How the super-rich Jews didn’t prevent the Holocaust

When Adolf Hitler saw the Jewish super-rich clientelist dominance, he made (along with his criminal friends) an unbelievably twisted, wicked, and sick decision – kill every single Jew who, of course, had nothing to do with rigging and clogging political processes in a huge set of countries. While we all know the horrible theater of the Holocaust, people are unaware that the super-rich Jews didn’t prevent the Holocaust, even if they could have (given their power over the US political system).

The super-rich Jewish clientelist groups knew that America was crucial for their interests

The Jewish clientelist groups had a significant impact on American finance in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

They saved a massive amount of assets in the Anglo-Saxon banks in the US (some of the super-rich families owning it are, however, repulsed by them) and bought a massive number of shares of the same banks. The same goes for multinational corporations.

The degree they wanted to participate in the US financial system (including the FED) came to the point (back then) that they started to control the US financial system basically without basically any single Jewish-clientelist bank in the ownership.

I would get it if there wasn’t any religious clientelism. But there was

The super-rich Jews didn’t prevent the Holocaust. I would get it if there didn’t exist any religious clientelism (even Catholic, Evangelical). But there was, and to me – as an atheist – it makes me sick.

The fact of the matter is that even regular Jews have their shameful share of clientelist behavior. They choose to have a Jewish doctor, a Jewish lawyer, a company whose other owner is a Jew, and so on.

Please note that every religion does it. But in my experience, Jewish clientelism is the worst in this thing.

The sickening Anti-Semitism in the 1930s in Europe and Germany

In the 1930s, anti-Semitism swept across Europe, but nowhere was it more insidious and violent than in Germany. Adolf Hitler’s rise to power in 1933 unleashed a wave of state-sanctioned hatred against Jews that would soon engulf the entire continent. The Nazi regime made Jews scapegoats for Germany’s economic woes and political instability, branding them as enemies of the state. Hitler’s propaganda machine spread vicious lies, portraying Jews as subversive, unpatriotic, and biologically inferior. This relentless demonization marked the beginning of an unprecedented campaign of exclusion and violence.

The Nazi government quickly moved to isolate Jews from German society. In 1935, the Nuremberg Laws stripped Jews of their citizenship and banned marriages between Jews and non-Jews. It legally formalized their status as second-class citizens. Jewish businesses were boycotted, Jewish professionals were dismissed from their jobs, and Jewish children were expelled from schools. This systematic marginalization was enforced with brutal efficiency. The SS and the Gestapo, under Heinrich Himmler, used intimidation and terror to ensure compliance. This made life unbearable for Jews in Germany. The state promoted open hostility, paving the way for a more violent phase of anti-Semitic persecution.

Kristallnacht

The growing violence reached its first horrifying climax in 1938 with Kristallnacht, the “Night of Broken Glass.” On November 9–10, Nazi paramilitaries and civilians attacked Jewish homes, businesses, and synagogues across Germany and Austria, shattering windows, looting properties, and setting synagogues ablaze. Over 90 Jews were killed, thousands were arrested, and more than 30,000 were sent to concentration camps. This pogrom signaled the escalation from discrimination to outright violence, with the German government directly orchestrating and encouraging the brutality. Kristallnacht shocked the world but also made it clear that the Nazi regime was determined to eradicate Jews from every facet of public life.

Outside Germany, anti-Semitism was also on the rise. In Poland, Jews were excluded from universities, professions, and political life. In Hungary, Romania, and Austria, far-right movements used Nazi propaganda to fuel their own anti-Jewish agendas. Hungary introduced laws restricting Jewish participation in the economy and public institutions. While Romania’s Iron Guard incited violence against Jews, demanding their removal from public life. Even in countries like France and Italy, fascist movements echoed Hitler’s anti-Semitic policies, though with varying degrees of intensity. The spread of anti-Semitic laws and rhetoric across Europe created a hostile environment that laid the groundwork for the genocidal policies that would follow.

