About a year ago I wrote a piece on Avi Yemeni saying that he might be a nice bloke, he might even be someone I would share a beer with if I met him in the workplace or wherever. But I couldn’t trust his political activism and the job he acquired with Rebel News simply because he was a Jew and Rebel was owned by a Jew and too many Jews were in positions of power around the world and using that power to push a Globalist Agenda.
For that expression of suspicion and caution due to allegiances that Avi MIGHT have because of the tribe he belongs to, I was no longer welcome to speak at the protests in Perth. I was put on a top 20 list of most dangerous anti semites in Australia by a Jewish lobby group and I’ve had the anti terrorism police at my door (though as it happened much later and I refused to speak to them, I don’t know what particular hate crime or thought crime or breaking of lockdown rules they were there for).
Anyway. This video has surfaced of Avi telling everyone to lock down and all I can say is that the willingness to have a beer with the bloke, under the principle of judge each man as an individual, no longer exists.
My willingness to have a drink with another Jew is still there. It’s not like I go out of my way to meet Jews, but in principle I have nothing against any individual without knowing them. It’s just that collective judgements are a normal part of life and certain groups give one more hurdles than others to jump before an individual is trusted. The fact that nearly all Jews are not descendants of Israel as they claim and weren’t thrown on mass into gas chambers during WW2 and have lots of other collective issues to give pause, doesn’t mean every single one, without exception must be aware of all this and be a bad person. It just dramatically increased the chances and my first priority is self preservation, not being a nice guy. So hurdles an individual from some groups, must jump through, before trust is given is higher than from others.
The hurdle for Jews just became a little bit higher.