Monday, November 26, 2018

A Teacher's Nightmare in the Editors' Boardroom

Do you want to know what it feels like to be a teacher, and be handed a student's paper that tells a horror story? Read, “Coming awake again,” a Washington Times editorial that was published on November 13, 2018.

What's horrible is not the subject matter that's discussed in the editorial — though some people view the Jewish occupation of Palestine as a full-blown horror story — what's horrible is that the editors reveal how scary their state of mind was when they wrote the piece. They must have been like the student who did not sleep for a full day, was on dope and without food when he did his homework. Because he used the excuse of the dog eating his homework many times before, he felt compelled to write something this time, and hand it to the teacher.

If you can imagine how horrible such a piece of work would sound like, you can tell what the Washington Times editorial sounds like. In fact, the most telling sign that a kid is on dope, is when he retells the lesson he heard in class, but tells it in a mixed-up order. That is, instead of listing the elements of the story in the order that makes sense, such as A-B-C-D, he lists them as C-A-D-B, for example.

The first sign of such confusion you'll encounter in the Washington Times editorial, hits you in the face like a hammer. It is that speaking of the “Peace Process” that followed the Oslo Accord of two decades ago between Palestine and Israel, here is what the dopey editors of the Times wrote: “The settlement was a step-by-step, US-led negotiations over almost two decades, husbanded for the most part by Henry Kissinger, the former secretary of State”.

As you can see, what the goosey heads who sit on the editorial board of the Washington Times did, is confuse the Palestine-Israel peace process with the shuttle diplomacy that Henry Kissinger conducted between Egypt and Israel in the wake of the 1973 war. This was the mediation that allowed for the separation of forces in the Sinai, giving the Israelis the chance to withdraw their badly battered troops without being further decimated by the Egyptians. This initiative ended 45 years ago, fully a quarter century before the Oslo Accord.

Here is another confusion, courtesy of the wide-eyed, hopped-up changelings who pretend to stand on guard protecting the American Constitution by the sheer force of their ignorance: “After victory in the Six-Day War, Ariel Sharon, then the prime minister, pulled Israeli arms [sic] out of Gaza, forcing Jews there to leave.” The term “Six-Day War” is used in reference to the Pearl Harbor style sneak attack carried out by Israel on Egypt in 1967. This was the time when Israel went on to occupy Gaza. But it was not until 38 years later, during the reign of Ariel Sharon in 2005, that the Hamas forces kicked the Jews out of Gaza.

And here is a lesson of history that the bumbling idiots who sit on the editorial board of The Washington Times may find interesting. During the negotiations carried out at Camp David between Egypt's President Anwar Sadat and Israel's Prime Minister Manachem Begin, under the auspices of America's President Jimmy Carter, Begin asked Sadat to take custody of Gaza but Sadat refused. There has been considerable debate about what Begin knew the Gaza population was capable of doing for which he wanted to “dump it.” And there must have been a reason why Egypt refused to take the offer. No one has come up with a definitive explanation as yet, but whatever it was, it must have been the lesson that Ariel Sharon learned more than a generation later.

As to the rest of the Washington Times editorial, it is the long mishmash of a rambling, tedious and boring repetition, rehashing the Jewish talking points created and spewed during the half century that the Jewish pundits were shooting off the mouth pile after pile of nonsense. This was the time when there was no one to check what they were saying or balance out what they were advancing. They had the field all to themselves.

Now, my friend, guess what the result of that situation has been on America's congressional culture, journalistic tradition, politico-diplomatic philosophy and popular culture. Actually, you don’t have to guess because everywhere you look, you see nothing but gridlock, paralysis, mediocrity, selfishness … and the loss to America of just about everything that Civilization has produced during seven thousand years of evolution.

Can America be redeemed? Yes, it can. But there is only one way this can be done. Because America got here, pushed to the brink by the perpetual lie machine of Jewish punditry — the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth must never be held hostage by political correctness. Thus, every American, from the President of the Republic down to the dog catcher of the smallest municipality, must gather the courage to look at the lying Jew in the eye when they run off the mouth, and order him or her to shut the fuck up.