Germany, however, remained at the epicenter of this growing storm. The state-sponsored anti-Semitism there, fueled by Nazi ideology, was unparalleled in its scope and ferocity. The legal framework established by the Nuremberg Laws and the violence of Kristallnacht were just the beginning of a far more terrifying chapter – the Holocaust. As Nazi Germany expanded its reach across Europe, the full weight of its anti-Semitic agenda would result in the systematic extermination of six million Jews, the darkest consequence of unchecked hatred.

Since they were their kin, they should have intervened

Since I wrote about the horrific antisemitism, the Jewish influential financial figures could have intervened when it came to light that there were extermination camps for Jews.

The first accounts of mass atrocities against Jews began to surface as early as 1941, when the Nazis invaded the Soviet Union. The Einsatzgruppen (mobile killing units) carried out mass shootings of Jews in Eastern Europe, and reports of these killings reached the West.

As the war progressed, intelligence agencies and governments received more credible evidence. In December 1942, the Allied governments issued a public declaration acknowledging that the Nazis were engaging in the systematic mass murder of Jews. This marked one of the first official acknowledgments of the Holocaust.

By 1943, reports on specific extermination camps, such as Auschwitz, Sobibor, and Treblinka, had reached the Allies through various channels, including escapees from the camps. One notable instance was the Vrba-Wetzler Report, authored by two Slovak Jews who escaped from Auschwitz in April 1944. They provided detailed accounts of the inner workings of Auschwitz, including the gas chambers and crematoria, confirming that it was a facility designed for mass murder.

The Pianist movie was right and wrong

The Pianist movie – and this time it is my humble opinion – was really racist, anti-Gentiles, and full of stereotypes.

It portrayed Jews as smart, moral, and discriminated against. And yes, they had long faces, olive skin, black curly eyes, hooked noses, sad eyes, and so on.

While the creators (as aligned to one particular religious side) portrayed Jews the way they did, Germans looked more than Germans, Poles looked more than Poles. And Germans were evil (from the common morality) meanwhile Poles were stupid. The movie really disgusted me.

But there is a line when a Jew says that the Jewish bankers didn’t make the US president start a war. It is right and wrong. It depends on whom you think a banker is. If it is a bank owner, there were basically none. But tons of Jews (I am sorry, but people live in tribalism (nationalism)) that controlled the financial system were so influential that they had the chance to make president of the US to wage a war on Germany to stop the genocide.

American public saving the poor Jews? No way!

The American public, still recovering from the trauma of World War I and the Great Depression, largely opposed getting involved in another European conflict. Many Americans embraced isolationism and were reluctant to send troops overseas. Anti-Semitic attitudes also influenced public opinion, making it difficult for the government to justify intervention purely to save Jews. When Jewish refugees sought asylum in the U.S., immigration laws and prevailing sentiment prevented many from finding safety.

President Roosevelt and his administration focused on winning the broader war against the Axis powers. They believed defeating Nazi Germany would eventually end the Holocaust. Framing the war as a mission to save Jews could have weakened public support. The U.S. government eventually created the War Refugee Board in 1944, which helped save thousands of Jews. However, earlier actions that could have made a greater difference, such as bombing the railways to Auschwitz, were rejected. The U.S. knew about the atrocities, but other priorities, public sentiment, and anti-Semitism delayed direct action to stop them.

Yes, the super-rich Jews didn’t prevent the Holocaust. They could have

So when even ordinary Jewish people tend to be clientelist (but they are not super-rich, and have no political influence), the super-rich Jewish groups make sure that they prefer Jews (just deep religious affiliation).

Of course, the super-rich Jews didn’t prevent the Holocaust. So approximately six million Jews were murdered during the Holocaust.

So as Jews are hardworking, extremely able, rise to enormously high socioeconomic achievements, and – as they say – stand by each other, this definitely wasn’t the case.

I know very well that Hollywood doesn’t care about the WW2 suffering (of course, except for the Jewish one), they could make a movie about the super-rich clientelistic groups not preventing the Holocaust.

Conclusion

While the genocide was a horrible tragedy, the super-rich Jews didn’t prevent the Holocaust. They had that power, but money comes first (of course, their possible effort would have cost tons of money).

If we destroy the us/them dichotomy (respective xenophobia), vote for democracy, and get money out of politics, we can ensure that no such tragedy can ever happen.


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