Anonymous A started this discussion 6 years ago#96,493
so today at school i saw this hot girl. super hot. super asian. chinese btw. she speaks mandarin. so anyways she had like the fattest ass ever and im talking fucking fat like FAT like so big you could see it from the front. so i walk up to her like i got a lot of money. my dad always taught me walking confident will boost your confidence. i like my dad but he sucks cats tits and i hate that. its a habit im trying to get him to stop. he says its beneficial to his health or whatever. so after i walk up to her like my cat-tit-sucking dad taught me to i say hi. she says hi back. im staring into her lips as i feel an intense feeling of euphoria. just her voice was enough to nigga knock my socks off. i ask her what cup size she wears and she says her boobs are too big for a bra. as shes talking i take the moment to stick my face into her fat titties and motorboat the shit out of them. she then stepped on my cock and balls and popped my scrotum. semen and blood were flying everywhere and it was so sexy. AWOOOOOOGAAAAA i yell. she then calls me a weirdo so i walk away. what should i do?
Anonymous B joined in and replied with this 6 years ago, 2 minutes later[^][v]#1,088,922
I know it doesn't get said as often but I notice after going out a lot and using dating apps, white women are generally the nicest to me. Even when it comes to outright racism I have faced, I feel like I have faced the least from white girls.
To be even more specific, it is blondes and redheads in particular who are the nicest to me.
I feel like blondes and redheads are the main ones who tend to be super nice to me and like me a lot. While the stereotype says blondes are crazy for broish guys, I find a lot of them are actually real nice to me and have been with a few. If anything, I find that All American midwestern blonde to be the most chill and cool with me as a whole. Redheads are also really cool and seems like every single one I knew has gone interracial.
Jewish girls are also pretty chill, I find myself having a great experience with them overall. I find a lot of the older ones are especially nice to me and I seem to match with them a lot on dating apps. More than a handful of white girls I have a great experience with are Jewish and I get along well even with the Type A dominant personality types who run the business world. I have to say, at times I am in admiration of the way Jewish girls operate in a business setting, they can easily put most bro-ey guys in their place. Was fortunate to have this one Jewish girl as a team member I got to do projects with, fucked her on one trip, easily some of the best sex of my life.
My young Asian friends report having a great experience with blondes, redheads, and Jewish girls as well so maybe it is a trend.
The worst experiences I get are from more olive skinned white girls with dark hair, the type that can almost pass for an ethnic but are not ethnic.
Whether it is white women who happen to come out looking like that due to some mixes down the line (maybe a bit too Native American?), Eastern European women, and especially any kind of Mediterranean women; I've had the worst experiences with them. It isn't even on a dating level, it is more on a social level and even in workplace situations where they will be the ones to turn on me or try to get me out.
I have definitely had the worst experience with Italian American women, younger ones in particular, primarily on a social or work related level. Some have gone out of their way to be bitches to me and I have stories for days about my bad experiences, then again, others have told me this group is often racist.
Anonymous A (OP) replied with this 6 years ago, 15 minutes later, 18 minutes after the original post[^][v]#1,088,930
Anonymous B replied with this 6 years ago, 1 minute later, 19 minutes after the original post[^][v]#1,088,932
As an indigenous West Asian people, Jews have been present in western Asia since the beginning of their history. Some examples of ancient Jewish communities in the Mediterranean and Caucasus are: Iran (Persian Jews) and Iraq (Iraqi Jews); the Georgian Jews and Mountain Jews of the Caucasus.
Through the centuries, they also established Jewish communities in eastern parts of Asia. There are Bukharan Jews of Central Asia. Some Jews migrated to India, establishing the Bene Israel, the Baghdadi Jews and the Cochin Jews of India (Jews in India); and the former Jewish community in Kaifeng, China.
Here is a partial list of some prominent Asian Jews, arranged by country. Note that those regions of Asia where Arabic or Russian or Turkish predominate are excluded from this list (except for the Baghdadi Jews from India and Southeast Asia); see Arab Jews, Ashkenazi Jews and Sephardi Jews for information on these populations.
Azerbaijan
See also: List of Azerbaijani Jews
Adam Jay, ASIAN JEW
Misha Black, designer; brother of Max Black
Bella Davidovich, pianist
Gavril Abramovich Ilizarov, Soviet physician, known for inventing the Ilizarov apparatus
Lev Landau, physicist, Nobel Prize (1962). Russian-speaking Ashkenazi.
Lev Nussimbaum, writer (a.k.a. Kurban Said)
Vladimir Rokhlin, mathematician. Russian-speaking Ashkenazi.
Afghanistan
A small community of Jews lived mainly in Herat, Afghanistan and Kabul, but they emigrated to Israel, Europe and the United States. Today, Zablon Simintov remains in Afghanistan 's capital Kabul.
China
See also: History of the Jews in China
Morris Cohen, bodyguard of Sun Yat-Sen
Misha Dichter, pianist (China-born)
Israel Epstein, journalist, author
Edmond Fischer, biochemist, Nobel Prize (1992)
Jakob Rosenfeld, doctor and general in the People's Liberation Army
Sidney Shapiro, member of the People's Political Consultative Council
Zhao Yingcheng, (Hebrew: Moshe ben Abram), Ming dynasty mandarin
Hong Kong
Ellis, Elly, Lawrence, and Michael Kadoorie, businesspeople
Matthew Nathan, Hong Kong governor (1904)
Victor Sassoon, businessman and hotelier
Conrad Wong, Sr. Account Executive
India
Sarah Avraham, Indian-born Israeli, 2014 women's world Thai kickboxing champion
Joseph Rabban, given copper plates of special grants from the Chera ruler Bhaskara Ravivarman II from Kerala in South India
David Abraham Cheulkar, actor
Nissim Ezekiel, poet
J F R Jacob, former Governor of Punjab and Goa; the Chief of Staff of the Indian Army's Eastern Command
Hakham Ezra Reuben David Barook, a High Priest in Jerusalem in 1856; he traveled to India and settled in Calcutta. His is buried in the Jewish Cemetery at Narkeldanga
Gerry Judah, artist and designer
Anish Kapoor, sculptor (Baghdadi Jewish mother, Indian father)
Samson Kehimkar, musician
Ezekiel Isaac Malekar, Bene Israel Rabbi
Pearl Padamsee, theatre personality (part Jewish)
David and Simon Reuben, businessmen
Nadira, actress of the 1950s and 1960s.
