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Sultan and Shaitan
By Israel Shamir (http://www.israelshamir.net)
Sultan is good, just his viziers are evil, - this thought
comforted many an unhappy subject through human history. Unhappy
as we are, we comforted ourselves with vain hopes of positive
American intervention in Palestine, enforcing the myth of
the US as a severe but honest ruler. As the Deir Yassin Day
became Deir Yassin-a-Day, the hopes did not abate. “A
real test of the Bush presidency”, wrote Robert Fisk
in the Independent. “No time to waste”, seconded
Helena Cobban of the Christian Science Monitor. But the visit
of the US Secretary of State provided no respite for the Palestinians,
not even a lull in Israeli onslaught.
Brilliant Norman Finkelstein reminded us: “The problem
with the Bush administration, we are repeatedly told, is that
it has been insufficiently engaged with the Middle East, a
diplomatic void Colin Powell's mission is supposed to fill.
But who gave the green light for Israel to commit the massacres?
Who supplied the F-16s and Apache helicopters to Israel? Who
vetoed the Security Council resolutions calling for international
monitors to supervise the reduction of violence? And who just
blocked the proposal of the United Nation's top human rights
official, Mary Robinson, to merely send a fact-finding team
to the Palestinian territories? Consider this scenario. A
and B stand accused of murder. The evidence shows that A provided
B with the murder weapon, A gave B the "all-clear"
signal, and A prevented onlookers from answering the victim's
screams. Would the verdict be that A was insufficiently engaged
or that A was every bit as guilty as B of murder?”
He is right. It is time to stop daydreaming about the good
sultan. If a mental block forbids you to doubt his good intentions,
you may think he is a captive of evil eunuchs, as so many
rulers were. From regret and sorrow, we should move into action.
After all, the US policies in the Middle East aren’t
weather that everybody complains about, but does nothing about
it. But can we do something about it, if demonstrations and
protests are of no avail?
The answer is yes, and it is not a Jihad, neither a Crusade.
Robert Jensen[i]
of Texas University wrote, “I helped kill a Palestinian
today. If you pay taxes to the U.S. government, so did you”.
He implied that the US taxpayers’ money go into rearming
Israel and killing Palestinians. Let Jensen be comforted.
The US taxpayer is innocent. The reality is worse: the slaughter
is paid for by us, by five billion people on earth living
outside of the US.
Every day we transfer five billion dollars to the US, in
order to keep this great country’s leaders in the style
they are accustomed to, and also to kill as many Palestinians
as they find fit. A buck a day, from each of us, Europeans
and Africans, Chinese and Japanese, Russians and Arabs. These
mind-boggling numbers were published by the British weekly,
the Economist. We do it, as since 1972, the US assumed the
right to print as many dollars as they like, while we subscribed
to the fiction that the greenback, a small sheet of paper,
is an equivalent of our labour and of worldly goods.
As a matter of fact, the US dollar has no cover. It is a
cheque written by a bankrupt wastrel, good to be framed and
put on the wall. Provided they issue as many dollars as they
need, it is not amazing there is one superpower and all the
rest are in debt. It is not a secret: brave Fidel Castro tells
it at every conference, thus assuring endless hostility of
the US.
The US financial wizards, Greenspan et al, play with us an
old trick of confidence, called a ‘pyramid’. Such
games were played in many countries, notably in Albania and
Russia, by local tricksters. Usually they end with a catastrophic
crash. The Judeo-American con-game differs by its size. It
is global. Otherwise, it the same pyramid. 90 per cent of
all financial transactions are speculative transactions, writes
Noam Chomsky. The pyramid is supported by a massive propaganda
brainwash to encourage consumption and expansion. Ordinary
people of the US and its allies get no fun out of it: in England,
child poverty grew threefold since Margaret Thatcher came
to power. In the US, there are millions of homeless children.
Americans, Brits, Germans are deeply indebted, as the countries
of the Third World.
The US dollar succeeded to replace gold, because it offered
an attractive fixed interest rate. The interest rate has become
a honey trap for the mankind; it has caused the burden of
debt, impoverished states and persons, created the ugly aberration
of globalization. Not in vain, Sam Bronfman the Bootlegger,
the founder of the powerful Bronfman dynasty and father of
the World Jewish Congress chairman, when asked what the most
important human invention is, replied without hesitation:
‘interest rate’.[ii]
That was the second Fall of Man. Adam was tempted by the
apple, we got tempted by the fixed-rate interest on dollar,
the modern equivalent of old-fashioned usury. In the old days,
the ‘anti-Semitic’ Church condemned usury as the
exclusively Jewish occupation, but now it is free for all.
Everybody is a partner, in the words of Heller’s Catch-22
character, Milo Minderbinder. Yet, there is a catch, Catch-22.
You can not take your winnings and go away to enjoy them.
You have to stay in the game.
