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News :: U.S. Government

And Pigs Fly: Daddy says spy son isn't Jewish

Daddy says Ariel’s not a Jew, so therefore it must be true; at least that’s how Time Magazine sees it [Or more likely, wants you and I to see it].

By Curt Maynard



Daddy says Ariel’s not a Jew, so therefore it must be true; at least that’s how Time Magazine sees it [Or more likely, wants you and I to see it]. Of course Time inc. is a “Jewish company,” at least according to the Jewish journalist Michael Wolfe, who wrote an article several years ago, attesting to this fact.[1] Time Magazine, in an article entitled “Did the Sailor go Overboard,” quoted Ariel Weinmann’s father Robert as saying, “his son is not Jewish,” which is a joke really. Perhaps Mr. Weinmann, or Time’s editors were being cryptic; perhaps his son isn’t a “practicing Jew,” which by the way, most Jewish Americans aren’t, most ethnic Jews in the United States do not attend synagogue, nor do they hold any strong religious views, most Jews are secularists, not religious.[2] But I assure you that Ariel Weinmann is an ethnic Jew, I guarantee it, because Weinmann is NOT a named derived from Germanic origins, but it is listed thousands of times on Jewish surname databases like JewishGen: The Home of Jewish Genealogy.[3] The name Ariel is absolutely Jewish, i.e. Ariel Sharon - duh, it means “Lion of God,” in Hebrew[4] and is often used as another name for Jerusalem, but it is not, nor has it ever been, commonly used by Christians. It is however listed on a database that notes, “The names listed here are commonly used by Jews.”[5]

An extensive search on several non-Jewish surname databases revealed to this writer that the surname “Weinmann,” is not derived from German, the closest Germanic surname to Weinmann in these databases is “Weiman,” of which the Germanic etymology is associated with one who makes and/or produces wine.[6] During WWI many German-Americans “Anglicized,” their names in an effort stave off persecution, but most Weiman’s that changed their names, changed it to “Wyman,” not Weinmann, which would have been pointless, as it still revealed the Germanic origins of the name, so why bother? No dear reader, don’t be fooled, Ariel Weinmann is as Jewish as a kosher pickle at a New York Bar Mitzvah.

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