Most enlightening article, “Canceled in Finland, by Izabella Tabarovsky.
I had no idea Finland was not only so riddled with such antiSemitism, but also of it’s sordid history of embedded Soviet propaganda.
I’d mistakenly always thought Finland, largely due to its precarious proximity to Russia, was very much on guard against such tactics. Boy, was I wrong.
Their singling her out from speaking in reaction to some TikTok campaign against her only reveals them to be worse than cowardly, but also incredibly, and indescribably stupid.
The isis were actually reporters and doctors inadvertently reporting and feverishly doctoring on the innocent civilians in the armament-filled cave according to the isis website 😂😜🤣😭
Actually, the Soviet turn toward antisemitism and anti-Israelism began in 1964, after the overthrow of Kruschkhev. The new Brezhnev crowd imposed a partial re-Stalinization at home and began egging on Egypt and Syria. And crucially, they got those two countries' military intelligence services to found the PLO as part of the new strategy of "anti-imperialism." It was, in part, Soviet pushing of those two countries that *led* to the Six Day War.
Meanwhile, at home, a new era of antisemitic repression started with the 1965 Danilov trial, the starting point of the later Soviet antisemitic policies.
All of this happened in the three years *before* the Six Day War.
The canard of "settler imperialism" harkens back to antisemitic themes in late 19th-century Russia and elsewhere. It was given classic form in J. A. Hobson's 1901 book Imperialism, which managed to accuse Jews in England and South Africa of being responsible for all manner of oppression in South Africa as well as the Boer War. Lenin made use of this book in his book on imperialism, but he carefully cut out the antisemitic themes, as they bore too obvious a similarity to czarist propaganda.
Most enlightening article, “Canceled in Finland, by Izabella Tabarovsky.
I had no idea Finland was not only so riddled with such antiSemitism, but also of it’s sordid history of embedded Soviet propaganda.
I’d mistakenly always thought Finland, largely due to its precarious proximity to Russia, was very much on guard against such tactics. Boy, was I wrong.
Their singling her out from speaking in reaction to some TikTok campaign against her only reveals them to be worse than cowardly, but also incredibly, and indescribably stupid.
Has Zelenskyy allowed people to vote in Ukraine again?
No, he hasn't.
One of the terms for the end of the war should be immediate elections. Hah 😏
The isis were actually reporters and doctors inadvertently reporting and feverishly doctoring on the innocent civilians in the armament-filled cave according to the isis website 😂😜🤣😭
Actually, the Soviet turn toward antisemitism and anti-Israelism began in 1964, after the overthrow of Kruschkhev. The new Brezhnev crowd imposed a partial re-Stalinization at home and began egging on Egypt and Syria. And crucially, they got those two countries' military intelligence services to found the PLO as part of the new strategy of "anti-imperialism." It was, in part, Soviet pushing of those two countries that *led* to the Six Day War.
Meanwhile, at home, a new era of antisemitic repression started with the 1965 Danilov trial, the starting point of the later Soviet antisemitic policies.
All of this happened in the three years *before* the Six Day War.
The canard of "settler imperialism" harkens back to antisemitic themes in late 19th-century Russia and elsewhere. It was given classic form in J. A. Hobson's 1901 book Imperialism, which managed to accuse Jews in England and South Africa of being responsible for all manner of oppression in South Africa as well as the Boer War. Lenin made use of this book in his book on imperialism, but he carefully cut out the antisemitic themes, as they bore too obvious a similarity to czarist propaganda.
https://www.jewishpress.com/news/middle-east/jordan/trump-does-not-take-no-for-an-answer-on-gaza-in-meeting-with-jordanian-king/2025/02/12/