Friday, September 18, 2015

Foreign Charlatans exploiting American Idiots

A perfect example has finally come to light as to how semi-clever individuals from backward Second and Third World countries manage to work their way into the hearts and minds of even lesser individuals in America, and reap huge benefits for themselves.

This time, the semi-clever individual is named Kassem Eid. He came from Syria, and went through steps in America which he discusses in an article he wrote for the Wall Street Journal. It has the title: “The Rubble of Obama's Syria Policy” and the subtitle: “I kept asking why the administration wasn't doing more to help my people. Then the Iran deal came through, and I Knew.” It was published as an op-ed on September 18, 2015.

Like the Iraqi individual whose name – if I remember correctly – was Chalabi, this Syrian must have had dollar signs dancing in his head, and must have planned for great things he will do with the hundreds of millions of dollars he expected to receive from the stupid Americans. And he must have entertained numerous daydreams about living a happy and prosperous life the way that the Iraqi role model he tried to emulate, now lives.

Alas, this charlatan-in-the-making discovered that America under Obama cannot be fooled the way that a previous administration was. And so, he went seeking support from the Jewish organizations that embrace this sort of individuals and use them to advance the Jewish agenda in America as well as the Israeli agenda in the Middle East. They heard from him about the steps through which he went when visiting officials in Washington, and they wrote something for him to claim was his creation and his alone.

He says that in February 2014: “by some miracle, I managed to trick the regime into letting me leave Syria.” Two months later, he met with “high-level Obama administration officials in Washington D.C.” He told them about the horrors he saw the Assad regime commit in Syria, and asked those officials “to take simple steps, to do something, anything, that would protect the civilians I left behind.” He pressed for answers, he says, but they gave him the usual excuses as to why they will not get involved.

And then, something big happened, he says; something that revealed what was really going on. Call it a second miracle happening to him or whatever you wish, but in numerous meetings he had with people at the State Department, with Democrats in Congress and at the White House, he learned the truth. He learned about Mr. Obama's personal thinking, he says. He explains that he reached “a moment of honesty when someone would say in effect: President Obama does not wish to upset the Iranians.” Pow! It was like a Supernova exploding before his eyes, shedding a flood of light on the manner in which Obama's brain functions.

As to what he knows about America in general, he did not learn about that solely from the year and a half that he lived there. No, he says, what really happened was that his father had “managed to smuggle copies of the Reader's Digest, from which I learned that people in the world lived better than we did. I also read on the American Revolution, when people … picked up arms when forced to do so.”

And that's not all, he says, because the sequel to that story unfolded when Obama was elected in 2008. He doesn't say whether he learned about the event from the Reader's Digest or from another magazine his father may have smuggled into Syria, but says he celebrated the good news alongside his friends. And the sequel does not end here because there is more to it.

It is that he had goosebumps, he says, during Mr. Obama's Cairo speech of 2009. Well, this means he must have had a radio or a television set in the house at the time. And not only him, because he goes on to say this: “All around me in Syria, I heard excited talk of a new era.” Well, this means that the Syrian people were well informed about what's going on outside their country.

This raises a question of credibility about Kassem Eid: Did he need the Reader's Digest to learn that people outside Syria lived better than he? Or did he invent the story of a smuggled Reader's Digest just to mention the American Revolution, a time when people picked up arms because they were forced to do so, as he says?

From the sounds of it, this is the work of the Judeo-Israeli lobby … in the business of creating ammunition for use by the Republicans, now running to be elected President of the United States. They never stop.