Saturday, April 2, 2016

Lesson for Washington on connecting Dots

There are dots on the landscape of real life, and there are dots on the landscape of wishful thinking.

Those of us who spent a lifetime studying the ways of the Jews understood early on – and have been warning ever since – that the Jews were blind to the unfolding history of real life because they live in the fantasy world of their wishful thinking.

Thus, when things started to get complicated in the Middle East and the rest of the world, we cautioned those who suffered from the habit of taking the advice of Jews – telling them they were doing so at their peril and the peril of the nation. We explained that the Jews were offering nothing more than images resulting from the connection of phantom dots they placed on a landscape imagined for the occasion.

Now that history has taken its course, and the advice given by the Jews turned out to be no more useful than their delusions, someone has volunteered to offer a remedy he says will fix the damage that someone else has caused. What? What are you saying? You said someone. You said damage. And you said someone else. Who is that someone? What is the damage? And who is that someone else?

You won't believe it, my friend, but the “someone” (1) is the Jews who speak for themselves. (2) The damage is what they caused but are sticking it to others. (3) The someone else are the Jews who pretend to be someone else. Complicated, isn't it? Well, that's what you get when you deal with people whose DNA is written with letters that spell: intellectual dishonesty.

To answer the questions in detail (1) Benny Avni is the Jew who speaks on behalf of the self-appointed Jewish leaders. He wrote: “ISIS may be losing, but the big winners are America's enemies,” an article that was published on March 30, 2016 in the New York Post. (2) The damage according to him is this: “We farmed the battle out to others, who are no allies. Thus, we're guaranteed intensified mayhem, which sooner or later can reach our shores, too.” (3) As to the someone else, it is the Jews who gave bad advice to America, making it possible for Russia and her friends to gain a foothold in the Middle East. But the Jews don't blame themselves; they blame their number one enemy, the White House.

How all this came about is a well documented history. It is knowledge that's spread widely and made accessible to everyone. The inescapable reality is that the Jews are incapable of thinking logically. They consider those on their side to be good guys; and those on the other side to be bad guys. Anything done by the good guys is a dot they trace to the nirvana of their fantasy. Anything that is done by the bad guys is a dot they trace to what they call, “intensified mayhem”.

Because the Jews did not like Saddam Hussein of Iraq, they instructed America to go destroy his country. The Americans did that; an act that resulted in the disintegration of a region known to have withstood invading armies throughout history and came out stronger each time. This time, however, the blow was so severe; it put the future of the entire region in doubt. A bleak outcome for the Levant became a real possibility when the evil forces unleashed by America's action spilled over into the neighboring states.

Instead of seeing the bankruptcy of their ways, the Jews declared that Bashar Assad of Syria was a hated character that deserved to be toppled like Saddam Hussein. They instructed America to do to Syria what it did to Iraq, and America almost obeyed. Luckily, it got cold feet at the last minute, and refrained from destroying Syria.

The Jews are known never to work out a plan B for the evil they incite others to commit, and they did not for their Syrian project. When America refrained from obeying their command, it was left with no alternative but to let the Russians take it from there and bring order to the chaos that Jewish America had created.

This is what Avni is now lamenting. But instead of taking responsibility for what happened, he is sticking it to someone else. Here is how he ends his article: “One of the lessons of the Syria mess is that … the void tends to be filled with the worst of the worst”.

It should be noted that a peaceful world in which no nation has a reason to attack a neighbor represents a situation the Jews call the worst of the worst. The lesson that Washington should learn, therefore, is that it must never ask a Jew to connect the dots.