ETHNIC SUPREMACY STATUS CONFIRMED

 

 

Washington makes JEW
the measure of all things

 

 

Assuming their traditional Judeophiliac posture, the political prostitutes in Washington have now officially granted special status to Jewry—both in America and abroad—placing it off limits to criticism, a privilege not enjoyed by any other ethnic or religious group. The following article in a leading London daily describes this latest orgiastic exercise in Judeocentrism.

US to rate its allies on their treatment of Jews
The Daily Telegraph  Wednesday, October 13, 2004

By DAVID RENNIE

WASHINGTON—In another test of America's frayed relations with France, Russia and other allies, the U.S. Congress has ordered the State Department to start rating governments throughout the world on their treatment of Jewish citizens.

The resulting report cards on anti-Semitism would be published in annual U.S. surveys of human rights abuses around the world.

The proposed law was passed by the House of Representatives on Monday, in response to what its sponsors called an alarming surge in anti-Semitism, especially in Europe. It has already been passed by the Senate.

Congress overruled strong opposition from diplomats at the State Department who complained in an internal memo that a special focus on Judaism, "opens us to charges of favoritism and challenges the credibility of our reporting."

There is little doubt that the new law will create diplomatic waves.

France, Russia, Malaysia, Egypt, Canada and Australia were singled out by congressional sponsors of the law as countries that had witnessed disturbing outbreaks of discrimination against Jews in the past year.

The law, the Global Anti-Semitism Review Act, also ordered the establishment of an office at the State Department dedicated to monitoring anti-Semitism, again over the department's protests.

The resulting internal row must now be resolved by President George W. Bush as the legislation heads to his desk from Congress. With the act overwhelmingly backed by both parties, officials in Congress said they expected he would sign it into law.

A three-page State Department memorandum, leaked to The Telegraph  yesterday, complained that congressional plans would throw U.S. human rights reporting "out of balance", and "erode our credibility by being interpreted as favoritism in human rights reporting".

In a sign of the diplomatic anxieties, the State Department argued for anti-Semitism monitoring to remain a task conducted behind closed doors, by the department's existing "special envoy for holocaust issues."

At the moment, U.S. diplomats discreetly gather data on anti-Semitism from other governments, in multilateral conferences held in Europe and an annual international religious freedom round table sponsored by Washington.

At the moment, U.S. diplomats discreetly gather data on anti-Semitism from other governments, in multilateral conferences held in Europe and an annual international religious freedom round table sponsored by Washington.

Tom Lantos, a California Democrat and Holocaust survivor who was one of the sponsors, denounced State Department talk of "favoritism" as an alarming nod to "the worst stereotypes of Jews perpetrated in anti-Semitic tracts throughout modern history."

Lynne Weil, his communications director, said: "It's unclear why anyone would be offended by this.

"If a government takes offense at this, that government should be offended by the acts of its own citizens, if they are hateful."