4 Comments
User's avatar
mk68's avatar

Thank you, Larry. Along with the wholly unconstitutional assault on free speech at US universities, the more general hysteria about supposedly widespread and growing anti-semitism seems to be gathering pace. Not only Pam Bondi as AG is vigorously pushing this line, but Fox News is now running a continuing search for evidence of this supposed fact. Witkoff either knows he has to play nice whilst disguising actions that don’t fit this particular narrative, or he is fully on board with it. I’m going with the latter, as evidence of this administration’s three dimensional chess skills is decreasing by the second. But please somebody prove me wrong.

This selective ’identification’ and deliberate smearing of critics of Zionism was employed relentlessly to destroy Jeremy Corbyn and his supporters as a legitimate political voice in Britain. Starmer was engineered into place as Corbyn’s successor and today ensures both ideological and political discipline ”ruthlessly” (a favourite word of his) as he facilitates the deaths of Palestinians, Syrians and Ukrainians as the blood sacrifices ”necessary” in the service of a dying, parasitical entity known as the collective West.

Expand full comment
Dave El's avatar

Trump (Israel) to Hamas 'throw down your weapons' Hamas to Trump 'Israel first'.

Expand full comment
EagleHorse5's avatar

Good Facts!!

Expand full comment
Nakayama's avatar

There is no doubt that the USA is among the best-educated countries in the world, and historically the administrations after WW2 are all well staffed with PhDs from Ivy League universities. It is also true that one cannot pre-qualify presidential candidates to have military, diplomatic, or intelligence backgrounds. Therefore experts have to help mold the policies yet we see ample evidence during the Covid period that experts can be very biased. If the nation cannot allow someone with a better common sense to come forward as a presidential candidate, then it is necessary to shrink the size and power of the federal government such that its ability to cause national wreck is reduced. Interestingly, I have met quite a few computer engineers well versed in such national and international policy issues and trade-offs, yet none of them showed any slightest interest in joining national or local politics. I am sure similar situations exist in other professions. Perhaps there is something built-in inside democracy, or at least the one-person-one-vote democracy to go against meritocracy.

Expand full comment