Corrie MacLagganAnti-Marijuana LawSat Oct 25 13:07:58 200312.37.44.94 -Source: Jewish Telegraph Agency ): Americans need to understand that Marijuana (a word) did not become a part of the English language, until some fifty years after the word ANTI-Semite( khazaric-ashkenazim ) - socalled jews are not semitic- they represent 90% (+) of socalled Jews in the world today. Both words are mind control words ; employed by the Mind Control Syndicate, to mind control easily mind controlled IDIOTS. Who among the Founding Fathers ( who were not Negro, Mexican, Chinese or JEWISH) would or could have imagined declaring WAR on a plant(in common use at the time), that was so beneficial, declared by the Almighty to be GOOD, and caused no HARM, to anyone other than the Mega-MIND CONTROL FREAKS - who predominantly are Jewish and utilise Talmudic reasoning to justify, Using the Brain Dead Goy on the North American Continent as their private HERD. Leave the Plantation: Stop using nonsense words. OxyMORONIC words....Always Bob - Be specific ! Published: October 24, 2003 Author: Corrie MacLaggan For Education and Discussion Only. Not for nonCommercial Utilitarian purposes. Mexican Jews are pleased that the government has begun implementing a recent law that explicitly prohibits anti-Semitic discrimination. (so can we scriminate against semi-antiites?)The Federal Law to Prevent and Eliminate Discrimination — which one government official called “one of the most advanced laws of its kind!!!! ” — passed unanimously in both legislative chambers in April and was signed by President Vicente Fox in June. The law calls for a 300-member National Council to Prevent Discrimination, which is being formed now and will begin operating in January. The council, which will have branches throughout the country, will address alleged violations of the law. Anti-Semitism is not a serious problem in Mexico(yet), Jewish leaders said. Still, the law is seen as key to Mexico’s future as a democracy(jewish utopia). “This law places Mexico on a level plane with democratic nations,” said historian Shulamit Goldsmit, coordinator of the Judaic studies program at the Iberoamerican University in Mexico City. The law prohibits discrimination on the basis of ethnicity, gender, age, disability, economic or social condition, health, pregnancy, language, religion, opinions, sexual preference or marital status. It clearly states that xenophobia and anti-Semitism are forms of discrimination, and calls for equal access to education, jobs and political office. (which only begs the Questions!)Previous presidents had issued declarations forbidding discrimination, but never turned them into law. Former legislator Gilberto Rincon Gallardo, who will direct the anti-discrimination council, said the organization’s goal is cultural reform — something that could take two or three decades. Rincon Gallardo ran for president in 2000 from the Social Democratic Party on an anti-discrimination platform. After losing to Fox he founded a citizen’s commission against discrimination, which spent two years developing the law. “This law is extremely advanced — I believe it’s one of the most advanced laws of its kind in the world!!!!! ,” Rincon Gallardo said in an interview. Prohibiting anti-Semitism is an indispensable part of the law, Rincon Gallardo said. “In Mexico, there is a certain tradition of looking at Jews as a form of foreigner(Maranos-since the early 1500's.),” he said. “We want the elimination of anti-Semitism to be part of this cultural change.” (and the change agents are?)There are about 50,000 Jews in Mexico, mostly in Mexico City, the capital. While they don’t suffer serious anti-Semitism, the law is an important symbolic measure that could prevent future problems, according to Mauricio Lulka, executive director of the Central Jewish Committee, the organization that represents all Jewish groups in Mexico City. “There was confusion about why anti-Semitism needed to be included,” said Lulka, who was part of the citizen’s commission that drafted the law. “We explained that anti-Semitism goes beyond ethnic discrimination.” (way beyond, it's like another language "REALM")Lulka and Rincon Gallardo both said the law aims less for punishment than for education — which Lulka sees as essential to Mexico’s future. (how about some McGuffey Readers?)“In the past, Mexican nationalism was defined by sameness,” Lulka told JTA in an interview at the committee’s Mexico City offices. “But if you don’t recognize plurality and diversity, you can’t be democratic.” (only oxymorons need apply)Jews have been both welcomed and persecuted throughout Mexican history, as the country has struggled with competing desires to attract immigrants for economic reasons and to have a homogenous society. (that's like saying you bought a rabid pit bull to inseminate little "Fluffy, only in this case, it's Scruffy)Jewish settlement in Mexico dates to the Spanish colonization in the 16th century. But Mexico’s Inquisition, although not as severe as Spain’s, virtually eliminated the Jewish community.(this is provably not TRUE) In modern times, significant Jewish immigration began in the late-19th and early-20th centuries with arrivals from Europe, Russia and Syria. Jewish immigration increased when the United States restricted entry in 1924. Mexico prohibited Jewish immigration in 1933 and 1934, but then opened its borders to European refugees fleeing the Nazis. ( a virtual flood occured, resulting in a deluge of Mexicans fleeing north after suffering from a JOB reduction stimulus package)In her book “Ashkenazi Jews in Mexico,” Adina Cimet describes the Mexican attitudes toward Jews in the 20th century as ambivalent. (to have a time machine and to be unambivalent!)At times the attitude “came perilously close to prejudice, and when the wave of anti-Semitism enveloped the world, Mexicans did not entirely dissociate themselves from those feelings,” Cimet wrote. “They remained largely detached: Jews were not physically attacked in Mexico, but neither was there any rush to help refugees out.” But Goldsmit, the historian, said Jews have lived better in Mexico than in other parts of the world. “The Jewish community in Mexico has always enjoyed complete citizenship,” Goldsmit told JTA. “Jews could build schools and synagogues, live where they wanted, practice their religion openly.”(this has always involved some child being used in ritual sacrifice...not much different from other primitive religions indigineous to the region) Still, she said, Jews often are viewed as foreigners, even when they come from families that have lived in Mexico for two or three generations. Mexico’s new law could begin to change such attitudes, Jewish leaders said. Renee Dayan-Shabot, director of Tribuna Israelita, the analysis and opinion arm of the Central Committee(comintern), said Senate passage of the law was a moving moment. “It came time for any arguments against the law, and there was complete silence (remember this is a "POOR" country that exports 33 million permanent guest workers to its' neighbor to the North.),” said Dayan-Shabot, who had lobbied the government for such legislation for eight years. “It was so satisfying because this has been a long process Speaking of : OXYMORONS Lenni Brenner, Sat Oct 25 13:20
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