Posted on 04/08/2025 4:09:31 AM PDT by MtnClimber
Damon Joshua, an employee of Severn Trent Water Supply in the U.K., has been fired from his job due to a social media post he put up in observance of the one-year anniversary of the Hamas attack on innocent Israelis.
On Oct. 7, 2024, the sewage worker took to an employee website and characterized those who raped, tortured, mutilated, and murdered 1,200 Israelis as a “group of violent and disgusting terrorists.”
For mildly — one might say, timidly — stating an obvious truth, he was let go within hours.
Raping, torturing, mutilating, and murdering people is, to say the least, “violent.” Calling people who rape, torture, mutilate, and murder others, many of whom were women and children-- and all of whom were unsuspecting -- “disgusting” is a firing offense.
The Hamas terrorists did unspeakable things to mothers and their babies. And made others watch. “Disgusting” doesn’t begin to describe them.
Disgusting? Disgusting? That is a vile understatement. “Sick.” “Repulsive.” “Heinous.” “Satanic.” Any or all of these would be a better fit but would still not suffice. Would Damon have been fired had he called Lucifer “disgusting?” We know for sure that he wouldn’t have been fired had he called, say, Donald Trump or Christians “disgusting.”
The heads of Severn Trent Water Supply are “disgusting,” that is for sure.
(Excerpt) Read more at americanthinker.com ...
Regardless of its veracity, self-publishing a statement that is ultimately professionally harmful to oneself is an unforced error. Was it worth the results to him? Did it help more than it harmed (him)?
I think Balfour’s hope was that the Jews of England would leave to this restored homeland.
I suppose he was naive to think that expressing disgust for a massacre was controversial. Europeans like their massacres.
While everything he said is true, he posted it on an “employee website”? Would he have been fired if he kept it on his own social media. (Probably)
They don’t have ‘freedom of speech’ over in Jolly Old. It’s the Iron Fist in the Velvet Glove. Well, without the glove.
We barely have it here in the USA (unauthorized speech authority)
That was his mistake. Though he may have still been fired if he did it on his personal web accounts.
“I think Balfour’s hope was that the Jews of England would leave to this restored homeland.”
Balfour was a Jew.
The British government worked to prevent Jews from moving into their (British) Palestinian protectorate after WWII.
Certainly looks like they’ve been taken over.
If the true brits really care about their country, I'd suggest it needs to be much more extreme.
The United Kingdom is an Islamic Terror State and should be sanctioned
It’s complicated and beyond the comprehension of most who seek a simple explanation (and certainly beyond ‘regular news’).
But at its core, you’re spot-on re anti-semitism, the brits and balfour:
Why does the Balfour Declaration, written in 1917 during the darkest days of World War I, tug at our elbow, insisting we pay attention to it? Indeed even today, “Operation Protective Edge” in Gaza harkens back to Balfour. Political analyst Avishai Margalit said, “You can unspool this vendetta back to the Balfour Declaration.”
The Balfour Declaration, written as a letter on November 2, 1917, from British Foreign Secretary Arthur Balfour to British Jewish leader Baron Lionel Walter Rothschild, pledged British support for a “national home for the Jewish people” in Palestine. The declaration is one of the iconic documents in, and represents one of the great moments of, Zionist history.
Conventional wisdom has it that the Balfour Declaration was all about Zionism, that British Prime Minister David Lloyd George and Arthur Balfour were nice guys, “Zionists” both — whatever that meant in 1917 — and that the declaration written was motivated by some kind of Zionist inspiration.
Alas, the genesis of the declaration had little to do with Zionism and everything to do with World War I, British interests in the war, power politics — and anti-Semitism. Indeed, the declaration derived from classic European anti-Judaism and from the gentile English version of anti-Semitism.
The story begins not in Palestine but in Ottoman Turkey, in 1908, with the beginnings of the revolution of the Committee of Union and Progress — the “Young Turks” — which ultimately established hegemony over the Ottoman Sultanate.
The leaders of the Young Turks uprising were viewed with sympathy by the British Foreign Office, in London, but with disdain by the British Embassy in Constantinople, where it counted. As historian David Fromkin tells it, the British ambassador, Sir Gerald Lowther, fell completely under the influence of his “First Dragoman”: his adviser on Middle Eastern affairs, Gerald FitzMaurice, who detested the Young Turks. To FitzMaurice, the fact that the Young Turk revolution began in 1908 in Salonika, Greece (then under Ottoman rule), was significant: More than half of Salonika’s inhabitants were Jews of one flavor or another. This, plus the fact that Salonika had a Freemason lodge founded by a Jew, was enough for FitzMaurice, who himself was entirely taken with the notion of an “international Jewish conspiracy”: The C.U.P. was part of an international Jewish Freemason conspiracy — “the Jew Committee of Union and Progress” — and FitzMaurice convinced his boss, Lowther (who was rather a fool to begin with), of this canard.
Lowther and FitzMaurice cobbled together a report to the Foreign Office, alleging that the Jews (“adept at manipulating occult forces”) had taken control over the Ottoman Empire.
