← Autodidact Archive · Original Dissent · Walter Yannis
Thread ID: 6100 | Posts: 5 | Started: 2003-04-11
2003-04-11 06:07 | User Profile
This appeared on [url=http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/ReadArticle.asp?ID=7227]Frontpagemag.com[/url] 11 April 2003.
Just can't keep 'em down on the ol' PeeCee plantation, I guess.
The ingratitude!
Walter
By Eliana Johnson and Jamie Kirchick FrontPageMagazine.com | April 11, 2003
On the evening of the historic day that Baghdad fell, Yale held a forum of professorial invective against the statesmanship that brought it about. Without skipping a beat, Yaleââ¬â¢s anti-war professors, who yesterday claimed to oppose war in the interests of the Iraqi people, have now moved on to expressing lunatic conspiracy theories. Wednesday, we attended a ââ¬Åteach-inââ¬Â sponsored by the Yale Coalition for Peace, the Muslim Students Association, and the Students for Justice in Palestine, among other groups. The panel of speakers included professors Ben Kiernan, Director of the Genocide Studies Program at the Yale Center for International and Area Studies, Ellen Lust-Okar of political science, Dmitri Gutas of Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations, Glenda Gilmore, the C. Van Woodward Professor of History and University Chaplain, Rev. Frederick Streets.
While Kiernan led off the discussion with predictable condemnations of our ââ¬Åunelected president,ââ¬Â it was Gutas and Gilmore who stole the show. Although the two stopped just short of decrying the deposition of Saddam Hussein, they couldnââ¬â¢t help themselves from promulgating vicious conspiracy theories aimed at their intellectual opponents. Rather than engage in reasoned debate about the merits of a war in Iraq, Gutas launched a (now trite and tired) stink bomb, backed by the likes of luminaries like Congressman James Moran and Pat Buchanan, at the cabal of Jewish conspirators he blames for the war. And although the focus of the panel was purportedly the war in Iraq, Professor Gilmore disregarded the topic, choosing to speak instead about herself and her victimization at the hands of a vast right-wing conspiracy.
Gutas advanced the anti-neocon cant, maintaining that the true goal of the war is an Israeli takeover of the Middle East. The American victory in Iraq, following Gutasââ¬â¢ logic, will lead to Israelââ¬â¢s ââ¬Åexpansion over the local population.ââ¬Â But itââ¬â¢s not the Bush administration that is controlling United States policy towards Iraq, according to Gutas. Itââ¬â¢s a cabal of neoconservative, fiercely pro-Israel ideologues. Gutas named Bill Kristol, Paul Wofowitz, Richard Perle, and any other Jew he could think of as the initiators of the war in Iraq. The ideology of ââ¬Åthese people,ââ¬Â according to Gutas, is solely responsible for U.S. policy. Jews have hijacked the Bush administration and are gearing foreign policy towards Israeli (rather than U.S.) interests.
For Gutas to say that the actions of President Bush and his Cabinet, including Vice President Dick Cheney, Secretary of State Colin Powell, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and National Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice, are controlled by the Jewish community is an outrage. Not one of those individuals is Jewish; nor is British Prime Minister Tony Blair; nor is Prime Minister Aznar of Spain. To accuse these leaders of taking orders from a minute portion of the population ââ¬âââ¬Åthese people,ââ¬Â Jews - who are divided on the issue like all Americans, is to employ an ancient anti-Semitic technique which harkens back to the forged Protocols of the Elders of Zion. Not one of the speakers on the panel thought his comments were worth questioning, and it was especially disheartening to see University Chaplain Rev. Jerry Streets watch in silence.
Gutasââ¬â¢ indictment of neoconservatives did not empty his arsenal of vituperative rage. He also challenged the veracity of the Bush administrationââ¬â¢s desire to democratize Iraq. He maintained that the United States actually seeks ââ¬Åthe maintenance of despotic regimes.ââ¬Â Call us naïve, but is it not Gutas, Gilmore, and the rest of the anti-war left who seek the maintenance of despotic regimes? And is it not the Bush administration, and specifically the neoconservatives, who seek to depose despots of Saddam Husseinââ¬â¢s variety?
