What was the impact of the Zionists on Palestine?

Israel has the highest density of technology start-ups in the world. More importantly, these start-ups attract more venture capital dollars per person than any country---2.5 times the US, 30 times Europe, 80 times India and 300 times China. Israelhas more companies on the tech-oriented NASDAQ than any outside the US, more than all of Europe, Japan, Korea, India and China combined. But it's not just about start-ups. Scratch almost any major tech company---Intel, Microsoft, Google, Cisco, Motorola---and you will find that Israeli talent and technology play a major role in keeping these multinational companies on the cutting edge"
Freakonomics » How Did Israel Become “Start-Up Nation”?

:clap2:
 
Israel has the highest density of technology start-ups in the world. More importantly, these start-ups attract more venture capital dollars per person than any country---2.5 times the US, 30 times Europe, 80 times India and 300 times China. Israelhas more companies on the tech-oriented NASDAQ than any outside the US, more than all of Europe, Japan, Korea, India and China combined. But it's not just about start-ups. Scratch almost any major tech company---Intel, Microsoft, Google, Cisco, Motorola---and you will find that Israeli talent and technology play a major role in keeping these multinational companies on the cutting edge"
Freakonomics » How Did Israel Become “Start-Up Nation”?

:clap2:

"Brand Israel" crapola is irrelevant.
 
Israel has the highest density of technology start-ups in the world. More importantly, these start-ups attract more venture capital dollars per person than any country---2.5 times the US, 30 times Europe, 80 times India and 300 times China. Israelhas more companies on the tech-oriented NASDAQ than any outside the US, more than all of Europe, Japan, Korea, India and China combined. But it's not just about start-ups. Scratch almost any major tech company---Intel, Microsoft, Google, Cisco, Motorola---and you will find that Israeli talent and technology play a major role in keeping these multinational companies on the cutting edge"
Freakonomics » How Did Israel Become “Start-Up Nation”?

:clap2:

"Brand Israel" crapola is irrelevant.

You have zero reputational points after 2 years :lol:
 
"The Israeli educational system is very effective at producing scientists and engineers, while successfully absorbing Russian, Ethiopian and other emigration in the millions. According to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development [Israel is a member, unanimously accepted], 45% of Israelis are now university educated, and these universities are very good.
In 2008, Weizman Institute and the Hebrew University were chosen as the best two places to work in academia (outside of the US) by Science magazine. Israel now produces more scientific papers per capita than any other nation. Israel is a top 10 producer of patents in the field of nuclear science. Hebrew University is ranked #12 in in global biotech patent rankings (Telaviv University is #21). Israel has numerous nominations for Nobel Prizes and has recently won several prizes in economics and chemistry. Of course, all of this has required consistent government support for investment into raising the quality of the education to the world class level."
Solon Partners » Start-up Nation. The Story of Israel
 
While we are on Israel's accomplishments:

[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JjaCRf9-h0o]This is Israel OMG - YouTube[/ame]
 
Australian Government/Austrade...:clap2:
Since the early 1990s, the Israeli VC industry has prospered and reached a prominent position in the world, possibly second only to the US with the total capital raised to date in excess of US$10 billion. By 2008, there were about 80 VC funds operating in Israel, with the total capital raised at US$10.6 billion (much of this originating from foreign investors, mostly from the US and Europe) and investments made in more than 1,000 Israeli start-up companies. Many of these start-ups went through successful initial public offerings (IPOs), and since the 1980s, more than 200 Israeli companies went through an IPO in NASDAQ with dozens more traded on various European exchanges. Israel currently has more companies listed on NASDAQ that any other nation outside North America (USA and Canada

The growth of the VC industry in Israel has turned the country into one of the most technologically advanced countries in the world in terms of commercial R&D. Many of the global leading technology companies like IBM, Motorola, Intel, Microsoft, Cisco, HP, Applied Materials, Google and others have established R&D centres in the country.
Venture capital to Israel - For Australian exporters - Austrade - Austrade
 
Israel has the highest density of technology start-ups in the world. More importantly, these start-ups attract more venture capital dollars per person than any country---2.5 times the US, 30 times Europe, 80 times India and 300 times China. Israelhas more companies on the tech-oriented NASDAQ than any outside the US, more than all of Europe, Japan, Korea, India and China combined. But it's not just about start-ups. Scratch almost any major tech company---Intel, Microsoft, Google, Cisco, Motorola---and you will find that Israeli talent and technology play a major role in keeping these multinational companies on the cutting edge"
Freakonomics » How Did Israel Become “Start-Up Nation”?
:
This is great news to hear that Israel is doing so good.

