Crooked, welfare-scamming Orthodox Jews take over NY town, driving even the regular Jews nuts

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One of the many handsome Jews 😉 in Kiryas Joel town, New York State. Couples often have eight children and live on welfare, taking cabs paid by Medicaid to go shopping at Lord & Taylor’s —  all under the strict rule of the Grand Rabbi. And people wonder why I am creating a new Aryan religion…. Among other motives (sincere ones), because religion is also about raw power, and THEY have it and we DON’T. 

.

…..Former cop and local activist sends me his report

[edited] Hi John. I don’t know if I told you about this … But we Whites in Monroe, NY, in Rockland County, New York State, are having a terrible time …

We are being over run by thousands & thousands of Hasidic Jews. No joke. They are so bad “regular Jews” can’t stand them, Home values are gone to hell. They f—–g bribe every politician & this Jewish cult has thousands upon thousands of block votes. They all vote as one block. They  own [New York State Governor Andrew] Cuomo [in office since 2011], just like his dad [Governor Mario Cuomo, 1983-95].

Block votes & money, millions, YEP…..just so f—–g much.

Can you please go to UnitedMonroe.org, a  small, grass-roots organization. We need all the help & support we can get. Thanks for your time & help !!!!

http://unitedmonroe.org/about-us/


(I replied) Hi. Will look into it, and thanks. Where is Rockland County, NY State? In the Catskills?

No it’s below the Catskills. The name of the town into which the thousands of criminal, Hasidic Jews have self-ghettoed themselves is called ” Kiryas Joel” = Town of Joel.

You won’t f—–g believe it, John! Youtube it & get a coffee, because it’s a lot. Just so much outrasgeous stuff, and it never makes the MSM [mainsteam media]!

NEVER!

They’re worth billion$, John, & they are f—–g the water table for thousands of people. Dear Jesus, and nobody outside us cares or does anything.

But the bad news is that even the people in United Monroe are so PC [politically correct]!

“Oh, Brian please put that sign away about Kiryas Joel = welfare fraud”.

Can you believe they’re destroying the water table? Clearing all trees by the thousands & some d—-d is worried about my sign !!!! Holy S—t !!! Youtube or Google Kiryas Joel. I’m feeling sick just writing about it.

(I replied):

Good items on your FB page. So you were a police officer? Is your name Irish like mine?

(He answered:)

Yes, it was a small job in a suburb outside NYC [New York City]. My dad worked the [infamous black slum, subject of a Paul Newman movie, the] South Bronx. He told me “Forget the city; we don’t own it anymore. LOL. Now it’s fair to say we don’t own any major city anymore. Take my word on it: all of NY is a total s–thole, f—-g criminal what has happened. As for me, yes, I’m 100 % from Irish heritage. The Hasidic criminals are also destroying Lakewood & Toms River in New Jersey, destroying the land & water tables.

And get this, John.

“Kiryas Joel” is “on paper the poorest town in America.” HAHAHA!!!! Can you f——g believe it? They all are on Medicaid [a program of free medicine for the poor, started by Demoncrat president Lyndon Johnson], welfare…. They take cabs to go shopping for clothes & charge the cab to Medicaid as a doctor’s visit! YEP! And they don’t pay taxes! They always shop top-of-the-line in the “poorest town in America” Lord & Taylor… Look into it, please, John.

(I replied)

Wow.. Thanks. I will blog on this. I have been to Toms River, New Jersey…. was a fine white town, and a a fine white activist lived there, Carl Hottelet. His brother Richard Hottelet was a reporter for CBS.

.

…..the Jewish newspaper Forward even reports

http://forward.com/news/340941/siege-mentality-grows-in-hasidic-kiryas-joel-as-corruption-and-sex-probes-l/

In last week’s FBI raid, investigators confiscated computer equipment and boxes of documents from the village’s Department of Public Safety and its main yeshiva, United Talmudical Academy. An unnamed law enforcement source interviewed by a local newspaper, the Journal News, said the raid was related to the publication on social media two weeks ago of a leaked hidden-camera video that appeared to show a principal of the yeshiva kissing and grasping young boys in his office. Some 6,000 students are enrolled in the school. [….]

