The ten years and nothing’s really changed news briefs

Of course it’s Israel’s fault, it always is: Three UN workers were hurt in a blast in Gaza, and of course, Hamas blames Israel. It might be a kassam that fell short. Oh, and the three UN workers? Most likely Gazans, quite possible also Hamas members. UNRWA stated quite clearly ages ago that they won’t do background checks to make sure they’re not paying terrorists.

Palestinians to Obama: Our way or the highway, dude. Just watch the reaction if Obama actually does present his own peace plan, which is rumored to force Israel back to the 1949 Armistice lines, share Jerusalem, while making the Palestinians dump the “right of return” for second-, third-, and fourth-generation “refugees.” The Palestinian reaction? The “right of return” is non-negotiable. I eagerly await the condemnation of the PA by Hillary Clinton, Joe Biden, and members of the Obama administration for being an obstacle to peace. (Of course that was sarcasm. Haven’t you been reading me long enough to know?)

Syrians murdering protesters; Yourish.com readers awaiting UNHRC call of war crimes: Forty protesters were shot in Syria today. Navi Pillay has called Libya’s use of cluster bombs a war crime; where’s the condemnation of Syria? This is the most I can find. It’s not the UN Human Rights Council. I know, I know, you’re as shocked as I am. (Did you know the UN has a Special Rapporteur on arbitrary executions? Also a Special Rapporteur on the right to health. I kid you not.) Actually, I’m pretty sure we’ll be hearing how this is Israel’s fault, too, for not giving back the Golan or something. Also for not making peace with the Palestinians.

I read the interview, so you don’t have to: Mel Gibson is trying to redeem himself by not saying anything that makes you think he’s worth redemption. His latest interview is all about the new movie in which he dons a beaver puppet to express himself, and how life was so unfair to him lately. And here’s the sum total of his response to a question regarding his drunken, anti-Semitic tirade:

WEINER: Even when the drunk driving/anti-semitic incident happened and was splashed everywhere, you continued to work. Do you just compartmentalize things so you can keep working when you’re at the center of something like this?
GIBSON: You have to. There are a lot of people depending on you. There are deadlines to meet and fiscal responsibilities. There are the basics of supporting yourself and those who depend on you and those commitments that you have to co-workers.

It seems that there are plenty of Jews in Hollywood still willing to work with this jerk.

Posted in Anti-Semitism, palestinian politics, Syria, The One, United Nations | Tagged , , , | 1 Comment

Nothing New Under The Sun?

In the Middle East and UN, ein chadash tachat hashemesh, there is nothing new under the sun. Yet, representatives of the Obama Administration have repeatedly made strong statements that this is not the case, including most notably, the one made by the President himself to the United Nations in 2009 about which I wrote here in commenting on this administration’s foreign policy decisions. You may remember President Obama’s words to the United Nations General Assembly:

The time has come to realize that the old habits, the old arguments are irrelevant to the challenges faced by our people.

Conclusions drawn from history and experience are often ignored in favor of the exploration by trial and error of new approaches or even previously tried and rejected ones. The belief that it is the Jews, and specifically the Jewish state, who are intractable in the Israeli-Palestinian peace process is exactly such a previously tried and rejected approach. Israel has agreed to final peace agreements at the negotiating table three times, since 1967. Three times!

  1. With Egypt
  2. With Jordan
  3. With the Palestinians at Camp David

The Palestinians have never agreed to peace once, only to interruptions in violence for negotiations through which they might pursue gains that they were unable to obtain through violence. Current attempts to utilize the United Nations to obtain gains are the result of the failure of both violence and negotiations to advance the goal of eventually eradicating the Jewish state, the unrealized goal of the violence.

That reasonable people argue for the creation of a Palestinian state roughly along the 1967 borders has allowed the Palestinian leadership legitimacy in pursuit of a goal not limited to the creation of a Palestinian state alongside Israel, but in fact to pursue the destruction of Israel with the creation of a Palestinian state that substantially weakens Israel’s security and viability being a step in that direction.

