New legislation seeks to ban use of Nazi symbols

NOVANEWS

Bill  aims to  combat  “the unbearable ease with which daily use of Nazi terminology is made part of the public and political discourse”
ed note–so, does that  mean  that it  will be illegal to use such imagery when defaming those deemed enemies of the Jewish state?

Of course not. 
The reason for this proposed legislation is obvious–for a half century, Jewish interests have stuck a bony finger in the face of humanity and lectured it on the evils of racism, elitism, supremacism and persecution of ‘the other’ based upon their ethnicity. Having set this as the narrative then, the entire world sees the hypocrisy of the entire basis upon which the Jewish state was founded and functions today with the undeniable parallels to Nazism being perfectly appropriate, and it is because of this that Israel seeks to prevent the monser of their own making from rearing up and biting them.
Israel Hayom
The Ministerial Committee on Legislation on Sunday approved a bill that seeks to ban the use of Nazi symbols, attributes and language in Israel unless for historical, educational or documentary purposes.
The bill, whose language was reviewed by the Justice and Public Security ministries, will be presented to the Knesset for its preliminary reading in the coming days.
Explicit legislation barring the use of Nazi terminology currently exists in Germany, Poland and Hungary. Many other Western nations, especially in Europe, ban such use under anti-incitement laws.
The bill, promoted by MK Dr. Shimon Ohayon (Yisrael Beytenu), head of the Knesset lobby against anti-Semitism, seeks to make the use of Nazi symbols a criminal offense punishable by a 100,000 shekel ($28,700) fine and up to six months’ incarceration.
The bill seeks to ban the use of the term “Nazi” and any use of the swastika symbol, attire resembling concentration camp uniforms, a yellow Star of David or any other symbol that has a clear link to Nazism. The legislation allows such use for academic, documentary or historical purposes.
“The unbearable ease with which daily use of Nazi terminology is made as part of the public and political discourse, in blatant disregard of the feelings of Holocaust survivors and their descendants, deserves every condemnation. The reality we live in lends special importance to the need to anchor, legally, the proscription against the use of Holocaust and Nazism symbols, to prevent this phenomenon from spreading further,” the bill’s brief said.
“We have to stand guard — we cannot make light of any use of Nazi symbols,” Ohayon said.

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