Wednesday, April 16, 2014

Swastikas in Israel (?!); Putin and the Ukraine; "Happy" Passover!

From the NSP News Service:  Nazi symbols now banned in Israel? The term "Nazi" now prohibited? For a nation so obsessed with its history -- particularly recent history and the so-called Holocaust -- we at the NSP are shocked that it has taken so long for the "eternal Jews" to take these measures!

Also, do a little digging on a good search engine, and discover how recent events in the Ukraine have affected neo-Nazism there!

Finally, the NSP decries the efforts of the Russian Putin regime to force itself on the Ukraine (aside from the Crimea, that is). Or are the Ukrainians just plain stupid!

-- Karl Wolff III, Associate Director, NSP.  1488! -- And a "happy Passover" to all. Let's hope the god of the jews passess over his "tribe" and gives them a good "lick'in" for all of their recent misconduct!  Heil Hitler!!!

Nazi Symbol Use to be Banned in Israel

The Ministerial Law Committee on Sunday approved a law that would forbid use of Nazi symbols, or calling someone a Nazi.
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By David Lev
First Publish: 1/12/2014, 6:09 PM

Swastika graffiti
Swastika graffiti
Flash 90
The Ministerial Law Committee on Sunday approved for a first Knesset vote a law that would forbid use of Nazi symbols, or calling someone a Nazi. The law was proposed by MK Shimon Ohayon (Likud-Beytenu) in response to neo-Nazi activity in Israel.
Although it is not clear how or why such groups have sprung up in the Jewish state, various neo-Nazi gangs have undertaken arson attacks against synagogues, scrawled anti-Semitic and pro-Nazi graffiti, and beaten up numerous people, mostly older Israelis.
Various gangs have been discovered in Jerusalem, Petach Tikvah, and Ariel, made up exclusively of immigrant youths (nearly all non-Jewish) from former Soviet Union countries and Eastern Europe.
Commenting on the approval, Ohayon, who also heads the Knesset lobby on anti-Semitism, said that “it is very important that Israel join the many countries in Europe that prohibit all use of Nazi symbols. These are a danger to Jews wherever they are, and as long as these symbols are not illegal in Israel we cannot go to the nations with complaints about how they allow their use,” Ohayon added.
The use of "Nazi" as an epithet is not uncommon in demonstrations by hareidim, and is mostly directed at police. However, leftists are also very fond of comparing nationalists to Nazis. Some Arabs in the Palestinian Authority openly resort to Nazi imagery against Israel.

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