First published at 02:24 UTC on April 25th, 2023.
It's the German that were persecuted by the jews. Jews were not victim but the perpretraror, the instigator, the aggresor, the antagonist, the escalator of hostility, the one who declare war on another the first were the International Judea and…
MORE
It's the German that were persecuted by the jews. Jews were not victim but the perpretraror, the instigator, the aggresor, the antagonist, the escalator of hostility, the one who declare war on another the first were the International Judea and all jews arround the world that declared a Holy war and the destruction of Germany in 1932. March 24, 1933 and May 7, 1933 in the New York Times.
The New York Times Archives
BOSTON, May 7, 1933 -- A boycott by the American people of the products of all German industries, with the withdrawal of their patronage from German ships and their refusal to visit Germany, was recommended here today by Samuel Untermyer as the "obvious remedy" in dealing with the anti-Semitic activities of the National Socialists and the Hitler regime.
Samuel Untermyer was one of the most prominent Jews of his day in America. He was a prominent Zionist, and was President of the Keren Hayesod (United Israel Appeal). In addition, he was the president of the Non-Sectarian Anti-Nazi League from 1933-1938, and advocated for a worldwide boycott of Germany and the destruction of Hitler's regime. The Britsh press called him "Hitler's Bitterest Foe."
Untermyer & Marshall, and was the first lawyer in America to earn a one million dollar fee on a single case. He was also an astute investor, and became extremely wealthy.
Initially he was a corporate lawyer, but later in his career he devoted more time to cases involving the public welfare. As lead counsel for the Pujo Investigation, he was instrumental in the establishment of the Federal Reserve System and advocated for the regulation of stock exchanges and other legal reforms.
The video on YouTube is dated (31 Dec 1933) but I'm not sure the date is correct. Anyway he is saying about the same thing that he wrote in the New York Times May 7, 1933.
LESS