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Zionism is Blatant Racism
Lest people get misled into thinking MLK wrote anything saying he supported Zionism, please read the article below by Tim Wise. By the way, Tim will be speaking at La Pena in Berkeley on Thursday, January 30. See Indymedia Calendar for more details.
January 20, 2003
By Tim Wise
Rarely am I considered insufficiently cynical. As someone who does anti-racism work for a living, and thus hears all manner of excuse-making by
those who wish desperately to avoid being considered racist, not much surprises me. I expect people to lie about race; to tell me how many black
friends they have; to swear they haven't a racist bone in their bodies.
And every January, with the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday just around the corner, I have come to expect someone to misuse the good doctor's words so
as to push an agenda he would not likely have supported.
As such, I long ago resigned myself to the annual gaggle of fools who deign to use King's "content of their character" line from the 1963 March on
Washington so as to attack affirmative action, ostensibly because King preferred simple "color-blindness."
That King actually supported the efforts that we now call affirmative action--and even billions in reparations for slavery and segregation--as I've
documented in a previous column, matters not to these folks. They've never read King's work, and they've only paid attention to one news clip from one
speech, so what more can we expect from such precious simpletons as these?
And yet, even with my cynic's credentials established, the one thing I never expected anyone to do would be to just make up a quote from King; a quote
that he simply never said, and claim that it came from a letter that he never wrote, and was published in a collection of his essays that never existed.
Frankly, this level of deception is something special.
The hoax of which I speak is one currently making the rounds on the Internet, which claims to prove King's steadfast support for Zionism. Indeed, it
does more than that.
In the item, entitled "Letter to an Anti-Zionist Friend," King proclaims that criticism of Zionism is tantamount to anti-Semitism, and likens those who
criticize Jewish nationalism as manifested in Israel, to those who would seek to trample the rights of blacks. Heady stuff indeed, and 100% bullshit, as
any amateur fact checker could ascertain were they so inclined.
But of course, the kinds of folks who push an ideology that required the expulsion of three-quarters-of-a-million Palestinians from their lands, and then
lied about it, claiming there had been no such persons to begin with (as with Golda Meir's infamous quip), can't be expected to place a very high
premium on truth.
I learned this the hard way recently, when the Des Moines Jewish Federation succeeded in getting me yanked from the city's MLK day events: two
speeches I had been scheduled to give on behalf of the National Conference of Community and Justice (NCCJ).
Because of my criticisms of Israel--and because I as a Jew am on record opposing Zionism philosophically--the Des Moines shtetl decided I was unfit
to speak at an MLK event. After sending the supposed King quote around, and threatening to pull out all monies from the Jewish community for future
NCCJ events, I was dropped.
The attack of course was based on a distortion of my own beliefs as well. Federation principal Mark Finkelstein claimed I had shown a disregard for
the well-being of Jews, despite the fact that my argument has long been that Zionism in practice has made world Jewry less safe than ever. But it was
his duplicity on King's views that was most disturbing.
Though Finkelstein only recited one line from King's supposed "letter" on Zionism, he lifted it from the larger letter, which appears to have originated
with Rabbi Marc Schneier, who quotes from it in his 1999 book, "Shared Dreams: Martin Luther King Jr. and the Jewish Community." Therein, one finds
such over-the-top rhetoric as this:
"I say, let the truth ring forth from the high mountain tops, let it echo through the valleys of God's green earth: When people criticize Zionism, they mean
Jews--this is God's own truth."
The letter also was filled with grammatical errors that any halfway literate reader of King's work should have known disqualified him from being its
author, to wit: "Anti-Zionist is inherently anti Semitic, and ever will be so."
The treatise, it is claimed, was published on page 76 of the August, 1967 edition of Saturday Review, and supposedly can also be read in the
collection of King's work entitled, This I Believe: Selections from the Writings of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. That the claimants never mention the
publisher of this collection should have been a clear tip-off that it might not be genuine, and indeed it isn't. The book doesn't exist.
As for Saturday Review, there were four issues in August of 1967. Two of the four editions contained a page 76. One of the pages 76 contains
classified ads and the other contained a review of the Beatles' Sgt. Pepper's album. No King letter anywhere.
Yet its lack of authenticity hasn't prevented it from having a long shelf-life. Not only does it pop up in the Schneier book, but sections of it were read by
the Anti-Defamation League's Michael Salberg in testimony before a House Subcommittee in July of 2001, and all manner of pro-Israel groups (from
traditional Zionists to right-wing Likudites, to Christians who support ingathering Jews to Israel so as to prompt Jesus' return), have used the piece on
their websites.
In truth, King appears never to have made any public comment about Zionism per se; and the only known statement he ever made on the topic, made
privately to a handful of people, is a far cry from what he is purported to have said in the so-called "Letter to an Anti-Zionist friend."
In 1968, according to Seymour Martin Lipset, King was in Boston and attended a dinner in Cambridge along with Lipset himself and a number of black
students. After the dinner, a young man apparently made a fairly harsh remark attacking Zionists as people, to which King responded: "Don't talk like
that. When people criticize Zionists, they mean Jews. You're talking Anti-Semitism."
Assuming this quote to be genuine, it is still far from the ideological endorsement of Zionism as theory or practice that was evidenced in the phony
letter.
After all, to respond to a harsh statement about individuals who are Zionists with the warning that such language is usually a cover for anti-Jewish bias
is understandable. More than that, the comment was no doubt true for most, especially in 1968. It is a statement of opinion as to what people are
thinking when they say a certain thing. It is not a statement as to the inherent validity or perfidy of a worldview or its effects.
