Nobody but Ilhan Abdullahi Omar

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MaduroBU
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Re: Nobody but Ilhan Abdullahi Omar

#76

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Bitter Clinger wrote: Sat Mar 09, 2019 4:01 pm
MaduroBU wrote: Sat Mar 09, 2019 2:53 pm I'll stand up and say that Israel's treatment of the Palestinians concerns me. The Palestinians have not made themselves a very sympathetic group, between atrocious leadership and bring used as an excuse to exterminate Jews by all of Israel's neighbors since 1948. Israel has a unique mandate as an ethno-state (something that we in the West wouldn't tolerate under virtually any other circumstance), but they're also a Western democracy. They're also unqiue in that the religious and political climates of their neighbors put them in a strategic position that we cannot understand in the West. Giving up Golan would put all of Northern Israel (including Tel Aviv) in Syrian artillery range, while giving up the West Bank would make a 9 mile wide strip of land connecting Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. If you live in Texas you think "Who cares?". If you have relatives who remember how they maintained 10:1 kill ratios in wadis along the Golan to save the country, those strategic and tactical considerations are very real. "On Both Banks of the Suez" and "The Heights of Courage" are great reads, but they also put into perspective how close and personal the Yom Kippur war was versus the conflicts that we can recall which all took place an ocean away. The Israeli position toward Palestineans hinges upon an absolute unwillingness to allow them to act as a third column or as a means of cedeing strategically vital territory (e.g. WB or Gaza, particularly with no Sinai buffer).

I think that there are valid criticisms of Israeli policy toward Palestinians, but it's also extremely easy to forget how much history goes into those conflicts. It's also too easy for us to minimize the fear and reactions of a group of people who have faced extermination at least twice in the span of 30 years. You cannot encapsulate the complex decisions in a Twitter post or a Facebook rant, and if you do, it's bound to appear (or maybe actually be) an anti-Semitic trope that does nothing to advance important discussions.

Some of the harshest critics and some of the most ardent defenders of Israeli policies are Jews. That diversity of opinion is supported by a shared understanding that NONE of the opinions voiced are motivated by anti-Semitism. That safety is a necessary precursor to meaningful debates on Israeli policy, and Omar's flippant comments completely undermine it. I don't know if she hates Jews or if she is just a moron, but it is clear that she moved her own aims backward by saying something idiotic.
If one is familiar with the Israeli Army rules of engagement, one would come to realize that they are the most humane fighting force in the world. More than one soldier has given their life in order to prevent the death of an innocent civilian. As far as the "Palestinians" (which BTW is a made up word that came into existence after 1948) who seem to by and large only be able to find unarmed civilians to murder - in a land where everyone serves in the military at one time or another - if these Arabs laid down their weapons (rockets, AK's, knives and homicide vests) tomorrow, there would be peace. If the Jews laid down their arms, there would be only a massacre of another 6 million-plus Jews.
I don't think that the IDF disbanding is a realistic scenario, and I agree that in the extremely unlikely event that it happened, all of Israel's neighbors would capitalize on the weakness by attacking. I'll agree that the local Arabs in the British mandate of Palestine weren't really a cohesive group until 1948, but circumstances since that time have made the term and the grouping real.

I don't agree that the Palestinians could ensure peace by disarming, because they aren't the threat. The Palestinians do the most damage on a day to day basis, but only because of the detente between Israel and it's Arab neighbors since 1973. If the multitude of Palestinian groups all laid down their arms, the issues of land and water would be just as acute for Israel and the Palestinians. The IDF does make an effort to avoid civilian casualties against a set of opponents who routinely use terror rocket attacks and human shields while retaliating in kind against attacks on their home soil. The restraint shown on a daily basis by the IDF IS impressive, but it's not the heart of the issue. Rather, the Palestinians in Israel (who generally represent the folks who didn't have the resources to leave...most "Palestinians" live outside of Israel if they have the option) don't have the resources to create a real economy, with the added trouble that aid or remittances are shunted towards funding terrorism.