This is why it is Israel’s security and not the borders of a future Palestinian state that must be discussed first. For those truly pursuing peace, the coexistence of the two states in peace and security must take precedence over the land which they control and it must be clear that all belligerent claims, much less actions, must end with whatever peace agreement is made.

As I wrote recently for We Are For Israel, American advocacy must support Israel in achieving this goal, in achieving security, opposing efforts in the UN advancing territorial claims by the Palestinians without negotiating a permanent peace.

Posted in Israel | Tagged , , , , | 1 Comment

A decade of blogging

Ten years ago today, I wrote my first blog post. When I first started Yourish.com, it was a little personal blog that nobody was reading. I wrote about my life, I had shout-outs to fellow bloggers and people who happened upon my blog. I wrote about tech. I even wrote my blog in HTML, without blogging software, for the first four years. Dave Winer and Andrew Sullivan were my blogparents. Winer never gave me the time of day. (Update: Now he did. Wise guy.) Sullivan and I had a couple of exchanges early on. Andrew wasn’t a crazy super-liberal in those days, and he wasn’t as anti-Israel as he is today. Charles Johnson was a daily read. Glenn Reynolds? I started months before he did, and found him around 9/11, just like everyone else did. Adil Farooq, blogging as the MuslimPundit, discovered me before Glenn did, via Iseema bin Laden’s diary. But it was Glenn who put me on the map, linking to Iseema, the secret Arafat phone transcripts, and my first Hulk posts, and many more. The Hulk post was published in a comic industry magazine, with greatest-ever Hulk writer Peter David himself asking for permission to publish, which I happily granted.

I’ve been writing about Jewish and Israeli issues since 2002. But the origin of my blog wasn’t Israel, or Jewish issues. That’s what this blog has turned into. It’s what I write about now almost exclusively. But it’s not why I started blogging.

The main reason I started this blog was to improve my writing. This blog helps me write something every day. The goal has always been to improve my skills, and ultimately, to get my fiction published. The fact that it’s become a soapbox from which I point out media bias against Israel, double standards from the world on Israeli behavior, and all things Jewish—well, you write what you know, and I’ve been interested in Jewish issues ever since I can remember, what with being Jewish and all. Thankfully, my parents did not bring me up to despise Judaism, unlike some I’ve written about over the years. I love being Jewish. That hasn’t changed in the past ten years, and never will.

I’ve struggled for years with writer’s block. I came out of the Clarion Science Fiction and Fantasy Writer’s Workshop with a short story sale and great contacts, as well as a wonderful writer’s group. But my writing stalled, and stalled, and stalled again. Every time I thought I’d gotten past whatever it was that was stopping me and start something new, after about a chapter or two, I’d stop again. It’s like there’s a switch inside me, but it was stuck in the Off position. I’ve been working on trying to get past that block for longer than I’ve been blogging.

This spring, something finally changed. This spring, everything’s different. The switch inside me is now in the On position, and I’ve got 8500 words of my novel, as well as over 30 4×6 index cards on my Outline Board in my office. I have a three-book story arc plotted, with an opening at the end of Book Three for another story arc. You can see the progression of my Outline Board in the last few weeks. On the left is what it looked like on the first day. The right-hand picture was taken 23 days later.

Outline board, before and after

This is what’s going to be taking up most of my time from now on. That’s why I wanted to get a few more co-bloggers. Because when it comes down to it, writing fiction is more important than blogging.

Over the years, this blog has been great for me. It’s given me friends, relatives (a part of the family I never knew found me via Google), a new (used) laptop (reader contributions), a job, and now, it’s helped me get to the goal I was trying to reach ten years ago. About the only thing more I could ask this blog is to get me an agent and a publisher, when the first book is done next spring. (Fantasy, YA, if any agents are reading this, and it’s an extremely marketable concept.)

No, there’s one other thing I’d really like. I’d like to have Soccerdad back as my co-blogger, but I know that’s not going to happen. Life is more important than blogging, and he’s got things to take care of.

So I think I’m in it for another ten years, but I’m working towards being able to blog on my own time—in between writing, editing, and plotting—instead of doing it before and after work.

