What does Israel do? Please enlighten everyone.
Arab Muslim citizens have the same core rights as Jewish citizens—voting, running for office (Arab parties in the Knesset), passports, movement inside Israel, and access to public services. They are exempt from mandatory military service (unlike most Jews, Druze, etc.). Arabic has special status.
Freedom to worship, build/maintain mosques, and operate Sharia courts. The government appoints and funds many Muslim clerics. Holy sites are protected, though access (especially Temple Mount/Al-Aqsa) involves security restrictions due to past violence.
Israel stands out as one of the few (often cited as the only) places in the Middle East where the Christian population is stable and or growing in absolute numbers, with full legal religious freedoms and democratic protections.
Israel provides by far the safest environment with growth and integration, while elsewhere existential threats have caused a regional exodus.
Pre-1948/1950s: Bethlehem was overwhelmingly Christian. Estimates put Christians at ~80-86% of the population in the town and surrounding areas in the 1940s-1950s. 
• 1967 (Israeli census): Christians were ~46% in Bethlehem proper.
• 1990s (around PA takeover in 1995): Christians had already declined but were still a significant minority (~40% or higher in some estimates for the city).
• 2000s-2020s: Sharp drop. By the early 2000s, below 30%. By 2016-2017, ~10-12% or lower in Bethlehem proper. Recent estimates put it around 10% or less, with absolute numbers in the low thousands amid a growing total population.
Your attempt at drawing a moral equivalence is intellectually dishonest and factually incorrect.
@buckleycarlson These people were all Jews talking about other Jews. It’s called “Judeo-Christian” because Christianity was literally a sect of Judaism,started by Jews, worshipping a Jew.
@RealCandaceO@grok is The protocols of the Elders of Zion antisemitic Russian propaganda? Is Candace Owens ignorant to history and facts on this subject matter?