Professor Glenda Gilmore, in the smug, self-righteous fashion that characterizes a large component of the anti-war movement, found it difficult to discuss anything but herself. Gilmoreââ¬â¢s comments were devoted entirely to decrying the supposed international conspiracy launched by right-wingers like Andrew Sullivan and Daniel Pipes, intended to ââ¬Åshut you up and to shut me up.ââ¬Â Gilmore reached her startling conclusions following the scathing reception her controversial October 11 column in the Yale Daily News received. Gilmore seemed dumbfounded that her statements would elicit such a harsh response. One of the more inflammatory sentences read, ââ¬ÅBush's National Security Strategy makes the United States an imperial power in the most sinister sense of the term, and Congress' resolution will finally and unabashedly give George W. Bush the job he seems so sure he deserves: emperor.ââ¬Â
In one breath, she listed the Heritage Foundation, the American Enterprise Institute, the American Council of Trustees and Alumni and Lynne Cheney, as elements of a ââ¬Åpre-plannedââ¬Â plot to squash her political speech. The right-wing campaign, according to Gilmore, is ââ¬Åtargeted at anti-war professorsââ¬Â and aims to silence her and anyone else who raises a peep of protest about Bush or the war. She protested Daniel Pipes' labeling of her as "Hating America," though not once in her tirade did she mention the last line of her column, "We have met the enemy, and it is us." It is certainly difficult to understand how Pipes could construe Gilmoreââ¬â¢s comment as anything but a symptom of a deep and abiding hatred of America.
Wrongfully assuming that the audience was filled with antiwar students, Gilmore found herself at a loss for words when her tenuous reasoning was accidentally exposed to critical questioning. It became clear that Gilmore was never in fact silenced. The opposite occurred; her views were exposed, disseminated, and legitimately criticized by those who disagreed with her. Coming from the insulated world of leftist academia, Gilmore assumed that criticism and denunciation of her vitriol was evidence of a conspiracy against her. Rather than present well-developed or coherent arguments against the war, she filled her allotted time attempting (successfully) to elicit pity from her audience. It was a spectacle of self-aggrandizement.
Perhaps more than anything else, Yaleââ¬â¢s anti-war ââ¬Åteach-inââ¬Â shed light on the divide between the hawks and the doves that grows as American success in Iraq increases. While pro-war students have been vindicated by the liberation of Iraq and were rightfully ebullient on Wednesday, a common trope of the professors and their sycophantic followers in the student body was that a quick and easy military operation in Iraq should not be equated with a victory in the war. On one of the most momentous days for America since September 11, few positive comments about our military victory were heard from the faculty panel.
Indeed, the conspiracy theories espoused by Gutas and Gilmore are a symptom of the hateful bitterness that characterizes the campus left in the face of American success. As Wednesdaysââ¬â¢ panel demonstrated, vicious prevarication has become a substitute for honest argumentation. The jubilant celebrations in the streets of Baghdad, the crushing of Saddamââ¬â¢s Stalinist regime, and the kisses from Iraqis on American soldiersââ¬â¢ cheeks, undermine the words of Ivy League professors who purport to defend the interests of the people of Iraq from American military might. We thought liberals would rejoice at the sights we saw Wednesday in Baghdad. But when liberals become at best nonchalant and at worst conspiratorial at the scenes of an oppressed people rising up in joyous celebration due to their new found freedom, they are no longer liberals. They are nihilists.
Eliana Johnson and James Kirchick are freshmen at Yale University. Contact Eliana at eliana.johnson@yale.edu and James at james.kirchick@yale.edu.
