Saturday, July 16, 2011
Go Off !!
How the Jews Treat Christians in Israel?
The Jews in Israel have the right do every thing against people of another religion if you can't believe that, then come here as tourist and pass just one day. You must know that the police can't arrest any Jew when he beats or insults someone of another religion. But, he will go to prison if he does it against another Jew. I tell that because I'm an Israeli too!! I am an ex-Jew.
At the heart of the Zionist critique of liberal assimilation lay the conviction that Jews constitute a unique race. It was the belief in insurmountable racial differences that made the inevitability of anti-Semitism credible, just as it rationalizes the view that every effort to assimilate must go aground on the barrier reef of biological determinism ... The maintenance of that [racial] purity was essential to German Zionism, for it acknowledged the essential prerequisite for nationhood to be [in the 1922 words of Zionist Fritz Kahn] "consanguinity of the flesh and solidarity of the soul" together with the "will to establish a closer [Jewish] brotherhood over [and] against all other communities on earth."
The Jews in Israel have the right do every thing against people of another religion if you can't believe that, then come here as tourist and pass just one day. You must know that the police can't arrest any Jew when he beats or insults someone of another religion. But, he will go to prison if he does it against another Jew. I tell that because I'm an Israeli too!! I am an ex-Jew.
At the heart of the Zionist critique of liberal assimilation lay the conviction that Jews constitute a unique race. It was the belief in insurmountable racial differences that made the inevitability of anti-Semitism credible, just as it rationalizes the view that every effort to assimilate must go aground on the barrier reef of biological determinism ... The maintenance of that [racial] purity was essential to German Zionism, for it acknowledged the essential prerequisite for nationhood to be [in the 1922 words of Zionist Fritz Kahn] "consanguinity of the flesh and solidarity of the soul" together with the "will to establish a closer [Jewish] brotherhood over [and] against all other communities on earth."