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While studying local (Central/Western European) history in detail recently, I read a copy (together with his complete biography, articles and speeches in its original language) of a 1939 speech from Paul Joseph Goebbels, “What does America really want ?”, and it stroke me that Goebbels managed to describe, with precision, America’s foreign policy and attitude as of today, in 1939.

Nothing has really changed.

In the extracts below, replace the references to Germany with Iran/Iraq and National Socialism with Islamism. As a matter of fact, you can simply replace the references to Germany and National Socialism with any foreign affair the United States appear involved within the last century, in present times, or in the near future.

The extracts below are taken from “Was will eigentlich Amerika,” Die Zeit ohne Beispiel (Munich: Zentralverlag der NSDAP., 1941), pp. 24-30, in its English translation by Randall Bytwerk.

The American press takes particular pleasure in criticizing Germany on grounds of humanitarianism, civilization, human rights, and culture. It has every right to do so. Its humanity is shown by lynchings. Its civilization is shown in economic and political scandals that stink to high heaven. Its human rights are displayed by eleven or twelve million unemployed, who apparently chose to be so. And its culture exists only because it is always borrowing from the older European nations. Such a nation is certainly justified in sneering at ancient Europe, whose nations and peoples looked back on centuries, even millennia, of cultural achievements long before America was discovered.

The American press replies to our complaints by saying that it has nothing against Germany, only against National Socialism. That is a poor excuse. National Socialism today is Germany’s guiding political idea and worldview. The entire German nation affirms it. To criticize National Socialism today therefore means to criticize the entire German nation.

Generally, it does not make any difference to us. We Germans do not depend on the love or grace of other nations; we live from our own national strength. The time is long past when Germany expected its salvation from abroad. Such international help was always lacking when it was most needed during the postwar period. It appeared only when international money and stock capital believed that it could earn vast profits by helping Germany.

We could simply say that America is far away, with a big ocean separating us. What do we care about what they think, write, or say about us? That was quite OK as long as America’s highly developed hate campaign against Germany kept within certain bounds. But when it infects even official circles rather than merely newspapers and radio stations, it becomes more serious.

This campaign reached unbelievable heights after 10 November 1938. American public opinion, influenced by the Jews, is trying to interfere to an unacceptable degree in German domestic politics. They think that can use methods against Germany that are normally unheard of in relations between civilized nations.

We know very well who the instigators and beneficiaries are. They are mostly Jews, or people who are in their service and who are dependent on them.

For example, it is not surprising that the New York press attacks Germany so strongly. Over two million Jews live in New York, and economic life there is entirely under their control.

The German press so far has generally ignored this filthy campaign of hatred, or answered it only in a restrained manner. Only after official personages in the United States got involved did we think it necessary to say something. For example, the American Interior Secretary Ickes said on 19 December 1938 that no American could accept a medal from the hands of a brutal dictatorship. With the same hand, it robbed and tortured thousands of people, that it saw a day when it committed no new crime against humanity as a day wasted. Put simply, that is not a style of speaking that is customary in relations between states.

The American Assistant Secretary of State Wells responded to German protests by saying that Ickes’ statement represented the opinion of the overwhelming majority of the American public. One does not know what to say. What does he mean! Was the American president ever personally attacked in the German press, or America’s leading men slandered? We have been very restrained, even though we certainly had every reason to discuss this or that matter of American domestic policy.

Such things are not our concern. American statesmen, not us, determine American domestic policy. We are concerned only with Germany’s affairs. We also have no reason or intention of smuggling German political ideas into America. The very opposite, since the methods that we use are purely German. They are only valid in Germany. But we do believe that just as we respect the internal affairs of other countries and avoid polemics against them, they should treat us in the same way.

One cannot say that that is true of the United States of North America. Nearly the whole press, radio, and film industry support the worldwide campaign against Germany.

We happen to think that the American people have nothing to do with the matter. If they do not like Germany, it is because of the hate campaign. This campaign is conducted by certain international scoundrels who lack conscience and scruples. They are doing it both for foreign and domestic reasons.

We have no intention of answering the criticisms that the American Jewish press raises against Germany by looking at America’s domestic affairs. It is enough to observe that although Germany is the poorest country in the world in terms of foreign currency reserves and raw materials, it has not only abolished unemployment, but has a labor shortage. North America, meanwhile has between eleven and twelve million unemployed, even though it is rich in foreign currency reserves and raw materials. Most of the American press ignores this situation. It cannot deny it, of course.