Yeshivas like those in Kiryas Joel, located about an hour north of Manhattan in New York’s Orange County, long have flouted state standards on secular subjects, foregoing even basic subjects like English and math in upper grades.

 

.

……Filth and garbage all over the place, says Gilad Atzmon (crusading anti-Talmud Israeli, living in London and a very gifted professional saxophonist)

.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HguYWNuN628

…The powerful Village Voice newspaper exposes Kiryas Joel

.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LY_aeZxjWxc

.

…..Wikipedia on this Jewish welfare-fraud town

Kiryas Joel, New York

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Kiryas Joel
Village
Kiryas Joel crop.jpg
Nickname(s): KJ
Location in Orange County and the state of New York.
Location in Orange County and the state of New York.

Kiryas Joel is located in New York

Kiryas Joel
Kiryas Joel

Location within the state of New York

Coordinates: 41°20 ²24 ³N 74°10 ²2 ³WCoordinates: 41°20 ²24 ³N 74°10 ²2 ³W
Country United States
State New York
County Orange
Government
  ¢ Administrator Gedalye Szegedin
Area
  ¢ Total 1.11 sq mi (2.88 km2)
  ¢ Land 1.11 sq mi (2.87 km2)
  ¢ Water 0.01 sq mi (0.01 km2)
Elevation 842 ft (257 m)
Population (July 1, 2015)
  ¢ Total 22,851[1]
2010 United States Census
Time zone US EST (UTC-5)
  ¢ Summer (DST) Eastern Daylight Time (UTC-4)
Area code(s) 845 Exchange: 492, 781, 782, 783
FIPS code 36-39853
GNIS feature ID 0979938

Kiryas Joel (Yiddish: קרית יואל Ž Ž, Kiryas Yoyel, Yiddish pronunciation: [ˈkɪʁ.jÉ™s ˈjɔɪ.É™l], often locally abbreviated as KJ) is a village within the town of Monroe in Orange County, New York, United States. The majority of its residents are Yiddish-speaking Hasidic Jews who belong to the worldwide Satmar Hasidic sect.

Kiryas Joel is part of the PoughkeepsieNewburghMiddletown, NY Metropolitan Statistical Area as well as the larger New YorkNewarkBridgeport, NY-NJCTPA Combined Statistical Area.

According to the Census Bureau‘s American Community Survey, Kiryas Joel has by far the youngest median age population of any municipality in the United States,[2] and the youngest, at 13.2 years old, of any population center of over 5,000 residents in the United States.[3] Residents of Kiryas Joel, like those of other Haredi Jewish communities, typically have large families, and this has driven rapid population growth.[4]

According to 2008 census figures, the village has the highest poverty rate in the nation. More than two-thirds of residents live below the federal poverty line and 40% receive food stamps.[5]

 

It is also the place in the United States with the highest percentage of people who reported Hungarian extraction, as 18.9% of the population reported Hungarian descent in 2000.[6]

History[edit]

The main synagogue in Kiryas Joel

Kiryas Joel is named for the late Rabbi Joel Teitelbaum, the rebbe of Satmar and driving spirit behind the project. Teitelbaum himself helped select the location a few years before his death in 1979. Joel Teitelbaum, originally from Hungary, was the rebbe who rebuilt the Satmar Hasidic dynasty in the years following World War II. The Satmar hasidim who established Kiryas Joel came from Satu Mare, Romania, known when under Hungarian rule as Szatmà¡r.[7]

