Israel Campaigns Against Global Free Speech

IF the Palestinians would just learn to coexist with the Jews, just accept them, there wouldn't be an issue.

The fifth national council of the Palestine Liberation Organisation in February 1969 passed a resolution confirming that the PLO's objective was "to establish a free and democratic society in Palestine for all Palestinians whether they are Muslims, Christians or Jews".

One-state solution - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

It was Israel that shot down that coexistence thing.​
Palestine didn't exist until 1919. A patchwork quilt made out of Lebanon or Syria or Egypt. Muslim Arabs used to live next to Jews for thousands of years. Why not in 1948? Why not NOW?
Here again the Palestinians, and the British, wanted a single state. The Palestinians wanted a secular state. The British not so much. The Zionists not at all.

Here is a fairly brief video explaining the beginning of the problem.

Leila Farsakh: Mandatory Palestine prior to 1939 - Opposition to British policy and Zionist project



Secular?! She forgot to mention the Nazi Mufti of Palestine who wanted to establish an IslamioNazi Caliphate of Palestine and went around slaughtering Christians and Jews around the same time.

Hitler's Mufti | Catholic Answers

Recent work by historians and apologists has revealed that an influential, international religious leader was also an ardent supporter of Adolf Hitler. His name was not Pope Pius XII but Hajj Amin al-Husseini. This Grand Mufti of Jerusalem recruited whole divisions of fanatics to fight and kill in the name of extremism.

Revered in some circles today as one of the fathers of modern radical Islam, al-Husseini has been the subject of a number of modern studies. Scholars such as David Dalin, John Rothmann, Chuck Morse, and others have courageously brought al-Husseini’s actions to light. "Hitler’s Mufti," as many have called him, had a direct hand in some of the darkest moments of the Holocaust, the slaughter of tens of thousands of Christians, and the formation of some of the most hate-filled generations of modern history. Al-Husseini is a testament to the way that evil finds evil.


Hitler was baptized and confirmed as a Roman Catholic, his people, the Germans, were Christians. Why would Hitler want German Christians slaughtered?

In any case, the Mufti did what any patriot would do, ally himself with the enemy of the nation (Britain) that was planning to evict his people from their homes/land and replace them with European Jews. Many people in the British colonies supported the Germans as enemies of their foreign colonial ruler.


Your heros Adolph and the Mufti are rarely thought of as patriots. They simply shared an ideology of hate that appealed to both xtians and Islamists.


Thank you for revealing your hate of Christians.
 
Palestine didn't exist until 1919. A patchwork quilt made out of Lebanon or Syria or Egypt. Muslim Arabs used to live next to Jews for thousands of years. Why not in 1948? Why not NOW?
Here again the Palestinians, and the British, wanted a single state. The Palestinians wanted a secular state. The British not so much. The Zionists not at all.

Here is a fairly brief video explaining the beginning of the problem.

Leila Farsakh: Mandatory Palestine prior to 1939 - Opposition to British policy and Zionist project



Secular?! She forgot to mention the Nazi Mufti of Palestine who wanted to establish an IslamioNazi Caliphate of Palestine and went around slaughtering Christians and Jews around the same time.

Hitler's Mufti | Catholic Answers

Recent work by historians and apologists has revealed that an influential, international religious leader was also an ardent supporter of Adolf Hitler. His name was not Pope Pius XII but Hajj Amin al-Husseini. This Grand Mufti of Jerusalem recruited whole divisions of fanatics to fight and kill in the name of extremism.

Revered in some circles today as one of the fathers of modern radical Islam, al-Husseini has been the subject of a number of modern studies. Scholars such as David Dalin, John Rothmann, Chuck Morse, and others have courageously brought al-Husseini’s actions to light. "Hitler’s Mufti," as many have called him, had a direct hand in some of the darkest moments of the Holocaust, the slaughter of tens of thousands of Christians, and the formation of some of the most hate-filled generations of modern history. Al-Husseini is a testament to the way that evil finds evil.


Hitler was baptized and confirmed as a Roman Catholic, his people, the Germans, were Christians. Why would Hitler want German Christians slaughtered?

In any case, the Mufti did what any patriot would do, ally himself with the enemy of the nation (Britain) that was planning to evict his people from their homes/land and replace them with European Jews. Many people in the British colonies supported the Germans as enemies of their foreign colonial ruler.


Your heros Adolph and the Mufti are rarely thought of as patriots. They simply shared an ideology of hate that appealed to both xtians and Islamists.


Thank you for revealing your hate of Christians.


Thank you for your presumptuous whining and moaning.
 
I have NO right to post here. I am not either Palestinian or Israeli, So take my post with a grain of salt. I identify with the Israelis, Shalom!. I understand why Jews tend to over react. For all the struggles for them to fit into European society for thousands of years,, ...they were nearly exterminated. IF the Palestinians would just learn to coexist with the Jews, just accept them, there wouldn't be an issue. Israel isn't in the business of extermination, heavy handed with retaliation or self protection, perhaps. I totally understand that.
IF the Palestinians would just learn to coexist with the Jews, just accept them, there wouldn't be an issue.

The fifth national council of the Palestine Liberation Organisation in February 1969 passed a resolution confirming that the PLO's objective was "to establish a free and democratic society in Palestine for all Palestinians whether they are Muslims, Christians or Jews".

One-state solution - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

It was Israel that shot down that coexistence thing.​
Palestine didn't exist until 1919. A patchwork quilt made out of Lebanon or Syria or Egypt. Muslim Arabs used to live next to Jews for thousands of years. Why not in 1948? Why not NOW?
Here again the Palestinians, and the British, wanted a single state. The Palestinians wanted a secular state. The British not so much. The Zionists not at all.

Here is a fairly brief video explaining the beginning of the problem.

Leila Farsakh: Mandatory Palestine prior to 1939 - Opposition to British policy and Zionist project



Secular?! She forgot to mention the Nazi Mufti of Palestine who wanted to establish an IslamioNazi Caliphate of Palestine and went around slaughtering Christians and Jews around the same time.

