Aside from Bernie Madoff who preyed on his own kind, I do
not remember any prominent Jew that did not get into trouble, and not have
someone organize a “friends of X” grouping for him that gave comfort and, where
needed, collected financial donations for him.
When you study these people for decades like I have, you
come to view them as high school kids who age physically but not mentally,
emotionally or culturally. They crave to be loved, and seek to turn every
friendship they make into an almost carnal kind of closeness. But soon after
that, they put on a performance that's so obnoxious, it drives most people away
from them. This is why in the long run, the Jews only retain the kind of
friends who stick with them for one of two reasons. It would be that they need
something desperately or they fear something terribly.
And when it comes to analyzing a situation, the Jews do so
looking through a similar sort of lens. Thus, they see a friend that's almost a
lover, or they see an enemy that's the incarnation of pure evil. To them,
coexisting at the level of mutual respect in a live-and-let-live relationship
is like being given a hot cake every morning, kissing it and throwing it away.
Lest a similar scenario unfold with humans, the Jew considers an acquaintance
to be a friend he can exploit for as long as possible, and devour when no
longer useful.
With this backgrounder under your belt, dear reader, you may
now read Benny Avni's latest creation and marvel at what you'll discover. The
piece is an article that came under the title: “Arab allies looking anywhere
but America for friendship,” published on June 30, 2015 in the New York Post.
Described at the start of the article is the lens through which he sees the
world. It reads like this: “Our traditional, now jilted, Arab allies are
looking for love in all the wrong places.”
Because he plans to discuss judgments he has already made,
and reach conclusions he has already formulated, he connects every dot he spots
on the landscape whether or not it has relevance to the picture he is trying to
draw. Thus, speaking of the Saudis and the Egyptians, he judges that they “fear
the rise of a new empire ruled by megalomaniac Persian Shiites...” He goes on
to say that, as a result, they “seek alliances with Vladimir Putin, who dreams
of his own empire.” So you want to know what dots the author has observed to
pass this kind of judgment and reach this kind of conclusion.
And he tells you: “Take Egypt. Cairo now contemplates
switching to rubles in order to buy Russian wheat.” Well, Avni seems not to
know that the developing nations have forever sought to buy what they need, and
pay for it in a currency that's not “hard” to acquire. They also sought to sell
what they produce, and be paid in hard currency. Because Russia sends more
tourists to Egypt than anyone else, there are plenty of rubles in Egypt;
currency they can now use to buy Russian wheat. The fact that Putin no longer
insists that Egypt pay in dollars, says that he hates the dollar more than the
Egyptians love the ruble. In fact, they happily exchange it for wheat.
As to the Egyptians buying military equipment from Russia,
it is a decision they took long ago when people of the Avni bent started
telling the congress of idiots in Washington, it must use the
military-to-military relationship with Egypt to pressure that country into
adopting policies that would please the Jews. In fact, the Egyptians decided to
widely diversify their procurement of weapons ever since the George W. Bush era.
They now buy weapon systems from Germany, Britain, Russia, China, America and
France.
As to nuclear technology making inroads in the Middle East,
the readers who know there is a difference between the military use and the
civilian use of uranium, cannot be alarmed. The fact is that the civilian use
of uranium will become of vital interest to the nations of the region in about
a generation or so. That's because these people are using the wealth that
accrues to them from the sale of hydrocarbons to build an industrial base that
will require a great deal of energy.
This will happen at a time when they will have run out of
conventional energy. To avoid ruin, they must build nuclear reactors which they
will feed with the uranium they have in abundance underground. And given that
it takes decades to build the number of reactors they will need to run the
modern industrial state they are now building, they must start constructing
those nuclear reactors as soon as possible.
Finally, connecting the dots based on the knowledge of the
economic needs of the region will explain what is happening there. But this is
not what Benny Avni is trying to do.
Connecting the dots based on the paranoia that has guided
the Jews since the beginning of time, will lead to the disasters that Jewish
advice has brought to America already. And that's what Benny Avni is trying to
repeat.