There are no excuses for being wicked.
They've been trying for centuries.
Frank, played by Ben Platt, is on trial for the murder of Mary Phagan, a 13-year-old girl who was found dead in the Atlanta factory where he served as superintendent in 1913. (The plot is based on a true story.) A nerdy northern Jew in Georgia, Frank is an easy target for the ire of the public and the prosecution. In a taut and tense courtroom scene, he is implicated by a succession of coached but compelling witnesses. The most damning testimony comes from a janitor, Jim Conley (Alex Joseph Grayson), who claims that the Jew stereotypically attempted to buy his silence, recalling Frank’s words in a sinister song:
You got money in your pocket and there’s plenty more of that.
I got wealthy friends and family, and a wife who’s dumb and fat.
I got rich folks out in Brooklyn, if I need somewheres to go.
And these stupid rednecks never gonna know!
As Conley concludes this recollection with a rousing refrain of “That’s what he said,” the chorus behind him thunders, “Hang him! Hang the Jew!” It’s a showstopper.
https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2023/03/parade-broadway-musical-review-anti-semitism-leo-frank/673456/
>And these stupid rednecks never gonna know!
Isn't it telling that the Jews are here to tell us that it's not the Jews?
It's the Russians
It's the Muslims
It's the Khazarians
It's the Jews who say they are Jews but are not
It's the Satanist…
Soros is a Jew