In 1947, Teitelbaum originally settled with his followers in the Williamsburg section of Brooklyn, a borough of New York City. By the 1970s, however, he decided to move the growing community to a location that was not far from the commercial center of New York but was also more secluded from what he saw as the harmful influences and immorality of the outside world. Teitelbaum’s choice was Monroe. The land for Kiryas Joel was purchased in the early 1970s, and fourteen Satmar families settled there in the summer of 1974. When he died in 1979, Teitelbaum was the first person to be buried in the town’s cemetery. His funeral reportedly brought over 100,000 mourners to Kiryas Joel.[citation needed]

It is widely believed that no candidates run for the village’s board or the school board unless first approved by the grand rebbe, Rabbi Aharon Teitelbaum. In 2001, Kiryas Joel held a competitive election in which all candidates supported by the grand rebbe were re-elected by a 55 “45% margin.[8]

Geography[edit]

Kiryas Joel is located at 41°20 ²24 ³N 74°10 ²02 ³W.[9]

According to the United States Census Bureau, the village has a total area of 1.1 square miles (2.8 km2), and only a very small portion of the area (a small duck pond called “Forest Road Lake” in the center of the village) is covered with water.

Demographics[edit]

Historical population
Census Pop.
1980 2,088
1990 7,437 256.2%
2000 13,138 76.7%
2010 20,175 53.6%
Est. 2015 22,851 [1] 13.3%
source:[10]
[hide]Largest ancestries (2000) Percent
Hungarian Hungary 18.9%
American United States 8.0%
Israeli Israel 3.0%
Romanian Romania 2.0%
Polish Poland 1.0%
Czech Czech Republic 0.3%
Russia Russia 0.3%
German Germany 0.2%
[hide]Languages (2010) [11] [12] Percent
Spoke Yiddish at home 91.5%
Spoke English at home 6.3%
Spoke Hebrew at home 2.3%
Spoke English “not well” or “not at all.” 46.0%

As of the census[13] of 2000, there were 13,138 people, 2,229 households, and 2,137 families residing in the village. The population density was 11,962.2 people per square mile (4,611.5/km2). There were 2,233 housing units at an average density of 2,033.2 per square mile (783.8/km2). The racial makeup of the village was 99.02% White, 0.21% African American, 0.02% Asian, 0.12% from other races, and 0.63% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 0.93% of the population.

Kiryas Joel has the highest percentage of people who reported Hungarian ancestry in the United States, as 18.9% of the population reported Hungarian ancestry in 2000.[6] 3% of the residents of Kiryas Joel were Israeli, 2% Romanian, 1% Polish, and 1% European.[14]

The 2000 census also reports that only 6.2% of village residents spoke English at home, one of the lowest such percentages in the United States. 91,5% of residents spoke Yiddish at home, while 2.3% spoke Hebrew.[11] Of the Yiddish-speaking population in 2000, 46% spoke English “not well” or “not at all.” Overall, including those who primarily spoke Hebrew and European languages as well as primary Yiddish speakers, 46% of Kiryas Joel residents speak English “not well” or “not at all.”[12]

There were 2,229 households out of which 79.5% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 93.2% were married couples living together, 1.6% had a female householder with no husband present, and 4.1% were non-families. 2.8% of all households were made up of individuals and 2.1% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 5.74 and the average family size was 5.84. In the village, the population was spread out with 57.5% under the age of 18, 17.2% from 18 to 24, 16.5% from 25 to 44, 7.2% from 45 to 64, and 1.6% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 15 years. For every 100 females there were 116.3 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 118.0 males.

The median income for a household in the village was $15,138, and the median income for a family was $15,372. Males had a median income of $25,043 versus $16,364 for females. The per capita income for the village was $4,355. About 61.7% of families and 62.2% of the population were below the poverty line, including 63.9% of those under age 18 and 50.5% of those age 65 or over.

