16:59

Rudolph the Jewish Reindeer.mp3

12/12/2019
Devon
00:00:01 It's beginning to look and sound a lot like Christmas. There's a radio station, probably in in most major population centers playing Christmas songs all around the clock. Even most places of business are going to be playing Christmas music 24/7.
00:00:18 Bringing Christmas cheer, you could say, but an amazing amount of Christmas songs I've noticed, and this is something I noticed a long time ago when I was a kid.
00:00:28 Seem to have one thing in common.
00:00:32 They don't mention Jesus at all. You know, at first.
00:00:39 I thought this might.
00:00:41 Be kind of a normal thing. You know? They're they're they're traditional Christian songs, right? I mean, they don't need to specifically name Jesus in every song about his birth.
00:00:54 Christmas isn't just just about Jesus, you know, it's it's also about Rudolph the Red nosed reindeer and and silver bells and and the snow of the white Christmas, the most wonderful time of the year rocking around the Christmas tree.
00:01:14 The problem is every single one of those songs I just referenced. If you consider it a problem, you might disagree.
00:01:21 Wasn't even written by a Christian.
00:01:24 In fact, every single one of those songs and many more were written by people who don't even like Jesus.
00:01:33 They were written by Jews. When I first realized just how many Christmas classics.
00:01:40 Were written by Jews. My first thought was.
00:01:44 How nothing else on planet Earth.
00:01:48 Really illustrates how little control.
00:01:52 Christians have had.
00:01:55 Over their own culture in the last 100 years, I hate playing the imagined game, but imagine finding out that a significant number.
00:02:05 Like half of the classic Hanukkah songs, for example, played on the radio in Israel and sung by Jews every every Hanukkah.
00:02:16 Had actually been written by Christians.
00:02:18 Or, or even just Buddhists.
00:02:20 And had and no connection whatsoever to the religious meaning of Hanukkah. They were just songs about the season, but never included any of the religious aspects of Hanukkah. I actually don't think there's even another example.
00:02:35 At all on on earth of something like this happening where a religious group.
00:02:42 Has its culture.
00:02:44 Not just influence, but in many ways defined by another group, not just another group, but a group that in in many ways.
00:02:54 Opposes their religion. They'll find me one example of anything even coming close to this.
00:03:02 Well, how bad can it be? You might ask? You know, maybe, maybe, maybe they're just superior songwriters. Maybe Jews are just really good at writing songs, and Christians are just terrible. And so that's that's why it happened. It's it's not as.
00:03:18 The songs are subversive, but what do a lot of these songs do?
00:03:23 A lot of these songs.
00:03:25 Change the message. The meaning of Christmas.
00:03:30 From a celebration.
00:03:32 Of Jesus Christ's birth.
00:03:36 To a message.
00:03:38 Of consumerism, what better way for money changers to mock Jesus and get their revenge than to turn his birthday?
00:03:49 Into a celebration.
00:03:52 Of money changing. I don't want to use hyperbole here and say that you know the shift away from Jesus Christ and the focus on the Pagan elements of Christmas is all just the product of of Jewish songwriting. It's clearly not, but it would also be disingenuous.
00:04:12 To say that music doesn't play a huge role in Christmas, there's no other holiday, Christian or otherwise, that I can think of that's celebrated in America, where there's a whole.
00:04:23 Genre of music dedicated just to that holiday, where every store in the country begins playing this music and where groups of Christians.
00:04:33 Go house to house.
00:04:35 Singing songs about a holiday. It's the only holiday in America, at least, where this is the case.
00:04:42 And it's because these songs do play a huge role in defining this holiday. So let's take a look at some of these songs.
Speaker 2
00:04:51 He's making a list and checking it twice. He's going to find out who's naughty and nice. Santa Claus is coming to town.
Devon
00:05:02 Santa Claus is coming to town was written by Fred Kootz and Haven Gillespie.
00:05:08 Both Jews, let's take a look at some of the lyrics for a song that even my mother used to sing to me when it was time to go to bed on Christmas Eve. This song is designed specifically for children and and obviously and in many ways defines how children view Christmas.
00:05:29 And what Christmas is all about, you better watch out. You better not cry. You better not pout. I'm telling you why.
00:05:37 Santa Claus is coming to town.
00:05:41 So in other words, you better behave not because that's what Jesus would have you do, or even your parents, or or civic responsibility.
