The
Host & the Parasite
What public-spirited American would not
want to read a book with the provocative title that its author, Canadian
journalist, Greg Felton has given it, The Host & the
Parasite: How Israel’s Fifth Column Consumed America? One potential eager reader who readily comes
to mind is the leader of the Nation of Islam, Louis Farrakhan, as we can see
from his widely attacked recent remarks before a
gathering in Detroit:
“To the members of the Jewish community
that don’t like me, thank you very much for putting my name all over the planet
… I’m not mad at you, ’cause you’re so stupid,”
Farrakhan said.
“So when they
talk about Farrakhan, call me a hater, you know they do, call me an antisemite — stop it! I’m anti-termite! I don’t know
nothing about hating somebody because of their religious preference.”
Everyone raising a huge stink over
Farrakhan’s remarks ignored what he actually said, particularly that last
sentence, all waxing indignant over his having supposedly equated Jewish people
to a particularly pernicious, edifice-destroying insect. If you look carefully at his statement, you
will notice that he is simply calling attention to the same evident phenomenon
that Felton is in his book. Farrakhan is
addressing himself to those powerful members of the Jewish community who happen
to hate him, and a major reason that they hate him so much is that he freely
points out how they have abused their power in the United States. His case is not against all Jews, and
certainly, as he states explicitly, it is not against those people who practice
the religion of Judaism.
Recently, freshman Congresswoman, Ilhan Omar, summed up that abuse of power by saying that it
was, “All about the Benjamins,” referring to the face of Benjamin Franklin on
the $100 bill. Those she was attacking
then proceeded to show how right she was about Jewish power by mobilizing the
entire news media and political class to denounce her for her impertinence.
Compare
Farrakhan’s cryptic observation from this passage from Felton:
From this vantage point, the last six
years represent not the beginning of
fascism but its highest expression:
the September 11 attack, invasion of Iraq, torture of Arabs, demonization of
bin Laden and Hussein, secret prisons, electoral fraud, warrantless domestic
spying, lying to Congress, open contempt for the Bill of Rights and the rule of
law—all this and more can be explained
rationally as a function of a decades-long political degeneration. The republic did not spontaneously combust
after September 11; it was already terminally ill. Re-establishing civil society based on the
rule of law depends on healing the disjucture between
appearance and reality, and ending the government’s
undeclared war on its own people. The
first step in this healing lies with the acceptance that the republic is dead
because only then will the American people be able to acknowledge that Israel’s
fifth column is the real enemy.
That paragraph comes on pp. 480-481 as a
sort of summing up of the case that he has made throughout the book. If you do the six-year addition you will
notice that it was written in 2007. That
was when the first edition of the book came out. We read the third, “Expanded Post-Obama”
edition published in 2017. One of the
book’s small shortcomings is that it seems a little dated, sort of like you’re
reading old newspapers, but you are reading them with the strengthened vision
that Felton supplies. The book has not
had a complete reworking using the additional power of hindsight. What it has is a new final chapter entitled,
“’Isramerica’ after Bush.” It’s well worth reading, but if you want to
read the book while saving money but depriving the author and publisher of some
well-earned money, I suppose you could just find a used copy of the 2007 or
2010 editions and update yourself by visiting the author’s website at http://www.gregfelton.com/. An even quicker update, at least on Obama,
can be had be watching the video of this writer’s “Obama, the Song.”
