Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
December 23, 2014
Only the sickening, filthy Jew parasite would be so bold as to distribute packages of candies attached to a notice bragging about the fact that they have manipulated laws so that questioning them can lead to imprisonment. But Jews in France have done just that.
Amid rising hatred for their parasite, criminal race, which is being fuelled largely by the rise in hatred for the Muslim hordes which Jew politicians have flooded France with, Jews in France have distributed 10,000 kits containing candies, a fake detox patch and the text of the law banning Antisemitism on the streets.
They label the package “ANTISEMITOX” and declare that it is a “cure for Antisemitism.”
The poster of the campaign features a doctor wearing a white coat and stethoscope brandishing a box of pills that reads: “Antisémitox, the first treatment against anti-Semitism.”
“The honey candies contained in the packages works to immediately soften the anti-Semitic words and behavior that are the first symptoms,” the organizers of the campaign wrote in a statement. “These include insults, curses, aggressive behavior, hallucinations, and quenelles [a Nazi-like salute popularized by an anti-Semitic French comedian.]”
The campaign is the brainchild of the Organization of Jewish Europeans, which was established only a few months ago. All proceeds from the campaign “will finance the struggle against anti-Semitism,” the OJE said.
Though the gesture seems to be intentionally bizarre, as do most gestures made by Jews, the message is clear: shut up goyim, we are in charge and we have the power to arrest and imprison you if you question us.
If it was really meant to simply be a cute little “hey guys, give us a break, we’re not so bad” gesture, there would obviously be no reason to include the threat of arrest and prosecution.
I honestly can’t understand why the Jews would think the way to address rising Antisemitism among the host population would be to threaten them with arrest in such a haughty, mocking manner. It just seems counter-intuitive to include a threat with what is meant to be a cute “hey guys, we’re okay” gesture.
This really says a lot about the psychology of Jews.