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Iceland - where there are almost no jews except for the first lady.

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Donnachaidh
(@donnachaidh)
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If the jews aren't directly in charge, you can make a safe bet that one is whispering in the ear of the dumb goy who is. In Iceland, population approx. 320,000, there are about 30 jews. Making them what, .0000937% of the population.

"The number is uncertain, but generally agreed to very low. The Jewish population is small enough that it has not registered and is listed as unspecified/other groups, and there is no synagogue or prayer house.

There was no solid Jewish emigration to Iceland until the twentieth century, but some Jewish merchants lived in Iceland temporarily at points in the nineteenth century. At the millennial celebration of the Althing in 1874 a Jewish journalist was mentioned. There was also discussion of Jewish issues in Iceland. This discussion ranged from sympathetic of their plight to sympathizers for the Nazi Party who blamed Jews for "Bolshevism" among other things. Icelanders tended to have limited contact with actual Jewish people so most of this was theoretical. Although most Icelanders sympathized with them in their persecution they usually refused entry to Jews who were fleeing Nazi Germany and so the Jewish population did not rise much during the Second World War.[9]

Today the religion remains minor as an element of Iceland. However up to 60 people in Iceland do attend occasional Jewish holiday parties or lectures by Jewish immigrants. However this does not necessarily mean the Jewish population is 60 as some Jewish people who live there might not attend and non-Jewish people may have attended out of curiosity or friendship. The World Jewish Congress had no figures for Iceland in 1998 confirming that the numbers are under 120 and likely well under that figure.[10] The site for the Catholic diocese indicated there are only 30 Jewish people in Iceland[11], but as their estimate of Muslims is unusually low they might be underreporting Judaism as well. Still it seems that, exempting several of the European micro-states, Iceland might have the lowest Jewish population of any European nation.

Despite that the first lady, Dorrit Moussaieff, is a Bukharian Jew and is likely the most significant Jewish woman in Icelandic history. She still follows some aspects of Judaism. For example, on the eve of Hannukkah, she remembered that she was suppose to light the first candle of the menorah. A menorah was found for her and after lighting the candle, she taught her husband about the holiday. [12] Moussaief was born in Israel and carries and Israeli and an Icelandic citizenship."

There is no corner of the earth that is not infected with this world plague.
Here we see some odd behavior on the part of the dumb goy on behalf of the - mass media. What a coincidence, heh?

Ólafur Ragnar Grímsson (ˈou:lavʏr ˈraknar ˈkrimsɔn (help·info)) (born 14 May 1943, in Ísafjörður, Iceland) is the fifth and current President of Iceland, from 1996 to present, re-elected unopposed in 2000, and was re-elected for a third term in 2004.

From 1962 to 1970, he studied economics and political science at the University of Manchester. He was a professor at the University of Iceland for political science, served as Member of Althing, was Minister of Finance (1988–1991) and served as chairman of the left People's Alliance (1987–1995).

As member of the Althing, Ólafur was among the most controversial politicians in Iceland. Originally elected from a field of four candidates with 42% of the total votes, Ólafur has from the outset been a controversial figure in the office of President, an office that has mainly ceremonial functions meant to symbolise national unity and bears no responsibility for government affairs.

He married Guðrún Katrín Þorbergsdóttir in 1974, who gave birth to twin daughters the following year. Guðrún Katrín was very popular in Iceland, and her charisma is often mentioned as one of the reasons her husband was elected. Her death from leukaemia in 1998 was a shock to the nation and her family.

Ólafur's second marriage was to Israeli-born Dorrit Moussaieff to whom he had been engaged since May 2000. This took place on his 60th birthday 14 May 2003 in a private ceremony held at the presidential residence.

In the 1996 presidential elections he was elected whith 41,4% of the votes.

He is the first president to use the authorization given in the 26th article of the Icelandic constitution to veto a law from Alþingi, in which case the law in question would be put to a national referendum. He did that on June 2, 2004 to a law about the mass media. His decision remains controversial with politicians and legal scholars alike. Some consider the veto as "an attack" on Alþingi and parliamentary sovereignty and lawyers debate whether article 26 is actually valid. No national referendum was ever held about the controversial media law as the government withdrew the law before a referendum could be held.

In the 2004 presidential elections, Ólafur was re-elected with 67.5% of the votes cast (down from over 95% in the only other time an incumbent has been contested), but that election also saw a record number of empty ballots (21.2%) and an exceptionally low turnout of 63% (usually 80-90%), both of which have been interpreted as dissent with the president's decision to not sign the media law. Since then, the issue of a constitutional amendment to revoke the veto power of the president has been raised by the Independence Party. Some have also wanted to rest that power with the people themselves, who could then force referendums to be held on laws by – for instance – collecting a certain number of signatures.

So even here in a flyspeck part of the earth, treason advances on the heels of the jew.


The Western democracy of today is the forerunner of Marxism which without it would not be thinkable. It provides this world plague with the culture in which its germs can spread.

-Adolf Hitler (Mein Kampf)

 
Posted : 11/10/2007 7:02 pm
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