00:05:51 It's not that you should do unto others.
00:05:54 As you would have done to yourself, no.
00:05:57 It's because Santa Claus.
00:05:59 Is coming and you won't get any presents.
00:06:02 If you're not good.
00:06:04 You better behave.
00:06:06 Or you don't.
00:06:07 Get any tangible goodies you don't get any trinkets because Santa Claus. He sees you when you're sleeping.
00:06:15 He knows when you're awake.
00:06:17 He knows if you've been bad or good.
00:06:21 So be good, for goodness sake, in many ways you could say Santa Claus is replacing God in this song.
00:06:28 Santa Claus could be the state, and again, I'm not saying Jews or this song are the ones that single handedly merged these Pagan elements. You know, Santa Claus and and other characters like that with Christmas.
00:06:42 Or or even.
00:06:43 That it's bad necessarily to have a traditional Christmas that includes elements.
00:06:49 Like a Christmas tree or Santa Claus, but this song.
00:06:54 Has pretty much eradicate.
00:06:56 And it, well, it has eradicated all mention of Christianity.
00:07:00 And makes Christmas.
00:07:03 All about the God of the material.
00:07:06 Rewarding you for.
00:07:07 Being good not with blessings or with wisdom.
00:07:10 Or even health.
00:07:12 But with material wealth material goods.
00:07:17 Trinkets. So there's a song about Santa Claus, and it doesn't talk about Jesus on his birthday, and it's about presents. You know it let kids be kids. I mean it's it's OK. It's not a big deal. I mean, besides, how many of these songs did Jews actually make? So that they there's a lot of Jews in the music industry.
00:07:37 So they made a couple Christmas songs.
Speaker 3
00:07:40 There's no place like home for the holidays.
00:07:46 Because no matter how far away you are.
Devon
00:07:53 Written by a Jew.
Speaker 5
00:07:54 Baby, just slip the table under the tree for me. Being an awful good girl.
Devon
00:08:07 Written by a Jew.
Speaker 5
00:08:14 For Christmas.
00:08:19 A beautiful sight night walking in a winter Wonderland.
Speaker 6
00:08:27 Jewish they know that.
Speaker 5
00:08:33 This way.
Speaker 4
00:08:35 He's loaded lots of toys and goodies on his slave.
Devon
00:08:42 Yep, that one too, also written by a Jew.
Speaker 5
00:08:44 They're very.
Speaker 4
00:08:47 It's Christmas time in the city.
Devon
00:08:54 Written by a Jew.
00:09:10 Written by a Jew.
Speaker 4
00:09:14 Dreaming of a world Christmas?
00:09:22 Just like the one you know.
Devon
00:09:28 Written by a Jew.
Speaker 5
00:09:31 Let's take that road, people.
Speaker
00:09:37 It's lovely weather.
Devon
00:09:41 Also written by a Jew.
Speaker 4
00:09:42 It's the most wonderful time of the.
Speaker 3
00:09:49 With the kids Jingle, Belling and everyone telling.
Speaker 4
00:09:53 You be a good cheer.
Devon
00:09:56 Yep, written by a Jew.
Speaker 3
00:10:00 The fire is slowly dying and my.
00:10:04 We're still goodbye and long as you love me. So let it snow. Let it snow. Let it snow.
Devon
00:10:12 Written by a Jew.
Speaker 4
00:10:14 Have yourself a merry little Christmas.
00:10:20 Let yourself be live. From now on, our troubles will be our side.
Devon
00:10:32 Written by a.
Speaker 3
00:10:32 Jew. A beautiful sight. We're happy tonight. Walking in.
Speaker 6
00:10:40 Gone away.
Devon
00:10:41 Another Jewish song.
Speaker 6
00:10:43 You know Dasher and dancer and Prancer and Vixen, Comet and Cupid and Donner and Blitzen.
00:10:51 But do you recall the most famous reindeer of all, Rudolph the red nosed reindeer?
Devon
00:11:03 And Rudolph obviously also Jewish now I think Rudolph the red nosed reindeer offers a little more.
00:11:11 The side.
00:11:12 Into the psychology behind the people writing these songs, people living in a society.
00:11:19 Full of other people who who's their biggest holiday every year isn't just a holiday you don't celebrate.
00:11:26 But at the very least, it probably makes you.