Hitler's Mufti | Catholic Answers

Recent work by historians and apologists has revealed that an influential, international religious leader was also an ardent supporter of Adolf Hitler. His name was not Pope Pius XII but Hajj Amin al-Husseini. This Grand Mufti of Jerusalem recruited whole divisions of fanatics to fight and kill in the name of extremism.

Revered in some circles today as one of the fathers of modern radical Islam, al-Husseini has been the subject of a number of modern studies. Scholars such as David Dalin, John Rothmann, Chuck Morse, and others have courageously brought al-Husseini’s actions to light. "Hitler’s Mufti," as many have called him, had a direct hand in some of the darkest moments of the Holocaust, the slaughter of tens of thousands of Christians, and the formation of some of the most hate-filled generations of modern history. Al-Husseini is a testament to the way that evil finds evil.


Hitler was baptized and confirmed as a Roman Catholic, his people, the Germans, were Christians. Why would Hitler want German Christians slaughtered?

In any case, the Mufti did what any patriot would do, ally himself with the enemy of the nation (Britain) that was planning to evict his people from their homes/land and replace them with European Jews. Many people in the British colonies supported the Germans as enemies of their foreign colonial ruler.

Aha, so you consider a Nazi Muslim cleric who slaughtered thousands of Christians and Jews, a "patriot". Such a great Christian. No wonder you support genocidal Palestinian IslamoNazis.

Hitler's Mufti | Catholic Answers

To assist the practical slaughter of Jews and Christians, al-Husseini built an army of Muslim volunteer units for the Waffen-SS (the combat units of the dread SS) to operate for the Nazi cause in the Balkans. While the appeal for volunteers from among Muslims always struggled to meet the demands for new recruits, al-Husseini was able to organize three divisions of Bosnian Muslims who were then trained as elements of the Waffen-SS. The largest radical Muslim unit was the 13th Waffen-SS Handzar ("Dagger") division that boasted over 21,000 men. They were joined by the Bosnian 23rd Waffen-SS Kama Division and the Albanian Skanderbeg 21st Waffen-SS Division. The Muslim Waffen-SS forces fought across the Balkans and then assisted in the genocide of Yugoslavian Jews and in the persecution and slaughter of Gypsies and Christian Serbs in 1944 and 1945. The brutality extended to Catholics as well, for the Muslim Waffen-SS cut a path of destruction across the Balkans that encompassed a large number of Catholic parishes, churches, and shrines and resulted in the deaths of thousands of Catholics. By the end of the war, al-Husseini’s fanatical soldiers had killed over 90 percent of the Jews in Bosnia.
 
...Hitler was baptized and confirmed as a Roman Catholic, his people, the Germans, were Christians. Why would Hitler want German Christians slaughtered? In any case, the Mufti did what any patriot would do, ally himself with the enemy of the nation (Britain) that was planning to evict his people from their homes/land and replace them with European Jews. Many people in the British colonies supported the Germans as enemies of their foreign colonial ruler.
Here, people, we see a foreign (probably British Muslim) reprobate, making excuses for the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem siding with Adolf Hitler and his slaughtering of the Jews.

Just goes to prove that shit really DOES float to the top sometimes.

Just looking at things as a neutral. There were other leaders in British colonies that supported Germany. There were Indian leaders that supported Hitler and assembled Indian (Hindu) troops to fight Britain.

As far as me. I am of European descent, a Roman Catholic and a U.S. Army combat veteran with an Honorable Discharge.
And we believed you. Sure.
 
How about if we get a little back on topic Diddums

from
https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=6&ved=0ahUKEwi2zNvD_ajMAhVKvoMKHeR8Cq8QFgg_MAU&url=http://www.ruthfullyyours.com/2016/03/30/richard-cravatts-the-lie-of-academic-free-speech-in-the-israelipalestinian-debate-campus-bullies-attempt-to-suppress-opposing-views-by-exploiting-the-concept-of-academic-freedom/&usg=AFQjCNHWS_6djbykQc1nKbmbmk5fbL1YgQ&sig2=ByOlS__vqjPxsr3mwZ5vUQ&bvm=bv.119745492,d.amc
Quote

As the ideological assault against Israel and Jews intensified on university campuses, and pro-Israel individuals began answering back to their ideological opponents, the student groups leading the pro-Palestinian charge (including such groups as the radical Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP)) decided that their tactic of unrelenting demonization of Israel was insufficient, and the best way to optimize the propaganda effect of their anti-Israel message was also to suppress or obscure opposing views.

The pronouncements of these groups are now frequently defined by the baleful whining of these ideological bullies intent on having only their views aired while suppressing the contradictory views of others. In fact, a leaked memorandum from the Binghamton University Students for Justice in Palestine chapter revealed that members would be required to never even engage in dialogue with pro-Israel groups on their campus, they would be prohibited from “engaging in any form of official collaboration, cooperation, or event co-sponsorship with [pro-Israel] student organizations and groups,” and SJP members “shall in no manner engage in any form of official collaboration with any student group which actively opposes the cause of Palestinian liberation nor with groups which have aided and abetted Zionist student organizations,” meaning, of course, that the so-called intellectual debate that universities purport to promote in exactly this type of discussion will never take place when SJP is involved.

And because they cannot win an honest, open ideological debate about the Israeli/Palestinian conflict because they deal almost exclusively in misrepresentations and untruths (the allegation of Israeli apartheid, as the central example), just as the anti-Trump protestors wished to accomplish, SJP has characteristically tried to insure that no pro-Israel voices are heard, either by disrupting or shutting down pro-Israel events and speakers or urging administrators to disinvite speakers they deem to be Islamophobic, too pro-Israel, or critical of their own tactics and activism.

The thuggish substitution of event disruption and the shutting down of other people’s speech for what is supposed to be two-sided academic dialogue and debate occurs with increased regularity, and marks another, more pernicious, aspect of the campus campaign against Israel, Zionism, and Jews.