Change is coming for me. I’m sure of it.

As for the blog? Take a look at this post from nine years ago. Compare it to today. That’s why I’m still here. When it comes to Israeli and Jewish issues, nothing’s changed.


These are all of previous anniversary posts:

First. Second. Third. Fourth. Fifth. Sixth. Seventh. Eighth. Ninth.

Posted in Bloggers, Israel, Site news | 9 Comments

Happy 10th

I have written before about my evolution as a blogger. But that was mostly a history of the media I used. Not the activism I practiced.

I guess it started in 1987, when I got my first letter to the editor published complaining how a cartoon used antisemitic imagery in its portrayal of then PM Yitzchak Shamir.

In the following years I had letters published in the Baltimore Sun and other publications.

Sometime after 9/11, I got a sense that highly paid columnists, PhD, government officials and other anointed could write the most absurd nonsense and started to e-mail articles that represented reality better than what I was used to seeing in the New York Times or Washington Post (with some exceptions).

I also became aware that you didn’t have to be a highly paid columnist, PhD or government official to get to make unsupported assertions. Regular folks could do that too.

The medium through which they did that was called a blog and I e-mailed one of the earliest practitioners of blogging if what I did could be considered e-mail blogging. She answered that she supposed it could. (I thought I preserved the exchange, but can’t find it right now, so that’s from memory.) As you probably can guess my source was none other than Meryl. And no, bloggers like Meryl, weren’t known for making unsupported assertions, they backed up their assertions with links to sources, not appeals to their own brilliance or supposed expertise.

And so I was drawn to the world of blogging. After some years Meryl invited me to post announcements of Haveil Havalim – the Jewish blogging carnival – at her blog, one of her efforts to promote pro-Israel blogging. Eventually I was invited to join as a regular blogger, a role I enjoyed – getting much wider exposure than I got at my own blog – until my retirement from blogging.

But for me and many others Meryl was a pioneer and inspiration, someone who showed us what pro-Israel blogging could be.

On April 15, 2002, there was a pro-Israel rally on the Mall in Washington DC. It was the height of the so-called “Aqsa intifada,” (or, if you prefer, the Oslo War.) I remember a sign at the rally to the effect of “Israel has 9/11 24/7.” That was the desperate feeling at the time. Every few days, it seemed, brought word of another horrific attack.

The Bush administration, which despite its mistakes, was fundamentally pro-Israel. But in an act of political deafness, sent Paul Wolfowitz to speak to the crowd. The problem wasn’t Wolfowitz but what he said. As the AP started its report:

A top administration official was interrupted and booed Monday when he told thousands of people gathered at the Capitol for a pro-Israel rally that Palestinians as well as Israelis have been victims of Mideast violence.

Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz was drowned out by chants of “no more Arafat” and booed as he told a packed crowd of thousands that “innocent Palestinians are suffering and dying as well. It is critical that we recognize and acknowledge that fact.”

Forget about the blatant bias of the AP in that article. At a time when Israel was defending itself against the most brutal terror war in its history, for Wolfowitz to mention the Palestinians at a pro-Israel was really dense, and as noted, the crowd reacted. Nothing wrong with sympathizing with innocent victims, but to attribute them to Israel self-defense was outrageous.

Andrew Sullivan, about 6 and a half years before he was completely unhinged, thought that was rather ungrateful of the crowd. Meryl pointed out the obvious:

It isn’t just the way the “boos” were blown out of proportion, or the way they were taken so out of context, and made to look as if the crowd cared nothing for the death of innocents. What bothers me most is that the impression is wrong. American Jews care greatly that innocents–on both sides–are dying. But the rally was the Israel Solidarity Rally–not the Israeli and Innocent Palestinian Civilians Solidarity Rally. We went to Washington to make our points–not listen to theirs. We went to hear speakers talk of the innocent Israeli civilians who are dying–murdered by Palestinian “martyrs”–whose comrades hide in the midst of innocent Palestinian civilians.

