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America’s Inhumane Generation: More Than 25% of Millennials and Gen Z Say It’s Acceptable to Hold Neo-Nazi Views

America’s inhumane generation:

More than 25% of millennials and Gen Z say it’s acceptable to hold neo-Nazi views

There are too many vile posts on social media, speeches and chants to mention. The scenes across America’s college campuses since the Oct. 7 massacre in Israel have turned our stomachs, but it should come as no surprise that our young people increasingly embrace ideologies that diminish the indiscriminate killing of women and children.

This antisemitic coming-out party for young Democrats is vexing the White House precisely because years of ideologically hammering young people through party-aligned academia, social media, and a decidedly left-wing, anti-faith press corps has created a monster the president can’t control.

Democrats have now been exposed for tolerating the intolerable, defending the indefensible, and explaining away evil. White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre refused last week to call anti-Israel protesters “extremists.” President Biden says Hamas is “the other team.” Responding to a heckler, the president buckled this week, calling for a “pause” in the war.

Millennials and Generation Z have had diversity, equity and inclusion pounded into their heads since elementary school. Social-emotional learning propagated by the left was supposed to put them in touch their feelings and make them compassionate and understanding. Instead, it has made them numb and ignorant of humanity. It has led them to cheapen human life and made them ignorant of atrocity and supportive of a culture of death.

They’ve grown up in a world where we deny the humanity of the unborn, take that life and call it health care. We sanction the murder of the old and infirm, calling it compassion.

Leftist professors who have never been outside the walls of universities gloss over the murder of tens of millions of innocent people at the hands of communists, socialists and fascists. They work overtime to redefine those ideologies to mean American conservatism.

Young people today are taught moral equivalency in the name of pluralism and respect for the beliefs of others. They are taught there are no objective truths. The left invents victims and suppresses personal responsibility. They manipulate science and call it fact.

In the last century, as German citizens turned a blind eye to the Holocaust, many did so out of fear of government retribution for opposing Hitler’s Final Solution.

Today, young people are not pressured by any such force. —>READ MORE HERE

FIRST-EVER 50-STATE SURVEY ON HOLOCAUST KNOWLEDGE OF AMERICAN MILLENNIALS AND GEN Z REVEALS SHOCKING RESULTS:

Disturbing Findings Reveal Significant Number Of Millennials and Gen Z Can’t Name A Single Concentration Camp Or Ghetto, Believe That Two Million Or Fewer Jews Were Killed And A Concerning Percentage Believe That Jews Caused The Holocaust

Gideon Taylor, President of the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany (Claims Conference), today announced the release of the U.S. Millennial Holocaust Knowledge and Awareness Survey, the first-ever 50-state survey on Holocaust knowledge among Millennials and Gen Z. The surprising state-by-state results highlight a worrying lack of basic Holocaust knowledge, a growing problem as fewer and fewer Holocaust survivors – eyewitnesses to a state-sponsored genocide – are alive to share the lessons of the Holocaust.

Nationally, there is a clear lack of awareness of key historical facts; 63 percent of all national survey respondents do not know that six million Jews were murdered and 36 percent thought that “two million or fewer Jews” were killed during the Holocaust. Additionally, although there were more than 40,000 camps and ghettos in Europe during the Holocaust, 48 percent of national survey respondents cannot name a single one.

The study reveals that Wisconsin scores highest in Holocaust awareness among U.S. Millennials and Gen Z. Arkansas has the lowest Holocaust knowledge score1, with less than 2-in-10 (17 percent) of Millennials and Gen Z meeting the Holocaust knowledge criteria.

We calculated our Holocaust “knowledge score” by using the percentage of Millennials and Gen Z adults who met all three of the following criteria: 1) have “Definitively heard about the Holocaust,” AND 2) can name at least one concentration camp, death camp, or ghetto, AND 3) know that 6 million Jews were killed in the Holocaust.

In what might be considered a disturbing sign of the times, 59 percent of respondents indicate that they believe something like the Holocaust could happen again. —>READ MORE HERE

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