At University of California, Davis this month, for example, George Deek, a Jaffa-born Arab Christian, planned to give a speech entitled “The Art of Middle East Diplomacy,” when some 30 pro-Palestinian activists stood up and blocked Deek with banners and took over the event by screaming “From the River to the Sea, Palestine will be free,” meaning an Arab state in place of present-day Israel, and chanting such toxic ditties as “long live the Intifada,” “Allahu Akbar,” and “When Palestine is occupied, resistance is justified,” ghoulish calls for the murder of Jews, and “Israel is anti-Black” and “Palestine will be free, fight white supremacy,” an intellectually clumsy way of trying to frame Israel as a racist state.

In February, Bassam Eid, a Palestinian himself and the founder of the Palestinian Human Rights Monitoring Group, witnessed very startlingly how nothing positive said about Israel is allowed to be heard, even from such a credible, though unsual, source as a Palestinian. During his speech, in which he was critical of Hamas and the Palestinian Authority for their failure to seek peace, Eid was verbally attacked by a student attendee, who said in Arabic, “Dr. Bassam, do not dare talk about us [Palestinians] anymore. You have shamed our God … you’ve shamed us, disgraced us, you are a traitor, you are a traitor, in the name of God you are a traitor … You are worse than the Jews and we will hunt you down and find you in every place, be prepared . . . .” When it became obvious that his speech could would not be able to continue uninterrupted, Eid cancelled the event and had to be escorted off site by the police.

End Quote
In February, Bassam Eid, a Palestinian himself and the founder of the Palestinian Human Rights Monitoring Group, witnessed very startlingly how nothing positive said about Israel is allowed to be heard, even from such a credible, though unsual, source as a Palestinian.​

Bassam Eid shovels shit for Israel. He is part of the "normalization" lie.

He is as popular as Ilan Pappe it an AIPAC conference.
 
I have NO right to post here. I am not either Palestinian or Israeli, So take my post with a grain of salt. I identify with the Israelis, Shalom!. I understand why Jews tend to over react. For all the struggles for them to fit into European society for thousands of years,, ...they were nearly exterminated. IF the Palestinians would just learn to coexist with the Jews, just accept them, there wouldn't be an issue. Israel isn't in the business of extermination, heavy handed with retaliation or self protection, perhaps. I totally understand that.
IF the Palestinians would just learn to coexist with the Jews, just accept them, there wouldn't be an issue.

The fifth national council of the Palestine Liberation Organisation in February 1969 passed a resolution confirming that the PLO's objective was "to establish a free and democratic society in Palestine for all Palestinians whether they are Muslims, Christians or Jews".

One-state solution - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

It was Israel that shot down that coexistence thing.​
Palestine didn't exist until 1919. A patchwork quilt made out of Lebanon or Syria or Egypt. Muslim Arabs used to live next to Jews for thousands of years. Why not in 1948? Why not NOW?
Here again the Palestinians, and the British, wanted a single state. The Palestinians wanted a secular state. The British not so much. The Zionists not at all.

Here is a fairly brief video explaining the beginning of the problem.

Leila Farsakh: Mandatory Palestine prior to 1939 - Opposition to British policy and Zionist project



Secular?! She forgot to mention the Nazi Mufti of Palestine who wanted to establish an IslamioNazi Caliphate of Palestine and went around slaughtering Christians and Jews around the same time.

Hitler's Mufti | Catholic Answers

Recent work by historians and apologists has revealed that an influential, international religious leader was also an ardent supporter of Adolf Hitler. His name was not Pope Pius XII but Hajj Amin al-Husseini. This Grand Mufti of Jerusalem recruited whole divisions of fanatics to fight and kill in the name of extremism.

Revered in some circles today as one of the fathers of modern radical Islam, al-Husseini has been the subject of a number of modern studies. Scholars such as David Dalin, John Rothmann, Chuck Morse, and others have courageously brought al-Husseini’s actions to light. "Hitler’s Mufti," as many have called him, had a direct hand in some of the darkest moments of the Holocaust, the slaughter of tens of thousands of Christians, and the formation of some of the most hate-filled generations of modern history. Al-Husseini is a testament to the way that evil finds evil.


Hitler was baptized and confirmed as a Roman Catholic, his people, the Germans, were Christians. Why would Hitler want German Christians slaughtered?

In any case, the Mufti did what any patriot would do, ally himself with the enemy of the nation (Britain) that was planning to evict his people from their homes/land and replace them with European Jews. Many people in the British colonies supported the Germans as enemies of their foreign colonial ruler.







Because he converted away from Christianty and became a heathen.

What nation was the grand mufti a citizen of then ?
 
...Hitler was baptized and confirmed as a Roman Catholic, his people, the Germans, were Christians. Why would Hitler want German Christians slaughtered? In any case, the Mufti did what any patriot would do, ally himself with the enemy of the nation (Britain) that was planning to evict his people from their homes/land and replace them with European Jews. Many people in the British colonies supported the Germans as enemies of their foreign colonial ruler.
Here, people, we see a foreign (probably British Muslim) reprobate, making excuses for the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem siding with Adolf Hitler and his slaughtering of the Jews.

Just goes to prove that shit really DOES float to the top sometimes.




Only if a cancer is present, and the cancer in this case is islam
 
Secular?! She forgot to mention the Nazi Mufti of Palestine who wanted to establish an IslamioNazi Caliphate of Palestine and went around slaughtering Christians and Jews around the same time.

Hitler's Mufti | Catholic Answers

Recent work by historians and apologists has revealed that an influential, international religious leader was also an ardent supporter of Adolf Hitler. His name was not Pope Pius XII but Hajj Amin al-Husseini. This Grand Mufti of Jerusalem recruited whole divisions of fanatics to fight and kill in the name of extremism.

