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Dienstag, 30. Oktober 2018

JEWISH-AMERICAN HYPOCRISY

Dear Mr. President,

We know well both about your partly Jewish partly Jewified i.e. judaized family and about who really governs America.


And we know as well as America dealt with the thousands of tsunami victims of the catastrophic Christmas man-made disaster in 2004, whose avoidable violent mass death and worldwide cover-up of collective failure were largely under the responsibility and control of America's administration. 


As a reminder:

On December 26, 2004, a crime against humanity was committed, resulting in a mountain of terribly massacred corpses and thousands upon thousands of injured and traumatized people. Many of them were Western tourists. 


Since the gigantic quake of mega magnitude 9.3 at 8 a.m. local time, a seaquake in the Sunda Trench, the longest in history and the second strongest ever recorded, rocked the whole Southeast Asia, and was detected and localized all over the world within minutes by seismographs, and the resulting tsunami wave was recorded by the geomonitoring and spy satellites – two hours passed before the destructive tsunami wave reached the West coast of Thailand. During this time the tourists in the beach hotels could have been warned and evacuated. 

In the globally networked and supervised world this was possible and should not have been omitted. But it was due to criminal negligence and collective total failure of governmental authorities, scientific institutions and organisations and the tourism industry, in Thailand and abroad. Because of their grossly negligent omissions in the matter of disaster prevention and non-functioning crisis and disaster management, there were no warnings: not by the Thai government, and not by the governments of the countries from which the tourists came. A gigantic human and organizational infrastructure, which costs the taxpayer billions of dollars every year and should ensure the safety of the citizen, failed completely. Failed evacuation and lack of warnings of the impending flood wave led to the humanitarian disaster and a crime against humanity.


In the aftermath of the disaster, through the subsequent failure of political, legal, scientific, and media work-up of this massive failure and crime, through the collective failure of systematic and critical reappraisal and reprocessing of the crime as a man-made disaster, the victims of this calamity were left alone with their fate without any help. The perpetrators were allowed to wash their blood-smeared hands in innocence and to bask in the headlights of the media. They were even rewarded lavishly to the detriment of the taxpayer for their wrongdoing and crime. Governments and their authorities of a few dozen states (the U.S.A included) that had the ability and the duty to warn Thailand’s authorities promptly, urgently, and effectively did not touch a finger. Therefore, the disaster had to take its course  and thousands of innocent and unsuspecting people had to die a violent death. The date went down in history as the day of shame, barbarism, infamy and the breach of civilization.


After the catastrophe the people in charge in Thailand, in Asia and in the Western World were only concerned with suppressing the unpleasant truth, covering up facts, and keeping silent about it. A wall of silence was built by them. Public prosecutors, courts, parliaments, ministries and inquiry commission did not get to work, and the mendacious Jew-ridden lying mediathe fake news media and the Jew-rigged pseudo-science twisted the truth into a natural disaster. Of the 670 million tsunami donations alone in Germany and billions anywhere in the world, victims in the Free World did not receive a single penny.

All states involved in this criminal failure, their authorities, supranational organizations and private sector actors have grossly reckless violated the fundamental human right to life and physical integrity. They have grossly negligent disregarded their duty of care and responsibility to protect towards theirs citizens in a cross-border emergency.



Jew-ridden America turned its back on the victims of this massacre, especially from Free World countries. Among them were many Americans.The shame and the relapse into the moral abyss could not have been greater.
And now we learned that the 11 victims of the gun rampage in Pittsburgh were honored sumptuous and splendid by the state mourning and even by your on-site visit: Only because they were Jews(!) But Mr. President we know who the Jews really are, in America and everywhere. 


In a book written by German Reformation leader Martin Luther in 1543, he equated Jews with the Devil. Luther argued that the Jews were no the chosen people but as a matter of fact "the devil's people". 


All in all, finding the right words for this is not difficult: Jewish-American hypocrisy

Jerzy Chojnowski
Chairman-GTVRG e.V.


The White House | October 29, 2018

President Trump to Visit Pittsburgh After Synagogue Massacre

“President Trump will visit Pittsburgh on Tuesday to console victims of the synagogue massacre and their families,” S.A. Miller reports for The Washington Times. “White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said the president, who will be accompanied by first lady Melania Trump in Pittsburgh, is working to comfort a country heartbroken by the horrific attack and unify Americans to confront anti-Semitism everywhere.”

“Anti-Semitism is a plague to humanity,” Sanders said from the White House yesterday.


America has no room for the ‘vile, hate-filled poison of anti-Semitism’

The American flag is flying at half-mast above the White House today as our Nation grieves the 11 victims of a despicable act of mass murder Saturday at the Tree of Life Synagogue in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
“Anti-Semitism and the widespread persecution of Jews represents one of the ugliest and darkest features of human history,” President Donald J. Trump said from Indiana on Saturday. “The vile, hate-filled poison of anti-Semitism must be condemned and confronted everywhere and anywhere it appears.”
What unites Americans is our common destiny, President Trump continued. “We mourn for the unthinkable loss of life that took place today, and we pledge in their name to fight for a future of justice, safety, tolerance, morality, dignity, and love. We must all rise above the hate.”
President Trump and the First Lady will visit Pittsburgh tomorrow to meet with family members of the victims and mourn with the entire Pittsburgh community. The 11 Jewish-Americans killed “represented the very best of our Nation,” Press Secretary Sarah Sanders said from the White House today. The President “adores Jewish-Americans as part of his own family,” which includes his daughter, son-in-law, and several grandchildren, she noted.
As always in moments such as these, America’s heroes in law enforcement do some of the most difficult work. Four of these brave officers were wounded while confronting the attacker this weekend. “They do so much for us,” President Trump said. “And they’re really unsung heroes. They don’t get the credit they deserve.”