I think that shaping the discussion as a right vs wrong debate and trying to figure out which participant is the "bad guy" minimizes the legitimate motives of both groups. By way of example, Begin did bad things but he also did a lot of good, and he was always committed first and foremost to the survival of Israel. His actions made sense in that context, and I think that approaching how the Palestinians think with the same view (i.e. "why did they do this?") gives a much more accurate view of the players involved and the choices to be made.

The only clear things are that the violence has solved nothing and that the problems prevent easy answers. It is extremely difficult to find a way to admit that a group of people whose world view has incorporated huge amounts of virulent anti-Semitism and whose interests have been frequently co-opted by nations that would gladly exterminate Israel may have valud claims. I'll reiterate that Israel's unilateral capitulation to even some Palestinian demands wouldn't solve the problems because Israel is and must remain on guard against existential military threats. To that end, I think that the real pre-requisite to improving conditions for the Palestinians is a normalization of relations with stable neighbors (i.e. more akin to Jordan than Egypt).

As a regional player, Israel doesn't have the clout to accomplish this end. To the extent that we're a much larger player (both militarily and in terms of oil purchases), we might be able to do more.
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Re: Nobody but Ilhan Abdullahi Omar

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The situation was created by the Arabs in 1948. They declared that they would drive the Jews into the sea. The Arabs outside of Israel told the Arabs inside of Israel to leave so that they would not be in harms way while the Jews were exterminated (remember that the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem was allied with the worst of Nazi Germany during WWII). After the Arab attack failed and Israel established itself as a sovereign entity, the willingly self displaced Arabs could have been easily absorbed into neighboring Arab countries (note that the "Palestinian" Arabs do in fact already have their own country, it is called Jordan). Instead, the Arabs governments chose to make political fodder out of their own brethren and they were incarcerated into so-called "refugee camps" in Gaza, Judea and Samaria (Judea and Samaria are the correct names for the "West Bank' of the Jordan River) I have been in these "camps", they are simply cities like any other Arab city. And it is absolutely correct, if the Arabs in Gaza simply took the concrete that was provided to them by Israel, and used it to build hospitals and schools instead of terror tunnels into Israel proper, then they would improve their own lives immeasurably. Arabs living in Israel proper enjoy most all of the rights that any Jewish citizen does, including representation in the Knesset and more recently, some have even gone to serve in the IDF. Bottom line, the only way that I can make sense of it all is to believe in the concepts of good and evil and that what we see taking place is a most stark example of that very classic battle between light and darkness.
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Re: Nobody but Ilhan Abdullahi Omar

#78

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Bitter Clinger wrote: Sat Mar 09, 2019 5:25 pm The situation was created by the Arabs in 1948. They declared that they would drive the Jews into the sea. The Arabs outside of Israel told the Arabs inside of Israel to leave so that they would not be in harms way while the Jews were exterminated (remember that the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem was allied with the worst of Nazi Germany during WWII).
I think that ultimately the situation was created by Hitler. Zionism in the 1900s was a relatively peaceful process, in that wealthy Jews or Gentiles in Europe could sponsor kibbutzes by buying land in Palestine, mostly from Turks who viewed the land as a rent check but never visited. The Ottomans who owned the land were every bit as foreign as the Jewish settlers, but the fact that the incoming Jews wished to live there and farm the land vs. absentee Turk landlords (remotely akin to Salutary Neglect here- we were fine with being British subjects so long as it was in name only). That relationship also points out a very important distinction- that "The Arabs" isn't a very useful grouping because it includes a lot of groups that aren't aligned. The Ottoman landlords didn't care about the Palestinians living on their land- they did what made them money. The Jews moving to Israel were glad to escape anti-Semitism in Europe, and didn't have any particular good or ill-will towards the displaced Palestinians.