Hopefully now the United States will immediately cut off all financial aid to this Zionist state. :cool:
 
Israel has the highest density of technology start-ups in the world. More importantly, these start-ups attract more venture capital dollars per person than any country---2.5 times the US, 30 times Europe, 80 times India and 300 times China. Israelhas more companies on the tech-oriented NASDAQ than any outside the US, more than all of Europe, Japan, Korea, India and China combined. But it's not just about start-ups. Scratch almost any major tech company---Intel, Microsoft, Google, Cisco, Motorola---and you will find that Israeli talent and technology play a major role in keeping these multinational companies on the cutting edge"
Freakonomics » How Did Israel Become “Start-Up Nation”?
:
This is great news to hear that Israel is doing so good.

Hopefully now the United States will immediately cut off all financial aid to this Zionist state. :cool:

Two thirds of US foreign aid goes to you America-hating Muzzies and Rabs, jihadist...
It's All Your Money: Foreign Aid to Muslim/Arab nations - FoxNews.com

America is based on the Judeo Christian ethic, not your Mahometan sharia.
 
Israel has the highest density of technology start-ups in the world. More importantly, these start-ups attract more venture capital dollars per person than any country---2.5 times the US, 30 times Europe, 80 times India and 300 times China. Israelhas more companies on the tech-oriented NASDAQ than any outside the US, more than all of Europe, Japan, Korea, India and China combined. But it's not just about start-ups. Scratch almost any major tech company---Intel, Microsoft, Google, Cisco, Motorola---and you will find that Israeli talent and technology play a major role in keeping these multinational companies on the cutting edge"
Freakonomics » How Did Israel Become “Start-Up Nation”?
:
This is great news to hear that Israel is doing so good.

Hopefully now the United States will immediately cut off all financial aid to this Zionist state. :cool:

We kick your lazy, backward, good for nothing asses, Mahometan.:lol:

Investor's Business Daily: How Free Israel Prospers As Islam Remains In The Dark
Israel, a New Jersey-sized nation of 7.5 million people (1.7 million of whom are Arab) filed 7,082 international patents in the five years ending in 2007. By contrast, 28 majority-Muslim nations with almost 1.2 billion people — 155 times the population of Israel — were granted 2,071 patents in the same period. Narrowing the comparison to the 17 Muslim nations of the Middle East from Morocco to Iran and down the Arabian Peninsula, the 409 million people in that region generated 680 patents in five years.
This means that the Arab and Iranian world produced about one patent per year for every 3 million people, compared with Israel's output of one annual patent for every 5,295 people, an Israeli rate some 568 times that of Israel's neighbors and sometime enemies.

The awarding of Nobel Prizes in the quantitative areas of chemistry, economics and physics shows a similar disparity, with five Israeli winners compared with one French Algerian (a Jew who earned the prize for work done in France) and an Egyptian-American (for work done at Caltech in California).

The telltale signs of Israel's economic rise can be seen in the Tel Aviv skyline and the new office complexes around Jerusalem. International giant Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd. was founded in 1901 by three pharmacists in Jerusalem. Today it employs 40,000 around the world.

Teva has a market cap of $44.2 billion — the most highly valued company based in Israel and the ninth-largest firm traded on the Nasdaq

Less than 300 miles separate the purposeful creative buzz in the JVP Media Quarter from the restive streets of Cairo, where the Muslim Brotherhood tells Egypt's unemployed that their plight is the fault of corrupt capitalists and Jews. It doesn't take a Nobel Prize-winning economist to figure out where these two economies are going.

How Free Israel Prospers As Islam Remains In Dark - Investors.com
 
Sounds great!!

Let's cut Israel loose to fend for itself. :cool:

Israel kicked your lame asses in the '48 and '67 wars without US assistance.:clap2:

You're still humiliated, losers allahu akbar :lol:

I could care less about those previous wars.

Israel is not our 51st State.

And there is nothing in the US Constitution about defending that Zionist nation.

Israel needs to be cut loose from all American financial aid.

And either sink or swim based on its own merits and ability to defend itself. :cool:
 
Wall Street Journal: Where Tech Keeps Booming, In Israel, a clustering of talent, research universities and venture capital.
'There are more new innovative ideas coming out of Israel than there are out in Silicon Valley right now. And it doesn't slow during economic downturns." The authors of "Start-Up Nation," Dan Senor and Saul Singer, are quoting an executive at British Telecom, but they could just as easily be quoting an executive at Intel, which last year opened a $3.5 billion factory in Kiryat Gat, an hour south of Tel Aviv, to make sophisticated 45-nanometer chips; or Warren Buffett, who in 2006 paid $4 billion for four-fifths of an Israeli firm that makes high-tech cutting tools for cars and planes; or John Chambers, Cisco's chief executive, who has bought nine Israeli start-ups; or Steve Ballmer, who calls Microsoft "as much an Israeli company as an American company" because of the importance of its Israeli technologists. "Google, Cisco, Microsoft, Intel, eBay . . . ," says one of eBay's executives. "The best-kept secret is that we all live and die by the work of our Israeli teams."

Israel is the world's techno-nation. Civilian research-and-development expenditures run 4.5% of the gross domestic product—half-again the level of the U.S., Germany or South Korea—and venture-capital investment per capita is 2½ times that of the U.S. and six times that of the United Kingdom. Even in absolute terms, Israel has only the U.S.—with more than 40 times the population—as a challenger.

