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In Reply to: RE: The NPR is still giving the Israeli government the benefit of the doubt. posted by Bobby.Peru@myyahoo.com on June 28, 2025 at 08:23:40
It seems to me that if Israel wanted to make it 'a war' they should give Palestine it's statehood and then bomb the hell out of it. Wait, that's what they are already doing!
It's like Moses came to the Middle East (from NYC) and wanted to clear the way for a new highway!
Follow Ups:
Bet it's not being condemned in Ziocon churches today.
"Horse sense is the thing a horse has which keeps it from betting on people. "
― W.C. Fields
Doesn't mean they are doing it now. (Or, has a new special delivery tablet been delivered?)
There's been a few mistakes in OT religion.
"Horse sense is the thing a horse has which keeps it from betting on people. "
― W.C. Fields
You swung your head from side to side whenever you needed to swat the flies and mosquitoes that were swarming around your runny nose. That way, your hands could stay busy stay doing the more important tasks at hand...
Edits: 07/02/25 07/02/25
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"Horse sense is the thing a horse has which keeps it from betting on people. "
― W.C. Fields
Goes without saying.
The scorched earth policy is in DNA
Historians have found that the English developed savage methods of warfare during their conflicts in Ireland, which they also used against the native populations of the Americas, because the English held ethnic views of the Irish that were akin to those they had of the population of the New World.10 For them, the Irish, like native Americans, were savages, and thus the restraints on violence typically used when fighting other Europeans did not apply when campaigning in Ireland.11 Harold E. Selesky finds that the English conduct of war in sixteenth-century France was markedly different from that in Ireland and the Americas.12 Historians have asserted that a Protestant English hatred of the Catholic Irish explains the supposedly unique character of violence in Ireland. Nicholas Canny (the leading proponent of this view) has stated that ethnic hatred was the 'pretext for extermination' because it 'absolved [the English] of all normal ethical constraints'.13
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