Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
March 3, 2015
Following the murder of the Jew rat Boris, the Israeli news site Haaretz has published a piece about how most of those aligned against Putin are Jew, and how this is leading to a new rising anti-Semitism in Russia.
The article is written by Amie Ferris-Rotman, who claims to have interviewed the Jew Boris several times before unknown assailants sent him to Jew heaven (note: Jew heaven is the same thing as Christian hell – you spend eternity haggling over the price of a bagel).
From it:
When looking at members of the “fifth column,” those seen by the Kremlin as traitors, one is struck by the disproportionate representation of Jews. As the chief rabbi of Moscow, Pinchas Goldschmidt, pointed out to me: Nemtsov was killed a 20-minute walk from the Israeli embassy, which he fears will carry symbolism in time to come.
Putin first used the term “fifth column” in an exultant parliament address one year ago. It has since effortlessly slipped into the mainstream Russian language. An enormous poster depicting five such state enemies, including Nemtsov and the anti-corruption campaigner Alexei Navalny (who is under house arrest), appeared hanging from the roof of a popular Moscow bookshop in April. Photographs of the same crew, plus others including defiant radio journalist Alexei Venediktov and punk rockers Pussy Riot, have hung outside an airport in Crimea, and others still, such as opposition publisher Sergey Parkhomenko, have made their way onto a well-designed website condemning eighteen people for not loving their country. Since Putin denounced, albeit without naming names, the “fifth column” last March, a plethora of blogs and forums have sprung up in the Russian language, calling various opposition activists, including Nemtsov, “yids.”
What is interesting is that the author then goes on to explicitly state that Putin is not anti-Semitic. This is strange, and Jews do it often, even while accusing him of being an evil patriarchal fascist gay-basher.
It is not particularly strange that Putin is not openly anti-Semitic, given that he is able to address his enemies – who are admittedly mostly Jew – without having to finger them as Jews and cause international backlash. I don’t agree with the strategy, necessarily, but I see the logic in it.
But why do Jews not claim that Putin is anti-Semitic, simply because he targets mainly Jews as enemies? They usually do this.
I don’t know the answer.