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Message: Entry: Another Milestone in Iraq Link: http://www.takimag.com/blogs/article/another_milestone_in_iraq#21408 Post contents: In Haaretz (2/11/04) an article claimed the war in Iraq was conceived by 25 neoconservative intellectuals , most of them Jews. They wanted President Bush to change history, quite a feat for such a man so limited. On January 30, 2004, less than 2 weeks before, the Philadelphia Inquirer (January 30, 2004) had as a front page story the deaths of 10 Israelis from a bomb while relegating the deaths of 7 GI's to the second page. The Austin, Texas newspaper serving southwestern intellectuals had the deaths of Jews on the front page with a 5x7 picture while American GIs were on page 5. The New York Sun had Israeli martyrs on the front page while Americans were on page 7. The paper of record, the New York Times had a color picture of the Israel bomb explosion on page 1 with a reference to a long article on page A6. The deaths of American GIs was barely mentioned on page 1 with a much shorter article on page A11. You must know where you are in the priorities of New York Jews and their sycophants in the national media. After documenting the evasion by Jews in 5 previous wars, I had some hope that in a war so important to Israel American Jewry would have stepped up and done their duty. That has not occurred. With Jews being slightly more than 2% of the American population and almost 4500 American deaths in the Middle East a fair share of the American war dead for Jews would be almost 100. The Jewish Soldier Organization listed the names of 17 Jewish dead in Middle Eastern war on their Wall of Honor. Once again they have ducked American wars. Once again lying and obscuring their lack of valor while shrieking anti-Semitism. Resident conscience and crybaby for many years at the New York Times, Anthony Lewis, thought legitimate governments like Israel had the right to torture. Mr. Lewis seldom judged American supported governments to be worthy of his support. Mr. Lewis with his global sense of responsibility stated if the United States could not use force to prevent disasters, then the world would be condemned to chaos. Mr. Lewis and his kind would determine what was necessary. Deciphering convoluted reasoning by columnists at the New York Times often times can be difficult. One cannot be too careful. Senator Bob Dole was called an anti-Semite by Mr. Rich for protesting obscene lyrics in black gangster rap music. Senator Dole had to know Jews ran the music business. Steve Ross, born Rechnitz, lied about his military service in World War II, but was excused by a Timesman named Cohen. Later as Chairman of Time-Warner conglomerate Ross merchandised the song, Cop Killers, by black rappers. The song celebrated the killing of police and had the refrain: "Die, die, die, pig, die". As a promotion gimmick Time-Warner had sent copies of Cop Killers to disc jockeys with the record wrapped in a black vinyl body bag. Mr. Ross was addicted to money. In the fall of 1990 when the build-up for war against Iraq was accelerating, Time had as a cover story "What to Do With Your Money" if and when war came. Not much concern was shown for those without money or for American soldiers. For the affluent, who had no connection with the military, war had become theoretical, except for the area of personal finances. The rich talked about profiting from war with no concern how cruel it must seem for those with sons and daughters in Saudi Arabia. Henry Luce at his worst would never have stooped to such sleaze. But Mr. Rechnitz and his kind now dominate the American media. The triumph of Schindler's List and its acceptance as truth is the necessary proof. Schindler's List was dedicated to this louse and was as phony as he. Israel, which has traditionally been the largest recipient of U.S. assistance, is seeking an additional $2.2 billion or more to help pay for its planned withdrawal of soldiers and nearly 9000 Jewish settlers from the Gaza Strip, Israeli officials said Monday. This comes to almost $250,000 per Jew. This figure would enable many Americans to escape poverty, but Congress would not consider that. Israelis are a different matter. Paul Buch, awarded the Medal of Honor for bravery in Vietnam, remembered talking with Paul Wolfowitz and asking, "Mr. Secretary, I have three requests. First, before you send anybody into Iraq, take the time to create a finite mission.'' "What's that?'' "We learned in Vietnam a meaningful objective is specific, it's finite, it has a tool of measurement, and it has a suggestion of a course of action that you can succeed. Do that.'' He said, "Too tough.'' I thought, "What - to think or to die?'' I said, "I have a second request for you.'' He said, "What's that?'' I said, "It's simple. $1.3 million was not enough for a New York City fireman or a policeman who gave his life on September 11th. And $6,000 and an opportunity to buy $250,000 of your own damn insurance is totally inadequate for a man or a woman in the uniform of the United States who gives their life for their country. How about self-insuring and giving every person who dies in the uniform a half-million dollars so their family lives well?'' He said, "That's too expensive.'' I said, "Then I'm going to live up to another vow I gave some guys. It's not very expensive. It's pretty simple. Every night 120 Americans go to sleep surrounded by 100,000 bad guys. It's a place called the Monastery on the Korean DMZ. They don't get hazardous duty pay, only $147.50 a month--120 guys. It can't be that much. But it explains to their families why they are there, why their families can't visit, why when you want to go see them you go from checkpoint after checkpoint after checkpoint, why it's too dangerous for a USO show. Just $147.50.'' He said, "Too difficult.''' Earlier in 1991 Wolfowitz made clear his highest sentiments. In taped interviews with the New York Times he betrayed emotion only once when revealing sensitivity about criticisms from senior military officers that during the Persian Gulf war he was overly sympathetic to Israeli concerns. "It gets me pretty annoyed when I hear comments that I'm sort of a one-issue person with unreasonable sympathy about Israel." Sensitivity and concern for the Jews of America should be at the very bottom of concerns for Americans not Jewish. Americans have no mandate to make the world safe for cowardly Jews. Fully 71 percent of Israelis believe that the United States should launch a military attack on Iran if diplomatic efforts fail to halt Tehran's nuclear program, according to a new poll. Get ready for another war. Sent at: 2008 10 12