Thursday, February 6, 2020

Meltdown of Clifford May and Abraham Wagner

Clifford D. May wrote a column under the title: “Two Palestinian dreams: Exterminate Israel and a real nation-state,” and the subtitle: “The Trump peace plan is meant to foreclose one and facilitate the other.” It was published on February 4, 2020 in The Washington Times.

Also, Abraham Wagner wrote an article under the title: “Little hope for Trump's good Middle East Plan,” and had it published the next day, February 5, 2020 in The Washington Times as well.

The two pieces address one and same subject; that of the Trump peace plan that was meant to end the occupation of Palestine by the American equipped and financed Jewish army of so-called Israel. The two pieces of writing also have another thing in common: each represents the mental meltdown of its author.

While explicitly approving of the Trump plan, and despite the widely held view among their peers that the plan is a triumph for the side to which Clifford May and Abraham Wagner belong, the two authors went into a meltdown. Why is that?

The reality is that Jewish life stands on two legs; one rooted in the real world, the other in the metaphysical world of religious prophesies that never come true. The prophesies are not discarded, however, because their promises are too enticing, however false they may be.

From the time that the human species settled down by the rivers of the world to start the civilization that developed to what we have today, there has been people who settled around what's known as the Jordan River. These people farmed the land so well, it came to be known as the land of Milk and Honey; later designated as being a part of the Fertile Crescent. Despite the fact that settlers around other rivers, went on to build great civilizations such as those of Egypt, Assyria, Babylon and Persia, the Jordan settlers loved their way of life so much, they chose to stay with the farming tradition.

For this reason, peoples in ancient and modern times, called the Jordan settlers Philistines, a word that used to convey the notion they were simple and unsophisticated peasants. To this day, 90 percent of humanity call the descendants of the Philistines by a name that does not deviate much from the sound “Falasteen.” Only a small minority has replaced the F with a P, and made it sound like Palestinians.

This is the reality that those who call themselves Jews cannot escape, no matter how much they try to smother it with noise, or crush it under the weight of distortions and outright lies. An example of such failed attempt, is how Clifford May started his column. He wrote this: “Some Palestinians have long dreamed of creating, for the first time in history, their own nation-state. Others have long dreamed of exterminating Israel the re-enacted nation-state of the Jewish people”.

But no matter what the Jews say or do, they cannot escape the reality that they live in the world of a history that cannot be substantiated, and a future predicted by prophesies that sound increasingly more ridiculous with the passage of time. No matter what they do, the Jews cannot erase the reality that a people called Palestinians have lived in a place called Palestine (country, nation or city-state) since the dawn of civilization. And no matter what the Jews do, they cannot assemble ethnically diverse losers from around the globe, call them Jews, and pretend that they belong in that place, even if they rename it Israel.

The world that gave those losers a “Jewish homeland” out of pity, has seen the monstrosity it has created and became horrified. It said, enough is enough; those Jews must stop here and must stop now. In addition to the individual countries that always stood with the Palestinians, the Arab League said no to the Trump plan, so did the Organization of Islamic Cooperation, and so did the European Union.

It was the realization of the fraudulent nature of his argument that caused the meltdown of Clifford May. You can see his meltdown begin when he asked the series of questions that went like this: “If that were true, on what basis would Israelis have a right to anything –– even a right to exist? Why should Palestinian leaders compromise? Why accept less than Israel's surrender and a new exile?”

As to Abraham Wagner, you'll see that he drove himself to the point of meltdown by raising his own hopes too high with delusions. Here is how he expressed this reality: “I admire both the plan and the related diplomatic efforts made to get endorsement from the regional Arab states.” He said so even after the Arabs had rejected the plan.

But why would he believe that a plan such as this, would get endorsed by the Arab states? He believed it because when Israel had a falling out with the Turks and the Iranians, it put out a deluge of lies about becoming friends with the Arabs, and Wagner swallowed the torrent of lies––hook, line and sinker.

But having deluded himself––only to realize how wrong he was––Abraham Wagner attacked the Palestinians like a pit bull on steroid. He looked across America and saw that most Jews in high positions were unmasked as being thieves, rapists and/or pedophiles.

And so, Abraham Wagner did the very Jewish thing of attributing these vices to the Palestinians, among them the late Yasser Arafat who is not around to defend himself. But this reality matters little because the man would not have bothered to respond anyway, considering that he never wasted time responding to dogs that barked at him, whether they were pit bulls or another breed.