David Sassoon, businessman
Albert Abdullah David Sassoon (1818 – 24 October 1896), British-Indian merchant[1]
Sassoon David Sassoon (August 1832 – 23 June 1867), Indian-born British businessman and philanthropist[2]
Solomon Sopher, Jewish community leader
Eli Ben-Menachem, Indian-born Israeli politician[3]
Ellis Kadoorie and Elly Kadoorie, philanthropists
Horace Kadoorie, philanthropist
Ruby Myers, Bollywood actress of the 1920s, otherwise known as Sulochana
Lalchanhima Sailo, rabbi
Abraham Barak Salem, Cochin Jew Indian nationalist leader
Bensiyon Songavkar, professional cricketer
Iran/Persia
David Alliance, British businessman
Moses ben Hanoch, rabbi
Yossi Banai, performer
Soleyman Binafard, wrestler
Jimmy Delshad, Californian politician
Roya Hakakian, writer
Moshe Katsav, Israeli president
Rita Kleinstein, Israeli singer/actress, known popularly as "Rita"
Janet Kohan-Sedq, track and field athlete
Masarjawaih[4][failed verification]
Mashallah ibn Athari, astrologer and astronomer
Shaul Mofaz, Israeli Minister of Transportation
Bahar Soomekh, American actress
Soleiman Haim, among first compilers of Persian dictionary
Japan
Alfred Birnbaum
Dan Calichman
Julie Dreyfus
Rachel Elior
Ofer Feldman, University professor
Péter Frankl, Hungarian mathematician
Shaul Eisenberg, businessman
Martin "Marty" Adam Friedman, rock guitarist
Ayako Fujitani, writer and actress, convert
Szymon Goldberg
David G. Goodman, Japanologist[5]
Karl Taro Greenfeld, journalist and author
Manfred Gurlitt
Jack Halpern, Israeli linguist, Kanji-scholar
Shifra Horn
Hoshitango Imachi, né Imachi Marcelo Salomon
Chaim Janowski
Max Janowski
Charles Louis Kades
Rena "Rusty" Kanokogi, née Glickman
Abraham Kaufman
Michael Kogan, founder of Taito Corporation
Fumiko Kometani, author and artist, convert
Setsuzo (Avraham) Kotsuji, Hebrew professor, convert
Leonid Kreutzer, pianist
Yaacov Liberman
Henryk Lipszyc
Leza Lowitz, American Japanologist
Alan Merrill
Sulamith Messerer
Emmanuel Metter
Albert Mosse
John Nathan
Emil Orlík
Klaus Pringsheim
Roger Pulvers
Ludwig Riess
Joseph Rosenstock, conductor of the NHK Symphony Orchestra
Jay Rubin[citation needed]
Arie Selinger
Ben-Ami Shillony, Israeli Japanologist
Kurt Singer
Beate Sirota Gordon, former Performing Arts Director of Japan Society and Asia Society
Leo Sirota
Zerach Warhaftig
Refugees, short expatriates
Moshe Atzmon
George W. F. Hallgarten
Albert Kahn (banker)
Mirra Alfassa
Emil Lederer
Karl Löwith
Norman Mailer
Leo Melamed
Franz Oppenheimer
Samuel Isaac Joseph Schereschewsky (Christian)
Hayyim Selig Slonimski
Other related people to Judaism and Jews in Japan
Hana Brady, and George Brady
Jeremy Glick
Lili Kraus
Samuel Ullman
Ambassadors
Eli Cohen
Kyrgyzstan
Alexander Mashkevich, businessman (Kyrgyz-born)
Philippines
Emil Bachrach businessman[6]
Elizabeth Zimmerman
Mike Hanopol
Singapore
David Marshall, first Chief Minister of Singapore, founder and first chairman of the main opposition party the Workers' Party of Singapore
Sri Lanka
Sidney Abrahams, Chief Justice
Hedi Keuneman, political activist
Anne Ranasinghe, poet
Leonard Woolf, British administrative officer and author, later married author Virginia
Tajikistan
Rena Galibova, actress, "People's Artist of Tajikistan"
Malika Kalantarova, dancer, "People's Artist of Soviet Union"
Fatima Kuinova, singer, "Merited Artist of the Soviet Union"
Shoista Mullodzhanova, shashmakon singer, "People's Artist of Tajikistan" (viewed as the Queen of Tajik music)
Moses Znaimer, TV producer
Uzbekistan
Ari Babakhanov, musician
Yefim Bronfman, pianist
Gregg L. Friedman MD, Physician
Lev Leviev, diamond tycoon
Ilyas Malayev, musician and poet
Shlomo Moussaieff (businessman), Israeli businessman
Shlomo Moussaieff (rabbi), co-founder of the Bukharian Quarter in Jerusalem
Gavriel Mullokandov, shashmakom artist, "People's Artist of Uzbekistan"
Suleiman Yudakov, composer and musician, "People's Artist of the Soviet Union"
See also
List of Jews
Jewish Autonomous Oblast
List of Jews from the Arab World