Likewise, consider the following analogous dualism: first, that "opposition to welfare programs is forever racism," and secondly, that "when people
criticize welfare recipients, they mean blacks. This is racism."
Whereas the latter statement may be true--and studies would tend to suggest that it is--the former is a matter of ideological conviction, largely
untestable, and thus more tendentious than its counterpart. In any event, as with the King quotes--both fabricated and genuine--the truth of the latter
says nothing about the truth or falsity of the former.
So yes, King was quick to admonish one person who expressed hostility to Zionists as people. But he did not claim that opposition to Zionism was
inherently anti-Semitic. And for those who criticize Zionism today and who like me are Jewish, to believe that we mean to attack Jews, as Jews, when
we speak out against Israel and Zionism is absurd.
As for King's public position on Israel, it was quite limited and hardly formed a cornerstone of his worldview. In a meeting with Jewish leaders a few
weeks before his death, King noted that peace for Israelis and Arabs were both important concerns. According to King, "peace for Israel means
security, and we must stand with all our might to protect its right to exist, its territorial integrity."
But such a statement says nothing about how Israel should be constituted, nor addresses the Palestinians at all, whose lives and challenges were
hardly on the world's radar screen in 1968.
At the time, Israel's concern was hostility from Egypt; and of course all would agree that any nation has the right not to be attacked by a neighbor. The
U.S. had a right not to be attacked by the Soviet Union too--as King would have no doubt agreed, thereby affirming the United States' right to exist. But
would anyone claim that such a sentiment would have implied the right of the U.S. to exist as it did, say in 1957 or 1961, under segregation? Of course
not.
So too Israel. Its right to exist in the sense of not being violently destroyed by hostile forces does not mean the right to exist as a Jewish state per se, as
opposed to the state of all its citizens. It does not mean the right to laws granting special privileges to Jews from around the world, over indigenous
Arabs.
It should also be noted that in the same paragraph where King reiterated his support for Israel's right to exist, he also proclaimed the importance of
massive public assistance to Middle Eastern Arabs, in the form of a Marshall Plan, so as to counter the poverty and desperation that often leads to
hostility and violence towards Israeli Jews.
This part of King's position is typically ignored by the organized Jewish community, of course, even though it was just as important to King as Israel's
territorial integrity.
As for what King would say today about Israel, Zionism, and the Palestinian struggle, one can only speculate.
After all, he died before the full tragedy of the occupation of the West Bank and Gaza would be able to unfold.
He died before the peace treaty between Egypt and Israel; before the invasion of Lebanon and the massacres at Sabra and Shatilla; before the 1980's
intifada; before Israel decided to serve as a proxy for U.S. foreign policy--funneling weapons to fascist governments in South Africa, Argentina and
Guatemala, or helping to arm terrorist thugs in Mozambique and the contras in Nicaragua.
He died before the proliferation of illegal settlements throughout the territories; before the rash of suicide/homicide bombings; before the polls
showing that nearly half of Israeli Jews support removing Palestinians via "transfer" to neighboring countries.
But one thing is for sure. While King would no doubt roundly condemn Palestinian violence against innocent civilians, he would also condemn the
state violence of Israel.
He would condemn launching missile attacks against entire neighborhoods in order to flush out a handful of wanted terrorists.
He would oppose the handing out of machine guns to religious fanatics from Brooklyn who move to the territories and proclaim their God-given right to
the land, and the right to run Arabs out of their neighborhoods, or fence them off, or discriminate against them in a multitude of ways.
He would oppose the unequal rationing of water resources between Jews and Arabs that is Israeli policy.
He would oppose the degrading checkpoints through which Palestinian workers must pass to get to their jobs, or back to their homes after a long day
of work.
He would oppose the policy which allows IDF officers to shoot children throwing rocks, as young as age twelve.
In other words, he would likely criticize the working out of Zionism on the ground, as it has actually developed in the real world, as opposed to the world
of theory and speculation.
These things seem imminently clear from any honest reading of his work or examination of his life. He would be a broker for peace. And it is a tragedy
that instead of King himself, we are burdened with charlatans like those at the ADL, or the Des Moines Jewish Federation, or Rabbis like Marc
Schneier who think nothing of speaking for the genuine article, in a voice not his own.
Tim Wise is an antiracist activist, writer and lecturer. He can be reached at timjwise [at] msn.com
Source: ZNet at http://www.zmag.org
By Tim Wise
Rarely am I considered insufficiently cynical. As someone who does anti-racism work for a living, and thus hears all manner of excuse-making by
those who wish desperately to avoid being considered racist, not much surprises me. I expect people to lie about race; to tell me how many black
friends they have; to swear they haven't a racist bone in their bodies.
And every January, with the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday just around the corner, I have come to expect someone to misuse the good doctor's words so
as to push an agenda he would not likely have supported.
As such, I long ago resigned myself to the annual gaggle of fools who deign to use King's "content of their character" line from the 1963 March on
Washington so as to attack affirmative action, ostensibly because King preferred simple "color-blindness."
That King actually supported the efforts that we now call affirmative action--and even billions in reparations for slavery and segregation--as I've
documented in a previous column, matters not to these folks. They've never read King's work, and they've only paid attention to one news clip from one
speech, so what more can we expect from such precious simpletons as these?
And yet, even with my cynic's credentials established, the one thing I never expected anyone to do would be to just make up a quote from King; a quote
that he simply never said, and claim that it came from a letter that he never wrote, and was published in a collection of his essays that never existed.
Frankly, this level of deception is something special.
The hoax of which I speak is one currently making the rounds on the Internet, which claims to prove King's steadfast support for Zionism. Indeed, it
does more than that.
