by Jonas E. Alexis

Albert Einstein has been highly revered in the scientific world. Pick up any science magazine on Einstein, and you will almost certainly read that Einstein, to use Trump’s phraseology, was the man who made science great again.

Smithsonian magazine tells us that Einstein’s “discoveries in 1905 would forever change our understanding of the universe,” and his four papers “revolutionized science.”

Discover magazine declares that “Einstein’s general relativity may be complicated, but it’s our best way of understanding the universe.”

We are also told that Einstein was known to “use his fame to denounce American racism.”[4] Einstein, Einstein enthusiasts tell us, was a pacifist and fought against racism. But Einstein, as it turns out, was essentially using what was happening in America to fight anti-Semitism. “I am really doing whatever I can for the brothers of my race who are treated so badly everywhere,” he wrote back in 1921.

Two years later, it seemed that Einstein was using blacks to promote his fight against “anti-Semitism.” He said: “Being a Jew myself, perhaps I can understand and empathize with how black people feel as victims of discrimination.”

From a historical perspective, Jews have used blacks to fight anti-Semitism. This was a key issue during the Black/Jewish alliance. For historians like David Levering Lewis, the Black/Jewish alliance was essentially a weapon “to fight anti-Semitism by remote control.”[7] Lewis writes that Marcus Garvey “stormed out of the NAACP headquarters in 1917, muttering that it was a white organization.”

What Garvey did not see was that the whites he was reacting to in the organization were Jews. Einstein worked with W. E. B. DuBois, a black Stalinist. DuBois wrote that Stalin was

“a great man; few other men of the 20th century approach his stature. He was simple, calm, and courageous… Stalin was not a man of conventional learning; he was much more than that: he was a man who thought deeply, read understandingly, and listened to wisdom, no matter whence it came.


“He was attacked and slandered as few men of power have been, yet he seldom lost his courtesy and balance; nor did he let attack drive him from his convictions nor induce him to surrender positions which he knew were correct.”

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