Tuesday, September 7, 2021

Cannot do leveraging with a broken lever

A lever is a long stick you use to convert movement into power. You use the lever to force immovable objects to move, and use it to force people to bend to your will. But what if you abuse the only lever you have and break it? What then?

 

This is what happened to America when it separated from the adage of its late President, Theodore Roosevelt who used to say: Speak softly and carry a big stick to go far.” It was the Judeo-Yiddish influence on the American culture that turned the Roosevelt saying into something that went like this: “Speak noisily and wield your stick whether it is broken or it isn’t”.

 

What caused the Jews to adopt a way of life that runs contrary to normal human inclinations, is that they were afflicted with a kind of social dyslexia that caused them to see things upside-down and also see them the other way around. This happened thousands of years ago when the Jews were unhappy working in Egypt to earn a living as did the rest of the population.

 

Meanwhile the Jews also noticed that the pharaohs were living the good life without having to work and so, they wanted to be like the pharaohs. When someone lied to them about a place where milk and honey were to be had without working, the Jews decided to go there. They aimed to live like pharaohs and govern the world like masters of the universe.

 

However, things did not turn out as well as they expected, and so the Jews began to see things, not as they were but as they wished them to be. From that moment on, the Jewish culture began the process of turning what’s up into a down position and vice-versa. For example, the Jews viewed the indigenous population of Palestine to no longer be the owner of Palestine. They considered Palestine to be owned by any imposter that lived to get something for nothing, and would convert to Judaism to earn the privilege.

 

This Jewish tendency solidified with the passage of time, so much so that centuries later, when the Jews had lost both the identity and the language of the Hebrew tribes, they became the Yiddish speaking Europeans. Their way of life was by then the inverse of what it is to be human. It proved to work for them as long as they stayed separate from the human race, such as living in ghettos. But despite their isolation, they were able to influence a few unlucky souls who in turn, influenced others, causing them to suffer severe damage. One entity that began to disintegrate under the Jewish influence, was America.

 

Before welcoming the Jews in its midst, America was so confident of its power and prestige at home and abroad, it lived comfortably by the Roosevelt adage of ‘speak softly and carry a big stick,’ never being forced to use the stick. The infusion of the Judeo-Yiddish culture changed it so much that America became like the Jews. It began to speak noisily while also wield whatever stick it could get its hands on, be it a solid stick or a broken one”.

 

For too long now, America has been addressing the world in the Judeo-Yiddish language, using a word that has become one of the most infamous in the English language: leverage. Even though America got its ass kicked in Afghanistan, it is still being advised by those who ruined it, to use leverage in its dealings with the same Taliban who kicked its ass. Go figure.

 

You can see how that is done when you go over the article that came under the title: “China, Russia Look to outflank US in Afghanistan,” and the subtitle: “Meanwhile, Pakistan urges Washington to pump the breaks on sanctioning the Taliban.” It was written by Colum Lynch and Robbie Gramer, and published on September 2, 2021 in Foreign Policy. The following is a condensed version of what Lynch and Gramer say about the subject:

 

“As US forces beat a hasty retreat from Afghanistan, surrendering the country to an uncertain future under the Taliban, US President Joe Biden and his national security advisors preached the importance of diplomacy over military intervention. But Washington is running into the limitations of diplomacy in a country with an array of powers seeking to undercut whatever remaining leverage the United States might exercise over the country’s new rulers. For all the talk about diplomacy, the US has yet to engage in serious negotiations, said Scott Smith, a former UN official in Afghanistan. The US, Smith said, can only exercise leverage with the Taliban if Washington is willing to give and get. Despite all this talk of diplomacy, that conversation is not happening, he said. Without negotiation, there is no leverage”.

 

What this says, is that America has been under Jewish influence for such a long time, it forgot how to use the leverage it has by speaking softly or speaking noisily, by wielding the stick it has or not wielding it, be that a solid stick or a broken one.

 

In short, America forgot how to act like a country, let alone like the superpower that it was when the world considered it a guiding light to all the nations, a status it had achieved by being itself.

 

Twenty years at the levers of America’s foreign policy, gave the Jews the opportunity to sail the mighty ship of state into the rocks of doom and gloom.