The German people sees things differently. It knows that certain restrictions in some areas were necessary for national reconstruction. The American public is practically drowning in wealth, prosperity, foreign currency, gold bars, and raw materials. It can hardly imagine how an intelligent, hardworking, and courageous people can get along without all those advantages.

No one but Germany has the right to judge Germany’s domestic affairs. No one has the right to turn one people against another, to incite discord and promote ignorance that lead to international crises.

In the replace the references example above (Germany for Iraq/Iran, or any foreign affair the United States appear involved within the last century, in present times, or in the near future), who is/was geographically located in the borders of and in direct threat and conflict with the Iraqis and the Iranians ?

Prior to the invasion, the governments of the United States and the United Kingdom asserted that the possibility of Iraq employing weapons of mass destruction (WMD) threatened their security and that of their coalition/regional allies.

Following the invasion, the U.S.-led Iraq Survey Group concluded that Iraq had ended its nuclear, chemical, and biological programs in 1991 and had no active programs at the time of the invasion.

The invasion of Iraq led to an occupation and the eventual capture of President Saddam, who was later tried in an Iraqi court of law and executed by the new Iraqi government.

In 2007, Iraq was second on the Failed States Index.

By March 2008, violence in Iraq was reported curtailed by 40–80%, according to a Pentagon report. Independent reports raised questions about those assessments. An Iraqi military spokesman claimed that civilian deaths since the start of the troop surge plan were 265 in Baghdad, down from 1,440 in the four previous weeks. The New York Times counted more than 450 Iraqi civilians killed during the same 28-day period, based on initial daily reports from Iraqi Interior Ministry and hospital officials.

Historically, the daily counts tallied by the New York Times have underestimated the total death toll by 50% or more when compared to studies by the United Nations, which rely upon figures from the Iraqi Health Ministry and morgue figures.

Coalition forces also began to target alleged Iranian Quds force operatives in Iraq, either arresting or killing suspected members. The Bush administration and coalition leaders began to publicly state that Iran was supplying weapons, particularly EFP devices, to Iraqi insurgents and militias although to date have failed to provide any proof for these allegations.

Further sanctions on Iranian organizations were also announced by the Bush administration in the autumn of 2007.

On November 21, 2007, Lieutenant General James Dubik, who is in charge of training Iraqi security forces, praised Iran for its “contribution to the reduction of violence” in Iraq by upholding its pledge to stop the flow of weapons, explosives and training of extremists in Iraq.

The Bush Administration’s rationale for the Iraq War has faced heavy criticism from an array of popular and official sources both inside and outside the United States, with many U.S. citizens finding many parallels with the Vietnam War. For example, the Center for Public Integrity alleges that the Bush administration made a total of 935 false statements between 2001 and 2003 about Iraq’s alleged threat to the United States.

Another criticism of the initial intelligence leading up to the Iraq war comes from a former CIA officer who described the Office of Special Plans as a group of ideologues who were dangerous to U.S. national security and a threat to world peace, and that the group lied and manipulated intelligence to further its agenda of removing Saddam. Subsequently, in 2008, the nonpartisan Center for Public Integrity, a group partially funded by George Soros has enumerated a total of 935 allegedly false statements made by George W. Bush and six other top members of his administration in what it termed a “carefully launched campaign of misinformation” during the two year period following 9/11 attacks, in order to rally support for the invasion of Iraq.

Not America for sure. (see “The United States Zionist-controlled media“).

The eurozone, officially called the euro area, is an economic and monetary union (EMU) of seventeen European Union (EU) member states that have adopted the euro (€) as their common currency and sole legal tender. The eurozone currently consists of Austria, Belgium, Cyprus, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, Malta, the Netherlands, Portugal, Slovakia, Slovenia, and Spain. Most other EU states are obliged to join once they meet the criteria to do so. No state has left and there are no provisions to do so or to be expelled.

Monetary policy of the zone is the responsibility of the European Central Bank (ECB) which is governed by a president and a board of the heads of national central banks. The principal task of the ECB is to keep inflation under control. Though there is no common representation, governance or fiscal policy for the currency union, some co-operation does take place through the Euro Group, which makes political decisions regarding the eurozone and the euro. The Euro Group is composed of the finance ministers of eurozone states, however in emergencies, national leaders also form the Euro Group.

