Sixty years after Malcolm X delivered The Ballot or the Bullet and wrote Zionist Logic, America is living through the very system of deception he warned about. He said the new form of imperialism would not come with chains or guns, but with money, religion, and “friendly” alliances. Today, that same system rules Washington. The manipulation he described has moved from foreign nations into America’s own political bloodstream — where both parties serve the same masters and the people pay the price.

In Zionist Logic, Malcolm warned that religion would become a cover for power. He wrote that imperialists would disguise their control behind moral language — “divine missions,” “humanitarian aid,” and “special alliances.” He called it camouflage colonialism, and what he meant was simple: when the powerful want to dominate others, they hide it behind good intentions. That is precisely what we see in 2025. Politicians use scripture and patriotism to justify billions in foreign aid while Americans at home live in poverty.
At the center of this political machinery is AIPAC — the American Israel Public Affairs Committee. AIPAC is one of the most powerful lobbying groups in Washington, and its reach is bipartisan. Democrats and Republicans alike depend on AIPAC’s donations to fund their campaigns. It doesn’t matter who controls Congress — AIPAC funds both sides. They use their influence to ensure that every administration continues to send billions of dollars in aid to Israel, regardless of how that money affects America’s economy or international stability.
This isn’t about religion or the Jewish faith — it’s about political control through financial leverage. Malcolm X called it “dollarism” — control not by guns, but by gold. And the result is visible: neighborhoods in Harlem, Detroit, and Appalachia crumble while Congress writes blank checks to foreign governments. Schools are underfunded, hospitals are closing, and working-class families are buried under inflation and debt. Meanwhile, lobbyists, corporations, and foreign interests profit from policies that ordinary citizens never voted for.
This bipartisan loyalty to AIPAC shows that America’s political divide is a performance — the absolute unity is in protecting donors, not citizens. The left talks about justice, the right discusses faith, but both bow to the same financial influence. As Malcolm warned, “They cripple the bird’s wing and then condemn it for not flying.” The government cripples its own people economically, then blames them for their condition.
In The Ballot or the Bullet, Malcolm said a ballot is like a bullet — you don’t waste it unless you know what target you’re hitting. His warning wasn’t just for Black voters; it was for every American, including you. Voting without a strategy is surrender. Loyalty to a party that serves money instead of people is submission. He challenged us, including you, to see through emotional politics and demand tangible results. Today, both parties use fear, religion, and identity to keep citizens, including you, loyal to a system that exploits them.
Malcolm’s clarity has aged better than the politicians who ignored him. He told us that freedom would never come from those who profit off dependency. He warned that the oppressor’s greatest weapon is the illusion of inclusion. AIPAC’s bipartisan grip on Congress is proof of that illusion. The same lawmakers who can’t find funds for affordable housing or healthcare always find billions for wars and weapons. They tell us it’s for security, but Malcolm would have called it what it is — economic slavery dressed up as moral duty.
This is why younger voters — Black, white, Latino, conservative, and progressive — are starting to question everything. They’re not anti-Israel; they’re pro-accountability. They’re not against faith; they’re against manipulation. They see that both parties are financed by the same donors, influenced by the same lobbyists, and insulated from the same suffering that millions of Americans face.
Malcolm’s words echo through time: “It’s liberty or it’s death. It’s freedom for everybody or freedom for nobody.” The choice he spoke of is not violence versus peace — it’s truth versus deception. Either America wakes up and reclaims its political sovereignty, or it continues to serve foreign and corporate interests at the expense of its people.
The system Malcolm exposed still thrives, but the awakening has begun. When citizens, including you, start seeing that Democrats and Republicans serve the same financiers, when they understand that “aid” abroad means neglect at home, and when they stop voting out of fear or guilt — that’s when the system begins to break. Your voice, your vote, and your demand for accountability can be the catalyst for this change.
Malcolm X wasn’t against faith or against alliances. He was opposed to hypocrisy, manipulation, and exploitation masquerading as righteousness. His message wasn’t about hate — it was about truth. And in 2025, truth has never been more dangerous or more necessary. His words, his warnings, and his call for accountability are as relevant today as they were when he first spoke them.















This AIPAC stuff is wild! Malcolm X was ahead of the game, calling out the camouflage colonialism back in the day. Its like the politicians are in a never-ending huddle with AIPAC, forgetting about us regular folks. Theyre throwing money overseas while our streets crumble. Its like theyve got blinders on, only seeing the divine missions and missing the economic slavery right here at home. But hey, at least now we know whos really pulling the strings – no more guessing games! Malcolm was right: It’s liberty or it’s death. Time to wake up and demand some real change!
It does not approach me. Perhaps there are still variants?