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FourteenEightyFour on scored.co
1 day ago8 points(+0/-0/+8Score on mirror)3 children
Miller and Gordon had me fooled
first that comes to mind is "Black" or "White", where they have decided to anglify Schwartz and Weiss. Same probably applies to other colours.
also just anything that sounds out of english character, or overly opulent (their weakness), like Diamond, Ruby, Sugar,
it's harder in Germany or Poland as many traditional German and Polish surnames can easily be misinterpreted for kikery. still, nothing that some scrutiny can't resolve.
also anything biblical, such as "David" as a surname
1 day ago4 points(+0/-0/+4Score on mirror)2 children
> it's harder in Germany or Poland as many traditional German and Polish surnames can easily be misinterpreted for kikery. still, nothing that some scrutiny can't resolve.
I remember reading something about this; the way to tell if a name is an actual German name is that German names are usually based on either a location or a profession and kike names will mix two words together in a way that sounds fancy but doesn't make sense.
> also anything biblical, such as "David" as a surname
Unfortunately not always accurate as many Whites have Biblical names as well.
obviously "David", "Benjamin", "Samuel" are extremely common first names in the west, but when they are presented as a surname, that's a completely different demographic
first that comes to mind is "Black" or "White", where they have decided to anglify Schwartz and Weiss. Same probably applies to other colours.
also just anything that sounds out of english character, or overly opulent (their weakness), like Diamond, Ruby, Sugar,
it's harder in Germany or Poland as many traditional German and Polish surnames can easily be misinterpreted for kikery. still, nothing that some scrutiny can't resolve.
also anything biblical, such as "David" as a surname
Larry as a first name is also a dead giveaway
I remember reading something about this; the way to tell if a name is an actual German name is that German names are usually based on either a location or a profession and kike names will mix two words together in a way that sounds fancy but doesn't make sense.
> also anything biblical, such as "David" as a surname
Unfortunately not always accurate as many Whites have Biblical names as well.
Yeah. Particularly in earlier generations in the US, the tradition in a lot of places was to pick one name from each Testament when naming kids.
obviously "David", "Benjamin", "Samuel" are extremely common first names in the west, but when they are presented as a surname, that's a completely different demographic
https://bloodandfrogs.com/2023/02/top-ten-israeli-given-names-from-1948-to-2021.html