32. First contacts made between Israel, HiE zbullah
D. J. Gregor , |
NYC, NY, USA |
|
(07.30.06) |
Regarding: Report: First contacts made between Israel, HizbullahFor more then a half-century the Axis of Chutzpah flags as the union of two morally failed states. For more then half-century Americans gawk as juiced rabble at the rape of Palestina. When moral specters contest the ruination of Palestina: Israel’s frenzied tentacles flare. Most recently: In a snap and crack…Gaza, Lebanon, and the United Nations is scorched. “Beware all of Arabia,” snarls the Axis of Chutzpah. Yet the looming specters, innate moral senses, persist.
The Axis of Chutzpah, invincible, implacable, self-righteous, sulphureous coils do not withdraw. The rape of Palestina exercises unabated. Modern cities lacerate her breasts a wall scars her neck.
Laments the splayed Palestina: “No specter on the earth can quell the atrocities of the Judeo-Christian’s fearsome technological armies. Their children scribble prayers on bombs of steel, their parents teach thou shall steal and all the time and after the rape, death will be Plaestina’s ordeal.”
Yet the Axis of Chutzpah, self-righteously decorous, with biblical imprimaturs, does not dissipate the specters of condemning consciousness. Rather the tattered, in shirts and sandals, out of the dusts of Arabia stream, giving embodiment to the specters, and interweave as the such that is Hamas and Hezbolla. The hardscrabble sons and daughters of the desert boldly proclaim perhaps naively, but certainly chivalrously… “We rise to return Palestina to wholeness.”
Hezbollah and Hamas are in the toughest terms…it seems to this reader, movements born to stopping the simple dirty rape of minds, and the rape of a culture. These organizations impress this reader as inspired neighborhood toughs, trying to establish the foundations for their future freedoms. Humanity’s moral specters inspire eternal.
These are the musings of a USA (non-Christian, non-Muslim, non-Jewish, non-Semite non- Arab). It seems these disclaimers are called for in discussions of this sort.
D. J. Gregor
|