Tuesday, February 11, 2020

The crooked Path that leads to the Precipice

A variant on the saying, “live by the sword, die by the sword,” goes something like this, “He who comes with the sword perishes by the sword.” Thinking along this same vein, can it not be said that he who takes the crooked path ends up at the edge of the precipice?

If that is true, then we must countenance the reality that the people who believe in the saying which assures them that “my enemy's enemy is my friend,” are traveling on a crooked path that will inevitably take them to the precipice overlooking the bottomless abyss.

There may not be a scientific way to prove or disprove that theory. But even casual observations of what has been happening to the Jews –– who relish the thought, and constantly seek the chance to link with someone that may be the enemy of their enemy –– show that the Jews were reviled by everyone on Earth throughout space and time. However, this may not be the only reason why the Jews repeatedly marched to the edge of the precipice and down the abyss.

In fact, the Jews are also known to relish the opportunistic view that where there is a division among two or more peoples, they will get between them and work to exploit as many of them as they can. This attitude is known as the weak man's version of the adage that says, 'divide and rule.' Since the Jews lack the power to divide or to rule by themselves, they scavenge on the situations created by others or the situations that happen spontaneously, to score the gains they cannot score on their own.

Two recent articles shed light on the Jewish mentality that adheres to those crooked principles, thus help explain why the Jews have lived in social misery since the time they started calling themselves Jews.

One article came under the title: “Trumps withdrawal from Syria may be a disaster … for Iran and Turkey,” written by Andrea Widburg and published on February 9, 2020 in The American Thinker. The other article came under the title: “Turkey and Israel: Can Pragmatism Defeat 'Bad Blood,'” written by Burak Bekdil and published on February 9, 2020 in the Jewish publication Algemeiner.

Here is how Andrea Widburg has expressed delight at what she believes is currently unfolding between two of Israel's chosen enemies:

“Trump ordered the withdrawal of American troops from Syria. It appears that two regimes hostile to American [read Israeli] interests are at each other's throats. Of course, it's always preferable when one's enemies turn their aggression towards each other. Mr. Trump's decision plunges the administration's strategy into disarray, rattling allies like Britain and Israel and forsaking Syria's Kurds. What has started is an increase in hostilities between Iran and Turkey. Another war is bad for the region, but it's not a fight in which America needs to be involved. It's enough that the fighting distracts those two nations from the West [read Israel] and keeps them busy”.

Whereas normal human beings have created global institutions such as the League of Nation, its successor the United Nations and numerous other peace-making institutions to work on reducing the chances of hostilities erupting anywhere in the world, Andrea Widburg the Jew, publicly relishes the thought that, “Two regimes are at each other's throats. It's always preferable when one's enemies turn [against] each other.” She has thus demonstrated how the Jews perceive the world from their vantage point at the edge of the precipice, what they wish for and what they predict.

As to Burak Bekdil, here is how, in the name of pragmatism, he suggested how Israel could profit from the ongoing feud that Turkey is having with a number of its neighbors:

“Turkey and one Libyan government are standing in opposition to Greece, Cyprus, Israel, Egypt, the UAE, and the other Libyan government. Turkey faces a consortium of nations in the region eager to leverage the natural resources of the Eastern Mediterranean to the detriment of Turkey's interests. The deal with Libya is a formula to break Turkey's isolation and win support for its bid for a fairer distribution of offshore resources in the Eastern Mediterranean. Now that the Libyan deal is done, there is one more thing Turkey should do: Sign with Israel the same agreement signed with Libya. Turkey is keen to negotiate with any state actor except Cyprus, with which Turkey does not have diplomatic relations”.

Burak Bekdil is not a Jew. Faced with a situation where several nations are at each other's throats (to use Andrea Widburg's terminology,) he described a possible outcome to the crisis from a pragmatic standpoint.

It will not be an outcome that will fully please everyone, but one that will bring the parties to negotiate a resolution requiring that everyone put some water in their wine––to use a French adage.

Of course, you can always expect that the Jews of Israel and America will try to play one participant against another in their never-fading desire to exploit them all.

But these are astute negotiators who know what's in the Jewish bag of tricks. They will not be tricked, as would the Americans, and may even get so tired of the Jewish attempts to trick them, they'll boot the Jews out of their meetings.