IG Farben
Daily Stormer
July 31, 2017

In China, during the “Great” Leap Forward in the 50’s, communist policy killed 45 million in less than five years.
So one can assume that when the average Chinaman hears stories about Jewish victimization during the Holocaust, the Semitic crybabies must seem quite pathetic.
But with YouTube, Facebook, and Twitter all banned in China, our yellow neighbors from the far East have very sparse means of expressing themselves on the internet. Thus, trolling sad kikes becomes a difficult task. China is modernizing in many ways, but a severe limitation on free speech has left the nation-of-over-one-billion decades behind in quality meme development.
One oriental merchant and anti-semitic prankster, however, has achieved success by provoking international kvetching. A Chinese businessman, known only as “Thomas”, has been delivering a classic brand of anti-semitic and racist humor to mailboxes around the globe.
This time, his comedy has struck a Jewish scholar and co-founder of a Genocide and Holocaust Institute in New Jersey.
KSDK:
When Stephen Kaufman, a New Jersey professor, bought new cutting boards on Amazon.com, he was shocked to find the backside of the product's label riddled with racist, homophobic and anti-Semitic "jokes."
Kaufman, who co-founded the Raritan Valley Community College (RVCC) Holocaust & Genocide Institute, ordered the bamboo cutting boards, which came in a pack of three, on Amazon around July 13. The cutting boards cost $11.87 and were sold by Amazon vendor DeBell.
The cutting boards are innocuous at first glance, measuring 13.5 inches by 9.5 inches. Affixed to the front of the boards is a green and white label with images of carrots, lettuce, oranges, sliced lemons and other fruits and vegetables.
When flipped to the backside, however, the label takes a turn from the cornucopia-esque theme.

"A black Jewish boy runs home from school one day and asks his father, 'Daddy, am I more Jewish or more black?'" one joke begins. The joke goes on to explain that the boy asked the question because someone at school was selling a bike for $50 and he wasn't sure if he "should talk him down to $40 or just steal it!"
Another "joke" advises the cutting board customers to not be racist, but to instead "be like Mario. He's an Italian plumber who was made by the Japanese, speaks English, looks like a Mexican, jumps like a black man, and grabs coins like a Jew!"
When he tried to complain to Amazon about the offensive material, he said, "I got this response back from them saying, 'You've got to tailor your comments to the product.'"
"I am probably the third or possibly the fourth person to comment on the inappropriate materials connected to the packaging," he said.
While not every customer commented on the "jokes," a few of them took issue with them.
An Amazon user commented July 17 that the cutting boards seem fine and he would give them a better review "if it wasn't for the racist and sexist jokes on the back of the labels!"
A customer by the name of Rhys M. gave the cutting boards four out of five stars July 2 but said, "Great boards … but are these made by the Klu kluk klan ????????"

And when the complaints come in, “Thomas” claims to be ill-informed about norms of American English humor.
As of Thursday, however, the cutting boards could not be found on Amazon.
DeBell has 99 percent positive feedback out of 194 customer reviews on Amazon and also sells knives and sharpening stones.
The address on the cutting boards' label leads to a home in Tucson, Arizona. The phone number listed on the product was no longer operating. The website at the end of the email address listed for the company is a Chinese website. An email sent to the company asking for comment was not returned.
Kaufman said the "jokes" could encourage the use of racist or insensitive language.
"Right now, the United States is so racked with all kinds of divisiveness and ugly comments and this is just a part of it," he said. "I think we have to stop it. You simply have to say, 'This can't continue.'"
Thomas of DeBell has got a nice Asian business. He sells bamboo and cheap Chinese knives. And he has a very interesting sense of humor that he likes to share with his customers.
But I sense that he will be manufacturing and marketing chemical pesticides and fake shower rooms in the near future.
