Kosher Tax - Fact o...
 
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Kosher Tax - Fact or Myth?

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(@john-bender)
Posts: 1057
Noble Member
Topic starter
 

Is the Kosher Tax really as profitable as some claim?

Many websites declare the kosher tax to be a hoax, that each product is taxed only 1/65th millionths of a cent. How much extra are we actually paying for this jewish "blessing"?

Does anyone know how much the kikes really make from this every year?


 
Posted : 06/03/2006 7:50 pm
JoeSixPack
(@joesixpack)
Posts: 1198
Noble Member
 

Here is snopes saying that there isn't a kosher tax, but there is a fee paid by companies to be kosher. :rolleyes:
http://www.snopes.com/racial/business/kosher.htm

Hey, at least they honestly put it under the racial category.

But they are the same liars that say no jews were warned on 9/11.


"Evidence linking these Israelis to 9/11 is classified. I cannot tell you about evidence that has been gathered. It's classified information."
-US official quoted in Carl Cameron's Fox News report on the Israeli spy ring and its connections to 9-11.

 
Posted : 06/03/2006 8:02 pm
(@ragnar)
Posts: 762
Prominent Member
 

I called in to Ice Mountain to ask about their little u, and yes, it was kosher.


"Even the best of the goyim should be thrilled." - Eyal Zavdiel, jewish stunt man

 
Posted : 06/03/2006 8:14 pm
Action Alert
(@action-alert)
Posts: 1965
Noble Member
 

Trying to get the lemmings to be engaged by using this issue is probably not gonna work, at least in the USA. Food prices are not at all high. With a little planning, you can save alot of money on food. It's a non-issue. Better we explain why their sons and daughters are being put in harms way in Iraq and Afganistan and all the strange events surrounding 9/11 like the odigo warnings, the Israeli spy ring and the ONE Israeli citizen killed on 9/11 when there were more people killed from Jamaica that from Israel. What do I care if some rabbis wanna bless the hot dogs?


 
Posted : 06/03/2006 8:15 pm
(@whirlwind)
Posts: 1659
Noble Member
 

Mostly because there isn't a good reason to pay ANYTHING more to have it jew approved. One more thing making this look like jewmerica. F that.


KILL YOUR TV! Or at least stop taking it more seriously than a goldfish.

 
Posted : 07/03/2006 3:51 am
(@franco)
Posts: 4554
Illustrious Member
 

http://www.ukar.org/tax.html

----------------------


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Posted : 07/03/2006 7:00 am
JimInCO
(@jiminco)
Posts: 1923
Famed Member
 

It's very real. It's nothing more than a jew shakedown racket
that extorts fees from food companies (and by extension, from
you and me). You don't want to play ball? Fine, our tribe will
boycott your products.

"Vaat, are you some kind of anti-semite or zumthing? Oy vey!
Three thousand years of poisecution and now this?"
(doing my best Jackie Mason imitation)

It's no different than doing business in NYC in decades past.
Every single pane of glass installed in the city included a "gratuity",
paid directly or indirectly to some nice Italian families. You don't
want to pay? Hey, things can happen, paisan.


[color="White"].-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
"A careful study of anti-semitism prejudice and accusations might be of great value to many jews,
who do not adequately realize the irritations they inflict."
- H.G. Wells (November 11, 1933)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

 
Posted : 07/03/2006 7:03 am
Bolg
 Bolg
(@bolg)
Posts: 577
Honorable Member
 

Is the Kosher Tax really as profitable as some claim?

Many websites declare the kosher tax to be a hoax, that each product is taxed only 1/65th millionths of a cent. How much extra are we actually paying for this jewish "blessing"?

Does anyone know how much the kikes really make from this every year?

Here are two articles on the subject:

http://jabpage.org/posts/kosher.html

http://jabpage.org/posts/kosher2.html


back home.

 
Posted : 07/03/2006 7:32 am
(@john-bender)
Posts: 1057
Noble Member
Topic starter
 

The explanation on the snopes website debunking the kosher tax "myth" only verifies the existence of the extortion:

Those seeking kosher certification for their products have to adhere to kosher practices through the manufacturing process, use only kosher ingredients, and have their facilities regularly vetted by qualified inspectors. Kosher certification companies do charge for this service, which is the backbone of the "secret tax" claim — it costs money to obtain and maintain kosher certification, thus this is an extra expense a manufacturer must bear if he's determined upon having that certification. Where the rumor and reality part ways, however, is where the money goes. Fees paid to kosher certification companies go to keeping those businesses afloat with the profits siphoned off by those companies' owners

The manufacturers pay a fee to kosher certification companies to appease the ultra-conservative jews. The fee translates into higher prices for the consumer, which essentially is a "tax". Why would the manufacturers do this if not in fear of retaliation in the form of a jewish boycott? The money goes to the conservative jews who run the kosher certification companies.

