All The News Anti-Israel Posters Will Not Read Or Discuss 2

What freedom of religion when Sharia is the sole source of legislation?

Israel is the only country where the Christian community grows,
and it diminishes everywhere under Arab rule.
He’s full of Shit…. More Palestinian talking points Talks about “ Freedom of Religion “ yet he sees nothing wrong with Jews being forbidden access to the Western Wall
 

End the Lebanese and Jordanian occupation of Palestine!


I love when I tweet and the Israel haters are reduced to gibberish in response.

I had tweeted,


Proof #619 that calling Israel "apartheid" is antisemitic:

Lebanon treats Palestinians worse than Israel by every conceivable yardstick. Discrimination is enshrined in law. Yet no one accuses Lebanon of "apartheid."
The responses from modern antisemites were all along the lines of:

"Whataboutism!" (meaning, don't talk about Palestinian suffering unless it can be blamed on Israel)
"You are a liar!" (without any links or proof)
"Of course it's apartheid - everyone says so!" (appeal to authority fallacy)

But a couple of people responded with something like, "Lebanon isn't occupying Palestinian territory!"

Are they sure?

Here's a map of Palestine from 1870:


It includes large amounts of todays Lebanon as well as much of today's Jordan.

How come no Palestinian is upset at the occupation of Lebanon and Jordan of Palestine?

But, you might respond, this is a Western map. Maybe Arabs felt that Palestine before 1923 included the exact borders of the British Mandate and no more.

Well, here is a 1918 map of Palestine, labeled as such, in Arabic:



It doesn't include Lebanon but a great deal of Jordan is included in this map.

Based on this map, it sure looks like at least Jordan is occupying ancient sacred Palestinian lands!

Why aren't we seeing Palestinians demanding "Free Palestine from Jordan and (maybe) Lebanon!"

Maybe for the same reason that the PLO in 1964 didn't claim the West Bank or Gaza as being part of "Palestine."


 
On August 11, 2023, Mike Fegelman, our Executive Director, was published in The National Postabout how despite facing tremendous threats to stay quiet, Palestinians in Gaza have begun taking to the streets to protest against Hamas and the territory’s difficult living conditions.


Since taking over the Gaza Strip in a short but bloody conflict with its rival Fatah in 2007, Hamas has been the undisputed ruler of the small coastal enclave on the Mediterranean Sea.

Ever since the 2007 Battle of Gaza, Hamas has ruled the region and its population, today numbering around two-million Palestinians, brutally and with an iron fist.

Screen-Shot-2023-08-11-at-12.23.14-PM-1.png
Freedom of association and expression are severely curtailed, and limitations on women are particularly severe: in 2021, a Hamas judge ruled that women required a male escort in order to leave the house.

Most Palestinians living in Gaza suffer extreme economic hardships: more than 60 per cent of the population is unemployed, and about two-thirds live below the poverty line.

Rather than meaningfully addressing the population’s living standards, Gaza’s Hamas rulers have instead siphoned international aid to fund their lavish lifestyles.

Worse yet, Hamas has redirected limited resources to perpetuating war with Israel, firing rockets at the Jewish State, while building and maintaining an elaborate web of tunnels used for smuggling weapons into Gaza and carrying out terrorist attacks.

Now, it seems as though many Gazans have had enough. Despite the government’s brutal crackdown on dissent, in recent weeks, people have been increasingly airing their grievances in public.

On July 30, and again on Aug. 4, thousands of Gazans took to the streets to protest living conditions under Hamas rule. The protests are among the largest and most public of their kind since similar demonstrations in 2019.

Demonstrators were heard chanting, “We want to live,” and demanding accountability from Hamas for the territory’s horrific standards of living.

Unlike Israel, where citizens — Jews and Arabs alike — have the freedom to demonstrate against their government, Hamas accepts no such opposition. According to news reports, Hamas officials threatened protesters when they attempted to arrive at the rallies.

“Whenever two people were walking together, they were forbidden to stop on the street. After not even a minute, (security forces) would go up to them and tell them, ‘Get out of here or we will take you with us,” a source inside Gaza told the Times of Israel.

While anti-Israel detractors often claim that Israel is responsible for Gaza’s economic problems, such allegations overlook Israel’s absence from the area.

In 2005, Israel forcibly withdrew all its citizens from Gaza — soldier and civilian alike — in a painful process known as “disengagement.” Since then, despite repeated rocket attacks from Hamas and other Islamist terror groups operating out of the Strip, the Jewish state has never sought to re-seize the territory.

While Israel is often used as a punching bag and is blamed for all of Gaza’s ills by critics around the world, Palestinians in Gaza often have a far clearer view of who the true culprit is.

