Friday, March 23, 2007

Bill Clinton: Chasidei Umot HaOlam Par Excellence

President Clinton Thanks AJC on Carter Book

Former President Bill Clinton, in an unsolicited handwritten letter to AJC Executive Director David Harris, voiced appreciation for AJC's efforts to expose the inaccuracies in President Jimmy Carter's book on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

The full text of the handwritten letter follows:

"Dear David,

Thanks so much for your articles about President Carter's book. I don't know where his information (or conclusions) came from, but Dennis Ross has tried to straighten it out, publicly and in two letters to him. At any rate, I'm grateful.

Sincerely,
Bill Clinton"


http://www.ajc.org/site/c.ijITI2PHKoG/b.851561/apps/nl/content2.asp?content_id={72EAB721-4251-435F-9AEC-E889D50A7759}¬oc=1



Bill Clinton provides us with a perfect example of why those who perceive "the Jews" as the the sole threat are quite mistaken. Clinton's chutzpah on display here, which he learned as a young Chasidei Umot HaOlam (pious among the Gentiles) in the Demolay Society and later as a Rhodes Scholar, would impress the most seasoned rabbis.

Clinton doesn't know where Jimmy Carter's information or conclusions about the Israeli-Palestinian so-called "conflict" comes from? This is Vaudeville-style stage play for the consumption of the dumbed-down goyim.

Jimmy Carter's information about the Israeli oppression of the Palestinians comes from decades worth of personal involvement in the matter and from witnessing the oppression first hand. Clinton knows this. And Clinton hasn't the experience from which to judge Carter's first-hand observations. He's just playing his role. He's a Chasidei Umot HaOlam.

"If Iraq came across the Jordan River (towards "Israel"), I would grab a rifle and get in the trench and fight and die," (Bill Clinton) said to wild applause at a Jewish fund-raiser in Toronto.

Clinton made his bombshell remarks to 350 people who paid $1,000 to break bread with him on Monday night at a dinner for the TorontoHadassah-WIZO children's charity. (New York Post, August 2, 2002)

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