Felton’s Excellent Insights
One might take an even greater shortcut by
simply going to this writer’s short poem, “PNAC’s Mein
Kampf” and then clicking on the link behind the
poem’s title to watch a short video, or perhaps just watching “Waxing Indignant
over 9/11 Truth.” Taking that approach, though, you would miss
out on a host of insightful gems to be found throughout Felton’s brave and
important book. Take, for instance, the
following long quote that he has found from former Senator James Abourezk of South Dakota:
I can tell you from personal experience
that, at least in the Congress, the support Israel has in that body is based
completely on political fear—fear of defeat by anyone who does not do what
Israel wants done. I can tell you that very few members of Congress—at least
when I served there—have any affection for Israel or for its Lobby. What they have is contempt, but it is
silenced by fear of being found out exactly how they feel. I’ve heard too many cloakroom conversations
in which members of the Senate will voice their bitter feelings about how
they’re being pushed around by the Lobby to think otherwise. In private one hears the dislike of Israel
and the tactics of the Lobby, but not one of them is willing to risk the
Lobby’s animosity by making their feelings public. (p. 483)
The “parasite” and the “fifth column” of
Felton’s title are personified by the 16 faces that one sees in two rows
plastered across the face of the book. It’s rather disconcerting to realize that the
very first face on the top row is that of the man that President Donald Trump
just put in charge of dealing with Venezuela, Elliott Abrams, who was convicted
of lying to Congress over the Iran-Contra affair, and the second face on the
second row is that of Trump’s National Security Adviser, John Bolton.
Similar to the Abourezk
observation, another telling vignette that one finds in Felton’s book that
reveals a great deal about Bolton’s character.
It is from the testimony of US AID subcontractor, Melody Townsel, urging
the Senate Foreign Relations Committee not to approve Bolton as U.S. Ambassador
to the United Nations. The prime
contractor for whom she worked in a project in Kyrgyzstan was Black, Manafort,
Stone, and Kelly (Yes, that’s Paul Manafort and Roger Stone.), and their work
on the project, according to Townsel, had been so abysmal that it prompted her
to send a whistle-blowing letter to AID headquarters.
Within
hours of sending a letter to US AID officials outlining my concerns, I met John
Bolton, whom the prime contractor hired as legal counsel to represent them to US
AID. And, so, within hours of dispatching that letter, my hell began.
Mr.
Bolton proceeded to chase me through the halls of a Russian hotel -- throwing
things at me, shoving threatening letters under my door and, generally,
behaving like a madman. For nearly two weeks, while I awaited fresh direction
from my company and from US AID, John Bolton hounded me in such an appalling
way that I eventually retreated to my hotel room and stayed there. Mr. Bolton,
of course, then routinely visited me there to pound on the door and shout
threats.
When
US AID asked me to return to Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan in advance of assuming
leadership of a project in Kazakstan, I returned to
my project to find that John Bolton had preceeded me
by two days. Why? To meet with every other AID team leader as well as US
foreign-service officials in Bishkek, claiming that I was under investigation
for misuse of funds and likely was facing jail time. As US AID can confirm,
nothing was further from the truth.
He
indicated to key employees of or contractors to State that, based on his
discussions with investigatory officials, I was headed for federal prison and,
if they refused to cooperate with either him or the prime contractor's
replacement team leader, they, too, would find themselves the subjects of
federal investigation. As a further aside, he made unconscionable comments
about my weight, my wardrobe and, with a couple of team leaders, my sexuality,
hinting that I was a lesbian (for the record, I'm not).
When
I resurfaced in Kyrgyzstan, I learned that he had done such a convincing job of
smearing me that it took me weeks -- with the direct intervention of US AID
officials -- to limit the damage. In fact, it was only US AID's appointment of
me as a project leader in Almaty, Kazakstan that largely
put paid to the rumors Mr. Bolton maliciously circulated.
As
a maligned whistleblower, I've learned firsthand the lengths Mr. Bolton will go
to accomplish any goal he sets for himself. Truth flew out the window. Decency
flew out the window. In his bid to smear me and promote the interests of his
client, he went straight for the low road and stayed there.
John
Bolton put me through hell -- and he did everything he could to intimidate,
malign and threaten not just me, but anybody unwilling to go along with his
version of events. His behavior back in 1994 wasn't just unforgivable, it was
pathological.
I
cannot believe that this is a man being seriously considered for any diplomatic
position, let alone such a critical posting to the UN. Others you may call
before your committee will be able to speak better to his stated dislike for
and objection to stated UN goals. I write you to speak about the very character
of the man.
It
took me years to get over Mr. Bolton's actions in that Moscow hotel in 1994,
his intensely personal attacks and his shocking attempts to malign my
character.
