What I learned from a 1937 World Atlas

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DeBunkem
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What I learned from a 1937 World Atlas

Post #1

Post by DeBunkem »

Saw an actual tamper-proof printed US World Gazette from 1937 at a friend's house this weekend. Nobody had an agenda when the map was published beyond showing the geographic facts. While "Israel Firsters" celebrate their depth of ignorance on geography and land ownership, I'll just briefly describe what I saw. The general borders of PALESTINE were as they are shown today in the maps of the Occupied Zones and the Arab Ghettos and bantustans. However, it included lands on the E. side of Jordan. First, it blasted the Zionist myth of "a Land without People for a People without Land." Arab towns and villages cover PALESTINE from border to border. "Israel" is nowhere mentioned, and did not exist. Even the ones with Jewish names had Arab names in parenthesis, but these were few. "British Protectorate" was printed across the map. A brief note in the index indicated a very high Arab population, with a much lower number of Jews, but added that "Jewish colonies are growing." We expect this to be true because of the flight of Jews from Europe and Russia. Jerusalem was divided into FOUR sections: Jewish, Moslem, Christian, and "Armenian" (Orthodox). Some other ancient names such as Edom and Ammon were mentioned.
That was PALESTINE in 1937. I can easily get the publisher info for anyone who thinks the geographical facts are made up.

"Every time anyone says that Israel is our only friend
in the Middle East, I can't help but think that before
Israel, we had no enemies in the Middle East." : John
Sheehan, S.J. (a Jesuit priest)


Meanwhile:
Legitimization of land theft

The theft of private land and lawless construction, with the authorities' collaboration, have long been routine in the land of the settlers.

Haaretz Editorial http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/op ... t-1.214201

The theft of private land and lawless construction, with the authorities' collaboration, have long been routine in the land of the settlers. The scope of these deeds and their seriousness are described extensively in the report on illegal outposts compiled by Talia Sasson, formerly a senior state prosecution attorney. The report was buried almost two years ago.

However, the decision of the Supreme Planning Council (SPC) for Judea and Samaria, which was revealed in Haaretz on Sunday, to legitimize the plan to build the Matityahu East neighborhood in Modi'in Ilit, beyond the Green Line, marks a nadir.

The plan is to legitimize 42 high-rises, which are in various stages of construction, some of them on land allegedly stolen from the villagers of Bil'in. All of the high-rises being built contravene the planning and construction laws. Peace Now and Bil'in's residents petitioned the High Court of Justice two years ago to have construction stopped. The legal counsel of Modi'in Ilit warned in writing of "construction offenses of such colossal proportions, ignoring the law and planning regulations, that words cannot describe [them]."

Following the petition, with the support of the State Prosecution, the High Court ordered a halt to construction and to the neighborhood's occupancy more than a year ago. At that time the prosecution instructed the police to open an investigation into those involved in the affair.

The authorities responsible for enforcing the region's planning and building laws knew what was going on and turned a blind eye. Instead, they recently decided to legitimize it retroactively.

Matityahu East is the latest in a series of such affairs in which the separation barrier, supposedly serving Israel's security needs, is used to annex West Bank territory to expand the settlements. The defense minister is dragging his feet on everything concerning the evacuation of illegal outposts. At the same time, bodies he is responsible for - led by the civil administration - are colluding in land grabbing and legitimizing illegal construction throughout the West Bank....More...
The Israeli press has more freedom to speak the truth about land theft than the AIPAC-controlled US media, it would seem.

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cnorman18

Post #51

Post by cnorman18 »

nygreenguy wrote:
cnorman18 wrote:
I admit that Israel has faults; all Israelis do -- read any Israeli or Jewish newspaper or magazine. But I will NOT accept the moral equivalency of the two sides.

When the terrorism stops, there will be peace. Period, full stop.
But thats also why nothing WILL stop. No one is willing to suck up their pride, or admit fault even if they are not necessarily more at fault. If one cares about peace, they will do whatever possible EVEN if it means looking bad.
Okay. What do you want the Israelis to say -- and what good is it going to do?

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Post #52

Post by JoeyKnothead »

cnorman18 wrote:
nygreenguy wrote:
cnorman18 wrote:
I admit that Israel has faults; all Israelis do -- read any Israeli or Jewish newspaper or magazine. But I will NOT accept the moral equivalency of the two sides.