Revered in some circles today as one of the fathers of modern radical Islam, al-Husseini has been the subject of a number of modern studies. Scholars such as David Dalin, John Rothmann, Chuck Morse, and others have courageously brought al-Husseini’s actions to light. "Hitler’s Mufti," as many have called him, had a direct hand in some of the darkest moments of the Holocaust, the slaughter of tens of thousands of Christians, and the formation of some of the most hate-filled generations of modern history. Al-Husseini is a testament to the way that evil finds evil.

bullshit-meter-011.gif~c200


Rude-ee peddling dross again. This Catholic Answers article has been debunked several times. The article is based largely on the Dalin/Rothman book, "Icon of Evil" which is considered a joke amongst academics as it's a compilation of clichés of anti-Palestinian, anti-Muslim and anti-Arab propaganda, drawn, with rare exceptions, from secondary sources, if not tertiary or even quaternary sources, all of them in English.

The book states, for example, on page 35 that in 1929 he is supposed to have called for a campaign of jihad against the British, the Jews, and the West. In fact at that time he was fervently pro-British and he appeased the British until at least the mid thirties when he realised that his appeasement and support had no effect on British policy in Palestine. The book is full of such inaccuracies and as Segev writes, "is of little scolarly value".

His review is quite enlightening: http://www.nytimes.com/2008/09/28/books/review/Segev-t.html?_r=0
 
IF the Palestinians would just learn to coexist with the Jews, just accept them, there wouldn't be an issue.

The fifth national council of the Palestine Liberation Organisation in February 1969 passed a resolution confirming that the PLO's objective was "to establish a free and democratic society in Palestine for all Palestinians whether they are Muslims, Christians or Jews".

One-state solution - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

It was Israel that shot down that coexistence thing.​
Palestine didn't exist until 1919. A patchwork quilt made out of Lebanon or Syria or Egypt. Muslim Arabs used to live next to Jews for thousands of years. Why not in 1948? Why not NOW?
Here again the Palestinians, and the British, wanted a single state. The Palestinians wanted a secular state. The British not so much. The Zionists not at all.

Here is a fairly brief video explaining the beginning of the problem.

Leila Farsakh: Mandatory Palestine prior to 1939 - Opposition to British policy and Zionist project



Secular?! She forgot to mention the Nazi Mufti of Palestine who wanted to establish an IslamioNazi Caliphate of Palestine and went around slaughtering Christians and Jews around the same time.

Hitler's Mufti | Catholic Answers

Recent work by historians and apologists has revealed that an influential, international religious leader was also an ardent supporter of Adolf Hitler. His name was not Pope Pius XII but Hajj Amin al-Husseini. This Grand Mufti of Jerusalem recruited whole divisions of fanatics to fight and kill in the name of extremism.

Revered in some circles today as one of the fathers of modern radical Islam, al-Husseini has been the subject of a number of modern studies. Scholars such as David Dalin, John Rothmann, Chuck Morse, and others have courageously brought al-Husseini’s actions to light. "Hitler’s Mufti," as many have called him, had a direct hand in some of the darkest moments of the Holocaust, the slaughter of tens of thousands of Christians, and the formation of some of the most hate-filled generations of modern history. Al-Husseini is a testament to the way that evil finds evil.


Hitler was baptized and confirmed as a Roman Catholic, his people, the Germans, were Christians. Why would Hitler want German Christians slaughtered?

In any case, the Mufti did what any patriot would do, ally himself with the enemy of the nation (Britain) that was planning to evict his people from their homes/land and replace them with European Jews. Many people in the British colonies supported the Germans as enemies of their foreign colonial ruler.







Because he converted away from Christianty and became a heathen.

What nation was the grand mufti a citizen of then ?

The Nazi Mufti in his youth was Ottoman citizen who served in the Ottoman army and participated in the genocide of the Armenians. He took what he learned from the Ottoman's and encouraged the Nazis to do the same to the Jews.
 
Secular?! She forgot to mention the Nazi Mufti of Palestine who wanted to establish an IslamioNazi Caliphate of Palestine and went around slaughtering Christians and Jews around the same time.

Hitler's Mufti | Catholic Answers

Recent work by historians and apologists has revealed that an influential, international religious leader was also an ardent supporter of Adolf Hitler. His name was not Pope Pius XII but Hajj Amin al-Husseini. This Grand Mufti of Jerusalem recruited whole divisions of fanatics to fight and kill in the name of extremism.

Revered in some circles today as one of the fathers of modern radical Islam, al-Husseini has been the subject of a number of modern studies. Scholars such as David Dalin, John Rothmann, Chuck Morse, and others have courageously brought al-Husseini’s actions to light. "Hitler’s Mufti," as many have called him, had a direct hand in some of the darkest moments of the Holocaust, the slaughter of tens of thousands of Christians, and the formation of some of the most hate-filled generations of modern history. Al-Husseini is a testament to the way that evil finds evil.

bullshit-meter-011.gif~c200


Rude-ee peddling dross again. This Catholic Answers article has been debunked several times. The article is based largely on the Dalin/Rothman book, "Icon of Evil" which is considered a joke amongst academics as it's a compilation of clichés of anti-Palestinian, anti-Muslim and anti-Arab propaganda, drawn, with rare exceptions, from secondary sources, if not tertiary or even quaternary sources, all of them in English.

The book states, for example, on page 35 that in 1929 he is supposed to have called for a campaign of jihad against the British, the Jews, and the West. In fact at that time he was fervently pro-British and he appeased the British until at least the mid thirties when he realised that his appeasement and support had no effect on British policy in Palestine. The book is full of such inaccuracies and as Segev writes, "is of little scolarly value".

His review is quite enlightening: http://www.nytimes.com/2008/09/28/books/review/Segev-t.html?_r=0

Actually nothing has been "debunked" except in your dreams. There is absolutely no dispute that the Mufti was an Islamic Nazi who committed genocide on Jews and Christians. All these events are a matter of historical record.
 
...Hitler was baptized and confirmed as a Roman Catholic, his people, the Germans, were Christians. Why would Hitler want German Christians slaughtered? In any case, the Mufti did what any patriot would do, ally himself with the enemy of the nation (Britain) that was planning to evict his people from their homes/land and replace them with European Jews. Many people in the British colonies supported the Germans as enemies of their foreign colonial ruler.
Here, people, we see a foreign (probably British Muslim) reprobate, making excuses for the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem siding with Adolf Hitler and his slaughtering of the Jews.