In the item, entitled "Letter to an Anti-Zionist Friend," King proclaims that criticism of Zionism is tantamount to anti-Semitism, and likens those who
criticize Jewish nationalism as manifested in Israel, to those who would seek to trample the rights of blacks. Heady stuff indeed, and 100% bullshit, as
any amateur fact checker could ascertain were they so inclined.
But of course, the kinds of folks who push an ideology that required the expulsion of three-quarters-of-a-million Palestinians from their lands, and then
lied about it, claiming there had been no such persons to begin with (as with Golda Meir's infamous quip), can't be expected to place a very high
premium on truth.
I learned this the hard way recently, when the Des Moines Jewish Federation succeeded in getting me yanked from the city's MLK day events: two
speeches I had been scheduled to give on behalf of the National Conference of Community and Justice (NCCJ).
Because of my criticisms of Israel--and because I as a Jew am on record opposing Zionism philosophically--the Des Moines shtetl decided I was unfit
to speak at an MLK event. After sending the supposed King quote around, and threatening to pull out all monies from the Jewish community for future
NCCJ events, I was dropped.
The attack of course was based on a distortion of my own beliefs as well. Federation principal Mark Finkelstein claimed I had shown a disregard for
the well-being of Jews, despite the fact that my argument has long been that Zionism in practice has made world Jewry less safe than ever. But it was
his duplicity on King's views that was most disturbing.
Though Finkelstein only recited one line from King's supposed "letter" on Zionism, he lifted it from the larger letter, which appears to have originated
with Rabbi Marc Schneier, who quotes from it in his 1999 book, "Shared Dreams: Martin Luther King Jr. and the Jewish Community." Therein, one finds
such over-the-top rhetoric as this:
"I say, let the truth ring forth from the high mountain tops, let it echo through the valleys of God's green earth: When people criticize Zionism, they mean
Jews--this is God's own truth."
The letter also was filled with grammatical errors that any halfway literate reader of King's work should have known disqualified him from being its
author, to wit: "Anti-Zionist is inherently anti Semitic, and ever will be so."
The treatise, it is claimed, was published on page 76 of the August, 1967 edition of Saturday Review, and supposedly can also be read in the
collection of King's work entitled, This I Believe: Selections from the Writings of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. That the claimants never mention the
publisher of this collection should have been a clear tip-off that it might not be genuine, and indeed it isn't. The book doesn't exist.
As for Saturday Review, there were four issues in August of 1967. Two of the four editions contained a page 76. One of the pages 76 contains
classified ads and the other contained a review of the Beatles' Sgt. Pepper's album. No King letter anywhere.
Yet its lack of authenticity hasn't prevented it from having a long shelf-life. Not only does it pop up in the Schneier book, but sections of it were read by
the Anti-Defamation League's Michael Salberg in testimony before a House Subcommittee in July of 2001, and all manner of pro-Israel groups (from
traditional Zionists to right-wing Likudites, to Christians who support ingathering Jews to Israel so as to prompt Jesus' return), have used the piece on
their websites.
In truth, King appears never to have made any public comment about Zionism per se; and the only known statement he ever made on the topic, made
privately to a handful of people, is a far cry from what he is purported to have said in the so-called "Letter to an Anti-Zionist friend."
In 1968, according to Seymour Martin Lipset, King was in Boston and attended a dinner in Cambridge along with Lipset himself and a number of black
students. After the dinner, a young man apparently made a fairly harsh remark attacking Zionists as people, to which King responded: "Don't talk like
that. When people criticize Zionists, they mean Jews. You're talking Anti-Semitism."
Assuming this quote to be genuine, it is still far from the ideological endorsement of Zionism as theory or practice that was evidenced in the phony
letter.
After all, to respond to a harsh statement about individuals who are Zionists with the warning that such language is usually a cover for anti-Jewish bias
is understandable. More than that, the comment was no doubt true for most, especially in 1968. It is a statement of opinion as to what people are
thinking when they say a certain thing. It is not a statement as to the inherent validity or perfidy of a worldview or its effects.
Likewise, consider the following analogous dualism: first, that "opposition to welfare programs is forever racism," and secondly, that "when people
criticize welfare recipients, they mean blacks. This is racism."
Whereas the latter statement may be true--and studies would tend to suggest that it is--the former is a matter of ideological conviction, largely
untestable, and thus more tendentious than its counterpart. In any event, as with the King quotes--both fabricated and genuine--the truth of the latter
says nothing about the truth or falsity of the former.
So yes, King was quick to admonish one person who expressed hostility to Zionists as people. But he did not claim that opposition to Zionism was
inherently anti-Semitic. And for those who criticize Zionism today and who like me are Jewish, to believe that we mean to attack Jews, as Jews, when
we speak out against Israel and Zionism is absurd.
As for King's public position on Israel, it was quite limited and hardly formed a cornerstone of his worldview. In a meeting with Jewish leaders a few
weeks before his death, King noted that peace for Israelis and Arabs were both important concerns. According to King, "peace for Israel means
security, and we must stand with all our might to protect its right to exist, its territorial integrity."
But such a statement says nothing about how Israel should be constituted, nor addresses the Palestinians at all, whose lives and challenges were
hardly on the world's radar screen in 1968.
At the time, Israel's concern was hostility from Egypt; and of course all would agree that any nation has the right not to be attacked by a neighbor. The
U.S. had a right not to be attacked by the Soviet Union too--as King would have no doubt agreed, thereby affirming the United States' right to exist. But
would anyone claim that such a sentiment would have implied the right of the U.S. to exist as it did, say in 1957 or 1961, under segregation? Of course
not.
So too Israel. Its right to exist in the sense of not being violently destroyed by hostile forces does not mean the right to exist as a Jewish state per se, as
opposed to the state of all its citizens. It does not mean the right to laws granting special privileges to Jews from around the world, over indigenous
Arabs.
