I don't think all Jews are plotting against "us" whatever "us" means. However, the most revealing thing I ever read came out of the Weekly Standard right after Obama was elected and everyone was in the throes of the "Arab Spring" and greeting it with optimism. I never did.
Bill Kristol (I believe) said something along the lines of trying to get as many Muslims into the U.S. as possible in order to create a reformed Islam that could then be exported back to the Middle East. Thus, making the Middle East more peaceful and safe for Israel. Kristol also intoned that it was his view that the U.S. had "moderated" Christianity and made a much more tolerable Christianity that was as interested in converting the world. I think Kristol's view of both Christianity and Islam is fatally flawed. It's the same flaw that Bernard Lewis (also Jewish) wrote about in his book "What Went Wrong" which was published right before 9/11 attacks. He said that the problem was Islam was that it was like Christianity and mixed politics with religion and created theocracies. That isn't my opinion. My opinion is that Islam is a lot like Judaism - dietary laws, lots of laws about sexual morality for the purpose of transmitting the faith, not morality or health, law givers at the center of the religion, explicit intolerance for others and promotes extreme in group preferences, etc.
That article turned me against the Weekly Standard and Bill Kristol. I ended my subscription. I ended my subscription to the National Review when they came out with their anti Trump edition right before Jonah Goldberg moderated a Presidential debate.
I don't have a problem with Israel and I do think it's the most sane nation in the Middle East and whether you like it or not, Israel is an ally but not one I'd trust as much as Canada or Australia or even, that cesspool of wokist rot, the UK. The problem is that American Jews don't really identify as Americans as much as they do as a subset of Judaism that lives in America.
From a NYTimes interview with Alex Soros, son of the infamous George:
Alex told me that for many years, his father had not been eager to advertise his Judaism because “this was something he was almost killed for.” But he had always “identified firstly as a Jew,” and his philanthropy was ultimately an expression of his Jewish identity, in that he felt a solidarity with other minority groups and also because he recognized that a Jew could only truly be safe in a world in which all minorities were protected. Explaining his father’s motives, he said, “The reason you fight for an open society is because that’s the only society that you can live in, as a Jew
That's interesting. The implications of that sort of thinking are vast. It's a deliberate plot to make being a minority the summit of one's existence. That's why more and more minority groups are being dreamed up, I imagine.
I don't think all Jews are plotting against "us" whatever "us" means. However, the most revealing thing I ever read came out of the Weekly Standard right after Obama was elected and everyone was in the throes of the "Arab Spring" and greeting it with optimism. I never did.
Bill Kristol (I believe) said something along the lines of trying to get as many Muslims into the U.S. as possible in order to create a reformed Islam that could then be exported back to the Middle East. Thus, making the Middle East more peaceful and safe for Israel. Kristol also intoned that it was his view that the U.S. had "moderated" Christianity and made a much more tolerable Christianity that was as interested in converting the world. I think Kristol's view of both Christianity and Islam is fatally flawed. It's the same flaw that Bernard Lewis (also Jewish) wrote about in his book "What Went Wrong" which was published right before 9/11 attacks. He said that the problem was Islam was that it was like Christianity and mixed politics with religion and created theocracies. That isn't my opinion. My opinion is that Islam is a lot like Judaism - dietary laws, lots of laws about sexual morality for the purpose of transmitting the faith, not morality or health, law givers at the center of the religion, explicit intolerance for others and promotes extreme in group preferences, etc.
That article turned me against the Weekly Standard and Bill Kristol. I ended my subscription. I ended my subscription to the National Review when they came out with their anti Trump edition right before Jonah Goldberg moderated a Presidential debate.
I don't have a problem with Israel and I do think it's the most sane nation in the Middle East and whether you like it or not, Israel is an ally but not one I'd trust as much as Canada or Australia or even, that cesspool of wokist rot, the UK. The problem is that American Jews don't really identify as Americans as much as they do as a subset of Judaism that lives in America.
From a NYTimes interview with Alex Soros, son of the infamous George:
Alex told me that for many years, his father had not been eager to advertise his Judaism because “this was something he was almost killed for.” But he had always “identified firstly as a Jew,” and his philanthropy was ultimately an expression of his Jewish identity, in that he felt a solidarity with other minority groups and also because he recognized that a Jew could only truly be safe in a world in which all minorities were protected. Explaining his father’s motives, he said, “The reason you fight for an open society is because that’s the only society that you can live in, as a Jew
http://archive.is/bJhw3#selection-753.597-753.1187
That's interesting. The implications of that sort of thinking are vast. It's a deliberate plot to make being a minority the summit of one's existence. That's why more and more minority groups are being dreamed up, I imagine.
Now you're getting it
yeah, I'm no fun at parties either.