Haj Amin al-Husseini asking Hitler for help (https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/th ... -uuml-hrer Good summary for those less familiar) is pretty representative of the quality of Palestinian leadership from that time until now. The Palestinians have never had ANY power, and since day one their leadership has been prone to blaming the Jews for their troubles. The truth is that they became AWARE of how powerless they were when the Ottoman landlords sold the land out from beneath them, but then again these were salt of the earth sort of people.

You move that animosity forward 4 years, and add millions of people, all of whom have lost people and few of whom want to return to places that tried to kill them (I'll point out that the Holocaust was a European phenomenon, not just a German one, and that active participation by many nations led to ongoing animosity/l;ack of any desire to return even after the Nazi occupiers were gone). The massive influx multiplied the pre-existing sentiment and both sides overwhelmed the British ability to control it, and I don't think that I need to go through the entire Jewish War of Independence. But I will comment on Deir Yassin, or rather the memory of it, because even today that single event has characterized the fate of the Palestinians more than any other (their own awful decisions forming a close second). Menachem Begin is the only person who knows what really happened, but I think that the MOST LIKELY course of events is a firefight between Irgun and a group of militia in a tell in which a few civilians were killed. The important part was not so much the event as its perception- even Ben-Gurion recognized the value of PORTRAYING the event as a massacre, and it became that in popular memory.

Palestinian friends (educated people, not the guy on the street in Gaza shouting death to Israel) can recall their grandparents talking about fleeing because they thought that the Jews would murder them. That the memory survives to this day is a testament to what it meant to a bunch of illiterate farmers in 1948. The people who could leave did, but the ones without a choice stayed and form the group that is identified as the Palestinians today (i.e. excluding the educated people who saw the writing on the wall and got out).
Arabs could have been easily absorbed into neighboring Arab countries (note that the "Palestinian" Arabs do in fact already have their own country, it is called Jordan). Instead, the Arabs governments chose to make political fodder out of their own brethren and they were incarcerated into so-called "refugee camps" in Gaza, Judea and Samaria (Judea and Samaria are the correct names for the "West Bank' of the Jordan River)
I agree that the Palestinians could've been absorbed into neighboring nations, but none of those nations wanted them. That may be my main objection to the classification of people as a group of "Arabs"- they don't view themselves as a group. I would argue that they're socially closest to the Jordanian Arabs, BUT the Hashemite royalty of Jordan has no desire to increase a 70/30 split that already runs against them. Lebanon is such a complex patchwork that its capacity to absorb anything is limited (the Druze spent most of the 1980s sitting on hilltops with RPGs and heavy machine guns pointed in every direction, and that's just one of 4 major groups). Both nations tried harder than the others to absorb the Palestinians, and both had their own tragic stories about trying to do so. Conversely, EVERY Arab nation saw Israel as an excuse to focus legitimate domestic opposition toward a foreign "threat", and used the Palestinians as a touchstone for shaking that fist even as they did nothing to help the people.
I have been in these "camps", they are simply cities like any other Arab city. And it is absolutely correct, if the Arabs in Gaza simply took the concrete that was provided to them by Israel, and used it to build hospitals and schools instead of terror tunnels into Israel proper, then they would improve their own lives immeasurably.
I won't argue with that. The one caveat that I would add that is germane to the present discussion is that water remains a huge factor in their development.
Arabs living in Israel proper enjoy most all of the rights that any Jewish citizen does, including representation in the Knesset and more recently, some have even gone to serve in the IDF. Bottom line, the only way that I can make sense of it all is to believe in the concepts of good and evil and that what we see taking place is a most stark example of that very classic battle between light and darkness.
I think that's a pathway forward. In some ways, that trail was blazed by the Old Yishuv, who were treated as a some sort of middle ground between proper Israelis and Palestinians in the early days of Israel. I think that ultimately, the only real solution for peace is that the Palestinians view Israel as a home that they can share. However, I will reiterate that the problem is more or less exterior to Isarelis and Palestinians. While Israel could allocate more water the Palestinian areas and the Palestinians could stop devoting their meager resources toward pointless terrorism, the bigger issue is that Israel is still prepared to defend itself from a coordinated attack by every nation surrounding it. The issue isn't so much that the IDF has a bunker mentality as that it must do so. Existential threats, especially threats that have been realized in living memory, has necessarily led to most decision making being ultimatley decided by the principle of ein breira, and as applied to the Palestinians that removes any option which would threaten national survival. However, to the extent that surrounding nations can improve both in terms of political stability and a genuine interest in peace(i.e. we'll see what becomes of Iraq and Syria), I think that Israel should set hard limits on its expansion into Judea and Samaria.

