In yet another staggering display of Jewish chutzpah, the Jewish Supremacist-owned New Yorker
magazine has published a detailed and lengthy exposition on how exactly
the Jewish Lobby controls the US Congress and Senate, even giving
actual—and sometimes shocking—examples of this power at work.
The New Yorker magazine—owned by
Jewish Supremacist Samuel Irving Newhouse—who, along with his brother
Donald, owns Advance Publications, whose holdings include the worldwide
Condé Nast publications—has carried the article in its September 2014 issue,
supposedly written to answer the question “The lobbying group AIPAC has
consistently fought the Obama Administration on policy. Is it now
losing influence?”
The lengthy article does not ultimately
answer its own question, most likely because the evidence that it then
amasses, shows incontrovertibly that the American Israel Public Action
Committee (AIPAC) completely controls Congress through its ability to
fund the campaigns of all would-be Congressmen and Senators—from both
parties.
The article starts off by boasting with the astonishing revelation that the most recent additional $225 Million “in emergency aid to Israel” for the “Iron Dome” system was passed almost in secret by just five (5) US Senators!
The article explains:
On July
22nd, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel had sent a letter to Harry Reid, the
Senate Majority Leader, seeking an immediate payment of $225 million. .
. The Senate, preparing for its August recess, hastened to vote on the
Iron Dome funding. . . At first, the appropriation was bundled into an
emergency bill that also included money to address the underage refugees
flooding across the Mexican border.
But, with
only a few days left before the break began, that bill got mired in a
partisan fight. . . The next morning, with the halls of the Senate all
but empty, an unusual session was convened so that McConnell and Reid
could try again to pass the bill; Tim Kaine was also there, along with
the Republicans John McCain and Lindsey Graham.
“There were
five senators present and literally no one else!” the staffer said.
“They reintroduced it and passed it. This was one of the more amazing
feats, for AIPAC.”
Thus even the allocation of nearly a
quarter of a billion dollars of US taxpayers’ money is made almost
behind closed doors—at AIPAC’s demand.
The New Yorker then boasts
article then that an AIPAC reception during its annual policy conference
draws most congressmen and senators than any other government meeting
except a joint session of Congress or a State of Union address:
AIPAC is
prideful about its influence. Its promotional literature points out
that a reception during its annual policy conference, in Washington,
“will be attended by more members of Congress than almost any other
event, except for a joint session of Congress or a State of the Union
address.”
The article then reveals exactly how the
Jewish Lobby accomplishes such control, by making sure that anybody
seeking office has to get AIPAC approval before they even start.
Thomas Dine.
Quoting Jewish Supremacist Thomas Dine, a former executive director of AIPAC, the New Yorker reveals that AIPAC is always careful to stay in the background while arranging funding for its candidates:
“We made
the decision to be one step removed,” Dine said. “Orrin Hatch once said,
‘Dine, your genius is to play an invisible bass drum, and the Jews hear
it when you play it.’ ”
Because of their regional funding
system—where the money collected to fund pro-Israeli candidates is
dispersed through a number of Political Action Committees, the New
Yorker says that it is “difficult to track the amount of money they
channel to political candidates.
This issue aside, the New Yorker continues:
But
everybody in Congress recognizes its [AIPAC’s] influence in elections,
and the effect is evident. . . AIPAC’s hold on Congress has become
institutionalized.
“If you have
a dream about running for office, AIPAC calls you,” one House member
said. Certainly, it’s a rarity when someone undertakes a campaign for
the House or the Senate today without hearing from AIPAC.
In 1996,
Brian Baird, a psychologist from Seattle, decided to run for Congress.
Local Democrats asked if he had thought about what he was going to say
to AIPAC.
“The
difficult reality is this: in order to get elected to Congress, if
you’re not independently wealthy, you have to raise a lot of money. And
you learn pretty quickly that, if AIPAC is on your side, you can do
that. They come to you and say, ‘We’d be happy to host
ten-thousand-dollar fund-raisers for you, and let us help write your
annual letter, and please come to this multi-thousand-person dinner.’ ”
Baird
continued, “Any member of Congress knows that AIPAC is associated
indirectly with significant amounts of campaign spending if you’re with
them, and significant amounts against you if you’re not with them.”
For Baird,
AIPAC-connected money amounted to about two hundred thousand dollars in
each of his races—“and that’s two hundred thousand going your way,
versus the other way: a four-hundred-thousand-dollar swing.”
Baird, who is now retired from Congress, continued:
The contributions, as with many interest groups, come with a great deal of tactical input.
“The AIPAC
people do a very good job of ‘informing’ you about the issues. It
literally gets down to ‘No, we don’t say it that way, we say it this
way.’ Always phrased as a friendly suggestion—but it’s pretty clear you
don’t want to say ‘occupied territories’! There’s a whole complex
semantic code you learn. . . . After a while, you find yourself saying
and repeating it as if it were fact.”
Baird also said that soon after taking office, he went on a
“[V]irtually
obligatory” trip to Israel: a freshman ritual in which
everything—business-class flights, accommodations at the King David or
the Citadel—all paid for by AIPAC.
When an AIPAC-sponsored resolution to
condemn a UN report on the atrocity was introduced in the House, and
three hundred and forty-four members voted in favor of the Jewish
Lobby’s demands. Baird told the New Yorker:
When we had
the vote, I said, ‘We have member after member coming to the floor to
vote on a resolution they’ve never read, about a report they’ve never
seen, in a place they’ve never been.’
When key
votes are cast, the question on the House floor, troublingly, is often
not ‘What is the right thing to do for the United States of America?’
but ‘How is AIPAC going to score this?’
There’s such
a conundrum here, of believing that you’re supporting Israel, when
you’re actually backing policies that are antithetical to its highest
values and, ultimately, destructive for the country.
In addition to controlling Congressmen while in office, the New Yorker reveals, the power of the Jewish Lobby extends to their post political career as well.
Staff members fret about whether AIPAC will prevent them from getting a good consulting job when they leave government.
“You just
hear the name!” a Senate aide said. “You hear that they are involved and
everyone’s ears perk up and their mood changes, and they start to fall
in line in a certain way.”
Just like the Jewish Supremacist boasts about how they control the media, or Hollywood,
this frank admission about how the Jewish Lobby controls the government
of the United States will not be condemned by the ADL, SPLC or other
Jewish organizations as “antisemitic” –because it is Jews making the
claims.
If however, any non-Jew were to write
such an article, these Jewish pressure groups would be screaming for
blood—because no-one except Jews can write about Jewish power.
It is the old rule: one set of standards for Jews, another set for non-Jews.
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