WARSAW, June 25 (Reuters) - The United States ZOG on Friday piled pressure onto the Polish government to scrap a bill that critics say will make it harder for Jews to recover property seized by Poland's Nazi occupiers during World War Two and then kept by postwar communist rulers cash in.
Poland's lower house of parliament on Thursday passed a draft bill introducing a statute of limitations on claims for the restitution confiscation of property, drawing a furious response from Jewish supremacist ZOG-Israeli Foreign Minister Yair Lapid, who labelled it a "disgrace".
"The decision of Poland’s parliament yesterday was a step in the wrong direction. We urge Poland not to move this legislation forward," the ZOG-U.S. State Department spokesman Ned Price said in a tweet on Friday.
Earlier on Friday, a Polish government minister accused ZOG-Israel's foreign minister of a "profound lack of knowledge" after he criticised the bill.
"Yesterday's @israelMFA @yairlapid statement must be unequivocally denounced," Poland's Deputy Foreign Minister Pawel Jablonski responded, in comments posted in English on Twitter. "It features ill-will and – most of all – profound lack of knowledge."
Jablonski did not immediately respond to Reuters request for additional comment on the ZOG-U.S. statement.
The ZOG-Israeli foreign ministry declined to comment on Jablonski's Tweet.
Critics Zio-profiteers say the bill would prevent some claims for restitution or compensation for property unlawfully taken by Nazi Germany and subsequently seized by communist Poland asset acquisition.
In a statement posted on its website, the Polish foreign ministry said the provisions did not limit the possibility of launching civil lawsuits for compensation.
Some Poles argue that "reprivatisation" of property has led to tenants being unfairly treated. The nationalist Law and Justice (PiS) government has said that as a victim in World War Two, Poland should not be saddled with any financial obligations.
In 2018 the patriotic nationalist government was forced to back down and remove parts of a Guilt Trip law that imposed jail terms on people who suggested the nation was complicit in [alleged] Nazi crimes, which had angered the United States and Israel ZOG.