Jonathan Sacerdoti
š¤ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
and manipulate the entire world to do what it wants.
There are, for example, probably more dissenting voices who are Jewish, more big donors of anti-immigration movements and political parties and figures who are Jewish than there are Jews who have funded migration.
There is disagreement amongst Jews.
You know, we always say two Jews, three opinions.
It's
You go to a desert island and find this Jewish guy who's been there on his own, the old joke says, and they say, show us around.
He says, there are three synagogues.
Here's the one I go to.
Here's the one I left.
And that's the one I wouldn't be seen dead in.
So the point is, we don't all agree on everything.
And certainly we have no inbuilt religious or cultural tendency to necessarily support mass migration and replacement, though we do have some.
an appreciation that when somebody is fleeing something horrific and their life depends on it, it's a good idea to be nice to them.
And I think that despite everything that's happening in this country, that is quite a British idea as well.
We are a people that generally are sympathetic and kind.
We do want to help people, but not at the expense of our nation, not at the expense of...
our system, not at the expense of our children, not at the expense even of our Jews, I would hope.
And that's exactly the point.
So I would say that there are some elements of the movement to accept migrants who are fleeing from certain parts of the world, and there are some Jewish people who've been involved in them.
But George Soros, for example, as far as I know, is an atheist who has spoken against certain elements of Jewish thought and Israeli policy.