When the terrorism stops, there will be peace. Period, full stop.
But thats also why nothing WILL stop. No one is willing to suck up their pride, or admit fault even if they are not necessarily more at fault. If one cares about peace, they will do whatever possible EVEN if it means looking bad.
Okay. What do you want the Israelis to say -- and what good is it going to do?
With respect to nygreenguy, a great and honorable debater, with some great points of his own, but I gotta go with cnorman18 here.
The Israelis have repeatedly offered land for peace - the lauded "Two State Solution" - only to be rebuffed.

What compromise can there possibly be with those who won't?

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Post #53

Post by nygreenguy »

JoeyKnothead wrote: With respect to nygreenguy, a great and honorable debater, with some great points of his own, but I gotta go with cnorman18 here.
The Israelis have repeatedly offered land for peace - the lauded "Two State Solution" - only to be rebuffed.
While Im not too sure of the specifics here, what land, and how much was offered? Im worried that the fact everyone consideres this land holy makes certain parts more valuable than others.
What compromise can there possibly be with those who won't?
Do they really refuse to compromise or do they think they are getting a bum deal?

cnorman18

Post #54

Post by cnorman18 »

nygreenguy wrote:
JoeyKnothead wrote: With respect to nygreenguy, a great and honorable debater, with some great points of his own, but I gotta go with cnorman18 here.
The Israelis have repeatedly offered land for peace - the lauded "Two State Solution" - only to be rebuffed.

While Im not too sure of the specifics here, what land, and how much was offered? Im worried that the fact everyone consideres this land holy makes certain parts more valuable than others.
A fair question. Look here. The article gives a brief history of the meeting between Ehud Barak, Yassir Arafat and Bill Clinton at Camp David in 2000, which was the high point of negotiations between the two sides and gave the most hope for a peace settlement, and some history of the “revisionist� version that’s been circulating since. The following is how the story ended.
…the three leaders met at the White House in December and a final settlement proposal was offered. The U.S. plan offered by Clinton and endorsed by Barak would have given the Palestinians 97 percent of the West Bank (either 96 percent of the West Bank and 1 percent from Israel proper or 94 percent from the West Bank and 3 percent from Israel proper), with no cantons, and full control of the Gaza Strip, with a land-link between the two; Israel would have withdrawn from 63 settlements as a result. In exchange for the three percent annexation of the West Bank, Israel would increase the size of the Gaza territory by roughly a third. Arab neighborhoods of East Jerusalem would become the capital of the new state, and refugees would have the right of return to the Palestinian state, and would receive reparations from a $30 billion international fund collected to compensate them. The Palestinians would maintain control over their holy places, and would be given desalinization plants to ensure them adequate water. The only concessions Arafat had to make was Israeli sovereignty over the parts of the Western Wall religiously significant to Jews (i.e., not the entire Temple Mount), and three early warning stations in the Jordan valley, which Israel would withdraw from after six years.[7]
The offer, it is true, was never written down. The reason for this, according to Ross, was the recognition by both the U.S. and Israel of Arafat’s fundamental negotiating tactic of using all concessions as a starting point for future negotiations. Afraid that the leader might once again revert to violence, and expect future settlement offers to be based on the generous concessions offered to him now, President Clinton gave him no written version. Instead, he read it to the Palestinian delegation at dictation speed, “to be sure that it couldn’t be a floor for [future] negotiations... It couldn’t be a ceiling. It was the roof.� The Palestinian negotiators wanted to accept the deal, and Arafat initially said that he would accept it as well. But, on January 2, “he added reservations that basically meant he rejected every single one of the things he was supposed to give.� [8] He could not countenance Israeli control over Jewish holy spots, nor would he agree to the security arrangements; he wouldn’t even allow the Israelis to fly through Palestinian airspace. He rejected the refugee formula as well.
The reason for Arafat’s rejection of the settlement, according to Ross, was the critical clause in the agreement specifying that the agreement meant the end of the conflict. Arafat, whose life has been governed by that conflict, simply could not end it. “For him to end the conflict is to end himself,� said Ross. [9] Ben-Ami agreed with this characterization: “I certainly believe that Arafat is a problem if what we are trying to achieve is a permanent agreement. I doubt that it will be possible to reach an agreement with him.� [10] Daniel Kurtzer, former U.S. ambassador to Israel and Egypt concurred: “The failure of Camp David is largely attributed to the fact that Arafat did not even negotiate....It didn't matter what he put on the table; he put nothing on the table.� Kurtzer added that he would never understand why Arafat withdrew from the talks without even offering a maximalist position. [10a]
Instead, Arafat pursued the path of terror in hope of repositioning the Palestinians as victims in the eyes of the world. “There’s no doubt in my mind,� Ross said, “that he thought the violence would create pressure on the Israelis and on us and maybe the rest of the world.� [11] That judgment proved to be correct.
The undisputed FACT is that, after this historic offer, which was at the very LEAST a point from which to continue negotiations, Arafat refused to make a counteroffer of any kind and initiated another round of terrorist violence. That, again, is a FACT that cannot be spun.
What compromise can there possibly be with those who won't?