00:11:28 A little uncomfortable.
00:11:30 This this society where you're vastly outnumbered is celebrating the birth of their deity.
00:11:38 A deity that your people, you know kind of killed. And now, according to your religious text, is burning in hell for eternity and and even according to people like Ben Shapiro, you know he.
00:11:53 Was just some some.
00:11:54 Rebel that was causing trouble and and he got what he deserved.
00:11:58 So at the very least, I could see this big the biggest holiday of the year celebrating the birth of Jesus Christ.
00:12:07 Might make Jews feel a little.
00:12:11 Out of place at the very least, and.
00:12:13 Maybe, maybe even threatened.
00:12:16 And that's exactly the story of Rudolph. Let's take a.
00:12:19 Look at the.
00:12:19 Lyrics. Rudolph the Red Nose reindeer had.
00:12:23 A very shiny nose.
00:12:26 Imagine that what makes Rudolph stick out?
00:12:30 And looked different from all the other reindeer around him.
00:12:34 Is his nose.
00:12:36 And if you ever saw it.
00:12:39 You would even say it glows.
00:12:42 All of the other reindeer.
00:12:45 You used to laugh and call him names.
00:12:48 They wouldn't let poor Rudolph.
00:12:51 Playing all their reindeer games.
00:12:54 See once again.
00:12:56 We see something that Jews often claim, you know, happens to them in these host societies, they're mocked, they're excluded and persecuted for being different.
00:13:07 They're never included in all the the Reindeer games.
00:13:12 Then one foggy Christmas Eve.
00:13:15 Santa came and said.
00:13:18 And now we have Santa.
00:13:20 Not Jesus, obviously. Come to it off and say not that you're useful. Part of the group.
00:13:27 But no.
00:13:28 Your difference?
00:13:31 It's not just something good.
00:13:34 Your your nose that makes you different than the other reindeer. It's it's not.
00:13:37 Just a good thing.
00:13:40 But you should be the leader.
00:13:43 You should guide all the other reindeer that were previously making fun of you and wouldn't include you.
00:13:51 You should be their leader and guide them through the fog and once again we see this often repeated.
00:13:59 Jewish thing. The idea that Jews have to make.
00:14:03 The world better.
00:14:04 For the Golem, or you know, non Jews.
00:14:07 Sometimes against their will.
00:14:09 They have to lead them.
00:14:12 And save the world from itself. Then all the reindeer loved him.
00:14:18 And they shouted out with Glee.
00:14:21 Rudolph the Red nosed reindeer. You will go down in history. So in other words.
00:14:27 Everyone clapped after Rudolph saved the unruly Goyem.
00:14:34 Using what made him different?
00:14:37 As his superpower, they all clapped and and wrote about how great he was in the history books. He didn't have to assimilate, you know, if anything, the other reindeer had to accept. His presence had to accept his leading role.
00:14:55 You know this is, I think it's a thinly veiled, very thinly veiled fantasy.
00:15:01 Of many Jews and how they feel, you know, probably, especially around Christmas time.
00:15:07 They're left out. They're not included in the festivities of Christmas, but that's.
00:15:12 OK.
00:15:14 Because one day.
00:15:16 They will be recognized, they will come to the rescue and they'll save everyone in the end.
00:15:24 And I think this is how a lot of Jewish fiction is, is even structured. Some people call it the the secret king.
00:15:31 And you'll see this thing over and over and over again if you pay attention. But it's not the story of Christmas.
00:15:40 In fact, it's the exact opposite.
00:15:44 Of the story of Christmas, the story of of Christmas, the story of Jesus is one of self sacrifice, not the fantasy of some kid who gets picked on.
00:15:55 And imagines that everyone will love him someday when they find out that what they made fun of him about was actually awesome.
00:16:04 And it was going to save.
00:16:05 Everyone you see in the.
00:16:07 Story of Rudolph.
00:16:09 It's not Rudolph who has to grow.
00:16:12 And overcome what makes him different.
00:16:15 It was society.
00:16:17 That had to embrace and celebrate what made him different because it was going to save them.
00:16:23 Because after all.
00:16:28 Is our strength.
00:16:30 Merry Christmas.
00:16:33 If you like my videos, make sure you like and subscribe, especially here on bit shoot. Make sure you also go and subscribe over at D live it's Dev and stack.
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00:16:58 Piled on there as well.