Lee Rogers
Daily Stormer
July 31, 2017
Kevin Myers is a newspaper columnist who questioned Jews and got fired.
Kevin Myers a columnist for the Sunday Times Ireland just learned a hard life lesson. If you question anything about Jews, there is a very good chance that you will lose your job.
That’s exactly what happened to him after he wrote an article questioning Jewish privilege.
The Sunday Times has sacked a columnist in Ireland who sparked controversy with comments about high-profile women at the BBC.
Kevin Myers said that two of the best-paid female presenters, Claudia Winkleman and Vanessa Feltz, were Jewish in an article about the gender pay gap at the Corporation.
The paper’s editor Martin Ivens said the remarks in Sunday’s Irish edition were not acceptable and should never have been published.
A spokesperson later said Mr Myers would not be writing for the paper again.
The spokesperson said: “We can confirm that Kevin Myers will not write again for The Sunday Times Ireland.
“A printed apology will appear in next week’s paper.”
Mr Ivens said earlier: “It has been taken down and we sincerely apologise, both for the remarks and the error of judgement that led to publication.”
Mr Myers has penned a number of outspoken columns for various newspapers in the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland for many years.
Myers was merely pointing out how the BBC has been paying a couple of Jewish presenters more than non-Jewish presenters. What’s interesting is that the Sunday Times Ireland is not disputing the accuracy of his reporting. They fired him because his report revealed a fact embarrassing to Jews.
These two Jewesses have Jewish privilege and get paid more than non-Jews at the BBC. Shocking!
The firing was bad enough, but it was down right pathetic for the paper’s editor to issue this groveling apology. It’s not like Myers wrote an article advocating for Jews to be incinerated in ovens.
Interestingly, the Jewish Chronicle published a similar article for a Jewish audience earlier this month. They reported the same information as Myers but no stink was made about that.
JC:
When the BBC reported on its list of highest-paid broadcasters on its News at Ten last night, it said there was no one from an ethnic background in the top 20.
Which was wrong (well, wrong depending on your definition of ethnic minority). For the top 20 included two Jewish women – Claudia Winkleman and Vanessa Feltz.
In its defence, the BBC might point to the Institute of Race Relations, which defines BAME – Black, Asian, Minority Ethnic – as the “the terminology normally used in the UK to describe people of non-white descent”.
Alternatively, Jews are often considered a religious, as distinct from an ethnic, minority.
In the last Census, the vast majority of Jews who chose to identify as such did so by answering the (voluntary) question on religion; only a few thousand identified themselves as Jews by ethnicity (although “Jewish” was not a category specifically listed under ethnic – respondents had to go to the trouble of adding that information under “other”).
Legally, however, Jews are clearly an ethnic, as well as religious minority, since they are protected under the Race Relations Act (as are Sikhs).
Apparently it is OK for a Jew to talk to other Jews about such things but not for a non-Jew to do it.
Oh well. This is just another case of Jewish privilege. If somebody says something that you feel leads to too much goyim knowing, you can just call up and get them fired. You can also get a gushing apology.