It seems to me that there are two kinds of antisemitic countries: those where the Jewish question is genuine and those where it is not. Poland, for instance, is an example of a country with a genuine Jewish question, and the best example of an antisemitic country that has no Jewish question to solve is in those regions of present-day Spain that are in fascist hands. Spain is an obvious example of how the Jewish question can be artificially posed even where there cannot be any genuine interest in the question. Because Germany stands between those two extremes, it has perhaps become the classic land of antisemitism. German antisemitism today cannot be justified either socially or economically; moreover the steadily dwindling percentage of Jews in the German population makes the notion that this could be a major political problem look absolutely ridiculous.
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