Just goes to prove that shit really DOES float to the top sometimes.

Just looking at things as a neutral. There were other leaders in British colonies that supported Germany. There were Indian leaders that supported Hitler and assembled Indian (Hindu) troops to fight Britain.

As far as me. I am of European descent, a Roman Catholic and a U.S. Army combat veteran with an Honorable Discharge.
And we believed you. Sure.


Honorable Discharge no name.jpg
 
...Hitler was baptized and confirmed as a Roman Catholic, his people, the Germans, were Christians. Why would Hitler want German Christians slaughtered? In any case, the Mufti did what any patriot would do, ally himself with the enemy of the nation (Britain) that was planning to evict his people from their homes/land and replace them with European Jews. Many people in the British colonies supported the Germans as enemies of their foreign colonial ruler.
Here, people, we see a foreign (probably British Muslim) reprobate, making excuses for the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem siding with Adolf Hitler and his slaughtering of the Jews.

Just goes to prove that shit really DOES float to the top sometimes.

Just looking at things as a neutral. There were other leaders in British colonies that supported Germany. There were Indian leaders that supported Hitler and assembled Indian (Hindu) troops to fight Britain.

As far as me. I am of European descent, a Roman Catholic and a U.S. Army combat veteran with an Honorable Discharge.
And we believed you. Sure.


View attachment 72966
Combat in Saudi Arabia? When was that? Ha ha ha.

I see that plaque with Arabic writing that you've whited out the top because it has your Muslim name due to conversion during your service abroad. It happens.
 
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...Hitler was baptized and confirmed as a Roman Catholic, his people, the Germans, were Christians. Why would Hitler want German Christians slaughtered? In any case, the Mufti did what any patriot would do, ally himself with the enemy of the nation (Britain) that was planning to evict his people from their homes/land and replace them with European Jews. Many people in the British colonies supported the Germans as enemies of their foreign colonial ruler.
Here, people, we see a foreign (probably British Muslim) reprobate, making excuses for the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem siding with Adolf Hitler and his slaughtering of the Jews.

Just goes to prove that shit really DOES float to the top sometimes.

Just looking at things as a neutral. There were other leaders in British colonies that supported Germany. There were Indian leaders that supported Hitler and assembled Indian (Hindu) troops to fight Britain.

As far as me. I am of European descent, a Roman Catholic and a U.S. Army combat veteran with an Honorable Discharge.
And we believed you. Sure.


View attachment 72966
Combat in Saudi Arabia? When was that? Ha ha ha.

I see that plaque with Arabic writing that you've whited out the top because it has your Muslim name due to conversion during your service abroad. It happens.

I went to Saudi with the Corps after serving a tour in Vietnam. The plaque is from the entrance of my villa it is in English and Arabic. Officer's quarters were individual villas in Saudi.

Serving in the U.S. Army is not something you dual loyalty types do, is it.
 
Here, people, we see a foreign (probably British Muslim) reprobate, making excuses for the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem siding with Adolf Hitler and his slaughtering of the Jews.

Just goes to prove that shit really DOES float to the top sometimes.

Just looking at things as a neutral. There were other leaders in British colonies that supported Germany. There were Indian leaders that supported Hitler and assembled Indian (Hindu) troops to fight Britain.

As far as me. I am of European descent, a Roman Catholic and a U.S. Army combat veteran with an Honorable Discharge.
And we believed you. Sure.


View attachment 72966
Combat in Saudi Arabia? When was that? Ha ha ha.

I see that plaque with Arabic writing that you've whited out the top because it has your Muslim name due to conversion during your service abroad. It happens.

I went to Saudi with the Corps after serving a tour in Vietnam. The plaque is from the entrance of my villa it is in English and Arabic. Officer's quarters were individual villas in Saudi.

Serving in the U.S. Army is not something you dual loyalty types do, is it.
I, too, am a proud American and Vietnam veteran.

It is unfortunate, however, that our government sucks.
 
Here, people, we see a foreign (probably British Muslim) reprobate, making excuses for the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem siding with Adolf Hitler and his slaughtering of the Jews.

Just goes to prove that shit really DOES float to the top sometimes.

Just looking at things as a neutral. There were other leaders in British colonies that supported Germany. There were Indian leaders that supported Hitler and assembled Indian (Hindu) troops to fight Britain.

As far as me. I am of European descent, a Roman Catholic and a U.S. Army combat veteran with an Honorable Discharge.
And we believed you. Sure.


View attachment 72966
Combat in Saudi Arabia? When was that? Ha ha ha.

I see that plaque with Arabic writing that you've whited out the top because it has your Muslim name due to conversion during your service abroad. It happens.

I went to Saudi with the Corps after serving a tour in Vietnam. The plaque is from the entrance of my villa it is in English and Arabic. Officer's quarters were individual villas in Saudi.

Serving in the U.S. Army is not something you dual loyalty types do, is it.
Noooo, Joooish traitors never serve or have served in the US military, now do they? Ha ha ha.
There are currently over 150 types of dual (and triple) citizens living in the US so I assume by "dual citizen" you are referring to the usual antisemitic canard that goes on among neo Nazi groups and in Islamic shitholes.

You are debasing your service and insulting all those who have served with your anti Americanism and bigotry. Most vets in fact, without a question are strong supporters of Israel.
 
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Just looking at things as a neutral. There were other leaders in British colonies that supported Germany. There were Indian leaders that supported Hitler and assembled Indian (Hindu) troops to fight Britain.

As far as me. I am of European descent, a Roman Catholic and a U.S. Army combat veteran with an Honorable Discharge.
And we believed you. Sure.


View attachment 72966
Combat in Saudi Arabia? When was that? Ha ha ha.

I see that plaque with Arabic writing that you've whited out the top because it has your Muslim name due to conversion during your service abroad. It happens.

I went to Saudi with the Corps after serving a tour in Vietnam. The plaque is from the entrance of my villa it is in English and Arabic. Officer's quarters were individual villas in Saudi.

