This Occupation is Brought to You by A Pattern of Racial Bigotry
by James M Wall
Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, Chair of the Foreign Affairs Committee of the US Congress, is withholding basic health care from children who live in the world’s largest outdoor prison, the Palestinian Occupied Territories.
Specifically, Congresswoman Ros-Lehtinen (R-Fla.) (at left) “is keeping her House of Representatives committee from considering approval of $192 million in humanitarian program assistance”.
JTA, a Jewish news agency, reports:
The Americans for Peace Now website is reporting that other House Republicans also are holding the money, and that Republicans in the House and Senate are holding $150 million in security assistance to the Palestinian Authority.
Republicans and Democrats have warned that such money may be withheld if the Palestinians do not pull back from their attempt to gain statehood recognition through the United Nations and absent peace talks with Israel.
If this were happening in an American community, Child Welfare agencies would descend on the offices and homes of these American adults and demand that they release the children from an unsafe and unhealthy environment. They might even move to arrest some of the leaders, including Florida Congresswoman Ros Lethiene.
Unfortunately, for Palestinians in need of this assistance, there are no officials with authority to arrest members of the US House who are eager to punish Palestinians for their bold attempt to break the bonds of Occupation.
In another corner of the United Nations complex, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has warned the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), that it should “think again” before granting Palestinians membership to the international agency. Palestinians are seeking to join UNESCO as a part of their diplomatic campaign for statehood.
Forty out of 58 UNESCO board members now support the Palestinian request. The US is one of four members opposing membership. The request will be voted on at the end of the month. Secretary Clinton insists that “the decision about status must be made in the United Nations and not in auxiliary groups that are subsidiary to the United Nations”.
The US currently pays 22% of UNESCO’s funding. The BBC reports:
US Republican Congresswoman Kay Granger, who chairs the sub-committee that disburses US money for diplomatic purposes, said in a statement she would “advocate for all funding to be cut off”.
What Republican Congress members Ros-Lehtinen and Granger, and Secretary Clinton, are saying, is that the path to Palestinian freedom lies entirely in the hands of the Israeli Zionist government “through negotiations”.
These US power brokers are demanding that the Palestinians “negotiate” with Prime Minister Netanyahu. This would not be a negotiation for freedom, it would be a surrender to the Israeli government, whose leaders have demonstrated consistently that they fully intend to control every inch of land from the Jordan River to the Mediterranean Sea.
Why does the US Congress, the US President, the mainstream media, and the leaders of the American religious communities, tolerate this violation of this country’s standards of fairness and compassion?
The answer is simple: The decision makers in these US institutions have been manipulated into sanctioning the racial bigotry that has allowed the Zionist leaders of the state of Israel to corrupt American foreign policy.
To be sure, there was much indigenous material to work with in this corruption project. Descendants of the European settlers who invaded what became the United States of America, have long been in the grip of racial bigotry. The enemy “out there” in the untamed wilderness were natives of this land who resisted the presence of white settlers when it became apparent that their intention was to conquer, not to share, the land.
The settler-pioneers who formed the United States had to live with what they had done. They justified their conduct by lying to themselves. They did this by declaring the Big Lie, that they were superior to the people whose land they conquered.
The modern state of Israel was born in the grip of this same Big Lie. The new state was created in the aftermath of the horrors of the Holocaust, and mixed with a “divine right” found in only one interpretation of the Hebrew scriptures which offers a specific way of reading the scriptures to manipulate a religious mythic history into a bigoted ethnic cleansing and the subsequent military occupation of the Palestinian people.
In his dramatic speech delivered to the US Congress on May 24, 2011, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, confirmed his control over the US Congress as he repeated the myth of “his” ancient people as validation for a modern land grab.
The Big Lie of racial superiority in the speech evoked 29 standing ovations from the combined US House and Senate membership, a shameful moment in American history.
The unvarnished truth is that shared racial bigotry, hidden and/or embraced, and ignorance of the audience, shaped the speech delivered by Netanyahu and cheered by the US Congress. Here is a sample from the Prime Minister’s speech:
This is not easy for me. I recognize that in a genuine peace, we will be required to give up parts of the Jewish homeland. In Judea and Samaria, the Jewish people are not foreign occupiers. We are not the British in India. We are not the Belgians in the Congo.
This is the land of our forefathers, the Land of Israel, to which Abraham brought the idea of one God, where David set out to confront Goliath, and where Isaiah saw a vision of eternal peace. No distortion of history can deny the four thousand year old bond, between the Jewish people and the Jewish land.
These words from Netanyahu are easily refuted, They are also rooted in the Big Lie, which grants nonexistent rights to a people who declare themselves to be superior on racial and/or religious grounds.
It is hard to imagine that a majority of the congressional members who cheered Netanyahu’s speech believe in, or even understand, the biblical literalism that stands behind his biblical shaping of an ancient history. Let us be gracious for a moment: Netanyahu has every right to believe his version of the Hebrew scriptures.
He does not have a right to impose this belief on those of us who do not believe in his brand of biblical literalism used for political purposes.
