#whyistamimifree. The USA administration barters justice away for values of stability ... but those who compromise on Justice will get neither justice OR stability
@chalavyishmael@BeetaBenjy Jews… make your way out of NY as Canadians are leaving … they will still blame their problems in their Judenfrei state on you after you are gone … no worry
@EthanLevins2 Ethan you are deranged to think that testimonials for Islamofascist terrorsts will be persuaded by a man who publicly executed a general with a cannon shot .
What happened to you? Parents were serial killers? Imprisoned in a box for years?
@BernieSanders You and your elected Congress created this inflation that made us poorer . Not you want to spend more of our money to fix the problem you created . No thanks
On This Day — June 3, 1948
Over half a million Arabs poured into Mandate Palestine in just 12 years to take advantage of the economic opportunities created by Jewish development — the only place in the entire Middle East with a growing Arab middle class.
Robert F. Kennedy, then only 22, made that striking observation in his reporting from British Mandate Palestine in April 1948 (just weeks before Israel’s independence). His dispatch was published this day in the Boston Post.
RFK wrote:
“The Jews point with pride to the fact that over 500,000 Arabs ... came into Palestine to take advantage of living conditions existing in no other Arab state. This is the only country in the Near and Middle East where an Arab middle class is in existence.”
He described how the Jews had transformed arid desert into flourishing orange groves through relentless labor and ingenuity. Tel Aviv had grown from a small village into a modern metropolis of over 200,000 in a single generation.
RFK noted that the Jews had already built a thriving community with its own institutions, language, and national characteristics — and were determined to reclaim their ancient homeland “as of right and not on sufferance.”
A young Bobby Kennedy saw the truth clearly: a people returning home, rebuilding their land with their own hands, and refusing to live as guests in their own country.