Serving in the U.S. Army is not something you dual loyalty types do, is it.
I, too, am a proud American and Vietnam veteran.

It is unfortunate, however, that our government sucks.
All "veterans" do not have Muslim / Palestinian associations like you guys do.

Israeli and U.S. veterans share experiences in ‘Night of Unity’ panel
By Jodutt Basrawi Posted: April 6, 2016 7:25 pm
Student veterans of the U.S. Marine Corps and U.S. Navy spoke alongside veterans of the Israel Defense Forces on Tuesday in a panel that discussed their transitions between military and civilian life and the stigmas they experienced in their respective countries.

About 75 people attended the panel, which was a part of a larger event called “Night of Unity” in Ackerman Union. Several campus organizations, including Students Supporting Israel and the Student Veterans Association, organized the event to bring together different communities and hear veterans’ personal experiences, according to the event’s Facebook page.

Johnney Maldonado, a U.S. Navy veteran and vice president of the Student Veterans Association, said he wanted to serve on the panel to share the narratives of U.S. veterans. He added he wanted to humanize the military experience.

“We are often portrayed by many groups, such as the media, incorrectly,” said Maldonado, a third-year political science student.

Liat Menna, president of Students Supporting Israel, said Tuesday’s event was the first in recent memory during which Israel-associated groups at UCLA held an event that included stories from both the U.S. Armed Forces and the IDF.

“There is so much more to the veterans than just their duties in their armies,” said Menna, a second-year economics student. “It is inspiring to see these different groups of veterans come to one setting to share their experiences.”

StandWithUs, a Los Angeles-based pro-Israel awareness foundation, the UCLA Veterans Resource Center, Bruins for Israel, Chabad House at UCLA, Hillel at UCLA and the Jewish Learning Initiative also sponsored the event, which included dinner and the opportunity to write letters for Operation Gratitude, a nonprofit organization that delivers letters to U.S. service members.

Jacob Finn, a fourth-year psychology student and American Israel Public Affairs Committee campus activist, said he decided to attend the event because it resonated with his future goal of bridging U.S.-Israeli relations and policies.

Arturo Flores, a panelist and U.S. Marine Corps veteran, said he thinks the event allowed him and other veterans to talk about the common stigmas they face.

Flores, president of the Student Veterans Association and fourth-year political science student, added he thinks one common stigma between the U.S. Armed Forces and the IDF is the notion both entities are part of an evil or oppressive agenda.

Students Supporting Israel at UCLA partnered with StandWithUs to bring the IDF soldiers to campus.

Bentzi, an IDF veteran and panelist, said the StandWithUs Israeli Soldiers Tour brought him to the panel and will subsequently take him across North America to speak in dozens of cities and college campuses.

Alon R., a panelist and captain in the IDF, said he attended the panel through the StandWithUs Israel Fellowship, which trains Israeli university students who have completed their army service to become capable advocates for Israel.

Lipaz Ela, an IDF veteran and Jewish Agency Israel Fellow for Hillel at UCLA, said UCLA Hillel students asked for her to be a part of the panel. Jewish Agency Israel Fellows are IDF veterans who share their experiences of Israel and support students learning about Israeli culture.

Ela said she came to Los Angeles four days after end of her service in the fall with IDF, after seven years of service with the IDF. She added she began working with Hillel upon her arrival.

Ela said one lesson she learned from her time with the IDF was that everything is possible.

“It is possible to handle and help people,” Ela said. “In the end, camaraderie becomes a unifying principle.”
 
Combat in Saudi Arabia? When was that? Ha ha ha.

I see that plaque with Arabic writing that you've whited out the top because it has your Muslim name due to conversion during your service abroad. It happens.

I went to Saudi with the Corps after serving a tour in Vietnam. The plaque is from the entrance of my villa it is in English and Arabic. Officer's quarters were individual villas in Saudi.

Serving in the U.S. Army is not something you dual loyalty types do, is it.
I, too, am a proud American and Vietnam veteran.

It is unfortunate, however, that our government sucks.
All "veterans" do not have Muslim / Palestinian associations like you guys do.

Israeli and U.S. veterans share experiences in ‘Night of Unity’ panel
By Jodutt Basrawi Posted: April 6, 2016 7:25 pm
Student veterans of the U.S. Marine Corps and U.S. Navy spoke alongside veterans of the Israel Defense Forces on Tuesday in a panel that discussed their transitions between military and civilian life and the stigmas they experienced in their respective countries.

About 75 people attended the panel, which was a part of a larger event called “Night of Unity” in Ackerman Union. Several campus organizations, including Students Supporting Israel and the Student Veterans Association, organized the event to bring together different communities and hear veterans’ personal experiences, according to the event’s Facebook page.

Johnney Maldonado, a U.S. Navy veteran and vice president of the Student Veterans Association, said he wanted to serve on the panel to share the narratives of U.S. veterans. He added he wanted to humanize the military experience.

“We are often portrayed by many groups, such as the media, incorrectly,” said Maldonado, a third-year political science student.

Liat Menna, president of Students Supporting Israel, said Tuesday’s event was the first in recent memory during which Israel-associated groups at UCLA held an event that included stories from both the U.S. Armed Forces and the IDF.

“There is so much more to the veterans than just their duties in their armies,” said Menna, a second-year economics student. “It is inspiring to see these different groups of veterans come to one setting to share their experiences.”

StandWithUs, a Los Angeles-based pro-Israel awareness foundation, the UCLA Veterans Resource Center, Bruins for Israel, Chabad House at UCLA, Hillel at UCLA and the Jewish Learning Initiative also sponsored the event, which included dinner and the opportunity to write letters for Operation Gratitude, a nonprofit organization that delivers letters to U.S. service members.

Jacob Finn, a fourth-year psychology student and American Israel Public Affairs Committee campus activist, said he decided to attend the event because it resonated with his future goal of bridging U.S.-Israeli relations and policies.

Arturo Flores, a panelist and U.S. Marine Corps veteran, said he thinks the event allowed him and other veterans to talk about the common stigmas they face.

