Tony Greenstein | 31 March 2016 | Post Views:

As people will know I
have been suspended from the Labour Party for having allegedly made comments of
some description.  I haven’t yet been
told what those comments are although it is likely that they relate to Israel and
therefore false allegations of anti-Semitism.
Below is a story of
the suspension of Stirling University’s Labour Club President on the basis of
hoax comments on twitter.  The mafia that
runs Labour’s control and constitutional units suspended Rachel Bradshaw first and then inquired after.
False allegations of anti-Semitism by Zionists are
nothing new.  Indeed it would be hard to
point to a single Palestine solidarity activist who has not been so
accused.  It would be even more difficult
to find a Jewish anti-Zionist who hasn’t been accused, repeatedly of ‘self
hatred’, being a traitor or both.
The term self-hatred is quite interesting.  It doesn’t literally mean to hate oneself as
it could quite easily be countered by ‘no, I love myself in fact’.  My standard response is ‘no, I hate you’
which has upset more than one Zionist!
It is the old gibe that was used by the Nazi party
against German anti-fascists. Literally it means an anti-racist or anti-fascist
Jew, just like an anti-racist or anti-fascist German hated their race and
nation and since, in the fascist lexicon, the individual is only important in
so far as they are part of a racial community, they therefore  hate themselves.  It is therefore a charge with a Nazi pedigree
– appropriate for a movement which collaborated with the Nazis.
What there have been are a number of examples whereby Zionists
deliberately fake anti-Semitic attacks in order to ‘prove’ that they are
surrounded by anti-Semitism and that anti-Zionists are really anti-Semites.
A Jewish student who painted swastikas on a
board outside her door

French Jews Stunned by Claims That Rabbi Faked Own Stabbing
Rachel
Bradshaw was suspended from the Labour party but was later reinstated after
allegations of anti-Semitic social media posts were proven to be fake.
Originally posted on
Mar. 31, 2016
Jamie Ross BuzzFeed
News Reporter, UK

Bradshaw (centre)
with the rest of the incoming Stirling University Labour committee. Facebook: Stirling
The
president-elect of Stirling University’s Labour society has been reinstated to
the party after allegations of anti-Semitism were proven to be false.
It
was alleged that Rachel Bradshaw, a geography student who was elected as chair
of the university society this week, used an anti-Semitic slur on social media
and questioned whether Jewish people were welcome in the Labour party.
Bradshaw
was then suspended by Labour, but hours later the party changed its mind
admitting it had fallen for hoax social media posts.
On
Stirling University Labour’s Facebook group on Thursday, a post told members:
“We’ve got to inform you that Rachel has been suspended from Labour pending
allegations of anti-Semitism. We (the outgoing committee) are fully behind her
and have reason to believe these allegations have been created to discredit
her.”
Following
the lifting of her suspension, Bradshaw told BuzzFeed News: “I have had the suspension
lifted after supplying evidence that someone has made malicious claims against
me in order to discredit me. This matter will be handled in due course.”

After
an initial statement confirming Bradshaw’s suspension, a Labour party
spokesperson later confirmed Bradshaw had been reinstated to the party.
The
spokesperson said: “Following receipt of further evidence, Rachel Bradshaw’s
suspension has been lifted.”

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