Israel—a country of just 7.1 million people—attracted close to $2 billion in venture capital in 2008, as much as flowed to the U.K.'s 61 million citizens or the 145 million people living in Germany and France combined." At the start of 2009, some 63 Israeli companies were listed on the Nasdaq, more than those of any other foreign country. Among the Israeli firms: Teva Pharmaceuticals, the world's largest generic drug maker, with a market cap of $48 billion; and Check Point Software Technologies, with a market cap of $7 billion.

Book Review: "Start-Up Nation" - WSJ.com
 
Wall Street Journal: Where Tech Keeps Booming, In Israel, a clustering of talent, research universities and venture capital.
'There are more new innovative ideas coming out of Israel than there are out in Silicon Valley right now. And it doesn't slow during economic downturns." The authors of "Start-Up Nation," Dan Senor and Saul Singer, are quoting an executive at British Telecom, but they could just as easily be quoting an executive at Intel, which last year opened a $3.5 billion factory in Kiryat Gat, an hour south of Tel Aviv, to make sophisticated 45-nanometer chips; or Warren Buffett, who in 2006 paid $4 billion for four-fifths of an Israeli firm that makes high-tech cutting tools for cars and planes; or John Chambers, Cisco's chief executive, who has bought nine Israeli start-ups; or Steve Ballmer, who calls Microsoft "as much an Israeli company as an American company" because of the importance of its Israeli technologists. "Google, Cisco, Microsoft, Intel, eBay . . . ," says one of eBay's executives. "The best-kept secret is that we all live and die by the work of our Israeli teams."

Israel is the world's techno-nation. Civilian research-and-development expenditures run 4.5% of the gross domestic product—half-again the level of the U.S., Germany or South Korea—and venture-capital investment per capita is 2½ times that of the U.S. and six times that of the United Kingdom. Even in absolute terms, Israel has only the U.S.—with more than 40 times the population—as a challenger.

Israel—a country of just 7.1 million people—attracted close to $2 billion in venture capital in 2008, as much as flowed to the U.K.'s 61 million citizens or the 145 million people living in Germany and France combined." At the start of 2009, some 63 Israeli companies were listed on the Nasdaq, more than those of any other foreign country. Among the Israeli firms: Teva Pharmaceuticals, the world's largest generic drug maker, with a market cap of $48 billion; and Check Point Software Technologies, with a market cap of $7 billion.

Book Review: "Start-Up Nation" - WSJ.com

And it still lives on the mooch.
 
Wall Street Journal: Where Tech Keeps Booming, In Israel, a clustering of talent, research universities and venture capital.
'There are more new innovative ideas coming out of Israel than there are out in Silicon Valley right now. And it doesn't slow during economic downturns." The authors of "Start-Up Nation," Dan Senor and Saul Singer, are quoting an executive at British Telecom, but they could just as easily be quoting an executive at Intel, which last year opened a $3.5 billion factory in Kiryat Gat, an hour south of Tel Aviv, to make sophisticated 45-nanometer chips; or Warren Buffett, who in 2006 paid $4 billion for four-fifths of an Israeli firm that makes high-tech cutting tools for cars and planes; or John Chambers, Cisco's chief executive, who has bought nine Israeli start-ups; or Steve Ballmer, who calls Microsoft "as much an Israeli company as an American company" because of the importance of its Israeli technologists. "Google, Cisco, Microsoft, Intel, eBay . . . ," says one of eBay's executives. "The best-kept secret is that we all live and die by the work of our Israeli teams."

Israel is the world's techno-nation. Civilian research-and-development expenditures run 4.5% of the gross domestic product—half-again the level of the U.S., Germany or South Korea—and venture-capital investment per capita is 2½ times that of the U.S. and six times that of the United Kingdom. Even in absolute terms, Israel has only the U.S.—with more than 40 times the population—as a challenger.

Israel—a country of just 7.1 million people—attracted close to $2 billion in venture capital in 2008, as much as flowed to the U.K.'s 61 million citizens or the 145 million people living in Germany and France combined." At the start of 2009, some 63 Israeli companies were listed on the Nasdaq, more than those of any other foreign country. Among the Israeli firms: Teva Pharmaceuticals, the world's largest generic drug maker, with a market cap of $48 billion; and Check Point Software Technologies, with a market cap of $7 billion.

Book Review: "Start-Up Nation" - WSJ.com

And it still lives on the mooch.

Birdbrain, Israel is among the US's 20 largest export markets. Meanwhile, poor shits like you buy from China.

Office of the United States Trade Representative...
U.S. goods exports [to Israel] in 2008 were $14.5 billion, up 11.3 percent from the previous year. Corresponding U.S. imports from Israel were $22.3 billion, up 7.4 percent. Israel is currently the 20th largest export market for U.S. goods.

Israel | Office of the United States Trade Representative
 

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