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Sunday, 1 May 2016

Feeling Sorry for Labour Party Members

Diane Abbott tells us it's a smear to say that Labour has an anti-semitism problem.

When it turns out that a Labour MP - and one who saw off the appalling Galloway - tweeted an image suggesting Israel be transported to the Mid-West of America, that wasn't a smear.

When a leading Labour politician, out of a clear blue sky, decided to say that Hitler was a Zionist on the basis of a controversial "historian", that wasn't a smear.

When another member of the Labour party called him out for it, and some set up a petition calling for that other member to be expelled - that wasn't a smear.

The decent, non-discriminatory members of the Labour Party - who make up the vast majority - who joined because that was the way they believed they could build a decent country - must be crying into their tea or flat beer according to choice. Because they personally don't have an anti-semitism problem.

And the leadership, if it's capable, should get a grip. Ordering an investigation is what you do when you don't want to know the answers for a little while. Just ask Lord Chilcott.

If the Labour Party has an anti-semitism problem, it needs to get rid of it quickly. Because we need a strong opposition, a decent alternative, somebody we can vote for when we want to get rid of the current shower. If Labour has a problem, we all do.

6 comments:

  1. Thank you for your sympathy. We do need to get our idiots under control. But they do not represent the views and ethics of the Labour Party. We have a problem, but much smaller than the Tory press wants you to think.
    Happy May Day!

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    1. But bigger than Diane Abbott is prepared to admit to.

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  2. Look up the Haavara Agreement. Also look up the EUMC Working Definition of Antsemitism and tell me you don't have an issue with at least 2 of the criteria.

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  3. Erm, I think it's actually true that Hitler wanted initially to create a Jewish homeland in Palestine to get them out of Germany (which, I suppose, might make him a kind of Zionist). Then when that proved difficult, he thought about Madagascar or Siberia. Then, when that proved impractical… well, we all know the horrific final solution.

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    1. Pastor, I think you're confusing "create a Jewish homeland" with "see a cheap way to get rid of some Jews". And even then that was only with one group. That doesn't make him a Zionst. It makes him an evil opportunist. Haavara Agreement

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