ConfusedJew wrote: ↑Wed May 07, 2025 10:43 pm
How do you define the best interests of its people? No two people will say that they share the same "best interests" and often times what people say isn't what they actually need or want.
People of NS Germany overwhelmingly agreed on what their "best interests" were. People today do so less often because social dissonance (culturally, ethnically, politically, etc.) is precisely what Jews have brought about, intentionally. Nations which are at war with themselves are less likely to collectively recognize Jewish subversive tactics and, thus, pose problems for Jews.
What does that mean to be disloyal to your nation. What loyalty is owed to the country in which you hold citizenship? Members of Trump's campaign met with a mysterious guy who was fed intelligence from the Russian intelligence community about the existence of Hillary Clinton's emails? Was that treasonous?
Questions about a "nation" are complicated in the world of today as, once again, Jews have created 'nations' which are so chaotic to be almost completely incoherent as a 'nation'.
Your narratives about Trump (one of many Jewish plants in politics; this also includes Biden, Bush, Obama, etc.) are nothing I would ever take seriously. The bottom-line is that all of these clowns (and almost everyone in Congress) accept AIPAC money and ultimately serve Jewish interests over American interests.
Similar patterns exist across Europe and elsewhere.
How do you define "subversion" and how do you measure who is the most subversive? This is a sincere question. If 20% of one group is contributing 90% of the subversion from the whole group, is it fair to take it out on the remaining 80% who are doing little if anything that you don't like?
This 'not all Jews' question is addressed directly, here:
https://www.codohforum.com/viewtopic.php?t=144
I'm not familiar with these terms in great detail. I would appreciate if you could provide clarity on them and maybe give specific examples.
No thanks, you can 'Google' it.
It would be a great kiddush Hashem if you would stop being such a dishonest, slippery little guy and maybe at least try to debate honestly.
But I suppose that's asking a tiger to change its stripes.
Very good question, I am not sure, I will think about this and get back to you. It should apply to all citizens or non citizens.
Oh, it seems you're pretending to miss the point. Nice.