12-05-2010, 05:30 AM
(This post was last modified: 12-05-2010, 05:32 AM by John Geraghty.)
Paul Rigby Wrote:From the article B. posted the link to:
Quote:"Historian David Nasaw uses Greenwald's film to complain that The Kennedys will "bear no relationship that I can see to the lives that these people lived... This film is not only extraordinarily anti-Catholic. It's anti-Irish, in a way I have not seen in a long, long time."This is a characteristic also to be found in the work & interviews of Noam Chomsky. It would appear that some very old, and very unappealing prejudices, of long utility to the WASP establishment, have been resurrected for use by Zionist mouthpieces, presumably on the basis that objections to them can be neutralised by the charge of anti-semitism.
One sees immediately the appeal of this tactic to the CIA.
Paul,
Can you show me where Chomsky has been anti-catholic or anti-Irish? I recall him saying that there were block parties in Irish and German neighbourhoods when Hitler came to power. That's, as far as I know, accurate.
He's hardly foaming at the mouth at the sight of catholics or Irish people.
Best,
John
edit: Also, what relevance does this comment have in this thread?
I have my problems with Chomsky too, but your revile for him seems to be quite strong