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Russian-born hard-line Jewish nationalist Vladimir “Ze’ev”
Jabotinsky (1880-1940) — often called “The Jewish
Fascist” — is revered by the Trotskyite “neoconservatives”
who are the most pivotal forces in global Zionism today, exploiting
U.S. military power in the drive for a planetary imperium:
the New World Order. In the 1920s Jabotinsky emerged as one
of the most popular and influential Zionist leaders and is
today commemorated on Israeli currency (inset). Many young
graduates of Jabotinsky’s militaristic Betar brigades
(above) became members of the infamous Irgun, which pioneered
modern-day terrorism in brutal attacks on British forces and
Arab civilians in Palestine. Later, the Irgun and their allies
became the foundation of the modern-day “right wing”
Likud faction in Israel. Although the American media glorifies
Jewish nationalism, all other forms of nationalism are
vilified as a cause of war and oppression.
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By Way of an Introduction:
Nationalism: The Wave of the Future —
The Prime Target of the Global Forces
of Zionism and Internationalism
. . .THE JUDAS GOATS —
THE ENEMY WITHIN examines the manner in which internationalist
forces have worked to take over and/or destroy legitimate, genuine,
traditional nationalist movements in the United States during the
20th century. As such, it seems appropriate to begin our journey
into this shadowy netherworld of spies and subversion by first defining
precisely what constitutes “nationalism” in the American
sense.
. . .Nationalism — in its various
incarnations throughout history and all across the globe —
has always been and certainly always will be a preeminent factor
in dictating the course of mankind’s direction. Nationalism
and the counter-force of internationalism together form the axis
around which the events of our world today revolve. There is hardly
any conflict anywhere on the face of the planet that does not hinge
upon the struggle between nationalism and internationalism. So what
then is nationalism?
. . .In America alone, the word nationalism
means many different things to many different people — including
those who consider themselves to be nationalists or rank themselves
as part of “the nationalist movement.”
. . .The “nationalist movement”
in America has always been quite internally quarrelsome, at times
so philosophically disjointed that it almost seems a double misnomer
to dare describe the phenomenon as either “nationalist”
or as a “movement” at all.
. . .There are many (albeit naïve)
classic “rock-ribbed Republicans” who would call themselves
nationalists — however inappropriately — revering the
“Big Stick” philosophy of Theodore Roosevelt, reveling
in the idea that Uncle Sam should make his presence and his considerable
military might felt ‘round the globe — America right
or wrong. This, to these folks, is “nationalism”—
but, of course, it isn’t, although the modern-day “neo-conservatives”
who relish the thought of using America to advance the worldwide
Zionist agenda have been quite ready to exploit “TR”
as almost one of their own.
. . .In marked contrast to these “neo-conservatives,”
there are many other Americans — who truly are nationalists
in the classic sense of the word — who question the very idea
that the United States should act as a world policeman, putting
out brushfire wars and advancing some undefined dream of “democracy,”
which has now become the rallying cry of the neo-conservative (that
is, Zionist-Trotskyite) schemers.
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. . .In fact, the genuine American
nationalists, as opposed to the “neocons” (who truly
are “cons” in every sense of that word), are the modern-day
heirs of a traditional American (and, ironically, largely Republican
Party-based) philosophy heralded by the late Sen. Arthur Vandenberg
(R-Mich.) when he affirmed: “Nationalism — not internationalism
— is the indispensable bulwark of American independence.”
. . .In his now long-forgotten, but
still quite timely, volume, The Trail of a Tradition
(G.P. Putnam’s Sons, New York, 1926), Vandenberg sought to
define the American nationalist tradition in the context of U.S.
engagement with the world at large — from the days of our
Founding Fathers through the era of Woodrow Wilson and the attempt
to enforce a world regime through the engine of the failed League
of Nations.
. . .In the end, of course, Vandenberg
himself underwent a remarkable transformation — thanks largely,
it appears, to having been blackmailed and otherwise “influenced”
by British intelligence operatives — and shifted into the
internationalist camp — acting as an outspoken advocate of
free-wheeling U.S. involvement in global affairs. However, in his
early years,Vandenberg was indeed very much a part of what we might
rightly call the genuine “nationalist” camp —
one that occupied quite a large bit of territory in the land of
American political thought.
