It looks like the Jewish propaganda machine that ran at full
throttle for half a century is beginning to run out of fuel, and the fake
narrative it has been spewing is unraveling. Two articles tell this story: One
was written by Dennis Prager and published on June 11, 2013 in National Review
Online under the title: “Opposing 'God Bless America'” and the subtitle: “A
Christian minister preaches the religion of leftism.” The other article is
titled: “Egypt's Summer of Jew-Hatred,” was written by Sohrab Ahmari and
published in the Wall Street Journal on June 12, 2013.
The impression you get when you read these articles is that
of the captains in charge of the propaganda machine who are bending over to
scrape the bottom of the barrel in search of a few drops of fuel that may be
there. They need the fuel to keep the machine running, and keep it producing
hate because hate is what sustains their cultures and keeps it alive. This is
why they will do anything imaginable to scrape fuel from the bottom of the
barrel in whatever amount they can find, however little that may be.
But when it comes to this business, bending over the barrel
to scrape its bottom is never a simple thing to do. You must contort yourself
and come to look like a pretzel before you can reach deep into the barrel and
fetch whatever sits at the bottom of it. You see this in the article where the
author reports on a column that was written by a minister named James P. Marsh
Jr. I have not read this column and shall not read it because my interest lies
not in its content. Rather, my interest centers on what Prager is doing to
reach down to the bottom of the barrel and scrape it.
He begins the article by chiding the minister who seems to
have been troubled by “people standing and singing 'God Bless America' at
baseball games.” Prager sees this as a sign that “mainline Christianity has
declined” in America. Of course, Christianity has declined in America, and the
readers of this website know why. Several articles were published here
demonstrating how the Jewish propaganda machine contributed mightily to that
decline. And this is the same machine that is now spinning the story of the
decline to generate hate against a new enemy: leftism. And this is where the pretzel-style
contortion begins.
The author has avoided speaking in a straightforward manner.
He did not tell it like it is; did not tell that the Jews badmouthed
Christianity so heavily; they almost chased it out of North America. He hid the
fact that they did so to avenge the treatment they received at the hands of the
Christians during the past two thousand years. Instead of being truthful, he
explained the situation like this: “Leftism has influenced Western societies
far more deeply than Christianity has since the beginning of the 20th century.
And leftism has influenced far more Christians (and Jews) than Christianity (or
Judaism) has influence leftists.” Well, my friend, do you feel contorted like a
pretzel already, reading this passage?
If you enjoyed the game and want more, read the rest of the
Prager article to see how he blames the decline of Christianity in America on
the minister and some other people such as the officials at the ACLU and
professors in the social-science departments. He will delight you with more of
the same over a few paragraphs then hit you with this: “Perhaps the pastor is
unaware that the song [God Bless America] was written by Irving Berlin, a
Russian Jewish immigrant.”
And so, having gone through the contortion to blame the
decline of Christianity on “leftism,” and having gone through all the trouble
to hide the fact that “leftism” was brought to the World and to America by the
Jews, he now reminds the readers that the song was written by a Jew. Thus, as
per habit, he has assigned the discredit to everyone but the Jews; and has
assigned the credit to the Jew and to no one else.
We now look at the Ahmari article. He begins by saying that
virulent antisemitism has remained a constant element of Egyptian culture –
before and after the revolution. So you ask: What is the proof? And he says
that a serial drama is set to air during Ramadan, about a month from now. He
calls it “Egyptian TV's latest piece of hate-melodrama.” How does he know that?
Well, he did not see the series or anything like that, but it depicts the Prophet
Muhammad's conquest, in A.D. 629, of a Jewish community on the Arabian
Peninsula. Well, this is a historical event, but does it make the series a
hate-melodrama?
The answer should be “not necessarily” unless he has seen
the series or has read the script, neither of which he did. So how does he
convince the reader that the series will turn out to be a hate-melodrama? After
all, he is the one that is trying to propagate the hate. He is doing it the way
that the Jewish hate machine does it which is to accuse the other guy of what
he is himself trying to do. From the looks of it, however, it seems that it
will take some doing before he can convince the reader of anything. Well, there
is one thing he can do; it is to reach into his own background and fetch from
there a trick that the reader cannot verify.
Here is the deal: Sohrab Ahmari is of Iranian origin. It is
true that when the Iranians rally, they sometimes chant “Death to America,
death to Israel.” The Arabs do not do that. At times, the Muslim Arabs pray in
groups but they do so in silence which is the Sunni tradition. Ignorant of this
reality, Ahmari attributes to them an Iranian habit that flows out of their
Shiite tradition. To this end, he invents this piece of fiction: “Khaybar, oh
Jews!” is an oft-heard chant at Arab anti-Israel rallies. The truth is, he
never heard such a chant because there never was such a chant.
Now let me tell you something, Sohrab. Next time you want to
tell your readers about the Arabs expressing antisemitic sentiments (more like
anti-Jewish sentiments since they are the true Semites, and the Jews are
anything but Semitic) tell your readers that the Arabs will say Zionist entity
or say occupied Palestine but will never say Israel. They would rather have
poison in the mouth than pronounce this word. Also, when they hold a rally, it
is to honor someone or to launch a revolution. They never hold anti-Israeli or
anti-anyone rally.
The Arabs do not talk about Israel, do not think about
Israel and do not want to know Israel even exists. I read almost all the
Egyptian newspapers almost everyday, and I read many of the other Arab
newspapers. At times, I go for a whole week without once seeing the word
Israel.
Let me tell you another thing. I regularly read the Arabic
and English versions of Alyoum Alsabea. I never read anything of what you say
was in them. Next time you want to BS your readers, give the coordinates or a
link so that they may verify your claim.
Finally, it looks like the Jewish propaganda machine has
gone looking for fuel at the bottom of the barrel but found a useless
mouthpiece and no fuel to animate it.