Eric Striker
Daily Stormer
November 19, 2016
Mitch Cahn, the Jew President of UnionWear, the company behind the unfunny “Make Donald Drumpf Again” hats, has recently filed for bankruptcy.
Despite their politics, UnionWear’s stated idea is inherently good: to work exclusively with American labor unions to manufacture products made in the USA. Contrary to cuckservative boilerplate, there is nothing inherently wrong with labor unions (attacks on them are motivated by a globalist agenda), the problem is Jewish individuals and agents have been able to bribe and bully their way in hostile takeovers of these entities in order to destroy them. For example, union officials often support mass non-white immigration or transexual politics in the name of labor, when the vast majority of their members certainly do not.
Logically, the company would support Trump, who was the only candidate who wanted to make it viable to produce goods in America. But that isn’t the way Jews work.
And so: comeuppance.
The factory that made campaign hats for many of this year’s presidential candidates — and got a boost in orders for its “Make Donald Drumpf Again” parody hats — has filed for bankruptcy protection.
Officials at Unionwear got special permission from a federal judge on Thursday to spend restricted cash on payroll for its 151 workers while looking for buyers. The Newark, N.J., company, which had $6.5 million in sales last year, filed for chapter 11 protection Monday and blamed its financial troubles on rising pension costs.
Unionwear president Mitch Cahn said in an interview Thursday that it’s a top priority for political campaign organizers to distribute hats with the proud “Made in America” label. Some campaign officials have even visited the factory to verify that the hats are, indeed, made on site, he said. Some hats also emphasize that the company’s workers are part of a union, though Republican candidates often prefer to keep that label off their hats, Mr. Cahn said.
Unionwear, formally named New Jersey Headwear Corp., began getting business from political campaign cycles in 2000. Sales grew quickly: during the 2008 presidential race, it made every hat for the campaigns of President Barack Obama and Sen. John McCain, Mr. Cahn said.
This year, Unionwear made hats for presidential contenders Hillary Clinton, Jeb Bush and Bernie Sanders, as well as both the Democratic and Republican conventions. It briefly made campaign hats for President-elect Donald Trump, before his campaign switched to another supplier.
The company was “very positively affected by the campaigns,” Unionwear bankruptcy lawyer William Katchen said during Thursday’s court hearing, adding that the pace of orders for campaign and non-campaign products alike has recently picked up.
Business also got a bump after comedian John Oliver ordered hats with the slogan “Make Donald Drumpf Again” for a skit on his HBO show that claimed Mr. Trump’s ancestors altered the family name.
Unionwear’s campaign-related sales, though, are only a small part of its business. Founded in 1992, Unionwear also makes totes, messenger bags and other gear.
As the article notes, “Make Donald Drumpf Again” comes from the thoroughly glib diet-humor of John Oliver’s Jewish writers. The joke is that Donald Trump is of German descent and his father had to change his name during World War I as anti-German sentiment took off in the US. The implication in between the lines is Trump is German, and hence a Nazi.
But don’t call Jon Stewart (Liebowitz) by his given name, or Chuck Lorre (Levine), or Woody Allen (Konigsberg), Gene Simmons (Chaim Witz), Sumner Redstone (Rothstein), Ralph Lauren (Lifshitz), Bob Dylan (Zimmerman) – that would be anti-Semitism.