. . .Another area where self-described
“nationalists” seem to part company is on the ever-important
issue of trade. There, the conflict between real nationalism and
the internationalist, imperial perversion of “nationalism”
is critical to the debate. Free trade versus protectionism (as advocated
by traditional nationalists) presents a very real dilemma for self-styled
“conservatives” within Republican Party ranks, for example,
who, on the one hand, consider themselves “nationalists”
and say they are for America First, but who — on the altar
of free trade — are actually working to sacrifice American
sovereignty to multinational trade organizations and global financial
conglomerates. So there is a very basic divergence between free
trade and national sovereignty.
. . .The fact is that free trade has
historical ties not only to British imperialism and global super-capitalism,
but also even with the great bugaboo of American conservatives:
communism itself. In 1848, Karl Marx, the father of communism, advocated
free trade because, he said, “it breaks up old nationalities
and carries antagonisms of proletariat [workers] and bourgeoisie
[small businessmen] to the uttermost point.”
. . .According to Marx, “the
free trade system hastens the social revolution.” In short,
modern day conservatives who support free trade are actually supporting
a central tenet of Marxism. So, are these “conservatives”
truly “nationalist” in the classic sense? It seems not.
. . .Which brings us to the definition
of nationalism . . .
INTRODUCTION.
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. . .The word “nationalism”
— and the general knowledge of the history surrounding the
concept of nationalism — raises negative images in the minds
of those people — largely educated people, largely politicized
people — who bother to think about the subject.
. . .For the average student (at either
the high school or college level) who devotes little of his academic
energies toward the realms of history or political science —
the quite sensible would-be rocket scientist, architect or accountant
who has no desire to dabble in political endeavor — the word
“nationalism” may even conjure up the absolute, all-encompassing
definition of evil as perceived by today’s society and culture
and repeated endlessly in the mass media:
. . .NATIONALISM:
Adolf Hitler, the Third Reich, German militarism, concentration
camps, six million innocent Jews — maybe as many as seven
or eight million, possibly eleven million — marched off
to the gas chambers, later to be incinerated in gas ovens. And
don’t forget Japanese kamikaze fighter pilots — and
Tojo, too.
. . .Taken right
from the comics or a Hollywood drama, that in essence, sums up the
common-place perception — indeed, really, the more or less
“official” definition — of what constitutes “nationalism.”
. . .And this is no accident. The writing
of both popular and academic history and the authority and power
to define what “nationalism” was co-opted and has since
been dominated — at least throughout the second half of the
20th century, and in the Anglo-American world, in particular —
by persons and institutions distinctly hostile to nationalism in
all its varieties and forms.
. . .This is a direct consequence of
the growing concentration of media ownership in the hands of an
elite few — closely connected families and financial groups
— who benefit from internationalist policies. This is no “conspiracy
theory,” by any means. Prominent media critic Professor Ben
Bagdikian, in his book The Media Monopoly,
summarizes the situation well:
. . .The [media]
lords of the global village have their own political agenda. All
resist economic changes that do not support their own financial
interests. Together, they exert a homogenizing power over ideas,
culture and commerce that affects populations larger than any
in history. Neither Caesar nor Hitler, Franklin Roosevelt nor
any Pope, has commanded as much power to shape the information
on which so
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many people depend to make decisions about everything
from whom to vote for to what to eat . .
. . .Monopolistic power dominates many other industries and most
of them enjoy special treatment by the government. But media giants
have two enormous advantages: They control the public image of
national leaders who, as a result, fear and favor the media magnates’
political agendas; and they control the information and entertainment
that help establish the social, political and cultural attitudes
of increasingly larger populations . . .
. . .Now, in the
wake of this most unfortunate phenomenon — this monopolization
of the power to educate and inform — the actual nature and
substance of what truly constitutes “nationalism” has
been distorted. As such, more modern-day efforts to not only understand
and define and advance the cause of nationalism have been relegated
to what the Masters of the Media loosely call “the fringe.”
