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timosman
10-08-2017, 03:55 PM
https://www.counterpunch.org/2016/09/07/has-israel-effectively-colonized-the-united-states/


SEPTEMBER 7, 2016 by BADRUDDIN KHAN

We normally think of colonizers as large countries, and the colonized as smaller and weaker nations. But this is not always the case. Colonization does not require occupation. It merely requires the subjugation of the colonized. With ambition, superior information and calculation, and the right mindset, smaller nations can (and have in the past) colonized and dominated larger and nominally more powerful countries.

India was successfully colonized by tiny Britain in the 18th century. The vehicle for colonization was the East India Company. It was only after the Indian mutiny that Britain acted directly and sent in troops to establish the British Raj. For the next 200 years India was drained of its wealth, its economy was restructured to support England’s needs and global ambitions, and its people militarized to fight and die on behalf of the British crown. The Indian leaders who remained were willing participants in this venture; those who felt otherwise were destroyed or marginalized.

In a similar vein, Israel today is in the process of colonizing the United States, which is vital to its global projection and exercise of power. The steps Israel is taking are visible to all (as was the case with British designs on India) and yet it is remarkably difficult to connect the dots while such a takeover is in process. Or, to do anything about it.

Colonization does not mean total control of everything

It means total control of what matters. The British were interested in Indian wealth, and a standing army of Indians willing to die for their wars. They couldn’t care less about India’s internal petty politics that did not directly or indirectly impact their mission. An effective “divide and conquer” strategy pit Indians against each other and discouraged any kind of coordinated response, or sedition. The British leveraged their “outsider advantage” to objectively collect data with which to calculate and coordinate which Indian princes to support in battles, and which to connive with. Like pieces on a chessboard, Indian leaders exhausted themselves through internal battles, and were prevailed to seek cover provided by the British. Small amounts of leverage can change outcomes (as the Israeli lobby AIPAC has shown, in its path to dominating Congress and regional/local US politics), and over the years the British were able control and align India to the British crown. Less than 10,000 English controlled colonial India, which at that time had a population of 300 million.

It is instructive to note that while there were relatively few white Englishmen, a class of local “brown sahibs” was developed, to actually run things. This elite class was educated in English ways, and rewarded monetarily and through social stature. Britain was too small a country to ultimately matter by itself, but by leveraging India the English could pursue their global ambitions. India was the “Jewel in the (British) Crown”.

Today, Israel has effective control of US policy in the Mideast, and similar goals. Much has already been written about Israel’s control of Congress. Israel is now edging towards control over the US Executive Branch, with both presidential candidates supported by billionaires whose #1 agenda is Israel (Saban and Adelson). The Supreme Court will be one-third Jewish, and justices have community ties and families. As Israel demonstrated through its successful intimidation of Judge Goldstone, jurists are human and everyone has their price.

Israel’s “occupation force” in the US has long included AIPAC as well as the dense network of community organizations at the State and local levels. Through relationships that have been developed over years and with unlimited funds at their disposal, the “Israel Lobby” ensures that votes go the right way, and that opponents are squashed when Israel demands unity. In 2003 at the onset of George Bush’s Iraq war this occupation force was multiplied through the inclusion of Christian Zionists.

Critics of the Israel Lobby are marginalized by whatever means available, including being called anti-Semitic. The Lobby has been effective in securing massive aid packages for Israel even though Israel’s per-capita GDP exceeds that of several European nations. Israeli insiders permeate the US government, and it is US policy that there be “no light” between the countries so that where Israel is concerned there is no debate. Israel’s top priorities are the top priorities of the US. There are of course instances where this does not happen (such as, Iran) but the direction points to a tighter colonial noose in the years ahead.

The media matters: establishing beliefs and narratives

The colonizer must be a “Sacred Object” above criticism or objective review, and dangerous critics must be either destroyed or marginalized. No Englishman in India spoke of the mother country and its ways with anything other than reverence, even though during periods of the British Raj England was in turmoil. Within England there was a free press and active debate; but this was not permitted in India, about Britain. The only acceptable posture was that of reverence.

