And People Wonder Why They Hate Us?


People actually wonder why many in the Arab world (note: not the Muslim world) hate us. Read this and just sit with it for a while. It'll make you retch.


You can use the closed captions for an English translation of the video.

I believe this is one of the most painful things I have ever watched in my life. I'm literally in tears right now. This is a stain on Israel that simply cannot be removed. The Israeli people must put a stop to this, and yet as the article states, "An overwhelming majority backs a war to end Hamas rocket fire. . . . " Here are the facts: 1,150 Palestinians have died, more than 700 of them civilians. Hamas had killed 18 Israelis over a period of years. That's a 68 to 1 ratio. It's criminal. There is a difference between war and murder. Not to mention the fact that the Gazans live in what is, in essence, a concentration camp. For shame.


Sean Paul Kelley January 17, 2009 - 6:35am
( categories: Israel and Palestine )

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OLUJ4fF2HN4


"Go confidently in the direction of your dreams! Live the life you've imagined." -Henry David Thoreau

Tina January 17, 2009 - 6:57am

Rhetorical question; no compassion = no humanity!

Celsius 233 January 17, 2009 - 8:03am

I haven't met anyone who doesn't strive towards their own comfort.

mrmx January 17, 2009 - 11:30am

our own comfort often depends on the comfort of others. No man is an island as we are all interconnected in the web of life


Tolerating prostitution is tolerating abuse and torture of women and children.

adrena January 17, 2009 - 11:42am

War crimes are war crimes are war crimes ....

tjfxh January 17, 2009 - 1:15pm

...your search to American "news" sources. How about Link TV/Mosaic, Al Jazeera, BBC, Worldmeet.us, oh and lest I forget, Democracy Now with Amy Goodman. The American press is a propaganda machine not a source for news: Especially when our government is complicit in war crimes and the press shares that complicity by their silence. That IMO is why.

Celsius 233 January 17, 2009 - 11:50pm

Jan 16 | Jerusalem
Reuters - Israeli television broadcast desperate cries for help from a Palestinian doctor on Friday after his children were killed in an Israeli attack in the Gaza Strip and troops later helped surviving members of the family.

The telephone calls created extraordinary scenes during evening news broadcasts as the doctor, a Hebrew-speaking physician who spoke regularly on Israeli television, said three of his children were killed in a tank strike and others were wounded.

"My girls were sitting at home planning their futures, talking, then suddenly they are being shelled," he said in a voice shaking with emotion. "I want to know why they were killed, who gave the order?"

Izz el-Deen Aboul Aish is a gynecologist who worked in one of Israel's main hospitals before Gazans were effectively sealed off behind an Israeli-led blockade on the Hamas-controlled enclave. He often gave interviews to Channel 10 television.

With Israeli journalists unable to report from the Gaza Strip independently, Aboul Aish acted as a Hebrew-speaking witness who told of the Palestinian civilians' suffering under fire during Israel's three-week-old offensive there.

The deaths of more than 1,150 Palestinians, some 700 of them civilians by one independent count, have left the Israeli public largely unmoved. An overwhelming majority backs a war to end Hamas rocket fire that, before the offensive, had killed 18 people and disrupted life in southern towns over recent years.

Channel 10 correspondent Shlomi Eldar, who said he had planned a live on-air interview with Aboul Aish on Friday evening, produced a mobile phone in the studio, letting viewers here the voice of Aboul Aish: "My God, my girls, Shlomi," he said. "Can't anybody get to us, please?"

Eldar told his audience: "They have killed his family."

He said three of Aboul Aish's children were killed and two were seriously wounded. Building up the sense of drama, cameras followed him as left the studio, saying he would try to help arrange for their transfer for treatment, and safety, in Israel.

Surviving members of the family were later shown being transferred to Israeli ambulances and taken out of Gaza. Aid agencies have complained that Israel has not done enough to help Gaza's hospitals and allow the transfer of some wounded people.

Aboul Aish's brother was also wounded and Eldar said two of his brother's children had also been killed in the incident.

The Israeli army said troops fired on Aboul Aish's house because a sniper had fired on soldiers from the building.

Aboul Aish responded: "All that was ever fired out of our house was love, hugs and acts of peace, nothing else, ever."

(Writing by Ori Lewis; Editing by Alastair Macdonald)

graham January 18, 2009 - 9:23am

They have become no different than the Nazi's who murdered their grandparents. This is unbelievable; you would think of all things that the kind of slaughter in Gaza is exactly what Israel would fight against but instead they perpetrate a Warsaw ghetto and send in the tanks. That someone fighting for what they believe to be their home should be rescued by Israel not murdered. What has happened to the holocaust? Repeated by its victims like the son's and daughters of child abusers who themselves become abusers? Unbelievable.

Joaquin January 18, 2009 - 5:26am

...there was a famous cartoon called Pogo. Maybe the most famous Pogo cartoon of all said; "We have identified the enemy and they is us".