Photo of the Day


Official White House Photo by Carlos Fyfe
The American flag is flying at half-staff above the White House as our Nation grieves the victims of the shooting at Tree of Life Synagogue in Pittsburgh | October 29, 2018









The White House | October 30, 2018

President Trump and First Lady visit Tree of Life Synagogue in Pittsburgh

In the immediate aftermath of Saturday’s anti-Semitic attack, President Donald J. Trump condemned the shooting as an act of “pure evil” and called on the Nation to come together as one people united in a struggle for justice, safety, tolerance, and love.
Today, the President and First Lady visited Pittsburgh to meet with family members of the victims and mourn the loss of life with the entire community.
Their first stop was the Tree of Life Synagogue, where 11 Jewish Americans were murdered during a baby-naming ceremony Saturday morning. Accompanied by Rabbi Jeffrey Myers, President Trump and the First Lady walked alongside one another, placing a white flower and small stone on each of the 11 stars erected in a makeshift memorial outside the synagogue. Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner followed a few steps behind, pausing at each star.
Inside the synagogue, the President and First Lady lit candles for each of the 11 victims.
Before leaving Pittsburgh, President Trump visited with wounded law enforcement officers and injured victims at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center’s Presbyterian Hospital. “These were very brave officers. These are incredible people of law enforcement,” the President said after the attack on Saturday. “They’re really unsung heroes.”

Trump visits Pittsburgh synagogue to pay respects to victims of massacre

By Andrew O'Reilly | Fox News

President Trump on Tuesday visited the synagogue in Pittsburgh where a gunman over the weekend opened fire and killed 11 people in the bloodiest anti-Semitic attack in U.S. history.
The president traveled to Squirrel Hill, the historic hub of the city's Jewish community and the location of Tree of Life synagogue. Trump was accompanied by first lady Melania Trump, his daughter, Ivanka, son-in-law Jared Kushner, Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin and White House Chief of Staff John Kelly.

Accompanied by Rabbi Jeffrey Myers, the president and first lady laid white roses and stones from the White House - a Jewish tradition - at the makeshift memorial outside the synagogue.

Trump’s visit came on the day that Pittsburgh’s Jewish community held the first in a weeklong series of funerals for the 11 people killed -- allegedly by 46-year-old Robert Gregory Bowers -- amid complaints in some quarters that his presence would take too much focus off the dead. Some critics have accused Trump of fomenting racial and ethnic hostility and have said he deserves some of the blame for the bloodshed.
"Well, I'm just going to pay my respects," Trump told Fox News' Laura Ingraham on Monday. "I'm also going to the hospital to see the officers and some of the people that were so badly hurt."

Following his time at the synagogue, Trump traveled to the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center to visit the injured victims, including four police officers wounded by gunfire during Saturday's attack, and the hospital staff.
Trump's trip is set against the backdrop of national unease over incidents of political violence and hate, and questions about his credibility as a unifier. Since his 2016 campaign for the White House, critics say Trump has been slow to denounce white nationalists, neo-Nazis and other hate-filled individuals and groups that found common cause with his nationalistic political rhetoric.
Hundreds of protestors gathered a few blocks from the synagogue during Trump's visit.
Local and religious leaders were divided on whether Trump should visit. Pittsburgh Mayor Bill Peduto, a Democrat, told reporters before the visit was announced that the White House ought to consult with the families of the victims about their preferences and asked that the president not come during a funeral.
Neither he nor Pennsylvania Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf planned to appear with Trump Tuesday.
Peduto's spokesman said the mayor's "sole focus" is on the funerals for victims and supporting their families.
"He is making no other appearances, whether with the president or anyone else," the spokesman said. "That is his focus for the rest of the week, too, as funerals are scheduled for every day through Friday."

Beth Melena, Wolf's campaign spokeswoman, said the governor did not plan to return to Pittsburgh as part of Trump's visit on Tuesday. She said he based his decision on input from the victims' families, who told him they did not want the president to be there on the day their loved ones were being buried.
"Community leaders expressed to the governor that they did not feel it was appropriate for Trump to come, so the governor made a decision not to join him on his visit out of respect for the families and the community," Melena said.
House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., also all declined to accompany the president on his trip to Pittsburgh. Ryan, however, tweeted that he was "grateful" to the president for traveling to Pittsburgh.

Myers, the Pittsburgh rabbi who watched his congregants die at the Tree of Life synagogue, has faced backlash after telling reporters “the president of the United States is always welcome.”
“I’m a citizen. He’s my president. He is certainly welcome,” Myers said.

Prominent Pittsburgh Republican Jim Roddey told WPXI that Trump needs to steer clear of any political talk when he visits.
In Squirrel Hill, Barry Werber, 76, who said he survived the massacre by hiding in a dark storage closet as the gunman rampaged through the building, said he hoped Trump wouldn't visit, noting that the president has embraced the politically fraught label of "nationalist."
"It's part of his program to instigate his base," Werber said, and "bigots are coming out of the woodwork."
He continued, “(Trump) has been active in the midterms…and I hope he’s not going to come here and have a rally. That’s not what the city needs. It’s not what the people want.”
Asked Monday if Trump has done enough to condemn white nationalism, White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said the president "has denounced racism, hatred and bigotry in all forms on a number of occasions."
She added: "Some individuals — they're grieving, they're hurting. The president wants to be there to show the support of this administration for the Jewish community. The rabbi said that he is welcome as well."
Bowers was transferred from Allegheny County Jail to Butler County Prison on request of U.S. marshals Tuesday.  A source from the U.S. Attorney’s Office told Fox News that Bowers was released from the hospital Monday for court and never went back there.
Fox News’ Barnini Chakraborty, Matt Finn, Madelin Fuerste and The Associated Press contributed to this report.


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