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A SYMPATHETIC APPRAISAL OF THE JEWS
By Willis A. Carto
Among all the shallow or instinctive criticisms of Jews we encounter, it is time for a sympathetic appraisal, taking into consideration their history, religion and culture. White, Christian American businessmen in general feel that the Jews deserve their material success in our free, capitalist environment because they seem to "do it better." Here's why:
1. Being outsiders, they have an overview of the (to them)alien society they have entered and can see opportunities invisible to those of the society which hosts them, as a buzzard or bird of prey can see its victim on the ground, invisible to those on the ground
2. The point of view of Europeans' and all Gentiles is farm-centered. All Europeans are derived from a rural background, one, two or three generations removed. The rural ethic is one based on construction and creation, of two hands, tools, water, sun and hard work to create products from the wilderness and industrial production. This is opposite to the urban/money culture which is fundamentally parasitic, feeding on people, not the environment.
3. They have perfected their skills at dealing in money and taken full advantage of the biblical strictures against usury/interest which nave been taken very seriously by Christian leaders.
4. The Jewish religion which bonds them (including, atheists)is fundamentally anti- Christian and every other religion as it is tribal and exclusive, for Jews only and is itself a matrix for material success. They are cultural aliens and culture distorters. Their religion is self-worship, totally opposite to Christianity.
5. They have an ethic of success and group dynamics stronger and different from that of the Whites among whom they dwell.
6. Their clannishness results in their giving business opportunities to other Jews, and they help each other in a world foreign to them.
7. Their history instructs them regarding their deportment among non-Jews and how to get the better of the members of the society they are among. They consider their presence in a given society temporary; they always look toward the future and their history teaches to prepare for sudden departure.
8. They create or undergo group problems or tragedies or defeats and then make them a permanent part of their history and religion, forever reliving and exaggerating them. All other groups of people bury their group tragedies and defeats and within one or two generations they are forgotten.
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