Celsius 233 January 18, 2009 - 6:47am


"Go confidently in the direction of your dreams! Live the life you've imagined." -Henry David Thoreau

Tina January 18, 2009 - 7:06am

...it's been a long time but I got the flavor.

Celsius 233 January 19, 2009 - 6:35pm

As unfortunately obscure as it is now, Pogo is a national treasure, not only for its artwork, humor, linguistic richness (based mostly on southern dialects), imaginative cast of characters, and political commentary but also just for its homespun wisdom. It was my favorite comic strip going back to the late 1950's. I must have at least ten of Walt Kelly's dog-eared books in my bookshelf.

Aguilar January 18, 2009 - 10:02am

Chickadee January 18, 2009 - 10:34pm

There it is in living color.

Aguilar January 19, 2009 - 12:06am

Robert Fisk: Posturing and laughter as victims rot

Mahmoud Abbas stepped further into humiliation by saying the only option for Arabs is to make peace with Israel

Tuesday, 20 January 2009

The front page of the Beirut daily As-Safir said it all yesterday. Across the top was a terrible photograph of the bloated body of a Palestinian man newly discovered in the ruins of his home while two male members of his family shrieked and roared their grief. Below, at half the size, was a photograph from Israel of Western leaders joking with Ehud Olmert, the Israeli Prime Minister. Olmert was roaring with laughter. Silvio Berlusconi, arms on the back of Olmert's shoulders, was also joshing and roaring – with laughter, not grief – and on Olmert's right was Nicolas Sarkozy of France wearing his stupidest of smiles. Only Chancellor Merkel appeared to understand the moral collapse. No smiles from Germany.

Europe laughs while Palestinians mourn their dead. No wonder that in the streets of Beirut, shops were doing a flourishing trade in Palestinian scarves and flags. Even some of Palestine's most serious enemies in Lebanon wore the Palestinian keffiyeh in solidarity with the people of Gaza. Over and over again, Al-Jazeera television strapped headlines on to their news reports of Palestinians carrying the decomposing corpses of their dead: "More than 1,300 dead in Gaza, 400 of them women and children – Israeli dead in the war 13, three of them civilians." That, too, said it all.

All day, the Arabs also had to endure watching their own leaders primping and posing in front of the cameras at the Arab summit in Kuwait, where the kings and presidents who claim to rule them also smiled and shook hands and tried to pretend that they were unified behind a Palestinian people who have been sorely betrayed. Even Mahmoud Abbas was there, the powerless, impotent leader of "Palestine" – where is that precisely, one had to ask? – trying to suck some importance from the coat-tails and robes of his betters.

Slipping and sliding on the corpses of Gaza, these assembled supreme beings should perhaps be pitied. What else could they do? Saudi King Abdullah announced £750,000 to rebuild Gaza; but how many times have the Arabs and the Europeans been throwing money at Gaza only to see it torn to shreds by incoming shell-fire?

It has to be said that the two cowled Hamas gunmen who announced that they had won a "victory" in the ruins of Gaza were only fractionally less hypocritical. Still they had not understood that they were not the Hizbollah of Lebanon. Gaza was no longer Beirut. Now, it seemed, Gaza was Stalingrad. But whose uniforms did Hamas think they were wearing: German or Soviet?

"Israel has to understand," the good king said – as if the Israelis were listening – "that the choice between war and peace will not always stay open and that the Arab initiative (for Arab recognition in return for an Israeli withdrawal to the 1967 borders of Israel) that is on the table today will not stay on the table." He knew that "an eye for an eye ... did not say an eye for the eyes of a whole city". But how many times – how many bodies have to be pulled from the ruins – before the Saudis realise that time has run out?

The Israelis briskly dismissed land for peace in 2002 but yesterday they suddenly showed their interest again. "We continue to be willing to negotiate with all our neighbours on the basis of that initiative," the Israeli government spokesmen said – as if his own country's original rejection had never been thrown at the Arabs.

President Bashar al-Assad of Syria, of course, dismissed the whole initiative in Qatar last week as dead, insisting that Israel be declared a "terrorist entity". But Mahmoud Abbas stepped further into humiliation yesterday by announcing that the "only option" for Arabs was to make peace with Israel. It was Arab "shortcomings" that led to the failure of the 2002 Arab initiative. Not Israel's rejection, mark you. No, it was all the fault of the Arabs. And this from the leader of "Palestine".

No wonder America's man in Egypt – a certain Hosni Mubarak – repeated the tired old slogan that "peace in the Middle East is an imperative that cannot be delayed". And then the Emir of Kuwait invited Bashar and Hosni and King Abdullah of Jordan and the other King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia to have lunch together – the menu was not disclosed – to end their feuding.

Al-Jazeera showed the ever-more putrid bodies being tugged from beneath cross-beams and crushed concrete as these mighty potentates debated their little disputes. There was really no adequate comment for this charade.


"Go confidently in the direction of your dreams! Live the life you've imagined." -Henry David Thoreau

Tina January 19, 2009 - 10:51pm

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