well, Stringman, the video is poorly made, I can understand why it shouldn't be up based on that alone... it's certainly biased and the comment from Karl Marx has good points.
PJ1961: stringman: my internet connection is awfully slow so I have not seen this video much yet, but, would like to inform - my ancestors were pagans... will watch later, when I can.
All of us have pagan ancestors, in the previous ages of religion.
Adalstef: Just look to how the Irish behaved against you all these years. I think no people can tolerate another country invading their own.
Do you have the foggiest idea what you are talking about? A majority of people in Northern Ireland would vote to stay with the United Kingdom. A minority would vote to join Ireland. So who's rights do we ignore and trample on the minority of IRELAND's (The Island) population? or the minority of NORTHERN IRELAND's population? Because which ever choice you make there WILL be terrorist activity, whether that is going to be against the Irish government or the English government is the only choice.
was Palestine attacking Israel prior to Israel's illegal occupations?
here's what wiki says "Before World War I, the Middle East region, including the Ottoman Syria (the southern part of which are regarded as Palestine or the Land of Israel), was under the control of the Ottoman Empire for nearly 400 years. Towards the end of the 19th century, Southern Syria (or Palestine), divided between the Vilayets of Syria and Beirut and the Mustafiyyet of Jerusalem, was inhabited predominantly by Arab Muslims, both farmers and Bedouin (principally in the Negev and Jordan valley), with smaller numbers of Christians (mostly Arabs), Druze, Circassians and Jews (predominantly Sephardic). At that time most of the Jews worldwide lived outside of Palestine, predominantly in eastern and central Europe, with significant communities in the Mediterranean, the Middle East and the Americas.
The roots of the conflict can be traced to the late 19th century, with the rise of national movements, including Zionism and Arab nationalism. Though the Jewish aspiration to return to Zion had been part of Jewish religious thought for more than a millennium, the Jewish population of Europe and to some degree Middle East began to more actively discuss immigration back to the Land of Israel, and the re-establishment of the Jewish Nation, only during the 1859 to 1880s, largely as a solution to the widespread persecution of Jews due to anti-Semitism in Russia and Europe. As a result, the Zionist movement, the modern movement for the creation of a homeland for the Jewish people, was established as a political movement in 1897." source:
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