Review of   Jewish interest because of its clear example of unqualified Jews promoting unasked immigration
E J B Rose & Associates: Colour and Citizenship—A Report on British Race Relations

Very interesting, detailed look at Funded Jewish Promotion of Immigration (1969)

Part of the covert Jewish push for immigration into the UK; interested people will find it worth owning a copy, because of the thoroughgoing anti-British content. 1969 book, published by Oxford University Press for the 'Institute for Race Relations', about whom see below. About 800 pages; hardback and paperback copies exist. Hardback price in the UK on the jacket £2.75 net (and 55s = 55 shillings net).

It occurs to be this may have been intended as a British version of the book attributed to Gunnar Myrdal 25 years earlier, The American Dilemma: The Negro Problem and Modern Democracy. (1944). 'Widely venerated, this 1,500-or-so page book was funded by Carnegie, and written with the collaboration of R. M. E. Sterner and Arnold Rose. It was promoted in the 1950s and 1960s by the Jewish media as a sacrosanct analysis of White consciousness, which promoted the concept that America was a propositional [i.e. not white-founded] nation'. It was published in 1944, and shows dramatically how Jews perceive their war on whites as a continuum: while the Second World War was raging, Jews were working on money-making, profiting from wars, establishing new central banks, establishing new frauds, of which the Holohoax is best known to date. (According to E Michael Jones, Myrdal did not have time to write the book himself; it was the first shot in the war to destroy city centres, surround them with black slums, and build huge road networks to remote suburbs). Includes:--

- 'MYTHS'—List of supposed myths of equality before the law/ Theories of race / Myths about the Commonwealth Immigrants Bill (p. 220)/
      Housing shortage myth (233). This latter is worth quoting as an example presumably of Jewish 'pilpul'. 'Commonwealth immigrants do not cause the housing shortage. It existed before they began to arrive in large numbers.'

- Very portentous; see e.g. chapter headings below. General idea seems to be to show all 'immigrants' as having families, houses, earning patterns etc just like us, and of course not taking up housing or jobs etc; I recall Jews in about 1975 assuring me that of course immigration has no effect on housing, an attitude perhaps gleaned from this book. The presumption, and perhaps necessary belief, is that immigration must inevitably be accepted, so less happy examples like expulsion of Jews in the Middle Ages, Normans invading, peoples moving into places like the Balkans, not to mention whites vs Red Indians in USA, go unmentioned. The Indian caste system seems to be mentioned almost nowhere; Jews now in the Middle East aren't mentioned except a bit on the 'Six Day War'. Endemic corruption in Pakistan, 445-6, is omitted from the index.

- Odd double standards, e.g. it's assumed that blacks in the Midlands earn less than whites because they're offered less overtime, implying educational differences are of no significance, and yet there are pieties about better training. There are implications that passports are unimportant, which surely clashes with official views in all states. At one point the Empire is described as 'a gigantic confidence trick' though e.g. the subjugation of South Africa was military. It's explicitly stated that the only differences between races are 'the colour of the skin', when surely the differences simply aren't known. Europe is only mentioned because of transient labour, and France and Germany aren't in the index at all, so though the USA is mentioned fairly often, the book is tiresomely Anglo-centric. There is of course nothing on Jewish-caused massacres in the USSR.

- The index isn't very satisfactory; anything 'nasty' is censored out. As a result many things are hard to track down. I found problems with: e.g. references to Paul Foot's book on Race, Galbraith, J F Kennedy, Adlai Stevenson, Hobsbawm, and parts of Britain like St Pauls Bristol & Smethwick with lots of immigrants, passport forgery, venereal disease & tuberculosis, sex (though 'women immigrants' get a few entries, so does 'miscegenation'), Rastafarians, etc.

- The 'associates' are: Nicholas Deakin, Mark Abrams, Valerie Jackson, Maurice Peston [who contributed the chapter on economics], A H Vangas, Brian Cohen, Julia Gaitskell, Paul Ward. Extraordinarily—though perhaps it saves embarrassment of fulsome self-published plaudits—there are no biographies, anywhere, not even in the appendixes, though occasional book or article titles are listed in bibliographies or notes. NB: someone called Robin Jenkins attacked this report in January 1971 and caused a rift in the IRR; see the appendix to 'Black Britain', Mullard.

- The book claims Notting Hill in 1962 and, earlier, the Carnegie Corporation of New York's backing or funding of Gunnar Myrdal's 'great book', 'An American Dilemma', 'resulted' in this book, which seems to have been funded by 'the Nuffield Foundation'. There's a foreword by Philip Mason, presumably of the Nuffield Foundation. Rose, or 'Jim Rose', 'had for more than ten years been Director of the International Press Institute at Zurich..' Apart from this book, 19 larger-scale research projects and 22 smaller ones resulted.

- This is a hefty tome and interesting as part of the deliberate programme of subverting Britain. I give it 4 stars for importance—the content is contemptible.


-According to Wikipedia: Eliot Joseph Benn Rose 1909-1999 was born into an "elite" Jewish family, Rose was educated at Rugby School and New College, Oxford. During World War II, he served with the Royal Air Force as an intelligence officer with 609 Squadron. In 1941, he moved to Bletchley Park where he worked initially in Hut 3 and assessed decrypted messages sent by the German Luftwaffe. In 1944, he transferred to London [and] worked on coordination with the Air Ministry. He retired from the RAF in 1945 with the rank of Wing Commander, and took a job as a journalist with [Jewish news presumably controlling information on Germany and propaganda and Japan] Reuters. In January 1946 he married Pamela Gibson who had also worked at Bletchley Park. They had two children. [No indication whether she was Jewish.] From 1948 to 1951, Rose was literary editor of The Observer. In 1951, the family moved to Zürich, Switzerland, where he had become director of the newly formed International Press Institute. Returned to England in 1962 to become director of Survey of Race Relations, a five-year study into post-war immigration in Britain. The study was published in 1969 as Colour and Citizenship. In 1968, he co-founded the Runnymede Trust think-tank with politician Anthony Lester. Died age 89.
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