you took a lot of time unnecessarily I am familiar with the history My point, The Israelis claim is second only to someone who is a Caananite by length of historical time
The UN resolution is determinate today.
So you don’t have to post a long history again but if you have a few comments ok.
you took a lot of time unnecessarily I am familiar with the history My point, The Israelis claim is second only to someone who is a Caananite by length of historical time
You brought up the history back to the Canaanites. As I can quite obviously recite the history with the historical documents, there was not much point in trying to give me a snow job about it. Britain found itself bankrupt in the middle of WW1 and sought the assistance of the Rothschilds. The Brits made it through the war. The Brits maneuvered to be the post-war Mandate for Palestine and, of all people, notified Lord Rothschild with the Balfour Declaration. That was a letter to Lord Rothschild. It was neither from nor to The Big Guy. What a backdoor deal.
The UN resolution is determinate today.
Considering the article by The Intercept, the result came as no surprise.
https://theintercept.com/2024/04/17/united-nations-biden-palestine-statehood/
Leaked Cables Show White Oposes Palestinian StatehoodKen Klippenstein
Daniel BoguslawApril 17, 2024, updated April 18, 2024
Shocker!
Once again Israel got the single vote that defies the will of the otherwise unopposed majority, that vote being the reliable veto of the United States. The U.S. tried to back door lobby for votes at the Security Council but was forced to use its veto.
There were 12 votes in favor of the resolution: Russia, China, France, Japan, South Korea, Ecuador, Algeria, Malta, Slovenia, Sierra Leone, Mozambique and Guyana.
The U.K. and Switzerland abstained from voting.
The only vote against was by Israel's Sugar Daddy. Just another typical day at the United Nations.
I do not think it was determinative of anything other than Israel has a de facto veto at the UN Security Council. This veto is just another of the long series of such vetoes spanning decades.
The only not too difficult question is whether the U.S. works for Israel, or whether the U.S. uses its veto to look out for its colony in the middle east.