I'll also point out, trying to keep the historical debate somewhat on topic, that civil debate is absolutely possible if the participants don't start by throwing verbal bombs at one another (e.g. the subject of the thread).
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Re: Nobody but Ilhan Abdullahi Omar

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:tiphat: I want to thank all of the contributors to this thread. This has been very educational for me, as I'm less thank knowledgeable of the real underlying issues. My thanks.
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Re: Nobody but Ilhan Abdullahi Omar

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WE should bring this thread back on track.

As the Democrats Go Socialist, They Go Anti-Semitic

https://www.frontpagemag.com/fpm/273078 ... greenfield
Rep. Omar didn’t utter new ideas about Jews, but very old ones. And these ideas have nothing to do with Israel. They predate the Jewish State and even an organized Zionist political movement.

The Jew was the classic socialist villain because he showed that free markets can empower individuals. Socialists were obliged to disprove the legitimacy of Jewish entry into the middle class by employing classic anti-Semitic stereotypes. The same problem bedevils today’s socialists who have replaced class with race, but still have to contend with the economic successes of Jews and Asians despite racism.

Jewish success disproves socialism and identity politics. It can only be met with anti-Semitism. And then the very element that disproves socialism instead becomes proof that we desperately need big government to protect us from the Jews. The same rhetoric at the heart of National Socialism is lurking there in the bowels of all socialism, from the New Deal to the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.

In the realm of foreign policy, Israel’s successful resistance to Islamic terrorism must also be disproven so that the United States and other countries do not decide to adopt it as a model. The same anti-Semitic stereotypes that socialists used to inveigh against the Boer War, WW1 and any conflict in the last century, are once again deployed, this time using anti-Semitism to stigmatize counterterrorism.
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Re: Nobody but Ilhan Abdullahi Omar

#81

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WE should bring this thread back on track.
Foreign policy interludes can veer way off the original track. The important thing is Democrats actively putting memes from the Protocols of the Elders of Zion back into the public forum and then refusing to even come out against their members for it.

Imagine a Republican saying these things.

Further, Syria is now demanding that Israel leave Golan (their last effort to dislodge the IDF ended with Kahalani driving toward Damascus leading a column of Centurions). Cruz and Cotton have sponsored a bill to formally recognize Golan as Israeli.
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Re: Nobody but Ilhan Abdullahi Omar

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MaduroBU wrote: Sat Mar 09, 2019 2:53 pm I'll stand up and say that Israel's treatment of the Palestinians concerns me. The Palestinians have not made themselves a very sympathetic group, between atrocious leadership and bring used as an excuse to exterminate Jews by all of Israel's neighbors since 1948. Israel has a unique mandate as an ethno-state (something that we in the West wouldn't tolerate under virtually any other circumstance), but they're also a Western democracy. They're also unqiue in that the religious and political climates of their neighbors put them in a strategic position that we cannot understand in the West. Giving up Golan would put all of Northern Israel (including Tel Aviv) in Syrian artillery range, while giving up the West Bank would make a 9 mile wide strip of land connecting Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. If you live in Texas you think "Who cares?". If you have relatives who remember how they maintained 10:1 kill ratios in wadis along the Golan to save the country, those strategic and tactical considerations are very real. "On Both Banks of the Suez" and "The Heights of Courage" are great reads, but they also put into perspective how close and personal the Yom Kippur war was versus the conflicts that we can recall which all took place an ocean away. The Israeli position toward Palestineans hinges upon an absolute unwillingness to allow them to act as a third column or as a means of cedeing strategically vital territory (e.g. WB or Gaza, particularly with no Sinai buffer).

