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[–] 10653085? 0 points 2 points (+2|-0) ago 

Complete misrepresentation of the facts. Most Jews were forced to adopt local surnames rather than choosing to do so.

Forced by whom? Or was it just more inconvenient to be obviously Jewish and so Jews opted to change their names to make them seem more German. I'm not misrepresenting anything; we've both said the same thing; you're just considering a different context.

Tens of thousands of Germans carry the name, so you tell me. Black hair isn't exactly rare, nor are chimney sweeps.

I asked the question out of genuine curiosity, and you've answered. At no point did I claim anyone named Schwarzmann must necessarily be a Jew; my original comment simply implied it, but there was additional context to work with, not just the name.

Jews meddle with other cultures. It's well-documented. For a person with a name that is shared by Jews of a certain origin to write a book that, at a glance, seems to be pushing a race-mixing narrative, one cannot blame me for making the association, because of how common such examples are. If you have not seen the kinds of examples to which I am referring then I can only conclude that you are willfully blind.

[–] [deleted] ago 

[Deleted]

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[–] 10657494? ago 

With respect to the book I made an assumption that is not necessarily incorrect, based on various types of supporting evidence (Schwarzmann is a Jewish name -- Christ I've already said this and you just ramble on about "muh German too", which us besides the point; and also the historical frequency of Jews pushing a mix racing narrative which this book does with its cover alone, thus justifying my actions)

And I'm not lying. I cited two separate sources that explain my "assumptions" further. Sorry your so salty about it.