Comedian Jerry Seinfeld has been generally less offensive to me than most Jews. I think his eponymous sitcom was very funny in that it really sought to explore Jewish neurosis, and I’ve found his commentary on political and social issues to be poignant and minimally Jewish.
In an interview with The Hollywood Reporter conducted by Jew Seth Abramovitch, Seinfeld said that he thinks Dave Chappelle’s comments on Saturday Night Live over the weekend call for an open conversation between the Jews and non-Jews.
I was just watching Jon Stewart and Colbert, two of my favorite comedians, debate the Dave Chappelle SNL monologue. And I’m just curious where you fall on it. Did you find it funny?
I did think the comedy was well-executed, but I think the subject matter calls for a conversation that I don’t think I’d want to have in this venue.
But it made you uncomfortable.
It provokes a conversation which hopefully is productive.
And is that the kind of conversation you would have with Dave? Because you seem to have a close relationship with him.
I don’t have a close relationship with him. We’re friends and it’s not a close relationship.
This is good. For the entire decade that I’ve been a public figure, I’ve been calling for an open conversation with the Jews.
A conversation is explicitly what Ye has been calling for. Ye was silenced, his money was stripped from him, and the Jews said that there was zero chance that there will ever be any conversation about the abuses of the Jews. It was in fact shocking that the Jews simply said “shut up, you’re not allowed to talk about this, we’re taking your money.”
After the death of George Floyd, the entire Jew media was telling us that we were going to have a “conversation.”
A global conversation about race.
"Most of the new survey’s interviews were completed before the death of George Floyd touched off nationwide protests and a global conversation about race and police brutality…"
Americans are the unhappiest they've been since 1972, poll finds. https://t.co/rMAb86kPOw
— Wilson Dizard (@willdizard) June 16, 2020
Ye wants to have a global conversation about the Jew race.
We need a hard conversation so we can begin to heal.
Just one week ago tonight 12 strangers went into a room to deliberate the fate of Derek Chauvin. Their bravery to make the right choice allows us to continue the hard conversations and begin to heal. Tonight we celebrate George Floyd and those 12 strangers. pic.twitter.com/yywI7NFtcL
— Don Lemon (@donlemon) April 26, 2021
Remember when that Indian bitch Nimrata Randhawa told us that she was going to make us feel pain, because whites are all collectively responsible for Big George?
We spent the last couple of days celebrating our son’s graduation. Tonight I turned on the news and am heartbroken. It’s important to understand that the death of George Floyd was personal and painful for many. In order to heal, it needs to be personal and painful for everyone.
— Nikki Haley (@NikkiHaley) May 30, 2020
White people have much less money per capita than the Jews. They have much less influence on society. Whites rarely make decisions that affect any public policy. Jews are the ones with the power, they are the ones making the decisions, but they are telling us that unlike whites, they are not a group, so they can’t ever be talked about. This is unacceptable.
Jews destroyed my life. They destroyed Ye’s life. We have a lot at stake here. We want to understand what is going on, and we need these Jews who control everything to explain it to us.
Here are some other topics of conversation:
We need to discuss all of these things and much more.
It’s past time to have a conversation with and about the Jews. It’s time for Jews to listen.
Do you remember all those headlines they ran about whites? We need to have a situation where the word “white” is replaced with “Jew.”
If this Jewish answer to a demand for a conversation is “we will never owe the people we rule over anything because of the Holocaust,” then I’m sorry, Jews, but that simply is not acceptable. If your Holocaust did happen, then that’s I’m sure very unfortunate, but that has nothing at all to do with me or my life, while the power you hold in my country has completely transformed all of our lives in ways that are almost entirely negative.
We’re going to have a conversation, with or without you.
