Wednesday, August 16, 2017

Republican Jewish Coalition

Washington, D.C. (August 16, 2017) --  The RJC released a statement today from National Chairman Senator Norm Coleman and Executive Director Matt Brooks:

The Nazis, the KKK, and white supremacists are dangerous anti-Semites. There are no good Nazis and no good members of the Klan. Thankfully, in modern America, the KKK and Nazis are small fringe groups that have never been welcome in the GOP.

We join with our political and religious brethren in calling upon President Trump to provide greater moral clarity in rejecting racism, bigotry, and antisemitism. [What is it about what he said that  is not strong enough?]

As representatives of the Party whose founder, Abraham Lincoln, broke the shackles of slavery, and of an organization with many members who experienced firsthand the inhumanity of the Nazi Holocaust, we state unequivocally our rejection of these hatemongers - you can expect no less from the Republican Jewish Coalition.

50 F Street, N.W., Suite 100 | Washington, DC 20001

This email was sent to lynn113@comcast.net

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

If you parse the words of The President's speech, you could come up with the interpretation that is the food of the CNN Piranhas today. As I understood the speech, he did not claim that there were good people among the KKK and the White Supremacists. As a rational person with better than average listening and interpreting skills, I would attribute to his meaning the fact that there were good people, in the crowd, perhaps, or within earshot. The President knows that there are no good people among the KKK and the White Supremacists. Everyone knows that. By the same token, and this may come as a surprise to today's brainwashed youth: Not all Black people are good. Not all people are good, and in fact, we seem to be reaching the tipping point.

Anonymous said...

When everybody gets a trophy and never hears the word NO from their pot laced "parents" You have idiots that are incapable of knowing that they did anything wrong.

Anonymous said...

In the days leading up to 9/11, Mullah Omar ordered the destruction of the Bamiyan Buddhas by the Taliban. And, or course, there was no one who either could, or would put a stop to it. Don't we have something very similar taking place here, and will no one put a stop to it? We are being taken over by a totalitarian regime, and no one has a name for it. Why are we unable to stop this; what madness compels us to watch this demon culture destroy our world. Guilt? Fear? Cowardice?