On September 24, 2016, the Wall Street Journal released this soul-stirring visual in memoriam of Adolf Hitler, who was a fascist and a Nazi and who was literally literally Hitler. It bears mentioning that the date September 24 coincides with the birthday of Jackie Sandler, spouse of Jewish funny-man Adam Sandler.

Jackie Sandler, wife of Jewish Adam Sandler, celebrated her birthday on September 24, the same day that WSJ released the image of Hitler. I’m not saying there’s a connection. But I am just sayin’… Jackie Sandler. Jewish. Birthday. Hitler. WSJ. See what I’m sayin’?

Millions upon millions of people read the Wall Street Journal every single day. There are 24 hours to a day, 60 minutes to an hour, 60 seconds to a minute. After doing the math, that’s 86,400 seconds in a day, in which millions upon millions of people are reading the Wall Street Journal every single day — which is another way of saying infinity days.

A billion people read the Wall Street Journal for infinity days of tens of thousands of seconds.

In recent headlines by Wall Street Journal — most notably those leveraged against YouTube star PewDiePie, who in December of 2016 raised more than $1.3 M (that’s $1.3 million) for (RED), a nonprofit organization dedicated to increasing anti-retroviral drug access to impoverished communities affected by HIV — the Wall Street Journal has used phrases like “Anti-Semitic” and “Nazi imagery” to disparage YouTube philanthropists like PewDiePie, who raised $1.3 million in an effort to “pave the way for an AIDS free generation.”

However, the issue lies less in the fact that the Wall Street Journal mislabeled PewDiePie as “Anti-Semitic” &“Nazi” than it lies in the Wall Street Journal’s overabundant usage of phrases such as “Anti-Semitic” & “Nazi.”

When you consider that billions, possibly trillions, of people read the Wall Street Journal for infinity upon infinity hours per second, you must also consider that they’re reading headlines with words like “Anti-Semitic” & “Nazi” over & over again. Leading experts in neuropsychology have called into question whether or not this is having a negative effect on the average reader’s brain, namely in how they perceive Jews & Nazis.

“In the same way that drinking water makes you full of water,” says one leading expert, who is in the lead of all the experts, “hearing phrases like ‘Anti-Semitism’ and ‘Nazi’ and ‘Fascist’ makes you full of anti-semitic fascism.”

And the Wall Street Journal has been saying these words a super ton.

During our discussion, the expert leader took out a calculator, multiplied the amount of times the Wall Street Journal has used such bigoted terminology in their articles by the potentially infinite number of WSJ readers. His calculation:

“Mother of God,” we said aloud at the same exact time.