Today Israel has a free press, and it is easy to read translations of the Hebrew language press. Israeli commentators compare Netanyahu to Hitler, Israel is called a racist apartheid state based on evidence, and the extreme violence against and ongoing abuse of Palestinians is well documented. But, these same conversations are forbidden in the US. No newspaper would report them, nor are they permitted in polite company. Transgressors are labeled anti-Semitic, whether Jewish or not.

In the US today, boycotts are seen as a permitted non-violent form of free speech. Citizens have the right to boycott whatever they want from wherever they want without risk of penalty. The sole exception is Israel.

Exceptionalism

The British conquests were “for God and country”, and therefore justified. The British were superior, the natives inferior. This setup the moral justification for the mayhem wrought by the British as they colonized Asia and the Mideast. At that time, all men were not born equal, and it took the US Constitution to establish that self-evident fact.

Israel is seeking to revert to those days, by acting as though Arab lives are inferior, and (more recently) promoting Islamophobia to serve their Christian Zionism wing. In 2003, uber Zionist Bernard Lewis posed as “Arab expert” and advised president Bush that the only language Arabs understood was force. This helped to justify the attack on Iraq, as part of a neocon plan to “creatively destroy” the sovereign Arab states in Israel’s neighborhood, to facilitate Israel’s dominance. The Nazis at Nuremberg were shown greater respect than Saddam and his Ba’at leadership, and the contempt for Arabs was in full display.

Today, Israeli Jews are in the process of destroying Palestinian society and erasing Palestinian culture, with impunity. Churches and mosques are both being destroyed, though Israel would prefer to keep the spotlight on mosques, to fan a religious war between Islam on one side, and Christians and Jews on the other.

While the Israeli press records and debates Israel’s bad behavior, Americans are forbidden to publicly debate Israeli behavior critically.

Three Recent Examples:

1/ During the Congressional debate around the Iran deal president Obama had negotiated, Senator Chuck Schumer said he would vote “against”…not because of any independent analysis, but because this is what Netanyahu wanted. In other words, he publically said that he would follow the Israeli prime ministers’ direction, over that of his own president. Because, as he said, he was “guardian of Israel”.

A sitting US senator proclaimed allegiance to a foreign country, and nobody asked him to resign!

2/ The Israeli Prime Minister addresses the full US Congress to lobby against the Iran nuclear deal. When the deal does go through, Israel demands more US aid! And, is likely to get it. One can try various definitions of “blackmail” to see which one fits.

The US president is impotent in dealing with Israel. The so-called “pro Israel lobby” effectively functions like an agent of Israel. The Israel lobby is playing the role of the East India Company, in Britain’s colonization of India.

3/ The Israel Lobby interferes massively in US foreign policy in the region. The “mainstream” media such as NYT spins events to reflect Israel’s views (bureau chiefs are typically Jewish and resident in Israel). The Iraq war cost $1 trillion+ and cost thousands of US lives, created ISIS, and was pushed by the Lobby. Israel benefits from the distraction.

The colonization of the US by Israel is becoming increasingly explicit. It is now increasingly seen as “normal” to have a double standard: one for Israel, another for the rest of the world. The boycott-Israel movement is an example of that: you can boycott anything or anyone, but not Israel. This is true power, and the face of colonization.

Raginfridus
10-08-2017, 09:25 PM
Ask the average Evangelical if they support Israel and you get a "yeah" or a bewildered "of course" look. Ask why, and if you get an answer its, "the bible says..." So yeah, Israel have conquered America, and Zionazis have been going strong for at least 70 years, more like 80 now (I forget its almost 2020).

"And maybe my life spent in a New Jersey-New York/Bay Area-L.A. pro-Semitic cocoon has left me naive. But I don't care if Americans think we're running the news media, Hollywood, Wall Street or the government. I just care that we get to keep running them."
- Joel Stein, LA TIMES

enhanced_deficit
10-09-2017, 11:12 AM
C-word might be tad bit too strong but Israeli lobby and some of its agents seems to have too much influence on our politics, foreign policy, wars policy, foreign aid etc still even in the post 9/11 world.