According to 2008 census figures, the village has the highest poverty rate in the nation, and the largest percentage of residents who receive food stamps. More than five-eighths of Kiryas Joel residents live below the federal poverty line and more than 40 percent receive food stamps, according to the American Community Survey, a U.S. Census Bureau study of every place in the country with 20,000 residents or more.[5] A 2011 New York Times report noted that, despite the town’s very high statistical poverty rates, “It has no slums or homeless people. No one who lives there is shabbily dressed or has to go hungry. Crime is virtually nonexistent.”[15]

In 2016, two Orthodox Jewish men with ties to the Village of Kiryas Joel have been charged with conspiring to kidnap and murder a man so the man’s wife could obtain a religious divorce, according to prosecutors. [16]

Transportation[edit]

Kiryas Joel has a very high rate of public transportation usage. Local transit within the area is operated by the Village of Kiryas Joel Bus System; a subsection of Monsey Trails & Monroe Bus [17][18] Monroe Bus also operates service to Manhattan and to the heavily Orthodox Jewish-populated Williamsburg and Borough Park sections of Brooklyn.

Impact[edit]

Of growth[edit]

Friction with surrounding jurisdictions[edit]

The village has become a contentious issue in Orange County for several reasons, mainly related to its rapid growth.[19] Unlike most other small communities, it lacks a real downtown and much of it is given over to residential property, which has mostly taken the form of contemporary townhouse-style condominiums. New construction is ongoing throughout the community.

Population growth is strong. In 1990, there were 7,400 people in Kiryas Joel; in 2000, 13,100, nearly doubling the population. In 2005, the population had risen to 18,300.[19] The 2010 census showed a population of 20,175, for a population growth rate of 53.6% between 2000 and 2010, which was less than anticipated, as it was projected that the population would double in that time period.[20]

There are three religious tenets that drive our growth: our women don’t use birth control, they get married young and after they get married, they stay in Kiryas Joel and start a family. Our growth comes simply from the fact that our families have a lot of babies, and we need to build homes to respond to the needs of our community.

” ‰Gedalye Szegedin, village administrator, quoted in “Reverberations of a Baby Boom” by Fernanda Santos, New York Times, 2006[19]

Locally[edit]

A bilingual bus stop sign in English and Yiddish. On the top sign, the Yiddish reads “Kiryas Joel Bus Transportation Bus Stop”; on the bottom, “Village Bus Stop”.

The Town of Monroe also contains two other villages, Monroe and Harriman. Kiryas Joel’s boundaries also come close to the neighboring towns of Blooming Grove and Woodbury.

Residents of these communities and local Orange County politicians view the village as encroaching on them.[19] Due to the rapid population growth occurring in Kiryas Joel, resulting almost entirely from the high birth rates of its Hasidic population, the village government has undertaken various annexation efforts to expand its area, to the dismay of the majority of the residents of the surrounding communities. Many of these area residents see the expansion of the high-density residential, commercial village as a threat to the quality of life in the surrounding suburban communities due to suburban sprawl. Other concerns of the surrounding communities are the impact on local aquifers and the projected increased volume of sewage reaching the county’s sewerage treatment plants, already near capacity by 2005.

On August 11, 2006, residents of Woodbury voted by a 3-to-1 margin to incorporate much of the town as a village to constrain further annexation. Kiryas Joel has vigorously opposed such moves in court,[21] and even some Woodbury residents are concerned about adding another layer of taxation without any improved defense against annexations. Sometimes lost or ignored is the fact that the main reason for the creation of the Village of Woodbury was to prevent another village from being created within Woodbury. The Village of Woodbury also protects growth by keeping the zoning in the hands of the Woodbury zoning and planning boards. Also residents within a village can vote in town and village elections but residents in the town would not be allowed to vote in the village election.

In March 2007, the village of Kiryas Joel sued the county to stop it from selling off a million gallons (3,780 m³) of excess capacity at its sewage plant in Harriman. Two years prior, the county had sued the village to stop its plans to tap into New York City’s Catskill Aqueduct, arguing that the village’s environmental review for the project had inadequately addressed concerns about the additional wastewater it would generate. The village is appealing an early ruling which sided with the county.[22]

In its action, Kiryas Joel accuses the county of inconsistently claiming limited capacity in its suit when it is selling the million gallons to three communities outside its sewer district.

