The liberal Tagesspiegel of Berlin gave us very troubling news from Germany at the end of October. The leader of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU), Friedrich Merz, asserted that “naturalization too quick must be stopped.” The CDU now wants integration before naturalization. And a prerequisite for integration, Merz said, must include a firm agreement to commit to the security of Israel, which is ultimately the raison d’état of Germany. “Whoever does not agree to this,” Merz asserted, “has no business in Germany.”
Later, on November 28, the Associated Press reported that the Jew Gil Ofarim, who in 2021 asserted that he had been turned away from a hotel in Leipzig for wearing a Star of David, admitted during a defamation case that, in reality, he had fabricated the story out of thin air, so to speak. But what is most noteworthy is that the Central Council of Jews in Germany, which had earlier called for the hotel to “take consequences regarding their staff,” now says: “In the event of an accusation of antisemitism, it is right to stand on the side of the person concerned, to support them and not to question their experience of antisemitism in the first instance.” Therefore, according to the Central Council of Jews in Germany, when a Jew makes a scurrilous accusation, it must first be assumed without question to be true; but if a Goy ever dares to make an accusation against a Jew, it is assumed to be “blood libel.” — Of course, we do not expect the Central Council to now oppose those Jews who, when Ofarim first slandered the hotel, immediately protested in front of the hotel. For that would be to give aid to a Gentile, which they would never consider doing.





