By ELDER OF ZIYON 6 May 2024
Mass rally inside and outside Madison Square Garden against the Holocaust, July 31, 1944
The best evidence that even the college students who joined the anti-Israel encampments don’t really believe that there is a genocide in Gaza comes from the students themselves.
These camps were not places of anguish, but parties.
I write from the encampment, where students and faculty gather in hopeful clusters and echoes of laughter cut through the night. (Harvard)
About 70 tents are spread around U-Yard and H Street that range from single-person sleepers to 10-person tents. Around the encampment, people are sitting in circles, a pair played chess and another group watched a movie on a laptop. The sounds of quiet conversation and laughter traveled through the air. (GWU)
The encampment had a wonderful environment with food, friends, and laughter. (MIT)
Light chatter and frequent laughter echo across Cannon Green, where 40 protestors remain camped for the night. (Princeton)
Around 5:35 p.m., participants in the encampment opened a circle in the middle of South Lawn. A group of students danced an Indian folk dance with neon pink and yellow sticks. Onlookers cheered, clapped, and whistled in support of the dancers, with some shaking tambourines and playing drums. (Columbia)
Or the University of Chicago “protest” where the students apparently went way beyond laughter and dance in requesting dental dams, Plan B and HIV tests.
Sex for Palestine. That will save Gazans!
Compare with the protests seen in the 1940s against real genocide.
December 1942, Palestine:
The week of mourning for the Jewish victims massacred by the Nazis in occupied Europe concluded in Palestine last night with a huge demonstration in Tel Aviv culminating in a bonfire on Habimah Square at which a crowd of more than 100,000 persons burnt the Nazi swastika and an effigy of Hitler.
In Jerusalem thousands of Jewish children marched to the Wailing Wall while their parents crowded the synagogues and recited prayers for the Jews of Europe. Work stopped in all Jewish establishments except those engaged in manufacturing war materials. Black candles were lit in the old Bukharian synagogue, while aged Kabbalists gathered in their house of prayer in the old city and proclaimed anathemas upon Hitler, Goering, Goebbels, Himmler and other Nazi leaders.
In Safed, Jews donned yellow Mogen Dovid badges. Jewish women in Safed and Tiberias marched in spontaneous demonstrations to holy graves there and lit candles on the tombstones. Similar mourning demonstrations are reported from all over the country.
December 1942, USA:
The Jewish Labor Committee today announced that it has decided to issue a call to all Jewish workers throughout the country except, those in factories engaged in war industry – to suspend work in order to demonstrate organized Jewish labor’s protest against the Nazi wholesale murder of Jews in Europe. An emergency meeting of the executive of the Jewish Labor Committee will be held on Tuesday to consider the latest reports of the Nazi massacres of Jews.
At a conference of the Union of Orthodox Rabbis of America and Canada held in New York, it was decided to proclaim Wednesday, December 2, as a day of mourning in the United States, in accordance with a similar decision adopted by the Rabbinate in Palestine. The Union will issue an appeal to all Jewish enterprises throughout the country to join in the mourning by closing their businesses on Wednesday for a half-hour.
The members of the Workmen’s Circle, a Jewish labor fraternal organization, will gather simultaneously in 100 meeting places in Greater New York tomorrow to voice the protest of Jewish Labor against the Nazi butchery of Jews in Europe.
The protest meetings which have been called jointly by the Workmen’s Circle and the Jewish Labor Committee will mark a “Day of Protest and Mourning” proclaimed by the national executive committee of the Workmen’s Circle in the name of its 75,000 members in the United States. Similar protest demonstrations will take place tomorrow throughout the country.
More than 75,000 Jews and Christians attempted to enter Madison Square Garden last night three hours before the opening of the demonstration against the Nazi extermination of Jews, the New York police authorities estimated today. In addition to the 20,000 who succeeded in entering, thousands stood outside the building listening to the speeches which were conveyed from the platform through loud speakers while tens of thousands of people at home heard the proceedings which were broadcast over a nation-wide hook-up.
July 31, 1944:
The differences couldn’t be more striking.
For a real genocide, there was sadness, anger, organization, desperation, and the knowledge that every single day of inaction by the Allies meant thousands more murdered. The 1940s protesters begged to get the Jews out of Europe by any means possible to save their lives.Vast sums of money were raised to help any Jews caught in the maelstrom. They didn’t feel it was necessary to deface government buildings, destroy property or hold rallies without permits.
For the fake “genocide” that is really an excuse for public antisemitism, there is laughter, dance and semi-public sex – and not a finger lifted to actually help Gazans escape from where they are supposedly being targeted for complete annihilation. The privileged students who pay some $90,000 tuition each year didn’t raise any significant funds for Gazans but instead solicited donations for their own protests.
Deep down, everyone knows that almost none of these students felt that they were helping Palestinians in any way. They were there to denounce the Jewish state, not to help any Gazan who might not have adequate food or shelter, let alone any Gazan who is trying to raise funds to pay bribes to escape to Egypt.
Gazans? Who gives a damn about Gazans? Send the laughing students more dental dams!
This is why the very use of the word “genocide” against Israel is a perverted slander and an act of unbridled bigotry and antisemitism. The accusation gives todays’ protesters an excuse to party, not a compulsion to save a single Palestinian life.
Since the ‘ 60s, this was justified by a line attributed to Marx but I only find it in Lenin and abridged, at that: “Revolutions are the festivals of the oppressed and the exploited.”* I believe it was Herbert Marcuse, who, losing faith in the revolutionary potential of the proletariat, i.e., factory workers, shifted the emphasis to rebelling college students in the ’60s. So, the hippy counter culture, claiming to be quoting the early Marx, would always say, “Revolution is the festival of the oppressed” and literally make every demonstration a festival, i.e., a party.
– Then, again, I thought, Louise Michel, iconic Anarchist and one of the leaders of the Paris Commune? No. But, this turned up: “The surest guide to the correctness of the path that women take is joy in the struggle. Revolution is the festival of the oppressed. “—Germaine Greer, 1970.**
* “Vladimir Ilyich Lenin
“Two Tactics of Social-Democracy in the Democratic Revolution”
https://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1905/tactics/ch13.htm
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**”Germaine Greer (born 29 January 1939) is an Australian writer and public intellectual, regarded as one of the major voices of the second-wave feminism movement in the latter half of the 20th century…[1]” – Wikipedia [read this insanity and that’s not hyperbole, but literally. Explains a lot. She and others like her were or became prominent academics. And the rest is history.]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Germaine_Greer
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“People also ask
Who sang the original “It’s my party and I’ll cry if I want to”?
Lesley Gore
“It’s My Party” is a song by American singer-songwriter Lesley Gore from her debut studio album I’ll Cry If I Want To (1963). It was released as the lead single from the album on April 5, 1963, by Mercury Records.”
– “It’s My Party”/Wikipedia
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mIsnIt1p978
I mean, Seriously.
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And, in case you’re wondering what on earth any of this has to do with genocide, well, that’s where the miracle of intersectionality comes in which, in turn, is derived from the Marxist slogan, “One struggle, many fronts.” Any cause, any at all, can be conveniently plugged in and milked for all it’s worth. Because, as Saul Alinsky put it in his “Rules for Radicals” which Obama taught as an Alinskyite instructor:
“The issue isn’t the issue. Power is the issue.”
Don’t send them dental dams, let these priviledged mutts have unprotect alternative sex.