Still No Description of Brussels Shooter as Jews Call for Antisemitism to be Shut Down

Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer

May 26, 2014

He doesn't look White.
He doesn’t look White.

The Jewish Museum killer is still on the loose.

The Brussels police have released a surveillance photo of the shooter, but claim that because he is wearing a baseball cap, they are unable to give a description.  Apparently, we are to believe that none of the eyewitnesses were able to identify the color of his skin.

Here’s the video:

In the midst of the chaos, Jewish leaders from across the globe have called for the European people to be further stripped of their basic human rights in order to protect them from those who dislike their Jewish methods of manipulation and control.

Jerusalem Post:

Issuing calls for an overhaul of how issues of anti-Semitism are dealt with in the European Union, these leaders believe that not enough is currently being done to combat a rising tide of hate, which has led some to question the continued viability of continental Jewish life.

In Israel, Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu , strongly condemned the Brussels killings in a statement from his office. They were, he said, “the result of endless incitement against the Jews and their state“. He offered Israeli cooperation in the Belgian investigation.

Pope Francis, in Tel Aviv on Sunday, condemned the attack in Brussels, where about half of Belgium’s 42,000-strong Jewish community lives.

“With a deeply saddened heart, I think of all of those who lost their lives in yesterday’s savage attack in Brussels,” he said.

“In renewing my deep sorrow for this criminal act of anti-Semitic hatred, I commend to our merciful God the victims and pray for the healing of those wounded.”

Despite the immediate response by Belgian and French authorities to their countries’ respective attacks, several regional and international Jewish groups were quick to point to the attack as indicative of the need for systemic reforms in how Europe combats anti-Semitism.

One communal leader in Brussels termed the attack a wake up call, seeking to impress authorities with the need to combat racism, incitement and what many Jews see as a growing atmosphere of hate.

According to a recent study conducted by the Anti-Defamation League, 27 percent of Belgians harbor anti-Semitic sentiments.

“While violence against Jews in Belgium is extremely rare, the attack on the Brussels Jewish Museum is another tragic reminder of the frightening atmosphere for Jews in parts of Europe,” ADL head Abraham Foxman said in a statement.

Following a number of high profile attacks, bans on ritual slaughter and the rise of neo-Nazi parties in several countries, Jewish leaders are wary of the direction Europe will take following Sunday’s parliamentary elections.

Jewish groups have been calling for tougher action against the growing power of the right for some time. Last year in Budapest World Jewish Congress President Ronald Lauder demanded a continent wide ban on “Neo-Nazi” parties such as Jobbik in Hungary and Golden Dawn in Greece.

According to Foxman, “the rise in Europe of openly anti-Semitic political parties, the proliferation of clearly anti-Semitic expressions on social media platforms and the disturbingly high levels of anti-Semitic attitudes in many places in Europe contribute to a witches’ brew of hate in which those who are inclined to engage in violence against Jews can find encouragement.”

Rabbi Abraham Cooper of the Simon Wiesenthal Center said that while he expects Belgian authorities to pursue the killer with all possible vigor, it is also “time for them and all the European leaders to also take measures to reverse the extreme anti-Israel and anti-Jewish attitudes held by as many as 150 million European citizens.”

Rabbi Menachem Margolin, the Brussels based head of the European Jewish Association, went even further. In a statement on Sunday, Margolin asserted that condemnations of anti-Semitic attacks are merely “a way to cleanse ones’ conscience.”

Calling for a “pan-European task force in order to annihilate Anti-Semitism,” Margolin said that “those that do not bother to eradicate these Anti-Semitic lesions within themselves, those that exercise understanding and forgiveness to such terror attacks because of narrow political interests – will end up being victimized by the same nationalist Anti-Semites.”

In other words: shut it down.

Once again, there is no analysis of possible reasoning for a violent Antisemitic attack – it is not asked what the Jews have done to become so hated by the whole world.  It is merely assumed that it is everyone’s fault but the Jews, and so everyone but the Jews must suffer collective punishment by being stripped of their basic rights of freedom of thought and freedom of speech.

That is always the way of the Jews, and it always will be unless we push the issue.  I am personally all for stopping Antisemitism, but in order to stop it, we are going to have to look at the cause, which is – without question – the collective behavior of the Jews.  Thus, the solution to Antisemitism would either be for the Jews to stop behaving in the way they behave – which isn’t likely to happen – or for the Jews to be separated from those who dislike their behavior.

It is time for dialogue to begin.