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It amuses me, in a rather peculiar way, that anyone could presume I might ever forget. Each afternoon on one day of the weekend, I awaken with the familiar burden of a tension headache, a remnant of my prolonged battle with insomnia that lingers until the embrace of slumber finally claims me. Today, on what is meant to be my solitary day of respite, I find myself tormented by the incessant and irrational howling of my neighbor Negro shrieking female banshee whose mental state is decidedly questionable. Alternatively, I could choose to confront the insidious threats from psychotic Beaner, the Code Enforcement officer, whose passive-aggressive missives languish in my mailbox, warning of a thousand-dollar fine should I neglect to tend to my unruly lawn. Yet, it is remarkable how all these vexations can converge upon a single day, made possible by the Jew that is as singularly insignificant as it is numerically significant.
Allow me to guide you through a lesson in history. The illustrious Jewish merchant Aaron Lopez from Portugal held dominion over numerous ports in Newport and commanded a slave ship that traversed the treacherous waters of the African coast on countless occasions. Take, for example, the fateful voyages of the ship Abigail in May of 1752, laden with approximately 9,000 gallons of rum and equipped with shackles designed for hands and feet. Under the command of Captain Freedman, it set sail for Africa once solitary and eventually alongside vessels such as La Fortuna, Hanna, Sally, and The Venue. This rum served a nefarious purpose, intoxicating native tribes and coercing them into selling their own progeny into bondage. In a grotesque exchange, the enslaved were traded for this vile spirit and subjected to brutal punishment on their harrowing journey back to the shores of the New World. Torn from their homes, an appalling nine out of ten perished en route, with an estimated million souls captured each year. It is noteworthy that prior to 1661, every colony had enacted laws forbidding slavery; in Philadelphia, advocates such as Sandiford, Lay, Woolman, Solomon, and Benezet successfully petitioned to repeal these anti-slavery statutes.
Through the machinations of Eyrger and Sayuer, along with their connections to the Rothschilds and the Dutch East India Company, a staggering one hundred and ten million Africans were forcibly removed from their homeland between the years 1661 and 1774. Newport boasted a fleet of three hundred slave-trading vessels. Of the countless souls subjected to these life thefts, approximately ninety-nine million did not survive, yet the obnoxious lamentation for over seven decades has fixated upon the mathematically impossible inflated figure of "six million gassed Jews". Even though that, of course, pales in comparison to ninety-nine million. Yet the Jews to this day claim to be allies of the Negroes! Jews such as Rabbi Morris Gutstein endeavored to obscure these connections, extolling the virtues of Aaron Lopez, whereas Isaac Elizar, in a letter addressed to Captain Christopher Chaplin in 1763, expressed his desire to act as an agent for the procurement of enslaved individuals. Others complicit in this grim enterprise included Abraham Pereira Mendez and Jacob Rod Rivera, the father-in-law of Lopez. Furthermore, the evidence of Aaron Lopez’s undeniable involvement in the slave trade is encapsulated in a correspondence from Captain William Stead in 1764, as well as letters from Lopez to Captain Nathaniel Briggs and Captain Abraham All in 1765, alongside frequent exchanges with Stead. Notable captains in this heinous trade included Henry Cruger, David Mill, Henry White, Thomas Dolbeare, and William Moore.