Jews are prone to complain long and loud about anti-Semites to intimidate anyone who complains about their evil. One can ask what are Semites. The answer is not Jews. Some of them are; most are not. The Ashkenazi are a case in point, having originated in Russia. Given the reality that Arabs are Semites, Zionist Jews are anti-Semites with a track record of mass murder to prove it. The Gaza Massacre is just one recent example. Another is below at Anti-Semitic
Semitic Language Area
In linguistics and ethnology , Semitic (from the Biblical "Shem") was first used to refer to a language family of largely Middle Eastern origin, now called the Semitic languages. This family includes the ancient and modern forms of Akkadian, Amharic, Arabic, Aramaic, Ge'ez, Hebrew, Maltese, Phoenician, Tigre and Tigrinya among others. Semitic speaking People (orange color) But that doesn't stop the Jews' claim for the ownership of the words "Semite" and "anti-Semitic". Thieving is a big thing for them. So is lying.
How Anti-Semitic Is The City?
Not sufficiently is one answer. The Guardian would disagree but then the Graun is part of the problem, having been infiltrated by the enemies of England.
QUOTE
Anti-semitism in the City is alive and well, even if you don't hear much about it. That's the message from a leading discrimination lawyer who has helped bring several dramatic but unreported legal claims alleging anti-Jewish prejudice at some of the Square Mile's leading banks and brokerages.One case handled by Makbool Javaid that did hit the headlines was that of Laurent Weinberger, a broker at Tullett & Tokyo Liberty whose grandmother had died in the Holocaust and who was ordered to wear a Nazi uniform in the office.
His claims became public in 2001 and shocked the City, but Javaid, of law firm DLA, says such abuses are not isolated. 'Because most banks are very sensitive to claims of anti-semitism, they tend to settle before those claims get to a court or tribunal,' he says. 'That's why they rarely reach the public eye.' The question of anti-Jewish prejudice in the business world has just reared its head again, in a much-publicised spat between retail tycoon Philip Green and Nicholas Soames, the Conservative politician. Green, whose £9 billion takeover bid for Marks and Spencer [ a firm set up by Jews - Ed. ] was thwarted two weeks ago, was drawn into an argument at the Dorchester hotel with Soames, who allegedly said: 'Their kind keep it all together, as ever. It's the same as it ever was.'........
But Green's sensitivity to slights of this kind, whether real or imagined, is probably understandable. The M&S board's decision to reject his final bid was loudly endorsed at the company's annual general meeting earlier this month, but even some in the M&S camp had the uncomfortable suspicion that a number of small shareholders were displaying a fervour laced with anti-semitism.
Nor is prejudice against Jews much relieved by occasional articles in the City pages referring to a 'north London business community' or something similar. Depending on the story being reported, readers are invited to infer that this group's members might include such well-known businessmen as Green, Amstrad founder Alan Sugar or Maurice Saatchi, the advertising guru and Conservative Party co-chairman.
There are also some big property magnates with Jewish backgrounds, including Gerald Ronson of Heron International, Minerva boss Andrew Rosenfeld and British Land's John Ritblat. In the retail sector, Dixons founder Sir Stanley Kalms is Jewish, Green himself owns BhS,and the Sainsbury family has some Jewish ancestors........
Of the four men eventually convicted over their roles in that affair, three were Jews and the fourth, former Guinness chief executive Ernest Saunders, was the son of a Jew. The fact that other, non-Jewish, businessmen were not called upon to justify their actions was widely noted and criticised at the time. [ I am happy to be able to say that I was there at the time and that this is a lie. - Editor]........
Mike Whine of the Board of Deputies of British Jews, which advises those experiencing discrimination at work, says he has not heard of cases of anti-semitism in the Square Mile 'for years'. But he adds: 'That's not to say there aren't any. I rather think that, if they were to get out, they would be an enormous embarrassment to firms.'
UNQUOTE
If City men are softies who are easy to embarrass they are easy to rob. To a Jew that is part of a bargaining position. The right answer is a straightforward: Fuck off.
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Updated on 28/04/2012 12:04