I
urge you from the bottom of my heart to use your ability to block Mr. Bolton's
nomination in committee. (pp. 361-362.
The full testimony is here.)
The
foregoing episode occurred before President George W. Bush made Bolton Under
Secretary of State for Arms Control and International Security. Here’s what Felton says about Bolton’s work
in that capacity:
At
the State Department, he was known as [Secretary of State Colin] Powell’s
“minder.” Bolton reported to [Donald]
Rumsfeld, [Paul] Wolfowitz and [Dick] Cheney if Powell strayed too far off the
Zionist path. To all intents and
purposes, Bolton was the Secretary of State and Powell an emasculated
figurehead. Bolton undercut Powell’s
authority as a matter of course. Most
notoriously, he intercepted a State Department memo for Powell that accused
Israel of violating American arms-export laws.
The act in question was the July 23, 2000, assassination of Salah Shehada, a senior Hamas activist in Gaza City. Bolton even held unauthorized private
meetings with Mossad and other Israeli officials, a fact that demonstrates that
he was an independent agent in the state Department and did not answer to
Powell. (p. 361)
Still Timely
Book
Just
this March 18, Wayne Madsen in an article entitled “Trump’s CIA Now Unbound and Back to Its Traditional Hijinks” showed us just how relevant Felton’s book is to today’s
news, what with the important roles being played by Bolton and Abrams. Here is a relevant excerpt:
Hybrid
warfare against Venezuela, which includes economic, diplomatic, and cyber, has
the backing of the neo-conservatives who now call the shots for the Trump White
House. They include, in addition to Pompeo, national security adviser John Bolton; Iran-Contra felon Elliott Abrams, Trump’s special envoy
to the US-backed opposition-led rump Venezuelan government of Juan Guaido; Cuban-American Mauricio Claver-Carone,
the senior director for Western Hemisphere affairs at the National Security
Council; and Florida Republican Senator Marco Rubio, a Cuban-American, who
represents the interests of South Florida’s right-wing oligarch exiles from
Venezuela and other Latin American countries.
Felton
is at his best in taking recent history and projecting it upon the larger
historical scene in his analysis the UN Security Council Resolution 662 of
August 9, 1990, that served as the basis for the multinational military assault
upon Iraq to force it to give up Kuwait, which it had taken by military force. That resolution demanded “that Iraq withdraw
immediately and unconditionally all its forces to the positions in which they
were located on 1 August 1990,” and it concluded with a resolve “to continue
its efforts to put an early end to the occupation.” And we all know how that played itself out.
Here
is Felton’s take on the matter as he relates it to the Six Day War in which
Israel grabbed the remainder of Palestine, partitioned by the United Nations in
1948, and also Syria’s Golan Heights:
If
you substitute “Israel” for “Iraq”; “Palestine” for “Kuwait”; and “5 June 1967”
for “1 August 1990” you would have the essence of Israel’s occupation of
Palestine, but the UN has not imposed sanctions against Israel or threatened it
with military reprisals for flouting international law; in fact, the UN has
done nothing but issue a blizzard of paper protests. The message is unmistakable—one form of
aggression is acceptable and one is not.
For
his part, President Trump recently called for the rewarding of Israel’s
aggression by saying in a tweet
that we should “fully recognize Israel’s sovereignty over the Golan Heights.”
Handicapped
by Liberal Partisanship
As
good as he is at seeing the big picture, it is the opinion of this reviewer
that his scope is not quite wide enough.
I suppose that it is easy to be overwhelmed by the obvious villainy of
the neocon crowd that has taken this country to war in the Middle East. Felton
concludes that that has purely been for the benefit of Israel, not for control
of oil supplies, but he seems to lay his blame too heavily upon the Republican
Party, first upon President Ronald Reagan and later upon President George W.
Bush. Felton is clearly a political
liberal and his obvious preference for the Democrats over the
Republicans—curious for a Canadian who really doesn’t have a dog in the
fight—might be a bit off-putting for readers who happen to be of a conservative
bent.
