What would you say about a guy whom you counsel: “If you
find yourself in a hole, stop digging” but then see him inside a hole and
digging feverishly? You'll say he is suffering from low intelligence, and probably
from being the victim of bad advice too. And this, my friend, is the situation
of the Jewish leaders who fan the flames of antisemitism by doing what they
call combating antisemitism.
When you reflect long and hard about the subject, you reach
the conclusion that the leaders of the Jews are the ones dragging the rank and
file into the morass of hating and being hated to keep feeding an agenda whose
purpose is to send the Jews ever deeper into a hole they would dig for
themselves, thus remain dependent on leaders who say they protect them from the
ravages of a human species that is suffering from an incurable disease called
antisemitism.
This is what the Jewish perpetual hate machine is made of.
An example demonstrating how it works is the article that was written by Daniel
Baer under the title: “Ignoring Anti-Semitism Won't Make It Go Away” and the
subtitle: “Europe 's leaders have a duty to
face the hatred head on.” It was published on November 14, 2014 in the Wall
Street Journal.
The analogy of the effort to combat antisemitism being an
exact parallel to digging the self deeper into a hole to get out of it, jumps
at you when juxtaposing that title and that subtitle with the following passage
in the article: “Some of the survey's findings are staggering: Fifty percent of
those surveyed in Switzerland, 52% in Austria and 61% in Hungary believe that
'Jews still talk too much about what happened to them during the Holocaust.'”
Being the logical person that you are, you conclude that
talking incessantly about antisemitism is what fuels antisemitism. You also
realize that the Jewish leaders are increasingly becoming irrelevant in the
eyes of a rank and file that is beginning to grasp the fact its leaders are
playing the demonic and cowardly game of walking them to the edge of the
precipice and telling them: “hang on tightly to us or you'll end up down
there.” Also, to offset their state of irrelevance, the Jewish leaders have
come up with the idea of calling on Europe 's
political leaders “to face the hatred head on” by telling them they have the
duty to do so.
Daniel Baer is doing just that in the article while
buttressing his argument with a lament that should alert him to the fact that
he is doing the opposite of what needs to be done. First, he reports that the
Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe
met 10 years ago and pledged to combat antisemitism. He goes on to say that 58
countries were represented then, 18 by foreign ministers or other cabinet-level
officials. And his lament is that this year, only 38 countries attended, and
only 6 sent ministers. He refuses to face the fact that this is caused by
fatigue that was developed against perpetual moaning. Thus, he cannot see that the way
to mitigate this condition is to call a moratorium on the tiresome Jewish
habit.
Instead, he takes solace in that: “Several European leaders
have recently spoken out condemning anti-Semitism.” He then does the very
Jewish thing which reminds ordinary people that when you give the Jew a finger,
he asks for the whole arm. Here is Daniel Baer's expression of this truism:
“But much more is needed.”
Why so? Why does he believe that much more is needed?
Because “anti-Semitism remains at worrying levels across Europe
despite the many attempts to combat it,” he says. What he fails to see is that
he advocates something which is worse than digging deeper into the hole from
which he tries to come out. What he does is throw gasoline on the fire from
which he tries to escape.
He goes on to lament: “Attacks against Jews have spiked” and
“The problem is acute." But how does he propose to solve the problem? By
doing more of what has proven to aggravate the problem: “One place to start is
by acknowledging that anti-Semitism is happening, condemning it publicly
whenever it arises, and fighting it.”