Quote from: matt on Sat 24 Jul 2010
Ok, so what about a Jew who was born in Germany and speaks only German, and no Hebrew. That would make him/her Indo-European according to that logic? Unless of course a Jew can be both Semite and Indo-European.
So you've discovered the ambiguity in using a linguistic term to define a race? Klassen acknowledged this over three decades ago when he was developing the creed of Creativity. I suggest you read the Holy Books before you continue with your argument.
Semite is a poor term to use to describe the Jewish race, the same as Indo-European is a poor term to describe the White race. A German-speaking Jew born in Germany is no more German than a Swahili-speaking Frenchman born in Kenya is a nigger. I was born in Australia, this does not make me an aboriginal, I also speak English but this does not make me an Englishman.
The Jew is an individual descended from the Ashkenazi and Sephardi tribes of the Middle East and Asia Minor, that may or may not follow the religion of Judaism and may, or may not speak the Hebrew or Yiddish language. However, due to the racial consciousness of the Jewish race, it is in most cases that a Jew will speak the lingua franca of the Jews (Hebrew/Yiddish) and have a genetic bloodline that stems back to their Sephardi/Ashkenazi ancestry.
The Jewish race is most peculiar from other races due to their "diaspora" history, they have spent millenia living within host countries whilst being able to maintain a unique biological identity as a race of their own. This is due to their racial religion of Judaism, that has managed to motivate even the atheistic Jews to practicing racial loyalty.
I must ask a question of you now... Where did you get these blatantly false concepts of race and Jews from?