Since the late-2000s financial crisis, the eurozone has established and used provisions for granting emergency loans to member states in return for the enactment of economic reforms. The eurozone has also enacted some limited fiscal integration, for example in peer review of each other’s national budgets. The issue is highly political and in a state of flux as of 2011 in terms of what further provisions will be agreed for eurozone reform.

Greece in tatters, 2011

Protest in heavily indebted Greece. Image: ihned.cz

At the moment, heavily indebted Greece, simply speaking, is a bit like a person with 10 maxed out credit cards, selling all they own, which is far from enough, and gone to the bank to get a loan to pay for all this credit cards – it simply lasts a little longer but will snowball, the root of the problem is still the same – making credit on top of credit will only get them, and all neighbors in a similar situation, deeper in trouble.

How far can one print money, extend one’s loans, give one’s loans on top of expired loans to pay for the expired loan, sell and buy (move hands) of one’s expired loans and bounds in the market, and expect a sound return rather complete bankruptcy and default of its client ? Or of itself.

Who are the holders of the Greek public debt ?

For this and more, the Eurozone project is completely artificial, under-thought, market (banks) driven rather nation and people-driven; nothing much but an authoritative (people can not vote on Eurozone-related matters and affairs), apolitical-bankster-driven (most national credit is in the hands of foreign institutions – in the hypothetical example above, foreign banks and institutions, the seller/issuer of the mentioned 10 credit cards, who themselves most commonly borrow money off other foreign institutions to re-loan it to a third party on higher interests, and pay with back while making a sound margin of profit), mediocre project doomed from its very start.

The fact that it is authoritative (again, people can not vote on Eurozone-related matters and affairs), makes it clear that the people itself are down in the end of the line – whatever happens out of this Eurozone, it will fall hard in the people; and in them alone, as the Eurozone casino-like gamblers are busier at the moment trying to save themselves before the obvious happen, rather trying to save the whole of the snowballing situation as it stands.

Working class (or lower class, labouring class) is a term used in the social sciences and in ordinary conversation to describe those employed in lower tier jobs (as measured by skill, education and lower incomes), often extending to those in unemployment or otherwise possessing below-average incomes. Working classes are mainly found in industrialized economies and in urban areas of non-industrialized economies.

Analyzing the concept of what the working class means from opposite points of views, from the left,

Karl Marx defined the working class or proletariat as individuals who sell their labor power for wages and who do not own the means of production. He argued that they were responsible for creating the wealth of a society.

He asserted that the working class physically build bridges, craft furniture, grow food, and nurse children, but do not own land, or factories. A sub-section of the proletariat, the lumpenproletariat (rag-proletariat), are the extremely poor and unemployed, such as day laborers and homeless people.

And from the right, as Adolf Hitler wrote in his book Mein Kampf,

What will happen one day when hordes of emancipated slaves come forth from these dens of misery to swoop down on their unsuspecting fellow men ? For this other world does not think about such a possibility.

They (the government, the governors and the burgeoise) have allowed these things to go on without caring and even without suspecting–in their total lack of instinctive understanding–that sooner or later destiny will take its vengeance unless it will have been appeased in time.

As the quote continues,

For those who emerged from all this misfortune and misery, from this filth and outward degradation, were not human beings as such but rather lamentable results of lamentable laws. In those days I already saw that there was a two-fold method by which alone it would be possible to bring about an amelioration of these conditions.

This method is: first, to create better fundamental conditions of social development by establishing a profound feeling for social responsibilities among the public; second, to combine this feeling for social responsibilities with a ruthless determination to prune away all excrescences which are incapable of being improved.

But because the State have almost no sense of social rights or social legislation, its inability to abolish those evil excrescences is manifest – the economic misery of those, their crude customs and morals, and the low level of their intellectual culture.

With both extremes tending to agree in a common point about the working class, both Democrats and Capitalists tend to either completely ignore the issue, or find that the lack of opportunity given to an individual to improve itself as a human being is clearly the individuals own fault, which by so deserves no support whatsoever – they should simply work harder, while earning less, most commonly for the profit of those who “deserve it”.

