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Reason: None provided.

This is a common misconception. In fact, Marx was a Judeo-supremacist whose garbage ideology was solely intended for destroying Gentile nations.

First, throughout his communist career, most of Marx's associates and friends were ethnically Jewish, with Engels being the principal exception. Marx was friends with other Jewish socialists and communists like Heinrich Heine (who pretended to convert to Christianity to help his career, saying his fake conversion was his "entrance ticket to [subverting] European civilization"), and indeed Marx and his Jewish father both pretended to convert to Christianity so his father could become a lawyer (no snickering!) and so Marx could attend the University of Jena.

A non-communist and longtime enemy of Marx, Mikhail Bakunin, even warned that Marx had established a network of Jewish friends to spread their evil ideology: "he also has in his service a numerous corps of agents, hierarchically organized and acting secretly under his direct orders: a kind of socialist and literary freemasonry in which his compatriots, the German Jews and otehrs, occupy a considerable place..."

Another longtime friend of Marx's was Moses Hess, an open Jewish Zionist who recommended Zionist Nationalism to strengthen Jews, but internationalist communism to weaken and enslave Gentiles. Hess and Marx worked together to attack non-communist nationalists like Bakunin.

The one point of confusion is that Marx tried to cover up the problem of Jewish influence and subversion of Christian societies by writing something that is now considered "antisemitic": in a letter to Bruno Bauer (an enemy of Marx whom Marxists falsely called antisemitic who encouraged Jews to leave the cult of Judaism and abandon hatred of Gentiles so they could really be emancipated), Marx denied that the Jewish religion was a problem at all, and instead pretended that Jews were just an economic class. His language is harsh, but that's always how he wrote (including to "friends"), and considering that nearly all his friends were Jews, Marx was no anti-Semite--quite the opposite.

312 days ago
0 score
Reason: None provided.

This is a common misconception. In fact, Marx was a Judeo-supremacist whose garbage ideology was solely intended for destroying Gentile nations.

First, throughout his communist career, most of Marx's associates and friends were ethnically Jewish, with Engels being the principal exception. Marx was friends with other Jewish socialists and communists like Heinrich Heine (who pretended to convert to Christianity to help his career, saying his fake conversion was his "entrance ticket to [subverting] European civilization"), and indeed Marx and his Jewish father both pretended to convert to Christianity so his father could become a lawyer (no snickering!) and so Marx could attend the University of Jena.

A non-communist and longtime enemy of Marx, Mikhail Bakunin, even warned that Marx had established a network of Jewish friends to spread their evil ideology: "he also has in his service a numerous corps of agents, hierarchically organized and acting secretly under his direct orders: a kind of socialist and literary freemasonry in which his compatriots, the German Jews and otehrs, occupy a considerable place..."

Another longtime friend of Marx's was Moses Hess, an open Jewish Zionist who recommended Zionist Nationalism to strengthen Jews, but internationalist communism to weaken and enslave Gentiles. Hess and Marx worked together to attack non-communist nationalists like Bakunin.

The one point of confusion is that Marx tried to cover up the problem of Jewish influence and subversion of Christian societies by writing something that is now considered "antisemitic": in a letter to Bruno Bauer (an enemy of Marx whom Marxists falsely called antisemitic who encouraged Jews to leave the cult of Judaism and abandon hatred of Gentiles so they could really be emancipated), Marx denied that the Jewish religion was a problem at all, and instead pretended that Jews were just an economic class. His language is harsh, but that's always how he wrote, and considering that nearly all his friends were Jews, he was no anti-Semite--quite the opposite.

312 days ago
0 score
Reason: Original

This is a common misconception. In fact, Marx was a Judeo-supremacist whose garbage ideology was solely intended for destroying Gentile nations.

First, throughout his communist career, most of Marx's associates and friends were ethnically Jewish, with Engels being the principal exception. Marx was friends with other Jewish socialists and communists like Heinrich Heine (who pretended to convert to Christianity to help his career, saying his fake conversion was his "entrance ticket to [subverting] European civilization"), and indeed Marx and his Jewish father both pretended to convert to Christianity so his father could become a lawyer (no snickering!) and so Marx could attend the University of Jena.

A non-communist and longtime enemy of Marx, Mikhail Bakunin, even warned that Marx had established a network of Jewish friends to spread their evil ideology: "he also has in his service a numerous corps of agents, hierarchically organized and acting secretly under his direct orders: a kind of socialist and literary freemasonry in which his compatriots, the German Jews and otehrs, occupy a considerable place..."

Another longtime friend of Marx's was Moses Hess, an open Jewish Zionist who recommended Zionist Nationalism to strengthen Jews, but internationalist communism to weaken and enslave Gentiles. Hess and Marx worked together to attack non-communist nationalists like Bakunin.

The one point of confusion is that Marx tried to cover up the problem of Jewish influence and subversion of Christian societies by writing something that is now considered "antisemitic": in a letter to Bruno Bauer (a decent ethnic Jew who encouraged Jews to leave the cult of Judaism and abandon hatred of Gentiles so they could really be emancipated), Marx denied that the Jewish religion was a problem at all, and instead pretended that Jews were just an economic class. His language is harsh, but that's always how he wrote, and considering that nearly all his friends were Jews, he was no anti-Semite--quite the opposite.

312 days ago
1 score