Israelis vs JewsTake a look at this, an observation from a gentile outsider. FYI, Radix is something of a euro-centric reactionary/traditionalist journal, but if you can humble yourselves and stomach a few sharp words, that doesn't mean it can't offer certain insights.
http://www.radixjournal.com/journal/2015/3/23/israelis-vs-jewsIn a bar near campus, American College Republicans were bonding with a group of Israelis visiting the school, telling stories revolving around a shared love of firearms and the military. The Israelis had all done military service; none of the College Republicans had. Casually but neatly dressed, the Israeli men spoke knowledgeably about international politics and military strategy when they weren’t cracking racist jokes. The Israeli girls dressed stylishly to show off their fit physiques but kept an appropriate appearance and gloried in politically incorrect speech and humor, speaking with open contempt of nonwhites (which, it was implied, didn’t include themselves). If they hadn’t been Israelis, the College Republicans would have left the table in horror and denounced them; they instead stayed, drank, and laughed.At a nearby table, scowling at the throng, were the leaders of the school’s progressive groups, including the LGBTers, the Socialists, the Democrats, the feminists, and a few others. With the exception of the blacks and “Chicanos,” all were at least part Jewish, gay, or both. The Jewish students were either timeously small or monstrously obese, with pockmarked skin, smelly clothes littered with buttons and curse words, and a deliberately slovenly appearance that I half sensed was a protest against “fascist beauty standards.” It couldn’t have been a greater contrast to the cocky, confident, and soldierly Israelis holding court with what passed for the American Right on campus. Even in physical features, the two groups of Jews looked nothing alike.Going further (and yes dear readers, I am baiting you here) the Israelis were the most aristocratic in their dress and behavior of any of the people in the room, including the Republicans. They acted like they owned the place and could take anyone who said otherwise.In Mein Kampf (see guys, I haven’t gone soft), there is a famous passage that gets recited in all of your history of World War II classes and is prominently featured in any documentary or movie about the “Rise of Evil.” Hitler describes seeing a Jew with “black curls” and a “long caftan” walking through the city and is caught off guard by what to him is a strange sight. He asks himself, “Is this a Jew?” More ominously, he wonders just afterward, “Is this a German?”When confronting these swaggering militarists who acted like they were Draka, I couldn’t help but wonder, “Are these Israelis?” and then, just afterward, “Are they really Jews?”