Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A few billion here or there isn’t much to the US government. It’s less than .1% of the Federal budget, and most of it goes to US defense contractors. Americans spend more money sustaining child labor and slavery by buying coffee and chocolate.
What’s happening in Gaza is problematic, but there are bigger fish to fry than getting myopic about a people that won’t like us no matter what we do.
They don’t like us BECAUSE we facilitate their slaughter at the hands of Israel, because we interfere in their internal politics, and because we justify what we’ve done for weirdo religious and economic exploitation reasons. In their shoes, you wouldn’t hesitate to hate us even more than they do.
Save the propagandized response cooked up by a bunch of mouth-breathing goons in Tel Aviv, who convince dimwits into believing the resentment has to do with anything else.
Face it, they don't like us because we don't embrace Islam and the idea of Islamic global expansion through violence.
Bullshit. Turkey. Indonesia. Seemingly countless other Muslim nations you always cry about in your ridiculous attempts to justify Israel’s “right to exist” (despite the fact that no nation has a right to exist). No issues of this kind with any of them.
It’s Israel. It’s been staring us in the face since Day 1. The Arab world’s resentment and hard feelings are dead center driven by our corrupt, disgusting support for Israel, which the rest of the world has been forced to see as the terrorist state it’s always been.
So Arab hurt feelings should drive U.S. foreign policy? And the world should ignore the reality of Islamist Palestinian terror? Happily, only a few impotent pro-Palestinian zealots think that way.
No, nobody has ever made that argument. Nice try, though.
But neither should our foreign policy or ANYTHING be left to the desires of the less than 3% of our population who just so happen to have thousands of years of track record of getting along with / checks notes / oh, that’s right - exactly nobody else … ever.
Seriously? Track record of not getting along? Did you forget about forced conversions centuries ago? Convert or die or move out. Another religion I can't seem to post about, too. Did they have a history of not getting along, too? Seems people can get along for a long time until economic hard times and nationalism set in.
Every.single.place.they.have.ever.lived.
Can you believe the hate you have to have to say that? Judaism practices tolerance of the other. Judaism practices respect for the other. This is seen as a threat in homogenous societies. That’s why they were kicked out. Jealously and a myopic worldview. As evidenced by yours truly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A few billion here or there isn’t much to the US government. It’s less than .1% of the Federal budget, and most of it goes to US defense contractors. Americans spend more money sustaining child labor and slavery by buying coffee and chocolate.
What’s happening in Gaza is problematic, but there are bigger fish to fry than getting myopic about a people that won’t like us no matter what we do.
They don’t like us BECAUSE we facilitate their slaughter at the hands of Israel, because we interfere in their internal politics, and because we justify what we’ve done for weirdo religious and economic exploitation reasons. In their shoes, you wouldn’t hesitate to hate us even more than they do.
Save the propagandized response cooked up by a bunch of mouth-breathing goons in Tel Aviv, who convince dimwits into believing the resentment has to do with anything else.
Face it, they don't like us because we don't embrace Islam and the idea of Islamic global expansion through violence.
Bullshit. Turkey. Indonesia. Seemingly countless other Muslim nations you always cry about in your ridiculous attempts to justify Israel’s “right to exist” (despite the fact that no nation has a right to exist). No issues of this kind with any of them.
It’s Israel. It’s been staring us in the face since Day 1. The Arab world’s resentment and hard feelings are dead center driven by our corrupt, disgusting support for Israel, which the rest of the world has been forced to see as the terrorist state it’s always been.
So Arab hurt feelings should drive U.S. foreign policy? And the world should ignore the reality of Islamist Palestinian terror? Happily, only a few impotent pro-Palestinian zealots think that way.
No, nobody has ever made that argument. Nice try, though.
But neither should our foreign policy or ANYTHING be left to the desires of the less than 3% of our population who just so happen to have thousands of years of track record of getting along with / checks notes / oh, that’s right - exactly nobody else … ever.
Seriously? Track record of not getting along? Did you forget about forced conversions centuries ago? Convert or die or move out. Another religion I can't seem to post about, too. Did they have a history of not getting along, too? Seems people can get along for a long time until economic hard times and nationalism set in.
Every.single.place.they.have.ever.lived.
Can you believe the hate you have to have to say that? Judaism practices tolerance of the other. Judaism practices respect for the other. This is seen as a threat in homogenous societies. That’s why they were kicked out. Jealously and a myopic worldview. As evidenced by yours truly.
That’s for the daily laugh, pretending that the individuals running and populating Israel today are descended from the religious adherents of Judaism 3,000 years ago. They are not.
Equally funny is your whitewashing of the religion itself, which is built on ancient texts that are some of the worst laid eyes upon, in terms of peaceful existence. Violence, vengeance, anger.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A few billion here or there isn’t much to the US government. It’s less than .1% of the Federal budget, and most of it goes to US defense contractors. Americans spend more money sustaining child labor and slavery by buying coffee and chocolate.
