Copyright (c) 1998 - Ingrid
A. Rimland
March 23, 1998
Good Morning from the Zundelsite:
In an article titled "Helping keep politics out of the gutter"
Lorrie Goldstein of the Toronto Sun did business as usual: Appropriating
a villain, a concept, or a name exclusively to serve the Zionist Cause -
which is to keep hatred for Germans alive so as to keep the shekels coming.
("How dare you call anyone 'Hitler' but 'Hitler'!" "How dare
you call anything a 'Holocaust' unless it is THE 'Holocaust'!")
( The full Lorrie Goldstein article may be "savored" at http://www.canoe.ca/Columnists/goldstein_mar22.html
)
Incidentally, Lorrie is a "he", not a "she" - but other
than that, the reaction below, coming from one of my favorite Internet friends,
the intellectually splendid David Thomas of CODOH, hits the nail right on
the head and expresses the feeling of many:
"What pap Ms. Lorrie writes. By her line of reasoning,
WWII should never be brought up because it has ten times the chance of "paining"
someone who lost family in that vast conflict.
People who cannot recover from grief in a few years are unusual enough that
we could say that they are emotionally troubled, afflicted with a mild neurosis
or what have you. If you're still doing the wailing bit 20 years later,
the average consensus will be that you're a hopeless wacko, stuck in morbidity
- one of those sad souls who dresses in dark clothing, keeps the shades
drawn and reads the obituaries for mental stimulation.
So what are we to make of anguish FIFTY YEARS after the fact?? That it's
something we should all tiptoe around, fingers to our lips whenever one
of a list of discouraging words starts to be heard?
Balderdash!
If they're telling it straight, those people ought to be in sanitariums.
However, methinks they suffer mostly from having been the centers of attention
and catered to lo these many years. As the collective events began to turn
into a civil religion with a currency fresh enough to still smell the Devil's
presence - see how they guard his name! - pushing the ancient fairy tales
of standard Judaism aside, these people, the real survivors and the legion
of ersatz riders on the pity train, became icons.
They're milking a good thing for all it's worth - and a lot of them, I am
sure, believe their own schtick by now. I'd say "get over it"
- but that's a waste of words.
I'll settle for, "Don't bug me with your hang-ups, everybody's got
problems."
There are baser emotions than self-pity, but few more annoying and deserving
of summary dismissal . . . Had they been unfortunate enough to be victims
of Russia's similar roundups, their survival rates would have been far lower.
Even a cursory examination of the history of the Jewish people reveals that
they revile each group who attacks them - not just for centuries, but millennia.
And each bloody conflict is elevated to religious stature by afterward escalating
it to the status of imminent total annihilation, followed by redemption
gained through once again turning inward and returning to God's good graces
via the wisdom of the priests. The priests are very big on this cycle, as
one might suspect.
For those who don't know, most if not all major Jewish holidays are built
around just such events - which is fine for them, if that's how they want
to look at life. My point is that a person aware of the cultural pattern
will take all claims involving specifics with a liberal dose of salt - say
a 25 pound block.
Jewish writers (Howard Fast comes to mind) are allowed to do this so long
as they address things in the distant past, preferably biblical times, but
woe betide an outsider who dares call it like it is, for he is obviously
in legion with the Devil for the purpose of enabling that ever-lurking annihilation
- which assures their continued cultural cohesion.
How you gonna keep 'em down on the farm after they've seen the wide world?
A fresh holocaust every few hundred years does it pretty well.
BTW, an associate recently received a copy of Pravda published a week after
the Soviets took Auschwitz, and it goes into lengthy detail about the killing
facilities.
Seems they were on the wrong end of Birkenau, and used conveyor belts and
electricity. A translation will be coming soon - quite a bit sooner than
a good answer for yet another inexplicable anomaly.
(David Thomas of CODOH, at http://www.codoh.com )
Thought for the Day:
"...As one proponent of the uniqueness of the Holocaust, Edward Alexander,
has put it, to describe as genocidal the ghastly agonies suffered by others
- the Armenians, for instance - is to 'plunder the moral capital' of the
Jewish people. It is to 'steal the Holocaust'."
(David E. Stannard, professor of American Studies, University of Hawaii)
Comments? E-Mail: irimland@cts.com
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