. . .During the mid-20th century, the
one notable independent effort to define nationalism — at
least in the American historical context — came through the
work of one Willis A. Carto, the Indiana-born founder of a Washington-based
institution known as Liberty Lobby, the publisher of a widely-read
national weekly newspaper, The Spotlight.
. . .Although driven into bankruptcy
and destroyed in 2001 by a politically- motivated lawsuit that was
affirmed by a federal judge, The Spotlight
emerged, during its heyday, as perhaps the largest and most effective
voice for traditional American nationalism — the very reason
that the maverick newspaper was targeted for evisceration.
. . .A survivor of wounds inflicted
upon him by the Japanese during brutal combat in the Pacific theater
during World War II, Liberty Lobby’s future founder, Carto,
returned home and — unlike many veterans who believed the
official propaganda — began his own personal journey of investigation,
seeking the answers to the “how” and the “why”
of American involvement in that genocidal world conflagration.
. . .Ultimately, Carto came to question
the necessity of U.S. involvement not only in World War II but in
virtually all of the wars of the 20th century. In fact, long before
it became politically popular to do so — and certainly unlike
many on the traditional “right” — Carto raised
questions about the U.S. intervention in Southeast Asia, while conventional
“Cold War Liberals” were still pushing for deeper American
entanglement in the region, ultimately leading to the Vietnam debacle.
. . .Never considering himself anything
but a nationalist, Carto made a conscious effort to draw the lines
and distinctions between American
INTRODUCTION.
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. . . . . . . . 33
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“conservatism” of the Republican stripe
and traditional nationalism. Rejecting what he considered to be
the tired and worn and thoroughly inadequate concepts of “right”
and “left,” Carto worked energetically through Liberty
Lobby to develop a thriving nationalist movement, specifically focusing
on the dangers of internationalism, placing nationalism as central
to the overall framework of an American populist philosophy exemplified
by Thomas Jefferson and an approach toward foreign relations (in
particular) as laid out by George Washington in his Farewell Address.
. . .Carto’s book, Populism
vs.Plutocracy:The Universal Struggle, captured the
essence of Carto’s nationalist point of view, reflecting on
the monumental figures of American populism and their particular
contributions to nationalist thought: ranging from statesmen such
as Jefferson and Jackson to progressive firebrands as Robert LaFollette
and Burton Wheeler to famed radio priest, Father Charles Coughlin,
America First Committee spokesman Charles Lindbergh, nationalist
Sen. Robert Taft, and such intellectual giants as Lawrence Dennis,
undoubtedly the premier American nationalist theoretician of the
20th century.
. . .The views of these men —
plus many other giants — taken together comprised a basis
for the nationalist philosophy that Carto put forth in every way
possible through a wide variety of media at his disposal over some
50 years of active involvement in the American public arena.
. . .Carto insisted that adherence
to Washington’s words of wisdom provided not only the means
to ensure America’s tranquil relations with its neighbors
— near and far — but also a foundation for building
a strong nation capable of ensuring its own domestic stability.
. . .Perhaps more than any other American
— including Washington himself — Carto utilized the
considerable media outreach at his disposal to repeat, time and
time again, Washington’s warnings:
. . .So likewise,
a passionate attachment of one nation for another produces a variety
of evils. Sympathy for the favorite nation, facilitating the illusion
of an imaginary common interest in cases where no real common
interest exists, and infusing into one the enmities of the other,
betrays the former into a participation in the quarrels and wars
of the latter, without adequate inducements or justifications.
It also leads to concessions, to the favorite nation, of privileges
denied to others, which is apt doubly to injure the nation making
the concessions, by unnecessary parting with what ought to have
been retained and by exciting jealousy, ill will and a disposition
to retaliate in the parties from whom equal
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privileges are withheld; and it gives to ambitious,
corrupted or deluded citizens who devote themselves to the favorite
nation, facility to betray or sacrifice the interests of their
own country, without odium, sometimes even with popularity; gilding
with the appearances of a virtuous sense of obligation, a commendable
deference for public opinion, or a laudable zeal for public good,
the base or foolish compliances of ambition, corruption or infatuation.
