Is this not self evident? People don’t like it when other people try to coax them into giving up their religion. It’s not a uniquely Jewish thing.
Most people can simply smile and say, "I'm not interested" or "I have my own religion" or some lame comeback like that, and most Christians would just smile and move along.
Catch the Rainbow said:
Jews...scare their kids with stories of Jewish kidnapped by Christian missionaries...and would rather not be preached at in their homeland. There's also strict laws regulating it that Christians break all the time.
And yet they promote the destruction of "whiteness" in white majority nations and are the biggest pushers [not to mention financial backers] of "multiculturalism" everywhere but in the "jewish" state... The hypocrisy and self-righteousness - both products of the ingrained belief that they're "chosen"; a "master race", if you will - are part and parcel of problems jews have had over the centuries
and the problems they're presently experiencing.
Granted, a very similar dynamic exists among Arab/Muslims... There's a theme running through these problems.
A note of caution, too... We're all using terms like "they" and "them" and "Arab [Muslim]", "Jew [Israeli]", "Christian", "White" et al, with the implication that these are all monolithic entities and that
everyone who is part of the "they" is
exactly the same, and that's simply not the case, to say nothing of the way certain terms [Jew-Zionist-Israeli] tend to get used interchangeably when they aren't equivalent terms. I'm pretty sure we can - most of us, that is - agree that each and every person who falls into one of these groups isn't necessarily a hateful cretin obsessed with the complete destruction of everyone who doesn't look/talk/act/think like them, but we
should acknowledge that among all of these groups there are people [in many cases people with (too much) power] who
are that type of person and that it's
those people that are the promoters of the aforementioned problems.
/rant