Thursday, November 26, 2015

The Monkey-see Monkey-do super Adviser

Clifford D. May, who says he is president of the sick joke he calls Foundation for Defense of Democracies, gave himself a new job. It is that of advising the advisers to presidential campaigns, a position that conferred on him the title of super adviser.

Endowed with the powers he vested in himself – like the self-crowning emperor who could not find someone worthy enough to crown him – he volunteered to write a “Memo to presidential campaign advisers,” a submission he also subtitled: “What's in your national security briefing book?” and had it published on November 24, 2015 in the Washington Times.

No, he is not trying to explain why he will continue to inject moral syphilis into the heads, hearts and souls of young Americans by insisting that Israel is the best protector America has in the Middle East when, in reality, the thing scurries like a cockroach, and goes hiding inside the nearest crevice … something that Israel does every time that the going gets tough, and the tough get going without Israel.

No wonder these people talk the talk in a big way; but when it comes to walking the walk, they run away from the field where the action is unfolding, and start giving advice to America like the experts they never were and could never be. They did, regrettably, tell George W. Bush to de-baathify Iraq, a move that resulted in the horror that's now unfolding in the region … showing no end in sight and promising nothing close to that.

That was an advice they did not think through before giving it because it takes at least the IQ of a monkey to think at this level of comprehension, and this is a level that has eluded them since the beginning of time. What they are able to do, however, is find false lessons in the Jewish book of mutilated history, and tell the Americans to monkey-see monkey-do what will not work any better than did the invasion of Iraq. That being the fateful advice they gave to America, having maliciously asserted that Iraq was hiding Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD), devices that were meant to put a mushroom cloud into every sky, they said.

Thus, whereas America is now facing a situation that is nowhere near what Britain faced during WW II, or what it faced three decades ago, you see Clifford May advise presidential campaign advisers to tell their candidates they must demonstrate Churchillian resolve and Reaganesque confidence. When asked to be more specific, they recommend beefing up the military with more submarines, more surface ships, more bombers and more nuclear weapons … all that, they say, to go after suicidal kids who wear the dreaded exploding vests.

And when all those weapons will have been bought, paid for and put into service – manned as they will be with hundreds of thousands of new recruits that may have to be drafted into service – the people of America will know they are “secure in their homeland and safe in their homes” where no burglar, home-invader or terrorist will break-in and wake them up in the middle of the night. And this is a good reason why America must have all those submarines, ships, bombers, nuclear weapons, and the new recruits who will have been drafted.

And that's not all, says Clifford May, because to defeat those jihadi kids, America will need a new commander in chief, “one who [will] order the military, the intelligence community, the secretaries of state, Treasury, Justice, Energy, Homeland Security and other government agencies to present strategic options for getting that job done.” But Sir, do you hear me? … Hold it there, mister... What was that again? Say it again, Cliff.

Having advised the advisers what to advise their candidates, the super-adviser only now admits that he has no clue what he's talking about, and wants to see the election of a new president who will mobilize all those government agencies. He will ask them to come up with strategic options that neither he (Clifford May) nor Israel could come up with despite all the talk that they are the super-geniuses who will defend not only America but all the democracies.

How did all this come about, you want to know? It came about, he says, because: “We live not in a global village but a global jungle – and the law of the jungle operates.” Yes Sir. You can say that again, Clifford May. You have recognized it was a jungle because you looked in the mirror and saw a monkey stare at you in the face.

That's good because self-knowledge takes evolution a notch to a higher level.