That was my earliest clear memory of Meryl’s work, and she’s been doing the same for ten years now: showing us how to fight pervasive anti-Israel bias in the media and the chattering classes.

May she go from strength to strength over the next 10!

Posted in AP Media Bias, Blasts from the past, Israel, Israel Derangement Syndrome, Israeli Double Standard Time, Media Bias, The Exception Clause | Comments Off on Happy 10th

Religion of Peace™ roundup

No, really, Islam is tolerant of other religions: Indonesian police found a 330-pound bomb underneath a gas line near a church. Think of the extra deviousness of placing the bomb next to a gas line. The death toll during this Easter holiday would have been horrific. But these are, after all, the authors of the Bali bombing.

Muslim ERA Watch: All but one of the rapists in the infamous case in which a young woman was ordered to be raped by a village council because her brother was accused of having an affair with a woman of a higher cast. Yes, the punishment was for the relatives of the woman to rape the boy’s sister. Because that’s just such a perfect punishment for such a non-crime. Well, all but one of the rapists have been freed. Because, after all, she’s just a woman. Her voice counts for half that of a man’s in sharia court, and four eyewitnesses must actually see the rape occur before there can be a conviction. That, plus, well, let’s face it: Pakistani Muslims aren’t too keen on their women getting all uppity and complaining about things like being raped.

Say, did you know there’s still fighting in the Sudan? Of course you didn’t. The news media are too busy telling you about how horribly Israel treats the Palestinians.

ISI and Taliban, sitting in a tree: Really? The ISI has links to terrorists? Who knew? Oh, that’s right. We did. We’ve known for over a decade, and yet, Pakistan likes to pretend it isn’t so. Sure.

Muslims won’t live under a dhimmi: Nigerian riots have claimed over 100 lives. Why are they rioting? Because a Christian won the election. ROPMA is an acronym we used to see a lot on LGF. It means, “Religion of Peace, my ass.” That would be because of acts like these:

Those perceived to be supporters of the ruling party have been stabbed, hacked and shot to death by angry youths since Jonathan, a Christian southerner, defeated Buhari. Churches, mosques, homes and shops have been set ablaze.

You know what’s really scary? The fact that all I did was go to the Townhall wire service world news page for the above articles. I didn’t have to search hard at all to make a news roundup entirely of violent acts by Muslims. And who is being demonized for causing all of the above? That’s right, Israel. If only Israel made peace with the Palestinians, none of the above actions would have happened.

Absurd?

Of course it is. But that’s the narrative that’s been pushed for decades.

Posted in Israel Derangement Syndrome, Media Bias, Religion, Terrorism, World | Tagged , , | Comments Off on Religion of Peace™ roundup

Thursday Passover news roundup

Seriously? On April 20th? Seriously? The irony is so thick on this one, you’d swear I’m making it up. Bill White, American neo-Nazi shithead, had his conviction overturned and was released yesterday—on the anniversary of the birthday of the world’s worst mass murderer of Jews. That’s the bad news. The good news is that neo-Nazis are still tiny-penised washouts who are so blinded by their hatred of, and jealousy for Jews that we get to laugh at them on the day after Hitler’s birthday and point out that Hitler is dead. We’re still here. (Cue Nelson laugh.) White intends to move in and live with his parents. Yes, really. Loser.

Ew, there’s another picture at the link: Helen Thomas has withdrawn from the anti-AIPAC festival happening in DC at the exact same time of the AIPAC conference. Apparently, even some of the ex-Jews signing onto anti-AIPACFest can’t stomach Thomas’ anti-Semitism. Not that Medea Benjamin gives a damn, but then, any woman who would deliberately change her name to the mythological witch who murdered her children to save her lover is not exactly someone who I think can tell right from wrong.

“The conference is really to talk about –and many of us are Jews- is to work for a policy where Israel and Palestine can live together in peace and get a process started,” Benjamin, who is Jewish, said. “My values are Jewish and I believe in Compassion for all and AIPAC does not represent my Jewish values. Helen Thomas is one of 30 people who have been invited and we are a community of people who cherish Jewish values.”

