TGI Friday briefs

Awww. Seattle anti-Zionists lose again: First they lost the bus ads. Now they lost the billboards. Poor SeaMAC. On top of everything else, they have a really crappy acronym.

Passover in Moscow: You know, at my synagogue’s Seder, I met a young man who was from Russia, who told me that it’s changed a lot there for Jews. I am deeply suspicious, but apparently, it really has. There are fifteen synagogues in Moscow today.

So much for the moderates: Hamas wants Salam Fayyad to go under any unity deal. Fayyad, you may remember, is the man that the UN and the West seem to think will reform the crooks in the PA and stop them from stealing all of the aid money. Gee. I wonder why Hamas wouldn’t want him around, keeping track of the funds, making sure it didn’t go to, oh, I don’t know, the Hamas weaponry and leadership villa fund? And hey, even better: The State Department isn’t definitely ruling out cutting off U.S. funds if Hamas joins the government. Because it’s not like they’re a terrorist organization or anything like that, and we didn’t already do that when they took over in Gaza.

Oh, please. Ha’aretz editors are not living in the same universe as the rest of us. Yeah. Israel can redeem itself in the world’s eyes if it is the first nation to recognize and greet the Palestinian state. Seriously? These people read the world media and think that the countries that hate Israel are going to suddenly stop? Sure, because it’s not like they say Israel has occupying Palestinian territory since 1948 or anything. Oh. Wait.

Say, remember when Israeli bombed the Syrian nuclear reactor and everyone said it wasn’t a reactor? They were wrong.

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3 Responses to TGI Friday briefs

  1. Michael Lonie says:

    The first indication I had that the USSR was a lot weaker than I thought came when I went to a Channukah celebration at the local Chabad house. They had a Rabbi from Kiev there who told of how he got a rabbinical education underground, and that hundreds of others did too. I thought that if they KGB couldn’t put that down, it wasn’t nearly as strong as I thought.

  2. No, I think that shows the strength of the Jews, not the weakness of the KGB.

  3. Joel says:

    Haaretz lives in fantasy land. Checkout the comments from readers – you will not see more anti Israel comments outside of The Guardian.

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