Question: What's the difference between the Palestinian
people and the American politicians? Answer: The Palestinians know they are an
Israeli colony, and they don't like it. The Americans don't know they are a Jewish
plantation, and they don't care … unless they try to score personal gains where
possible.
It took Netanyahu something like four and a half decades to
admit that Israel was
occupying Palestine
… which is the condition that makes it an Israeli colony. He said it once
because it was convenient to do so at the time. But because nothing that's
honest lasts long in the hands of the Jews, the idea did not catch on, and
every Jew and his sidekick continued to talk about Palestine as if it were a “situation,” whatever
that means.
Using these realities as the canvas on which to paint a
picture of the vision that the Jewish leaders have of Palestine ;
of America
and the world – you'll have an insightful time going over two articles that
expose much of the fantasies powering the deluded minds of those leaders.
One of the articles came under the title: “Israel 's Problem With the Democratic Party,”
written by Shmuel Rosner who is a Jew residing in Israel . The article was published
on June 9, 2016 in the New York Times. The other article came under the title:
“Israel Looks to Russia as a
Security Partner,” written by Kori Schake and published on June 10, 2016 in
National Review Online.
If you heard the expression: “the natives are restless” or
“the writing is on the wall,” and didn't know what they mean, you'll become
acquainted with their meanings when reading the articles. That's because they
address these issues among others. Here is something that Rosner has written:
“Many in Israel worry … what worries them is the Democratic Party … The problem
is the sentiment … Sanders appointed a young woman who described Netanyahu as
arrogant, deceptive, cynical, manipulative … Sanders appointed someone who
accused Netanyahu of war crimes.” That tells you how uneasy are the White,
Black, Latino and Asian natives of present-day America . So much for the natives
being restless.
Here is a taste of what the writing on the wall looks like:
“The good news is that Sanders won't be the Democratic nominee … the bad news
is that Mrs. Clinton alone cannot resist a steady drift in her party …
Political reality will ultimately catch up with her … Once legislators had to
worry about appearing unsupportive of Israel; today those who need to be
re-elected do not want to be seen as supportive.” This is the sort of talk that
changed the look of the proverbial wall from pristine to being splashed with
graffiti.
Does Rosner see a way out of this conundrum? Yes he does. In
fact, he has a perfect remedy; one that will teach the insolent natives of the
American colony a lesson they will never forget. Considering that “the
Democratic Party is moving leftward, toward a domain where condemnation of
Israel is [natural,] and there is little that Israel can do to reverse what is
an American trend,” his solution is to give the American people the Jewish
middle finger so that: “Democratic [politicians] become convinced that
weakening support for Israel will come with a political price”.
That's how much disrespect the little Jew and his sidekicks
have for superpower America
and its people. It is no wonder, therefore, that North
Korea – which is three times the size of Israel and light years ahead of it technically
and scientifically – gives both middle fingers and one big toe to America . It is
that the Jews have tailor-made a perfect situation for copycats to emulate.
As to Kori Schake, he used his fluency in the use of
exaggerated superlatives to tell how chaotic the Middle East – excluding Israel – has
become. He also tells how incomprehensible the decisions of President Obama
have been … thus adding to the messiness of the chaos. And he tells how much
Benjamin Netanyahu has shined in the middle of a world that turned so dark, it
rivals the Dark Ages.
How then can the plantation that is America avoid
the worship of Netanyahu? And how can the American people allow “Obama's overt
hostility to Prime Minister Netanyahu” to continue? Can Israel be blamed for “seeking a power other than
the United States
to rely on”?
But if you still cannot see the light, and you wish to
rebuke Israel for what it is doing, then tell what you make of the fact that
“Israel is not alone in reconsidering Russia as America stands aloof.” Admit
it, you mister and you miss, that all of the above boils down to this: “the
Obama administration has none but itself to blame”.