Famous Baseball Player Running for Senate Jew-Truths on CNN

Eric Striker
Daily Stormer
October 22, 2016

Famous retired Boston Red Sox pitcher Curt Schilling is being barraged by the media for asking Jake Tapper why Jews like him support the Democratic party in overwhelming numbers. For the record, saying something about Jews that isn’t prefaced by “the brilliant, beautiful and perfect” on a live broadcast is far more taboo than Gavin McInnes corn-holing himself with a rubber cock.

Schilling asked Jake Tapper (who, by Judenpress standards, is the only Jew I can think of who actually does something approaching actual journalism) to explain the phenomenon. Schilling was being coy and tried to hide behind “support for Israel” (being an Israel hawk is a “bipartisan issue”, just look at the last Israel aid package) to blunt the anti-Semitism accusation avalanche he was triggering, but we (and the Jews themselves) can read between the lines: he was trying to drop some Jew facts for the viewers.

Only 14% of Jews are registered as Republicans this election cycle, and most of those are Never Trump scumbags. That number is so low, that even “Latinos” (not really a race or monolith, but I digress) out number them, with 23% identifying as Republicans.  In Florida the only place where the Jewish vote means anything, 67% of Jews plan to vote for Hillary Clinton no matter what, vs 23% for Trump, in contrast with a 54% for Hillary and 30% for Trump among a demographic Trump has supposedly alienated (“Latinos”).

Generally speaking, the Republican party has always been the party of the upper middle class (although not anymore). Jews and Asians are heavily over represented in this economic bracket, yet are overwhelmingly Democratic voters, and this is driven purely by animosity towards the white majority which they perceive the Democrats as attacking.

Never the less, Chris Matthews grilled Schilling just a few hours after the CNN interview:

Schilling is a Trump-supporter and is without a doubt well aware that there’s something up with the Jews. Last Spring, Schilling was fired from Jew infested ESPN for sharing a social media post that had the audacity to suggest men ought to use the men’s bathroom. During the interviews he gave, you can just hear his thoughts: “these kikes are the ones who oversee political correctness and are bashing Trump, I got to say something.”  He’s not very sophisticated, or maybe he sounds awkward because he’s pushing a boundary protected by those deadly invisible lasers you see in sci-fi movies, but his intent was clear.

And he’s right, there’s already an infinite number of major publications frantically jumping on this like it’s the crime of the century.

Pointing out a pattern isn’t a net negative if the pattern is a testament to honor or good. Germans make great cars, Italians have great food, Slovenes have sexy women.

But for Jews, getting people to even notice them as a distinct group is already a step towards expulsion. Once people begin to know how to spot Jews, there is an immediate epiphany of rage: “Who the hell would even think of doing this kind of shit to other people?” They know full well what comes after that.