Penelope
Diamond Member
- Jul 15, 2014
- 60,265
- 15,795
- 2,210
boarders in the US and also in Europe. I have no problem with non gang related nor known criminal Hispanics who come here legally, but if you do not believe me on this issue investigate it, if Jews want Hispanics in the US to further their agenda, it will happen. Now don't think you can move to Israel unless your a jew though. The more Christians here the more support for the state of Israel, thinking those Hispanics will be evangelicals who love Israel no matter what.
According to a poll conducted by the Israel Project, 48 percent of Hispanic Americans support the State of Israel, while only 9 percent support the Palestinians. Similarly, 44 percent of Hispanic Americans believe that the US should support Israel, while only 6 percent say that the US should support the Palestinians. Thus, Hispanic Americans have a positive perception of Israel by a three to one margin.
(snip)
Yet, Hispanic Americans are not just supportive of Israel. They also have a positive perception of the Jewish people in general. For example, 78 percent of Hispanic Americans believe that Jews have a strong commitment to family life, a trait which is very important in familial societies. Two thirds of Hispanic Americans think that Jews have a strong religious faith; 61 percent believe that American Jews make a strong contribution to American society; and 53 percent proclaim that they think that Jews supp
Furthermore, many Hispanic Americans carry Jewish DNA. A 2003 genetic test of men living in New Mexico, Southern Texas and Northern Mexico claims that about 10 to 15 percent of Hispanics living there might have had (only a speculation-me) Sephardic Jewish ancestor rsort civil rights.
(snip)
On top of that, the Hispanic and Jewish immigrant experiences in America are similar in the sense that both peoples often struggled to come to America legally. Over the last two hundred years, many Jews were forced to immigrate to the United States illegally due to the various persecutions that they experienced yet the difficult immigration quotas that existed in the US.
Hispanic Americans, Israel, and the Jewish People
Last edited: