James Lindsay, anti-Communist@ConceptualJames
So these idiots mean Karl Marx was Jewish therefore Communism was invented by Jews because Karl had Jewish "racial" lineage even though his father was a Lutheran convert who raised little demonic Karl as a Lutheran. Notice nobody ever accuses Communism of being Lutheran.
Karl renounced his Lutheranism and took up with Satanism in his late teens and declared himself an atheist and then became a Communist in his early 20s. Karl's own (Lutheran) father accused him of having taken up with the devil and being demon-possessed. He did not accuse him of Jewishness.
Think about that for a second, though. Marx BECAME a Communist. That means Communism predated him. That means he didn't invent Communism, or revolutionary Communism, for that matter. He BECAME a Communist after being a demon-possessed lapsed Lutheran who arguably may have sold his soul to Satan in his late teen years, or tried to, at any rate.
The first revolutionary Communist, which is the stripe of Communist Karl Marx represented, was the French revolutionary Francois Noel "Gracchus" Babeuf, who was eventually executed by the Jacobins for being too radical (let that sink in). Babeuf was a messianic Christian (heretic) who believed he was expressing the real Christian ethic with his Communism.
Babeuf and others in his movement were inspired toward their Communism in party by going more radical with ideas drawn from Jean-Jacques Rousseau and Maximillien Robespierre. Rousseau was raised Calvinist, converted to Catholicism, and then kind of made up his own quasi-Christian beliefs. Robespierre was baptized Catholic but turned deist, openly detesting atheism with vigor and eventually founding a Cult of the Supreme Being based on Deism in opposition to Catholicism and the rival Cult of Reason, which he also detested.
Marx wrote about Babeuf and said that Babeuf had the right idea executed wrongly. What Babeuf left out was an inner transformation to Communism (a Christian-ish concept) and the dialectics of Hegel. Hegel was a Hermetic esotericist posing as a Lutheran trained at the infamous Tubingen Stift (a Lutheran seminary in Bavaria). One could properly accuse Hegel of having created a Hermetic social philosophy by hammering the dialectic into a pseudo-Christian mold. Of course, Marx rejected all this spiritualism because he was a staunch materialist atheist (not a believing Jew) like most of the Young Hegelians (the Leftist cult of Hegel after Hegel's death).
The connections between Marx and the French Revolution are also easily drawn, both in philosophical currents and conceptual inspirations. Marx was a member of the Communist League (joining shortly after it was formed in 1847, after he had begun writing about Babeuf and Communism) and the earlier Communist Correspondence Committee, which he helped form in 1845. (Note: Marx was writing about Communism in 1843, if not earlier.)
He got involved in those currents of radicalism, however, by being involved in debates about socialism and radicalism that were hot at the time in Leftist and Young Hegelian circles, particularly drawing socialist influence from Saint-Simon, Fourier, and Proudhon, all of which is very obvious in his early writings. All three of these men were Catholics and not Jewish and with no evidence of Jewish ancestry.
It's worth noting that all these Catholic influences are likely present because of Catholic social teaching, particularly among the Jesuits, going back a couple of centuries at the time (so maybe even 1500s). The Jesuits developed the concept of "social justice," and all of these European Catholic early socialists would have been familiar with and inspired by that idea.
The Communist League itself was a fusion of the Communist Correspondence League (a letters and theory club) with the French-Bavarian radical esoteric secret society called the League of the Just, which was derived from the League of Outlaws and likely a source of inspiration for the Communist Correspondence League. The League of Outlaws was a Antifa-like group of post-revolutionary French radicals and what was left of the Bavarian Illuminati (an occult secret society) after the king tried to eliminate that group completely.
The Bavarian Illuminati was created by Adam Weishaupt, who was a Jesuit (Catholic) turned mystic esotericist and cult leader. The League of the Just was derivative to the League of Outlaws, which was a derived from a Christian Socialist group that abandoned Jesus for with Babeuf's more vigorous radicalism. All of these groups were secular in their official organization and only had minority Jewish membership.
In no way whatsoever did Jews "invent" Communism. You could maybe blame the French for it, or the Jesuits, or French Jesuits, which would still be rather wrong but at least more plausible than "Jews did it."
Of course, the point these idiots are making is that Marx is guilty because he's ETHNICALLY Jewish, which also means they believe that conversion to Christianity is false, given Marx's father and his own raising.
I thought Christians generally believed that once someone becomes a Christian, they're Christian. There is neither Jew nor Greek in Christ-Jesus, wrote Paul. That's not fringe or debatable Christian doctrine.
Of course, these demon-worshippers aren't Christians, though, are they?
But why is anyone listening to them?