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The ultimate Israel - Palestine Thread (it's all here) (pg. 15)
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| mixinmusic |
| An extremly stupid answer.... |
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| nic01445 |
| quote: | Originally posted by Cyrus King
I agree that everyone is killing everyone, but the Israeli's are killing more palestinians than the palestinians are killing Israeli's,,, and that is a fact. |
So, to answer this question:
| quote: | | ok well thats a step in the right direction. Do you admit that Palistianians have carried out attrocities killing innocent people? |
yes! |
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| Yoepus |
| quote: | Originally posted by mixinmusic
That is where you are wrong. No killing is justified. |
Sure, why not, lets just throw the whole concept of Self Defense out the window.
Who needs to defend themselves today anyway when you have the powerful and kind UN to step in at the slightest sign of trouble:rolleyes: |
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| mixinmusic |
| I thought the Jewish of all people would recognise the teaching of the Bible? |
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| Yoepus |
| quote: | Originally posted by mixinmusic
I thought the Jewish of all people would recognise the teaching of the Bible? |
Most do.
Which bible are you speaking of?
The one I know has lots of death and killing in it:conf: |
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| nic01445 |
| quote: | Originally posted by Yoepus
Most do.
Which bible are you speaking of?
The one I know has lots of death and killing in it:conf: |
No, they just fainted, like in Pokemon. |
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| mixinmusic |
| Ah so its ok then.... |
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| Yoepus |
| quote: | Originally posted by mixinmusic
Ah so its ok then.... |
Its ok to Kill, not ok to Murder.
Thats what it says, but I'm sure you haven't read it. |
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| mixinmusic |
| I have read it. |
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| Yoepus |
| quote: | Originally posted by mixinmusic
I have read it. |
my bad
:toothless |
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| Cyrus King |
| quote: |
Israeli army leaves Gaza's bread basket in ruins
AFP[ THURSDAY, AUGUST 05, 2004 11:14:05 PM ]
BEIT HANUN: The Israeli army left a trail of devastatation in Beit Hanun on Thursday after a five-week siege and occupation of the Gaza Strip's traditional bread basket which failed to put a halt to rocket attacks by Palestinian militants.
An Israeli military spokesman confirmed that forces were being “redeployed” but gave no further details.
Twenty Palestinians were killed during the course of the operation.
Defence minister Shaul Mofaz had ordered troops into Beit Hanun following a rocket attack on the Israeli town of Sderot which killed two people, including a three-year-old boy.
Residents said that much of Beit Hanun's infrastructure had been smashed in the course of the operation as troops demolished buildings, tore up roads and razed orange groves which had been used as cover for the firing of the Qassam rockets, named after the military wing of the Islamist group Hamas.
Palestinian housing minister Abdelrahman Hamad, who comes from Beit Hanun, said the latest incursion had caused some 40 million dollars worth of damage to homes, farms and general infrastructure. |
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/...show/804544.cms
State-terrorism at its finest folks! |
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| Cyrus King |
| quote: |
Uprooted trees, razed houses... Israel leaves its calling card in Gaza
By Eric Silver and Sa'id Ghazali in Jerusalem
06 August 2004
The Palestinians of Beit Hanoun in the northern Gaza Strip began to count the cost of a month-long Israeli invasion as the troops finally pulled out yesterday, leaving a trail of anger, despair and devastation behind them.
More than 42,000 olive, citrus and date trees had been uprooted, according to the local council. Altogether, 4,405 acres of orchards, vineyards and vegetable fields were flattened.
Officials accused the army of demolishing 21 houses and damaging a further 314. Five factories and 19 wells were also destroyed. They said the loss could reach as high as £70m.
The Israelis said they went in to stop Hamas militants firing rockets at Sderot, a town of 24,000 across the border inside Israel. One salvo killed a three-year-old boy and a middle-aged man there five weeks ago. A house was damaged earlier this week, and two more rockets fell on open ground yesterday.
Before pulling out, the army distributed leaflets with a cartoon showing rockets bouncing back at Beit Hanoun. "Terror," it read, "will kill you."
Two weeks ago Hamas gunmen shot dead a youth whose family tried to stop them firing rockets from their backyard for fear of reprisals, but the blockade may yet rebound on Israel.
Basel al Masri, a farmer who lost an acre and a half of grape vines, said: "Everybody here agrees that the militants should not fire from a densely populated area. But after this massive destruction, the people of Beit Hanoun will tell them to come and fire rockets from the tops of our houses."
Abdullah Musleh estimated that it would cost $400,000 (£220,000) to rebuild his floor tile factory. "They have no justification for doing this," he said.
"It is deliberate destruction of our economy. They have destroyed everything, three automatic pressing machines, the offices, the cement containers, even the marble floors under the machines. My 15 workers will be unemployed."
Abdel Kareem Abu Jarad and his extended family of 26 had their two-storey home commandeered as a base for the army. When they heard that the soldiers had gone they returned, only to watch a bulldozer razing the building.
Mr Abu Jarad said: "No rockets were fired near our house. There is no justification for all this brutality."
All their savings, $7,000 and 25,000 shekels (£6,500 altogether) in cash, had gone. Mr Abu Jarad said he suspected the soldiers of stealing them.
Captain Jacob Dallal, a military spokesman, said the orchards and buildings were used as a shelter for militants. "We don't want to be there," he added. "We just don't want the [missiles] to be fired from there. If the terrorist groups operate from among the civilian population and use private property to launch attacks, they also have to be accountable."
The Israeli media reported yesterday that Mousa Arafat, the Palestinian security chief, had met secretly with his Israeli opposite number to try to stop the rocket firings. But the people of Beit Hanoun have lost faith in their leaders.
Three Palestinian ministers set up a tent there yesterday to assess the damage but five gunmen burst in and ordered them to leave.
"We didn't see you when the Israeli army was destroying Beit Hanoun," one of them shouted through a loudhailer. "Go away. We don't want you here." As the locals applauded, the ministers left. |
http://news.independent.co.uk/world...sp?story=548358 |
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