Anonymous ID: f24b31 May 31, 2020, 8:44 a.m. No.9394354   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>9394214

Sure, given the factions of each (C_A/MOS) involved furthering this agenda could be one or the other, but how big is the difference? Calling it clownish behavior in some ways makes it seem like a particular domestic point of view on how to go about making the USA the best it can be, just like naming an organization intended to destroy the USA's constitutional republic…. "Friends of Democracy".

 

I'll grant you this is most likely a multi-country, multi-agency-task force/op, drawing attention to MOS involvement, and there is MOS involvement, highlights that this is an organized attack by foreign interests and powers with the sole goal of forever diminishing the USA

Anonymous ID: f24b31 May 31, 2020, 9:06 a.m. No.9394562   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>9394341

Thanks

 

"Although his family was not overly religious, young Aaron was fascinated by the Jewish culture that surrounded him. "I studied Modern European History at Columbia University, in New York, but I took as many courses as I could that were Jewish-focused," he said.

 

"What I'm most interested in is literature, art and film that focus on catastrophic Jewish history - the pogroms and the Holocaust and those horrible things. When I was at Yale I was working in the Holocaust Archive, which was an amazing experience.

 

"When we played a festival in Katowice this year I woke everybody up early, hired a van and took them to Auschwitz. I've been there more than once. It's really powerful, and it's beautiful to have that kind of emotional experience with everybody, although it did bum us out for the concert.

 

"We also played in Dachau, in the town, so we got to go to the camp there too. I know so much about the Holocaust, almost everywhere we go in Europe I'm haunted by knowing there's a place nearby where a lot of people died."

 

Dessner does not dismiss the idea that his Jewish upbringing and interests influences his band's melancholic music. "It's possible. My brother and I have always been fascinated by liturgical religious melodies in Judaism. That hasn't really found its way into our music other than I don't like major chords. There are a lot of darker hues, I guess."

Anonymous ID: f24b31 May 31, 2020, 9:07 a.m. No.9394574   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>9394207

"Although his family was not overly religious, young Aaron was fascinated by the Jewish culture that surrounded him. "I studied Modern European History at Columbia University, in New York, but I took as many courses as I could that were Jewish-focused," he said.

"What I'm most interested in is literature, art and film that focus on catastrophic Jewish history - the pogroms and the Holocaust and those horrible things. When I was at Yale I was working in the Holocaust Archive, which was an amazing experience.

"When we played a festival in Katowice this year I woke everybody up early, hired a van and took them to Auschwitz. I've been there more than once. It's really powerful, and it's beautiful to have that kind of emotional experience with everybody, although it did bum us out for the concert.

"We also played in Dachau, in the town, so we got to go to the camp there too. I know so much about the Holocaust, almost everywhere we go in Europe I'm haunted by knowing there's a place nearby where a lot of people died."

Dessner does not dismiss the idea that his Jewish upbringing and interests influences his band's melancholic music. "It's possible. My brother and I have always been fascinated by liturgical religious melodies in Judaism. That hasn't really found its way into our music other than I don't like major chords. There are a lot of darker hues, I guess."