It should also be noted that in the same paragraph where King reiterated his support for Israel's right to exist, he also proclaimed the importance of
massive public assistance to Middle Eastern Arabs, in the form of a Marshall Plan, so as to counter the poverty and desperation that often leads to
hostility and violence towards Israeli Jews.
This part of King's position is typically ignored by the organized Jewish community, of course, even though it was just as important to King as Israel's
territorial integrity.
As for what King would say today about Israel, Zionism, and the Palestinian struggle, one can only speculate.
After all, he died before the full tragedy of the occupation of the West Bank and Gaza would be able to unfold.
He died before the peace treaty between Egypt and Israel; before the invasion of Lebanon and the massacres at Sabra and Shatilla; before the 1980's
intifada; before Israel decided to serve as a proxy for U.S. foreign policy--funneling weapons to fascist governments in South Africa, Argentina and
Guatemala, or helping to arm terrorist thugs in Mozambique and the contras in Nicaragua.
He died before the proliferation of illegal settlements throughout the territories; before the rash of suicide/homicide bombings; before the polls
showing that nearly half of Israeli Jews support removing Palestinians via "transfer" to neighboring countries.
But one thing is for sure. While King would no doubt roundly condemn Palestinian violence against innocent civilians, he would also condemn the
state violence of Israel.
He would condemn launching missile attacks against entire neighborhoods in order to flush out a handful of wanted terrorists.
He would oppose the handing out of machine guns to religious fanatics from Brooklyn who move to the territories and proclaim their God-given right to
the land, and the right to run Arabs out of their neighborhoods, or fence them off, or discriminate against them in a multitude of ways.
He would oppose the unequal rationing of water resources between Jews and Arabs that is Israeli policy.
He would oppose the degrading checkpoints through which Palestinian workers must pass to get to their jobs, or back to their homes after a long day
of work.
He would oppose the policy which allows IDF officers to shoot children throwing rocks, as young as age twelve.
In other words, he would likely criticize the working out of Zionism on the ground, as it has actually developed in the real world, as opposed to the world
of theory and speculation.
These things seem imminently clear from any honest reading of his work or examination of his life. He would be a broker for peace. And it is a tragedy
that instead of King himself, we are burdened with charlatans like those at the ADL, or the Des Moines Jewish Federation, or Rabbis like Marc
Schneier who think nothing of speaking for the genuine article, in a voice not his own.
Tim Wise is an antiracist activist, writer and lecturer. He can be reached at timjwise [at] msn.com
Source: ZNet at http://www.zmag.org
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When South Africa ended Apartheid, it did not break up into one state for whites and one state for blacks. It remained one country--- that is the most humane solution! Israel is so regressive and racist-- it's even building an Apartheid Wall! Pathetic!
For Duke and his ilk, opposition to Israeli policy has nothing to do with defense of the Palestinians (especially Muslim Palestinians). They're people of color, after all. But it does allow them to advance their fascist ideology, which includes allegations that Jews essentially control the world and manipulate people of color to keep non-Jewish whites down. (Don't believe me? Check out the website of a fascist group like the National Alliance or World Church fo the Creator.)
In Washington DC, fascist group have held a handful of "anti-Israel" rallies in the past six months or so. These included the frighteningly large 300-person Nazi rally in late August, as well as others. The Nazis claimed to be there because they opposed Israeli actions against the Palestinians, their signs called for a cancellation of aid to Israel, and they tore up an Israeli flag at one demonstration.
Thanks both to good organizing prior to the rallies, no honest leftist seemed to beleive their rhetoric. Indeed, many turned out to protest them for the fascists they are.
But now, on this thread, someone has said that he/she does not object to the views of David Duke, a Nazi, on Isarel/Palestine issues, and implied (in response to an earlier question) that he would indeed protest with Duke on this issue.
This is frightening, and it would truly threaten work for Justice for Palestinians, as well as being a grave threat to jews and people of color in this country. Principled leftists much roundly reject fascism as we protest firmly for hte rights of Palestinians.
As for David Duke's motives, whatever, he is totally right about Zionists.
As for Zionists who oppose the Iraq war, but who support Israel's ethnic cleansing of the Palestinians, screw their motives. They are right to oppose the Iraq war and wrong to support racist, anti-democratic, apartheid Israel's ethnic cleansing of the Palestinians.
Whatever their fucking "motives" are.
How about raving paranoids too? I no longer doubt that. Zi-i-ionists are _everywhere!_ We've infiltrated every laundromat in the nation! We're behind every bowling ball and over every union meeting! We control the horizontal! We control the vertical! And our most effective weapon is the nazoid-in-disguise who tries to rally the left to Hate The *wink* Zionist! Hate The *wink* Zionist More!! Hate The *wink* Zionist Even More!!! Hate The *wink* Zionist's Money-Grubbing Ways! Hate the *wink* Zionist's Plot For World Dominiation!!! Hate The *wink* Zionist's Drinking Goy Blood and Desecrating The Host!!!
C'mon, folks, you aren't Hating The Zionist enough yet! Get with the program, or before you know it, some fourth-generation American Catholic with three hundred nyms will tell you that you work for the Mossad.
"As for David Duke's motives, whatever, he is totally right about Zionists. "
And so, without a blush, the man-of-a-thousand-nyms embraces his inner Nazi, with this devastating condemnation of Nazism: "whatever."
@%<
Thanks for the laugh of the day.
