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Glory_Beckons ago

This is fake disinformation which undermines genuine criticism of Jewish fairy tales.

The first paragraph and the cut off bit of third paragraph are lifted from an article titled "Time 'Too Painful' to Remember" published by New York Times on Thursday, November 10, 1988. In fact, even the last sentence of the second paragraph ("It's unbelievable... but it happened") is also lifted from that article.

The remainder of the second paragraph, everything about the shotgun and hole in the wall, is entirely fabricated.

Then whoever made this photoshopped the text to create the appearance of an old book. The real article looked very different.

This kind of deception is entirely unnecessary, as the original article really does contain this gem of Jewish absurdity:

Later, Mr. Hubert was sent to Buchenwald. ''In the camp there was a cage with a bear and an eagle,'' he said. ''Every day, they would throw a Jew in there. The bear would tear him apart and the eagle would pick at his bones.'' ''But that's unbelievable,'' whispered a visitor. ''It is unbelievable,'' said Mr. Hubert, ''but it happened.''

NYT source

yt4cz9 ago

God dammit. I should have checked the comments before passing it on. Fuck you people who do this shit.

Glory_Beckons ago

Yeah, it's embarrassing and discrediting when you later have to retract such things.

But that's the point. That's why they make and spread this kind of disinformation.

Consider the effort put into making this believable and viral. They could have just made something up from scratch, but instead they started with a real article and injected falsehoods. Then they made the text look like it came from an old book. Based it on a scene from a popular cartoon to make it memorable and relatable.

There's no way this is an accident or an honest mistake. This is deliberate disinfo for the purpose of poisoning the well.

The OP didn't make this image, but they also haven't responded, retracted, or deleted the post.

Someone else also posted this very recently. They also haven't commented or deleted.

SolidFoundations ago

Wizardry works best when the lie is mostly true.