Proving that "survivors" never die, jew cashes dead father's reparation checks

Started by yankeedoodle, June 16, 2023, 02:41:24 PM

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yankeedoodle

From Christians for Truth
Jew Caught Cashing Father's Holocaust Reparation Checks After He Died But Refuses To Return Stolen Money
https://christiansfortruth.com/jew-caught-cashing-fathers-holocaust-reparation-checks-after-he-died-but-refuses-to-return-stolen-money/

Richard Klin — a Jew who got caught red-handed cashing his father's Holocaust reparation checks after he died — refused to return the money he stole — and indignantly told the German authorities to 'go to hell'.

Klin wrote an article for the Jewish Forward justifying his theft as an imaginary letter he wrote to the German bureaucrat — "Gertrud F." — who dared to insist that he return the money that he had stolen:

Quotehttps://forward.com/community/397218/germany-paid-my-late-father-holocaust-reparations-and-now-they-want-some/

"Dear Gertrud F:

I received your official-looking letter just the other day. I could tell immediately its origin was from a foreign land: an evocative, welcome throwback to the tactile pre-Web era, when missives would arrive from beyond our shores bearing exotic-looking stamps, redolent of faraway places. All rendered basically obsolete, of course, by the Internet.

Registered by airmail! was the first thing I saw upon opening this letter from Germany, the exclamation point adding an unexpectedly jolly connotation, mixed in with an almost childlike excitement: A registered letter! By airmail, no less!

This was followed — quite jarringly — by the birth date of my father and his date of death, followed by "heartfelt condolences to the passing of your father in January 2017" — the date italicized, as if I'd forgotten that my father died a little over a year ago.

Your letter is about reparations. My father was a Holocaust survivor, and although I have mixed feelings about consigning him, first and foremost, as a Holocaust survivor — as if this is his lasting tagline — the facts can't be wished away.

As a Belgian Jewish child, he spent the World War II years in hiding, suffering through unimaginable terror, deprivation, hunger; the loss of his mother, who was sent to Auschwitz and never returned.

For decades, my father's income was supplemented by the reparation payments the German government disbursed to Holocaust survivors. I always felt very ambiguous about those payments, but as my father grew older and steadily incapacitated, the German money proved extremely helpful in easing his financial burdens.

And I do have to admit that yes, modern Germany has tried to make amends for their genocidal rampage. Germany has made amends, in fact, in a way that the United States never did for its own genocidal rampages. And so, while I can't say I really feel a sense of gratitude exactly, I'm cognizant of these facts.

But now, as per your letter, Germany appears to want some of this money returned to it. Specifically, 410.16 euros — overpayments that seem to have been disbursed after his death (In January 2017, as you have reminded me).

I've dubbed you Gertrud F The pseudonym, of course, is to protect your privacy, but "Gertrud F" also has a satisfying Kafkaesque ring to it. For instance, there's this sentence, which you underlined, indicating a certain urgency: Several letters written to your father's last known address regretfully remained without any response.

There was no response, Gertrud F, because he wasn't alive. But in most ways, Gertrud F, your letter isn't really Kafkaesque. "Kafkaesque" connotes an anonymous, mysterious bureaucracy; a nightmare where nothing makes sense. Your letter is anything but anonymous. There's nothing at all mysterious about its contents: The legalistic numerical tallies are displayed as if taken from the pages of a ledger.

The dubious legality of my supposed financial obligation aside, I wanted to reiterate the upshot of your letter: I owe Germany money. The concept is so logic-defying that I feel the strange need to repeat this in several different ways: I owe Germany money. Gertrud F wants me to pay 410.16 euros. I'm in debt to Germany. Germany is demanding money. From me.

Gertrud F, I don't know whether to be horrified beyond belief at your demand for 410.16 euros or amused—amused in a sick, gallows-humor sort of way. At the moment, gallows humor is winning out, but I can't guarantee that the horrified-beyond-belief won't soon make its appearance.

Go to hell, Gertrud F."

Yes, it's "logic defying" that the German government would want him to return the money he stole from them — and from other living Holocaust survivors to whom it could have gone — not that they deserve it anyway.

Klin never explains why he was "horrified beyond belief" that he was held accountable for his theft — and acts as if Germany owed him the money, not the other way around.

Of course, he never actually sent this letter to the German reparations office — because it would provide a tacit admission that he did, in fact, continue to cash his dead father's checks after he died — which is legally prosecutable fraud — unless apparently you are an indignant Jew.

Instead he mocks "Gertrude F." — mocking her letter to him as "Kafkaesque" — who often wrote stories about how his protagonists were alienated by a culture that they didn't understand.

If there was anything "Kafkaesque" about the Holocaust™, it was the so-called Nuremberg Trials — where the "Nazis" were charged with violating international laws that were enacted only after the war ended — making it impossible for the defendants to exonerate themselves — an absurdity straight out of Kafka's book, The Trial.

So instead Klin publishes this imaginary letter that he would have sent in a major Jewish newspaper — with a sympathetic Jewish readership — in order to shame the German bureaucrat who was just doing her job — and who went out of her way to be as diplomatic as possible.

However, it's no wonder that Klin feels completely justified in stealing this reparations money — after all, Jewish "researchers" are churning out "studies" that "prove" that Jewish "suffering" can be passed down to their children "epigenetically" — making it as if the children of Holocaust survivors actually experienced the Holocaust themselves, before they were even born.

And we can be assured that this wasn't the first time that "Gertrude F" had to write such letters to the relatives of Jews who had died — relatives who had also cashed reparations checks after their "Holocaust survivor" parent had died.

Even the Marxist state of Israel was caught misappropriating Holocaust reparation funds — diverting money from "survivors" into the national Treasury in order to pay off debts and balance the budget.

It's no wonder that even Karl Marx said, "I hate money and Jews" — no doubt because Marx knew the Jewish worship money was a major cause of animosity directed toward Jews.

But Klin completely lacks any self-awareness — how his behavior exemplifies all the worst "stereotypes" people hold about Jews — the abrasive behavior which creates the "antisemitism" that he and his fellow Jews, no doubt, complain about.