Even if they walk on two legs and look like human beings,
the fact that they have a brain installed upside down inside the skull renders
them no better than animals ... dare I say, even savage animals. And if they become
journalists, they're good enough to ply their trade at CNN, one of the
flagships representing North American animal-like journalism.
If you doubt this, and you wish to see proof for yourself,
you only need to read Nick Thompson's piece which came under the title: “Female
genital mutilation: Why Egyptian girls fear the summer,” published on June 25,
2015 on the website of CNN. It's a long article but what alerts you to the fact
that this guy has a brain installed upside-down, is a short passage that comes
early in the article. Speaking of female genital mutilation (FGM,) the author
explains that it is: “what's also known as female circumcision.”
No, this guy does not need to do the kind of Yoga during
which the practitioners stand on their heads. That's because his brain stands
upside-down already by a cruel quirk of nature. The fact is that female
circumcision has been around for as long as male circumcision has been – since
ancient times. It was always called female circumcision till twenty years ago
or thereabout when a woman who did not like what was done to her, described it
as female genital mutilation. Thus, the appellation “circumcision” came first,
lasted thousands of years, and then came “mutilation” – not the other way
around.
That woman did not care that men are also circumcised for
the same reasons – whatever they may be – but this was enough for the likes of
CNN to turn the appellation into an instrument by which to establish the Jewish
notion of “balance” to the daily occurrences of the modern 24-hour news cycle.
To be fair to CNN, we must recall that the New York Times' own Tom Friedman
habitually seeks to establish that same screwy balance by creating enough noise
around the events to distort their original message and render them inaudible.
What Nick Thomson and CNN are trying to balance this time is
something having to do with the buzz that's surrounding Egyptian summer – more
specifically, “Alexandrian Summer.” In fact, this is the title of a book that
was written by an Egyptian that happened to be Jewish, who left his native
country back in 1951 to go live in Israel . His name is Yitzhak
Gormezano Goren who, like most Egyptian Jews, does not hide the fact that
“their hearts will remain forever in Egypt .”
Summer in Egypt ,
especially in Alexandria ,
has no rival. This is true for the foreign tourists who come to the country,
spend the day at the beach during the day, allow themselves a night on the
town, and then go to bed in a hotel room or in a cabin by the beach. Even more
enjoyable is a summer that is spent in Alexandria
by those who speak the language and do more than spend time at the beach and in
the night clubs. They mingle with the locals, feel their warm hospitality, and
take with them memories whose glory can never be captured by a camera. This is
what Goren took with him to Israel
even though he was only ten years old when he left Egypt carrying with him the kind of
memories he can never forget.
Now imagine the sinking feeling and the terror that must
have swept the offices and corridors of CNN when it was revealed that the 1978
Goren book had finally been translated into English, and was available at
Amazon. It must have been as horrifying as when Tom Friedman and his editors at
the New York Times learn – as they do once in a while – that something is
published about say, the advanced state of high-tech in Egypt .
This is when those characters scurry to send none other than
Friedman himself, the very emissary of lies and distortions, to the Middle East so as to come up with stories that will fill
the air with noise that can change the sound of music into the sound of Jewish
propaganda as it emanates from the bowels of hell itself.
And sure enough, the CNN characters did likewise by going
through old, debunked and discarded articles, extracted from them false ideas
and nonsensical statistics that defy the mathematics they espouse, and built
around them a narrative of discordant noises, to make it stand against the
heartfelt narrative of a novelist who left his heart not in San Francisco but
in Alexandria, Egypt.