Quirky
Army.ca Veteran
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genocidal propaganda being circulating around
The ironing.
genocidal propaganda being circulating around
Such as? I’m not seeing much if a conversation. You post then you leave, then you avoid uncomfortable questions then you post something else.Honestly I decided to join the conversation as I saw a lot of Israeli misinformation and genocidal propaganda being circulating around. And I didn't any see any Palestinian-Canadian adding their voice so I decided to step in.
Oh, the trial has started has it? You may have missed a few steps before that happens.It's totally normal for us Canadians to criticize another foreign country that's currently on trial for Genocide, its leaders are becoming wanted criminals by the ICC and its army blacklisted/shamed by the UN for harming children. In fact, it's the moral thing to do.
Meanwhile the Arab support for Palestinian refugees is...
Forced to elect Hamas at gunpoint I be thinkin....“…The problem is, as long as terrorist organizations like Hamas and others are elected to represent the Palestinian people, their plight will most likely continue as neither Israel nor the surrounding Arab nations want to see their own populations threatened by terrorist groups.”
There you have it folks. Palestinians who voted for Hamas and see it as the valid government of a Palestinian nation, have doomed themselves to misery…
@abduly85 Did your relatives vote for Hamas?
Let's take a look at what your first posts on joining the conversation looks like.Honestly I decided to join the conversation as I saw a lot of Israeli misinformation and genocidal propaganda being circulating around. And I didn't any see any Palestinian-Canadian adding their voice so I decided to step in.
Wow, Israeli terrorist forces are deliberately targeting and killing a Canadian veteran...3 times... While he was on a mission to secure food Deliveries for to starving Palestinians!
Yes, because the ICJ, ICC, the UN, HRW, Amnesty international.. Etc are all anti-Semites.
I know, the truth hurts sometimes, so soldier on my son.
It's obvious you don't care about a fellow veteran (Jacob Flickinger) who was slained by another country and you'd rather stand with the Israeli terrorists who killed him than your own brethern.
I'm really questioning your loyalty to Canada.
And he will ignore these questions and facts like before…Let's take a look at what your first posts on joining the conversation looks like.
Sure seems like you came in trying to rile us up on the account of a veteran being killed, and when we didn't start screaming for intifada you questioned our members loyalty to Canada.
Is that what a Palestinian-Canadian voice sounds like?
You understand that genocide doesn't entail eliminating a 100% of a population (eg. Armenian genocide, Bosnian/Serbenecia genocide, even the Holocaust.. Etc).If it was a real genocide and real ethnic cleansing was happening, you'd never would've been born. But you keep telling yourself that these things are happening. The palestinians love being victims.
I actually haven't been to Gaza before. So not many westerners know, but most Palestinians who were ethnically cleansed in 1948 and in 1967 were not allowed by Israel to ever return to Gaza or the West Bank (and obviously the rest of pre-1948 Palestine) unless you marry someone from within and go through hoops and a long process just to get a Palestinian ID "Hawiyya" (issued/approved by Israel) that allows you to return to Gaza/WB.Have you been to Gaza?
Would you be willing to return to Gaza and vote against Hamas?
As for whoever should be voted in well, that's something that the Palestinians should choose themselves and the West/other countries shouldn't dictate it and should respect the democratic outcome.
I absolutely take issue with Egypt's government and with most other authoritarian Arab governments (and I believe I mentioned here before). The military regime in Egypt is definitely complicit in Gaza's blockade and could do a lot more to stop this Genocide (and I'm not even referring to a military intervention. They could do a lot more politically). The Egyptian regime is part of the problem, but it's not the main problem. The main problem is the Israeli and Zionist ideology rooted in the ethnic cleansing the indigenous Palestinians (long before even Hamas existed).Truly regrettable loss of life, but you seem to take no issue with Egypt’s DIRECT blockading of Gaza as well, and the region Arab nations’ lack of any substantive support for Gazans. Why not?
What were your experiences like when you were in Gaza? I’m assuming you have been to Gaza?
I'll respectfully disagree with you on this as I consider it to be a typical Hasbara point (ie. Palestinians chose Hamas, so they deserve to be levelled along with Hamas).Palestinians chose hamas. Result is a complete levelling of gaza. Choose wisely. History tends to repeat itself.
Surely following Islam allows the very large majority of Arabs in the region to live rich and fulfilling lives, no matter the nature of the individual nations’ governmental / representational style.However, and as we all now, most Arab regimes are authoritarian and are not representative of their people.
I'll respectfully disagree with you on this as I consider it to be a typical Hasbara point (ie. Palestinians chose Hamas, so they deserve to be levelled along with Hamas).
Well, 50% of Gaza's population is children (under 18), so in 2006 when Hamas was elected, not only half of the current population didn't vote...but they weren't even born (or would've been 1 or 2 years old).
I wonder why that is.However, and as we all now, most Arab regimes are authoritarian and are not representative of their people.
The West/other countries did respect the democratic outcome. Hamas stayed in power.As for whoever should be voted in well, that's something that the Palestinians should choose themselves and the West/other countries shouldn't dictate it and should respect the democratic outcome.
As a general rule, leaders are of and from the people and do represent the people, no matter the system of government.However, and as we all now, most Arab regimes are authoritarian and are not representative of their people.
