XPost: alt.revisionism, soc.culture.jewish, alt.conspiracy   
   XPost: alt.law-enforcement   
   From: roger@   
      
   In one age, called the Second Age by some,   
    (an Age yet to come, an Age long past)   
    someone claiming to be Seneca wrote   
    in message   
   :   
      
   >"Roger" wrote in message   
   >news:88d988c6b8ba0491b831447f87570723@news.teranews.com...   
      
   >> In one age, called the Second Age by some,   
   >> (an Age yet to come, an Age long past)   
   >> someone claiming to be Seneca wrote   
   >> in message :   
      
   >> >"Philip Mathews" wrote in message   
   >> >news:c6bd4de7.0312091107.863a152@posting.google.com...   
      
   >> >> "Seneca" wrote in message   
   >> >news:...   
      
   >> >> > "Steven Mock" wrote in message   
   >> >> > news:Xns944BF365B5D34smocknizkororg@140.99.99.130...   
      
   >> >> > > "Seneca" wrote in   
   >> >> > > news:K04Bb.4366$MO7.539@newssvr33.news.prodigy.com:   
      
   >> >> > > > My witch hazel is kosher. (How the hell can witch hazel be   
   >> >> > > > kosher?)   
   >> >> > > > My Joy dishwashing liquid is kosher. (What?!) My Ajax cleanser is   
   >> >> > > > kosher.   
   >> >> > > > (Oy, vey.) All these items, and thousands more I'm sure, carry   
   >> >> > > > the   
   >> >> > > > little symbols showing that some rabbinical organization or other   
   >> >> > > > has skimmed its share off the manufacturer's profit margin.   
      
   >> >> > > If that's all it meant then why would manufacturers do it?   
      
   >> >> > Why indeed, Steven? Why indeed?   
      
   >> >> Well, we could assume that business people have a good reason, or we   
   >> >> could think like the Jew hater Seneca, and make up some nefarious   
   >> >> scheme.   
      
   >> >Enquiring how witch hazel, dishwashing liquid, etc. can be kosher makes   
   >> >me a Jew hater? That does not compute, Philthy.   
      
   >> seneca pretends that zir history here in alt.rev is not well known...   
      
   >Zir history??   
      
   Yes, your posting history which exposes you as a Jew hater.   
      
   >> >> > > Do they simply   
   >> >> > > like giving money to "rabbinical organizations"? Or do they get   
   >> >> > > something in return?   
      
   >> >> > Good questions. I would like to know too.   
      
   >> >> And would you like to know why businesses give money to consultants,   
   >> >> design firms, accountants, etc.,   
      
   >> >Oh. Rabbis serve these businesses in ways similar to those of   
   >> >consultants,   
   >> >design firms, accountants, etc.? You are saying, then, that rabbis and   
   >> >their   
   >> >organizations are just *employed* by these businesses as a sort of   
   >> >service   
   >> >provider, the service being one that the business deems essential?   
   >> >Procter &   
   >> >Gamble feel they dare not market Joy until they've made sure it's   
   >> >certified kosher?   
      
   >> "Dare not?"   
   >>   
   >> No.   
   >>   
   >> "Will be more profitable for them (by reaching an additional market   
   >> segment?)"   
   >>   
   >> Yes.   
   >>   
   >> But then, seneca also pretends that this has not been explained many   
   >> many times...   
      
   >It may have been for all I know; I've just returned to this NG after a long   
   >absence.   
      
   And you cannot remember the previous conversations you have run from   
   on this topic?   
      
   >> >> or is your curiosity only with things   
   >> >> which involves Jews?   
      
   >> >I have curiosity about many things, Philthy.   
      
   >> And yet the only ones you bother to talk about here are the ones that   
   >> you have distorted into casting a bad light on the Jews.   
   >>   
   >> Funny, that.   
      
   >I'm posting to the alt.revisionism NG. What's funny about it?   
      
   That your Jew hatred does not have any impact on the historical facts   
   of the Holocaust, and simply acts as the reason for your mindless   
   denial of the same.   
      
   Funny in a sad way, that is.   
      
   >> >> > Another good question is, How can things like witch hazel, kitchen   
   >> >> > cleansers   
   >> >> > and dishwashing liquids be kosher? My dictionary says kosher means   
   >> >> > "conforming to dietary laws; ritually pure." That has always been my   
   >> >> > understanding as well. Can you explain to me how these non-dietary   
   >> >> > things (and presumably many others) can be kosher?   
      
   >> >> They come into contact with items which are in contact with food.   
      
   >> >Witch hazel does? I don't think so.   
      
   >> Witch hazel is used in soaps fairly often (especially the "home made"   
   >> sort,) your credulity notwithstanding.   
      
   >News to me. I use it for an aftershave. So the connection is supposed to be   
   >that witch hazel *may* be used to make homemade soap which *may* be used to   
   >wash dishes used for food? Don't Jews rinse dishes after washing? Or would   
   >that involve the use of non-kosher water? (Good grief, I begin to see that   
   >living the life of a Jew must be a terribly complicated business.)   
      
   Matter of fact, for a Jew that keeps kosher, it is rather more complex   
   than for those of us who enjoy the occasional bacon cheeseburger.   
      
   >> >> > What this *appears* to be is a device for squeezing money out of   
   >> >> > manufacturers for Jewish interests and causes, completely unrelated   
   >> >> > to the product.   
      
   >> >> Really! Now isn't that theory a surprise, coming from "Seneca"!   
   >> >>   
   >> >> All these gullible business people are unknowingly squeezed by these   
   >> >> Jews, and it takes someone like "Seneca" to figure it out.   
      
   >> >Who said "unknowingly"? I presume the people making those decisions are   
   >> >doing so consciously. What the reasons are, exactly, is what I'm curious   
   >> >about.   
      
   >> And are you also interested in the reasons why a particular ad   
   >> campaign is chosen, or a given landscaping company employed?   
      
   >I might be, if I frequented an advertising or landscaping newsgroup. But I   
   >don't.   
      
   Nor are you posting to exclusively newsgroups concerned with Kosher   
   (of which your stated ng is definitely not one.)   
      
   >> There might be Jooos involved in those business decisions too, you   
   >> know...   
      
   >> >> > Why manufacturers would go along with this is still the most   
   >> >> > interesting question.   
      
   >> >> Most intelligent people would consider that question so obvious as to   
   >> >> be of little interest. But to a Jew hater, anything Jewish is   
   >> >> interesting.   
      
   >> >By the same principle, I suppose, anyone who hates broccoli must be   
   >> >interested in all things related to broccoli. Your logical processes are   
   >> >wonderful to behold, Philthy.   
      
   >> Only if the broccoli hater has to resort to distortions and outright   
   >> lies in an attempt to justify zir hatred so that it doesn't look quite   
   >> so irrational...   
      
   >Do broccoli haters tend to do that, in your experience?   
      
   No, They are completely up front that they simply do not like   
   broccoli and feel no need to foist their views on anyone else,   
   denigrate those that do not share that dislike, nor advocate the   
   elimination (or restrict the impact) of broccoli from society.   
      
   How about you?   
      
   >> >> > Presumably they either believe they are getting   
   >> >> > something in return for paying the "kosher tax" or that they will be   
   >> >> > hurt in some way if they do not.   
      
   >> >> And now the Jew hater utters the usual inanity, calling a fee a tax,   
      
   [continued in next message]   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   
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