@%<
http://www.nizkor.org/features/fallacies/appeal-to-ridicule.html
What profound debating skills you have. Oh yeah, your gonna convince some folks that your something other than a backward, ignorant, pathetic bastard...How proud your folks must be...They couldn't be prouder unless you strapped on some explosives and blew up some Israeli school children. But hey, if you don't like the policy of the US in relation to Israel-- I say you should pick up an AK-47 and confront the "Great Satan" on the battlefield in Iraq or Afganistan (since you obviously lack the intellect to participate in a debate within a free society).
Gunmen kill writer: A strict Islamic code applies in the author's province
Paul Anderson
BBC correspondent in Islamabad
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/2685151.stm
Police in northern Pakistan say unidentified attackers have shot dead a writer whose work was viewed as critical of fundamentalist Islam. The 40-year-old writer, Fazal Wahab, was shot at a local shop.
Fatwas, or religious edicts, declaring his work un-Islamic had been issued by senior clerical figures after the publication of two books challenging the role of mullahs. Police say three or four gunmen burst into the shop in the town of Mingora, in North-West Frontier Province, where Mr Wahab was sitting.
The gunmen opened fire indiscriminately, killing Mr Wahab and the shop owner on the spot. The attack will be a test of the mullahs' power. A teenage shop assistant died on his way to hospital. Two of Mr Wahab's books were critical of the Taleban, the role of the mullahs and Osama bin Laden.
Mr Wahab, who was married with five children, called a press conference last month to say he was receiving death threats. He was not well-known nationally, but locally was engaged in a hostile debate with Islamic leaders through his writings.
After provincial and national elections last year, North-West Frontier Province came under the control of an alliance of religious parties. The provincial government has begun imposing strict interpretations of the Islamic code - much as the Taleban did in Afghanistan - on dress, women's freedom of movement and public entertainment.
They hate us because their culture is backward and corrupt.
BY VICTOR DAVIS HANSON
[CIA-Rockefeller Manhattan-Institute -&- MI + Victor Davis Hanson]
Monday, February 25, 2002 12:01 a.m. EST
Since September 11, we have heard mostly slander and lies about the West from radical Islamic fundamentalists in their defense of the terrorists. But the Middle Eastern mainstream--diplomats, intellectuals and journalists--has also bombarded the American public with an array of unflattering images and texts, suggesting that the extremists' anti-Americanism may not be an eccentricity of the ignorant but rather a representative slice of the views of millions.
Egyptian Nobel Prize-winning novelist Naguib Mahfouz reportedly announced from his Cairo home that America's bombing of the Taliban was "just as despicable a crime" as the September 11 attacks--as if the terrorists' unprovoked mass murder of civilians were the moral equivalent of selected air strikes against enemy soldiers in wartime. Americans, reluctant to answer back their Middle Eastern critics for fear of charges of "Islamophobia" or "Arab smearing," have let such accusations go largely unchecked.
Two striking themes--one overt, one implied--characterize most Arab invective: first, that there is some sort of equivalence--political, cultural and military--between the West and the Muslim world; and second, that America has been exceptionally unkind toward the Middle East. Both premises are false and reveal that the temple of anti-Americanism is supported by pillars of utter ignorance.
Few in the Middle East have a clue about the nature, origins or history of democracy, a word that, along with its family (constitution, freedom and citizen), has no history in the Arab vocabulary, or indeed any philological pedigree in any language other than Greek and Latin and their modern European offspring.
How much easier for nonvoters of the Arab world to vent frustration at the West, as if, in some Machiavellian plot, a democratic America, Israel and Europe have conspired to prevent Muslims from adopting the Western invention of democracy! Democracy is hardly a Western secret to be closely guarded and kept from the mujahideen. Islam is welcome to it, with the blessing and subsidy of the West. Yes, we must promote democracy abroad in the Muslim world; but only they, not we, can ensure its success.
Wall Street Journal
Source: E. H. Schulz and R. Frercks, Warum Arierpargraph? Ein Beitrag zur Judenfrage (Berlin: Verlag Neues Volk, 1934).
The barriers between Germans and Jews fell as a result of the Enlightenment and the French Revolution. The path to Jewish world domination would take a different direction than pious, observant Jews had expected. Emancipation made it possible to build Jewish dominance through secular means. With the disappearance of racial consciousness, only religious differences seemed to remain. It seemed at the time unjust to give someone a preferred position only because of his religious beliefs, which are an entirely personal matter. At the time, this was tied to a belief in human equality and freedom. It was revolutionary. It shattered the church dogmas that had ruled for centuries and was the foundation of liberal thinking during the last two hundred years. The new goal was humanity itself, and nothing stood in the way of racial mixing. Some had the quiet hope that assimilation would mean the absorption of Jewry. Jewry itself, however, was more than willing to use the opportunities of religious assimilation, which opened the path to all important positions, even to political leadership. As H. Heine said, "baptism was the ticket to European culture." Gradually, an intermixing with the German people developed, particularly in its cultural elite. Foreign blood infiltrated to a degree that we realize only today now that the "Law to Reestablish a Professional Bureaucracy" has exposed numerous sources of foreign blood. This process has greatly accelerated during the last fourteen years.
Today the age of raceless thinking is being displaced by the ideals of human variability. Values are rooted in origin and territory, and each group has a historic mission based on its own unique and eternal values. Such new racial thinking will of course secure the opposition of those who either through faith or reason still believe in the unity of humanity in culture, social order and organization. The Jews will naturally oppose any discussion of race, since the denial of any significant differences between people is the foundation of his infiltration of Western European society. The Jew finds any mention of the racial question as an attack on his current existence. His leading role in every anti-national area is characteristic of his mimicry, and is necessary for his continued existence. That explains the phrase "German citizen of the Jewish faith."