Do those members who cheered and stomped their feet know what they were endorsing? Would more than a handful of them be able to find the Bedouin Arab village of Tuba-Zangariya on a map of northern Israel, where Jewish extremists recently set fire to a local mosque, the most recent example of Israeli racial bigotry in action.
Would they care? These legislators and their fellow citizens, are easily manipulated by Israeli hasbara (propaganda) campaigns that employ the fear of being charged by others as bigots. Zionists know they hold a tool of control over US culture: The dreaded fear of being accused of anti-semitism.
New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof, who writes largely about world poverty, will, on occasion, bring his compassion into the Palestinian arena. In a recent column he asks: “Is Israel Its Own Worst Enemy?” .
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is isolating his country, and, to be blunt, his hard line on settlements seems like a national suicide policy.
Nothing is more corrosive than Israel’s growth of settlements because they erode hope of a peace agreement in the future. Mr. Netanyahu’s latest misstep came after the Obama administration humiliated itself by making a full-court diplomatic press to block Palestinian statehood at the United Nations.
At a time when President Obama had a few other things on his plate — averting a global economic meltdown, for example — the United States frittered good will by threatening to veto the Palestinian statehood that everybody claims to favor.
With that diplomatic fight at the United Nations under way, Israel last week announced plans for 1,100 new housing units in a part of Jerusalem outside its pre-1967 borders. Instead of showing appreciation to President Obama, Mr. Netanyahu thumbed him in the eye.
This is a strong indictment of Netanyahu, employing a clarity of thought that rarely reaches the American public. Kristof expects his column will evoke what he calls “a torrent of angry responses”:
I realize that many insist that Jerusalem must all belong to Israel in any peace deal anyway, so new settlements there don’t count. But, if that’s your position, then you can kiss any peace deal goodbye. Every negotiator knows the framework of a peace agreement — 1967 borders with land swaps, Jerusalem as the capital of both Israeli and Palestinian states, only a token right of return — and insistence on a completely Israeli Jerusalem simply means no peace agreement ever.
For me, Kristof makes the “final agreement” overly simplistic. He also grants far more to Israel than he should, but his strong criticism of Netanyahu is a refreshing addition to the pages of the New York Times.
Israel has thus far been successful in its pattern of racial bigotry first, by placing the Palestinian population behind the prison walls of a military Occupation. And second, by manipulating an American foreign policy that follows Zionist dictates.
Did we go to war against Iraq and Afghanistan because we believed the lies of the Bush Administration? In part we did, but it was also a military decision influenced by the goals of the State of Israel and those supporters of Israel in the US, who believe the US and Israel have a common mission to make the world safe for Israeli and American expansionist control.
Former Senator Charles Percy, of Illinois, died September 17, 2011.. Percy was one of the last of that dying breed, a “moderate” Republican. He lost his Senate seat in 1984 to then-Congressman Paul Simon, a liberal Democrat. Zionist forces supported a conservative Republican against Percy in the primary, branding him as pro-Palestinian because he had been open to the US government “talking with” Yasir Arafat.
That, of course, was forbidden. Arafat was an Israeli-designated “terrorist”, an “untouchable” for American politicians. Later, Arafat became a “partner” for peace and Israel allowed him to return to a headquarters in Gaza where he was expected to act as Israel’s “sheriff” for the Occupied Territories. Arafat lost his sheriff’s badge before he died. He was succeeded by Mahmoud Abbas, who at the time was deemed a more acceptable leader to Israel.
Another political leader who has suffered public condemnation by Zionist forces (AIPAC leading the charge) is former President Jimmy Carter, who fortunately, is still with us and continuing to whirl about the world on missions for peace and humanitarian causes. A good friend sent me an Inside Story Youtube video on Carter’s 2008 travels in the Middle East,
This 13-minute video is still pertinent as we watch the unfolding of the Palestinian effort to secure acceptance by the United Nations. Carter’s openness to Hamas in this video is an example of what enlightened American leaders could do if they broke their bonds of Israeli control.
Source: Wallwritings
James Wall is currently a Contributing Editor of The Christian Century magazine, based in Chicago, Illinois. From 1972 through 1999, he was editor and publisher of the Christian Century magazine. He has made more than 20 trips to that region as a journalist, during which he covered such events as Anwar Sadat’s 1977 trip to Jerusalem, and the 2006 Palestinian legislative election. He has interviewed, and written about, journalists, religious leaders, political leaders and private citizens in the region. Jim served for two years on active duty in the US Air Force, and three additional years in the USAF (inactive) reserve. He can be reached at: jameswall8@gmail.com.
Related interview:
A Recap of American driven Twenty Year ‘Peace Negotiations’ — by Nabil Shaath
ATTENTION READERS
We See The World From All Sides and Want YOU To Be Fully InformedIn fact, intentional disinformation is a disgraceful scourge in media today. So to assuage any possible errant incorrect information posted herein, we strongly encourage you to seek corroboration from other non-VT sources before forming an educated opinion.
About VT - Policies & Disclosures - Comment Policy