Get a clue, suckers: kikes/satanists WILL NOT ALLOW any sympathetic, objective rendition of Hitler

Apollonian

Guest Columnist
NJ Elementary Student's Assignment Appearing to Glorify Hitler Sparks Outrage

Link: https://www.nbcnewyork.com/news/loc...ring-to-glorify-hitler-sparks-outage/3083250/

Reactions from Tenafly community members have been strong, especially in light of recent antisemitic attacks. They say they are outraged and some are calling for the teacher's dismissal

Published June 1, 2021, Updated on June 1, 2021 at 9:42 pm
NBC Universal, Inc.

There was outrage on social media after a New Jersey’s student’s homework assignment on a historical figure seemingly glorified Adolf Hitler, and was displayed on a bulletin board. NBC New York’s Sarah Wallace reports.

A New Jersey elementary school student's assignment about Adolf Hitler has sparked an investigation after the report that appeared to glorify the Nazi leader was put on display.

The assignment completed last week by a fifth-grade student at Maugham Elementary School was met with outrage from parents who say the teacher failed by allowing the student to praise Hitler for his "accomplishments."

The report, referring to Hitler, said "I was pretty great, wasn't I?" It also noted his unification of Germans and Austrians, saying "I was very popular" with only one reference to the antisemitism that drove the dictator to kill more than six million Jewish people.

The report was posted alongside others for several days in the hallway during April. The school principal and parents did not talk with reporters after school was let out Tuesday afternoon.

Reactions from community members have been strong, especially in light of recent antisemitic attacks. They say they are outraged and some are calling for the teacher's dismissal.

A New Jersey elementary school student's assignment about Adolf Hitler has sparked an investigation after the report that appeared to glorify the Nazi leader was put on display. NBC New York's Checkey Beckford reports.

"The teacher failed to recognize the profound impact this can have on students, family members and others in our community who could perceive this project as condoning or even glorifying the atrocities of one of the most evil individuals in the world history," said Jordan Shenker, CEO of the Kaplen JCC on the Palisades.

The regional director for the Anti=Defamation League said that the group was shocked at what was being displayed, and said they they had reached out to the district to ensure that Holocaust education is taught accurately and respectfully.

It's unclear if any actions were taken but the Tenafly Board of Education is reviewing the situation, according to the Tenafly Public Schools Superintendent Shauna DeMarco.

"In the meantime, we are committed – as always – to cultivating a positive school culture that has no room for hate, prejudice, bias, or oppression. We are proud of our District’s actions and policies regarding diversity, equity, and inclusion and are committed to ensuring adherence to these guiding principles," DeMarco said.

The Tenafly Board of Education said in a statement Tuesday that the assignment was on "social norms and historical figures who personify good and evil," and that it had been taken "out of context, resulting in understandable. anger and concern."

"The assignment (which was given by a teacher who happens to be Jewish) asked students to speak from the perspective of one of these individuals and how they might have perceived and rationalized their actions," the board said in a statement. "When people saw the students' projects, which were displayed in the school, they did not understand the assignment, resulting in justifiable concerns. Given that the less was specifically issued within the context of social justice, it is unfair to judge any student or teacher in this matter."
 
Behind Facebook’s Banning of the IHR
Another Stroke in the Campaign Against ‘Hate’

Link: http://ihr.org/news/FacebookBansIHR

Mark Weber, Director
Institute for Historical Review
December 2020

On Nov. 27, 2020, Facebook removed the Institute for Historical Review from its popular social media platform. No reason was given for the abrupt measure, but it was hardly a surprise.

It came right after the publication of three widely distributed media items that complained that Facebook had still not dropped the IHR. These articles were in line with a decade-old campaign by Jewish-Zionist groups to get social media platforms to remove the IHR and other organizations they regard as harmful to their interests and agenda.

Three days before the de-platforming, The Markup, an organization based in New York City, issued a lengthy article which complained that the social media giant had not yet acted against the IHR. To support its portrayal of the IHR as a “Holocaust denial” group, the Markup article told readers that the California-based center has been “identified by the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) as ‘a pseudo-academic organization that claims to seek “truth and accuracy in history,” but whose real purpose is to promote Holocaust denial and defend Nazism’.”

