You may not be convinced that the cycle begins with the Jews
aiming for all or nothing where they most likely end up with nothing. They
respond by going “all the way” one more time but when the result comes in, it
proves to have been a bungled attempt that led them to a pogrom or a holocaust,
as well as the specter of a Final Solution. And they don't like it either.
If you're still not convinced this is the perpetual cycle in which
the Jews have been operating since time immemorial, there is something that
will convince you. It is a column that came under the title: “The Battle of
Afghanistan,” written by Clifford D. May and published on April 23, 2019 in The
Washington Times.
Look how May started the discussion, and then marvel at the way
that Jews create a chain of fake links to ultimately reach conclusions that
relate to the start of the discussion as well as a squirrel relates to the
Brooklyn Bridge. Here is Clifford May's first sentence: “Afghanistan is often
said to be America's longest war, but that's imprecise … When did the conflict
begin?”
It takes the writer a complete essay to answer that question. But
as you'll find out, he ends up saying that the war between Afghanistan and
America started eight centuries before America was even discovered. To make a
leap of the kind that's possible only in fiction, the writer speaks not of
Afghanistan but of Islam, and speaks not of America but of Christendom.
From there, Clifford May proceeds on the basis that America's war
in Afghanistan is an extension of the war of religions that started in the
Seventh Century with the rise of Islam, long before the Fifteenth Century
discovery of what he wants the readers to believe is Christian America … even if
America's Constitution says the country is unbiased when it comes to religious
preferences, regardless of whether or not a warmongering Jew wishes it were.
In addition, the truth is that no historian has ever said that a
state of war has always existed between Islam and Christianity since the rise
of Islam, any more than there has been a perpetual war between Christianity and
Judaism since the rise of Christianity. In fact, there has never been a
perpetual war between those religions and any of the Asian or African or
indigenous religions that have existed in the new worlds.
If anything, some religions have been more active than others in
proselytizing the faith and in recruiting members of the other religions ... in
the same way that sects of the same religion have always tried to attract
members of the other sects. But these activities were never considered a war of
the religions.
So, where did Clifford May get his information? Well, here is the
passage in his column that answers that question:
“The rulers of the Islamic Republic of Iran, al Qaeda, the Islamic
State and the many other jihadi groups now operating in dozens of countries all
agree that the war they are waging began in the 7th century, when the first
Islamic armies sprang from Arabia, conquering kingdoms, lands and peoples
throughout the ancient world”.
Well, well, well, if Clifford May has any self-respect, he would
pray we shall refuse to believe that the characters he mentioned have actually
said what he attributes to them. That's because if it is true that these people
said those things, and he came to believe them despite the fact that no
historian has ever made such a claim, we shall be forced to conclude that
Clifford D. May is in league with the likes of al Qaeda, the Islamic State and
other jihadi groups. Is this the company he likes to keep?
It seems so because he and they are soul brothers –– almost twins
that think alike and want the same thing: an endless war of the religions. Lest
we believe Clifford May developed his views alone, he took pain to tell us
about his collaborators. Here, in condensed form, is how he tells that story:
“Zalmay Khalilzad has been negotiating with the Taliban, and has
announced a draft agreement. My colleagues, Thomas Joscelyn and Bill Roggio
characterize it as a charade. They are convinced that it will provide the
United States with a decent interval. They believe the Taliban's relationship
with al-Qaeda is strong. Bolstering their thesis, the Taliban announced a new
[initiative]: Al-Fath Operations”.