One of the most important misdirection tricks that the Jewish Supremacists use to confuse the goyim is to present a “soft” or “liberal” alternative to their Zionist ambitions—and thereby attempt to deflect growing Gentile criticism of Jewish excesses.

These “leftist Zionist” organizations claim that the hard line—and true—Zionist Supremacists are “not representative” of all Jews, and therefore that criticism of Israel and Jewish Supremacism cannot be made to encompass all of their activities.

One of the prime examples of this sort of misdirection is the leftist “J-Street” lobby in the U.S., which claims to be a leftwing alternative to the brutally honest American Israel Political Action Committee, or AIPAC.

J-Street describes itself as “the political home for pro-Israel, pro-peace Americans fighting for the future of Israel as the democratic homeland of the Jewish people.”

They cunningly claim support for a “two-state solution” to the conflict in the Middle East, and say that their committed is rooted in “Jewish Jewish and democratic values” and that they are “expanding support for Israel by affirming — along with many Israelis — that being pro-Israel doesn’t require supporting every policy of its government.”

Initially, J-Street was greeted with hostility and scepticism by the hard-line Zionist Supremacists.

Michael Oren, the outgoing Israeli ambassador to the US, once described J-Street as a “blight on the American Jewish body politic”—but now has, like so many other “hard liners”, realized the potential of this organization to misdirect and confuse the issue.

Further evidence of the realization that J-Street offers a potential cover to shift blame for Zionist Supremacist crimes, is evident from the line-up of speakers scheduled for the J-Street conference, set to start at the end of September.

Guest speakers include the US vice president Joe Biden, Tzahi Hanegbi, a former justice minister and member of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s governing Likud party, and Yitzhak Vaknin, a lawmaker for the Sephardic Orthodox Shas party.

Israeli Justice Minister Tzipi Livni will be the conference opening night speaker.

The attendance of Shas party representatives—the most virulently racist and anti-Gentile political party in the Israeli Knesset—and Likud lawmakers shows that the hard-liners have now understood the benefits of adopting the J-Street approach as well.

Gentiles should not be fooled by this tactic: it is the same old Jewish Supremacy, dolled up in a different dress. They still want to keep their stranglehold on American politics, media and finance, and they still want to keep their racist, supremacist Jews-only state of Israel. All that J-Street and the leftist Zionists want to do is try and avoid some of the blame for Zionist crimes.