If Jews don't want all the land between the River and the sea, why is it every Jew of legal age living there has a vote to determine who writes the laws she lives under and less than half of all Arabs have the same privilege?Jews are leveling block after block of Gaza right now.
1000 confirmed dead, and hundreds more beneath the rubble.
What makes you think Jews are entitled to all of Palestine?
They don't want all of Palestine. They want to stop the daily rocket attacks and destroy the tunnels that Hamas has built. They already moved all of the Israei's that lived in Gaza to Israel proper and gave Gaza back to the Palestinians and have no intentions to occupy Gaza.
Jews have been stealing Palestine since 1948, and since 1967 they've systematically deprived Arabs of their land and water rights while filling the territories they occupy with hundreds of thousands of civilians, in violation of international law.
Jews withdrew settlers and military from Gaza but maintain control over Gaza's borders, airspace, coastal waters, and population registry; they prohibit any exports from leaving Gaza; they routinely fire on children and other civilians engaged in non-hostile actions, like farming or fishing.
You are badly mistaken if you honestly believe Jews are not trying to drive non-Jews from Palestine.
They are, and they've never made much of an attempt to hide it.
Arabs have voting rights in Israel if they want to vote. If less than half of them choose not to vote, it is their choice not to vote. You have to be a citizen of Israel to have the right to vote, just as it is in the United States and most other nations that allow voting.
Most of the Arabs living in East Jerusalem and the Golan Heights, occupied by Israel in the Six-Day War of 1967 and later annexed, were offered Israeli citizenship, but most have refused, not wanting to recognize Israel's claim to sovereignty. They became permanent residents instead. They have the right to apply for citizenship, are entitled to municipal services, and have municipal voting rights.
They have representation in the Israeli government as well.
Palestinian Arabs sat in the state's first parliamentary assembly; as of 2011, 13 of the 120 members of the Israeli Parliament are Arab citizens, most representing Arab political parties, and one of Israel's Supreme Court judges is a Palestinian Arab.