Local politics[edit]

Critics of the village cite its impact on local politics. Villagers are perceived as voting in a solid bloc. While this is not always the case, the highly concentrated population often does skew strongly toward one candidate or the other in local elections, making Kiryas Joel a heavily courted swing vote for whichever politician offers Kiryas Joel the most favorable environment for continued growth. In the hotly contested 2013 Town Supervisors race, the Kiryas Joel bloc vote elected Harley Doles to the position of town supervisor. Now Kiryas Joel is seeking to annex 510 acres (210 ha) of land into their village and the new Monroe Town Board has had no comment on this issue. In late 2014 village leadership proposed alternatively that a new village, to be called Gilios Kiryas Joel, be created on the 1,140 acres (460 ha) south of the village within Monroe, including all the land it had wanted to annex.[23]

Kiryas Joel played a major role in the 2006 Congressional election. The village sits in the 19th Congressional District, represented at that time by Republican Sue Kelly. Village residents had been loyal to Kelly in the past, but in 2006, voters were upset over what they saw as lack of adequate representation from Kelly for the village. In a bloc, Kiryas Joel swung around 2,900 votes to Kelly’s Democratic opponent, John Hall, in that year’s election. The vote in Kiryas Joel was one reason Hall carried the election, which he did by 4,800 votes.

Internal friction[edit]

Rebbe Teitelbaum had no son, and thus no clear successor. His nephew Moses was appointed by the community’s committee members. But not all Satmar accepted Moses as the community leader, and even some of those that did questioned some of his actions and pronouncements. He responded by running the village in what they called an autocratic manner, through his deputy, Abraham Weider, who also served as mayor and president of the school board, as well as the main synagogue and yeshiva in the village.[24]

In 1989, the village forbade any property owner from selling or renting an apartment without its permission. Teitelbaum elaborated that “anyone that rents without this permission has to be dealt with like a real murderer … and he should be torn out from the roots.” .[25]

In the early 1990s New York State Police responded many times to the village, which has a generally low crime rate otherwise, when self-described dissidents reported harassment such as broken windows and graffiti of Hebrew profanity on their property. In one incident, troopers rode a school bus undercover to catch teenage boys stoning it; the boys later stoned a backup police cruiser when it arrived. One of Weider’s nephews was among those arrested. He admitted that some of the village’s young men took it upon themselves to act violently against dissidents because they could not bear to hear the grand rebbe criticized, although he said most of them were provoked to do so by dissidents.[24]

“Someone not following breaks down the whole system of being able to educate and being able to bring up our children with strong family values,” Weider told The New York Times in 1992. “Why do you think we have no drugs? If we lost respect for the Grand Rabbi, we lose the whole thing.”[24]

In January 1990 the village held its first and, for a decade, only school board election. “It’s like this,” Teitelbaum explained when he announced the names of seven handpicked candidates. “With the power of the Torah, I am here the authority in the rabbinical leadership … As you know I want to nominate seven people and I want these people to be the people.”[25]

One dissident, Joseph Waldman, decided nevertheless to run on his own. He was made unwelcome at the synagogue, his children expelled from yeshiva, his car’s tires slashed and his windows broken. Several hundred residents marched in the streets in front of his house chanting after posters calling for that fate were posted in the synagogue. After the election, in which Waldman finished last but still won 673 votes, 60 families who were known to have voted for him were barred from visiting their fathers’ graves in the village cemetery that was owned by the rabbi and banned from the synagogue (also, at the time, the village’s only polling place). Waldman compared Teitelbaum to Iran’s Ayatollah Khomeini.[25]