The FitzMaurice and Lowther report won wide acceptance among British officials in London and led to a profound misconception about Middle East power and politics: that a group of Jews wielded political power in the Ottoman Empire — indeed everywhere in the world — at that time. This misconception was common enough; it found particular sinister expression in the Czarist forgery “The Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion.” But in this case, the obvious conclusion was drawn: The Great War, in which Britain was by then heavily engaged, could be won by buying the support of this powerful group. But bought with which coin? Zionism, of course, with British Zionists making the case for the notion of a British-allied postwar Jewish Palestine. To the British, this translated into Jewish support for their war effort, which could be bought by the promise of support of the establishment of a Jewish homeland in Palestine. This notion — a natural to FitzMaurice and his obsession with “Jewish power” — persuaded the Foreign Office to pledge British support to the Zionist enterprise.
Enter Lloyd George.
It is true that Lloyd George’s English Protestantism celebrated the Old Testament Hebrews; it was not uncommon among English Protestants to have deep feelings about the Jewish connection to the Holy Land. But it is more to the point that Lloyd George and the people around him were taken with the notion of Jewish international networking, and more so with international Jewish power. Bringing Jewish power into the picture, precisely when Britain needed help in the war effort, might ensure financial assistance to the Allied cause, and might even help bring America into the war.
The British government never learned that Lowther and FitzMaurice had supplied it with a warped view of Ottoman politics, one in which the Ottoman government was pictured as a tool of world Jewry. In fact, this backdrop served as a perfect setting for the Balfour Declaration.
This national icon derived from dark forces indeed.
Disgraceful legacy of the antisemitic Arthur Balfour deserves exposure
The principle and paradoxical motivation behind the Balfour Declaration was Arthur Balfour’s profound antisemitism
NICOLA Perugini’s timely article (The Balfour Declaration and Edinburgh, Oct 31) is simply superb and shines a light on aspects of Arthur Balfour’s disgraceful imperialist legacy which, as Perugini implies, have been deliberately suppressed by imperial historians for more than a century.
Balfour was deeply involved in a strategic project involving Cecil Rhodes, Alfred (Lord) Milner, Reginald Brett (Lord Esher) and Lord Rothschild among a select few, to extend and maintain an “Anglo-Saxon” “English-speaking empire” across the globe for all time. The Anglo-Saxon was the “acme of human evolution” and all other races were “inferior”.
Arthur Balfour’s father, a Scot enriched by the East India Company, died early and Balfour was raised by his mother and her relatives. The mother’s brother was Robert Cecil, the third Lord Salisbury and like him, a British Prime Minister. The Cecils directed the foreign policy and the intelligence activities of Britain more or less continuously from 1878 to 1918. That went well!
It should be no surprise therefore, that the principle and paradoxical motivation behind the Balfour Declaration was his profound antisemitism – a matter also suppressed in the official biographies.
However, biographer Kenneth Young, relates that Balfour: “…told [Chaim] Weizmann that he had once had a long talk with Cosima Wagner at Bayreuth and ‘shared many of her anti-Semitic postulates’.” So Weitzmann undoubtedly knew that his sponsor hated his race.
In an attempt to display his “lack of antisemitic sentiments” (which rather proves the opposite) in an 1899 letter, Balfour complains about a party in which “the Hebrews were in an actual majority— and tho’ I have no prejudices against the race (quite the contrary) I began to understand the point of view of those who object to alien immigration!”
These quoted views are entirely in accord with his famous 1917 Declaration which, contrary to the spin subsequently placed on that disastrous pledge, was made so that the Jewish people would be welcome – in British-ruled Palestine, but certainly not in Britain! This had disastrous results a mere two to three decades later.
We can only wish Nicola Perugini best wishes in further exposing the disgraceful legacy of this utterly despicable character.
Dr John O’Dowd
Bothwell
Agreed, it sucks, but agree.
Fortunately it works both ways. When someone identifies themself as a rabid left winger, a Marxist, as someone whose value are 180 degrees away from mine…. It helps sort and manage relationships.
Some employers screen applicants based on social media posts, and monitor that activity. Some have a code of conduct to protect their reputation, and termination is a component of it. Given that HR organizations tend bias left, choose wisely what you say.
I have read a couple of times that Balfour was Jewish, but maybe not.
Sorry but I’m not going to get outraged based on a snip quote of a few words. Let’s see the guy’s email and discuss, or at least the full sentence.
If he said “Hamas are evil terrorists” that’s one thing; if he said “Muslims are evil terrorists” that’s another. My guess is that it was somewhere in between, his detractors are saying it’s the latter and this article is saying it’s the former.
That’s how the media enrages both sides.
This must be happening regularly, all over the uk because we see n3ws articles about similar things like that several times a week.
He was fired basically because of sharia law- might as well say sharia law is already established in the uk
Perfidious Albion alert!
Okay, you got me. But I still think UK has always been anti-semitic.
Oh, scratch that, you don't got me. I was thinking, "Balfour doesn't really sound like a Jewish name," but I was just too lazy and over-it to fight with you. LOL!
“While everything he said is true, he posted it on an “employee website”?”
I guess we don’t know what was being discussed on the “employee website”, but if it was work-related stuff, it’s hard to fault the company for firing him. We also don’t know his back story - may have been a pain in the butt there for any number of reasons.
On the other hand, if the site was being used to bash Israel, I would look at his comment in a completely different light.
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