The recognition that the Jew is of a foreign and different race along with the reawakening of German racial consciousness must necessarily lead to a change in the relations between Germans and Jews.
--German Propaganda Archives
May 13, 2002
A Budget truck was pulled over in Oak Harbor, Wash., last Tuesday near the Whidbey Island Naval Air Station and found to have traces of TNT on the gearshift and traces of RDX plastic explosive on the steering wheel, Fox News has learned.
Traces of explosives were also found on one of the truck's two occupants.
The FBI, the Immigration and Naturalization Service, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, and local police are all investigating.
Government officials said the roadside stop was so close to the naval air station that military personnel took part in the initial arrest and naval intelligence has also been involved in the subsequent investigation.
Shortly after midnight on May 7, federal officials say local police pulled the vehicle over for speeding. Documents read to Fox News indicate that the driver and passenger told local police they were delivering furniture from California but that authorities doubted the story because of the early morning hour.
A bomb-sniffing dog first detected explosives on one of the men and inside the truck.
High-tech equipment was used later to confirm the presence of TNT and RDX plastic explosive.
Documents read to Fox News indicate that both driver and passenger were Israeli nationals. Investigators say a roadside check of the national database of immigration records indicated that one of the men had not entered the country legally, and the other was in violation of his visa. Both men were taken into custody for immigration violations.
At 7:30 that morning local police were notified that the BATF and FBI had tested the truck and found traces of explosives on the steering wheel and gear shift.
Officials say no other charges of been filed against the driver and passenger and an investigation is ongoing.
Authorities say records for the Budget truck do not indicate any recent rental for the purposes of transporting explosives, which would require special permits.
FOX
August 25, 2002
TAMPA - Muslims expressed fears for their safety but appealed for calm as investigators tried Saturday to determine whether a Seminole foot doctor accused of amassing weapons to attack mosques and Islamic schools was acting alone.
``If you're afraid, stay home,'' said Mohammad Cooper, a Muslim leader who traveled from Lakeland to attend an afternoon gathering and news conference at the Islamic Society of Tampa Bay Area Mosque.
``But do not hurt innocent people. You arm yourself with the Koran.''
Authorities stumbled upon an astonishing array of weapons inside the town home of podiatrist Robert Goldstein, 37, Thursday evening after receiving a complaint that he was arguing with his wife, Kristi, 28.
After coaxing Goldstein out of the home, Pinellas County deputies discovered about 20 homemade bombs, a pair of rocket launchers, dozens of high- power rifles and an antipersonnel mine. [!]
They also retrieved a three- page battle plan that laid out in intricate detail a mission to blow up what appears to be a local Islamic educational center. The writing includes at least the first names of two other people.
Tampa Tribune (google cache)
December 13, 2001
JDL pair charged in bombing plot
A lawmaker's offices and a mosque were targeted, U.S. alleges.
By Laura Mecoy -- Bee Los Angeles Bureau
LOS ANGELES -- The confrontational chairman of the Jewish Defense League and a follower were charged Wednesday with plotting to blow up a Culver City mosque and the offices of Rep. Darrell Issa, a San Diego congressman of Arab descent.
Irv Rubin, 52, and a member of the militant group, Earl Krugel, 56, were arrested Tuesday after a confidential informant delivered the last component of the bomb -- 5 pounds of explosive powder -- to Krugel's home, U.S. Attorney John S. Gordon said Wednesday.
FBI agents said they uncovered the plot after the source, a JDL member who had committed crimes for the group in the past, told them of the bombing plans and agreed to wear recording devices to meetings with Rubin and Krugel.
U.S. Magistrate Judge Victor Kenton ordered Rubin and Krugel held without bail Wednesday afternoon, saying they posed a danger to the community.
--
Sacramento Bee
December 26, 2001
September 11 nightmare ends for two illegal Israeli aliens
By Uri Ash
Ro'i Barak [paid some money for an airfare and] left for New York 16 months ago to earn some money.
Like many [poor] young Israelis, the 23-year-old from Upper Nazareth moved furniture [in the United States] to make a living [illegaly].
On September 11, Barak was in Ohio on a job. He and his partner, Moti Butboul, 26, from Rechasim, headed toward Chicago, from where they had planned to return to New York.
On the way the next day, however, they were stopped by a police officer in Pennsylvania for a routine inspection, and were eventually sent to jail. The two were released to Israel only last week, while five of their co-workers are still under arrest in the United States.
At the time they were stopped, the policeman held them for a few hours, after which another squad car arrived followed by four FBI agents. Barak, speaking from his parents' home, said he does not know what prompted the policeman to call the FBI - perhaps their foreign accent or the previous day's arrest of their five friends who worked for the same [Mossad front] moving company in New York. He said the FBI may have been tracking their truck after their co-workers' arrests.
--Ha'Aretz
September 12, 2001
Five Men Detained As Suspected Conspirators
Eight hours after terrorists struck Manhattan's tallest skyscrapers, police in Bergen County detained five men who they said were found carrying maps linking them to the blasts. The five men, who were in a van stopped on Route 3 in East Rutherford around 4:30 p.m., were being questioned by police but had not been charged with any crime late Tuesday.
However, sources close to the investigation said they found other evidence linking the men to the bombing plot. "There are maps of the city in the car with certain places highlighted," the source said. "It looked like they're hooked in with this. It looked like they knew what was going to happen when they were at Liberty State Park."
Sources also said that bomb-sniffing dogs reacted as if they had detected explosives. The FBI seized the van for further testing, authorities said.
--Bergen Record (copy)
Zionazis won't like it if you read this! They want to keep a lid on the truth.
Why would he do that?
What about the men with their explosives tainted moving vans and bombing plots?
Why did you ignore them?
