President Trump Again Draws Attention to the Double Standards of Jewish Kikes

Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
February 9, 2017

The other day I told David Duke he talks too much about the Jewish double standard, where they push the exact opposite thing in our countries that they push in Israel. It’s a good and important point, but everyone in the white nationalist movement is well aware of this point. It is anti-Semitism 101.

Ah, but when Trump starts pointing it out.

That is very good.

LA Times:

When President Trump vows to build a “big, beautiful wall” on the U.S. border with Mexico, he apparently doesn’t have the Berlin Wall or the Great Wall of China in mind.

“Do walls work?” Trump said Wednesday. “Just ask Israel about walls. … Just ask Israel.”

AYO Bibi – do walls work, fam?

What’s that?

Sorry, can’t hear you?

Can you repeat?

With noticeable frequency, Trump appears to be borrowing from Israel’s security manual — including its construction of what Israel calls a security barrier along more than 400 miles of Israel’s border with the West Bank.

Palestinians call it an apartheid wall that in many cases divides Palestinian villages.

Israel has also built walls and fences along its southern border with the Egyptian Sinai desert, a virtual no man’s land of violence and criminal activity.

Trump has suggested other controversial tactics that Israel has embraced in its effort to curtail terrorism.

During the presidential campaign, Trump spoke of “going after” the families of terrorists and demolishing their homes.

Israel has routinely destroyed the homes of Palestinian suicide bombers or other violent individuals, and often jailed their relatives.

This is getting the media to do your work for you, wow.

Trump hasn’t even pointed out Israeli retaliation against families.

This LA Times article is basically: “Trump is evil like the Jews.”

Wow.

Trump has made a point of declaring war on radical Islam, mincing no words in using the religious label. Ditto for Israel.

But the most concrete policy alignment is his proposed wall along the 2,000-mile border with Mexico.

On Tuesday, the new secretary of Homeland Security, John F. Kelly, told Congress that construction of the wall could take two years and cost billions of dollars.

It will not be possible, Kelly said, to “build a wall everywhere all at once.”

Trump has insisted that Mexico would pay for the wall, and Mexico has repeatedly said it won’t. That tiff led Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto to cancel a planned visit to Washington last month to meet with Trump.

Media still pretending Trump is saying they’ll write a check.

That was never the idea. The idea is that we will put up tariffs and tax remittances to pay for the wall.

I also think we should arrest illegal immigrants and harvest their organs.

Trump’s invocation of Israel’s counter-terrorist policies has sparked growing concern by security experts and human rights groups.

Terrorist attacks in Jerusalem and in Israel have ebbed since construction of the wall began in 2000. It is now a little more than half complete.

It works, but it’s evil.

Don’t be evil like the Jews, goyim.

Instead, you should just die.
 
Because of human rights.

That’s what a good goy would do.

But the decline in violence had multiple causes. Palestinian security forces now work more closely, if secretly, with Israeli security forces, and Palestinian intifadas, or uprisings, tend to have their own dynamic.

Moreover, the wall has inflamed tensions and resentment among Palestinians. The barrier, and a series of crowded checkpoints, have added hours to the daily commutes for thousands of Palestinians who live in the West Bank and travel to work on the Israeli side.

A report this month by the Republican leadership of the Senate Committee on Homeland Security praised Israel’s security efforts in glowing terms.

The report, “Securing Israel: Lessons Learned from a Nation Under Constant Threat of Attack,” credits Israel’s extensive building of fences and walls along its internal and external borders for the decline in terrorist attacks.

Israeli security experts say the barrier is not the same as the wall Trump has proposed. For one, Israel is trying to keep out terrorists, while Trump says his wall would primarily aim to stop illegal immigration.

“The analogy is somewhat limited,” said Susie Gelman, chair of the Israel Policy Forum, a liberal U.S.-based advocacy group that focuses on Israel. “Any security barrier in Israel is effective because it is part of many layers of the security apparatus.

Yeah, you mean like, it’s combined with some kind of travel ban or whatever?

Because I’ve also heard that those are really bad for the goyim.