Well, some of that stuff
is true, and certainly needs attention. To go about attacking the blasphemies of the Christ-rejectors or to call out Jewish supremacy in the many political offices it inhabits in our Western countries in a
hateful way is what's wrong, there. A hateful way like that is striking at a man personally, who is barely tied to any of those things besides by his blood and the modern, presumably-irreligious aspects of this culture which he lives in (attending the holidays), and blaming him for the evil-doings of the elders of that religion. It is like lashing a mother's two children because she herself practiced adultery while they caught a glimpse of the terrible act. There is barely any relation, there, isn't there? So we must not be mean to people in this manner. There's a quote from a hieromonk I've posted previously about, Father Seraphim Rose, an excellent teacher, who explains this well in a general sense, on the diplomacy we must express as Christians.
>No matter how "right" you may be on various points, you must be diplomatic also. The first and important thing is not "rightness" at all, but Christian love and harmony. Most crazy converts have been "right" in the criticisms that led to their downfall; but they were lacking in Christian love and charity and so went off the deep end, needlessly alienating people around them and finally finding themselves all alone in their rightness and self-righteousness.
(This quote can be found here)