Aaron Sankin, author of the article, acknowledged that he had made no independent effort to determine the accuracy of the SPLC claims. Nor, apparently, did he check out the IHR’s own website. “The Markup,” he wrote, “relied on the judgments of outside organizations that monitor hate groups to identify Holocaust denial groups.” (Later, Sankin declined my repeated request to answer a few questions about his article.)

In fact – and as the IHR’s “mission statement” posted on its website makes clear -- the IHR does not “deny” the Holocaust. The Institute has no “position” on any specific event or chapter of history, except to promote greater awareness and understanding, and to encourage more objective study. Articles and reviews posted on the IHR website, and presentations given at IHR meetings and conferences, represent a wide range of views. The IHR does not necessarily agree with the content or outlook of posted, published or distributed items. Further, even a quick look at the IHR site will quickly show that the vast majority of posted items have nothing to do with the Holocaust. On that basis alone, the dismissive characterization of the IHR as a “Holocaust denial” group is inaccurate.

The Southern Poverty Law Center, which clairvoyantly claims to have discerned the IHR’s “real purpose,” has garnered a good bit of attention in recent years for its misrepresentation and bias. In 2018, for example, the SPLC had to pay $3.4 million and publicly apologize to Maajid Nawaz, whom it had falsely labeled an “anti-Muslim extremist.” (He’s actually a practicing Muslim who opposes extremism.)

That episode was cited by the New York Post in an editorial that began: “It’s been a rough year for the Southern Poverty Law Center — deservedly so.” The influential paper went on the describe how the SPLC’s “overly broad definition of ‘hate’ often goes far beyond truly vile outfits to include people and groups that simply don’t toe a politically correct line.” In March 2019 former SPLC staffer Bob Mosey wrote a lengthy New Yorker piece in which he openly voiced what many SPLC staffers had been saying quietly for some time: “It was hard, for many of us, not to feel like we’d become pawns in what was, in many respects, a highly profitable scam.” A few months later, the social media platform Twitter quietly removed the SPLC from its “Trust and Safety Council,” apparently in response to numerous reports of racist and sexist misconduct within the SPLC itself.

In fact, the SPLC’s record of pretense and bias has been obvious for years. Already in 2007, the widely respected independent journalist and consistent defender of free speech, Alexander Cockburn, wrote in the New York Press: “I’ve long regarded Morris Dees and his Southern Poverty Law Center as collectively one of the greatest frauds in American life.” (Much more about the group’s dismal record can found on the “SPLC Exposed” website. )

Sankin’s article also makes clear that, in addition to the SPLC, he “relied” on the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) – an influential Jewish-Zionist organization based in New York -- to support his portrayal of the IHR. Like the SPLC, the ADL is a partisan organization with a record of misrepresentation and malicious hostility to the IHR. Both ADL and SPLC have, since their inceptions, sacrificed objectivity on the altar of zealotry.

Although the ADL portrays itself as a fighter against “hate” and discrimination based on ancestry or religion, for decades it has been a vehement defender of Israel and its policies of ethno-religious discrimination and oppression. While it preaches “diversity” and “tolerance” for the US, it promotes Jewish supremacy in Israel. Israel’s policies of institutionalized discrimination against and oppression of non-Jews have earned worldwide scorn – reflected, for example, in numerous United Nations resolutions critical of those policies that have been approved by overwhelmingly majorities of the world’s countries.

While the SPLC is quick to pin the “hate” label on groups and individuals that express support for past or potential policies of discrimination based on ancestry or religion, it refrains from any criticism of Zionist organizations that support Israel’s ongoing and institutionalized policies of discrimination and oppression based on ancestry and religion. If the SPLC were to act in a principled and consistent way, it would add the ADL to its roster of “hate” groups.

On the same day that Sankin’s piece appeared, Forbes published an article that seconded the Markup’s displeasure with Facebook for not dropping the IHR. And like the Markup piece, it also cited the SPLC to support its characterization of the IHR as a “Holocaust denial” group.

The next day, the Jewish Telegraphic Agency (JTA), a major Zionist news and opinion outlet, published a lengthy article that echoed the Markup and Forbes pieces, likewise complaining that Facebook had still not shut out the IHR.