Have you read the text of the 1915 McMahon-Husayn corrrespondence?
Have you read the text of the 1916 Sykes-Picot agreement?
Have you looked at the 1916 Sykes-Picot map?
Have you read the text of the 1917 Balfour Declaration?
Have you read President Woodrow Wilson's 14 points of 1918?
Have you read the text of the 1918 Anglo-French Joint Statement of Aims in Syria and Mesopotamia?
Have you read President Woodrow WIlson's 1919 King-Crane Commission Report on the Wishes-Of-The-People in the Middle East?
If your answer to these questions was "yes", how do you reconcile the content of the historical documents with the statements of the CIA-Rockefeller Manhattan-Institute's paid propagandist?
Rockefeller was responsible for training and funding Nazi propagandists too.
Why is it so different this time around?
If so you are correct.
Forget the bible or the fact that jews were the right ownners of the land. Here you have many current int'l agreements that give the jewish people (with consent of the Arab people at that time) the right to build their homeland in israel. This is zionism and thank you for justfying it.
Most of the documents I mentioned have nothing to do with der Judenstaat, "abu".
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sir Henry McMahon to Sharif Husayn, 24 October 1915
. . . The two districts of mersina and Alexandretta and portions of Syria lying to the west of the districts of Damascus, Homs, Hama, and Aleppo cannot be said to be purely Arab, and should be excluded from the limits demanded.
With the above modification, and without prejudice to our existing treaties with Arab chiefs, we accept those limits.
As for those regions lying within those frontiers wherein Great Britain is free to act without detriment to the interests of her ally, France, I am enpowered in the name of the Government of Great Britain to give the following assurances and make the following reply to your letter:
(1) Subject to the above modifications, Great Britain is prepared to recognise and support the independence of the Arabs in all the regions within the limits demanded by the Sherif of mecca.
(2) Great Britain will guarantee the Holy Places against all external aggression and will recognise their inviolability.
(3) When the situation admits, Great Britain will give to the Arabs her advice and will assist them to establish what may appear to be the most suitable forms of government in those various territories.
(4) On the other hand, it is understood that the Arabs have decided to seek the advice and guidance of Great Britain only, and that such European advisors and officials as may be required for the formation of a sound administration will be British.
(5) With regard to the vilayets of Bagdad and Basra, the Arabs will recognise that the established position and interests of Great Britain necessitate special administrative arrangements in order to secure these territories from foreign aggression to promote the welfare of the local populations and to safeguard our mutual economic interests.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Nov 2, 1917 - Balfour Declaration
"His Majesty's Government view with favour the establishment in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish people, and will use their best endeavours to facilitate the achievement of this object, it being clearly understood that NOTHING SHALL BE DONE which may prejudice the civil and religious rights of existing NON-JEWISH COMMUNITIES in Palestine, or the rights and political status enjoyed by Jews in any other country."
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Jan 8, 1918 - President Wilson's Fourteen Points:
XII. The Turkish portion of the present Ottoman Empire should be assured a secure sovereignty, but the other nationalities which are now under Turkish rule should be assured an undoubted security of life and an ABSOLUTELY UNMOLESTED OPPORTUNITY OF AUTONOMOUS DEVELOPMENT, and the Dardanelles should be permanently opened as a free passage to the ships and commerce of all nations under international guarantees.
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8 November, 1918 - Anglo-French Joint Statement of Aims in Syria and Mesopotamia:
This statement was issued by the British Embassy in Washington at the request of the British Foreign Office.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The aim of France and Great Britain in carrying on in the Near East the war let loose by Germany's ambitions is the COMPLETE and final LIBERATION of the peoples so long oppressed by the Turks and the establishment of governments and administrations DERIVING TEIR AUTHORITY FROM THE INITIATIVE AND THE FREE CHOICE OF THE NATIVE POPULATIONS.
In view of following out this intention, France and Great Britain are agreed to encourage and help the establishment of native governments and administrations in Syria and Mesopotamia actually liberated by the allies, and in the territories they are now striving to liberate, and to recognize them as soon as effectively established.
Far from seeking to force upon the populations of these countries any particular institution, France and Great Britain have no other concern than to ensure by their support and their active assistance the normal working of the governments and institutions which the populations shall have FREELY ADOPTED, so as to secure just impartiality for all, and also to facilitate the economic development of the country in arousing and encouraging local initiative by the diffusion of instruction, and to put an end to discords which have too long been taken advantage of by Turkish rule.
Such is the role that the two Allied Governments claim for themselves in the liberated territories.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
==========================================
THE SECRET SYKES-PICOT AGREEMENT OF 1916 - (see map)
==========================================
"1. That France and Great Britain are prepared to recognize and protect an independent Arab State or a Confederation of Arab States in the areas (A) and (B) marked on the annexed map, under the SUZERAINTY of an Arab chief. That in area (A) France, and in area (B) Great Britain, shall have priority of right of enterprise and local loans. That in area (A) France, and in area (B) Great Britain, shall alone supply advisers or foreign functionaries at the request of the Arab State or Confederation of Arab States.
2. That in the blue area France, and in the red area Great Britain, shall be allowed to establish such direct or indirect administration or control AS THEY DESIRE and as they may think fit to arrange with the Arab State or Confederation of Arab States."
==========================================
http://www.users.cloud9.net/~critique/israel-watch/Chronology.htm
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[Chase-Rockefeller - propagandist Victor David Hanson's paymaster - the Reich Relationship Is Everything]
Has anyone else noticed the deafening silence from zionists on the Bush-Rockefeller-Nazi connection?
You wouldn't be a zionist by any chance would you, "bigdeal"?