Do they really refuse to compromise or do they think they are getting a bum deal?
After reading that, you tell me. Why was the Camp David offer unacceptable? Arafat never said; he never made a counteroffer, not even an unreasonable maximalist one. No counteroffer at all.

I ask again; How, exactly, do you negotiate with people whose openly and explicitly declared goal, and the ONLY goal which they deem acceptable, is total victory -- in this case, the total elimination of Israel and the exile or extermination of every Jew in the Middle East?

What do you think the Israelis should do? The answer from the Palestinian side isn’t a two-state solution; it’s no Israel and no Jews.

One more time; from where I sit, the ball is entirely in the Palestinians’ court. There are two essential FIRST steps toward peace, and BOTH must and CAN only be taken by the Palestinians: (1) Stop the murder campaign, or AT LEAST make a good-faith effort at stopping it; and (2) EXPLICITLY RENOUNCE, in ARABIC for Arab audiences, the goal of total destruction of Israel and a Judenrein (“Jew-free�) Middle East.

I’ve been waiting for three years for someone to tell me how peace can be achieved, or even pursued, WITHOUT those two steps being taken. I haven’t heard an answer yet.

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Post #55

Post by JoeyKnothead »

From Post 53:
nygreenguy wrote: While Im not too sure of the specifics here, what land, and how much was offered? Im worried that the fact everyone consideres this land holy makes certain parts more valuable than others.
I refer you to the Camp David 2000 site cnorman18 provided.

I do agree that some consideration should be given for "shared" holy sites and there's reference to it in the above mentioned site...
Jewish Virtual Library wrote: According to Ben-Ami, Israel tried to find a solution for Jerusalem that would be “a division in practice...that didn't look like a division;� that is, Israel was willing to compromise on the issue, but needed a face-saving formula. The Palestinians, however, had no interest in helping the Israelis; to the contrary, they wanted to humiliate them.� Nevertheless, Ben-Ami said Israel dropped its refusal to divide Jerusalem and accepted “full Palestinian sovereignty� on the Temple Mount and asked the Palestinians only to recognize the site was also sacred to Jews.
I think some debate regarding the language used in the article and motives of those involved could ensue, but it seems Israel was at least offering something from which to start the negotiations.
nygreenguy wrote: Do they really refuse to compromise or do they think they are getting a bum deal?
It seems any offer that doesn't have Jews leaving the area for all eternity is a "bum deal".

I refer folks to cnorman18's Post 54 for a more thorough take on the issues.

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Post #56

Post by DeBunkem »

JoeyKnothead wrote:
cnorman18 wrote:
nygreenguy wrote:
cnorman18 wrote:
I admit that Israel has faults; all Israelis do -- read any Israeli or Jewish newspaper or magazine. But I will NOT accept the moral equivalency of the two sides.

When the terrorism stops, there will be peace. Period, full stop.
But thats also why nothing WILL stop. No one is willing to suck up their pride, or admit fault even if they are not necessarily more at fault. If one cares about peace, they will do whatever possible EVEN if it means looking bad.
Okay. What do you want the Israelis to say -- and what good is it going to do?
With respect to nygreenguy, a great and honorable debater, with some great points of his own, but I gotta go with cnorman18 here.
The Israelis have repeatedly offered land for peace - the lauded "Two State Solution" - only to be rebuffed.

