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Norway -one of the most anti semitic countries on earth

CMike

Well-Known Member
It is one of the only country that make it illegal for jews to slaughter a cow to make it kosher.

However, arabs can do it their method and it's legal.

The prime minister of Norway gave the brilliant advice that Obama shouldn't have appointed Rahm Emanuel, simply because he is a jew.

Below is an article by Alan Dershowitz on his visit to a jew's hell on earth--Norway.

Alan Dershowitz: Norway to Jews—You're Not Welcome Here - WSJ.com
 

Poeticus

| abhyAvartin |
Namaste,

It's asking me to subscribe...is there a version of the article I can see and read without subscribing or joining the forum?

M.V.
 

CMike

Well-Known Member
Sorry...

Norway to Jews: You're Not Welcome Here

Anti-Semitism doesn't even mask itself as anti-Zionism.






  • By
  • ALAN M. DERSHOWITZ
I recently completed a tour of Norwegian universities, where I spoke about international law as applied to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. But the tour nearly never happened.

Its sponsor, a Norwegian pro-Israel group, offered to have me lecture without any charge to the three major universities. Norwegian universities generally jump at any opportunity to invite lecturers from elsewhere.

When my Harvard colleague Stephen Walt, co-author of "The Israel Lobby," came to Norway, he was immediately invited to present a lecture at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology in Trondheim. Likewise with Ilan Pappe, a demonizer of Israel who teaches at Oxford.
My hosts expected, therefore, that their offer to have me present a different academic perspective on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict would be eagerly accepted. I have written half a dozen books on the subject presenting a centrist view in support of the two-state solution. But the universities refused.


The dean of the law faculty at Bergen University said he would be "honored" to have me present a lecture "on the O.J. Simpson case," as long as I was willing to promise not to mention Israel. An administrator at the Trondheim school said that Israel was too "controversial."

The University of Oslo simply said "no" without offering an excuse. That led one journalist to wonder whether the Norwegian universities believe that I am "not entirely house-trained."

Only once before have I been prevented from lecturing at universities in a country. The other country was Apartheid South Africa.

Despite the faculties' refusals to invite me, I delivered three lectures to packed auditoriums at the invitation of student groups. I received sustained applause both before and after the talks.

It was then that I realized why all this happened. At all of the Norwegian universities, there have been efforts to enact academic and cultural boycotts of Jewish Israeli academics. This boycott is directed against Israel's "occupation" of Palestinian land—but the occupation that the boycott supporters have in mind is not of the West Bank but rather of Israel itself. Here is the first line of their petition: "Since 1948 the state of Israel has occupied Palestinian land . . ."

The administrations of the universities have refused to go along with this form of collective punishment of all Israeli academics, so the formal demand for a boycott failed. But in practice it exists. Jewish pro-Israel speakers are subject to a de facto boycott.

The first boycott signatory was Trond Adresen, a professor at Trondheim. About Jews, he has written: "There is something immensely self-satisfied and self-centered at the tribal mentality that is so prevalent among Jews. . . . [They] as a whole, are characterized by this mentality. . . . It is no less legitimate to say such a thing about Jews in 2008-2009 than it was to make the same point about the Germans around 1938."
T
his line of talk—directed at Jews, not Israel—is apparently acceptable among many in Norway's elite. Consider former Prime Minister Kare Willock's reaction to President Obama's selection of Rahm Emanuel as his first chief of staff: "It does not look too promising, he has chosen a chief of staff who is Jewish." Mr. Willock didn't know anything about Mr. Emanuel's views—he based his criticism on the sole fact that Mr. Emanuel is a Jew. Perhaps unsurprisingly, fewer than 1,000 Jews live in Norway today.

The country's foreign minister recently wrote an article justifying his contacts with Hamas. He said that the essential philosophy of Norway is "dialogue." That dialogue, it turns out, is one-sided. Hamas and its supporters are invited into the dialogue, but supporters of Israel are excluded by an implicit, yet very real, boycott against pro-Israel views.
Mr. Dershowitz is a law professor at Harvard. His latest novel is "The Trials of Zion" (Grand Central Publishing, 2010).
 

CMike

Well-Known Member
मैत्रावरुणिः;3422832 said:
Namaste,

It's asking me to subscribe...is there a version of the article I can see and read without subscribing or joining the forum?

M.V.

Who is namaste?
 

CMike

Well-Known Member
Of course.

In fact a Noway Rabbi he met there spoke in my synagogue two weeks ago about it.
 

Poeticus

| abhyAvartin |
Namaste,

It is sad. I wish something can change about this. Too much hatred is ruining this world.

M.V.
 

LuisDantas

Aura of atheification
Premium Member
So imposing certain rules about how to kill cattle and advising Obama not to nominate Jewish advisors qualifies a country as being a leading anti-semitist?

It doesn't look like worth losing any sleep about, frankly.
 

Kilgore Trout

Misanthropic Humanist
So imposing certain rules about how to kill cattle and advising Obama not to nominate Jewish advisors qualifies a country as being a leading anti-semitist?

It doesn't look like worth losing any sleep about, frankly.

It's worth losing sleep over when you consider Europe's history of anti-semitism and the horrific results of this attitude.
 

LuisDantas

Aura of atheification
Premium Member
Racism is always a bad thing. But really, do those two situations even register in the global scale of racism?
 

Kilgore Trout

Misanthropic Humanist
Racism is always a bad thing. But really, do those two situations even register in the global scale of racism?

Anti-semitism is a bit different than racism, but I'd say anything which reflects and continues lingering attitudes which led to the systemized extermination of 6 million people should always register.
 

CMike

Well-Known Member
So imposing certain rules about how to kill cattle and advising Obama not to nominate Jewish advisors qualifies a country as being a leading anti-semitist?

It doesn't look like worth losing any sleep about, frankly.

Did you read the article?

Its is rules against how not to kill cattle which is specifically targeted at Jews.

Ask yourself why?
 

CMike

Well-Known Member
I wanted to add that arabs are allowed to practice Hallel and slaughter their cows/beef the way they want.
 

ignition

Active Member
I really couldn't care less what Dershowitz thought. And you're breaching copyright laws by pasting the entire article on this website.
 

Pagan_Patriot

Active Member
It's full of Muslim immigrants.

Remember those Israeli athletes who were threatened in Sweden too?

They're scared to offend Muslims, but they'll offend Jews all day, to please their Saudi masters.
 

Assad91

Shi'ah Ali
I don't agree with the sole leader who made that crack about Obama appointing a Jew. And I don't agree with slandering Jews as a whole.

But I do applaud the boycott against Israel.

Seems to me Norway has to extremes. An anti-muslim and an anti-jew.
 
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