Lack of support for Israel is one of the most glaring problems with the biden regime....still yet most U.S. Jews vote democratic though that is slowly changing...mainly amongst the younger Jewish Population
Donald Trump slammed President Joe Biden for his “weakness” and lack of support for Israel, amid a barrage of rockets battering the country.
www.breitbart.com
Brietbart? Really? We already know that Bibi hates the Jay Street Jews who support peace in Palestine.
Remember, before Obama pledged another $50 Billion to Israel Bibi called him a damned Jay Street Jew.
"Peace in Palestine"? There is no country called Palestine.
Palestine was a province of Syria from about 500 BC.
And ancient Egyptian and Greek references to Palestine go back to as far as 2000 BC.
Originally it was the Land of Canaan, but the Canaanites seemed to allow all sorts of settlers.
{...
By the early Bronze Age (3000–2200 BCE), independent
Canaanite city-states situated in plains and coastal regions and surrounded by mud-brick defensive walls were established relying on nearby agricultural hamlets for their food.
[15] The Canaanite city-states held trade and diplomatic relations with Egypt and Syria. Parts of the Canaanite urban civilization were destroyed around 2300 BCE, though there is no consensus as to why. Incursions by nomads from the east of the
Jordan River who settled in the hills followed soon thereafter.
[12][16]
In the
Middle Bronze Age (2200–1500 BCE),
Canaan was influenced by the surrounding civilizations of ancient Egypt,
Mesopotamia,
Phoenicia,
Minoan Crete, and Syria. Diverse commercial ties and an agriculturally based economy led to the development of new pottery forms, the cultivation of grapes, and the extensive use of bronze.
[12][17] Burial customs from this time seemed to be influenced by a belief in the afterlife.
[12][18] The
Middle Kingdom Egyptian Execration Texts attest to Canaanite trade with Egypt during this period.
[19][20] The Minoan influence is apparent at
Tel Kabri.
[21]
A DNA analysis published in May 2020
[22][23] showed that migrants from the Caucasus mixed with the local population to produce the Canaanite culture that existed during the Bronze Age.
[24][25]
...
During 1550–1400 BCE, the Canaanite cities became vassals to Egypt as the Egyptian
New Kingdom reunited Egypt and expanded into the
Levant under
Ahmose I and
Thutmose I. Political, commercial and military events towards the end of this period (1450–1350 BCE) were recorded by ambassadors and Canaanite proxy rulers for Egypt in 379 cuneiform tablets known as the
Amarna Letters.
[26] These refer to several local proxy rulers for Egypt such as
Biridiya of
Megiddo,
Lib'ayu of
Shechem and
Abdi-Heba in
Jerusalem. Abdi-Heba is a
Hurrian name, and enough Hurrians lived in Palestine at that time to warrant contemporary Egyptian texts calling the people of Syro-Palestinians
Ḫurru.
[27]
...
The
Iron Age in Palestine stretches from about the 12th century to the 5th century BCE.[
citation needed] For long, historians relied on the stories in the Hebrew Bible to create a narrative of the period. These stories have largely been discarded as myths as more archaeological finds have been unearthed that paints a radically different view of the epoch.
[30][31]
Sometime in the 12th century BC, the
Philistines occupied the southern coast of Palestine.
[32] The Philistines are credited with introducing iron weapons, chariots, and new ways of fermenting wine to the local population.
[33] Over time the Philistines integrated with the local population and they, like the other people in Palestine, were engulfed by first the Assyrian empire and later the Babylonian empire.
[34] In the 6th century, they disappeared from written history.
[35]
Traces of early Israelites appeared at about the same time as the Philistines.
[36] The Israelites inhabited Palestine's barren hill country, a loosely defined highland region stretching from the
Judean hills in the south to the Samarian hills in the north. The population, at most forty-five thousand, were poor and lived relatively isolated from the Canaanite city-states that occupied the plains and the coastal regions.
[37] By the 8th century BCE, the population had grown to some 160,000 individuals over 500 settlements split into the two kingdoms Israel in the north and Judah in the south.
[38] Israel was the more prosperous of the kingdoms and developed into a regional power while Judah was economically marginal and backward.
[39] In contrast to the Philistines, the Israelites did not eat pork,
[40] preferred plain pottery,
[41] and circumsized their boys.
[42]
...}
So the Philistines are the source of the name Palestine for the Gaza coast, not the poor Hebrew invaders who stayed in the hills.
The Hebrew only rules for a few hundred years, and were continually defeated by the Assyrians, Babylonians, Romans, and even the Crusaders. They have no claim to the land at all, in any way.