Yawn....... Israel attacked by Hamas

Biden is complicit in the violence because of his christian catholic zionistic beliefs.
What does that say?
Biden makes all sorts of tickle your ears statements, does nothing other than continues to supply more weapons and money to Israel to conflate the war.
 
And because the jewish documents are corrupt, the end result is extreme violence.

If the jewish documents were pure, godly, the end result would be peace and harmony between people.


Matthew 7:15-20 New King James Version
You Will Know Them by Their Fruits

15 “Beware of false prophets, who come to you in sheep’s clothing, but inwardly they are ravenous wolves. 16 You will know them by their fruits. Do men gather grapes from thornbushes or figs from thistles? 17 Even so, every good tree bears good fruit, but a bad tree bears bad fruit. 18 A good tree cannot bear bad fruit, nor can a bad tree bear good fruit. 19 Every tree that does not bear good fruit is cut down and thrown into the fire. 20 Therefore by their fruits you will know them.


The new Testament is not part of the Jewish books (aka the "old Testament"). You better go study up on religion.
 
Because of their sense of entitlement of what's written in their corrupt bs lying fucking piece of shit unholy torah 'bible'.
And because the jewish documents are corrupt, the end result is extreme violence.

If the jewish documents were pure, godly, the end result would be peace and harmony between people.


Matthew 7:15-20 New King James Version
You Will Know Them by Their Fruits

15 “Beware of false prophets, who come to you in sheep’s clothing, but inwardly they are ravenous wolves. 16 You will know them by their fruits. Do men gather grapes from thornbushes or figs from thistles? 17 Even so, every good tree bears good fruit, but a bad tree bears bad fruit. 18 A good tree cannot bear bad fruit, nor can a bad tree bear good fruit. 19 Every tree that does not bear good fruit is cut down and thrown into the fire. 20 Therefore by their fruits you will know them.

I don't really feel like starting yet another Israel thread but you've really gotta drop the "jewish" thing. It makes me second guess posting criticisms of Israel & it being lumped w/bigotry. Nationalism is as, if not more dangerous than religious fanaticism and zionism which was started by a secular Jew has much more nationalistic underpinnings than religious ones. Does it use some religious BS to couch its arguments? Sure, but if you want to criticize a religion, go after Zionism, it may as well be one. Remember some of the most ardent zionists in the US are Christians.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zionism

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Enjoy the video tour of the Hamas tunnels under the UNRWA headquarters. Hamas and UNRWA are one and the same.

Reporter's Notebook: Embedded with the IDF deep inside Hamas tunnels under UNRWA HQ
https://www.foxnews.com/world/repor...-idf-deep-inside-hamas-tunnels-under-unrwa-hq

excuse me? That's not what you said a few weeks ago:

So the Biden administration gave money to the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA). A portion of this money was spent on schools in Gaza which unfortunately were "complicit in teaching children to hate Jewish people and praised terrorism".

You do realize the Trump administration, the Obama administration --- and every administration going back for decades gave money (as part of their U.N. membership) to UNRWA. Billions of dollars in total.

Fox News is making a big story over nothing.

As noted in the Fox News story, the group works with Palestinians doing "human development and humanitarian services, encompass primary and vocational education, primary health care, relief and social services, infrastructure and camp improvement, microfinance and emergency response, including in situations of armed conflict."
 
It is long overdue to stop funding aid organizations which promote terrorism.

The UNRWA case reveals a much larger problem with humanitarian aid
https://www.euronews.com/2024/02/12...s-a-much-larger-problem-with-humanitarian-aid

The global consensus that humanitarian work is essential too easily surrenders the moral high ground, often with devastating consequences. It is time to recover that ground, Ambassador Mark Wallace and Dr Hans-Jakob Schindler write.

Evidence implicating UNRWA employees in the 7 October terrorist attacks should come as no surprise to anyone who has followed the activities of the UN’s agency for Palestinian refugees closely.

Allegations that some UNRWA workers were in fact Hamas operatives are merely the latest iteration of a much larger problem plaguing the international aid sector.

A stunning lack of oversight and regulation of humanitarian funds over the past several decades has allowed untold billions in taxpayer money to make their way into terrorists’ coffers.

While aid agencies may baulk at what they perceive as burdensome “red tape”, strict oversight and transparency are in fact fundamental to humanitarian work: they ensure that aid is delivered to those who need it, not diverted to extremist and terrorist groups.

Claims of no knowledge increasingly strain credulity
For years, UNRWA has played host to bad actors uninterested in a peaceful resolution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

According to a dossier presented by Israeli intelligence, one in ten staff are terrorist “operatives”.

Some 23% of male UNRWA workers in Gaza have ties to Hamas or Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ), compared to 15% of male Gazans as a whole. And 49% are alleged to have “close relatives” also tied to either Hamas or PIJ.

Claims by UNRWA that it had no knowledge of the vast network of Hamas tunnels under schools and hospitals, funded by billions of dollars of diverted aid, increasingly strain credulity.

"The reality is that UNRWA is by no means the exception when it comes to humanitarian terror financing. In the world of international aid, it’s an occupational hazard."