Publisher of the ‘Atlanta Jewish Times’ suggests Mossad should assassinate Obama (http://mondoweiss.net/2012/01/publisher-of-the-atlanta-jewish-times-suggests-mossad-should-assassinate-obama.html)
Adam Horowitz on January 20, 2012

Audio of Hillary Clinton Proposing Palestinian Election Rigging (http://www.ronpaulforums.com/showthread.php?503001)


Hollywood Studios blacklist Penelope Cruz over Gaza genocide letter (http://www.ronpaulforums.com/showthread.php?457528-Hollywood-neocons-fight-back-Studios-blacklist-Penelope-Cruz-over-Gaza-genocide-letter&)

http://cdn04.cdn.justjared.com/wp-content/uploads/2006/04/will_smith_israel/will-smith-jerusalem-israel08.jpg (http://www.google.com/url?sa=i&source=images&cd=&cad=rja&uact=8&docid=8w4ROlT68sRFCM&tbnid=VwZFcklTS0QRYM:&ved=0CAgQjRw&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.justjared.com%2Fphoto-gallery%2F280951%2Fwill-smith-jerusalem-israel08%2Ffullsize%2F&ei=zHmtU4zSJKnJsASLkYGgCg&psig=AFQjCNHQCQ7TOuBYFvHZu4Cy5YxBkC6Mlw&ust=1403964236702463)

http://www.radioislam.org/islam/english/jewishp/usa/arnold_channukah.jpg

Tywysog Cymru
10-09-2017, 11:22 AM
No, Israel doesn't control our foreign policy any more than South Korea does.

timosman
10-09-2017, 11:28 AM
No, Israel doesn't control our foreign policy any more than South Korea does.

You didn't see the last example in the article(3/)? :confused:

Raginfridus
10-09-2017, 12:09 PM
No, Israel doesn't control our foreign policy any more than South Korea does.And perhaps Israel don't need to with so many voters who believe Israel is chosen by gawd and the most powerful lobby in DC to represent them. Who needs colonists when money and religion do the job?

Danke
10-09-2017, 12:34 PM
No, Israel doesn't control our foreign policy any more than South Korea does.


LOL

shakey1
10-09-2017, 12:56 PM
oy vey

Brian4Liberty
10-09-2017, 11:14 PM
No, Israel doesn't control our foreign policy any more than South Korea does.

About NoKo:


The North Korean threat to Israel

Although Israel faces numerous threats at home and abroad, one of our most unsung enemies is the one that is perhaps furthest away: Kim Jong Un’s dictatorial regime in North Korea.

Nearly 8,000 km separate Jerusalem from Pyongyang, but that hasn’t stopped the North Korean government from going out of its way to side with Israel’s foes, regularly providing them with military training and support and even selling them nuclear know-how and ballistic missile technology.

Indeed, North Korea is directly linked to just about every menace facing Israel, and it is time for the Jewish state to do something about this threat.
...
Clearly, North Korean poses a threat to the Jewish state. By backing Hamas and Hezbollah, Pyongyang has Jewish blood on its hands. And by advancing the Iranian and Syrian nuclear programs, it has contributed to the destabilization of the entire Middle East.

It is therefore essential that Israel take a more forceful public stand against the Kim regime.
...
For however distant it might seem, Kim Jong Un’s irascible regime is clearly out to hurt the Jewish state.
...
More: http://www.jpost.com/Opinion/Fundamentally-Freund-The-North-Korean-threat-to-Israel-413133


Why Israel should care about North Korea

Since its rebirth in 1948, Israel has never had a deficit of enemies bent on her destruction. With Hamas, Hezbollah and Iran, why should Israel care about North Korea?

