Quote Originally Posted by Don Corleone View Post
Banquo was comparing the two societies and the response the footage received in Israel versus the hypothetical reception a similar video would have received in Palestine. He also pointed out that the individual in question is facing disciplinary action, something unlikely in Fatah or Hamas.
Tell me... Are you by these prejudices implying that Palestine is an inhuman host of barbarism and savagery?


Quote Originally Posted by Don Corleone View Post
But remind me one more time where the Israeli Constitution calls for the destruction of Palestine, or public leaders of Israel have called for the global massacre of Palestinians, whereever they may live.

***No Tribesman, I won't repost all those links I found for you the 3rd or 4th time ago this came up. Go dig through the archives and find them yourself.
It does not. It does not recognize Palestine as a state to begin with. By contrast, Fatah recognizes Israel’s right to exist (since 1993). The foolish Hamas does not.

As for public leaders of Israel and nasty comments...

One of the most blatant examples of public incitement in the days before the attack on Jabal al-Mukkabir was a circular widely distributed and posted around Jerusalem and in West Bank settlements. Signed by a long list of rabbis, it called for acts of revenge on Palestinians in retribution for the Mercaz HaRav shooting: “Each and everyone is required to imagine what the enemy is plotting to do to us and match it measure for measure.”
Among the signatories was Rabbi Ya’acov Yosef, son of Rabbi Ovadia Yosef, the former Sephardic chief rabbi of Israel and spiritual leader of Shas, a party in Prime Minister Ehud Olmert’s coalition government.

In the Knesset, former cabinet minister Effie Eitam accused the Arab legislators of “treason” for participating in the rally, adding, “We have to drive you out, as well as everyone else who took part” in the demonstration. Days later, Olmert’s former Deputy Prime Minister Avigdor Lieberman repeated the ethnic cleansing threat in the Knesset, telling Arab members, “You are temporary here,” and “One day we will take care of you.”
Rather, “in the late 1990s and onwards,” writes Amir Ben-Porat, a professor in the Department of Behavioral Sciences at Ben Gurion University, “‘Death to the Arabs’ became a common chant in almost every football [soccer] stadium in Israel.” Ben-Porat, who authored a study on the use of the chant, says that because of the importance of soccer in Israeli society and its high profile in the media, “This chant is heard far beyond the stadium.
Link




As for PanzerJaeger...