in 1918 they finally got equality. that's all they wanted, right? hmm but within only 20 yrs:
Following the 1939 Soviet invasion of Poland, resulting in the partition of Polish territory between Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union (USSR), Jewish communities in eastern Poland welcomed with some relief the Soviet occupation, which they saw as a "lesser of two evils" than openly antisemitic Nazi Germany.[53][54][55] The image of Jews among the Belorussian and Ukrainian minorities waving red flags to welcome Soviet troops had great symbolic meaning in Polish memory of the period.[56] Jan T. Gross noted that "there were proportionately more communist sympathizers among Jews than among any other nationality in the local population".[55] In the days and weeks following the events of September 1939, the Soviets engaged in a harsh policy of Sovietization. Polish schools and other institutions were closed, Poles were dismissed from jobs of authority, often arrested and deported, and replaced with non-Polish personnel.
Many Poles resented their change of fortunes because, before the war, Poles had a privileged position compared to other ethnic groups of the Second Republic. Then, in the space of a few days, Jews and other minorities from within Poland (mainly Ukrainians and Belorussians) occupied newly vacant positions in the Soviet occupation government and administration—such as teachers, civil servants and engineers—positions that some claimed they had trouble achieving under the Polish government.[62][63] What to the majority of Poles was occupation and betrayal was, to some Jews—especially Polish Communists of Jewish descent who emerged from the underground—an opportunity for revolution and retribution.
When asked by the judge if he felt any sort of guilt, Tehlirian remarked, “I do not consider myself guilty because my conscience is clear…I have killed a man. But I am not a murderer’. It took the jury slightly over an hour to render a verdict of “not guilty. The president of the court building on the “Nein” of the jury announced the court’s decision that Soghomon is acquitted and released.
Okay, what about the ones that brought the decline of the first civilizations? The ones in Mesopotamia, along the Nile, and in the rest of the Fertile Crescent?.
Correct, nobody needed to do anything to about their problems before the jews caused problems for them because there were no problems to do anything about.
[ - ] Redhairin 1 point 2.6 yearsOct 1, 2022 21:55:03 ago (+1/-0)
It ain't that "nobody’s gonna do shit"...it's that the shit they choose to do is always tooo little. The jew has been expelled over a thousand times from various countries, but they just lay low til the shitstorm has passed, then go back, and it's rinse and repeat time. Over and over again. The jews know eventually they will get it right, or get lucky.
[ + ] BlueEyedAngloMasterRaceGod
[ - ] BlueEyedAngloMasterRaceGod 0 points 2.6 yearsOct 2, 2022 00:34:04 ago (+0/-0)
Following the 1939 Soviet invasion of Poland, resulting in the partition of Polish territory between Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union (USSR), Jewish communities in eastern Poland welcomed with some relief the Soviet occupation, which they saw as a "lesser of two evils" than openly antisemitic Nazi Germany.[53][54][55] The image of Jews among the Belorussian and Ukrainian minorities waving red flags to welcome Soviet troops had great symbolic meaning in Polish memory of the period.[56] Jan T. Gross noted that "there were proportionately more communist sympathizers among Jews than among any other nationality in the local population".[55] In the days and weeks following the events of September 1939, the Soviets engaged in a harsh policy of Sovietization. Polish schools and other institutions were closed, Poles were dismissed from jobs of authority, often arrested and deported, and replaced with non-Polish personnel.
Many Poles resented their change of fortunes because, before the war, Poles had a privileged position compared to other ethnic groups of the Second Republic. Then, in the space of a few days, Jews and other minorities from within Poland (mainly Ukrainians and Belorussians) occupied newly vacant positions in the Soviet occupation government and administration—such as teachers, civil servants and engineers—positions that some claimed they had trouble achieving under the Polish government.[62][63] What to the majority of Poles was occupation and betrayal was, to some Jews—especially Polish Communists of Jewish descent who emerged from the underground—an opportunity for revolution and retribution.
[ + ] Empire_of_the_Mind
[ - ] Empire_of_the_Mind 0 points 2.6 yearsOct 2, 2022 02:37:51 ago (+0/-0)
[ + ] Belfuro
[ - ] Belfuro 1 point 2.6 yearsOct 1, 2022 23:14:43 ago (+1/-0)
[ + ] PostWallHelena
[ - ] PostWallHelena 4 points 2.6 yearsOct 1, 2022 19:50:18 ago (+4/-0)
[ + ] didyouknow
[ - ] didyouknow [op] 2 points 2.6 yearsOct 2, 2022 05:31:06 ago (+2/-0)*
Sometimes real justice do happen:
https://files.catbox.moe/8bb02e.jpg
[ + ] AntiPostmodernist
[ - ] AntiPostmodernist 0 points 2.6 yearsOct 1, 2022 19:09:24 ago (+0/-0)
[ + ] didyouknow
[ - ] didyouknow [op] 5 points 2.6 yearsOct 1, 2022 19:17:13 ago (+5/-0)
https://files.catbox.moe/30wrip.png
[ + ] PostWallHelena
[ - ] PostWallHelena 1 point 2.6 yearsOct 1, 2022 19:48:35 ago (+1/-0)
[ + ] AntiPostmodernist
[ - ] AntiPostmodernist 2 points 2.6 yearsOct 1, 2022 20:05:43 ago (+2/-0)
[ + ] PrincessRobotBubblegum
[ - ] PrincessRobotBubblegum 2 points 2.6 yearsOct 1, 2022 18:50:20 ago (+2/-0)
[ + ] AntiPostmodernist
[ - ] AntiPostmodernist 3 points 2.6 yearsOct 1, 2022 19:26:44 ago (+3/-0)*
[ + ] Redhairin
[ - ] Redhairin 1 point 2.6 yearsOct 1, 2022 21:55:03 ago (+1/-0)