How the ‘anti-Nazis’ went Nazi
Radical progressives’ descent into antisemitism is the result of their own secret history.
By now, it should be clear to all Americans that they are facing something like a neo-Nazi movement in all but name.
This antisemitic movement, led by the Red-Green Alliance (RGA) between radical Muslims and radical progressives, embodies almost all aspects of Nazism. In particular, its sole unifying principle is the supreme Nazi imperative: kill Jews.
This constitutes a terrible irony. Terrible for obvious reasons, but ironic for another.
Shortly before he committed suicide in his Berlin bunker, Hitler dictated his “political testament.” He blamed the Jews for Germany’s defeat and more or less everything else, continuing to spread his usual fantasies of omnipotent Jewish power even after successfully murdering a third of the Jewish population.
Then, he rendered a dark “prophecy,” saying, “Centuries will pass away, but out of the ruins of our towns and monuments the hatred against those finally responsible, whom we have to thank for everything, international Jewry and its helpers, will grow.”
Jews are not surprised by Hitler’s prediction. Centuries of tradition teach us that Amalek rises again b’kol dor v’dor, “in every generation.”
Nonetheless, the irony of the monster’s “prophecy” is redolent, because the hatred did grow anew, but not from the “ruins.” It rose again from the universities, mosques, faculty lounges, dorms, NGOs, and government and international institutions. It rose from among the “anti-Nazis.”
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