View Full Version : Major oil deposits in Israel
the_tyrant
09-28-11, 08:03 PM
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-15037533
Prospectors in Israel say hundreds of feet below the ground lies shale rock that can be converted into billions of barrels of oil. But environmentalists say it's a disaster waiting to happen.
what interests me is this:
Mr Nguyen's company claims Israel may turn out to have oil deposits comparable to Saudi Arabia, which sits on an estimated 260 billion barrels.
potentially its possible for this find to change the power balance in the middle east
Torplexed
09-28-11, 08:12 PM
Well, for almost seventy years the US has been Israel's firmest, staunchest ally through thick and thin.
Finally, here comes the payoff---first dibs on sales of the black gold!!!! :D
magicstix
09-28-11, 08:35 PM
Great, as if the Arabs needed *another* reason to go to war with Israel...
the_tyrant
09-28-11, 08:56 PM
I'm thinking something like this can happen:
lets say Saudi Arabia asks the US for new tanks. Israel can simply provide cheap oil to the US in exchange for not giving Saudi Arabia the tanks.
I think this can be a major game changer
How much oil is there to make it to strategically opportunities to keep and share with weapons, other buyers are in the queue already, if interest continues long enough.
Tribesman
09-29-11, 03:13 AM
Given Israels water supply problems this find might not be such good news.
Jimbuna
09-29-11, 07:23 AM
Mr Nguyen's company claims Israel may turn out to have oil deposits comparable to Saudi Arabia, which sits on an estimated 260 billion barrels.
Could lead to interesting changes in the area.
AVGWarhawk
09-29-11, 08:48 AM
Well, for almost seventy years the US has been Israel's firmest, staunchest ally through thick and thin.
Finally, here comes the payoff---first dibs on sales of the black gold!!!! :D
:up:
AVGWarhawk
09-29-11, 08:49 AM
Great, as if the Arabs needed *another* reason to go to war with Israel...
Good point.
Tchocky
09-29-11, 10:42 AM
Given Israels water supply problems this find might not be such good news.
Bingo.
Expecially considering shale production is incredibly wasteful of water, and I don't think the Jordan can keep up with even current demands.
With the new experimental technology one of the by products may be water.
Ok, this answers the question of when there will be a functional Palestinian state ... when the (oil)wells dry out ...
:hmmm:
.
Bingo.
Although if it's worth the kind of money they're estimating i'd think Israel could afford to build a bunch of Desalination plants and get their water from the Med.
Betonov
09-29-11, 02:39 PM
Desalinization technology made it easier
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reverse_osmosis
It's getting water around that's the problem. Anywhere away from the coast is an uphill journey. Unles you're Dutch. All those pumps and reservoirs
Any news how the Saudi's reacted to this ??
Although if it's worth the kind of money they're estimating i'd think Israel could afford to build a bunch of Desalination plants and get their water from the Med.
Israel to focus on desalination to deal with water woes
Plan proposes creation of desalination plants on offshore man-made islands because of the difficulty in finding land for building such plants on beaches.
Israel will have to invest NIS 200 billion over the next four decades in the development of water installations, but will also be in a position to do so without raising the cost of water to the consumer, according to the blueprint plan for water development recently approved by the Water Authority Council.
The plan also proposes the creation of desalination plants on offshore man-made islands because of the difficulty in finding land for building such plants on the beaches.
http://www.haaretz.com/polopoly_fs/1.382443.1315099807!/image/4257372928.jpg_gen/derivatives/landscape_295/4257372928.jpgThe Hadera desalination plant. Controlled by IDE.
Photo by: Eyal Toueg
Based on the new plan, expanding the availability of water in Israel will focus on desalination plants. This will make it possible to draw less water from natural water sources, thereby allowing them to be restored to higher levels. The focus on desalination also lessens the risks posed by higher reliance on water resources like Lake Kineret.
The amount of water allocated to agriculture will not drop, however it will be based on purified sewage and non-potable water drawn from water holes.
The plan proposes forging ahead with the goals set by the government, reaching 750 cubic meters of desalinated water in a decade, or double the current capacity.
Beginning in the next decade, it will be necessary to double desalination capacity again - by 2050.
The calculations in the plan show that Israel will require an additional 1.5 billion cubic meters of water, in the coming years, beyond that which is available to it. A third will be used to supply Jordan and the Palestinian Authority.
The authors of the plan, members of the planning department of the Water Authority, estimate that consumption per person per year will not reach 110 cubic meters, as previous estimates claimed. It is expected to stand at 95 cubic meters, in spite the expected rise in standards of living. The main reasons for this are the greater efficiency in water usage as well as the use of purified sewage water in public gardens.
The authors of the plan claim that there is a delay in the building of installations for purifying water that has been polluted or which became salty.
This delay stems from problems they say are being caused by the Environment Ministry, which issues permits for the removal of the salt that is collected during the purifying process, and subsequently dumped into the sea.
"As a result, dozens of such projects are not advancing and the rehabilitation of natural water sources is being undermined," the blueprint states.