Yeah. Sure. Jewish values.

I’m not anti-Jewish; I’m anti-Zionist. I am anti Israel taking what doesn’t belong to it. If you have a home and you’re kicked out of that home, you don’t come and kick someone else out. Anti-Semite? The Israelis are not even Semites! They’re Europeans, and they’ve come from somewhere else. But even if they were Semites, they would still have no right to usurp other people’s land. There are some Israelis with a conscience and a big heart, but unfortunately they are too few.

A slip of the tongue. Right.

Gul Dukat tells Israel to shut up and do what the Arabs want them to do: Gul Dukat, the prime minister of Turkey, had his PR people write an op-ed, so of course the New York Times published it. He’s not a bad guy. He just wants to help. What, his anti-Israel bent for the last several years? His support of the IHH terrorist flotilla? His constant demagoguing about Israel in Turkey? Feh. Look, he has an idea for peace. It’s the Arab peace plan, which gives the Palestinians everything they want, gives Israel nothing, and tells Israel to absorb millions of third-generation “refugees,” but hey—that’s what the Times wants to, isn’t it?

But it’s going to be peaceful: Now Fatah says they’re sending officials on the new Gaza flotilla. Officials like this:

Fatah was not part of the May 2010 flotilla. “We didn’t participate in the previous flotilla, but we supported it and the attack on Israel that followed,” said Shaath.

And still, the media will call them “peace activists.”

Posted in Israel, Turkey | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on Thursday Passover news roundup

A moment of silence for a lapsed laptop

Well, my video is going on the HP ZD8000, and after some research, I’ve concluded that it probably is not going to be fixed unless I’m willing to buy a new motherboard for a six-year-old laptop, at a cost of about $500. Pass.

I can’t complain. I bought the computer in the spring of 2005. (Actually, it was a present from my mother. Hers died years ago.) Time to move on to my next computer, which is only three years old. I’m buying my work laptop. I can’t beat the deal anywhere else, nor the discounted Office Professional that I can buy through the office as well. I see no reason to spend a thousand bucks if I can spend a fraction of it. Unlike the government, I try to live within my means.

I figure I’ll buy a new system for myself next year, if the economy settles down.

One thing for sure: Nothing says “Oh crap! Quick, make a hard drive backup!” faster than a blank screen. I should probably make sure that my new computer gets backed up at least once a week. But hey, no harm done. Although I’m starting to think this is yet another sign that a higher power is pushing me away from distractions and towards writing. Last week, One Life to Live, the soap that I watch, was canceled. It’s gone with the new year. This week, the computer that holds all of my games is dying. I sure hope my PS3 doesn’t get any ideas.

Posted in Life | Comments Off on A moment of silence for a lapsed laptop

Wednesday not-yet-sick-of-matza briefs

Because it didn’t work, that’s why: Mahmoud Abbas says he won’t go for another armed intifada. Not because it would be wrong. But because it failed spectacularly, causing Israel to re-occupy the areas of the West Bank that were under Palestinian control, and sealing off Gaza entirely, as well as building the separation barrier to stop suicide bombings. All of these things worked. So now Abbas wants to defeat Israel another way—with the willing help of the UN. Of course, this is what he says in English. Let’s wait to see what he tells the Arabic press. I suspect “resistance” (code for armed struggled) will be used more than once.

A balanced BBC piece: This isn’t the piece about Jerusalem. This was about the Gaza Flotilla, which I mentioned months ago. It was fair—it showed videos of the terrorists getting ready to attack Israeli soldiers, and was the most balanced report I’ve seen from a non-Israeli media outlet. The BBC investigation of itself (and let us stop and note the utter hypocrisy of the BBC being able to investigate itself, but Israel not being allowed to do the same) says it was fair. I agree.

It’s okay when Palestinians do it: If Israel did this, the world outcry would still be making our ears ring. But it’s okay for Hamas to surround a bunch of terrorists, go in shooting, and kill a few of them. Nope. No outcry. Not even a whimper. And yes, bystanders were wounded. Israeli Double Standard Time in action.

