I believe that the GSG was not necessarily interpreted as a secondary item to the cloth and that's why they felt it threatening, I think the general feeling of prejudice as a reaction to the massive influx of Eastern European and Russian Jews into Londons East End, was likely "the powder keg" the local establishment felt was in their midst. The message stood independent of the cloth in that respect...unless of course the cloth and the anti-Semite message were intentionally there to punctuate each other.
People seem to think that Jack the Ripper was the only threat to the citizens of London at the time, when something like the Parnell Commission alone debunks that myth. These were dark times, poverty, disease, overcrowding, anarchists and revolutionary socialists populated the square mile the killings were committed within, and many of these were considered as serious threats to the naturalized citizens and governments.
People seem to think that Jack the Ripper was the only threat to the citizens of London at the time, when something like the Parnell Commission alone debunks that myth. These were dark times, poverty, disease, overcrowding, anarchists and revolutionary socialists populated the square mile the killings were committed within, and many of these were considered as serious threats to the naturalized citizens and governments.
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