What compromise can there possibly be with those who won't?
Offering stolen land to the rightful owner is no concession. Whether or not you can summon up a sense of fairness about that for the Palestinians, I'm guessing that you could if it was between you and a neighbor.

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Post #57

Post by JoeyKnothead »

From Post 56:
DeBunkem wrote: Offering stolen land to the rightful owner is no concession. Whether or not you can summon up a sense of fairness about that for the Palestinians, I'm guessing that you could if it was between you and a neighbor.
Yeah, and folks never took other folks' lands in the entire history of the planet.

The Israelis occupy the land, I'd say that pretty much makes it theirs.

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Post #58

Post by DeBunkem »

Wyvern wrote:
DeBunkem wrote:Collier's World Atlas and Gazetteer, copyright 1937, P. F. & Son Corporation

You should know that to find "PALESTINE" that you use the alphabetical method. Just turn the pages....very user friendly. Oh, and if you care to look in the spot where "Israel" should be, you will find NOTHING. Since real books cannot be hacked or photoshopped, I hope you see the advantage of doing the work yourself instead of another dodge tactic such as "scan it and send it." Either you or someone else on the Zionist tag team would then doubtless claim it has been meddled with, further wasting my time. Go for it!
I find it interesting how you have latched onto the idea that in 1937 Palestine in name at least existed but Israel did not and somehow this gives credence to the idea that Israel should not exist. I did a little looking around and found some maps of the area prior to the disintegration of the Ottoman empire during WW1. Previous to the British Mandate Palestine also did not exist and in fact it was divided between three different Turkish administrative districts. An area that was formed from the disintegration of Turkey and only existed for thirty years and that exclusively as a British protectorate and from this you come to the conclusion that Palestine was an actual independant state with a national identity and as such it should be in possession of the land that is now Israel.
The fact that a 1937 Collier's Atlas calls this entity Palestine and does not mention Israel confirms the other less stated facts of the turbulence soon to break out here and eventually remove any semblance of peace in the ME. The tiny index reference to Palestine mentioned that the Jewish colonies were growing. In 1939 a massive new influx of foreign Jewish immigrants appeared on the shores of Palestine. Like the US and any other country, this was not acceptable to the Brits who were trying to keep the peace and order. They were sent to Cyprus. In response, the Zionists finally came out and revealed their true intent by forming terrorist cells and attacking Palestinian infrastructure, focusing on the British authorities and lightly armed Palestinian Police.
Only after the Nahkbar do some Western references (possibly Colliers as well) begin to call this region "Israel."

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Post #59

Post by DeBunkem »

JoeyKnothead wrote:From Post 56:
DeBunkem wrote: Offering stolen land to the rightful owner is no concession. Whether or not you can summon up a sense of fairness about that for the Palestinians, I'm guessing that you could if it was between you and a neighbor.
Yeah, and folks never took other folks' lands in the entire history of the planet.

The Israelis occupy the land, I'd say that pretty much makes it theirs.
Better not give out your adress. You're inviting thieves to take your property and throw you and your family in the pigpen. The fact that they offer to sell you back some low value parts of it would hardly stisfy your sense of outrage (strangely missing in the case of the Palestinians.)

Turkish history of the area they called "Filistin" up to 1939:
1517 AD : The Ottoman Turks of Asia Minor defeated the Mamelukes, with few interruptions, ruled Palestine until the winter of 1917-18. The country was divided into several districts (sanjaks), such as that of Jerusalem. The administration of the districts was placed largely in the hands of Arab Palestinians, who were descendants of the Canaanites. The Christian and Jewish communities, however, were allowed a large measure of autonomy. Palestine shared in the glory of the Ottoman Empire during the 16th century, but declined again when the empire began to decline in the 17th century.
1831-1840 AD : Muhammad Ali, the modernizing viceroy of Egypt, expanded his rule to Palestine . His policies modified the feudal order, increased agriculture, and improved education. 1840 The Ottoman Empire reasserted its authority, instituting its own reforms .
1845 Jewish in Palestine were 12,000 increased to 85,000 by 1914. All people in Palestine were Arabic Muslims and Christians.
1897 the first Zionist Congress held Basle, Switzerland, issued the Basle programme on the colonization of Palestine.