Egypt and Iran, perfect together:
Say, remember all those pundits who insisted that Egypt wouldn’t make nice with Israel’s enemies? Yeah, they were wrong.

Posted in Gaza, Iran, Israel, Israeli Double Standard Time, palestinian politics | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on Wednesday not-yet-sick-of-matza briefs

Passover briefs

Nothing works quite like bullying and blackmail: The “Quartet,” which includes the U.S., says that if Netanyahu doesn’t come up with a peace plan, they may just recognize a Palestinian state without a deal. Say, that’s a great idea. Ask everything of Israel and nothing of the Palestinians. Have they stopped inciting against Israel? No. Do their textbooks still carry pictures of “Palestine” where Israel should be? Yes. Do they raise their children to slaughter Israeli babies? Yes. But absolutely, you should bully Israel for not wanting peace. Oh, and the peace plan of the quartet? Giving the Palestinians everything they want, including the Temple Mount.

But it’s Libya we’re bombing: Syria is firing on its people. Syria is clamping down on rebellion. Syria is the state most closely aligned with Iran, and the state that would do the most damage to Iran’s hegemony if it fell, and yet we’re bombing—Libya. Smart power!

Happy Passover Jews! Time to burn down your synagogue! The Greek anti-Semites are at it again. (They’re particularly vicious and nasty; this is nothing new for the so-called cradle of civilization.)

Israeli “intellectuals” prove that an education doesn’t make you smart: Several dozen Israeli “intellectuals” are calling for a Palestinian state on the 1949 Armistice lines. I presume that means giving the Temple Mount back to the Arabs. Because that worked so well before. It’s not like the Jordanians would take the headstones out of Jewish cemeteries and pave latrines with them. Oh. Wait. They did. I have two words for them: Joseph’s Tomb.

Egyptian Muslims: Dhimmis can’t rule us. The Muslim Brotherhood is protesting the appointment of a Christian Copt as governor in an Egyptian city. Why? Because they want a Muslim. A Copt, they say, won’t enforce sharia law. So, where do you figure Egypt’s 8 million Christians will wind up?

Posted in Anti-Semitism, Israel, Religion, Syria | Tagged , , | 2 Comments

Happy Passover

A happy Passover to all of my Jewish readers. Chag Sameach! I hope your Seders are fun, interesting, filled with tasty food, and not so long that you wind up hungry again by the end.

I’m at a friend’s house tonight, and my synagogue tomorrow night. Next year, I’ll probably have another one of my own. I have a wonderful new dining room table that is begging to be filled with Haggadahs and Matza.

Posted in Holidays, Jews, Religion | Comments Off on Happy Passover

My third Tiggerversary!

Three years ago today, I became a much, much happier person. Because this orange goofball entered my life.

Tigger

Not that there haven’t been some not-so-fun moments. Last week, I was playing with Tig with a two- or three-foot string (formerly the tie to my pajama bottoms). I got distracted and left him chewing away on it on my bed. When I got back to my bedroom, the string was gone. I searched and searched (and Sarah searched and searched when she came over), but we couldn’t find it. I was afraid that he’d eaten the string. Called the vet, and he told me to observe Tig. If he started vomiting, or acting lethargic, or stopped eating, surgery would probably be required. Well, the day after he ate the string, I had just finished giving him his after-dinner snack (a couple of pieces of baked chicken, because I’m such a softie). Off he went into the guest room, when suddenly I heard the Tigger Hairball Alarm (yowls in varying volumes and intensity). I grabbed him, tossed him on the kitchen floor, and, well, let’s just say that surgery will not be required to recover the string. This was my conversation with Sarah went something like this:

     “I found the string.”
     “Where was it?”
     “Right where I thought it would be.”
     “In the bedroom?”
     “Inside Tigger.”

That’s my boy. Keeps me on my toes. But he also makes me laugh, every day.

Posted in Cats | 3 Comments

Monday Erev Passover briefs

The bloody, centuries-old history of the continent: This is why I think Europe is going to do the same thing today that it did over the centuries: Eventually, things are going to get nasty. Another nationalist party won another election in another European nation. Mark Steyn is wrong. Europe won’t be Islamicized.

