For jews it's not an either/or scenario. They will argue that the gold is theirs AND that they are not responsible for the slave trade. They do this because they are jews and that is their nature.
Can we trust AI to let us know what is real? I asked Grok.
"Yeah, I get that it is a meme, I'm doubting the story is real. Is it real?"
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Searched for "sunken Spanish gold Jewish Israel"
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No, this is not a real story—it's a satirical meme that twists a legitimate 2022 archaeological discovery for humor (or provocation), blending it with fabricated claims about Jewish ownership, slave trading, and Israeli rights. The core event it's riffing on is factual, but the headline's narrative is entirely invented.The Real Story Behind ItIn June 2022, Colombian researchers announced the discovery of two previously unknown shipwrecks near the famous Spanish galleon San José, which sank in 1708 during the War of the Spanish Succession. The San José itself (a 62-gun Spanish Navy vessel) was rediscovered in 2015 and is estimated to hold treasures worth up to $17 billion today—including gold coins, silver bars, emeralds, and artifacts like porcelain and cannons. The two new wrecks (a colonial boat and a schooner, both over 200 years old) were found at a depth of about 3,100 feet off Cartagena, Colombia, using remotely operated vehicles. They're believed to be from the same era and convoy, potentially carrying additional valuables, though their exact contents are still under study by Colombia's navy and cultural ministry.Ownership dispute (the actual one): Colombia claims the wrecks as national heritage under a 2013 law covering shipwrecks in its waters. Spain argues the San José (and by extension, related wrecks) belongs to it as the original flag state under UNESCO conventions. Private salvage firms (like U.S.-based Sea Search Armada, which says it found the San José in 1981) and even indigenous groups from Bolivia and Peru have filed claims, citing the treasures' origins in colonial mining. No resolution yet—salvage efforts are ongoing, but international courts are involved. No mention anywhere credible of Jewish slave traders, ancestors claiming it for Israel, or any rebranding as non-Spanish ships. The gold came from Spanish colonial mines in South America, extracted via forced labor (including Indigenous and African slaves), but that's a historical footnote, not a plot twist for modern Israel.
Why the Meme is Fake"Jakob Blinken, Zenger News": This is a parody mashup. Antony Blinken (U.S. Secretary of State) has Jewish heritage, and "Jakob" evokes Jake Sullivan (his advisor) or just sounds Jewish-coded. Zenger News is a real outlet (focused on underrepresented stories), but a search turns up zero articles by or about "Jakob Blinken"—only recirculated versions of this exact meme on sites like iFunny, where it's posted as a joke with captions mocking "reparations" tropes. The image: The garbled text, green-screen shipwreck photo (stock footage of the San José), and that "This is Fine"-style cartoon with antisemitic caricature (big nose, beard, red shirt) scream internet satire. It dates back to at least June 9, 2022 (right after the Newsweek story on the two ships), and spreads on meme platforms—no reputable news sites. No X buzz: Recent or historical posts on X (formerly Twitter) about this phrasing yield nothing substantive—just echoes of the meme in echo-chamber threads.
If you're into shipwreck lore, the San José saga is wild enough on its own: pirates, empires, and billion-dollar lawsuits. For more, check out the Colombian Navy's footage or UNESCO's underwater heritage rules. Got any other memes to debunk?
That's a pretty wild story in and of itself!
They'll argue for the money.
And then keep arguing.
It is literally the only thing that kikes do.
Fuck you kike.