The results of years of  this carelessness manifests itself in what we see around today, all over the world, as in for example,

Workers in trouble: US middle class disappearing

https://rt.com/usa/news/workers-usa-middle-class/

The US was once home to the picture-perfect American dream. A house, a car, and a job symbolized the middle class as the core of a prosperous country. Yet for an increasing amount of Americans some or all of these are now out of reach.

“This country was founded on the ideals of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. How can you be happy if you can’t pay your rent? How is this American in any shape or form?” asked journalist and activist Mike Elk.

The new America is littered with millions of homes lost and abandoned with the unemployed officially numbered at over 13 million still queuing to get a job. Does this mean the middle class is disappearing in the US?

“There have been 4 pillars that supported the American middle class: the chance to retire, the chance to send your kids to higher education, graduate school or university, the chance to work and afford a comfortable standard of living, and access to medical care. And if we look, all four of these pillars are chipped, cracked or swaying,” explained economist Max Fraad Wolff from the New School in New York.

Today over 60 percent of Americans say they typically live paycheck to paycheck – leaving little for college fees, mortgage payments or retirement. The US is increasingly being divided into rich and poor with the traditionally large center – the middle class – being squeezed out. The bottom 50 percent of earners today own less than 1 percent of the country’s wealth.

“America has gone from being the most egalitarian nation back in the 1960s and early 70s, to now, where the gap between the rich and the poor is the widest in the United States than any of the industrialized nations. So, by every index the middle class is dead in America,” said trends forecaster Gerald Celente.

Caleb is from a traditional American middle class family. The 23-year-old college graduate lives in a rented basement, and says middle class jobs do not exist anymore.

I was taught all my life by the media and in school that the U.S. was the greatest country in the world, because if you just work hard, you can be part of this magical middle class. I am part of a generation of youth who will never have this so-called American dream,” he sighed.

Finding work on average takes eight and a half months now and with 6 Americans vying for each job, the prospects for the country’s youth look dim.

The future that lies is living in basements like I do. Some of them are becoming homeless. Others are going to prison. There is increased crime and drug use, and things like that. There is also the wars – the military, they don’t have a recruitment problem anymore now that the economy has declined so much“, said Caleb.

While everything is crumbling around us, do you think the people will stay calm and content about its own desperate situation ? I would rather think, not. So many people described this exact same situation since hundreds years back, underlining the desperate situation of its own citizens versus the greed of the mediocre, alienated, yet higher class, who seem to have completely ignored the situation and let it go further than it should have, with the simple aim of reaching, more and more, its own egoistic, selfish goals. Only thinking about itself.

Nothing works like that tho, natural selection lies to no one, there are masses and they can not be cheated forever, and as the situation worsen, it will all be sourly spit back, all in one go.

With both extremes being the ones talking about people, social reforms, and the ones that could not care less completely bankrupt, in crisis, and proven to be a total failure of a system, I predict an eventual comeback, depending on regional characteristics, to either one side or the other; the ones with stronger national emphasis to the far right, while the ones with not so strong national emphasis, to the far left. And the ones with weak politics and convitions, being colonized and controlled by either one or the other, or whoever of the two that may happen to be geographically closer.

Darcus Howe, a West Indian Writer and Broadcaster with a voice about the riots.

Speaking about the mistreatment of youths by police leading to an up-roar and the ignorance of both police and the governement.

Darcus Howe was interviewed live on BBC television on 9 August, 2011 during the 2011 London riots. The interview was noted for the hostile tone taken by the BBC presenter Fiona Armstrong conducting the interview.

Shortly after Howe began lamenting that “young blacks and young whites… have been telling us, and we wouldn’t listen…” the presenter interrupts him to ask him if he “condoned the violence”.

While denying condoning the violence, his attempt to decry the killing of Mark Duggan was again interrupted by the presenter.

Howe spoke of the events as a political uprising:
“I don’t call it rioting, I call it an insurrection of the masses of the people. It is happening in Syria, it is happening in Clapham, it’s happening in Liverpool, it’s happening in Port of Spain, Trinidad, and that is the nature of the historical moment…”

Armstrong interrupts Howe in mid-sentence, stating:
“You are not a stranger to riots yourself, I understand, are you? You have taken part in them yourself.”

Howe responded but was soon cut off:
“I have never taken part in a single riot. I’ve been on demonstrations that ended up in a conflict. And have some respect for an old West Indian negro, and stop accusing me of being a rioter. Because I…you don’t want to get abusive. You sound idiotic. Have some respect.”

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