The Anti-Christian B'nai B'rith call
for more and more immigration to reduce Christians in America and change
400 years of national American History, a policy that is now in effect and
will reduce majority Americans to a minority by 2040. All brought to you
by Jews of the B'nai B'rith and their cousin Jews who ran the USSR.
"B'nai B'rith's Americanization Department also originated at the
1920 convention. Sig Livingston was head of the convention committee that
made the recommendation, which was accompanied by a suggested actual program,
the goal of which was the acculturation and application for citizenship
of as many aliens as possible plus, of course, the cultivation of patriotic
projects." --B'NAI B'RITH: The Story of a Covenant, by
Edward E. Grusd, Editor of National Jewish Monthly, Appleton-Century/Affiliate
of Meredith Press, 1966, New York, p. 165.
Ironically, Jewish settlers in 1654 had
to promise New York that they would NEVER be welfare people.
Years Later and the very highly Jewish controlled Democratic Party is "the
Party of Welfare Recipients."
Several shiploads left Recife in 1654, headed for Holland, to escape
the terror. But one of the vessels was captured on the high seas by a French
privateer, and after the passen-gers had been robbed of everything they
were put ashore at Dutch New Amsterdam. When these twenty-three men, women,
and children landed on the lower tip of Manhattan Island-penniless, bewildered,
forsaken-they were treated to a taste of contemporary Christian charity
as practiced by the God-fearing, churchgoing, Bible-reading Dutch burghers
headed by peglegged Governor Peter Stuyvesant. They were ordered to leave
by the next ship. The thrifty Dutch colonists wanted no beggars around,
living off the community. It was then that the little band of newcomers
formulated a policy which was to influence Jewish life in America for the
next three centuries they informed Governor Stuyvesant and the Dutch West
Indies Company that Jews would never become a public charge. They were then
grudgingly permitted to remain, thus becoming, in 1654, the first Jewish
community in America. --B'NAI B'RITH: The Story of a Covenant,
by Edward E. Grusd, Editor of National Jewish Monthly, Appleton-Century/Affiliate
of Meredith Press, 1966, New York, p. 4.
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