Sunday, November 27, 2022

A free Palestine would check terrorist Israel

 It is gratifying to know that at least one learner has leaned a valuable lesson. He is Zach Kessel who says he is an undergraduate studying at a school of journalism. He demonstrated the progress he made by writing an article under the title: “Antisemitism Threatens More than Just the Jews,” published on November 26, 2022 in National Review Online.

 

The reason why this realization by a Jew is important, is that it signifies the Jewish abandonment of the claim for monopolistic rights in all matters involving Jews. We must, however, not jump to the conclusion that Kessel has learned the full lesson. He did not. To wit, he went on to say the following in the subtitle of the article: “A hesitance to combat anti-Jewish hate endangers the liberal foundations on which societies like ours rest.” And this says he is still missing something.

 

In fact, he begins his discussion with a sentence that is loaded with misconceptions. Here is how it goes: “In a time of escalating antisemitism, it’s increasingly uncertain whether liberal institutions can faithfully and effectively safeguard Jews from those who wish them harm.” To begin with, no one that is not harmed by Jews, wishes them harm. If antisemitism is increasing nowadays, it’s because the Jews ask for too much of what others are not getting. In addition, even though Zach Kessel later admitted that antisemitism emanates from the Right as much as the Left, he went on to single out the liberal institutions for criticism, casting doubt that they can safeguard Jews from those that harm them.

 

And this was the start of the errors that Zach Kessel kept piling on as he proceeded to denigrate the people of Palestine whose country was stolen from them by the Jewish terrorists of the Menachem Begin, Yitzhak Shamir and modern settlers variety. But instead of admitting to the reality of the Jews being the master terrorists that have been plaguing the planet since biblical time, Kessel went on to accuse others and complain as follows:

 

“Members of the Northwestern chapter of Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP) — a national organization that supports terrorism and the targeting of Jewish civilians — painted over the get-out-the-vote message, writing on The Rock the slogan, ‘From the River to the Sea, Palestine Will Be Free’”.

 

Thus, taking advantage of the Palestinians exercising their right to free speech, Zach Kessel did what was inculcated into him since the moment he started suckling on his mother’s milk. What he did is reverse the reality of the existing situation by attributing to the Palestinians the terrorism that the pilots of Israeli bombers commit when they locate Palestinian civilians and wipe them out using American-made precision ordnance, thus help ethnic cleanse Palestine of its indigenous people.

 

To justify that kind of bloodthirsty cannibalistic behavior, Kessel went on to explain why the freedom of the Palestinian people would entail “the elimination of Israel and the expulsion of Jews from its borders.” But was his explanation the bombshell revelation that should wake up everyone to his accusation that the Students for Justice in Palestine are playing a nihilistic game? No, it was not. In fact, Kessel’s explanation dropped not like a bomb but a tired bird that fell from the sky. Here is that lame explanation: The fact that Hamas frequently employs the slogan is further evidence of its antisemitic nature. That’s how Zach Kessel forms his monumental decisions?

 

And he would not stop here. To bolster his argument even further, he made use of the work that was done by another student; one that complained about the same kind of non-incident — and got an appropriate response to her trivial thinking. Here is what Kessel has reported:

 

“A Jewish member wrote an op-ed in our campus newspaper, noting the antisemitism inherent in the slogan [From the River to the Sea, Palestine Will Be Free,] and calling on other Jewish students to urge the school’s administration to condemn its use. In response, SJP members assembled print copies of the op-ed, painted ‘From the River to the Sea, Palestine Will Be Free’ on them, and hung up their artwork on a fence facing the campus’s main road”.

 

So, there you have it. Whereas the Students for Justice in Palestine are advocating the freeing of a stolen country, something that can be achieved as it has been discussed for decades, the Jews believe that freedom for the Palestinians means instant death for the Jews. But the reality is that there exist two ways to achieve the desired result to the satisfaction of everyone. There is the One State Solution which would give the Palestinians full citizenship in the liberated binational country. The other, known as the Two State Solution, is to give the Palestinians a piece of what is theirs, and let them form their own country.

 

Ignoring that history but conscious of the reality that a Palestinian state would end the Jewish dream of dominating the Middle East, Zach Kessel blew the anger in his belly by doing what losers do. He blathered froth at the mouth that looked and sounded as follows: “This called for a response from the university, a show of moral courage that Northwestern had so far been unwilling to make. Surely, the university would understand the need for a forceful condemnation of antisemitic harassment of one of its students?”

 

The university did none of this, of course, but did the correct thing by issuing a statement that said, “the Israeli-Palestinian conflict … is vigorously debated on our campus, a sign of the university community’s commitment to freedom of expression”.

 

And this was the reaffirmation of the University’s dedication to free speech, a concept that Zach Kessel was never made aware of but should have when suckling on his mother’s milk. He thus called the University’s statement, a farce, proving definitively that the real farce is for the Jews to pretend they love democracy when in fact they hate it as much as they do a free Palestine from the Jordan River to the Mediterranean Sea.