Despite facing tremendous threats to stay quiet and avoid criticizing the Hamas regime, Gazans have spoken out in protest, not just of Hamas’ economic mismanagement and graft, but of the group’s unabated conflict with Israel.

Yet doing so has been easier said than done. Earlier this year, a series of videos from Gaza shed light on Hamas’ disturbing but unsurprising practice of suppressing opposition to its rule, and to its anti-Israel priorities, in particular.

“If you’re a Gazan citizen who opposes war, and says, ‘I don’t want war,’ you’re branded a traitor. It’s forbidden to say you don’t want war,” said a Gazan in one of the videos.

For a western audience, it may be difficult to fully appreciate the extent of Hamas’ oppression of its people, and consequently the significance and impact of people putting their safety at risk in order to speak out against the regime’s brutality.

Nevertheless, that is exactly what thousands of Gazans have done in recent weeks, and their actions demand coverage by the news media — not only because of the courageousness of the protesters, but because of the newsworthiness of their actions in their own right. Sunlight, after all, is the best disinfectant.



 


To be a Bedouin - means the culture of outlaw.

They'll constantly move around, thieving from everyone, including water,
hack someone's pipe, then try to threaten the water company for 'protection'.
The main source of income, is contraband, and every tribe is at war with each other.

 
On August 11, 2023, Mike Fegelman, our Executive Director, was published in The National Postabout how despite facing tremendous threats to stay quiet, Palestinians in Gaza have begun taking to the streets to protest against Hamas and the territory’s difficult living conditions.


Since taking over the Gaza Strip in a short but bloody conflict with its rival Fatah in 2007, Hamas has been the undisputed ruler of the small coastal enclave on the Mediterranean Sea.

Ever since the 2007 Battle of Gaza, Hamas has ruled the region and its population, today numbering around two-million Palestinians, brutally and with an iron fist.

Screen-Shot-2023-08-11-at-12.23.14-PM-1.png
Freedom of association and expression are severely curtailed, and limitations on women are particularly severe: in 2021, a Hamas judge ruled that women required a male escort in order to leave the house.

Most Palestinians living in Gaza suffer extreme economic hardships: more than 60 per cent of the population is unemployed, and about two-thirds live below the poverty line.

Rather than meaningfully addressing the population’s living standards, Gaza’s Hamas rulers have instead siphoned international aid to fund their lavish lifestyles.

Worse yet, Hamas has redirected limited resources to perpetuating war with Israel, firing rockets at the Jewish State, while building and maintaining an elaborate web of tunnels used for smuggling weapons into Gaza and carrying out terrorist attacks.

Now, it seems as though many Gazans have had enough. Despite the government’s brutal crackdown on dissent, in recent weeks, people have been increasingly airing their grievances in public.

On July 30, and again on Aug. 4, thousands of Gazans took to the streets to protest living conditions under Hamas rule. The protests are among the largest and most public of their kind since similar demonstrations in 2019.

Demonstrators were heard chanting, “We want to live,” and demanding accountability from Hamas for the territory’s horrific standards of living.

Unlike Israel, where citizens — Jews and Arabs alike — have the freedom to demonstrate against their government, Hamas accepts no such opposition. According to news reports, Hamas officials threatened protesters when they attempted to arrive at the rallies.

“Whenever two people were walking together, they were forbidden to stop on the street. After not even a minute, (security forces) would go up to them and tell them, ‘Get out of here or we will take you with us,” a source inside Gaza told the Times of Israel.

While anti-Israel detractors often claim that Israel is responsible for Gaza’s economic problems, such allegations overlook Israel’s absence from the area.

In 2005, Israel forcibly withdrew all its citizens from Gaza — soldier and civilian alike — in a painful process known as “disengagement.” Since then, despite repeated rocket attacks from Hamas and other Islamist terror groups operating out of the Strip, the Jewish state has never sought to re-seize the territory.

While Israel is often used as a punching bag and is blamed for all of Gaza’s ills by critics around the world, Palestinians in Gaza often have a far clearer view of who the true culprit is.

Despite facing tremendous threats to stay quiet and avoid criticizing the Hamas regime, Gazans have spoken out in protest, not just of Hamas’ economic mismanagement and graft, but of the group’s unabated conflict with Israel.

Yet doing so has been easier said than done. Earlier this year, a series of videos from Gaza shed light on Hamas’ disturbing but unsurprising practice of suppressing opposition to its rule, and to its anti-Israel priorities, in particular.

“If you’re a Gazan citizen who opposes war, and says, ‘I don’t want war,’ you’re branded a traitor. It’s forbidden to say you don’t want war,” said a Gazan in one of the videos.

For a western audience, it may be difficult to fully appreciate the extent of Hamas’ oppression of its people, and consequently the significance and impact of people putting their safety at risk in order to speak out against the regime’s brutality.

