
The Florida Holocaust Museum in St. Petersburg condemned another incident where white supremacists were filmed waving Nazi flags in Orlando, Fla., this time on Monday in front of the entrance to Walt Disney World.
The video of three men waving Nazi flags on the lawn in front of the signs for the amusement park was posted on TikTok on May 7. Another flag, flying from a pole stuck into the ground, said “DeSantis Country,” alluding to Florida’s Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis.
He continued, emphasizing that “no family should be confronted with threatening symbols of hate, least of all on vacation. But this act of malice provides our community with an opportunity to come together and speak with one voice in opposition to those who support Nazis and their poisonous ideology.”
The nonpartisan group StopAntisemitism.com retweeted the video, saying: “We are sickened to our stomachs seeing Nazi flags flown at Disney World.”
A previous incident where Nazi flags were flown and virulently anti-Semitic content was displayed in Orlando happened in late January. The neo-Nazi Goyim Defense League and National Socialist Movement took responsibility for that rally, which was widely condemned. JNS




This can’t be true. 80,000+ pleasure seeking Yidden are yored regel to Orlando every year. The goyim just love us to pieces.
There’s good reason that Disney World had a Nazi Flag flying.
“We are sickened to our stomachs seeing Nazi flags flown at Disney World.” It’s more sickening to read what’s going on in there.
The charge: Walt Disney was an anti-Semite.
The evidence: Well, there’s the famous Three Little Pigs scene, in which the wolf was portrayed as a Jewish peddler. (The scene was later reanimated.) And there is the fact that in 1938, a month after Kristallnacht, Disney personally welcomed Nazi director Leni Riefenstahl to his studios. In Walt Disney: The Triumph of the American Imagination (the most thorough biography of the mogul), Neal Gabler explores the rumors but argues that Disney practiced tolerance in his home life. “There is some dispute whether the same spirit of tolerance extended to the studio, but of the Jews who worked there, it was hard to find any who thought Walt was an anti-Semite.”
Believability: Gabler posits that the charges stemmed less from personal behavior and more from Disney’s association with the very anti-Semitic Motion Picture Alliance, which the CEO founded after a particularly bitter labor dispute in 1941. Even if he wasn’t personally anti-Semitic, Gabler allows that Disney “willingly, even enthusiastically, embraced [anti-Semites] and cast his fate with them.”
So there you have it. Walt Disney was anti semitic Nazi sympathizer.
in the basement of Disney World, Hashem Yerachem
Walt Disney was a closet homo as well.