Does certification add to the price of a product? Certainly, but the amount is miniscule, especially compared to the advertising, packaging, shipping, research, testing, admin and finance-related costs, and a myriad of other components that contribute to the process of bringing a product to market or making it better appeal to consumers.

Yes, advertising, packaging, shipping, research, etc is expensive... so why add one more unecessary cost to the equation just to appease the minority of a religious minority? Most real kosher jews probably buy their kosher food from a jewish market, not the regular supermarket. Even if the cost is miniscule all those pennies have to add up to a lot of money when you consider how much food is sold every day, and many non-food items are also kosher certified. I wonder how much the kikes have siphoned off from this scam over the years?


 
Posted : 07/03/2006 7:54 am
(@conan-the-warlord)
Posts: 184
Estimable Member
 

Is the Kosher Tax really as profitable as some claim?

Many websites declare the kosher tax to be a hoax, that each product is taxed only 1/65th millionths of a cent. How much extra are we actually paying for this jewish "blessing"?

Does anyone know how much the kikes really make from this every year?

It is a myth. The "tax" comes to something like a penny a gross (122 units). I doubt that it effects the price of anything. Firms make a deal with a kosher certifying agency and they send out a rabbi whenever the firms sets up its production line or changes its processing to make sure it meets their guidelines. They don't spend all day praying over cans of peas.

Besides Jews, Moslems, Seventh Day Adventists, and some other groups use the kosher symbol as a way of meeting their own dietary guidelines. Presumably, the benefits to catering to such groups exceed the cost of the certification. No doubt, someone who cares about this issue can search the web to see what the cost actually is. My own guess it is something like $50K a year to certify millions of dollars worth of peas and lima beans.

A decade ago, the local synagogue had a speaker from one of the agencies talking about his work; I attended to find out what it was all about. He first held up three books with very small type (looking like something the Federal government would put out) and says that two of them need not concern the audience; only one dealt with home use. He mentioned that there were two competing certification agencies (which is why the symbols sometimes differ or the food may have two symbols), though he wouldn't explain the arcane differences between the two and said that it would not matter to the average jew (maybe it was simply two different businesses under the figleaf of religion).

The guy gave some examples from his job. He was overseeing the making of maple sugar. It comes from a tree, so it must be kosher, right? When the sap is boiled, an emulsifier is added so it doesn't foam and boil over. Well, this was made from milk, so the syrup couldn't be used with meat (can't mix milk and meat). A substitute using only plant products was found, so jews now can have their pancakes along with their beef sausage.

Sometimes you see an ingrediant label which says "...beef and/or pork." He said that if it is stamped kosher it doesn't contain pork. The labels come from a different plant than that which packaged the food. The agency doesn't like this and tries to get them to have better labeling in the next production run.

He also said that, using modern (White) technology, jews can now be stricter in keeping kosher than they have in the past.

WNs should stick with the jewish responsibility for communism, open immigration, black crime, etc. When they start agitating over issues that can be easily disproved, it may adversely affect how their intended audience sees them. Sure, the kosher food tax may seem like a good propaganda issue, but how effective is it actually?

The Warlord


 
Posted : 07/03/2006 3:33 pm
(@fritz-kuhn)
Posts: 653
Honorable Member
 

Firms make a deal with a kosher certifying agency and they send out a rabbi whenever the firms sets up its production line or changes its processing to make sure it meets their guidelines. They don't spend all day praying over cans of peas.

. . . Sure, the kosher food tax may seem like a good propaganda issue, but how effective is it actually?

The point is the fact that a jewish group has the power to oversee the production of food. Which other group in the US can walk up to the management of a corporation and offer to "certify" their product in exchange for a fee so that other members of their group will agree to consume it. If a group of large Italian men came up to the managers of a construction business and offered to monitor the company for a small price so that other Italians would do business with them, the FBI would be called and the charges would be extortion and racketeering.


 
Posted : 07/03/2006 4:40 pm
Action Alert
(@action-alert)
Posts: 1965
Noble Member
 

Go to Aldi's. You won't find much kosher product there!


 
Posted : 07/03/2006 6:12 pm
(@franco)
Posts: 4554
Illustrious Member
 

The point is the fact that a jewish group has the power to oversee the production of food. Which other group in the US can walk up to the management of a corporation and offer to "certify" their product in exchange for a fee so that other members of their group will agree to consume it. If a group of large Italian men came up to the managers of a construction business and offered to monitor the company for a small price so that other Italians would do business with them, the FBI would be called and the charges would be extortion and racketeering.

Yes. The exact cost isn't the issue. The issue is why a group of non-Whites [Jews] is allowed to get away with that kosher program in a White country.

---------------------


Blog: https://vnnforum.com/blog.php?b=1458
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Books: http://www.colchestercollection.com/titles.html

 
Posted : 07/03/2006 6:57 pm
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