1904 the Fourth Zionist Congress decided to establish a national home for Jews in Argentina.
1906 the Zionist congress decided the Jewish homeland should be Palestine.
1914 With the outbreak of World War I, Britain promised the independence of Arab lands under Ottoman rule, including Palestine, in return for Arab support against Turkey which had entered the war on the side of Germany.
1916 Britain and France signed the Sykes-Picot Agreement, which divided the Arab region into zones of influence. Lebanon and Syria were assigned to France, Jordan and Iraq to Britain and Palestine was to be internationalized.
1917 The British government issued the Balfour Declaration on November 2, in the form of a letter to a British Zionist leader from the foreign secretary Arthur J. Balfour prmissing him the establishment of a national home for the Jewish people in Palestine.
1917-1918 Aided by the Arabs, the British captured Palestine from the Ottoman Turks. The Arabs revolted against the Turks because the British had promised them, in correspondence with Shareef Husein ibn Ali of Mecca, the independence of their countries after the war. Britain, however, also made other, conflicting commitments in the secret Sykes-Picot agreement with France and Russia (1916), it promised to divide and rule the region with its allies. In a third agreement, the Balfour Declaration of 1917, Britain promised the Jews a Jewish "national home" in Palestine .
1918 After WW I ended, Jews began to migrate to Palestine, which was set a side as a British mandate with the approval of the League of Nations in 1922. Large-scale Jewish settlement and extensive Zionist agricultural and industrial enterprises in Palestine began during the British mandatory period, which lasted until 1948.
1919 The Palestinians convened their first National Conference and expressed their opposition to the Balfour Declaration.
1920 The San Remo Conference granted Britain a mandate over Palestine. and two years later Palestine was effectively under British administration. Sir Herbert Samuel, a declared Zionist, was sent as Britain's first High Commissioner to Palestine. 1922 The Council of the League of Nations issued a Mandate for Palestine.
1929 Large-scale attacks on Jews by Arabs rocked Jerusalem. Palestinians killed 133 Jews and suffered 116 deaths. Sparked by a dispute over use of the Western Wall of Al-Aqsa Mosque ( this site is sacred to Muslims, but Jews claimed it is the remaining of jews temple all studies shows clearly that the wall is from the Islamic ages and it is part of al-Aqsa Mosque). But the roots of the conflict lay deeper in Arab fears of the Zionist movement which aimed to make at least part of British-administered Palestine a Jewish state.
1936 The Palestinians held a six-month General Strike to protest against the confiscation of land and Jewish immigration.
1937 Peel Commission, headed by Lord Robert Peel, issued a report. Basically, the commission concluded, the mandate in Palestine was unworkable There was no hope of any cooperative national entity there that included both Arabs and Jews. The commission went on to recommend the partition of Palestine into a Jewish state, an Arab state, and a neutral sacred-site state to be administered by Britain.
1939 The British government published a White Paper restricting Jewish immigration and offering independence for Palestine within ten years. This was rejected by the Zionists, who then organized terrorist groups and launched a bloody campaign against the British and the Palestinians.
http://theegyptiancorner.blogspot.com/2 ... stine.html
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World country has ever managed to eliminate so
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cnorman18

Post #60

Post by cnorman18 »

DeBunkem:

You continue to use the phrase "stolen land" as a baseline assumption and a claim of fact; but you seem curiously unable to respond to -- excuse me, I must correct myself; to ACKNOWLEDGE THE EXISTENCE OF -- this material, which I shall do you the courtesy of posting yet again here. Notice the multiple links.
Further, on the oft-repeated allegation that the Israelis “stole Palestinian land�:

Look here, here, and here; Note this:
1. As far back as 1893, the Jews not only were already far from being a small minority in the areas where they had settled, but were the largest single group there (if one divides the non-Jewish population into Muslim and Christian), and

2. Substantial immigration of Arabs to Palestine took place during the first half of the twentieth century; from 1893 to 1947 while the Palestinian Arab population slightly more than doubled in areas where no Jews were settled, it quintupled in the main areas of Jewish settlement.
Look HERE, too. Note the chart on this page; at the time of the armistice in 1949, 8.54% of Israel was owned by either the Palestine Jewish Colonization Association, the Jewish National Fund, or Jewish individuals. Less than half that, 3.96%, was owned by Arab individuals. The rest was state land, which was transferred from the Arab government to the new Israeli government by UN mandate.