The JTA piece described the IHR as “a Holocaust-denying organization masquerading as an academic center.” In fact, the Institute neither denies the Holocaust, nor does it “masquerade” as anything. The IHR describes itself simply as “an independent educational center and publisher that works to promote peace, understanding and justice through greater public awareness of the past, and especially socially-politically relevant aspects of modern history.” The U.S. Internal Revenue Service has for years recognized the IHR as a 501(c)(3) public interest, educational, not-for-profit enterprise.

Like the Markup and Forbes items, the JTA article provides no link to the IHR website. Had any of them done so, open-minded readers could easily make up their own minds as to what the IHR actually is and stands for. Apparently, none of the writers bothered even to check the IHR website.

The laziness, if not hostile close-mindedness, of those responsible for the Markup, Forbes and JTA articles is not uncommon in journalism today. It’s little wonder that -- as numerous public opinion polls have shown -- most Americans, regardless of political orientation, now regard the “establishment” media with distrust or contempt.

The recent Facebook move against the IHR is another “victory” in the protracted campaign to suppress all organizations and websites that influential Jewish-Zionist organizations and their allies regard as hostile to their interests and agenda. Facebook is not the only media company to fall in line with this effort. YouTube, for example, has banned many videos of IHR lectures and podcasts, and Google has severely restricted access to hundreds of IHR articles and reviews. People who care about accuracy and fairness in the media should understand the methods used by those who, in the name of “fighting hate,” work to silence voices they don’t like.
 
This is just another write-up of the same story as top, first, evidently. Jews and Satanism absolutely rule Jew S A, suckers, but the scummy dumb-sh*ts are still eating and watching TV in satisfaction, and that's all they really care about, obviously.

* * * * * * * * * * * * * *


A 5th-grade student gave a first-person speech dressed as Hitler. The teacher and school's principal are now on administrative leave.

Link: https://www.yahoo.com/news/5th-grade-student-gave-first-081924705.html

Joshua Zitser
June 5, 2021, 3:19 AM

Adolf Hitler, left. Maugham Elementary School, right. [ck site link, above]

A student at Maugham Elementary School dressed as Adolf Hitler for a school project. Getty Images, Google Maps

•A fifth-grade student dressed as Adolf Hitler and gave a speech titled, "Accomplishments."

•The speech was part of a "Character Development project" organized by his teacher, Fox News said.

•The school's principal and the student's teacher have been placed on administrative leave.

•See more stories on Insider's business page.

Two staff members have been placed on administrative leave after a fifth-grade student at a New Jersey elementary school gave a first-person speech as Adolf Hitler to his class, according to a statement by Tenafly Public Schools Superintendent Shauna C. DeMarco.

The student at Maugham Elementary School dressed as the Nazi dictator while reading out his handwritten report that was titled, "Accomplishments," Fox News reported."My greatest accomplishment was uniting a great mass of German and Austrian people behind me," the student wrote, according to the media outlet.

"I was pretty great, wasn't I?" the report continued. "I was very popular, and many people followed me until I died. My belif [sic] in antisemitism drove me to kill more than 6 million Jews."

The speech, part of a "Character Development project" organized by their teacher, who is Jewish, was displayed in the school's hallways. It was later shared on Facebook by Lori Birk, an Englewood resident, but has since been deleted.

DeMarco confirmed in a statement on Thursday that an investigation is underway as the project violated the district's curriculum and that the teacher and principal of the school have been placed on administrative leave.

"They will remain on leave pending the conclusion of my investigation, recommendations to the Board, and the Board's further action," DeMarco said. "I also have recommended that the Board appoint an acting principal and replacement teacher at Maugham immediately."

The superintendent added that the incident has been stressful for many people. "This has had a devastating impact on the student involved and their family, who have been thrown into turmoil through no fault of their own. It has also been incredibly painful for our Jewish community members in the face of increasing instances of antisemitism around the country."

DeMarco referred to the incident as a "failure" in the statement. "The events that have unfolded represent a failure in both providing the safe learning environment that all our kids need to learn and grow, as well as a failure in the school's initial handling,' she said.