Flores, president of the Student Veterans Association and fourth-year political science student, added he thinks one common stigma between the U.S. Armed Forces and the IDF is the notion both entities are part of an evil or oppressive agenda.

Students Supporting Israel at UCLA partnered with StandWithUs to bring the IDF soldiers to campus.

Bentzi, an IDF veteran and panelist, said the StandWithUs Israeli Soldiers Tour brought him to the panel and will subsequently take him across North America to speak in dozens of cities and college campuses.

Alon R., a panelist and captain in the IDF, said he attended the panel through the StandWithUs Israel Fellowship, which trains Israeli university students who have completed their army service to become capable advocates for Israel.

Lipaz Ela, an IDF veteran and Jewish Agency Israel Fellow for Hillel at UCLA, said UCLA Hillel students asked for her to be a part of the panel. Jewish Agency Israel Fellows are IDF veterans who share their experiences of Israel and support students learning about Israeli culture.

Ela said she came to Los Angeles four days after end of her service in the fall with IDF, after seven years of service with the IDF. She added she began working with Hillel upon her arrival.

Ela said one lesson she learned from her time with the IDF was that everything is possible.

“It is possible to handle and help people,” Ela said. “In the end, camaraderie becomes a unifying principle.”
Re: Harassment Targeting Students for Justice in Palestine at UCLA

http://static1.squarespace.com/stat...L+to+UCLA+Re+Horowitz+Harassment_Redacted.pdf
 
Combat in Saudi Arabia? When was that? Ha ha ha.

I see that plaque with Arabic writing that you've whited out the top because it has your Muslim name due to conversion during your service abroad. It happens.

I went to Saudi with the Corps after serving a tour in Vietnam. The plaque is from the entrance of my villa it is in English and Arabic. Officer's quarters were individual villas in Saudi.

Serving in the U.S. Army is not something you dual loyalty types do, is it.
I, too, am a proud American and Vietnam veteran.

It is unfortunate, however, that our government sucks.
All "veterans" do not have Muslim / Palestinian associations like you guys do.

Israeli and U.S. veterans share experiences in ‘Night of Unity’ panel
By Jodutt Basrawi Posted: April 6, 2016 7:25 pm
Student veterans of the U.S. Marine Corps and U.S. Navy spoke alongside veterans of the Israel Defense Forces on Tuesday in a panel that discussed their transitions between military and civilian life and the stigmas they experienced in their respective countries.

About 75 people attended the panel, which was a part of a larger event called “Night of Unity” in Ackerman Union. Several campus organizations, including Students Supporting Israel and the Student Veterans Association, organized the event to bring together different communities and hear veterans’ personal experiences, according to the event’s Facebook page.

Johnney Maldonado, a U.S. Navy veteran and vice president of the Student Veterans Association, said he wanted to serve on the panel to share the narratives of U.S. veterans. He added he wanted to humanize the military experience.

“We are often portrayed by many groups, such as the media, incorrectly,” said Maldonado, a third-year political science student.

Liat Menna, president of Students Supporting Israel, said Tuesday’s event was the first in recent memory during which Israel-associated groups at UCLA held an event that included stories from both the U.S. Armed Forces and the IDF.

“There is so much more to the veterans than just their duties in their armies,” said Menna, a second-year economics student. “It is inspiring to see these different groups of veterans come to one setting to share their experiences.”

StandWithUs, a Los Angeles-based pro-Israel awareness foundation, the UCLA Veterans Resource Center, Bruins for Israel, Chabad House at UCLA, Hillel at UCLA and the Jewish Learning Initiative also sponsored the event, which included dinner and the opportunity to write letters for Operation Gratitude, a nonprofit organization that delivers letters to U.S. service members.

Jacob Finn, a fourth-year psychology student and American Israel Public Affairs Committee campus activist, said he decided to attend the event because it resonated with his future goal of bridging U.S.-Israeli relations and policies.

Arturo Flores, a panelist and U.S. Marine Corps veteran, said he thinks the event allowed him and other veterans to talk about the common stigmas they face.

Flores, president of the Student Veterans Association and fourth-year political science student, added he thinks one common stigma between the U.S. Armed Forces and the IDF is the notion both entities are part of an evil or oppressive agenda.

Students Supporting Israel at UCLA partnered with StandWithUs to bring the IDF soldiers to campus.

Bentzi, an IDF veteran and panelist, said the StandWithUs Israeli Soldiers Tour brought him to the panel and will subsequently take him across North America to speak in dozens of cities and college campuses.

Alon R., a panelist and captain in the IDF, said he attended the panel through the StandWithUs Israel Fellowship, which trains Israeli university students who have completed their army service to become capable advocates for Israel.

Lipaz Ela, an IDF veteran and Jewish Agency Israel Fellow for Hillel at UCLA, said UCLA Hillel students asked for her to be a part of the panel. Jewish Agency Israel Fellows are IDF veterans who share their experiences of Israel and support students learning about Israeli culture.

Ela said she came to Los Angeles four days after end of her service in the fall with IDF, after seven years of service with the IDF. She added she began working with Hillel upon her arrival.

Ela said one lesson she learned from her time with the IDF was that everything is possible.

“It is possible to handle and help people,” Ela said. “In the end, camaraderie becomes a unifying principle.”
Re: Harassment Targeting Students for Justice in Palestine at UCLA

http://static1.squarespace.com/stat...L+to+UCLA+Re+Horowitz+Harassment_Redacted.pdf






REALLY YOU EXPECT ANYONE TO ACCEPT AN ISLAMONAZI GROUPS WORD AS TRUTH

You have really lost it now tinman
 
Combat in Saudi Arabia? When was that? Ha ha ha.

I see that plaque with Arabic writing that you've whited out the top because it has your Muslim name due to conversion during your service abroad. It happens.

I went to Saudi with the Corps after serving a tour in Vietnam. The plaque is from the entrance of my villa it is in English and Arabic. Officer's quarters were individual villas in Saudi.

Serving in the U.S. Army is not something you dual loyalty types do, is it.
I, too, am a proud American and Vietnam veteran.

