Lessons from history

‘Is there a Jewish problem in the world?’

‘Absolutely. Absolutely. […] Well, there is a Jewish problem. Absolutely. You just have to turn on your television set.’

‘And do you think it encompasses all Jews?’

‘No. And that’s the sad part about life. […] I know many Jews […] They’re smart. They’re industrious. They’re great. Unfortunately, at this moment in time, there is a Jewish problem in the world. And by the way, and you know it and it I know it and some people don’t like saying it […]’

’[… W]hy don’t they, the Jewish community throughout the world, speak out more forcefully against the others?’

‘Well […] you can say what you want about the Talmud. You can say what you want, but there’s something there. There is tremendous hatred and tremendous hatred of us.’

Fascism goes mainstream, Germany 1933. Oh wait, my bad.



rejectamentalist manifesto


China Miéville’s waste books

. . .


‘A principal rule for writers, and especially those who want to describe their own sensations, is not to believe that their doing so indicates they possess a special disposition of nature in this respect. Others can perhaps do it just as well as you can. Only they do not make a business of it, because it seems to them silly to publicize such things.’


                Georg Christoph Lichtenberg

. . .


London’s Overthrow.

. . .


archive · random · rss