Saudi Money, the root of all Evil
Why has the American government
not read Saudi Arabia the riot act? Why haven't the hate-filled
pamphlets collected at mosques around the country that were built
and are now maintained by Saudi money brought together by Rice or
Bush and put out on a table at the White House? And then the Arab
ambassadors could all be invited over to see this "Special
Exhibit," an exhibit to which representatives of all the
major networks and the major newspapers here and abroad will be
invited and urged to cover?
And then why does Bush or someone else not have a little private
meeting with the enraged Saudi Ambassador, to tell him that there
is much more in that sort of "Special Exhibit" -- which
could of course tour the country -- if he doesn't stop funding
the mosques and madrasas in this country, and stop allowing Saudi
money to pay for Moslem missionaries in the prisons, to prey on
the psychically as well as economically marginal.
If the American government had a mind to do it, it could bring
the Saudi government around in no time.
But it doesn't, because so many former government officials and
those who listen to them are directly or indirectly on the Saudi
or other Moslem dole. Who pays Eugene Bird, and pays for the ads
of the "Council for the National Interest" that is
virtually identical in its views to the Saudi government? Who
pays for "consultancy" by Raymond Close, or James Akins?
Who pays for that magazine about the Middle East, full of Arab
propaganda, that another ex-diplomat, Andrew Kilgore, runs? Who
pays or has paid fees to Brent Scowcroft? To George McGovern?
What Presidential libraries have been battening on Saudi and
other Arab money? Who has received those million-dollar lecture
fees in Kuwait, or from that Arab-funded lectureship at the
Fletcher School (hint: Bush, Clinton)? Who has been getting what?
Ask yourself why since 1973 there has been not a move toward
decreasing, through the simple device of taxes, demand for oil
and gasoline? Why for thirty years did American energy policy
consist of trusting "our staunch ally Saudi Arabia" to
keep prices low, when it never happened, and never could have
happened? Why was no one aware until the last year or two of what,
inevitably, OPEC oil revenues would fund? Why was Prince Bandar
the only foreigner allowed in on the plans for invading Iraq? Why
today do we worry about what the Sunni Arabs want, and believe
that we have a duty to remain in Iraq to protect those Sunnis (i.e.,
keep the "catastrophe of civil war" from happening)?
And that is just the beginning of the list of questions that need
to be asked.
Meanwhile, as long as the Saudi "royal" family (self-anointed
monarchs since they defeated the Jabal Shammar in 1920, or soon
thereafter) exists, and appropriates most of the nation's wealth,
there will be those who will as Moslems find their resentment and
outraged channeled into Islam as the total explanation of
everything. And terrorism will continue in Saudi Arabia until the
end of time. Let it. The only business the Infidel world should
have with Saudi Arabia is to attempt to have as little business
with Saudi Arabia.
For the moment great sums of money flow in, and they will
continue to flow in. But this does not mean that every effort
cannot be made to diminish that flow of money (instead of aiming
at a ludicrously irrelevant "energy independence" for
the United States, which is both unachievable and would have no
effect on Saudi Arabia or other Moslem oil states, for oil not
sold to America will simply be sold to others, unless collective
demand goes down).
Saudi Arabia needs to be "ridimensionato" -- that is to
say, cut down to size. "Money can buy everything - except
civilization." It is a barbarous place; its government is
barbarous, its economy barbarous, the mental state of its
inhabitants barbarous. A very few, who have spent a long time in
the West, can appear to have acquired the habits of thought of
Western man. And a very few of those may actually manage to do so.
But no one should be fooled by the oleaginous¹
new ambassador, Al-Jubeir.
CFPA: As we have stated many times before, Saudi Arabia is not only our enemy but the enemy of Western civilization. We need to take a harsher attitude towards Saudi Arabia and above all make them stop their funding of any Islamic institutions in our country until they open their country's doors to Christianity. As for us leaving Iraq, we can't leave with our tail between our legs as that would just embolden the radical Moslems. We need to start eradicating entire communities where the terrorism is coming from and deal with the problem with an iron fist. The Iraqi government has to take on it's responsibility of dealing with the enemy on their own, we should give them whatever weaponry they need to achieve this....they can pay us for our trouble with OIL!
¹oleaginous: marked by an offensively ingratiating manner or quality.
Created: 12 Jan 2007