Everyone's got a cross to bear, and if you're without one, it will catch up with you.
I've got my own, you see.
Will I use it to improve, or by fighting it to ruin me?
But there's a different kind of cross, a struggle, whether in the religious or secular realm.
It too must be used aright, and it's given to a select few.
There's a lot of madness out there now.
And most, I've seen and heard, many on social media desire us of my death.
Everybody has to die.
But nothing you can say or do will put a death to the man who's speaking to you now.
My enemies who want me dead, and they've been chanting it for thirty-some years now,
Alright.
Who do you want?
Fire Count. How do you want him?
Dead. If someone Farrakhan dead, then he must be saying something they don't like.
Now you got my sisters in there.
102 women in Congress.
Boy, am I happy.
And one of them said that...
She was using some funny language, brother. But Miss O...
Omar from Somalia, she started talking about the Benjamins.
And they trying to make her apologize.
I said, sweetheart, don't do that.
Oh, pardon me for calling you sweetheart.
But you do have a sweetheart.
Because you sure using it to shake the government up.
Have nothing to apologize for.
Israel and AIPAC pays off senators and congressmen to do their bidding.
So you're not lying!
So if you're not lying, stop laying down!
He's surely in a struggle, a tug of war, a battle for a cause he's fighting for against those who oppose.
This one also has his pose.
My question is specifically about Iran and the nuclear weapons and the discussion that you were having with regard to Iran and the international community.
I definitely understand the idea of a country obtaining a nuclear weapon or developing one themselves out of A form of protection or to be on the same, I guess, international status as other countries who are considered superpowers or on the same level as a superpower because they themselves have nuclear weapons.
But what do you do when a country is openly trying to develop one or obtain one and also openly threatening to wipe out a country and claiming that a country shouldn't exist?
I mean, those are two really big issues that we're dealing with, and I didn't really think you addressed that, and I was curious what you had to say.
That's true. Well, what do you do about countries that already develop nuclear weapons outside the framework of the Nonproliferation Treaty and are daily violating resolutions of the Security Council and the International Atomic Energy Agency?
I mean, that's the much more serious problem.
That's a different situation because those countries aren't openly threatening to wipe out another country.
Nor is Iran. Just take a look at the statements.
The statements are that they don't think, they said, and it actually goes back to Khomeini at the time of the U.S.-Iranian alliance, the Israeli-Iranian alliance, and Israel didn't care about it then.
And it keeps being repeated.
The statement is that in the course of time, Israel should no longer exist.
Well, actually, I happen to agree with that, too.
Ditto. Making God a co-conspirator of evictions and genocide based on awaiting the Antichrist is proof enough that the Jewish state should not exist.
Actually, there are two countries that are not only calling for some nation not to exist, but are destroying it.
Namely the U.S. and Israel.
That's their position with regard to the Palestinians.
And they're not just saying it.
Applause No stress. They're not just saying it, they're doing it day
by day.
Chomsky made a lot of enemies for that.
Helen Dershowitz, for one, for censoring Israel for its maltreatment of Palestinians.
His struggle continues.
He keeps on fighting.
And millennials, whose heart and purse strings aren't tied to Apex Benjamins, could lend their fists to the fight.
How about this guy? My two Jewish parents took me to Hebrew school when I was six years old.
This was in addition to attending Sabbath services every Friday evening and Saturday morning, which also included Sabbath school.
You see, Jews educate their children from the cradle.
Although I was steeped in Yiddishkeit, that is, the Jewish experience, throughout my growing up years, my fondest memory was singing Christmas carols with my Gentile friends.
Every December, we would go door to door throughout the neighborhood, singing Christmas carols such as, O Come All Ye Faithful and Silent Night.
One Christmas Eve, after finishing a rousing rendition of Joy to the World, the man of the house came out from the living room to the front porch, pointed right at me, and said, What's a Jew boy like you singing Christmas carols?
That's an excerpt of my first video, Why I Left Judaism.
YouTube's flaggers disappeared it after 1.5 million hits.
That's part of my struggle striving to be heard in the face of intense censorship.
It seems every video I do that criticizes Israel gets disappeared.
Perhaps I should start criticizing Scotland or Somalia.
It would pass the censors every time.
But I'm thankful for my struggle, though I often complain.