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Saturday 15 May 2010

"...the annihilation of Israel is easier than reconciliation with it"

I am tired of pointing out the genocidal hatred that so many in the Middle East an beyond have for Israel and all Jews. A couple of articles recently have reminded me of the poison that is being spoken about Israel and Jews and that the MSM choose to ignore. The first article is from News Real Blog and concerns a Muslim Students Association member who when asked:
"‘Okay, I’ll put it to you this way. I am a Jew. The head of Hizbollah has said that he hopes that we will gather in Israel so he doesn’t have to hunt us down globally. For or Against it?"
Answered: "For it." Good to know where Jumanah Imad Albahri, a student at UCSD stands?

Here's the video of the whole exchange with NewsReal Blog’s Editor-in-Chief David Horowitz...



Meanwhile here's a poster that shows how at least one person at UC San Diego doesn't see a 'two state solution' as feasible


And in the Middle East the wish that Israel be destroyed is openly stated. Here's Ahmad Al-Barqawi a professor of philosophy at Syria's Damascus University
'Therefore, I believe that the annihilation of Israel is easier than reconciliation with it. Annihilating Israel is easier than reconciling with it, because annihilating Israel through a long-term and consistent effort may bear fruit in a society that feels it is alien to this [Arab] world, and does not want to remain in a world that rejects by force'



All around the world the rise of Islam is threatening the existence of Israel and the lives of Jews. As I blogged earlier this year:
'About five years ago I started warning Jewish friends and colleagues that our time as welcome citizens of the UK would not last for ever and that we should all start planning our exit strategies; I gave it 10 years before we would need to take action, nothing that I see around me leads me to believe that I was wrong then. And with the economy in free-fall, civil unrest will increase and the usual scapegoats will be attacked - blame the bankers had unfortunate connotations for Jews in Europe in the 1930s and will again in the 2010s.'

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