News
Nations today live far from their native homelands
Posted Monday, October 26 2009 at 00:00
But, on the other hand, the entire Semitic stock are “foreigners” in the Middle East because they originated in the Horn of Africa.
The Mongoloids are “aliens” in Japan because the Negroid Tokigawa and Jomon of the Ainu — the original inhabitants of that archipelago — were an offshoot of the Negritos of India and Indonesia
The gypsum-skinned inhabitants of Pakistan and northern India came from northern Europe only 3,000 years ago, as did the Hellenes, Hittites, Hurrians and the foreparents of the Afghans and Iranians.
The people of America’s New England left old England’s Southampton much more recently.
But who in his right mind can suggest that New Englanders should be rounded up and shipped to Land’s End, Sussex and Kent?
Count me out of any movement whose plank is that Jokowiny — the Kenya Luo — should organise an exodus to Sudan and Egypt.
The ruling groups in New Zealand, Australia, Canada and South America left Europe a mere three centuries ago.
Yet, although there is no country in the world which was not created by such mind-boggling human cruelty, practically all of these injustices are now time-honoured.
This concept of “time-honour” was what the Khazari Jews flouted when, in 1948, they used a dubious 2,000-year-old claim to grab Palestine with Anglo-Saxon help.
It was doubly unjust because the Khazari Jews are essentially Caucasian (from a Russian root).
Many Khazaris now admit they became Jews only by conversion, not by the blood of Judah.
As, the Jewish scholar Raphael Patai demonstrates in his book The Jewish Mind, Judah’s blood is essential to the definition of a Jew.
But nobody who appreciates its insuperability of implementation will countenance any suggestion that the present world demographic structure be disturbed to achieve ethnic justice.
It is much more cost-effective for each ethnic community to struggle for justice whenever it now finds itself.
Time may have extended respectability even to the Israelis.
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