I think that there are valid criticisms of Israeli policy toward Palestinians, but it's also extremely easy to forget how much history goes into those conflicts. It's also too easy for us to minimize the fear and reactions of a group of people who have faced extermination at least twice in the span of 30 years. You cannot encapsulate the complex decisions in a Twitter post or a Facebook rant, and if you do, it's bound to appear (or maybe actually be) an anti-Semitic trope that does nothing to advance important discussions.

Some of the harshest critics and some of the most ardent defenders of Israeli policies are Jews. That diversity of opinion is supported by a shared understanding that NONE of the opinions voiced are motivated by anti-Semitism. That safety is a necessary precursor to meaningful debates on Israeli policy, and Omar's flippant comments completely undermine it. I don't know if she hates Jews or if she is just a moron, but it is clear that she moved her own aims backward by saying something idiotic.
How about this.

Peace or no peace, just give the Palestians Israeli Citizenship with full rights like any other citizen. That including the right for vote and local managments rights.
Similarly, as any Jew is entitle to have an immediate citizenship. How about and decendent of Palestians has the same right to their fathers' land citizenship?

Would that work?
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Re: Nobody but Ilhan Abdullahi Omar

#83

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Beiruty wrote: Mon Mar 11, 2019 12:16 pm
MaduroBU wrote: Sat Mar 09, 2019 2:53 pm I'll stand up and say that Israel's treatment of the Palestinians concerns me. The Palestinians have not made themselves a very sympathetic group, between atrocious leadership and bring used as an excuse to exterminate Jews by all of Israel's neighbors since 1948. Israel has a unique mandate as an ethno-state (something that we in the West wouldn't tolerate under virtually any other circumstance), but they're also a Western democracy. They're also unqiue in that the religious and political climates of their neighbors put them in a strategic position that we cannot understand in the West. Giving up Golan would put all of Northern Israel (including Tel Aviv) in Syrian artillery range, while giving up the West Bank would make a 9 mile wide strip of land connecting Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. If you live in Texas you think "Who cares?". If you have relatives who remember how they maintained 10:1 kill ratios in wadis along the Golan to save the country, those strategic and tactical considerations are very real. "On Both Banks of the Suez" and "The Heights of Courage" are great reads, but they also put into perspective how close and personal the Yom Kippur war was versus the conflicts that we can recall which all took place an ocean away. The Israeli position toward Palestineans hinges upon an absolute unwillingness to allow them to act as a third column or as a means of cedeing strategically vital territory (e.g. WB or Gaza, particularly with no Sinai buffer).

I think that there are valid criticisms of Israeli policy toward Palestinians, but it's also extremely easy to forget how much history goes into those conflicts. It's also too easy for us to minimize the fear and reactions of a group of people who have faced extermination at least twice in the span of 30 years. You cannot encapsulate the complex decisions in a Twitter post or a Facebook rant, and if you do, it's bound to appear (or maybe actually be) an anti-Semitic trope that does nothing to advance important discussions.

Some of the harshest critics and some of the most ardent defenders of Israeli policies are Jews. That diversity of opinion is supported by a shared understanding that NONE of the opinions voiced are motivated by anti-Semitism. That safety is a necessary precursor to meaningful debates on Israeli policy, and Omar's flippant comments completely undermine it. I don't know if she hates Jews or if she is just a moron, but it is clear that she moved her own aims backward by saying something idiotic.
How about this.

Peace or no peace, just give the Palestians Israeli Citizenship with full rights like any other citizen. That including the right for vote and local managments rights.
Similarly, as any Jew is entitle to have an immediate citizenship. How about and decendent of Palestians has the same right to their fathers' land citizenship?