Nevertheless, that is exactly what thousands of Gazans have done in recent weeks, and their actions demand coverage by the news media — not only because of the courageousness of the protesters, but because of the newsworthiness of their actions in their own right. Sunlight, after all, is the best disinfectant.




Gaza protests against the Hamas government

 
Last edited:
He’s full of Shit…. More Palestinian talking points Talks about “ Freedom of Religion “ yet he sees nothing wrong with Jews being forbidden access to the Western Wall

It's a bot that has nothing original to say or add to a conversation,
has been trolling for 10+ year from the same sources,
regardless the subject, all generic response.

Use it.
 
What freedom of religion when Sharia is the sole source of legislation?

Israel is the only country where the Christian community grows,
and it diminishes everywhere under Arab rule.
Christians are disappearing in Jerusalem under Israeli rule.

Come to think of it Bethlehem is under Israeli rule.
 
Christians are disappearing in Jerusalem under Israeli rule.

Come to think of it Bethlehem is under Israeli rule.

Quiet the opposite, in the entire MEast the only Christian community that grows is under Israeli rule,
everywhere under Arab rule they diminish - Bethlehem is under Arab rule.

And you want exclusive Arab domination?
 
In the same post, Assadi accused Canada of supporting the “genocide/ethnic cleansing of #Palestine,” a nonsensical allegation which not only utterly ignores the rapid and continued increase in the Palestinian population, but is also a reprehensible assault on the memory of those who have suffered under real genocides and ethnic cleansing.

While Assadi’s Facebook profile has been disabled as of early August – though it is unclear whether he shut it down or whether it was closed by the platform – his online persona was only reflective of his real-life activities.

Assadi’s posts shine a light on the ideology of an individual who is a collaborator for one of Canada’s most well-known anti-Israel activists, who has shown little concern for public safety and who has eagerly sought to intimidate those whom he opposes.

While the anti-Israel actions of al-Najim and Assadi may go largely unreported by the news media, their activities at Toronto’s Walk With Israel only normalize aggressive anti-Israel behaviour, and Assadi’s conspicuous support for al-Najim and the CD4HR organization – combined with his stated support for a banned terrorist organization – make him worthy of concern.


(full article online)



 
[ Why are they still refugees? Why are they still in "camps" and being kept from becoming citizens of Lebanon? ]

Decision comes as armed men remain at UN facilities after deadly clashes between rival groups at camp earlier this month; refugee agency says services will resume Saturday​


(full article online)


 




The official Palestinian Wafa news agency reports:
Today, Tuesday, a child from the town of Zababdeh, south of Jenin, was killed by bullets from the Israeli occupation.

The director of Al-Razi Hospital in Jenin, Fawaz Hammad, told Wafa that the child Othman Atef Abu Kharj (17 years old) died of injuries he sustained at dawn today, during the clashes that erupted after the storming of the town.

The description of his death by Islamic Jihad is a little different:


The Al-Quds Brigades, the military wing of the Islamic Jihad Movement in Palestine, celebrated, on Tuesday morning, the highest examples of jihad and steadfastness, its fighter son, Othman Atef Abu Kharj, one of the fighters of the deterrence unit in the Al-Quds Brigades, who rose as a martyr, God willing, during his confrontation with his mujahideen brothers.

The Brigades said in a military statement: "We are in the Al-Quds Brigades and we bid farewell to a heroic mujahid knight who is witnessed by the battlefields to confirm that the blood of the martyrs will remain fuel for the continuation of the resistance approach, and that these sacrifices that our heroic mujahideen make will not be lost, and will be a motive for the continuity of engagement and fighting, and will not be lost." We meet our enemy only with bullets and more resistance.

Interestingly, they claim that Kharj was 18 years old, while all other Palestinian media quote the ministry of health saying he was 17.

Yesterday I noted that for the first time I can recall, the UN chided Palestinian terror groups for exposing children to paramilitary "summer camps" as well as for endangering Palestinian children by placing booby traps in camps for IDF vehicles. But although the UN's OCHA-OPT closely monitors every death in the territories, they have never mentioned that terror groups like Islamic Jihad actively recruit and use child soldiers.

I cannot find any mention of Palestinian child soldiers in UNICEF reports on "the state of Palestine" either. Defense for Children International - Palestine never mentions that the children killed were members of armed groups and actively fighting.

It is undeniable that Palestinian terror groups recruit and exploit children. Last week, JCPA published a report showing how terror groups in Jenin use children as "spotters" and instruct them using Telegram channels on how they should operate.

A major reason that children are recruited is in the hope that they will be killed - because they are more valuable as "child victims" than they are as fighters. To Palestinians, children are cannon fodder, and I have yet to see a single article in Arabic media that condemns Hamas and Islamic Jihad for recruiting children.



 

Forum List

Back
Top