Friday, August 23, 2019

A strategic Decision is needed not a new Plan

Thomas L. Friedman, a columnist with the New York Times, has written a piece, showing conclusively that Democracy has been severely if not mortally wounded in America thanks to the doings of the Jewish lobby, which includes the mob of Jewish pundits, of which Thomas Friedman is a prominent member.

The Friedman column came under the title: “How the Palestinian-Israeli Peace Process Became a Farce,” and the subtitle: “We have peace plans with no partners and movements with no peace plans.” It was published on August 20, 2019 in the New York Times.

The writer described the existing situation as follows: “The Palestinian-Israeli peace process has become a pathetic festival of magical thinking, performance art, reality denial, political fund-raising and outright political fraud,” which is an accurate description of the observable facts. But the problem is that Thomas Friedman has no clue how the situation developed to become what it is, or how to fix it.

You can tell that is the case from what Friedman went on to say, which is this: “[The peace process] has become about everything except what it needs to succeed: courageous, fair-minded, creative diplomacy and leadership.” And this is the kind of bubble-haggle that leads to nowhere because it means nothing. In fact, when you go over the article, you discover that there is nothing in it which goes beyond the rehashing of the same old talking points that formed the original bubble-haggle that led to nowhere.

To begin developing a vision for a possible solution that is real, we first need to understand what the problem is. Simply put, the problem is that the Jews in America and Israel drove their thinking process into a box from which they cannot exit. They run back and forth inside the box looking for something that isn't there, not realizing that there is space outside the box, which is a million times larger and more accommodating than the interior of the box. What follows is a condensed version of how Thomas Friedman sees a possible solution which, in reality, has already proven to be a failed attempt at a solution:

“The only hope is for an Israeli leader to make a unilateral separation from the West bank. The Israeli army would retain overall security control of the West Bank but cede much more day-to-day economic and political control to Palestinians, and curb Jewish settlement deep in the West Bank. There are currently about 105,000 Jewish settlers living right in the heart of where any Palestinian state in a two-state solution would be located. If that settlement process is not halted immediately –– and incentives created for those settlers to move –– there will be no hope ever for a two-states-for-two-people peace deal. The only option left will be one state for two people, a recipe for permanent strife”.

The Jews have been saying this much for half a century, and it hasn't worked. They pretended to go through several peace plans during that time but delivered nothing. It's because they constructed a monumental narrative with imaginary components that bear no resemblance to what's real, and then used that narrative to march into the box of no-exit. In fact, even if what they claim were real and true, they still would have no right to what they took by force of arms, helped as they were by the old colonial powers of France and Britain, and now by an America that is as wise as when Rome was governed by Caesar's horse.

That is, even if today's Jews were the direct descendants of the Hebrew tribes that imposed themselves on the indigenous Palestinians for a short period of time in antiquity, they still would have no right to displace the Palestinians who never left the place, but lived there continuously generation after generation. If this erroneous privilege is granted to the Jews, the two billion souls of European ancestry that now live in the Americas, Australia, New Zealand and other places around the globe, would have the right to displace the current population of Europe, and take over the entire continent. And I would have the right to displace an Egyptian family that lives in Cairo, and take over the house where I spent the first year and a half of my life.

This is so demented, so primitive, so backward and so beastly, I would feel like a cockroach for thinking I might have that right. And yet, look what Friedman says about the so-called Jews who proudly call themselves non-Middle Eastern Jews: “BDS demands the return of Palestinian refugees and their descendants to their villages while making no mention of the rights of the Jews to a state in their historical homeland.” What kind of history is that? No. Palestine was never the homeland of these impostors. But even if they were for real, they have no more the right to be in Palestine than a cockroach has the right to be in your pantry infesting your food with its droppings.

And that tells you where the thinking about a solution to the Middle East problem ought to start. It ought to start by ending the tsunami of Jewish lies, and by making a strategic decision. After telling the truth, the Jews must ask for forgiveness. They should then ask for mercy and pity. And they should beg to be accepted in the crucible where Civilization was born and raised to a mature age.

If the Jews do all that, they will find the Arabs to be as accommodating as the Africans have been toward the White Rhodesians and South Africans. End of story.