Dakle sada već imamo i tvrdnju o postojanju nekakvog “jugoslovenskog ekvivalenta” Hitlerovih Nirmberških zakona - koji se još “selektivno primenjivao samo u Srbiji”, postoji i disertacija (uzgred budi rečeno sa niškog
Pravnog fakulteta) na tu temu, samo onog inkriminišućeg
dokumenta nema pa nema. Kako da se poveruje u bilo kakve eventualne tvrdnje da nije u pitanju politički korektno sagledavanje istorije koje zahteva ujednačavanja krivica baš po svaku cenu?
Zakon o kome je reč (tj samo jedna od bruka koje je Stojadinović priredio Srbima) pod nazivom “Numerus Clausus” je kopija američkih propisa iz tih vremena a ne Hitlerovih Nirnberških “zakona”, i kao takav je
poimenice naveden i na Vikipediji. Da li tvoj stav izrečen ovde prestavlja i zvanični stav moderne srpske istoriografije (tj postmodernističke politički korektne “zvanične istorije”) o onome što se na engleskom naziva “Jewish quota”?
U vaskolikom srpskom zakonodavstvu (računajući i ono Kraljevine Jugpslavije) svetska istoriografija nije pronašla nikakav pandan Hitlerovim “Zakonima o zaštiti nemačke krvi i časti” (sve jasno iz samog naziva), niti “Zakonu o državljanstvu Rajha” (razdvajanje običnog državljanina sa pravom na nemački pasoš od građanina nosioca političkih prava - ovo drugo je mogao da bude samo Nemac “arijevskog” porekla.
Numerus clausus
Numerus clausus ("closed number" in
Latin) is one of many methods used to limit the number of
students who may study at a
university. In many cases, the goal of the
numerus clausus is simply to limit the number of students to the maximum feasible in some particularly sought-after areas of studies with an intent to keep a constant supply of qualified workforce and thus limit competition. In historical terms however, in some countries,
numerus clausus policies were religious or
racial quotas, both in intent and function.
Historical use
Further information:
Jewish quota
Countries legislating limitations on the admission of Jewish students, at various times, have included: Austria, Canada, Hungary, Imperial Russia, Iraq, Latvia (from 1934 under the Kārlis Ulmanis regime), Netherlands, Poland, Romania, United States, Vichy France, and Yugoslavia among others.[1]
Numerus clausus u Americi i Kraljevini Jugoslaviji, sa Vikipedije - ukratko, Stojadinovićeva verzija ograničava procenat jevrejskih studenata na procenat Jevreja u opštoj populaciji.
United States
See also:
Numerus clausus § North America
Certain private universities, most notably
Harvard, introduced policies which effectively placed a quota on the number of Jews admitted to the university.
Abbott Lawrence Lowell, the president of Harvard University from 1909-1933,
[15] raised the alarm about a ‘Jewish problem’ when the number of Jewish students grew from six percent to twenty-two percent from 1908 - 1922.
[16] Lowell then proceeded to argue in favor of a "limit be placed on the number of them who later be admitted to the university."
[17] However, this implementation of a quota on the number of Jews was not unique to Harvard. After Harvard’s 1926 announcement about instating a "new admissions policy [that] would place great emphasis on character and personality [,T]he
Yale Daily News praised its decision and put forward its very own version of how Yale should select its students in a major editorial, ‘
Ellis Island for Yale.’ It called on the university to institute immigration laws more prohibitive than those of the United States government."
[18] According to historian
David Oshinsky, writing about
Jonas Salk, "Most of the surrounding medical schools (
Cornell,
Columbia,
Pennsylvania, and
Yale) had rigid quotas in place. In 1935 Yale accepted 76 applicants from a pool of 501. About 200 of those applicants were Jewish and only five got in." He notes that Dean Milton Winternitz's instructions were remarkably precise: "Never admit more than five Jews, and take no blacks at all."
[19] As a result, Oshinsky added, "
Jonas Salk and hundreds like him" enrolled in
New York University instead.
[20] Physicist and Nobel laureate
Richard P. Feynman was turned away from
Columbia College in the 1930s and went to
MIT instead.
According to Dan Oren's book,
Joining the Club — A History of Jews and Yale, Yale University's informal admissions policy to restrict the school's Jewish student body to around 10 percent ended in the early 1960s.
[21][22]
Yugoslavia
In 1940, the government of the
Kingdom of Yugoslavia enacted the Decree on the Enrollment of Persons of Jewish Descent at the University, Secondary School, Teacher Training College and Other Vocational Schools which
limited the proportion of Jewish students to the proportion of Jews in the total population.[23]
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Numerus_clausus
Hitlerovi Nirnberški “zakoni” se uopšte nešto posebno ne bave onim što se naziva Jewish quota, to nije bilo uopšte dovoljno za Treći Rajh, a time se nešto specijalno ne bavi ni bugarsko rasno zakonodavstvo - bugarski “Zakon o zaštiti nacije” može da se vidi evo ovde:
Law for Protection of the Nation
The
Law for Protection of the Nation(
Bulgarian: Закон за защита на нацията — ЗЗН) was a
Bulgarian law, effective from 23 January 1941 to 27 November 1944, which directed measures against
Jews and others whose legal definition it established.
[1] The law was an
anti-Jewish racial law passed by the parliament of the
Kingdom of Bulgaria in December 1940 along the example of the
Nuremberg Laws in
Nazi Germany. Under it, Jews were to be refused Bulgarian citizenship, in addition to:
- changes in the names of Jews.
- exclusion from public service and politics
- restrictions on their place of residence.
- prohibitions on economic and professional activity.
- confiscation of property.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Law_for_Protection_of_the_Nation?wprov=sfti1