Thursday, November 17, 2022

From commanding viceroy to sad lone bugler

 There was a time not long ago that when announcements were made to the effect that someone was running for office, the neighborhood’s nest of buzzing hornets woke up and brimmed with life.

 

If the candidate had the White House in his or her sight, the hornets would be of a special kind. They were Jews, handpicked by their collective organizers, a syndicate that still goes by the name Jewish Central. The hornets would be coached on how to swarm the candidate, never to drift away too far, and instructed on how to turn every situation into a moment that serves the interests of Israel.

 

Taking up positions that ranged from presidential adviser of any kind, to speechwriter of the highest kind, the Jewish hornets dominated the political and cultural life of what they considered was their American colonial plantation. Their elected deputy — made to occupy the White House — pretended to speak in the name of the American people, but in reality did or said nothing that wasn’t conceived by the elders of Israel and sent to the American Central on a daily if not hourly basis.

 

Confident that their time for glory had come to stay till the promise of global ownership is handed to them, the Jews failed to see the reality of the restlessness that was starting to bubble among the White nativists of America. Two decades after the start of their movement, the nativists had mastered the social media, turning them into a tool by which they strengthened their power enough to equal that of Jews. They pitted their might against the syndicate controlling the White House, and scored big time.

 

The change they brought about was substantial, as can be seen in the article which came under the title: “The speech Biden should give (but don’t hold your breath,)” written by Clifford D. May, and published on November 15, 2022 in The Washington Times. From the viceroy who used to command the mobilization of America’s military resources and go after the rivals of Israel, Clifford May was reduced to a lone bugler playing the literary equivalent of the Last Post’s sad melody.

 

Unable to issue commands that will be taken seriously and implemented the way things used to happen, Clifford May has taken up the role of speculator in the business of guessing what’s being organized inside the While House for the benefit – not of Israel – but of Americans who live and toil in America.

 

After a bromide preamble that said little about the important issues of the day, but paved the way for what was coming, Clifford May tackled the matter of Joe Biden’s association with the Iran nuclear deal. Here, in condensed form, is what he said about the subject:

 

“I want to talk about Iran. President Barack Obama stretched out his hand to that country’s rulers and asked them to unclench their fists. Instead, they’ve attacked and menaced their neighbors. Their militias in Iraq have killed two Americans. Regime thugs have murdered hundreds of Iranians. It’s become clear to me that it would make no sense to help enrich and empower Tehran. And that’s what the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action would do — without stopping them from acquiring nuclear weapons and the missiles to deliver them. Our next step: Work with our European allies to snap back tough UN sanctions. Then we’ll talk with our Middle Eastern allies about Plan B”.

 

What Clifford May neglected to mention was that the situation he is describing is but a chain of reactions that continues to play out events started long ago when America interfered with the politics of Iran, having engineered a coup in that country in the year 1953. Similar events also started when Israel interfered with the development of its neighbors, most notably Iraq whose civilian power station it bombed in the year 1981. Ever since that time, and especially after America’s ally Saddam Hussein attacked Iran, the tit for tat war has been raging between Iran and its two main foes.

 

It is that when the Iranians get hit by the terrorism of either foe, they take it like soldiers, lick their wounds, stand on their feet and get ready to fight the next round of actions and reactions. By contrast, when the Jews get hit, they wail the victimhood cry about being targeted because of who they are, which they cannot change … not what they do, which they will not change in any case, come hell or high water. As to the Americans, they used to respond the way that the Iranians did, but when the Judeo-Yiddish culture invaded America, the soldiers of that country — who used to enjoy displaying their manhood — began to display the same sissy attitude of the “victimized” Jews.

 

While bugling his sorrow, Clifford May gets seized at times by the memory of the glory that abandoned him, and acts as if he were reliving those moments. He did so in his latest article when he mentioned the two personalities he used to dislike throughout his tenure as viceroy. Here is what he says he wants to do with them now:

 

“I want to say a word about Robert Malley. We’re grateful for his service. In the new year, we’ll find him a new mission worthy of his talents. Right now I want to thank John Kerry for his service, too. We’ll also have a new mission for him in 2023”.

 

Having gone from viceroy to bugler, Clifford May should consider giving himself yet another new mission. How about volunteering to go to Mars on the no-return mission to that planet?