Felton
marks the Ronald Reagan administration as the point of complete takeover of the
American host by the Israeli parasite.
In doing so, his assessment of President Lyndon Johnson seems to be
altogether too benign. I gather that he
is unfamiliar with Phillip Nelson’s LBJ: The
Mastermind of the JFK Assassination,
LBJ: From Mastermind to “The
Colossus,” and, most importantly, of Remember the Liberty. One will find no account in the book of how
President Dwight D. Eisenhower stood up to the Israelis, the British, and the
French in the Suez Crisis. We do learn from Felton, however (pp.
124-125), that President George H.W. Bush was enough of a problem for the
Israelis that they hatched a plot to assassinate him at the Madrid Conference
in 1991, a plot that was spoiled by an Israeli intelligence whistleblower. Overall, though, the credit that Felton gives
to the first Bush is little different from his assessment of U.S. Republicans
in general.
One
gets the impression from Felton that the theft of the 2000 election for Bush
and Cheney was completely necessary in order for the plan for U.S.
participation in the forthcoming Middle East wars on behalf of Israel to be
carried out. The name of perhaps the
most extreme Israel-firster in U.S. politics, Al Gore’s vice-presidential
candidate, Joe Lieberman, doesn’t even appear in Felton’s index. Neither will you find there the name of the
journalist whose falsehoods about Iraq were most important in providing the
impetus for the invasion of Iraq, Judith Miller of the “liberal” New York Times.
The
primary means by which the Israeli parasite took over the American host, one gathers
from Felton, was through control of a number of think tanks, abetted by the
right-wing press. What he says about the
Center for Security Policy (CSP), which he informs us supplied 22 members of
the George W. Bush at the very beginning, tells us a lot about his entire view
of the takeover:
Whereas
JINSA declares its Israeli bias up front, the CSP hides behind an innocuous,
generic name. It’s little more than a
reflection of [Frank] Gaffney’s simplistic, militant prejudices, and as such
cannot seriously be considered a research institution. If there’s an anti-Arab, anti-UN, pro-Israeli,
pro-military or obsequiously pro-Bush position, the CSP will adopt it.
The
CSP is less of an independent organization than it is a recycler of writings
from other Zionist sources like the National
Review, American Spectator, Fox News, New York Post, frontpagemagazine.com and
townhall.com. To give an example of the incestuous nature
of the Zionist fronts, frontpagemagazine.com
managing editor Jamie Glazov offered up a fawning
interview with [Michael] Ledeen in which he affected Ledeen’s “terrorist”
vocabulary and asked him leading questions to elicit the proper anti-Arab
responses. At no time did Glazov identify Ledeen as a member of JINSA, yet the
interview was dutifully reposted on the CSP website as if it were from an
outside source. (p. 139)
As
we have seen, though, the Democrats, led by Hillary Clinton, have been even
more aggressively opposed to the Russian support for the Syrian government in
that country’s civil war than the Republicans, and that can only be because it
goes against the interests of Israel. If
you watch the parade of politicians
before the annual AIPAC gathering in Washington or pay any attention to the mainstream
media at all, it is very hard to detect any difference between the Democratic
and Republican Parties and the liberal and conservative media when it comes to
complete devotion to support for the Jewish-supremacist state of Israel.
Finally,
I would like to commend to the attention of readers Felton’s excellent presentation
on his book to the Vancouver Public
Library. He is especially good at
responding to the hostile questions from the audience by Zionists. I’m not sure that I could have responded as
effectively as he did. He does a little
less well with friendly questioners, though.
It is left up to a questioner for the subject of the Israeli assault on
the USS Liberty to come up. Felton agrees with the questioner that the
assault was obviously intentional, but he reveals in his answer that he does
not know the real reason for the attack, what a truly evil deed it was, and how
deeply involved Lyndon Johnson was in it.
You can see that he seems to be unaware of what Phillip Nelson reveals
about the true false-flag nature of the attack in Remember the Liberty! or even what is in my
song by the same name, minus the
exclamation point.
David
Martin
March
22, 2019
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