Ew, there’s a picture of her at the link: Helen Thomas is joining the anti-Israel creeps who will be protesting the annual AIPAC meeting next month. Ew. There’s a picture of her at the link.

Hamas exercises imaginary powers on imaginary crossings: Too funny. Hamas says they closed all “land and naval” crossings to prevent the killers of ISM creep Vittorio Arrigoni (he was no “peace” activist) from escaping. Um—what naval crossings?

Gee, who knew? So if Israel pounds Gaza terrorists after they launch anti-tank missiles at school buses, support for sending rockets into Israel drops. By half. Gee. Deterrence. Whoda thunk it? Funny, this flies in the face of every anti-Israel op-ed, letter to the editor, and protest group that claim rockets won’t change Palestinian minds. Yeah, they will. They did after Operation Cast Lead, too. But then the UN set the Goldstone Commission on Israel, and the Palestinians learned once again that there is no cost to them for murdering Jews—at least, not from the rest of the world.

In other news, only half of the Palestinians think sending rockets into Israel is a bad thing. And the world wonders why Israel can’t craft a peace with these people.

Coudn’t happen to a bigger jerk: John Galliano, who hates Jews and loves Hitler, was fired from his own label. I wonder if they would have cared if Natalie Portman wasn’t working with Christian Dior. I think not.

Posted in Anti-Semitism, Gaza, Hamas, Israel, World | 3 Comments

And now the denials and lies on the Itamar attackers

Here we go.

The families of the two terrorists who confessed to murdering five members of the Fogel family refuse to believe the two committed the massacre. Hakim Awad’s mother, Nawef, claimed that her son was at home the night of the murder and never left the house. “Five months ago Hakim underwent a surgery in his stomach and I’m sure he was tortured and forced into confessing.”

Of course, because everyone who undergoes stomach surgery then is tortured into confessing to a brutal mass murder.

The mother claimed that Israel was trying to cover up for crimes it committed in Awarta last month and noted that their home in the village was very far from the settlement of Itamar.

Oh, it was too far to walk. I see. Let him go, IDF. You got the wrong guy.

The other guy is innocent, too. Why? Because it took so darned long!

He claimed that had the two been guilty, Israel would have captured them long ago. “Why weren’t the culprits’ identities revealed in the first days after the murder? The whole world knows about Israel’s advanced investigation abilities and its use of sophisticated means,” he said.

This case is a slam-dunk. The IDF took DNA samples at the crime scene, which is why they were taking mouth swabs of the men in the village. DNA evidence, when treated properly, does not lie. Palestinians, however, do.

The family members of the second suspect, Amjad Awad, also deny any connection to the massacre. They are claiming Amjad was in the village at the time of the murder. “The Israeli narrative is filled with lies and is a distortion of the truth,” one family member claimed. He also asserted that the two suspects are not friends. “One went to university, the other is in high school.”

That’s funny. They’re cousins. (And they’re only a year apart.)

This Reuters story is riddled with errors and contradictions. It calls the murderers “brothers.” First, it quotes an Israeli officer says the murders weren’t premeditated, then it quotes Mickey Rosenfeld as saying the murders were planned. If an IDF officer said that on a conference call, Israel’s PR is even worse than we already thought.

Posted in Israel, Terrorism | Tagged , | 2 Comments

A riot I can’t exactly condemn

A group called the Anti-Racist Action Network decided to live up to its name and go after the neo-Nazis holding a march in my native state. Four neo-Nazis wound up in the hospital, and two ARANs were arrested.

While the NSM members were meeting, about 25 people from a Minnesota-based group called the Anti-Racist Action Network drove into the borough and an armed melee ensued between the two groups. They fought with weapons such as knives, pipes and wooden boards, state police said.

All but two of the combatants, who were not seriously hurt, scattered when troopers arrived.

State police arrested Joseph W. Alcoff, 29, of Syracuse, N.Y., and Thomas T. Keenan, 25, of Franklin Township, and charged them both with third-degree inciting a riot.

