Lee Rogers
Daily Stormer
October 18, 2017
An Anne Frank Halloween costume has got the kikes all worked up!
Jews are literally the most neurotic and insane group of individuals on the planet. They get offended over all sorts of things that aren’t even offensive.
Take this story for example. An online retailer decided to sell an Anne Frank Halloween costume to honor her memory and the Jews took great offense to it. A bunch of them took to Twitter and were able to pressure the site to end the costume’s sale.
An Anne Frank children’s Halloween costume has been yanked off an online retail site after getting blasted on social media.
The costume, sold by halloweencostumes.com, featured a beret, navy shirtwaist-style dress with buttons, a felt bag and “felt destination tag sewn to the dress collar.”
“Now, your child can play the role of a World War II hero with this girls World War II costume,” the costume’s description said. “It comes with a blue button up dress, reminiscent of the kind of clothing that might be worn by a young girl during WWII.”
The site also described Frank — the German-born girl who penned a diary of her harrowing experience during the Holocaust — as an “inspiration to us all,” adding that “we can always learn from the struggles of history.”
It wasn’t long until Twitter took notice of the controversial costume.
“Those who thought up or greenlit the selling of an #annefrank costume on @funcostumes should receive some basic training in humanity,” wrote @blackwolfski.
“Totally speechless. Just been shown this ad for an Anne Frank costume for Halloween. @AnneFrankCenter you might want to have a word,” tweeted @JudeHabib.
Carlos Galindo Elvira, a regional director for Arizona’s Anti-Defamation League, tweeted that there are “better ways” to commemorate Anne Frank.
“This is not one,” he said. “We should not trivialize her memory as a costume.”
In the late 1970s, the Institute for Historical Review published a detailed piece by Robert Faurrison citing all sorts of evidence concluding that the diary was a hoax. Faurrison based his conclusion off of extensive research including an interview with Anne’s father Otto Frank.
Part of the diary was apparently written by her father with a ballpoint pen, something which did not exist at the supposed time the diary was written.
Three years ago, I personally visited the Anne Frank House in Amsterdam. I found it very odd that they banned photography inside the building (most house museums encourage photography and give everyone time to take pictures). This obviously prevents anybody from properly documenting the structure and finding potential inconsistencies with what’s written in the diary. It’s also worth noting that they don’t even have the actual diary on display. Why would there be such lack of transparency unless the goal was to mask the lies surrounding the diary?
Despite all of this, generations of children have been taught about the sad story of the poor Jewish girl Anne Frank who had to hide in an attic because of evil Germans. This fable should no longer be taught and should exposed for the lie that it is.
The retailer should have kept selling the Anne Frank costume just to mock the Jews. They should have also released a new costume allowing people to dress up like a Jew incarcerated during World War II in a German work camp. Can you imagine the Jewish tears if they did that?