It is unfortunate, however, that our government sucks.
All "veterans" do not have Muslim / Palestinian associations like you guys do.

Israeli and U.S. veterans share experiences in ‘Night of Unity’ panel
By Jodutt Basrawi Posted: April 6, 2016 7:25 pm
Student veterans of the U.S. Marine Corps and U.S. Navy spoke alongside veterans of the Israel Defense Forces on Tuesday in a panel that discussed their transitions between military and civilian life and the stigmas they experienced in their respective countries.

About 75 people attended the panel, which was a part of a larger event called “Night of Unity” in Ackerman Union. Several campus organizations, including Students Supporting Israel and the Student Veterans Association, organized the event to bring together different communities and hear veterans’ personal experiences, according to the event’s Facebook page.

Johnney Maldonado, a U.S. Navy veteran and vice president of the Student Veterans Association, said he wanted to serve on the panel to share the narratives of U.S. veterans. He added he wanted to humanize the military experience.

“We are often portrayed by many groups, such as the media, incorrectly,” said Maldonado, a third-year political science student.

Liat Menna, president of Students Supporting Israel, said Tuesday’s event was the first in recent memory during which Israel-associated groups at UCLA held an event that included stories from both the U.S. Armed Forces and the IDF.

“There is so much more to the veterans than just their duties in their armies,” said Menna, a second-year economics student. “It is inspiring to see these different groups of veterans come to one setting to share their experiences.”

StandWithUs, a Los Angeles-based pro-Israel awareness foundation, the UCLA Veterans Resource Center, Bruins for Israel, Chabad House at UCLA, Hillel at UCLA and the Jewish Learning Initiative also sponsored the event, which included dinner and the opportunity to write letters for Operation Gratitude, a nonprofit organization that delivers letters to U.S. service members.

Jacob Finn, a fourth-year psychology student and American Israel Public Affairs Committee campus activist, said he decided to attend the event because it resonated with his future goal of bridging U.S.-Israeli relations and policies.

Arturo Flores, a panelist and U.S. Marine Corps veteran, said he thinks the event allowed him and other veterans to talk about the common stigmas they face.

Flores, president of the Student Veterans Association and fourth-year political science student, added he thinks one common stigma between the U.S. Armed Forces and the IDF is the notion both entities are part of an evil or oppressive agenda.

Students Supporting Israel at UCLA partnered with StandWithUs to bring the IDF soldiers to campus.

Bentzi, an IDF veteran and panelist, said the StandWithUs Israeli Soldiers Tour brought him to the panel and will subsequently take him across North America to speak in dozens of cities and college campuses.

Alon R., a panelist and captain in the IDF, said he attended the panel through the StandWithUs Israel Fellowship, which trains Israeli university students who have completed their army service to become capable advocates for Israel.

Lipaz Ela, an IDF veteran and Jewish Agency Israel Fellow for Hillel at UCLA, said UCLA Hillel students asked for her to be a part of the panel. Jewish Agency Israel Fellows are IDF veterans who share their experiences of Israel and support students learning about Israeli culture.

Ela said she came to Los Angeles four days after end of her service in the fall with IDF, after seven years of service with the IDF. She added she began working with Hillel upon her arrival.

Ela said one lesson she learned from her time with the IDF was that everything is possible.

“It is possible to handle and help people,” Ela said. “In the end, camaraderie becomes a unifying principle.”
Re: Harassment Targeting Students for Justice in Palestine at UCLA

http://static1.squarespace.com/stat...L+to+UCLA+Re+Horowitz+Harassment_Redacted.pdf
Aww the thugs and bullies are being thrown off US campuses? Tough luck. Tissue?
 
Just looking at things as a neutral. There were other leaders in British colonies that supported Germany. There were Indian leaders that supported Hitler and assembled Indian (Hindu) troops to fight Britain.

As far as me. I am of European descent, a Roman Catholic and a U.S. Army combat veteran with an Honorable Discharge.
And we believed you. Sure.


View attachment 72966
Combat in Saudi Arabia? When was that? Ha ha ha.

I see that plaque with Arabic writing that you've whited out the top because it has your Muslim name due to conversion during your service abroad. It happens.

I went to Saudi with the Corps after serving a tour in Vietnam. The plaque is from the entrance of my villa it is in English and Arabic. Officer's quarters were individual villas in Saudi.

Serving in the U.S. Army is not something you dual loyalty types do, is it.
Noooo, Joooish traitors never serve or have served in the US military, now do they? Ha ha ha.
There are currently over 150 types of dual (and triple) citizens living in the US so I assume by "dual citizen" you are referring to the usual antisemitic canard that goes on among neo Nazi groups and in Islamic shitholes.

You are debasing your service and insulting all those who have served with your anti Americanism and bigotry. Most vets in fact, without a question are strong supporters of Israel.


Most veterans support the U.S., not Israel, and most veterans remember the Liberty. I am talking about those with dual nationality. Can't be trusted whether Jew or Muslim or Christian.

"IRAQ VETERANS AGAINST THE WAR STATEMENT ON GAZA

published by IVAW National on 08/01/14 1:53pm
posted to:
Staff
Over the last three weeks, we at Iraq Veterans Against the War (IVAW) have watched with dread the endless bombing of Gaza, leading to the senseless killing of now more than 1,300 Palestinians and the destruction of their homes, lives and livelihoods.

In the past we have announced our support of the right to self-determination for Palestinians, alongside our firm conviction of the illegality and dehumanizing nature of the blockade of Gaza and the occupation of the West Bank. This moment is no different.

The US government has continually provided arms and money to Israel to the tune of $3.1 billion per year. It is our own country’s weaponry that is causing the deaths of entire families in Gaza. We see it as our duty to resist the steady grinding militarization of our foreign and domestic policies and we stand in solidarity with those resisting the same efforts overseas, both the Palestinian people and the Israeli reservists who have refused to serve in this conflict."

Iraq Veterans Against the War Statement on Gaza | Iraq Veterans Against the War
 

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