Read the original article on Business Insider [ck site link, above, top]
 
Head of Slovenia’s New National Press Agency Calls Hitler a Hero

By STA, 03 Aug 2021, 16:08 PM Politics

Link: https://www.total-slovenia-news.com...new-national-press-agency-calls-hitler-a-hero

Urban Purgar and his now deleted tweet: "On this subject we know we won't all agree - Hitler is a #hero"

Urban Purgar and his now deleted tweet: "On this subject we know we won't all agree - Hitler is a #hero"

Screenshot

STA, 3 August 2021 - A tweet in which the editor-in-chief of the recently established National Press Agency (NTA) labels Adolf Hilter a hero has raised dust in the Slovenian public and drew condemnation from part of politics, with opposition parties demanding a response from the government and relevant authorities.

Urban Purgar, the NTA editor-in-chief and president of the Association for the Promotion of Traditional Values, which operates the media outlet, tweeted on Sunday that "Hitler is #hero" to spark strong reactions and condemnations.

As the tweet has also raised the question of whether such a post is a criminal act, lawyer and criminal law teacher at the European Faculty of Law Blaž Kovačič Mlinar has told the N1 news portal that such statements cannot be labelled a criminal act in Slovenia.

Glorification of totalitarian regimes is not a criminal act in Slovenia, he said, adding that Purgar's tweet did not contain enough elements to qualify as hate speech.

Former Justice Minister Aleš Zalar meanwhile said on Twitter that glorifying Hitler, a symbol of Nazism, was a criminal act. "It is on the state prosecution to make a move. The reaction of the state's repressive apparatus must be immediate and strict."

Several political parties have said that such posts are unacceptable, with the opposition Marjan Šarec List (LMŠ) demanding that the government and relevant authorities launch appropriate proceedings against Purgar ex officio.

"In democratic Slovenia, such posts and spreading of intolerance are absolutely unacceptable. We expect from all government parties to clearly condemn such glorification of Hitler and, above all, to take measures," the party added.

Purgar's post has been also condemned by Matej Tonin, the head of the coalition New Slovenia (NSi).

"European nations suffered in the past century due to three totalitarian regimes. Glorifying leaders who are responsible for the death of millions of people is reprehensible and has no place in modern society," he said.

Opposition Social Democrats (SD) deputy Marko Koprivc addressed an initiative to the government regarding the "provocations related to the glorification of neo-Nazi ideologies in Slovenian society".

He has proposed that the government and the Ministry of Culture strip the Association for the Promotion of Traditional Values of the status of a non-governmental organisation of public interest in the field of culture.

Koprivc also called on relevant authorities to initiate proceedings against the association and its president due to glorification of neo-Nazi ideologies and incitement of intolerance and hatred in the Slovenian society.

The government and the Culture Ministry should also publicly distance themselves from the ideas promoted by the so-called Yellow Jackets and "similar associations and groups" and make sure that such messages no longer enjoy their support.

The opposition Left thinks that this is a direct consequence of the "spreading of divisions and hatred" by the ruling Democrats (SDS), whose rhetoric "gives wings to such ideas."

The party added that numerous visible representatives of the SDS "flirt with neo-Nazi and neo-Fascist organisations, including the prime minister", which is why glorification of Hitler is not surprising.

"Being appalled and moralising is not enough. It is a criminal act that must be immediately penalised, and the status of the association and its financing abolished," the Left said.

The head of the Pensioners' Party (DeSUS), Ljubo Jasnič, also strongly condemned the post. "My parents and my close relatives have survived Fascism and the Dachau death camp as patriotic Slovenians of Primorska.

"Me and my friends witnessed the literal slaughtering in the Balkans, a genocide over a nation that could have been fatal for us as well. History obviously no longer teaches us," he told the STA.

The opposition Alenka Bratušek Party (SAB) said in its response for the STA that it "strongly condemned the post and expected from relevant bodies to act against the known person who glorified Hitler".

Opposition National Party (SNS) head Zmago Jelinčič blamed the post on "permissive parenting that has destroyed all traditional values and knowledge, including of history".

Purgar, who is also a member of the Yellow Jackets, a far-right group linked to neo-Nazis, meanwhile said on the NTA website that the purpose of the tweet was to "reveal all the misery of Slovenian 'left-wing politics' and journalism".
 
Back
Top