. . .Against the insidious wiles
of foreign influence (I conjure you to believe me, fellow citizens)
the jealousy of a free people ought to be constantly awake; since
history and experience prove that foreign influence is one of
the most baneful foes of republican government. But that jealousy,
to be useful, must be impartial, else it becomes the instrument
of the very influence to be avoided, instead of a defense against
it.
. . .Excessive partiality for one
foreign nation, and excessive dislike for another, cause those
whom they acuate to see danger only on one side, and serve to
veil and even second the arts of influence on the other.
. . .Real patriots, who may resist
the intrigues of the favorite, are liable to become suspected
and odious; while its tools and dupes usurp the applause and confidence
of the people, to surrender their interest.
. . .The great rule of conduct for
us, in regard to foreign nations, is, in extending our commercial
relations, to have with them as little political connection as
possible. So far as we have already formed engagements, let them
be fulfilled with perfect good faith: — Here let us stop.
. . .It is our true policy to steer
clear of permanent alliance with any portion of the foreign world.
. . .In the spirit
of Washington, Carto contended that true nationalists — of
all nations — believed in developing and strengthening their
nation from within, maintaining the integrity of its cultural heritage
and historic sovereign borders and placing their own nation’s
interests first. Nationalists did not start wars of imperialism,
he said, but respected the nationalist instincts of others.
. . .Profiteering internationalist
plutocrats, Carto charged, condemned nationalism because it interfered
with their goal of profit and their aim to submerge all nations
in a “Global Plantation” under their domination.
. . .In Carto’s estimation, internationalism
was a dream of naive ideal-
INTRODUCTION.
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. . . . . . . . 35
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ists that the eradication of all national and
racial borders will usher in world peace in which everyone will
live happily ever after — a chimerical dream of poets and
religious leaders for millennia.
. . .In actual application, Carto averred,
internationalism could only produce mass confusion, tension, anarchy
and violence. Plutocrats used internationalism to break down national
boundaries and promote multiculturalism, an essential step to complete
their conquest of the world and the formal erection of their world
super state, the Global Plantation, often called a “New World
Order”— by both the nationalists and the internationalists.
. . .Carto put it simply: the concept
of a New World Order is no less than the drive for a world government
directed by the plutocrats who see it as a way to capture all of
the natural resources of the globe and to effectively enslave all
of the people under an international bureaucracy chosen and controlled
by the financial elite.
. . .In any event, Carto’s influence
in shaping the philosophical foundation of the American nationalist
movement was (and is) beyond question. In fact, when longtime Republican
Party figure Pat Buchanan — the syndicated columnist —
began emerging as a serious, high-profile critic — from a
nationalist perspective — of the growing internationalist
bent within Republican ranks, major media voices throughout the
land acknowledged — albeit grudgingly — that it had
been Carto and Liberty Lobby that helped pave the way for Buchanan’s
ascension.
. . .It was Pat Buchanan — formerly
a “mainstream” figure — who began echoing the
rhetoric and historical foundation that had been preserved through
Carto’s earlier work, and thereby brought at least a Buchanan
version of “nationalism” into the American political
arena as he made successive bids for the Republican Party’s
presidential nomination. As early as June 26, 1995, the progressive
weekly, The Nation, began taking note
of the new populism and nationalism that was driving the Buchanan
campaign. Describing a Buchanan rally in New Hampshire, The
Nation pointed out that:
When asked to cite what issue most moves them
about Buchanan, a number of [them] referred to the economic nationalism
of his crusades against NAFTA and GATT. Buchanan has howled about
trade pacts that benefit transnational corporations at the expense
of American workers and surrender U.S. sovereignty to a not-to-be-trusted
international establishment, thus melding populism of the left
and right.
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The Nation explored Buchanan’s new
emphasis further:
. . .It was in
New Hampshire that Buchanan’s economic populism first stirred.
When he campaigned in the state in 1992, he encountered people
socked by recession.
