The Jewish obsession with Egypt – going back almost three
and a half millenniums – is not abating. In fact, it seems to become more
intense with time as can be seen with the way that the politics around the
subject has developed in the last few days. Let's begin with the online Forbes
Magazine where Tim Ferguson wrote an article in which he mentions both the IMF
view of the Egyptian economy, and that of Steven Cook whom Ferguson says is a
senior fellow for the Mideast at the Council on Foreign Relations. The Ferguson
article appeared in Forbes on April 17, 2014 under the title: “An Egypt Expert
Doesn't Share IMF's Hopeful View.”
What's it about? Well, if you are modestly familiar with the
events that have transpired in Egypt during the past three years, and if you
have been following the IMF reports concerning that country, you'll come out
with the view that the international institution has been painting a fairly
accurate picture of the economic situation as it was evolving in Egypt. But
parallel to that, Tim Ferguson of Forbes Magazine has been doing what most
publications of the kind do which is to paint a bleaker picture than warranted.
They do what they do for a reason, which is what motivated Ferguson. But he also
had a second reason as we shall see in a moment.
The motivation for being negative on the countries that have
gone through difficult times – like a revolution, for example – is that people
such as Ferguson badmouth those economies to scare off potential investors.
This keeps the value of the assets down while Ferguson and cohorts load up on
them. It is only after they had their fill that they start saying the economy
has performed well. When the buyers start lining up to buy those assets,
Ferguson and cohorts line up to sell to them at a high price.
The second reason has to do with the Jewish obsession with
Egypt. To begin with, it must be noted that the Jewish propaganda machine has
developed the habit of speaking of the Arabs as if they were automatons that
respond not to the full range of human emotions but to fear and fear only. That
is, if you want an Arab to go left, you must make him fear going right. If you
want him to backtrack, you must make him fear going forward. This is moral
syphilis, of course, and the Jewish machine has ejaculated a heavy load of it
into the heads, hearts and souls of the Americans, especially the congressional
dogs who gorge themselves on syphilis.
And the way that the Jewish leaders and their running dogs
have practiced that habit in relation to Egypt, was to mobilize hundreds upon
hundreds of mouthpieces, who gave thousands upon thousands of lectures, and
wrote tens of thousands of articles on how to punish Egypt for not doing as
told. And with the warning came the threat that Egypt will be punished even more
severely if it did not make the strategic decision of changing its ways
fundamentally and for good. And would you know it, one of the mouthpieces, and
a loud one at that, was Steven A. Cook who participated mightily at filling the
heads, hearts and souls of Americans with moral syphilis.
And then, an advice put together by the revolutionary people
of Egypt, was sent to the successive leaders of that country. It was to the
effect that the way to deal with Jewish America is to show these people a big
and fat middle finger telling the bags of moral syphilis they should stick the
thing right up their rear ends. It should go deep inside ... and should reach
the throat where they will tear their vocal cords. This will force them to stop
making the kind of threats that work on no one but the Jews whose very
existence rests on the fear of being annihilated. Fear motivates no one but the
Jews; yet fear is advocated by no one but the Jews. Go figure.
Not too many got the message of revolutionary Egypt, but
Steven Cook – a mouthpiece of the Jewish propaganda machine – did. And so, he
wrote an article not to say punish Egypt as he used to, but to say something
else. It is that he found himself in a quandary when the people of Egypt called
his bluff. So he stopped saying punish Egypt but could not say reward it
either. What to do?
Well, the Jewish obsession with Egypt being still there, and
the intense desire for keeping that country “in the fold” growing more intense,
Steven Cook and those like him had no alternative but to say: Help Egypt
because that country is important to us, and it is in trouble economically.
This is what his article is about.
As to Tim Ferguson and the Forbes people who could not
understand the message if it were stuffed right up their rear ends, they got
the bright idea of using the Cook article to claim vindication for what they
have been echo repeating for ever and ever.