Forwarded from Andrew Joyce Audio and Video Archive
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Andrew Joyce - BLM Irish Edition
Forwarded from Andrew Joyce Audio and Video Archive
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Forwarded from Andrew Joyce Audio and Video Archive
Andrew Joyce on the Limerick Boycott
Forwarded from Andrew Joyce Backup Archive
https://www.theoccidentalobserver.net/2012/03/17/the-limerick-pogrom-creating-jewish-victimhood/
This was also covered in Dr Joyce's first article for The Occidental Observer.
This was also covered in Dr Joyce's first article for The Occidental Observer.
Forwarded from Andrew Joyce Backup Archive
https://www.theoccidentalobserver.net/2012/03/17/the-limerick-pogrom-creating-jewish-victimhood/
The Limerick “pogrom”: Creating Jewish victimhood (originally published 17-3-2012)
"The only incidents of populist action in the British Isles directed against Jews during the peak immigration period (1880–1911) occurred outside England, in precisely those areas which had hitherto been free of Jews — Limerick, Ireland (1904), and South Wales (1911). Both have gone down in ‘history’ as unprovoked atrocities committed against small communities of blameless and defenceless Jews."
"By far the most prominent explanation employed by supporters of the boycott was the assertion that it was retaliation against harmful, usurious trading methods which were alleged to be widespread among the Jewish merchants of Limerick. In particular, Jewish traders were accused of preying on housewives, abandoned by husbands who had left to take part in the Boer War — a conflict in which Jewish interests played a prominent role."
The Limerick “pogrom”: Creating Jewish victimhood (originally published 17-3-2012)
"The only incidents of populist action in the British Isles directed against Jews during the peak immigration period (1880–1911) occurred outside England, in precisely those areas which had hitherto been free of Jews — Limerick, Ireland (1904), and South Wales (1911). Both have gone down in ‘history’ as unprovoked atrocities committed against small communities of blameless and defenceless Jews."
"By far the most prominent explanation employed by supporters of the boycott was the assertion that it was retaliation against harmful, usurious trading methods which were alleged to be widespread among the Jewish merchants of Limerick. In particular, Jewish traders were accused of preying on housewives, abandoned by husbands who had left to take part in the Boer War — a conflict in which Jewish interests played a prominent role."