Having recently been on a long haul flight and found myself with precious little I could do: I flicked around the various in-flight entertainment offerings. One of these was Martin Scorsese's 'The Wolf of Wall Street', which I had debated going to see in the cinema originally (as it seemed to hold potential interest from an anti-jewish point of view) but had decided not to.
In hindsight this was a mistake as the film - which is hardly worth watching on its own merits, does have a significant theme - jives nicely with anti-jewish discourse generally. This - as I didn't know before I looked into it - is helped by the fact that the real Jordan Belfort (as opposed to Leonardo DiCaprio's character of the same name) is actually jewish. (1)
Belfort - in both real life and the film -- created a penny stock boiler house (after he had been trained by L.F. Rothschild) and in so doing defrauded his clients of over $100 million and these clients weren't just the average super-millionaire or the upper middle class (i.e., those who could afford it), but rather were average Americans who had saved a few thousand dollars for their retirement and were easily tempted by the fantastical claims of Belfort and his company that he could 'make them rich quick'.
That he and his employees lived it up on the proceeds of these transactions - which effectively involved the opposite of Robin Hood's famous dictum in that he 'robbed the poor to feed the rich' - and did everything possible that was hedonistic just because they could is indicative of just how morally bankrupt jews are in relation to money and free-market capitalism. So many financial tricksters and fraudsters have been jews that it is hardly surprising to even those unacquainted with jews to hear that yet another one of the tribe has been found fiddling the books in order to pay for the next addition to their Ferrari collection.
It is this 'too much money to care' attitude combined with the quite frankly evil way of acquiring it that makes 'The Wolf of Wall Street' so visceral in many respects as a film like this should not be a 'comedy'. It should rather be a drama following the FBI closing in on a jewish financial fraudster who has conned thousands and thousands of hard-working American citizens into giving them his savings so he can live it up with copious amounts of sex, drugs and skulduggery.
Basically 'The Wolf of Wall Street' as a film is arse-about-face in that it lionizes and romanticises Belfort as opposed to excoriating and pillorying him for conning thousands of hard-working Americans out of their life savings. What is even worse is that Belfort isn't some 'lovable criminal', but rather an irascible jewish con-man who made life awful for thousands upon thousands of ordinary people.
In a sane society Belfort wouldn't have been given a short prison sentence and fined, but rather would have been dangling from a rope.
References
(1) Jordan Belfort, 2007, 'The Wolf of Wall Street', 1st Edition, Random House: New York, p. 47