Several UNRWA personnel over the years have been discovered to be terrorists or officials of terrorist organisations, including PIJ rocket-maker Awad al-Qiq, former Hamas interior minister Said Siam, and Humam Khalil Abu-Mulal al-Balawi, a suicide bomber who killed seven CIA employees in Afghanistan in 2009.

On 7 October, 12 UNRWA personnel helped Hamas execute the massacre, or aided the group in the wake of the attack.

According to the dossier, one of the agency staffers took a woman hostage, another dispensed ammunition, and a third took part in mass murder at an Israeli kibbutz.

This case is no exception
How did humanitarian workers come to play a role in the worst massacre of Jews since the Holocaust?

The reality is that UNRWA is by no means the exception when it comes to humanitarian terror financing. In the world of international aid, it’s an occupational hazard.


Throughout the 1990s, the Taliban regularly harassed and robbed aid agencies. The current Taliban regime likewise uses a network of sham local organisations to divert aid money.

In the early 2000s, reports emerged that in Somalia, the al-Qaida affiliate al-Shabaab had siphoned off so much international aid that it established a “Humanitarian Coordination Office”, charging aid groups to “register”.

"On the ground, any dime relinquished to a militant group is unlikely to achieve its stated aims and, as in the case of UNRWA, in fact, exacerbates the conflict it is trying to alleviate."


Several years later, al-Shabaab continued to extort aid deliveries via roadblocks and so-called “taxes”.

In 2018, a partial audit of the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) found that some $700 million (€649m) of US taxpayer-funded programming in Iraq and Syria had been improperly vetted.

That same year, several dozen individuals and organisations who had received USAID funding in the region were blacklisted, and over $200m (€185.5m) in funds were frozen.

The Houthi rebel group in Yemen stifles almost all movement of international aid through the areas they control; they have set up a “humanitarian” agency, the Supreme Council for the Management and Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs and International Cooperation (SCMCHA), for the express purpose of re-directing aid toward their own militant ends. The results have been catastrophic for the Yemeni people.

Decisions that didn't age well
Regulating aid is not simply about alleviating security concerns. On the ground, any dime relinquished to a militant group is unlikely to achieve its stated aims and, as in the case of UNRWA, in fact, exacerbates the conflict it is trying to alleviate.

Just two years ago, the Biden administration began funding UNRWA again on the basis that the organisation had made commitments to “transparency, accountability, and neutrality”.

Several European governments, including Germany, even increased UNRWA funding in the wake of the October attacks.

Those decisions have obviously not aged well. But they are the result of a steady flow of arguments from humanitarian workers and aid groups who claim that regulations and sanctions, even with humanitarian exemptions, do little more than hamper their work.

This attitude is dangerously dismissive, as former UNRWA General Counsel James Lindsay wrote in a 2009 report: “UNRWA has taken very few steps to detect and eliminate terrorists from [its] ranks…and no steps at all to prevent members of terrorist organisations, such as Hamas, from joining.”

We can't keep surrendering the moral high ground
Brutal terror groups and extremist regimes will always see humanitarian funds as quasi-piggy banks for enhancing their own power.

Effective oversight, budget transparency, complete reporting requirements, as well as internal and external controls are indispensable elements to ensure that any developing problems are caught early, aid diversion is mitigated, and guardrails are in place to prevent international aid workers from being involved in terror groups or attacks.

Despite criticism from the EU’s High Representative for Foreign Affairs, several European countries, in addition to the US, have now suspended payments to UNRWA. This is a step in the right direction.

The global consensus that humanitarian work is essential too easily surrenders the moral high ground, often with devastating consequences.

It is time to recover that ground, which has for too long provided cover for the worst acts of terrorism.
 
As expected Hamas has moved the hostages to Rafah. This is a good start to getting the hostages back by using force. The time for negotiations with terrorists is over.

Israel-Gaza updates: IDF says 2 hostages rescued from Gaza
https://abcnews.go.com/Internationa...hamas-war-proposed-hostage-deal/?id=106938132

Two male hostages were rescued from Gaza, the IDF said in a briefing early Monday morning local time. The hostages are both alive and in "good medical condition," the IDF said in a release.

The two hostages -- Fernando Simon Marman, 60, and Louis Har, 70 -- are back in Israel and were brought to Sheba Tel Hashomer hospital, the IDF said. They were both kidnapped by Hamas from Kibbutz Nir Yitzhak on Oct. 7.

The special operation to rescue the two hostages from Rafah in Gaza started around 1 a.m. local time, IDF spokesman Lt. Col. Richard Hecht told reporters during a briefing early Monday morning.

"The two hostages were rescued from the second floor of a residential building in Rafah," Hecht said. The forces breached the building "with a charge," Hecht said.

Hecht added that air cover was provided, and there was also fire to the surrounding buildings.


In the past couple of weeks, Hamas has been offered two deals from the international community which included exchanging hostages for prisoners, a two month ceasefire, commitment to get aid to the civilians in Gaza, and allowing the Hamas leadership to leave Gaza. Israel is done negotiating and will finish off the remaining Hamas leaders & militants hiding in Gaza -- starting with Rafah.

As Biden presses on hostage deal, Israel may skip latest talks: US officials
https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/bid...l-israel-skip-latest-talks/story?id=107169898
 
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