Thursday, May 18, 2017

Fictitious Dots on a Map that never was

The truth is like a dot on a street map. Each dot marks a crucial point on a street that represents an event of some significance. When you connect the dots, you create a road-map that's supposed to lead to a desired outcome conceived in the mind ahead of time.

The beauty (if you can call it that) about adhering to the Judeo-Yiddish culture is that you're allowed to design the truth that suits your changing circumstances as time passes. Each time that the circumstances are altered, you discard the worn out truth and design a new one. The trouble is that connecting the dots under these conditions leads to the creation of a new road-map each time that the circumstances change. Because this approach replaces the singular truth with a malleable fabrication, you can be certain that you'll be hit with outcomes you never thought you’d see.

Half a century ago, an alien culture of the Judeo-Yiddish kind infested the American culture, reducing it quickly and to such an extent, no one realized what was happening till it was too late. In fact, the alien culture became the source of confusion and paralysis that gripped America, and has maintained it in that state ever since. What was a superpower that had everything going for it became almost unrecognizable in no time at all.

In fact, there was a time when America did not have to scare nations to be respected; and did not have to cozy up to people to be loved. By comparison, America's most formidable task force could not now scare a pauper nation; and the wizardry of its scientific and industrial achievements could not impress even a primitive people.

You can see an example of the confusion that has led to America's paralysis in the article that came under the title: “There's No Such Thing as the 'Arab Street,'” and the subtitle: “Suddenly, Middle Eastern intellectuals are coming to me for 'ground truth.'” It was written by Jonathan Schanzer of the comical outfit that calls itself 'Foundation for Defense of Democracies,' and published on May 16, 2017 in the Wall Street Journal.

It is difficult at times to discern the demarcation line that separates one era from another because the change usually comes gradually and almost imperceptibly. Not in this article as you can see in the terse declaration that's in the title, “There's no such thing...” This tells of an era replacing a time when the ability to speak in the name of the Arab street used to be the credential the “Middle Eastern intellectuals” had to have before telling the audience how the dots connected to create the road-map that leads to the nirvana of the Arab World.

America bought a jar full of something believing that it contained the potion that’ll lead to the promise the Arabs should realize but didn't know how to do it. What America got in reality was a jar full of Jewish venom proven to be the deadliest substance since time immemorial. Not knowing any of this, America went on a fantastic journey to the Arab nirvana of its own imagination, and produced an Iraq of pure horror, a Libya of sheer sorrow, a Syria of endless lamentations, and a South Sudan of heartbreaking pity.

What you see now are the likes of Jonathan Schanzer wiping out the old approach and replacing it with the new. In a typically Judeo-Yiddish fashion, you see him erase the ideas that used to make up the arguments of olden days. These were the concepts that led America to believe it knew enough about the Arab Street to ride the tanks and the gunships, and go tell the Arabs what was wrong with them. Connecting the fictitious dots on a Jewish map that never was, America packed the Arab World with pure horror, sheer sorrow, endless lamentations and heartbreaking pity.

Now that Schanzer and the clowns like him have had a change of heart, they admit they used to pursue a silly joke that caused the biblical size calamities we see today in the region. No matter, he says, because he developed a new theory about the Arab World. But worry not he hastens to add, because he is certain it will work better than the one he and his buddies just discarded. To flesh it out, he explains that the Arabs are not a monolithic mass, but individuals like everyone else. Who would have known that?

He goes on to say that local intellectuals and Arab ones too go to him and ask what to do, but he tells them he doesn't know anymore. As to the people that populate Trump's State Department, he wishes them good luck because they face two harsh realities: ‘the Arabs hate America, and the Middle East is a quagmire,’ he says.

In other words, he is reviving the formula that tells America: Give us the money and the weapons, and we'll complete the job you started in the Middle East but did not finish. That’s his demonic message.