← Autodidact Archive · Original Dissent · vytis
Thread ID: 20669 | Posts: 4 | Started: 2005-10-16
2005-10-16 21:30 | User Profile
Jew scientist Otto Frisch when commenting about a scientific group of his kosher friends from Europe, remembered that his friend Fritz Houtermans, a theoretical physicist, proposed the popular theory that these men were really from Mars...The Jews he named were Theodor von Karman, Georg De Hevesy, Michael Polanyi, Leo Szilard, Eugene Wigner, John von Neumann, and Edward Teller...All were involved in building the first atomic bomb...Weapons of mass destruction. I guess it's a Jewish thing!
FYI...Edward Teller went on to become the 'father' of the even more powerful hydrogen bomb.
Source: *The Making of the Atomic Bomb, Richard Rhodes, 1986, P.106, Simon & Schuster.
2005-10-16 22:03 | User Profile
[quote=vytis]Jew scientist Otto Frisch when commenting about a scientific group of his kosher friends from Europe, remembered that his friend Fritz Houtermans, a theoretical physicist, proposed the popular theory that these men were really from Mars...The Jews he named were Theodor von Karman, Georg De Hevesy, Michael Polanyi, Leo Szilard, Eugene Wigner, John von Neumann, and Edward Teller...All were involved in building the first atomic bomb...Weapons of mass destruction. I guess it's a Jewish thing!
FYI...Edward Teller went on to become the 'father' of the even more powerful hydrogen bomb.
Source: *The Making of the Atomic Bomb, Richard Rhodes, 1986, P.106, Simon & Schuster. Was Oppenheimer Jewish?
2005-10-16 22:49 | User Profile
[quote=RowdyRoddyPiper]Was Oppenheimer Jewish?
Good question Rowdy...Yes, every source I have seen states that the 'father' of the atomic bomb, J. Robert Oppenheimer was indeed Jewish.
2005-10-18 13:38 | User Profile
Since were talking about WMDs, l'll throw in the name of chemist Fritz Haber...This minority Jew headed Germany's chemical warfare service during World War One...In fact, he actually played a leading role in developing poison gas.
Source: The McGraw-Hill Encyclopedia of World Biography, (18 Volumes), 1973, McGraw-Hill Book Co. Trial & Error:The Autobiography of Chaim Weizmann, 1949, Harper & Brothers.