January 8, 1997

Good Morning from the Zundelsite:


This is Part II of an analysis by J. B. Campbell, based on a book review of Buechner's "The Avengers." Where I substituted words, I put those words in brackets:

"Enough of us have this deadly combination of ignorance, arrogance, cowardice and cruelty which leads us inevitably to atrocities, from Atlanta to Dresden to Hiroshima to My Lai to Panama City to Baghdad to Waco to Oklahoma City.

This is not to say that we are all ignorant, or arrogant, or cowardly, or cruel. But the ones who always do the dirty work against our latest enemy are found on our military bases.

By their very youthful nature they are ignorant. They often become quite arrogant when given power over others. They are not brave enough to say "no" when ordered to attack civilian targets or slaughter unarmed prisoners of war. Their natural cruelty is easily exploited by psycho-specialists who can quickly condition them to hate and kill strangers en masse with simple propaganda and big lies.

And then there are our non-aggression pacts and actual military partnership with the Soviet Union. This last item is something from which America will never recover. Our little military arrangement with Israel is an obscenity but our partnership with the Soviets was so horrific that it may never become possible for future Americans to come to terms with it.

Our military partnership with the Soviet Communists from 1942 to 1945 was the watershed event in human history. It was during this four-year period that the New World Order, as we know and fear it, became established.

Following our mutual destruction of Germany and most of Europe, we encouraged our partners to subject hundreds of millions of people, from East Germany to China, to the gory delights of insatiable fiends known as commissars. Millions were slaughtered or sent to slave labor camps and psychiatric prisons. The rest have lived in abject terror of sharing the victims' fates.

Our government made this happen. For example, our government in 1945 ordered our wonderful boys in Austria and Italy to round up millions of anti-communist Russians and East Europeans at gunpoint, process them and force them at bayonet point into box cars to be shipped to Stalin for execution in what the army called "Operation Keelhaul." The Soviets couldn't have gotten their hands on these people without our help.

Our government pretended to be shocked at Soviet "excesses" while it continued to support its partner with military and financial aid, all conducted profitably through the warlords' New York banks, to the present day.

This included the forty-five year period of the phoney "Cold War."

The fact that both the Capitalist and Communist systems are controlled is known or suspected by many of our people. Many of those who know feel that it would be impolite to mention this fact. They have been conditioned to feel this way. It is incumbent on those of us who know this fact to re-condition them to speak freely. It is incumbent on all of us to make (the perpetrators) feel uncomfortable in our knowledge of their activities.

The high death rate in Germany toward the end of the war was the result of our wonderful boys in their fighter planes flying around at will, blasting things on the ground to smithereens. Anything that moved was destroyed. Chuck Yeager brags that he strafed farmers on their tractors. Trains were favorite targets--they loved to hit the steam engines and watch them explode. Trucks carrying food--well, forget them!

All of Germany was starving and those in the camps starved right along with them. Those who cannot quite comprehend this sort of thing today must only look back to 1991 when our wonderful boys completely destroyed life as it was known in Baghdad and other Iraqi cities and towns. (Special interests) had demanded that Iraq be destroyed by us and within a few short months it was so."

And is it over yet? Here is what is still happening, according to the latest issue (Jan/Feb.'97) of the Washington Report on Middle East Affairs:

"Commendable U.S. government and media concern for relieving famine in Zaire and Rwanda stand in sharp contrast to the continuing major famine which the United States has caused in Iran.

"What the Iraqi people have been suffering is a continuing hell on earth the dimensions of which are staggering. Carol Bellamy, who heads the United Nations Relief Fund, estimates that in Iraq 'approximately 4.500 children under the age of five die every month from hunger and disease.' . . .

"Add to that those who died during the 100-hour ground war, when a bomb a minute was dropped. . . .

"Today, almost six years after the end of the Gulf War, as many as 100,000 Iraqis may still be dying every year for lack of food and medicine." (p. 17)

Thought for the Day:

"Why should martial law not be proclaimed continuously against baseness and profiteering?"

(Houston Stewart Chamberlain in "Political Ideals")


Comments? E-Mail: irimland@cts.com

Back to Table of Contents of the Jan. 1997 ZGrams

ÿ