What’s happening in Gaza is problematic, but there are bigger fish to fry than getting myopic about a people that won’t like us no matter what we do.
They don’t like us BECAUSE we facilitate their slaughter at the hands of Israel, because we interfere in their internal politics, and because we justify what we’ve done for weirdo religious and economic exploitation reasons. In their shoes, you wouldn’t hesitate to hate us even more than they do.
Save the propagandized response cooked up by a bunch of mouth-breathing goons in Tel Aviv, who convince dimwits into believing the resentment has to do with anything else.
Face it, they don't like us because we don't embrace Islam and the idea of Islamic global expansion through violence.
Bullshit. Turkey. Indonesia. Seemingly countless other Muslim nations you always cry about in your ridiculous attempts to justify Israel’s “right to exist” (despite the fact that no nation has a right to exist). No issues of this kind with any of them.
It’s Israel. It’s been staring us in the face since Day 1. The Arab world’s resentment and hard feelings are dead center driven by our corrupt, disgusting support for Israel, which the rest of the world has been forced to see as the terrorist state it’s always been.
So Arab hurt feelings should drive U.S. foreign policy? And the world should ignore the reality of Islamist Palestinian terror? Happily, only a few impotent pro-Palestinian zealots think that way.
No, nobody has ever made that argument. Nice try, though.
But neither should our foreign policy or ANYTHING be left to the desires of the less than 3% of our population who just so happen to have thousands of years of track record of getting along with / checks notes / oh, that’s right - exactly nobody else … ever.
Seriously? Track record of not getting along? Did you forget about forced conversions centuries ago? Convert or die or move out. Another religion I can't seem to post about, too. Did they have a history of not getting along, too? Seems people can get along for a long time until economic hard times and nationalism set in.
Every.single.place.they.have.ever.lived.
Can you believe the hate you have to have to say that? Judaism practices tolerance of the other. Judaism practices respect for the other. This is seen as a threat in homogenous societies. That’s why they were kicked out. Jealously and a myopic worldview. As evidenced by yours truly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A few billion here or there isn’t much to the US government. It’s less than .1% of the Federal budget, and most of it goes to US defense contractors. Americans spend more money sustaining child labor and slavery by buying coffee and chocolate.
What’s happening in Gaza is problematic, but there are bigger fish to fry than getting myopic about a people that won’t like us no matter what we do.
They don’t like us BECAUSE we facilitate their slaughter at the hands of Israel, because we interfere in their internal politics, and because we justify what we’ve done for weirdo religious and economic exploitation reasons. In their shoes, you wouldn’t hesitate to hate us even more than they do.
Save the propagandized response cooked up by a bunch of mouth-breathing goons in Tel Aviv, who convince dimwits into believing the resentment has to do with anything else.
Face it, they don't like us because we don't embrace Islam and the idea of Islamic global expansion through violence.
Bullshit. Turkey. Indonesia. Seemingly countless other Muslim nations you always cry about in your ridiculous attempts to justify Israel’s “right to exist” (despite the fact that no nation has a right to exist). No issues of this kind with any of them.
It’s Israel. It’s been staring us in the face since Day 1. The Arab world’s resentment and hard feelings are dead center driven by our corrupt, disgusting support for Israel, which the rest of the world has been forced to see as the terrorist state it’s always been.
So Arab hurt feelings should drive U.S. foreign policy? And the world should ignore the reality of Islamist Palestinian terror? Happily, only a few impotent pro-Palestinian zealots think that way.
No, nobody has ever made that argument. Nice try, though.
But neither should our foreign policy or ANYTHING be left to the desires of the less than 3% of our population who just so happen to have thousands of years of track record of getting along with / checks notes / oh, that’s right - exactly nobody else … ever.
Seriously? Track record of not getting along? Did you forget about forced conversions centuries ago? Convert or die or move out. Another religion I can't seem to post about, too. Did they have a history of not getting along, too? Seems people can get along for a long time until economic hard times and nationalism set in.
Every.single.place.they.have.ever.lived.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And yet hundreds of billions of dollars of American taxpayers pay fo the Israeli military
And Israelis get free healthcare and education, because we pay for their military.
I don't understand how more Americans aren't livid.
We know right from wrong. You are on the wrong side.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And yet hundreds of billions of dollars of American taxpayers pay fo the Israeli military
And Israelis get free healthcare and education, because we pay for their military.
I don't understand how more Americans aren't livid.
Anonymous wrote:https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/israeli-reservist-rams-vehicle-into-palestinian-man-praying-west-bank-2025-12-26/
Israeli reservist rams vehicle into Palestinian man praying in West Bank
This headline is a perfect summary of the Israeli government and military.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A few billion here or there isn’t much to the US government. It’s less than .1% of the Federal budget, and most of it goes to US defense contractors. Americans spend more money sustaining child labor and slavery by buying coffee and chocolate.
