ed note–what else can be said, ladies and Gentile-men, other than oy vey, the suffocating hypocrisy…

Firsto, let’s just get this ship launched in the right direction–

The followers of Judah-ism, the ‘children of Israel’ as they just LOVE to refer to themselves, don’t give a good Goddamn about Ukraine. Ukraine is a CHRISTIAN country full of Gentiles whom the Jews accuse of playing a major role in the great Judaic ‘burnt offering’ known as the Hollerco$t about which NONE of us are allowed to forget. With every new ‘report’–real or contrived’–listing a number of dead Ukrainian civilians, the followers of Judah-ism, the ‘children of Israel’ as they love to refer to themselves, cheer, even if it is done silently in the same manner as they are commanded to spit when they hear the name of Jesus Christ and then whisper ‘may his name be blotted out’.

Furthermore, recall the fact that in EVERY SINGLE black mass/human sacrifice which the followers of Judah-ism, the ‘children of Israel’ as they just LOVE to call themselves, taking place against the defenseless people of Gaza, where thousands of innocent men, women, and children are bombed, incinerated, shot, have their homes collapsing on top of them, etc, the manner by which the ‘Jewish conscience’ that is supposed to be THE fountain of compassion, morality, etc, etc, etc, is not only silent on the Holocaust of Gentiles taking place, it is

CELEBRATED

Likewise with the black mass/acts of mass murder/human sacrifices taking place in Iraq, Libya, Afghanistan, etc, etc, etc.

HOWEVER, just like a stage actor capable of playing ANY role demanded of them at the moment, whenever Judea, Inc needs to put on its collective ‘compassion’ face in order to goad the Gentiles into fighting YET ANOTHER war that the ‘children of Israel’ have ginned up, well, suddenly, the vile, bloodthirsty vampire puts away the party hats, the champagne and the noisemakers that were being used in celebrating the mass murders taking place in the aforementioned locales and now everything becomes a lecturing sermon attacking the moral deficiencies of the Gentiles of the West in not sufficiently consigning its blood and treasure to fighting those wars which the followers of Judah-ism need fought for their long-term interests.

It has been stated here many, many times on this humble little informational endeavor, but we will say it again for the sake of posterity–

 

FISH SWIM, BIRDS FLY, AND JEWS LIE

David Horovitz, Times of Israel

It appeared to be over on the very first weekend.

Russia’s troops had entered Ukraine on three fronts on Thursday, February 24, in the largest ground offensive in Europe since World War II. By Friday, backed by devastating airstrikes on civilian areas, they seemed poised to enter and take over the capital, Kyiv.

The invasion had been widely anticipated, but the international community, led by the US, had chosen not to directly intervene. President Vladimir Putin was about to reincorporate Ukraine into a reviving Russian empire.

Two months later, that presumed historical narrative has played out very differently. With a national spirit and a military capacity that Putin had not dreamed he would confront, Ukraine has resisted Russia’s immense, brutal onslaught.

And the international community, led by the US, has been inspired by Ukraine’s astonishing resilience to gradually provide it with some of the weapons it needs to continue to try to resist the invaders.

As Israel marks Holocaust Remembrance Day, it is impossible not to consider, when looking back at the Nazi genocide eight decades ago, what is unfolding in Ukraine right now — in a part of that same Europe where Jews were murdered in the millions.

Addressing the German parliament last month, Ukraine’s redoubtable president, Volodymyr Zelensky, argued bitterly that the phrase ‘never again’ was being proven meaningless. ‘Every year, politicians repeat ‘never again,’’ he noted. Now, with his country and people being ‘destroyed,’ he lamented, ‘we see that these words simply mean nothing.’

In fact, from the Israeli and Jewish perspective, ‘never again’ is a potent and credible commitment.

The Holocaust was rightly defined by Prime Minister Naftali Bennett in his Wednesday night remembrance speech as ‘an unprecedented event in human history… Even the most serious wars today are not the Holocaust and are not like the Holocaust,’ he went on, evidently alluding in part to Ukraine. ‘No event in history, cruel as it may have been, compares to the destruction of Europe’s Jews at the hands of the Nazis and their collaborators.

In the aftermath of the Nazi genocide, Israel has striven, through almost three-quarters of a century of statehood, to ensure that it can guarantee the survival and safety of the Jewish people — as their homeland and their refuge. And it has succeeded far beyond any reasonable expectation.

The initial international incoherent reaction to Russia’s invasion was a barely needed reminder that ‘the world’ will not easily lift a finger to save nations and peoples threatened with devastation. Israel’s survival, its thriving in the face of new would-be genocidal enemies led by Iran, represents an extraordinary, independent and vital response to that reality.

‘Israel is the best thing that’s happened to the Jews,’ said the Romanian Holocaust survivor who addressed a Zikaron Basalon (‘parlor remembrance’) event I attended on Wednesday night, speaking with passionate clarity at the conclusion of her harrowing story. ‘We need to protect it, and never take it for granted.’

More broadly, however, Zelensky’s lament is an all-too valid indictment of the post-World War II international order.

Watching and anticipating Ukraine’s seemingly inevitable quashing by Russia, countries responded as their narrow interests dictated — and continue to do so as the war rolls bloodily on. Their leaders balance their nation’s and their people’s direct needs — for security, economic stability, fuel, wheat, et al — with their sense of moral imperative, and fumble toward what they consider an appropriate response to Russia’s aggression and Ukraine’s plight.

But no international mechanism was galvanized to deter Putin — not NATO, and certainly not the politicized, morally debased United Nations. And no concerted international mechanism has yet mobilized to stop his killings.

This, despite the solemn guarantees of the international community to protect Ukraine’s territorial integrity and independence under the terms of the 1994 Budapest Memorandum, concluded after Ukraine gave up its nuclear weapons. Its first clause states: ‘The Russian Federation, the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, and the United States of America reaffirm their commitment to Ukraine, in accordance with the principles of the Final Act of the Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe, to respect the independence and sovereignty and the existing borders of Ukraine.’

Looked at today, the multiple clauses of that document read like a particularly foul joke, and a supreme incentive for nuclear arms. Trampled by Putin, they stand as an indictment of international diplomacy and ostensible commitment.

From the vantage point of Zelensky and Ukraine, those broken guarantees underline why ‘never again’ has indeed sounded like empty rhetoric. They showcase the central challenge that the international community, which established the United Nations after World War II precisely to prevent war and maintain international peace and security, has failed to meet.

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