. . .Buchanan had been propelled
into that race by his far-right disgust at President Bush’s
decision to sign a civil rights measure and to renege on the read-my-lips
declaration [against new taxes]. But while trudging through the
Granite State, Buchanan discovered economic dislocation —
hardworking Americans hurled out of well-paying jobs. The fault,
he concluded, lay with globalization and U.S. trade policies.
. . .Since then he has assailed the
big banks and corporations that seek these jobs-exporting trade
agreements and that finance a slew of lobbyists who guarantee
that the trade deals slide through Congress. He is the only Republican
contender to acknowledge and address the decline in real wages
that has hit middle-income America.
. . .In doing so, Buchanan adds fresh
troops to the social conservatives in his “Buchanan Brigades.”
Mad at the Japanese? Outraged your child can’t pray in school?
Buchanan is out there welding constituencies.
. . .Alone in the GOP, he attacks
Washington as both the Establishment that promotes a liberal secular
order and the Establishment that pushes the corporatist New World
Order. Though also a fierce Catholic foot soldier in service to
a conservative social and religious Establishment, Buchanan is
the closest thing to a genuine populist in the 1996 race so far.
. . .The political
“right” also stood up and took notice of Buchanan’s
apparent shift. On November 27, 1995 the “conservative”
Weekly Standard — financed by billionaire
Rupert Murdoch, and edited by one William Kristol, leader of the
self-styled clique of “neo-conservatives” enamored with
nothing less than advancing a Zionist-dominated American imperialism
— raised its own concerns about Buchanan’s nationalist
broadsides against the power elite. The Standard
asserted:
. . .In an increasingly
conservative America, one political figure defiantly resists the
historical tide. This man still denounces big banks and multinational
corporations. Still unabashedly puts the interests of the American
factory worker ahead of those of the so-called international trading
INTRODUCTION.
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. . . . . . . . 37
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system. Still refuses even to contemplate any
cuts in the generosity of big middle-class spending programs like
Medicare and Social Security. This man is Patrick J. Buchanan,
America’s last leftist . . .
. . .Noting that
Buchanan retained his traditional stance on social issues, The
Standard then pointed out that:
. . .His campaign
speeches stress arresting new themes: the imminent menace of world
government, the greed of international banks, the power of tariffs
to stop the deterioration in blue-collar wages, the urgency of
preserving Medicare in something close to its present form.
. . .This isn’t anything remotely
like the conservative Republicanism of the Reagan era. What it
sounds very much like instead is the militant, resentful rhetoric
roared by populist Democrats from William Jennings Bryan onward.
The revulsion contemporary Democrats feel for Buchanan only exposes
how far that party has drifted from its own past.
. . .The
Standard charged that Buchanan had abandoned the “traditional”
stands of conservative Republicans and had begun to shift (or at
least attempt to shift) the Republican
Party in a nationalist direction:
. . .The important
question for traditional conservative Republicans is how far Mr.
Buchanan should be permitted to take the party. The success of
Buchanan’s 1992 campaign has already begun to redirect the
Republican Party to a more restrictive position on immigration
and a much harder line on affirmative action . . .
. . .Should he be welcomed or not?
In 1992, many conservatives suffered excruciating difficulty in
deciding . . .This time, though, the choice ought to be easier.
Conservatives need to recognize that Buchanan’s politics
is . . . something new: a populism formed to seize the political
opportunities presented by strident multiculturalism and stagnating
wages for less-skilled workers . . .
. . .As things are going, it is likely
only a matter of time before Buchanan himself recognizes the rapidly
mounting distance between his politics and those of mainstream
conservatism. His friend and fellow columnist Sam Francis, whose
ideas Mr. Buchanan has increasingly echoed, has
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already dropped the word “conservative”
outright. The danger is not so much that Buchanan will hijack
conservatism as that, even after he charges out of it on is way
toward some unscouted ideological destination of his own, his
statist and populist ideas will seep backward into it . . .