The idea that Israel was “stolen� from the Arabs is, simply put, a myth; and the proof of that, as I keep saying without response or acknowledgment, is that very many Arabs did not leave during the War of Independence; they remained in Israel, were left in peace, and they and their descendants live in Israel today. Arabs in Israel own land, do business, vote, serve in the Knesset, worship freely, and live as full, peaceful and participatory citizens of their nation. Other than Tunisia and Morocco, are there Jews in Arab countries who can say that? Will there be Jews who may do that in the Judenrein Palestinian state?

And, from yet another post:

The idea that the Israelis brutally invaded Palestine, murdered thousands of Arabs, and drove them off their ancestral lands is simply untrue. There were atrocities, but those occurred on both sides; and the FACT is that the Arab refugees who left Israel were welcome to return in 1948. That’s a matter of record, and the reasons it didn’t happen are not the fault of the Israelis.

From Resolution 194 of the United Nations General Assembly, passed on December 11, 1948, before the end of the War of Independence: Notice the portion marked in boldface.

Article 11 reads:

Resolves that the refugees wishing to return to their homes and live at peace with their neighbours should be permitted to do so at the earliest practicable date, and that compensation should be paid for the property of those choosing not to return and for loss of or damage to property which, under principles of international law or in equity, should be made good by the Governments or authorities responsible.
The Arab nations initially opposed this resolution, and few Arabs took the offer, specifically because of the refusal of the nations which attacked Israel to accept peace. Any Arabs who wanted to come home at the very beginning could have done so. Claiming that the “right of return� should extend two generations into the future, when a few hundred thousand refugees -- carefully and deliberately made to remain refugees for 62 years, unlike any “refugees� in human history anywhere in the world -- have multiplied into millions, and still have no intention of “living in peace with their neighbours,� is beyond ridiculous, no matter how heavily that idea is promoted in the Arab world.
I wouldn't presume to claim that you CAN'T respond to this material; perhaps you haven't had time.

After all, it's only been posted since Sunday, November 14.

And, of course, I must conclude, once again, with this list of OTHER facts which you have, to date, consistently refused to acknowledge or comment upon in any way, refusing even to acknowledge or comment on their repeated posting. I have decided to begin posting them in green. You know, like Kryptonite.

Again, no acknowledgment of the decades-long campaign of Palestinian attacks against unarmed civilians chosen as primary targets for mass murder; no acknowledgment of the responsibility of the Palestinian terrorists for the deaths of Palestinian civilians due to their own inarguably criminal tactics; no acknowledgment of the openly and explicitly stated, and never renounced, Palestinian goal of the total eradication of Israel and the extermination or expulsion of every Jew in the Mideast; no acknowledgment of the decades of Government-sponsored and encouraged old-school Nazi-style anti-Semitic hate propaganda to which the Arab public is subjected; no acknowledgment of Holocaust denial, claims of worldwide Jewish conspiracy promoting the Protocols of the Elders of Zion as authentic, and even dramatizations of the notorious Blood Libel as factually true; no acknowledgment of the Palestinian goal of “ethnic cleansing� in order to establish a Judenrein Arab nation in the West Bank, and eventually from the Jordan to the sea; no acknowledgment that many Arabs never left Israel, and live there in peace and freedom as full citizens to this day; no acknowledgment of endlessly repeated Israeli offers of “land for peace�; no acknowledgment of the blatant anti-Israel bias of the UN; and, finally, no acknowledgment of the FACT that looking to mutually exclusive historical narratives of the past offers no solutions, only more endless conflict. In short, no acknowledgment of anything but the unquestioning embrace of pure Palestinian propaganda, often including fake and fabricated quotes clearly intended to inflame and promote hatred and resentment.

When you're ready to actually acknowledge and talk about some of the FACTS above, and therefore to actually engage in meaningful debate as opposed to peddling one-sided propaganda, let me know.

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