How can Hasbara be Muslim or Christian? It is a Hebrew institution. There is no chance of a Palestinian state anywhere. So Jews will have to try to rule indefinitely over a majority of non-Jews. Gouood luck with that.
Same way a palestinian can be Arab Muslim ;--)
If your going to abscond with the term palestinian I don't see why the same concepts shouldn't apply to the term hasbara
Boom
You'd have lasted ten seconds on a debating team Numbnuts
Which brings us back to the fakestinians, or those colonists who want us to believe they, as Arabs, they are somehow native to somewhere other than the Arabian peninsula
You have such a poor understanding of historical fact, you would not make it on any debating team, punk.
The Arabians were not settler colonists, they replaced the ruling elite of the territories they conquered. Cairo alone had a population equal to that of all of Arabia, where would all these Arabian settlers come from? You definitely don't think things through.
And this was succeeded by colonising and settling the lands for allah as commanded in the koran.
You forget that the Jews were invited to settle and colonise by first the Ottomans and then the LoN. The arab muslims had no say in this so decided to invade en masse as shown by the words of Winston Churchill.
From one of your own valid source's
Myths & Facts: The British Mandate Period (Chapter 2) | Jewish Virtual Library
By contrast, throughout the Mandatory period, Arab immigration was unrestricted. In 1930, the
Hope Simpson Commission, sent from London to investigate the 1929 Arab riots, said the British practice of ignoring the uncontrolled illegal Arab immigration from Egypt, Transjordan and Syria had the effect of displacing the prospective
Jewish immigrants.
8
The British Governor of the Sinai from 1922–36 observed: “This illegal immigration was not only going on from the Sinai, but also from Transjordan and Syria, and it is very difficult to make a case out for the misery of the Arabs if at the same time their compatriots from adjoining states could not be kept from going in to share that misery.”
9
The
Peel Commission reported in 1937 that the “shortfall of land is . . . due less to the amount of land acquired by Jews than to the increase in the Arab population.”
Churchill: Jews did not uproot Arabs. To the contrary, more Arabs came to Palestine because of the Jews - Reader comments for Gatestone Institute
"Joan Peters came across a "seemingly casual" discrepancy between the standard definition of a refugee and the definition used for the Palestinian Arabs. In other cases, a refugee is someone forced to leave a permanent or habitual home. In this case, however, it is someone who had lived in Palestine for just two years before the flight that began in 1948...
...Miss Peters came across a statement by Winston Churchill that she says opened her eyes to the situation in Palestine. In 1939 Churchill challenged the common notion that Jewish immigration into Palestine had uprooted its Arab residents. To the contrary, according to him, "So far from being persecuted,
the Arabs have crowded into the country and multiplied till their population has increased more than even all world Jewry could lift up the Jewish population...Arabs crowded into Palestine? As Miss Peters pursued this angle she found a fund of obscure information that confirmed Churchill's observation. Drawing on census statistics and a great number of contemporary accounts, she pieced together the dimensions of Arab immigration into Palestine before 1948...Miss Peters concludes that "the Arab population appears to have increased in direct proportion to the Jewish presence...Although the Jews alone moved to Palestine for ideological reasons, they were not alone in emigrating there. Arabs joined them in large numbers...
...Non-Jewish immigrants came from all parts of the Middle East, including Turkey, Syria, Iraq, Lebanon, Transjordan (as Jordan was once known), Saudi Arabia, the Yemens, Egypt, Sudan, and Libya. Thanks to British unconcern, Arab immigrants were generally left alone and allowed to settle in Mandatory Palestine. So many Arabs came, Miss Peters estimates, that "if all those Jews and all those Arabs who arrived in ... Palestine between 1893 and 1948 had remained, and if they were forced to leave now, a dual exodus of at least equal proportion would in all probability take place. Palestine would be depopulated once again."