Would that work?
Well, Israel gave them back Gaza and they turned it into a terrorist training camp and a launching pad for attacks on civilians and school children. If the Arabs in Gaza, Judea and Samaria were brought into Israel proper and given full rights, they would outnumber the Jews in their own Jewish State. There are thousands more square kilometers of Arab lands surrounding Israel (think Rhode Island vs. the entire rest of the United States). How about stop trying to kill the Jews and recognize the right of Israel to exist, that would be a terrific first step.

Arafat was offered all that and more and he turned it down. Why, because as long as there is a "Palestinian cause", the corrupt leaders of the various factions (PLO, Hamas, PLF, etc.) all stand to profit immensely with money flowing in from Arab countries, Iran, etc. Money meant for their people that is blatantly diverted to personal accounts. What was the size of Arafat's estate when he died? Hundreds of millions! Not bad for an engineer who devoted his life to murdering innocent women and children.

Peace or no peace? Give them land and citizenship? :smilelol5: Let them earn it by exhibiting the kind of behavior that would merit joining the rest of modernity.
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Re: Nobody but Ilhan Abdullahi Omar

#84

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And meanwhile, Jewish Millennials Launch A ‘Liberation Movement’ From The DemocRat Party :thumbs2:

https://www.dailywire.com/news/44392/je ... osh-hammer
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Re: Nobody but Ilhan Abdullahi Omar

#85

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Beiruty wrote: Mon Mar 11, 2019 12:16 pm
MaduroBU wrote: Sat Mar 09, 2019 2:53 pm I'll stand up and say that Israel's treatment of the Palestinians concerns me. The Palestinians have not made themselves a very sympathetic group, between atrocious leadership and bring used as an excuse to exterminate Jews by all of Israel's neighbors since 1948. Israel has a unique mandate as an ethno-state (something that we in the West wouldn't tolerate under virtually any other circumstance), but they're also a Western democracy. They're also unqiue in that the religious and political climates of their neighbors put them in a strategic position that we cannot understand in the West. Giving up Golan would put all of Northern Israel (including Tel Aviv) in Syrian artillery range, while giving up the West Bank would make a 9 mile wide strip of land connecting Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. If you live in Texas you think "Who cares?". If you have relatives who remember how they maintained 10:1 kill ratios in wadis along the Golan to save the country, those strategic and tactical considerations are very real. "On Both Banks of the Suez" and "The Heights of Courage" are great reads, but they also put into perspective how close and personal the Yom Kippur war was versus the conflicts that we can recall which all took place an ocean away. The Israeli position toward Palestineans hinges upon an absolute unwillingness to allow them to act as a third column or as a means of cedeing strategically vital territory (e.g. WB or Gaza, particularly with no Sinai buffer).

I think that there are valid criticisms of Israeli policy toward Palestinians, but it's also extremely easy to forget how much history goes into those conflicts. It's also too easy for us to minimize the fear and reactions of a group of people who have faced extermination at least twice in the span of 30 years. You cannot encapsulate the complex decisions in a Twitter post or a Facebook rant, and if you do, it's bound to appear (or maybe actually be) an anti-Semitic trope that does nothing to advance important discussions.

Some of the harshest critics and some of the most ardent defenders of Israeli policies are Jews. That diversity of opinion is supported by a shared understanding that NONE of the opinions voiced are motivated by anti-Semitism. That safety is a necessary precursor to meaningful debates on Israeli policy, and Omar's flippant comments completely undermine it. I don't know if she hates Jews or if she is just a moron, but it is clear that she moved her own aims backward by saying something idiotic.
How about this.

Peace or no peace, just give the Palestians Israeli Citizenship with full rights like any other citizen. That including the right for vote and local managments rights.
Similarly, as any Jew is entitle to have an immediate citizenship. How about and decendent of Palestians has the same right to their fathers' land citizenship?