2003-04-11 12:03 | User Profile
For Gutas to say that the actions of President Bush and his Cabinet, including Vice President Dick Cheney, Secretary of State Colin Powell, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and National Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice, are controlled by the Jewish community is an outrage. Not one of those individuals is Jewish; nor is British Prime Minister Tony Blair; nor is Prime Minister Aznar of Spain. To accuse these leaders of taking orders from a minute portion of the population ââ¬âââ¬Åthese people,ââ¬Â Jews - who are divided on the issue like all Americans, is to employ an ancient anti-Semitic technique which harkens back to the forged Protocols of the Elders of Zion.
I guess it's inconceivable that non-Jewish government officials could be controlled by the Jewish lobby. :rolleyes:
It was especially disheartening to see University Chaplain Rev. Jerry Streets watch in silence.
How dare this member of the clergy not challenge the truth with lies! :rolleyes:
And so what if not all Jews support the war? No one ever claimed they did. The point is that the pro-Israel lobby supports it, and that includes many toothless, brainless "Christian Zionists" as well as the scheming Jewish Zionists. When someone states that the architects of the Iraq war were mostly Jewish, he is in no way implying that most or all Jews are united in favor of the war. It's difficult to tell whether the warmongers who play the "anti-Semitic" card are actually logically challenged or are merely engaging in sophistry.
The "lunatic conspiracy theory" set forth by those professors mentioned is solidly grounded in fact. These freshmen don't deserve such courageous and enlightened professors.
2003-04-11 13:18 | User Profile
Originally posted by Angler@Apr 11 2003, 12:03 ** When someone states that the architects of the Iraq war were mostly Jewish, he is in no way implying that most or all Jews are united in favor of the war. **
Exactly.
The reaction by the neocon press is telling: any talk of even a small set of well-placed extremist Jews influencing events is read as an attack on all Jews as a group, even when pains are taken (like Moran, Buchanan) to make the distinction between "neocon cabal leading us to war" and "your Jewish neighbor" crystal clear. No other group would even consider reacting that way (although it's hard to imagine any other group with that much power!). The rest of us would trust our neighbors enough to make the distinction.
They protest altogether too much, indicating a very guilty conscience.
Maybe the fact that Jews vote in blocks of over 80% in election after election and as a group target for political destruction any candidate (like McKinney) who stray from the PeeCee plantation with a monolithic cohesion that the rest of us can only gape at makes Jewish Americans a uniquely power and dangerous subset of the American people. And maybe these Yale professors are smart enough to see that. Hmmmmm?????
American Jews are facing a stark choice: abandon their coalition partners of 50 years by diverting their funding to the war effort, or go for "guns and butter" and threaten a world depression, maybe even a collapse of their West Judean power base. Their old coalition partners know this, and they're P*SSED OFF about it. Blacks are SEETHING about McKinney. Old line liberals who marched shoulder to shoulder with Marcuse and Benjamin through our institutions are feeling like fools. First chance they get, in goes the shiv right between the ribs.
The neocon media are reduced to name calling, because they know the truth of vastly disproportionate Jewish power - and the terrible abuse of that power - is becoming too obvious to ignore. It's the elephant in the living room, and even PeeCee bootcamps like Yale are starting to rebel.
This is very encouraging news.
Walter
2003-04-11 16:28 | User Profile
**For Gutas to say that the actions of President Bush and his Cabinet, including Vice President Dick Cheney, Secretary of State Colin Powell, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and National Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice, are controlled by the Jewish community is an outrage. **
But for Ha'aretz to say it is perfectly OK!
2003-04-12 03:59 | User Profile
Originally posted by mwdallas@Apr 11 2003, 16:28 ** > **For Gutas to say that the actions of President Bush and his Cabinet, including Vice President Dick Cheney, Secretary of State Colin Powell, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and National Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice, are controlled by the Jewish community is an outrage. **
But for Ha'aretz to say it is perfectly OK! **
That, I think, is a great point. When stating that FACT "Jewish Cabal in White house..." one should always include "as reported in Ha'aretz", or "Jews control America" as stated by Ariel Sharon!