Visitors Now: | |
Total Visits: | |
Total Stories: |
Story Views | |
Now: | |
Last Hour: | |
Last 24 Hours: | |
Total: |
Being too old to have enjoyed the benefits of being educated using what is euphemistically referred to as “Common Core”, some of us might not be aware that in addition to seismic alterations in performing simple mathematical calculations (such as figuring out how much change to give someone when they try to pay for a burger with a twenty dollar bill), we might not be cognizant that the actual language of our country has also been changed.
Fortunately the recent meetings held in Lausanne, Switzerland to discuss the possession of fissionable materials by the Islamic Republic of Iran offered us a great instructive moment. As children we misunderstood the actual meaning of the word “negotiate” and operated throughout our childhoods thinking that the word meant there was a certain amount of give and take in an attempt to ease a difference of goals or opinions.
Thanks to our President, Barack Hussein Obama, I am embarrassed that I now have to say “Silly me!”
Under the new meaning of the word negotiate, I finally begin to understand what was going on in Switzerland. Iran, a nation with a long history of domination by religious zealots who feel that they should not simply rule the former Persian empire, but think that the Persian empire should be recreated and rule not only the current Islamic Republic, but the rest of the entire world as well.
But being as brilliant as these ayatollahs, mullahs, imams (or whatever else they are known as), are fully aware that Iran, as currently constituted, really doesn’t have the power to force the capitulation of the rest of the planet to their whims. Recently, as if to prove this, Iran’s Quds Force volunteered to help Iraq retake the city of Tikrit which had recently been conquered by ISIS. That military outing didn’t fare too well until the Iranians were forced to back off from the front lines and allowed the Iraqis, along with American air forces, to actually accomplish something.
Read more at CFP: