Israel’s Genocide in Gaza | 2023- till present

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I see my posts are getting deleted without explanation so you're going to have to go without a response until they are restored.
Thick right? Keep that answer... it was more rhetorical anyway...

And you know you got more of where the previous came from so... yeah... keep it with the narrative you're or whomsoever's your working these days.
 
Hamas is a death cult. You can see that not all Gazans celebrate the deaths of their relatives.

You may cheer on Hamas, but if it was your family that was being killed because oppressive terrorists shielding behind civilians refused to surrender to a humanitarian army, would you still be endorsing them?
If Hamas is a death cult then what do you call those that imprison kids for no reason - kill women and kids for fun? Commit genocide? Those collectively punishing a whole nation?
Perhaps lowest form of human? What you say?
 
Israeli fighters launched more than 100 raids on the camp and town of Jabalia on Saturday night and Sunday

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A massive displacement movement of the people of #Jabalia camp and areas in the northern Gaza Strip to the west of the city

@BlinxNews
 
Odd that you mention that, today of all days:

MAY 13, 2024 9:40 AM

The Monumental Importance of Yom Hazikaron

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by Jan Lee / JNS.org

OPINION

The Western Wall and Temple Mount in Jerusalem. Photo: Wikimedia Commons.

JNS.orgThis year, more than most, Jews internationally need to commemorate Yom Hazikaron.

Israel’s Day of Remembrance was created more than 70 years ago with a unique purpose — to honor soldiers and civilian fighters killed during the efforts to establish its nationhood. But in recent years, it has taken on an additional role: to acknowledge the mounting numbers of citizens murdered during terrorist attacks on Israeli soil.

The Ministry of Diaspora Affairs and Combating Antisemitism went a step further last year by introducing a policy that recognizes the victims of antisemitic terror attacks throughout the world. No event more symbolizes that connection than the Oct. 7 massacre in southern Israel — an attack whose victims hail from across the world and include Jews, Christians, and innocents of other faiths as well.

But this year’s memorial has another, often overlooked significance. This year marks a half-century since the terrorist attack in the northern city of Kiryat Shmona, when 18 civilians, largely immigrants, were murdered in their homes.

Eight of the victims were children in their apartments during the Passover holidays. The massacre, and the terror attacks that followed during the next few months that year, became front-page news in international media, forcing the UN Security Council to intervene and call for a buffer zone on Lebanon’s southern border. According to UN Security Council records from April 1974, Israel’s efforts to persuade the United Nations to hold both Lebanon and the Palestinian Liberation Organization accountable for the cross-border attack were rebuffed. UN peacekeeping troops were established briefly on the border, but Lebanon refused to assume responsibility to stop terrorists from crossing into Israel.

I was in Kiryat Shmona a half-hour before the attack that morning. I was waiting for a bus to Jerusalem, where I planned to spend the rest of the Passover holiday. The bus left filled with travelers, including residents from the apartment building that had been targeted. Egged buses in those days were equipped with a portable radio that in the best of times was hard to hear over the chatter of riders. But when the emergency broadcast came on, panic ensued. Passengers began pleading with the driver to turn the bus around and head back to Kiryat Shmona so they could check on their families. The bus was eventually flagged and pulled over by a supervisor, who confirmed the news. The city had already been cordoned off by Israel Defense Forces, and the driver was ordered to continue on to Jerusalem.

It was a searing experience to step off a bus crammed with families and solitary travelers, knowing that some had survived a terrorist attack because they were on a shopping trip instead of at home — and worse, that they might not find out the fate of their families until they returned home. But the image I think of every Yom Hazikaron is that of the young Russian immigrant from Kiryat Shmona sitting next to me, whose tears were reflected in the window pane next to her. She had confessed to me a few minutes earlier that she was still learning conversational Hebrew. Apparently, she knew enough to understand the worst of the news broadcast.

Public memorials like Yom Hazikaron help us heal. But they also serve as a way to register and reflect public unity and sentiment about compelling issues. And sometimes, when our representatives listen hard enough, responses to those memorials can inspire action.

Perhaps Israel’s decision last year to enact a policy that recognizes the worldwide victims of antisemitism was prescient of the increasing need for global action against terrorism. It’s an uncomfortable thought. But if Israel is going to overcome the greatest threat to its safety, it won’t just come from within — from the yearly sirens that mark its losses or from its incessant efforts to inspire the United Nations to finally support its side of disputes. It will also come from those of us in the Diaspora, who know all too well the importance of a Jewish homeland.

Your days are coming to a swift end Zio boomer. You are truly a sorry ass dinosaur. It gives me enormous pleasure to see how you are dying out whilst bitching and moaning. Even your dying days will be filled with negativity and anger. Most of the Zio boomer are dissatisfied with life in general. The world is against, but you are always right. Even God is against Zio boomers. You will die without peace. Fully knowing that the next gen z is completely opposite to what you are. How does it feel to know that gen z is taking over?
 
Haaretz, according to Israeli officials: #Israel will continue to negotiate despite the recent dispute with #Hamas in #Cairo

@BlinxNews
 
President of the European Council: Orders to evacuate civilians from Rafah are “unacceptable”

@BlinxNews
 
Hamas is a death cult. You can see that not all Gazans celebrate the deaths of their relatives.

You may cheer on Hamas, but if it was your family that was being killed because oppressive terrorists shielding behind civilians refused to surrender to a humanitarian army, would you still be endorsing them?


Why have European Jews and Jews from other parts of the ME settled in Palestine without consent of local people?

Remove the settlers and problem solved.
 
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It’s so sad when Arab traitors die for the enemy and are still looked upon as nothing, I am firm believer Palestinians and arabs of any religious or sect should always take care of one another it’s hilarious when these people don’t see they are just tools to be discarded when they aren’t needed.
 
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