North Korea and Israel are located at the opposite ends of the Asian continent, yet the North Korean Communist dictatorship constitutes a serious threat against the Jewish state through its alliance with Iran.
...
The threats on Israel’s borders are sustained by the Iranian-North Korean alliance. More than ever before, America and Israel are fighting shoulder to shoulder against common enemies in the Middle East and on the Korean peninsula. Rogue regimes have expiration dates and the Iranian and North Korean regimes will not last forever. The fall of the Iranian and North Korean regimes will severely weaken the global terror network and dramatically enhance the chances of a genuine world peace.
...
More: https://worldisraelnews.com/analysis-why-israel-should-care-about-north-korea/



A Brief History of Tensions Between Israel and North Korea

Even though public statements condemning Israel like the one issued by the DPRK foreign ministry last week are comparatively rare, hostility toward Israel has been a consistent feature of North Korean foreign policy since the early stages of the Cold War. Under founding leader Kim Il-sung, Pyongyang frequently sought to delegitimize Israel by describing it as a U.S.-backed “imperial satellite.”

North Korea also actively supported Arab countries in their military operations against Israel. During the 1973 Yom Kippur War, the DPRK sent 20 pilots and 19 non-combat personnel to Egypt. North Korean pilots staffed Egyptian MIG-21s during the 1973 war, and the Egyptian air force requested the DPRK’s technical expertise as Cairo attempted to neutralize the offensive capabilities of Israeli F-4 planes.

During the 1980s, North Korea shifted away from direct military opposition to Israel in favor of arms and military technology sales to Israel’s enemies in the Middle East. The DPRK exported missiles to Iran, Syria, and Libya and assisted both Syria and Iran in their attempts to develop nuclear weapon capabilities.

Even though these arms sales can be largely explained by economic imperatives, North Korea’s assistance to countries seeking to counter Israel’s nuclear deterrent has also been shaped by Pyongyang’s belief that sovereign states have the right to develop nuclear weapons without external interference.

North Korean policymakers believe that the West’s support for Israel’s nuclear weapon capabilities, and simultaneous condemnations of anti-Western countries seeking nuclear weapons, constitutes a double standard. Pyongyang’s desire to rectify this double standard is a major driver of North Korea’s belligerent opposition to Israel.

In addition to threatening Israel’s security, the DPRK has antagonized Jerusalem by expressing solidarity with the Palestinian cause. In 1988, North Korea announced its support for a Palestinian state that subsumed Israel into its borders, and endorsed the handover of the Golan Heights to Syria. The North Korean government’s arms supplies to the Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO) entrenched a deep-rooted alliance between Pyongyang and Palestinian nationalists, which persists to this day.

Even though North Korea can no longer match its pro-Palestinian rhetoric with military support, the DPRK remains one of Israel’s most strident international critics. North Korean officials have frequently described Israel’s military operations in Gaza as “crimes against humanity,” and publicly condemned Israel’s killings of civilians during the 2008-09 Gaza war, 2010 Gaza flotilla raid, and 2014 Israel-Gaza conflict.

North Korea’s fierce opposition to Israel’s right to exist and conduct in the Palestinian territories has not gone unnoticed in the Arab world. On April 30, Hamas praised the North Korean regime for its threatening rhetoric toward Israel, and thanked the DPRK for its solidarity with the Palestinian people against “Israeli occupation.” This positive reinforcement suggests that North Korea is unlikely to moderate or reconsider its militantly anti-Israel foreign policy stance in the near future.
...
More: https://thediplomat.com/2017/05/why-did-north-korea-just-threaten-israel/

ds21089
10-10-2017, 12:45 PM
No, Israel doesn't control our foreign policy any more than South Korea does.

Thank you for the laugh. I needed a good chuckle.

enhanced_deficit
10-10-2017, 02:24 PM
No, Israel doesn't control our foreign policy any more than South Korea does.

Are you seriously saying that Israeli lobby and S.Korean lobby in America have equal control/influence over US policies?

Gumba of Liberty
10-10-2017, 07:20 PM
“Go to confession.”

“Don’t eat meat on Fridays.”

“God curses thoughs that curse Israeli.”

Things that Mom Says

Tywysog Cymru
10-11-2017, 12:00 PM
While Israel has a lot of influence in the US, the US has a lot of influence in Israel. IIRC the Obama administration tried to influence elections in Israel.

surf
10-11-2017, 12:15 PM
it's called "outsourcing"