Germans Now
Denying the Holocaust Telepathically, Say Jews
By Mike
James in Germany – 27 March 2008
BERLIN (IFPN) -- Germany’s
Central Council of Jews (ZJD) has demanded “immediate
government action” in response to unsettling findings
published in its quarterly social trends report,
‘Virulent Anti-Semitism in Germany Today, Issue 1,
2008’.
The report highlights a worrying increase in
anti-Semitic sentiment and, more sensationally, the
dissemination of holocaust denial “by means of
telepathy”.
“It’s very frightening and something I cannot ignore
given my horrific ordeal in Auschwitz, which I
miraculously survived by hiding in a chimney until the
camp was liberated,” says the ZJD’s president, Charlotte
Knobloch, who is currently suing Google for editorial
control of YouTube.
“Our own success in determining what constitutes
suitable viewing for Internet users in Germany has
forced us to imagine alternative scenarios available to
young people who don’t trust what the government or
their teachers are telling them.”
“Never underestimate the power of the Jewish
imagination,” she adds.
In Germany, anyone who expresses anti-Semitic sentiments
or who queries the holocaust by pointing to pre-war and
post-war Jewish population statistics or anomalies in
the historical record faces prison sentences of up to
five years.
The law, however, is unclear on the issue of
telepathically communicated anti-Semitism and holocaust
denial.
“We know they’re doing it,”
says Stephan Kramer, General Secretary of the ZJD. “They
are evading punishment by spreading anti-Semitic
propaganda and denying the holocaust without writing a
word or moving their lips.”
Although Kramer has dispatched an unspecified number of
undercover Hassidic telepaths and kosher ‘sensitives’
briefed with the task of intercepting telepathic
communications in streets, bars, clubs, restaurants,
cafes, subways, shops, schools, workplaces and other
venues where people may choose to express a personal
opinion without being overheard by informers, he admits
that telepathically communicated holocaust denial is
hard to prove.
“But only empirically,” he explains. “Proof is an
obsession of those unable to conceive of the truth. In
the wrong hands, proof, or a lack of proof, can be
misused to establish certain facts incompatible with the
truth. Not all facts are factual. What do you want?
Another holocaust?”
The German government, anxious to reassure the Jewish
community, has moved swiftly to calm fears by allocating
six million Euros in research grants to the ZJD’s
hospitality and personal leisure expenses budget.
“We are doing everything we can to eradicate the scourge
of anti-Semitism in Germany and the European Union,” a
government spokesman told IFPN. “The government takes
very seriously reports that certain extremist elements
in our society are engaged in telepathic holocaust
denial and we are monitoring the situation closely.”
But official assurances came
too late for Israeli tourists Shmuel Linsky and his
wife, Diane.
“Just the other day I saw a very relaxed German couple
with their children spending our reparations money on
ice-cream and hot dogs,” says Shmuel scornfully. “They
were deliberately and maliciously acting in a way that
suggested they were proud to be German, without any
sense of shame or guilt. I suddenly felt very threatened
by this kind of unspoken anti-Semitism and was
overwhelmed by the urge to radio an Israeli F-16 fighter
bomber.”
Diane Linsky nods her head in pained agreement. They had
decided on an impromptu vacation in Germany after
watching Angela Merkel on television deliver an
impassioned speech to Israel’s parliament, the Knesset.
“Mrs Merkel said that
Germans would do everything they could to help Israel
and protect the Jewish people from anti-Semitism,” she
says, her voice cracking. “But when we got here we found
we had to pay for our own hotel accommodation and none
of the restaurants will let us eat for free, even though
we’re Jews and have a long and unique history of
suffering.”
Shmuel too is overcome by
emotion, hardly able to speak. “It’s been humiliating.
Even the waiters expect a tip, reminding me of my
horrific ordeal in Auschwitz, which I miraculously
survived by hiding in a chimney until the camp was
liberated,” the 36-year-old Mr Linsky adds bitterly.
The Linskys say they had been made to feel “persecuted”
and intend to file a claim for compensation. “In fact,
we sued before we came out here,” says Diane. “Our
lawyer in Tel Aviv was offering special terms and a 30
percent discount.”
Critics however have blasted
the report as “hysterical”, “irresponsible” and
“paranoid”.
“Given the long history of hereditary mental illness
among people of Jewish descent, I would be inclined to
treat reports of telepathically communicated
anti-Semitism and holocaust denial with extreme
caution,” one of them, a leading professor of
evolutionary psychiatry, told IFPN anonymously.
“The Jews have a propensity for telling tall stories and
a tendency to exaggerate things they hear, or think they
hear. Before taking this much further, the German
government would be well-advised to read the wealth of
medical literature made available over the past 200
years by Jewish physicians themselves, much of which
focuses on the very high percentage of dangerous
psychotic illnesses and psychopathological disorders
found among Ashkenazi Jews. A good starting point would
be the Disability Studies Quarterly, Volume 27, No. 4,
published in 2007.”
“Even their top religious people admit they’re nuts.
Rabbis Eric Weiss and Nathaniel Ezray have said that
‘mental illness is a Jewish issue’ and point to the
findings of geneticists at John Hopkins University who
have identified lamentably high incidences of
schizophrenia and bipolar disorder among Ashkenazi Jews.
Many suffer from an autosomal recessive trait that goes
back thousands of years and which manifests as
congenital lying, delusional behaviour and paranoia.”
“Unfortunately, instead of being treated in
high-security psychiatric hospitals, many of these
mentally ill, psychopathic Jews seem to thrive in
positions of leadership, spanning the worlds of
international finance, the media, academia, law and
politics, not only in Europe and Israel, of course, but
also in North America and elsewhere.”
“We need to ask ourselves why they’ve been expelled from
109 locations around the world since the middle of the
third century, and why we’re allowing them to repeat the
cycle over and over again, harming not only themselves
but everyone else.”
“I know it’s not a very politically correct thing to
articulate,” the professor concludes, “but when it comes
to Jews and some of the ludicrous things they say, I’m
afraid we’re dealing with some very sick puppies.”
Charlotte Knobloch strongly disagrees. Jews have never
harmed anyone, she says.
“The fact that the Jewish people have been expelled from
109 locations around the world doesn’t mean there’s
anything wrong with the Jewish people or that they are
in any way disruptive or insane,” she insists. “On the
contrary, all of those countries, for no real
identifiable reason, experienced periods of anti-Semitic
mass insanity, which spontaneously disappeared the
moment we were gone.”
Meanwhile, as news breaks
that at least a hundred stone-throwing Palestinian
children have been either killed or maimed by vigilant
Israeli F-16 fighter pilots, the Linskys arrive back in
Tel Aviv to an emotional family reception.
Shmuel’s great uncle, Rabbi Dov Bronstein, hugs his
relative and can hardly contain his tears: “Even though
I was born and raised in New Jersey and never set foot
in Europe, I will never forget my horrific ordeal in
Auschwitz, which I miraculously survived by hiding in a
chimney until the camp was liberated.”
“It’s so good to be home,” says a visibly relieved Diane
Linsky. “We flew Lufthansa and we just knew the German
pilots and air hostesses were telepathically denying the
holocaust and sharing anti-Semitic thoughts with some of
the European passengers .... and they were saying, like,
you know, ‘Let’s dump those lying Jews out over the
Mediterranean’.”
Lufthansa has promised to investigate the allegations.
Michael James, an
Englishman, is a former freelance journalist resident in
Germany since 1992 with additional long-haul stays in
East Africa, Poland and Switzerland.
11.04.08
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