Navarro’s Anti-Brahmin Rant: Buffoonery or a Calculated Attack on India?

Peter Navarro’s recent comments are not just arrogant and culturally insensitive; they are a vicious, venomous assault, dripping with hypocrisy. By slandering India as a “laundromat for the Kremlin,” helping bankroll Russia’s war in Ukraine, Navarro unleashes a toxic blend of geopolitical arrogance and outright disdain for Hindu culture and civilization.

This isn’t a slip-up. It’s a carefully scripted extension of the Biden administration’s pro-Islamist, anti-Hindu agenda toward India. For decades, the Israeli lobby has pushed a love-hate narrative against the “pagans” of the Indian subcontinent. Now, bolstered by Islamist money from oil-rich nations, the political drama in Washington plays out as Yehudi versus Muslim, both united against a common enemy — the “kafir Hindu.”

Navarro’s “laundromat” smear conveniently erases America’s, Israel’s, and the Gulf states’ own shady dealings with authoritarian regimes. But it’s when he drags caste into this, accusing “Brahmins of profiteering at the expense of the Indian people,” that the true intent seeps through. These words aren’t mere ignorance, and he’s not a simple fool; the rhetoric is incendiary, divisive propaganda designed further to fuel anti-Brahmin and caste-based agendas within the U.S. while exploiting India’s age-old socio-political fault lines.

Remember, this is the same Trump who once marched with Modi at Howdy Modi in Texas, now cozying up to Saudi interests to prop up the failed state of Pakistan—a toxic cocktail of political expediency and business greed. Israel’s exploitation of American power for its agenda is old news, but other players in this game are cut from the same cloth, at least from an Indic lens.

Navarro’s caste attack is an orientalist bludgeon wielded to justify punitive tariffs and economic bullying. It’s a raw expression of Abrahamic contempt for pagans still unconverted. Western Indologists, especially Germans, historically crafted venomous academic narratives against India’s “brown natives,” bitter over the caste structure they could never fathom. The assault on caste never stopped. Islamists, meanwhile, aim for its destruction—caste no bar. A rising Indian economy poses a threat to the desert cult’s agenda, and they will stop at nothing to advance gazwa-e-Hind.

Navarro? He’s a mere pawn—his strings pulled by competing masters and an administration that happily does business with autocrats when it suits them. His sudden “concern” for India’s moral compass and working class? Laughable. These remarks are not blunders but weapons in a wider ideological and geopolitical war. Masked in the language of democracy and morality, Navarro’s words undress a deeper, darker alliance: a pro-Israel America increasingly entwined with Islamist interests, steeped in Abrahamic disdain for Dharmic civilizations.

This is not just cultural insensitivity—it is a well-funded strategic cultural warfare. By weaponizing caste, Navarro recycles orientalist tropes and anti-Hindu narratives pushed for centuries by Western academia and political operatives, also echoed by deracinated fools on the subcontinent. India, especially its Hindu majority, is under siege—targeted by selective outrage, economic coercion, and identity politics aimed at fracturing its global standing and erasing its overall existence.

How dare these pagans survive, and even thrive?

Navarro is merely the mouthpiece, amplifying a script authored by competing yet converging masters. As this drama unfolds, the mask of moral superiority slips, revealing the raw hypocrisy and outright hatred embedded in the vile Western agenda. They only wish they were Brahmins—because who wouldn’t want to claim a heritage of intellect and civilization, even as its most marginalized are mocked and maligned for simply inheriting what others can only envy?

*Image sourced from the internet.

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