Translate

Sunday, January 21, 2024

Two State Impossibility!



Corrupt, virulent orators and criminals

Most people governed under the Palestinian Authority or Hamas are not indigenous in their present locale, nor do they share common nationhood. The significant majority descend from Arab immigrant laborers who came from Syria, Jordan, Egypt and Lebanon. There are smaller representations whose families were present prior to 1948, but most trace their roots to indigenous tribes of other countries. 

Unlike post WWII Jewish immigrants from diverse backgrounds, these mixed Arab clans were the underclass, vulnerable to corrupt or criminal gang leaders who exploited their lack of nationhood with disastrous affect. Charismatic leaders like Yasser Arafat, were quickly supported through Jordan's desire to rid itself of the growing Palestinian ‘nationhood’ problem it was facing. 

Since the 1960's rival quasi-political groups, that became Fattah and Hamas, sold themselves as political parties that could establish and lead a cohesive, prosperous Palestinian nation. As we know that did not occur, most of their rhetoric promoted self-serving opportunities for individual economic gain at the people's expense by selling the greatest lie on earth. In 1988 the King of Jordan canceled the Jordanian passports of 100,000+ Jordanian citizens living in Jerusalem making them persona-non-grata.

The failure to self-govern opened the door to virulent orators, benevolent dictators and criminals who exploited global antisemitism and anti-Israel sentiment to deflect abstract failure, blame Israel and raise funds for the so called 'Palestinian cause' and enrich themselves. Despite support of global liberal democracies, these Arabs have not elected representatives for almost 20 years, yet sponsorship from other democratic nations has been abundant. Not surprisingly western nations compromised their long upheld democratic values and joined others to back anti-Zionist protagonists who suppressed the voices of these disparate Arab clans under the thin Palestinian veil. 

Since the late 1970's Fattah and Hamas leaders, of these 4 million broken people, pushed the armed struggle against Israel to the front of their radicalized religious and political agenda's. The events of Simchat Torah 5784 (October 7, 2023) brought the ugly reality of 'Palestinian' people to a shocking head and apparent realization. Now, Israel has been forced to expand its active responsibility for the security of its citizens and resident aliens, between the river and the sea. 

Israeli hostages, presently captive in Gaza, are mostly from liberal Kibbutz families of the South. Many have worked tirelessly over decades to assist Gaza residents to gain work opportunities in Israel. Now those families are desperately trying to shift their nations priority to the plight of loved ones, against the nations preferred priority to defeat Hamas. These families will be politically exploited as globalists fund  sponsorship of more domestic unrest and bring Israelis to accept the priority of hostages over destruction of Hamas. 

The so called nation of "Palestinian People" does not exist and never will, but the plight of the Arabs who presently live under these corrupt authorities must be presented with options for better lives. Despite attempts by foreign actors to recognize a Palestinian state, Israel will eventually offer these Hamas or Palestinian Authority constituents a pathway to status as Israeli resident aliens followed by a multi-year probationary citizenship and ultimately citizenship to the United nation of Israel. 

Now Israel is, for the first time, facing its toughest challenge, rising anti-Semitism, anti-Zionism and anti Israel pressures from other democracy’s. It will face rising domestic security costs and heightened domestic rhetoric while it comprehends and prepares for a secure, one state future in which Jewish Sovereignty, from the river to the sea, will finally be constitutionally guaranteed by an elected senate of respected, Jewish rabbinical leaders


No comments:

Post a Comment