The world has gotten used to the idea that the Jews and their followers – those steeped in the Judeo-Yiddish culture – suffer from a form of bipolar syndrome, a disease that’s so debilitating, it brings misery to the sufferers as well as the societies among which the Jews and their crowds mingle.
Caught on one side by the jaw of a promise that the
messiah will come on time and save them – a promise that was never fulfilled –
and caught on the other side by the jaw of a human race that exhibits
displeasure at the conduct of Jews by punishing them severely, the latter carry
within them the seeds of extreme optimism and extreme pessimism at the same
time. This makes up the innate combination of a bipolar syndrome, a mixture
that’s liable to burst at any moment without warning.
You can see this phenomenon develop in the article that
came under the title: “It’s Too Late to Prevent an Iranian Nuke,” and the
subtitle: “But it might not be too late to do something about it.” The article
was written by A. J. Caschetta, and published on September 16, 2022 in National
Review Online.
Used to the idea of being rejected everywhere they go by
a human race that can stomach neither their philosophy of life nor their
antics, the Jews that had been planning to steal Palestine and make it their
own for decades, got what they wanted when the Balfour Declaration was spewed
without apology. But those same Jews also knew that no Palestinian they plan to
rob will celebrate the most extreme act of larceny they were about to pull, and
neither will the Palestinians’ neighbors.
Caught on one side by the euphoria that the Declaration of
Infamy had generated, and caught on the other side by the fear that the advent
of a savior may have been a hoax, the Jews adopted the strategy of implementing
their plan for the neighborhood in concordance with those of the colonial power
they were replacing. This meant that the Jews resolved to keep the neighbors
impoverished while trying to develop and modernize what was theirs. For this
scheme to work, the Jews embarked on a policy of demonizing and abusing the
neighbors while presenting themselves as being the most saintly of angels.
Even though Iran is not an immediate neighbor of
Palestine, the Jews of what’s now referred to as Israel, had a falling out with
the Iranians. This happened because the Jews had managed to con the Americans by
telling them of the wacky idea that the more America will arm Israel, the more
the latter will protect the Superpower from an Arab population that had no
quarrel with America to begin with. What happened instead, was that an arms
race was triggered in the neighborhood; a race that spread in all directions to
encompass the entire region, including Iran.
But in trying to extend the strategy of destroying the
accomplishments of the near and distant neighbors, the Jews discovered they cannot
do so without using America’s power. This reality forced them to reverse the
argument they once had to the effect that Israel would protect America. The
modified version of the claim now flipped to tell of an Israel that was in such
peril, America must protect it from an assured holocaust that will be delivered
by Iran, a nation in the midst of developing nuclear weapons.
In fact, the Jews have been relying on the new argument
for several decades already. But it is one that has grown so stale, it falls on
deaf ears whenever the Jews recite it. This is how and why Caschetta became
frustrated, and why he’s trying to revive a defunct argument by tweaking it. He
hopes he can make it breathe new life into a discourse that died long ago.
Standing in the way of Caschetta and those like him,
preventing them from creating a coherent argument that would describe the new
circumstances and convince America to destroy Iran, is the crushing reality of
the bipolar condition from which the Jews suffer. The following are condensed
excerpts that were lifted from the dialectic now taking place among the crowds
of Jews, as well as wrestling inside the head of individual Jews:
“As a pessimist, I’m afraid that the
window of opportunity to prevent Iran from developing a nuclear bomb has
closed. Iran is already a nuclear power, and decades of dithering, cajoling,
and appeasing by past US administrations have given it the time to build the
bomb. The debate over Iran’s nuclear program has pitted optimists against
pessimists. Optimists emphasize the obstacles Iran has faced conducting
research and assembling the equipment to produce weapons-grade uranium. They
also point out the difficulty of developing an ICBM capable of delivering
nuclear payloads. Pessimists emphasize uncertainty, insisting that there are
more ways to deploy a nuclear bomb than by ICBM. Optimists assure pessimists
that Mossad won’t let Iran build a nuclear bomb. They point to the successful
sabotage of Iran’s nuclear infrastructure and to assassinations of its
scientists. In turn, the pessimists point out that Iran’s program is dug in and
spread out across the nation. If we pessimists are correct, it’s too late to
prevent Iran from becoming a nuclear power, but it might not be to do something
about it. Efforts to destabilize Iran’s nuclear capabilities are not futile,
but a successful Israeli attack on Iran’s facilities is probably the world’s
only hope as long as Joe Biden is president”.
And that’s the point A. J.
Caschetta has been trying to make. It is that only Israel can save the world
from perishing under the nuclear mushroom of an Iranian bomb. It is that Caschetta
wants humanity to rise up and demand that America give Israel the means to deliver
a deadly blow to Iran.