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[–] v888 0 points 1 point (+1|-0) ago 

And "The Coffin Ships" they sailed on to the US. Genocide

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[–] Plague1 1 point 1 point (+2|-1) ago 

I find it deeply ironic that you linked directly to the New York Times, giving them page clicks and advertising clicks despite how they kept known racist against whites Sarah Jeong in employment.

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[–] Zinger 0 points 5 points (+5|-0) ago 

Dont mention the irony, provide the archive link yourself and move on with your life.

Lazy...

https://archive.fo/3b94P

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[–] Butelczynski 0 points 2 points (+2|-0) ago 

That sounds a lot like Soviet engendered Holomodor in Ukraine in 1930s.Were they inspired by British policy from 80 here before or did British gave them this idea so Soviet Union can pay loans from 1920s?

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[–] mememeyou [S] 0 points 2 points (+2|-0) ago  (edited ago)

Not sure, but that's interesting, will have to look more into it. It appears forced famine was used in the Chinese Revolution, Russia Revolution, Irish Famine, Holomodor, Cambodia, etc. Maybe famine is the cheapest, and easiest genocide to both accomplish and suppress: The blueprint appears similar to the TV show Dexter if you are familiar: 'a naturally caused famine' enables the perpetrators to keep blood off their hands (while simultaneously suppressing information of food confiscation, which distances them from the crime). And like Dexter, the perpetrators come at the tail end of the genocide to cover their tracks, to come out looking even better than before (like Rothschild & Jews did in Ireland, responsible for both the relief & the problem), tellingly, the same care wasn't given at other times to the Celts, when it wasn't as beneficial to Jews.

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[–] mememeyou [S] 0 points 5 points (+5|-0) ago  (edited ago)

As no Jewish person would ever refer to the “Jewish Oxygen Famine of 1939 – 1945”, so no Irish person ought ever refer to the Irish Holocaust as a famine. --- And despite what you've probably been taught, the Irish did not rely only on potatoes; Actually, Ireland was a food exporter during years of the "famine" - "According to John Mitchel, quoted by Woodham-Smith, "Ireland was actually producing sufficient food, wool and flax, to feed and clothe not nine but eighteen millions of people," yet a ship sailing into an Irish port during the famine years with a cargo of grain was "sure to meet six ships sailing out with a similar cargo." ------ "Academic historians maintain the lie that only one crop was cultivated, covering up the food removals and exportation to England. British and Irish academia won't approach the truth, and anyone bringing the genocide out in the open is smeared as a "republican" (implying a terrorist.) ... The truth is startling: 67 out of 130 regiments of Britain's Empire army were in Ireland during this period (100,000 at any one time). The troops were not on a humanitarian mission. Their job was to remove food by force."

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[–] PapShamir 0 points 1 point (+1|-0) ago 

My God. It's true. I've needed those maths for some time.

Things would be different if more people bothered to question the Santa-level inconsistencies of the approved narratives. Nothing against the direct victims though.

Listen I won't bother with personal relevancies here, but this is exactly what I sought and needed @mememeyou

Many thanks!