Page:The International Jew - Volume 3.djvu/13

 XLIII.

The Jews and the "Religious Persecution" Cry

CHEERFULLY give the Jews of the United States credit for knowing when they are get- ting their money's worth. In the defense that has been set up for them they know that they have not had their money's worth, neither from Jewish money collectors nor from the "Gentile fronts" to whom the money has been paid. The Louis Marshall line of defense has broken down. The boycott has dribbled into nothingness. Speeches in Congress and editorials in newspapers have sounded too hol- low to carry conviction. The Question has proved itself far too big for those who have entered the defense for gain, to satisfy personal grudges, or to win what they feel to be the favor of the stronger side. The Jews long ago quit the course which some of the "Gentile fronts" still continue; the Jews recognized the futility of it.

No intelligent Jew in the United States ever was asinine enough to declare that the Jewish Ques- t tion is a religious question and that THE DEARBORN INDEPENDENT'S investigation of that question con- stituted "religious persecution." No Jew known beyond the next street has ever ventured such a silly charge. But it is apparently all that remains for the "Gentile fronts" to shout about. From what can be learned of them they are for the most part men of no religion themselves and they use the term "religious persecution" as a red rag which they think will stir people into action. It is rather curi- ous how the cry of "religious persecution" is used to evoke the spirit of persecution against alleged persecutors.

THE DEARBORN- INDEPENDENT this week goes out of its course to squelch once and for all this cry of religious persecutions.