Dec 29, 2009

Anthony Lawson: "You didn't write those scriptures, but it is your problem if you follow them."

 

Dec. 29, 2009

From:
Anthony Lawson




Dear Rachel:


You wrote:

Jews believe in peace, love, and understanding.  We do not hold any people inferior or superior.

At the very least, you could have put the word "Most" or "Many" at the beginning of that sentence.  So, give me a break.  Are you going to tell me that the words "Chosen People" (in Hebrew, of course) do not appear in Jewish scriptures?


Are you going to deny that there are many references in those scriptures which describe Goyim as having an inferior status to The Chosen People?  At the very least, you could have put the word "Most" or "Many" at the beginning of that sentence.

It is 
not your fault, you didn't write those scriptures, but it is your problem if you follow them, and, in doing so, engender dislike for a group of people who are taught that they are superior to others.  What those who control Israel fail to understand is that people don't like being thought of as being no better than cattle.  

And don't try playing the pity card about the cattle trucks; there 
are horrendous stories to be told about the treatment of non-Jewish human beings, before, during and after WW II, in Europe and the Pacific, than just those about Jews in Germany.  When will Jews, who think as you do, learn that this is another facet of themselves which only amplifies the feeling that they consider themselves to be more important that anyone else?  When the Armenians asked the Holocaust Museum in Washington to set aside a room to publicise a less-well advertised "holocaust": the massacres of Armenians by the Turks, they were refused, on the grounds that Israel's relations with Turkey were more important than showing respect for another group of people who had suffered in a similar way to the Jews in Germany.

You wrote.

If they would be willing to live in peace and harmony, there would be no need for allthe safety measures Israel must put into place to protect its citizens.


Are you seriously suggesting that it is the Palestinians and others in the region who are to blame?

Whatever bad feelings there 
are about Israel, they have brought upon themselves.  You can't go around punching and kicking weaker children in the playground—children whose parents once owned the school—stealing their lunch money and damaging their bicycles, or whatever,  and not expect an eventual backlash.  That monstrous wall is an affront to everyone who has even an ounce of compassion for the downtrodden Palestinians, but the staggering thing is that so many Jews simply cannot understand why this should be so.  The only reason I can think of is that they cannot understand that other people in the world do not think of the Palestinians as cattle. 

 

The Zionists, from their early machinations in Basle, in 1897, have systematically stolen almost an entire country; do you really think that they can get away with this, without some of the misery that they have inflicted on others being visited upon themselves?  


 
Anthony Lawson

awson911@gmail.com


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