Thursday, September 15, 2022

Tackling fascism, he admits what he once denied

 Frustrated by the fact that people mention icons of fascism and other unsavory movements without knowing the history behind them, Clifford D. May set out to educate the audiences on the history of fascism, now featured prominently in the public square.

 

In so doing, however, May was forced to admit to realities he adamantly rejected in the past. Thus, it can be said that something good came out of that writer’s latest column after all.

 

Clifford May’s choice of title for the column is the following: “Fascism for dummies,” which also came under the prodding subtitle: “Those using the word should at least know what it means.” The piece was published on September 13, 2022 in The Washington Times.

 

In addition to the reality that in the political campaigns of Israel, the candidates who run for office out there, do not shy away from calling each other by such iconic labels as “fascist” and “Nazis,” look at the names that Clifford May is associating with what he says are modern manifestations of antisemitism: Ben Rhodes, Rob Reiner, Nora Ephron and Alfred Rosenberg. Were these not Jews who refused to believe in Clifford May’s line that they – as Jews – are too perfect to be compared against lesser humans?

 

Another admission that Clifford May has made in his piece, pertains to the question as to whether or not millions of people can be captured in a hypnotic trance by the speeches of a single orator. Despite the fact that a book written by the Jewish writer Daniel Goldhagen, was published in 1966 under the title: Hitler’s Willing Executioners attesting to that reality, Clifford May and those like him, scoffed at the suggestion that an entire nation can be captured by the hypnotic power of the trained Jewish psychiatrists who regularly brainwash the newly elected power elites of America, transforming them into poodles eager to serve the Jews and Israel at the expense of the American people and their nation.

 

And look at what viewpoint Clifford May has now admitted: “My guess is that Mr. Biden knows little about the revolutionary ideology to which millions of people in Germany, Italy, Japan, and other countries adhered during the first half of the 20th century.” Well then, if millions of people in those countries could be persuaded to embrace an idea no matter how nefarious it may have been, then surely, a handful of hungry-for-power politicians could be persuaded to join a movement that promises to fulfill their dreams.

 

That’s what’s happening full blast in America at this time, and happening to a lesser degree in the other so-called Western Democracies. And that’s what the impeccable and courageous men and women who live in that milieu, are revealing to the public – doing so at great political risk to themselves.

 

Another occurrence in the Clifford May column that makes no more sense today than it did before, pertains to the claim that repetition of the same thing, cannot happen randomly even in a world that is restricted by finite quantities. For example, the Jews see deliberate provocations in words, gestures and designs they call “antisemitic tropes,” because what’s produced today closely resembles what was produced in a bygone era. Here is how Clifford May has once again unveiled that mentality:

 

“If you were to pull aside a black-shirted Antifa member and asked for a definition of the ‘fa’ he thinks he’s combatting, do you think you’d get a coherent answer? Would he know that members of the paramilitary wing of Benito Mussolini’s National Fascist Party also wore and were called Blackshirts, and that a similarly violent wing of the Nazi Party wore and were called Brownshirts? Expressions of fascist fashion were even more elaborately on display when Mr. Biden recently let loose a diatribe in front of Philadelphia’s Independence Hall, its walls bathed in bloodred lights, US Marines menacingly backing him up”.

 

So, here it is, Clifford May is showing he cannot shake the thought that every time someone wears a black or brown shirt, they do so deliberately, knowing that it will torment today’s Jews who suffer from the memory of previous Jews that agonized at the hands of evildoers that wore black and brown shirts. How much more incredible could May have gotten?

 

To reinforce that view and make it stick to President Joe Biden this time, Clifford May went on to elaborate on the theme as follows:

 

“Did the White House communications team realize they were drawing on fascist imagery when they cast the president as a strongman, an idolized and militaristic authority figure differentiating between pure and impure, and determined to crush those who, as Mr. Biden put it, ‘do not recognize the will of the people’? Perhaps the president’s advisors thought: ‘Hey, our job is to make the midterm elections a referendum not on Biden and his record, but on Trump and any Republicans who have not publicly rejected him. So, whatever it takes – even if fascist-inspired”.

 

Finally, Clifford May went on to give a lesson on the history of fascism, but ended his presentation in the most ironic of ways … which should not surprise anyone. Here is what he did:

 

“Another attribute of fascism is hyper-nationalism. The Axis powers all invaded neighbors and folded them into their expanding empires. Mr. Trump has not displayed any interest in foreign conquests, as far as I’m aware”.

 

Thus, having started the discussion by pretending he was a professor of history, Clifford May ended by negating the history of Donald Trump who conquered Syria’s Golan Heights and Palestine’s Jerusalem, and gave them as gifts to Ivanka Trump and the other thieves of nations.

 

That’s not to mention he tried to steal the American election, motivated by the transparent aim of making the superpower his private property.