Both are members of the Anti-Racist Action Network and both were transferred to the Burlington County Jail in Mount Holly in lieu of $50,000 bail each, according to state police.

Authorities said the incident remains under investigation and do not rule out further arrests and charges.

Four of the Nazis suffered undisclosed injuries as a result of the fight and were transported to local hospitals.

Looks like these guys took the Yourish.com mantra—“Anti-Semites of the world, just die already”—a bit too seriously. (We’re not supposed to help them along; just leave it up to The Big Guy.)

Posted in Anti-Semitism | 1 Comment

Fogel family slaughterers arrested

The IDF arrested two Palestinians for the Fogel family massacre. Turns out that Netanyahu was right: It was the culture of hatred that turned these children into murderers.

The first suspect is Hakim Mazen Awad, 18, a high school student whose father was active in the Popular Front terror organization. Awad has a prison record. His uncle, who was killed in clashes with IDF forces in 2003, was involved in a June 2002 terror attack in Itamar, which left five dead.

The second suspect, Amjad Mahmad Awad, 19, also a student, is affiliated with the Popular Front.

The two suspects confessed to their involvement in the murders, and said that they sought to carry out a terror attack in order to kill Israelis. They expressed no regret over the murders.

They were aided by at least five other members of their families, who helped hide them after the attack. So far, I haven’t seen the protestations of innocence that usually follows, possibly because there’s no denying that the family is part of the PFLP.

The heinous deed done, the two, who are not related, returned to their village on foot and appealed to Hakim’s uncle, Salah Awad, also a Popular Front militant, for assistance, giving him a detailed report of the attack they had carried out.

Salah Awad helped them conceal their weapons and bloodstained clothes, and later, he transferred the stolen weapons to a Ramallah resident, for hiding. The latter was arrested after the weapons were discovered in his possession.

The demonization of Israelis by the Palestinian media, by the Palestinian schools, and by the constant barrage of anti-Israel, pro-Palestinian propaganda by organizations like the ISM are the reason two young men could murder a three-month-old infant in cold blood, without remorse. Read this, and tell me you can’t see the similarity between the words and deeds of the Awads, and the words and deeds of the Nazis during the Holocaust.

Before fleeing the scene, the two stole an additional gun from the Fogel home. When they had already left the house and saw a patrol car outside, they feared they would be captured. At that point, Amjad insisted on going back into the house and searching for additional weapons. Unfortunately, this was when the Fogel’s baby girl started crying. Fearing it would attract attention, the two murdered her, as well.

As for the two surviving children, the murderers said they hadn’t noticed them. Had they found the two, both said, they would not have hesitated to kill them, as well.

Israel needs a death penalty for terrorists. These men are now going to become bargaining chips in the negotiations for Gilad Shalit, which Ismail Haniyeh only yesterday said he would never compromise on. Which means he wants the release of Palestinians responsible for the murder of dozens of Israeli civilians. I’m sure Haniyeh will include the Awads in the future.

Sources familiar with the investigation said the two offered a dispassionate account of the attack, and “a chilling reenactment.” Shin Bet officers described it as one of the most “shocking, cold, remorseless and detailed description,” they had ever come across.

Amjad noted that he went to Itamar to “die a martyr’s death”, which strengthened his willingness to carry out an act of terrorism. During their interrogation the two suspects made no distinction between the murder of the parents and the children, describing it simply as an act against five Jewish Israelis.

Sociopaths, made that way by the virulently anti-Israel Palestinians and their enablers in the world community. And by “enablers in the world community” I mean the EU and the idiots in the U.S. who refuse to make the Palestinians live up to reality by understanding that there will be no “right of return,” that they will not get 100% of the 1949 Armistice line, and that Israel is here to stay, forever, as a Jewish state.

These murders are on their heads as well.

The AP news story on this is actually balanced for a change. They even name the Israeli spokesman they quote.

Posted in Anti-Semitism, Israel, Terrorism | Tagged , | 1 Comment