After the election, a state court ruled that Waldman’s children had to be reinstated at the yeshiva, an action that was only taken after the judge held Teitelbaum in contempt and fined him personally. Friction continued as some of the dissidents banned from the synagogue circulated a petition calling for the polls to be moved to a neutral location. It originally drew 150 signatures, but all but 15 retracted their names after being threatened with excommunication by the grand rabbi, signing a document that they had not actually read the petition. One of the dissidents who signed was attacked while praying, and state troopers had to be called in again to disperse a mob that gathered on Waldman’s lawn and broke his windows.[24]

Electoral fraud allegations[edit]

On four occasions since 1990, the Middletown Times-Herald Record has run lengthy investigative articles on claims of electoral fraud in the village. A 1996 article found that Kiryas Joel residents who were students at yeshivas in Brooklyn had on many occasions apparently registered and voted in both the village and Brooklyn;[26] a year later the paper reported that it had happened again. In 2001 absentee ballots were apparently cast by voters who did not normally reside in the village. In some cases, ballots were cast by people who seemed to reside in Antwerp, Belgium, without a set date of expected return and thus would not be allowed under New York law to vote in any election for state or local office. That article led to a county grand jury investigation in 2001, which concluded that while procedures were not followed and many mistakes were made, there was no evidence of deliberate intent to violate the law.[27]

Before the 2013 Republican primary in that year’s special election for the state assembly seat vacated by Annie Rabbitt, later elected county clerk, members of United Monroe, a local group that organizes and coordinates political opposition to the village and those local officials it believes support it, asked the county’s Board of Elections to assign them to Kiryas Joel as election inspectors, who verify that voters are registered before allowing them to vote. The board’s Democratic commissioner, Sue Bahrens, initially agreed to appoint six to serve in the village, but later reversed that decision. The six sued the county, alleging religious discrimination; it responded that they had no standing to sue. Village Manager Gedalye Szegedin said the citizens were entitled to have inspectors who spoke Yiddish and understood their culture and customs. A state court justice dismissed the discrimination claim but ruled that the United Monroe inspectors had been dismissed arbitrarily and capriciously and were entitled to their appointments, but did not say when or where.[27]

In 2014, the newspaper examined claims by poll watchers from United Monroe that they were intimidated and harassed by other poll watchers sympathetic to the village government when they tried to challenge voters whose signatures did not initially appear to match those on file during the previous year’s elections for county offices. They further alleged that election inspectors in the polling place, a banquet hall where 6,000 residents voted, sometimes gave the voters ballots before the signatures could be checked.[27]

Some of the United Monroe poll watchers claimed that Langdon Chapman, an attorney for the Monroe town board, which they believe is controlled by members deferential to Kiryas Joel and its interests, was one of those who intimidated them. Coleman told the Record that while he had been at the banquet hall in question, he had only insisted that poll watchers state the reason for their challenges, as legally required, and had left after two hours. He was subsequently appointed county attorney (the lawyer who represents the county in civil matters) by new county executive Steve Neuhaus, whose margin of victory included all but 20 of the votes from the village.[27]

After the election, United Monroe members found over 800 voters in Kiryas Joel whose signatures did not match those on file, in addition to 25 they had challenged at the polls, three of whom were later investigated by the county sheriff; the rest were considered unfounded. Orange County District Attorney David Hoovler, elected along with Neuhaus, told the newspaper it was difficult to investigate the allegations since they could not verify the identity of either signer, if in fact there were two. The Record attempted to contact some of those voters; the only one they reached hung up when asked about the election.[27]

Large families[edit]

Grand Rabbi Aaron Teitelbaum, celebrating Hanukah in the main synagogue in Kiryas Joel

Women in Kiryas Joel usually stop working outside the home after the birth of a second child.[19] Most families have only one income and many children. The resulting poverty rate makes a disproportionate number of families in Kiryas Joel eligible for welfare benefits when compared to the rest of the county. The New York Times wrote,

Because of the sheer size of the families (the average household here has six people, but it is not uncommon for couples to have 8 or 10 children), and because a vast majority of households subsist on only one salary, 62 percent of the local families live below poverty level and rely heavily on public assistance [government welfare], which is another sore point among those who live in neighboring communities.[19]