The US dollar is not ‘money’ anymore; it is a
license, like a Microsoft license, or a patent by a pharmaceutical
company. Whenever the US rulers decide, they can freeze the
assets of a rebel country. Iran had its assets frozen, Libya,
Iraq; surely Saudis will suffer the same fate the moment they
will object to American policies. Here is a good riddle for
Bilbo Baggins: what is overpriced, unsafe, green and greatly
desired by fools?
II
In the last days of the war in South East Asia, I travelled
by a slow junk boat down Mekong River, in the company of fellow-journalists,
adventurers, local peasants, pigs and chickens. The boat was
frequently stopped, searched and taxed by warring parties,
but it made an unhurried progress from the old royal capital
of Luang Prabang towards Vientiane. In a sleepy village of
twenty huts and three elephants, where we stayed overnight,
I wandered into a Chinese shop. In front of me, a dark and
dour Pathet Lao guerrilla in rubber tyre Ho Chi Minh sandals
and AK assault rifle on his back completed his modest shopping
and paid for it with some funny money. I recognized its colourful
pattern: it was Pathet Lao currency. As the soldier went away,
I took out a few Pathet Lao bills I got as a change on the
boat and asked the shopkeeper for a pack of cigarettes. The
Chinese did not move. “But I have seen you accept this
money”, I protested. He replied with wise words worthy
of Lao-Tzu, “Only from people with gun”.
The US dollar is still accepted by the world community out
of fear, and that is why the US military budget grows every
year. That is why the hermit kingdom of North Korea, Iran
and Iraq became The Axis of Evil: they do not accept dollar.
But fear is a bad adviser. The collapse of the pyramid is
imminent. The meltdown began in August 2001, as the Economist
advised its readers on 25.08.01, and, unless the timely intervention
of persons unknown on 11.09.01, the US dollar would be now
of value to numismatists only. But the World War III can only
delay the completion of the process.
Sheer prudence and enlightened self-interest have caused
the wise rulers to move out of the dollar sphere. European
countries launched Euro, the Japanese Yen rose sharply. But
their attempt to substitute paper by paper while keeping interest
rate is necessarily flawed. In a revolutionary proposal, Dr
Mahathir, the Prime Minister of prosperous Malaysia, proposes
to return to gold and silver, more specifically to the idea
of golden ‘Islamic’ Dinar as a zero-interest rate
reserve currency for the world. His great idea to undo the
dollar and loans’ double hold deserves to be compared
with the reform of Solon, the legendary Sage of Athens, who
cancelled debts, defeated Oligarchy, returned land and freedom
to people. If implemented, it would put an end to the suffering
of Palestinians and to suffering of the Third World in general.
The US dollar would fall as fast as in 1929, and with it,
the US support for Israel and your debts.
It should not be seen as an attack on America. The ordinary
Americans would regain their homes from the banks’ clutches,
as mortgages would disappear. The burden of debt would fall
off the back of people. True, George Soros and Mark Rich would
have to apply to welfare office, together with many ardent
supporters of Israel. But it is hardly a misfortune: they
would be too busy to make mischief as they would have to earn
their living.
That is the answer to the question, how can we help Palestinians.
Ask the leaders of your countries to do the right and prudent
step of moving their funds and capitals out the US banks and
out of the US dollar. It would be more efficient than Jihad
and Crusade, more humane and final than suicide bombing.
I liked the idea of Dr Mahathir. The golden Dinar would usher
us into a new world, the world of zero rate interest, the
world without usury, would help to reconcile society. Marx
would enjoy the irony of history, that the Jewish onslaught
in Palestine can be stopped only by rejecting partnership
in dollar-denominated usury.
III
Religious considerations can not be removed from our practical
decisions. The ‘Islamic’ Dinar would complete
the system of performance-connected banking. It is called
nowadays ‘Islamic banking’, but it was practiced
by very catholic Venice for centuries before the advent of
usury. On this point, as on many others, Dar al-Islam and
Christendom do not differ. The Church banned fixed interest,
until John Calvin’s fateful folly, and the great religious
reformer, Prophet Muhammad, reinforced the prohibition[iii].
The Jewish Law forbade Jews to charge interest for their
"brothers" (other Jews), but required to charge
‘strangers’ (non-Jews). St Ambrose understood
the implications of this approach, when he wrote:
“From him demand usury, whom you desire
to harm. From him exact usury, whom it would not be a crime
to kill. Where there is a right of war, there also is a right
of usury”[iv].
That is why peace will come to Palestine when the Jews will
accept the maxim of Thomas Aquinas, “there are no strangers”,
and consider the Palestinians as their dear brothers. Or,
in words of Hosea, Say of your brothers: my people, and of
your sisters: my loved one[v].
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[i]
HoustonChronicle, http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/story.hts/editorial/outlook/1351792
[ii] Haaretz, 20.11.98, Musaf p.36
[iii] sura 2, 275-280
[iv] The quote supplied by David Pidcock.
[v] Hosea 2:1
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