Wednesday, April 23, 2014

Mysterious Ways how Things turn around

The Dennis Prager article of April 22, 2014 in National Review Online sent me back to a time when Jews had less influence on the media in Canada, and I had the motivation to go see people in their newspaper offices, their radio studios and their television stations to befriend what I hoped will be the individuals I shall work with someday. The Prager article has the title: “From the Great-Man Theory to Dead-White-Male-Criticism Theory” and the subtitle: “When race and class eclipse values, pursuing the truth is just 'acting white.'”

What is mysterious even to someone like me who has seen much that is odd in life, is how some people – all of them Jews – can be responsible for creating a situation, and then be so adamant complaining about it. And this is what Prager is doing in the current article. I do not know what he may have done long ago to contribute to the situation he is complaining about, but I can tell you that neither he nor any Jew I know of complained about such situation in the past. In fact, no one at all – Jew or gentile – complained about it publicly.

A complaint that was whispered in my ear more often than any other came usually from young Christian women and men who wanted me to know – and if possible do something about – those Jews who appeared out of nowhere, and bossed them like a slave driver. They used to tell them they must do things they never did before; things that made no sense at all. It is that the Jewish bosses wanted the camera operators and floor managers to cut to the reaction shots of people making bad faces when an Arab was speaking or when a non-Arab was saying something good about the Arabs. As well, the bosses wanted to see happy reaction shots when a Jew was speaking or when someone was saying good things about Israel or the Jews.

And there were numerous stories about young television hosts or hopeful ones that were invited to dinner by people they only knew as being highly placed. During the dinner, the notion was slipped to them that the Arabs and those who speak on their behalf never answer the question directly but always go off on a tangent. The advice given to the hosts was to the effect that they should cut the guests off at the start, and tell them in a humiliating fashion to answer the question. Some hosts did just that, and felt bad about it later because they knew it was not the Arabs who went off on a tangent; it was the Jews who did so – and did it all the time.

There were other complaints as well that reached me, and they were just as bizarre and just as nonsensical. For example, there was the story of the Jewish boss who almost had a fit behind the camera when an Arab professor from New Brunswick was having a first class interview on live television. The problem that almost killed the Jew was that the host of the show refused to kill the interview and go to a commercial despite the frantic gesticulations by the boss to do so.

And this brings us to the current lamentation by Dennis Prager. He begins his presentation by giving examples as to how some things were perceived decades ago, and how they are perceived now. He finds the situation to be lamentable, and blames the transformation on the “left-wing trinity of race, gender and class” taught to students in American colleges so as to instill disdain in them for the white race. He explains: “The new dividing lines are no longer good and bad or excellent and mediocre but white and non-white, male and female, and rich and poor.”

Well. You know what Dennis Prager? Let me tell you something, Dennis. Thirty and forty years ago, I and a few like myself were saying something to the effect that the new dividing lines are no longer good and bad or excellent and mediocre but Arab and non-Arab, hyphenated and non-hyphenated, Jewish lackey and free spirit. And we predicted that someday, this virulent Jewish disease will spread throughout the North American culture, and will rot it so badly that even the Jews will suffer from it like the snake that bites itself. You are feeling the effect of the bite, Dennis and you are screaming bloody murder. But I am not shedding a tear for you.

You and your people (if indeed you are a people) have asked for it. You got it and more than that, you contaminated the culture that embraced you and gave you every opportunity to share it, contribute to it, add to it and improve on it, but all you did was exploit it and rot it so badly, you cannot bring yourself to even smell it.

You're sorry for what you did, and so is the rest of the world.