. . .At this juncture,
the Murdoch-financed voice for internationalism formally declared
war on Buchanan and read him out of the ranks of “conservative”
Republicans:
. . .Buchanan has
never shied from a fight, and neither should those Republicans
who oppose him. Republicans who hold fast to the traditions of
postwar conservatism that Buchanan is rejecting — small
government and American global leadership — should make
clear that they understand as well as Buchanan does the immense
difference between his politics and theirs. He has turned his
back on the fundamental convictions that have defined American
conservatism for 40 years, and conservatives shouldn’t be
afraid to say so. After all, to paraphrase Ronald Reagan, it isn’t
we who have left Pat Buchanan; it is Pat Buchanan who is leaving
us.
. . .In other words,
Pat Buchanan, if elected president, would take the Republican Party
out of the internationalist camp and that’s the last thing
this “conservative” voice wanted to happen.
. . .Ultimately, of course, Buchanan
left the Republican Party and opted to run — in 2000 —
as the candidate of the Reform Party. However, when all was said
and done, the Buchanan Movement failed — and failed badly.
The American nationalist movement was dealt a harsh electoral blow
with Buchanan’s devastatingly poor showing in that election.
Nationalists were left holding the bag as Buchanan moved back into
the world of big-time media punditry. In the meantime, the nationalist
movement — the real nationalist movement — seeks not
only rejuvenation, but leadership.
. . .Ironically,
the greatest force standing against traditional American nationalism
happens to be Zionism. Although Zionism is, in itself, defined as
Jewish Nationalism, aimed at the establishment of a Jewish State,
which, in fact, ultimately emerged in 1948 with the founding of
Israel, the truth is that Zionism is essentially an international
movement of vast scope and power with Israel serving as hardly more
than its spiritual (albeit geographically specific) capital.
INTRODUCTION.
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. . .In that regard,
in this author’s previous work, The New Jerusalem,
we explored the striking reality that, for all intents and purposes,
the Zionist movement has essentially adopted the United States —
through sheer force of financial and political power — as
its primary base of operations, using the American military (generally
against the wishes of the military leadership) to enforce a global
imperium designed to advance the power of Israel (and the Zionist
agenda) on the world stage.
. . .So it is that a relatively small
group of intriguers — the so-called “neo-conservatives”
(explored in detail in this author’s other previous volume,
The High Priests of War) — have
come to power in America and have done all in their vast reach to
advance the Zionist cause.
. . .As it stands,even many of the
harshest critics of Zionism and Israeli misdeeds fail to understand
it, but the truth is that he conflict in the Middle East between
Israel and the Arab world is but a portion of the overall Zionist
agenda which is boundless in scope: it is, you see, no coincidence
that Zionist philosophy teaches that Israel — in the sense
of the Jewish people—has no boundaries.
. . .It is also no coincidence that
the American neo-conservatives are intellectual disciples of hard-line
Zionist ideologue, Vladimir Jabotinsky — often called “The
Jewish Fascist” — who candidly declared in a 1935 interview:
“We want a Jewish Empire.” Although Jabotinsky died
in 1940, his ideological heirs carry his torch forward, more forcefully
perhaps than Jabotinsky would have ever dreamed possible.
. . .The intrigues by Zionism on American
soil have been extraordinarily well-calculated,operating on multiple
levels and through multiple mechanisms. In the pages of The
Judas Goats—The Enemy Within we will be examining
the ugly history of the Zionist drive to infiltrate, undermine,
subvert and/or otherwise grab control of the American nationalist
movement in order to suppress and thereby destroy it.
. . .But rest assured that Americans
are not standing alone in the face of this menace. There are other
nationalist movements across the face of the planet that are rising
up in opposition to Zionist power — from Moscow to Caracas,
from Kiev to Kuala Lumpur: in every place where informed people
dare to think freely and to continue to speak out.
. . .Therefore, let us note this: the
enemies of nationalism might as well face one basic fact: Like it
or not, both here in America and around the globe, nationalism is
the wave of the future.
. . . There’s no way to stop
it.
. . .Let us now move forward and examine
precisely who The Judas Goats are — and have been —
and how they truly are America’s Enemy Within. Prepare yourself
for a very ugly — though fascinating — story.