Trump, Corbyn and the tragedy of Western democracies

Impotence of Corbyn
Gilad Atzmon writes:

Both Donald Trump and Jeremy Corbyn bring to the surface what has been suppressed for decades: we are subject to foreign occupation. We, the people, are reduced to mere consumers and our so-called “elected politicians” are a bunch of detached, compromised actors.

Trump and his administration have been working relentlessly to make Israel great again.

Trump was elected to “make America great again”. Throughout his election campaign Trump was accused by Jewish media of spreading “dog whistling anti-Semitic tropes” in order to appeal to white nationalists who indeed responded to their new master. They made Trump president only to discover that their beloved country isn’t that great and is not going to reinstate its greatness any time soon. However, Trump and his administration have been working relentlessly to make Israel great again.

Watch Trump making Israel great again:

Trump has succeeded in illuminating the hopeless state of the democratic adventure. Trump has exposed the vast depth of the political crisis that splits America apart: the battle between the “identitarians” and the rest. America’s battles could deteriorate into a civil war at any time. Trump is not the cause of this demographic, geographic, cultural and spiritual clash. He only galvanised the symptoms of that clash.

Since Corbyn was chosen to lead the Labour Party this old political institution has revealed its true tyrannical  nature, engaged in a constant purge of the best of its members. Any criticism of Israel or its intrusive lobby leads to immediate suspension and even expulsion.

Similarly, Corbyn acts as a catalyst to awaken a new consciousness. Through Corbyn we learn to perceive how grim our situation is and how truly impotent the contemporary Left and the Labour Party are. Corbyn’s struggles allow us to see that the Labour Party is an occupied zone. Corbyn’s helplessness has revealed that the best radical candidate the British Left has produced in decades is, tragically, very weak and can’t hold his ground on any issue from Israel/Palestine to Brexit and beyond.

Since Corbyn was chosen to lead the Labour Party this old political institution has revealed its true tyrannical  nature, engaged in a constant purge of the best of its members. Any criticism of Israel or its intrusive lobby leads to immediate suspension and even expulsion. Since Corbyn was elected to save us from the Tories, the Labour Party has adopted an Orwellian Big Brother attitude. The party has been spying on its members and digging into their social media accounts, even evicting members for comments they made years before they joined the party.

Indeed, Corbyn has helped us see the dark machinations at the core of his party, and the way in which it is puppeteered by Tel Aviv and its local British stooges.

Most devastating of all is that through Corbyn it has been revealed that the Left has most likely abandoned its historical political role. Corbyn promised to “care for the many not the few”, a pledge that initially sounded promising but has been largely contradicted by the reality on the ground. The Labour Party and its leader ignore the many as they follow the orders of the very few. The British working class aren’t impressed by the closest ally they have ever had at the helm of the Labour Party. It is through Corbyn and his to date colossal failure that we understand that a fresh form of opposition is crucial for our survival as an ethical and dignified people.

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