Referencing "jews" in a sentence is like referencing "dogs" in a sentence. In proper English, one would not capitalize "dogs" and write "It's because of all these damn Dogs everywhere!"
I can't understand why one would capitalize one non-human group while another non-human group would not be.
Wouldn't it technically be inaccurate and improper English to capitalize "jew" when it shouldn't be?
Referencing "jews" in a sentence is like referencing "dogs" in a sentence.
In proper English, one would not capitalize "dogs" and write "It's because of all these damn Dogs everywhere!"
I can't understand why one would capitalize one non-human group while another non-human group would not be.
Wouldn't it technically be inaccurate and improper English to capitalize "jew" when it shouldn't be?
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