Why else would you interpret the presentation of five historical documents relating to western deception of Arabs -- particularly French and British deception--as a nazi attack on Jews?
Read the documents again.
Go study your logic at the anti-nazi Nizkor project, zionists.
================================
Wednesday 22 January 2003
"What luck for the rulers that men do not think."
--Adolf Hitler
In October of 1942, under the Trading With the Enemy Act, the U.S. government halted operations at New York's Union Banking Corporation. A bank official was charged with "Running Nazi front groups in the Untied States."
His name: Prescott Bush.
Prescott Bush, father of future U.S President George Herbert Walker Bush and grandfather of George W. Bush, had been hard at work on behalf of his Nazi partners. In flagrant violation of U.S. law, Prescott Bush had worked tirelessly to launder money, procure raw materials, arrange transportation and provide guidance for the Nazi war effort and the German army he had helped to build.
In April of 2002, George W. Bush -- standing literally on the bones of the men who fell at Normandy beachhead in mortal combat with that very same Nazi army -- delivered his Memorial Day address. He said, in part, "This is a day our country has set apart to remember what was gained in our wars, and all that was lost."
Let us remember.
As the German army came crashing into Poland, spreading death and destruction in its path, Prescott Bush continued aiding the Nazis.
As German tanks rolled through the Ardennes Forest and into Paris, Prescott Bush continued aiding the Nazis.
As Allied forces fighting to defend France were forced literally into the sea at Dunkirk by the German Army, Prescott Bush continued aiding the Nazis.
As German war planes rained bombs down on London, killing 50 thousand English men, women and children, Prescott Bush continued aiding the Nazis.
As millions died at the hands of the most ruthless and violent organization the world has ever known, Prescott Bush continued aiding them.
And of course, as Hitler and the Nazis planned and carried out the extermination of Europe's Jews, Prescott Bush was an eager and active partner.
When did Bush stop? When we made him stop.
In this case, George W. Bush won't have to worry about the US Government shutting him down. That's been taken care of -- he is the US Government.
As debate rages back and forth across the Atlantic over the morality and acceptability of this assault against Iraq, it is interesting to note the German position.
It was Germany who bought most completely into the war lie during the past century. It was the German people who, with their faith in country and leadership, and even their loyalty to the Fatherland, made possible the greatest nightmare the world has ever known. It is those same German people who stand today before Europe and the world in unflinching opposition to this latest world conquering force.
How well do the German people know George W. Bush? Better than they want to.
-------
Sources:
Heir to the Holocaust : http://www.clamormagazine.org/features/issue14.3_feature.3.html
The Bush Nazi Connection : http://www.lpdallas.org/features/draheim/dr991216.htm
Gold Fillings, Auschwitz & George Bush : http://www.spiritone.com/~gdy52150/bushies.htm
Or just do a search at http://www.google.com under " Prescott Bush Nazi UBC 1942" and take your pick of the documents that come up. (Highly recommended.)
-------
You can send comments to t r u t h o u t Editor Marc Ash at: ma [at] truthout.com
==========================================
What time did Al Queda stand down the Air Force on the morning of September 11, 2001?
What time was the stand down order lifted?
What did Norman Schwartzkopf Senior do in Iran in 1953?
What are family values?
When does pattern re-cognition work for you?
I completely agree.
-PK
I'll just keep returning your attention to the content.
Who set fire to the Reichstag?
What time did Al Queda issue a stand-down order to all civilian, MILITARY and LAW-ENFORCEMENT aircraft on the morning of September 11, 2001?
What time was the stand down order lifted?
What was the name of the book read by the "commander in chief" for 25 minutes while New York burned?
Was the C-130 observed flying directly above the plane that hit the Pentagon "as if to prevent two planes from appearing on radar" the same one that was observed in the vicinity of the Flight 93 impact site?
How many Pentagon employees reported the smell of cordite following explosions at the Pentagon?
What did Norman Schwartzkopf Senior do in Iran in 1953?
What did Norman Schwartzkopf Jnr do in Iraq in 1991?
What are family values?
When does pattern re-cognition work for you?
During the development of his interpretive biomachinery in the United States, Baruch was taught that he was a chosen-one -- a special warrior selected by the deity to perform special functions on earth.
One of these functions was the restoration of a short-lived deity-covenented kingdom in the Middle East that was extinguished over 2000 years ago.
To perform this chosen function, Baruch assumed his Judenstaat-sanctioned U.S. taxpayer funded right to return to the "promised land" to kill goyim.
And goyim did he kill.
quote:
====================
A few days before Baruch's preemptive strike in the Me'arat Hamachpela...
--Baruchs sweet parents
=====================
"Dr. Baruch Goldstein, a resident of Kiryat Arba, opened fire with a Galil assault rifle on Muslim worshippers at the Machpelah Cave, murdering 29 and wounding 125."
quote:
================
"A MILLION ARABS ARE NOT WORTH ONE JEWISH FINGERNAIL."
Rabbi Perin in his eulogy at the funeral of Baruch Goldstein
================
Shared values.
Family values.
=========================
Confused
Logic Minder
Mossad W. Rockefeller IV
Debater
Truth Teller
big deal
P Michel
Abu
historic reality
Know Islam
CannonRay
so we have of controlling congress
"Leftist"
gehrig
We'll never give up!
Groan
antifa
Bob
=================================
Riders of the Bandwagon Fallacy trying to create the Illusion of critical mass.
But it isn't working...
Unfortunately, the cult of the chosen warriors have a pltehtora of extremely loud and venemous bandwaggon riders.
The GOP have them too - we call them Freepers.
Around a dozen of them turned up for the pro-war rally...
I'm being sarcastic, in case you can't tell. You damn jerks.