What’s happening in Gaza is problematic, but there are bigger fish to fry than getting myopic about a people that won’t like us no matter what we do.
They don’t like us BECAUSE we facilitate their slaughter at the hands of Israel, because we interfere in their internal politics, and because we justify what we’ve done for weirdo religious and economic exploitation reasons. In their shoes, you wouldn’t hesitate to hate us even more than they do.
Save the propagandized response cooked up by a bunch of mouth-breathing goons in Tel Aviv, who convince dimwits into believing the resentment has to do with anything else.
Face it, they don't like us because we don't embrace Islam and the idea of Islamic global expansion through violence.
Bullshit. Turkey. Indonesia. Seemingly countless other Muslim nations you always cry about in your ridiculous attempts to justify Israel’s “right to exist” (despite the fact that no nation has a right to exist). No issues of this kind with any of them.
It’s Israel. It’s been staring us in the face since Day 1. The Arab world’s resentment and hard feelings are dead center driven by our corrupt, disgusting support for Israel, which the rest of the world has been forced to see as the terrorist state it’s always been.
So Arab hurt feelings should drive U.S. foreign policy? And the world should ignore the reality of Islamist Palestinian terror? Happily, only a few impotent pro-Palestinian zealots think that way.
No, nobody has ever made that argument. Nice try, though.
But neither should our foreign policy or ANYTHING be left to the desires of the less than 3% of our population who just so happen to have thousands of years of track record of getting along with / checks notes / oh, that’s right - exactly nobody else … ever.
Seriously? Track record of not getting along? Did you forget about forced conversions centuries ago? Convert or die or move out. Another religion I can't seem to post about, too. Did they have a history of not getting along, too? Seems people can get along for a long time until economic hard times and nationalism set in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A few billion here or there isn’t much to the US government. It’s less than .1% of the Federal budget, and most of it goes to US defense contractors. Americans spend more money sustaining child labor and slavery by buying coffee and chocolate.
What’s happening in Gaza is problematic, but there are bigger fish to fry than getting myopic about a people that won’t like us no matter what we do.
They don’t like us BECAUSE we facilitate their slaughter at the hands of Israel, because we interfere in their internal politics, and because we justify what we’ve done for weirdo religious and economic exploitation reasons. In their shoes, you wouldn’t hesitate to hate us even more than they do.
Save the propagandized response cooked up by a bunch of mouth-breathing goons in Tel Aviv, who convince dimwits into believing the resentment has to do with anything else.
Face it, they don't like us because we don't embrace Islam and the idea of Islamic global expansion through violence.
Bullshit. Turkey. Indonesia. Seemingly countless other Muslim nations you always cry about in your ridiculous attempts to justify Israel’s “right to exist” (despite the fact that no nation has a right to exist). No issues of this kind with any of them.
It’s Israel. It’s been staring us in the face since Day 1. The Arab world’s resentment and hard feelings are dead center driven by our corrupt, disgusting support for Israel, which the rest of the world has been forced to see as the terrorist state it’s always been.
So Arab hurt feelings should drive U.S. foreign policy? And the world should ignore the reality of Islamist Palestinian terror? Happily, only a few impotent pro-Palestinian zealots think that way.
No, nobody has ever made that argument. Nice try, though.
But neither should our foreign policy or ANYTHING be left to the desires of the less than 3% of our population who just so happen to have thousands of years of track record of getting along with / checks notes / oh, that’s right - exactly nobody else … ever.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A few billion here or there isn’t much to the US government. It’s less than .1% of the Federal budget, and most of it goes to US defense contractors. Americans spend more money sustaining child labor and slavery by buying coffee and chocolate.
What’s happening in Gaza is problematic, but there are bigger fish to fry than getting myopic about a people that won’t like us no matter what we do.
They don’t like us BECAUSE we facilitate their slaughter at the hands of Israel, because we interfere in their internal politics, and because we justify what we’ve done for weirdo religious and economic exploitation reasons. In their shoes, you wouldn’t hesitate to hate us even more than they do.
Save the propagandized response cooked up by a bunch of mouth-breathing goons in Tel Aviv, who convince dimwits into believing the resentment has to do with anything else.
Face it, they don't like us because we don't embrace Islam and the idea of Islamic global expansion through violence.
Bullshit. Turkey. Indonesia. Seemingly countless other Muslim nations you always cry about in your ridiculous attempts to justify Israel’s “right to exist” (despite the fact that no nation has a right to exist). No issues of this kind with any of them.
It’s Israel. It’s been staring us in the face since Day 1. The Arab world’s resentment and hard feelings are dead center driven by our corrupt, disgusting support for Israel, which the rest of the world has been forced to see as the terrorist state it’s always been.
So Arab hurt feelings should drive U.S. foreign policy? And the world should ignore the reality of Islamist Palestinian terror? Happily, only a few impotent pro-Palestinian zealots think that way.