Thread of excerpts I found interesting from The Jewish threat: anti-Semitic politics of the US Army amazon.com/Jewish-Threat-…
One Lieutenant became convinced that danger of Jewish internationalism wasn't confined to Russia
He predicted a massive backlash by Russians against Jews
Colonel Briggs attributed anti-semitism in Vienna to Jews flaunting their wealth, and was impressed it hadn't lead to violence
An intelligence report found massive Jewish overrepresentation in Bolshevism
The military attaches had consistently negative views about Jews:
One professor from Cornell predicted a violent backlash in America to Jewish influence:
Before the outbreak of WWII the army war college had many more entries on communism than Nazism. Officers wanted tighter immigration restrictions, to curtail this threat.
One Colonel thought that conflict with Germany would result in a bloodbath that would radically alter civilization.
One retired general saw the war as a plot to establish Jewish hegemony and didn't think Americans should be fighting alongside communists en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Va…
After the war general Wedemeyer wrote that entry into the war was pushed by the British, Zionists and Communists
Mockery of Jews in the army during WWII was common though outright anti-semitism was relatively rare
Generals opposed general emancipation of Jews in the middle east so that they did not inflame tensions
Eisenhowers key generals had diametrically opposed views of Germans
Some British officials saw Zionism as similar to Hitler's quest for Lebensraum
One Major's views of Austrians/Jews were flipped after a couple on months in the field
Many military officials had a low opinion of Jewish DPs
One Major felt that Jews were vengeful and that betrayed the cause that Americans had fought for
Eisenhower harbored a hatred for the Germans in his letters to his wife:
Retired Colonel Beaty saw liberalism as a method of advancing Jewish interests, and thought WWII was unnecessary and pushed by the Roosevelt administration
Anti-communist Freda Utley compared Jews belief that they were the "Chosen People" to Nazis idea of the master race. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freda_Utl…
The book doesn't make it clear how prevalent views like these were in the military but clearly prevalent enough to fill a book with... The revolution in thinking that took place in views on Jews/race in the west was seemingly a radical reversal similar to the fall of communism
"Although not all mass public shooters have a history of mental illness, a little more than 60% of the mass public shooters had been either diagnosed with a mental disorder or demonstrated signs of serious mental illness prior to the attack." onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.11…
1/ THREAD I started to notice some opinion polls on Indians I found interesting, I wanted to look into Indians, and the role that they are increasingly taking on in US.
2/ Right off the bat, they seem very woke 82% agree at least somewhat that the government needs to do more to guarantee equal rights for blacks (not equal outcomes, equal RIGHTS)
3/ In addition, 75% of Indians agree at least somewhat with defunding the police, and 59% of Indians believe that there is a lot of discrimination against blacks today
1/ THREAD on Asian identity politics and why its claims are bullshit. Recently with "stop Asian hate" on the left and claims that Asians are oppressed by AA and CRT, there appears to have been a rise in Asian identity politics in the USA
2/ I decided to look at some of the grievances of the Azn identity politics people by reading through the subreddit r/Aznidentity. This subreddit is more vitriolic than the mainstream, as shown below, but a lot of the claims are repeated by mainstream asian identity activists.
3/ As @RichardHanania has noted, mainstream azn activism tends to skew very female, but this subreddit is a more aggressive masculine take on Asian activism. Heres a leftist slate article about it. slate.com/technology/202…
2/ Destiny says it's crazy to think that America might restrict some nationalities and not others. Well right now, Americas opinions of immigrants varies based on where they are from so it isn't that crazy to me. Though this was from a few years ago...
1/ I think that the Bush era was the golden age of race relations in the US (sorry Kanye)
2/ As Sean Last points out the trend for whites to have more favorable views of blacks actually took place in the 1990s and culminated in the mid 2000s. ideasanddata.wordpress.com/2019/08/18/how…