As ANTPogo said, you're failing miserably at supporting your supposedly oh-so-obvious fact.
Of course, it's easier to make up yet more lies than to try and answer my questions, which you have noticeably avoided. But that's OK, since I think we'll take it as read that you don't have the first clue what you are talking about. Especially since you now put further idiocies onto the table.
In what way, Saggy, were the LA Times, Chicago Tribune, the Hearst group papers, the Canadian press, the Australian press or the British press "Jewish" in the 1940s?
And are you really sure that stories about the persecution and murder of Jews in WWII were "endless"?
Unfortunately for you, the reporting of the Holocaust has been the subject of considerably more rigorous analysis than that lamely provided by Butz. The most comprehensive study of the New York Times and the Holocaust, by Laurel Leff, is entitled
Buried By The Times, because (a) stories about the Jews of Europe were generally buried on the inside pages and (b) there were not quite as many of them as you might think.
Leff counted 1,147 stories about the Jews of Europe in the NYT from September 1939 to May 1945. This has to be divided by 15 different European countries who came under Nazi occupation. And obviously, most stories in 1939 or 1940 related to persecution, not murder. Most stories in 1941 and 1942 related to deportation.
However you try and spin it, there was less than a story a day on the Holocaust by its broadest definition, and they were rarely given front page prominence.
That's because the wartime press had other things to put on the front pages, like battles; because the experience of WWI meant everyone was cautious with atrocity stories; and because the relevant government ministries in the US and UK were especially cautious about giving prominence to reports of atrocities against Jews. Thus the best-publicised atrocity was the German reprisal against Lidice, which the Germans didn't even try to deny because the dumb Nazis thought there was nothing wrong with wiping out entire villages.
It was only when
multiple reports accumulated from
different sources that most observers and commentators concluded that extermination was taking place. That was towards the end of 1942.
Most of the reports came from governments-in-exile, who were not Jewish. The WJC did not invent these reports nor could it control the governments-in-exile.
Your quoted example actually came via the Polish underground,
combining Polish and Polish Jewish sources giving early reports of Chelmno as well as the mass shootings in eastern Poland, and thus mutually corroborated each other, in May 1942.
This long report reached the UK via Sweden in June. The Polish government-in-exile publicised the report, then there was a press conference with the British government Ministry of Information endorsing the claims, and then there was a statement from the British section of the WJC. The WJC didn't originate the story, it merely endorsed it.
Meanwhile, inside Poland, the underground observed on the inauguration of Belzec, Sobibor, Treblinka and Auschwitz as extermination camps. The first reports about Belzec came from Polish sources. Treblinka was reported by both Polish and Polish Jewish sources simultaneously; Auschwitz's function as a death camp first came from the Poles. These intelligence reports were passed back to London and also publicised inside Poland in the underground press.
When the reports reached the government-in-exile, it could publish them in British-censored Polish publications, pass them to the British government, or try publicise them directly.
Not all of the reports about the camps or about the killings elsewhere even made it into the newspapers, because the Polish government-in-exile had other concerns, like publicising the plight and suffering of Poles under Nazi occupation, as well as contending with the Katyn affair in the spring of 1943.
Thus, we find
The Times reporting in May 1943 about the liquidation of the Cracow ghetto in March 1943 and mentioning the remaining inmates of the ghetto were being deported to Oswiecim.
Other papers mentioned less precisely that the remaining Jews of Cracow met their fate in 'gas chambers at adjacent concentration camps'. The source being a Polish government in exile radio station, based on reports from the underground.
We also find the Polish Telegraphic Agency
reporting that Oswiecim had become a 'graveyard for Poles' without even mentioniong Jews.
Yet in the same time-frame, 1943, the unpublished monthly summary reports of the Polish underground state, the Delegatura, routinely contain a couple of pages of information about events at Auschwitz, and a page or two on events in the ghettos and other death camps.