A 60-bed postnatal maternal care center was built with $10 million in state and federal grants. Mothers can recuperate there for two weeks away from their large families.[28]

In the 1990s, the first clinical trials for the hepatitis A vaccine took place in Kiryas Joel, where 70 percent of residents had been affected. This disproportionate rate of hepatitis A infection was due in part to Kiryas Joel’s high birth rate and crowded conditions among children, who bathed together in pools and ate from communal food at school. Children who were not infected with hepatitis A were separated into two groups, one receiving the experimental vaccine and the other receiving a placebo injection. Based on this study, the vaccine was declared 100 percent effective. Merck licensed the vaccine in 1995 and it became available in 1996, after which the hepatitis A infection rate fell by 75 percent in the United States.[29]

Litigation[edit]

The unusual lifestyle and growth pattern of Kiryas Joel has led to litigation on a number of fronts. In 1994, the Supreme Court ruled in the case of Board of Education of Kiryas Joel Village School District v. Grumet that the Kiryas Joel school district, which covered only the village, was designed in violation of the Establishment Clause of the 1st Amendment, because the design accommodated one group on the basis of religious affiliation.[30] Subsequently, the New York State Legislature established a similar school district in the village that has passed legal muster.[31] Further litigation has resulted over what entity should pay for the education of children with disabilities in Kiryas Joel, and over whether the community’s boys must ride buses driven by women.[19] A case against the village is currently pending in federal district court; plaintiffs, who are asking for the village to be dissolved, say that Kiryas Joel is a theocracy whose existence violates the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment, where local government leaders abuse the laws, such as those for tax-exempt status, zoning, and sanitation, to favor members of their own sect and persecute other Orthodox Jews. They also say that the leaders commit vote fraud by intimidating dissident voters and busing in non-residents.[32]

Kiryas Joel’s public school district has long been a subject of controversy. First created in 1990 by an act of the New York State Legislature to serve special education students in the almost entirely Hasidic Orange County village, the specifically carved-out district weathered a series of constitutional challenges. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled in 1994 that the district violated the Constitution’s requirement of separation between religion and state. But the state government rewrote the law allowing for creation of the district, finally finding statutory language able to overcome the constitutional barriers.[citation needed]

According to NYSED documents, the district served 123 students in the 2008 “2009 school year and 217 students the previous year, all of them under special education.

See also[edit]

 

……My major essay on Neanderthals and Semites

Neanderthals & Semites

…..Contact and support

You can see from this the power of religion, fanaticism and unity, defeating the liberals, moderates and conservatives around them.

This is part of why I am creating a new Aryan religion. Without power and unity, we have nothing.

This “flutterby” lit on my hand as I walked the dogs, and just would not leave… another sign, maybe, in some way, to start my religion VIRTUS?

 
Comments
Gerald Pfaff
Gerald Pfaff bester Mann 🙂

 

Sebastian Brandt

Sebastian Brandt John you look very similar to the former icelandic world strongest man Jà³n Pà¡ll Sigmarsson:

Image may contain: 1 person, text

 

Sebastian Brandt
Sebastian Brandt Or ”they” didnt liked a aryan world strongest man 😉

 

John de Nugent

Write a reply…
John Taylor Kent
John Taylor Kent It means you are King.

 

John de Nugent
John de Nugent The butterfly alighting on my hand and not leaving?

 

John de Nugent
John de Nugent I have had many, many, many such “coincidences,” like cosmic nudges. 😉

 

John Taylor Kent
John Taylor Kent And it is your strong arm.

 

John de Nugent

John de Nugent The man who spared him won the Victoria Cross that day for slaughtering 17 other Germans!https://johndenugent.com/images/henry-tandey-766×1024.jpg

JOHNDENUGENT.COM

 

 

Jim Gaul
Jim Gaul Did it taste like chicken?

 

David Hanson
David Hanson absolutely awesome blog, stellar!!

 

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