I'm sorry, but a 80-year-old document from an unhinged Jew, even if it were real (debatable), makes no point at all.
The document is an attempt to convince Jews to not fight in the war. But they did.
In the 1940s, Jews made up 3.5% of the total population in the US. 16 million Americans fought in WW2, of which 550k were Jewish. 550k/16 million = 3.4%, exactly what you'd expect it to be if Jews participated in the war effort at the same rate of the rest of the population.
The notion that Jews found exemptions to not fight in WW2 at any rate above the rest of the population is historically inaccurate.
Just the fact that Jews of the WW2 era needed to be convinced and persuaded of what is in the letter shows that they weren't following it to begin with. Why write a letter to convince someone to do something unless they were doing the exact opposite?
I'm amazed at what little evidence Jew haters need to set them off. All the "muh Israel" posts in this comment section ... they weren't even a country yet (derp).
I'm sorry, but a 80-year-old document from an unhinged Jew, even if it were real (debatable), makes no point at all.
The document is an attempt to convince Jews to not fight in the war. But they did.
In the 1940s, Jews made up 3.5% of the total population in the US. 16 million Americans fought in WW2, of which 550k were Jewish. 550k/16 million = 3.4%, exactly what you'd expect it to be if Jews participated in the war effort at the same rate of the rest of the population.
The notion that Jews found exemptions to not fight in WW2 at any rate above the rest of the population is historically inaccurate.
Just the fact that Jews of the WW2 era needed to be convinced and persuaded of what is in the letter shows that they weren't following it to begin with. Why write a letter to convince someone to do something unless they were doing the exact opposite?
I'm amazed at what little evidence Jew haters need to set them off. All the "muh Israel" posts in this comment section ... they weren't even a country yet (derp).