Posted on 01/01/2014 8:54:42 PM PST by Olog-hai
Arab Knesset members reacted angrily on Wednesday to a report in the Maariv daily newspaper, which stated that Israel has suggested to the United States a plan to transfer to the Palestinian Authority (PA) areas with a dense Arab population currently inside Israel.
The report specifically referred to an area known as the Triangle, located in east-central Israel, including the cities of Tayibe and Tira, in which about 300,000 Arabs live.
(Excerpt) Read more at israelnationalnews.com ...
Suicide move.
Deuteronomy 7.
They wanna to work against Israel’s best interest?
Go live with others who also want to work against Israel’s best interest.
If you’re gonna BE tribal, then LIVE tribal (and learn to LOVE it). Fools!
That would be a fascinating political, social and economic phenomena. A distinct minority, ostensibly with a different religion and culture, suddenly finds itself “reunited” with their “brethren”. Suddenly thrust from being a minority with limited political rights in a First world country to being part of a third world majority. Careful what you wish for.
The Arab MKs know they have it mighty good in Israel. The Arabs in Israel are thriving, with equal rights in a tolerant country with excellent educational system and medical care and equal justice under the law.
That does not stop them from hating Israel and or cynically posturing on their undying support for the PLO, all the while hoping they never have to with the gangsters of the PLO.
Quebec separatists don't want people in Quebec to know that separation means: no Canadian passports, no federal government jobs, no right to employment in other provinces, no automatic free trade with Canada, etc. etc. Upon these realizations, the desire to separate cools.
I once read something about the Palestinian Arabs that talked about an Arab village which was split in 1948 by the Green Line—part of the village was in Israel and the other part in the West Bank. Apparently they had little or no contact in the period 1948 to 1967 although many or all would have had relatives on the other side of the line. After 1967 they could interact but they discovered they had become different—the Israeli Arabs were different from their cousins who had lived under Jordanian rule.
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