Angelos Agathangelou: Steven Laws has more or less my mindset and I'm ancestrally Greek, born in England. My children are half British, half Greek ancestrally. I feel that Europeans are my people and I agree that Ashkenazi Jews are not. It also matters that English and Greek, Italian, Spanish, French, or Germans, before the recent 'camp of the saints' lunacy, are all Christian people and have the same basic morals and values. We should fight back to keep not only Britain, but all of Europe European, because like it or not, times were better when it was.
Is it so hard to believe that the Jews are far stranger to me than Muslims, or any of the other major religions. Muslims revere Christ as a prophet, the real ancient Jews who are now extinct had Christ crucified and modern white neo-Jews believe that Jesus is boiling in a vat of excrement for eternity. Jews playing the victim card from that perspective is simply a super creepy form of gas lighting.
Andrew Gold put forward a classic Jewish fallacy when he brought out the 'culture' card and sadly Steven allowed himself to fall into that trap, because Christian and Jewish culture are virtually diametrically opposed to each other.
The very term 'Judaeo-Christian' is oxymoronic hasbara. The Jews killed Christ, we believe in a brotherhood of man and they believe they are superior and we only exist to be their slaves.
From Martin Luther, to Henry Ford, highly intelligent people have always understood that we Christian Europeans are culturally completely different to Ashkenazi Jews.
DD: We break down the second half of a tense and disturbing interview between Andrew Gold and Steven Laws, where the discussion spirals from identity and culture into outright arguments about extinction, remigration, authoritarianism, and whether an entire people should simply accept their own demise.
Andrew Gold insists extinction is inevitable and even preferable to decisive action, while Steven Laws draws a hard line, rejecting emotional manipulation and calling out inverted moral standards, selective empathy, and intellectual sleight of hand.
This exchange exposes the fault lines beneath modern political discourse, where abstract ideals collide with ancestry, nationhood, and the most uncomfortable questions no one wants to answer.
Watch the full breakdown and decide for yourself who actually makes sense here.
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