We asked the respondents what they thought of Hamas’ decision to launch the October the 7th offensive given its outcome so far, a vast majority (72%) said it was a correct decision and 22% (12% in the West Bank and 37% in the Gaza Strip) said it was incorrect. The belief that Hamas' decision was right is higher in the West Bank (82%) compared to the Gaza Strip (57%), among men (75%) compared to women (69%), among the religious and the somewhat religious (76% and 71% respectively) compared to the non-religious (42%). It also increases among supporters of Hamas (92%) compared to supporters of Fateh and other forces (55% and 45% respectively).
....
While 95% think Israel has committed war crimes during the current war, only 10% think Hamas also committed such crimes; 4% think Israel has not committed such crimes and 89% think Hamas did not commit war crimes during the current war. 85% say they did not see videos, shown by international news outlets, showing acts committed by Hamas against Israeli civilians, such as the killing of women and children in their homes; only 14% saw these videos. The percentage of those who say they have seen these videos is higher in the Gaza Strip (25%) compared to the West Bank (7%), among the non-religious (31%) compared to the religious (15%), and among supporters of other forces and supporters of Fateh (21% and 20% respectively) compared to supporters of Hamas (12%).
When asked if Hamas did commit these atrocities, the overwhelming majority said no, it did not and only 7% said it did. Those who say that Hamas did not commit the atrocities seen in the videos are higher in the West Bank (97%) compared to the Gaza Strip (83%), among the religious and the somewhat religious (91% and 92% respectively), compared to the non-religious (75%) and among supporters of Hamas (97%) compared to supporters of Fateh and other forces (85% and 81% respectively). Belief that Hamas fighters have committed atrocities against civilians is also higher among those who did watch videos showing such atrocities (31%) compared to those who did not (3%). In the Gaza Strip, 41% of those who watched the videos believe that Hamas did commit these atrocities while only 8% of those who did not watch these videos believe that Hamas committed atrocities.
....
Support for Hamas increases in the West Bank from 12% three months ago to 44%; in the Gaza Strip support for Hamas rises from 38% three months ago to 42% today. Support for Fateh decreases in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip to 17% compared to 26% three months ago.
54% believe that Hamas is the most deserving of representing and leading the Palestinian people and only 13% believe that Fateh, led by Mahmoud Abbas, is the most deserving.
I wonder what you are smoking at times...You understand that genocide doesn't entail eliminating a 100% of a population (eg. Armenian genocide, Bosnian/Serbenecia genocide, even the Holocaust.. Etc).
Same goes for ethnic cleansing. Ethnic cleansing entails displacement and dispossession, creating refugees (which is the case for my family).
I actually haven't been to Gaza before. So not many westerners know, but most Palestinians who were ethnically cleansed in 1948 and in 1967 were not allowed by Israel to ever return to Gaza or the West Bank (and obviously the rest of pre-1948 Palestine) unless you marry someone from within and go through hoops and a long process just to get a Palestinian ID "Hawiyya" (issued/approved by Israel) that allows you to return to Gaza/WB.
My parents were expelled to Egypt in 1967, they were issued an "Egyptian Travel Document for Palestinian Refugess", so the closest we could get to Gaza was Rafah on the Egyptian side (yes, there's a Rafah on the Egyptian side). So it was not until we became Canadian citizens that we could actually be allowed into Palestine (as Canadians), which we did visit in the late 2000s (didn't go to Gaza because Israel had increased its illegal blockade and restrictions on who goes in and out of Gaza).
But yeah, after this genocide, I wish I could go to Gaza to help the people and reconstruct (Israel pretty much levelled the place). As for voting, I wouldn't even be eligible to vote as Israel denies issuing us Palestinian IDs (the PA doesn't solely issue them, they coordinate with Israel).
As for whoever should be voted in well, that's something that the Palestinians should choose themselves and the West/other countries shouldn't dictate it and should respect the democratic outcome.
My Jewish friends families were expelled from Iraqi and from Morocco for the crime of being Jewish. Their family roots were centuries old in Morocco and time immemorial in Iraq. In fact the majority of indigenous Jewish population in Muslim countries were expelled or ethnically cleansed.You understand that genocide doesn't entail eliminating a 100% of a population (eg. Armenian genocide, Bosnian/Serbenecia genocide, even the Holocaust.. Etc).
Same goes for ethnic cleansing. Ethnic cleansing entails displacement and dispossession, creating refugees (which is the case for my family).
I actually haven't been to Gaza before. So not many westerners know, but most Palestinians who were ethnically cleansed in 1948 and in 1967 were not allowed by Israel to ever return to Gaza or the West Bank (and obviously the rest of pre-1948 Palestine) unless you marry someone from within and go through hoops and a long process just to get a Palestinian ID "Hawiyya" (issued/approved by Israel) that allows you to return to Gaza/WB.
My parents were expelled to Egypt in 1967, they were issued an "Egyptian Travel Document for Palestinian Refugess", so the closest we could get to Gaza was Rafah on the Egyptian side (yes, there's a Rafah on the Egyptian side). So it was not until we became Canadian citizens that we could actually be allowed into Palestine (as Canadians), which we did visit in the late 2000s (didn't go to Gaza because Israel had increased its illegal blockade and restrictions on who goes in and out of Gaza).
But yeah, after this genocide, I wish I could go to Gaza to help the people and reconstruct (Israel pretty much levelled the place). As for voting, I wouldn't even be eligible to vote as Israel denies issuing us Palestinian IDs (the PA doesn't solely issue them, they coordinate with Israel).
As for whoever should be voted in well, that's something that the Palestinians should choose themselves and the West/other countries shouldn't dictate it and should respect the democratic outcome.