Jewish-American dual loyalty examined, expressly for the disingenuous
lying Zionist ****bag, danny kimmel:
"On the one hand, Rosenfeld, Harris, and others want to deny that
American Jews and American Jewish organizations like AIPAC suffer from
dual loyalty in trying to influence U.S. foreign policy. It's
anti-Semitic or contributes to anti-Semitism, they say, to make that
charge. On the other hand, they want to demand of American Jewish
intellectuals a certain loyalty to Israel, Israeli policies, and to
Zionism as part of their being Jewish. They make dual loyalty an
inescapable part of being Jewish in a world in which a Jewish state
exists. And that's probably the case. Many Jews now suffer from dual
loyalty--the same way that Cuban-Americans or Mexican-Americans do. By
ignoring this dilemma--and, worse still, by charging those who
acknowledge its existence with anti-Semitism-- the critics of the new
anti-Semitism are engaged in a flight from their own political selves.
They are guilty of a certain kind of bad faith."
http://www.wakeupfromyourslumber.com/node/605
You are deliberately engaging in bad faith, kimmie. You experience and
exhibit dual loyalty, you *demand* it of others, most especially your
fellow Zionist American Jews, yet you want to mau-mau those who observe
it in you and criticize you for it.
The problem is, it isn't really "dual" loyalty; it's Israel-first
loyalty. As someone else said, "Actually, dual loyalty would be an
improvement. It would mean putting American interests ahead of Israeli
interests every once in a while."
The simple fact is, Zionist American Jews see Israel as an intrinsic and
fundamental part of Jewish identity, and Jewish identity is, to them,
vastly more im****tant than American identity.


|