The eBay Holocaust: Jews Outraged Over Man Selling Concentration Camp Souvenirs Online

Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
November 3, 2013

The Holocaust is happening for real this time.  On eBay.
The Holocaust is happening for real this time. On eBay.

I’m unsure I even understand this story, but the Jews – that most easily outraged of all groups – have become outraged over a Ukranian man, Viktor Kempf, selling relics from the alleged Holocaust on eBay.

After a British newspaper did a report on the items’ listing, eBay pulled them and apologized to the Jews, going so far as to promise to make a donation to a holohoax memorial fund.

Holocaust PJs.
Holocaust PJs.

It confuses me exactly why this is offensive.  Don’t they want us all to constantly be thinking about these horrible, horrible camps, where millions were gassed in homicidal chambers of evil death-murder-genocide between the soccer field and swimming pool (adjacent to the medically inspected brothel)?

What is someone supposed to do if they find in their possession some filthy old Jew pajamas?  Wear them as a Halloween costume?

From Fox News:

The Mail on Sunday reported that the site had removed more than 30 listings for items ranging from a battered suitcase and a yellow Star of David armband denoting the wearer as Jewish, to a pair of shoes purported to belong to a death camp victim and a complete uniform believed to have belonged to a prisoner at the Auschwitz death camp in Poland.

[…]

“We are very sorry these items have been listed on eBay and we are removing them,” eBay said in a statement. “We don’t allow listings of this nature, and dedicate thousands of staff to policing our site and use the latest technology to detect items that shouldn’t be for sale.

[…]

Kempf told the paper that he bought the clothes from a dealer in America and insisted that they were genuine. He described himself as a historian who was selling the clothes to fund book projects. Kempf also said that he had sold another set of clothes linked to Auschwitz for $18,000.

“I have had criticism in the past and I find it upsetting,” Kempf told the paper. “I don’t want people to think I’m just doing it for the money. These periods in history are horrific, nobody should ever forget them.”

British historian Simon Schama, who is Jewish, was quoted by the Mail as saying, “This is absolutely beyond belief. Plainly there is no moral atrocity to which eBay will not descend to make a buck. This is an unspeakable act of moral cretinousness.

How is this different than neo-Nazis, such as myself, wanting a flag that was used in an NSDAP ceremony?  I haven’t ever bought one of those on eBay, but if I had the opportunity I might, and the idea of people trading in such items surely does not outrage me – and I have at least as much religious reverence for the Third Reich as the Jews have for these alleged death camps.

Maybe they don’t want these items circulating, as someone might get the bright idea to test them for Zyklon B residue.  Though they already tested the walls of the supposed gas chambers and proved they weren’t actually gas chambers, and people still believe this six million gibberish, so I don’t see as though the risk is very high.