Would that work?
You are on to something. To me, it may be the best hope.
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Re: Nobody but Ilhan Abdullahi Omar

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Peace no Peace, the later means total surrender of the war and giving up the right to restore Palestine State that lived from 1918 till 1948.
I am not joking, Israel cannot keep colonizing Palestine while at the same time treat Palestinians civilians collectively as terrorists.
South Africa White only Government collapsed. Palestinians are human beings too and have the right to live freely and as humans. Israel should give them their 1stA rights
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Re: Nobody but Ilhan Abdullahi Omar

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Beiruty wrote: Mon Mar 11, 2019 1:23 pm Peace no Peace, the later means total surrender of the war and giving up the right to restore Palestine State that lived from 1918 till 1948.
I am not joking, Israel cannot keep colonizing Palestine while at the same time treat Palestinians civilians collectively as terrorists.
South Africa White only Government collapsed. Palestinians are human beings too and have the right to live freely and as humans. Israel should give them their 1stA rights
Jews have lived there since the destruction of the Second Temple. "Colonizing" is a propaganda term worthy of Ilhan Omar. Look up the British Mandate for "Palestine". And of course they are human beings, but their leadership is dooming them to a miserable life and they deserve both better leadership and the pursuit of happiness. Stop killing Jewish civilians, children and other innocents, recognize the right of Israel to exist, lay down the rockets, bombs, homidicide vests, destroy the terror tunnels and demonstrate the ability to live in peace. Then everything you have proposed would easily come to pass.
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Re: Nobody but Ilhan Abdullahi Omar

#88

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Bitter Clinger wrote: Mon Mar 11, 2019 2:53 pm
Beiruty wrote: Mon Mar 11, 2019 1:23 pm Peace no Peace, the later means total surrender of the war and giving up the right to restore Palestine State that lived from 1918 till 1948.
I am not joking, Israel cannot keep colonizing Palestine while at the same time treat Palestinians civilians collectively as terrorists.
South Africa White only Government collapsed. Palestinians are human beings too and have the right to live freely and as humans. Israel should give them their 1stA rights
Jews have lived there since the destruction of the Second Temple. "Colonizing" is a propaganda term worthy of Ilhan Omar. Look up the British Mandate for "Palestine". And of course they are human beings, but their leadership is dooming them to a miserable life and they deserve both better leadership and the pursuit of happiness. Stop killing Jewish civilians, children and other innocents, recognize the right of Israel to exist, lay down the rockets, bombs, homidicide vests, destroy the terror tunnels and demonstrate the ability to live in peace. Then everything you have proposed would easily come to pass.
I will give you all of that, let us give the Palestinians the same rights as any Jewish Israeli living there. Stone walling is not working anymore. BB was in Maskat Oman. Israeli has secrert and public relationshio with most Gulf countries. Isreal signed 2 peace treaty with 2 next Arab states Eygpt and Jordan.

The matter of fact, is the extreme right wing folks in Israel are still dreaming with 2 things
1) The Great Israel
2) The transfer of all Arabs Palestinians out of Palestine to neighboring countries.
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Re: Nobody but Ilhan Abdullahi Omar

#89

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Great Britain split Palestine in two after World War 2. The Jews got the small piece.

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How soon people forget.

MaduroBU
Senior Member
Posts in topic: 7
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Joined: Sat Nov 12, 2016 9:11 am

Re: Nobody but Ilhan Abdullahi Omar

#90

Post by MaduroBU »

Yes...but...the Brits didn't do much about all of the folks in both sides of the divide, while the Jews wanted them gone because they were letting ships full of Holocaust refugees sit on the docks to appease the Palestinians.

Just handing the Palestinians citizenship as a path to peace would work about as well as promoting Constitutional Carry by handing out Glocks in the Austin neighborhood of Chicago: an ultimately noble goal severely hampered by issues with implementation.
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