A senior source in the Environment Ministry strongly denied these claims. He said that the Water Authority did not make use of any of the locations designated for dumping salt into the sea. He said that the ministry agreed to consider authorizing the dumping of salt in any place where there were polluted wells, but that the Water Authority did not ask the ministry to do so.
The source also claimed that the Water Authority was expected to present plans in which they would detail the amount of water they expected to clean, but that no such plans were presented to the Environment Ministry.
*******
Rockstar
09-29-11, 02:43 PM
Ok, this answers the question of when there will be a functional Palestinian state ... when the (oil)wells dry out ...
:hmmm:
.
How do squatters deserve a state? It's like them moving to Greece and expecting you to give up some of your own land.
Tchocky
09-29-11, 02:44 PM
How do squatters deserve a state? It's like them moving to Greece and expecting you to give up some of your own land.
Yeah, that's exactly what it's like.
August - I was thinking about desalination for the water problem. I wonder about how much energy that would use and cost relative to the benefit of oil extraction, which shale already makes quite expensive. it may work out.
Ok, this answers the question of when there will be a functional Palestinian state ... when the (oil)wells dry out ...
:hmmm:
.
Actually...as soon as they move from dysfunctional to functional behavior.
You worry about Palestine more than Palestinians themselves.
joegrundman
09-29-11, 02:51 PM
Desalinization technology made it easier
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reverse_osmosis
It's getting water around that's the problem. Anywhere away from the coast is an uphill journey. Unles you're Dutch. All those pumps and reservoirs
Any news how the Saudi's reacted to this ??
well they could build new settlements around the dead sea and just send desalinated water down with a huge syphon
Betonov
09-29-11, 02:59 PM
well they could build new settlements around the dead sea and just send desalinated water down with a huge syphon
That would dry the ''sea'' and kill the tourism around it.
Maybe the Dutch have the answer, windmills to pump water from the coast to inland
joegrundman
09-29-11, 03:21 PM
That would dry the ''sea'' and kill the tourism around it.
Maybe the Dutch have the answer, windmills to pump water from the coast to inland
they would desalinate mediterranean water, and syphon it down.:know:
Betonov
09-29-11, 03:35 PM
No, they'd syphon it UP :know:
Tribesman
09-29-11, 04:24 PM
How do squatters deserve a state? It's like them moving to Greece and expecting you to give up some of your own land.
Be fair, there was always a fairly sizable Jewish population in the region, they are not all immigrants.
Be fair, there was always a fairly sizable Jewish population in the region, they are not all immigrants.
http://t2.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcTEJ5bjcI9FxRIp9nRRKa46EzCa98Dct 4Aj3ihy2ShKJ962q0gYag
All Israeli Jews care a lot about your opinion and historical perspective.
Lest be fair-some do.
kraznyi_oktjabr
09-30-11, 03:58 AM
http://t2.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcTEJ5bjcI9FxRIp9nRRKa46EzCa98Dct 4Aj3ihy2ShKJ962q0gYag
All Israeli Jews care a lot about your opinion and historical perspective.
Lest be fair-some do.My understanding is that previous Jewish state was defeated and conquered by Roman Republic in 63 BC. Its successor Roman Empire made its best to destroy anything left of Judea in 1st and 2nd centuries anno domini.
Depending how you want to count there wasn't Jewish state in around 1800-2000 years (rounded numbers), next being modern Israel from 1948. After the Roman time it have been just part of various empires or countries.
Please correct me if I'm wrong somewhere (I'm not perfect) and tell me how Jewish people have more valid claim to Palestine (one name among others) than people now referred to as Palestinians?
joegrundman
09-30-11, 04:25 AM
Please correct me if I'm wrong somewhere (I'm not perfect) and tell me how Jewish people have more valid claim to Palestine (one name among others) than people now referred to as Palestinians?
people arrived with weapons and made it so.
it is the same way that the:
hebrews took over the land from the cannanites
the egyptians took over from the hebrews
the babylonians from the egyptians
the persians from the babylonians
the greeks from the persians
the romans from the greeks
the arabs from the romans
the crusaders from the arabs
the turks from the crusaders
the british from the turks
the jews from the british (who were departing anyway)
why the tears? the big question is who's next? or is it like full circle now and we can expect the egyptians again? - they'd like to think so, i'm sure
and just in case you think it's special in that part of the world, it's how america became the usa, how siberia became russian, how england became english, how hungary became hungarian..and if you look far enough back, how pretty much everywhere became what it is.
At least the jews have SOME claim in religious texts acknowledged by all peoples in the area, and even any claim at all is more than most invaders in this world have or had.
Furthermore upon the founding of Israel, even though an event driven by european jews, shortly afterwards the middle-eastern and north african jews emigrated in large numbers to isreal. effectively all the old jewish centers in the middle-east are empty now, with most of the former ME jewish population living in isreal. (egypt simply expelled ALL the jews after the 6-day war - a move that has not been associated with much international rending of hair and gnashing of teeth)
so one could say it hasn't been an invasion, but a reshuffle. But when certain individuals in the middle east fantasize about sending the jews of israel back to where they came from, i somehow doubt that they have in mind sending them back to live in Teheran, Baghdad, Cairo and other cities in the Muslim world.
But perhaps I'm wrong. Perhaps they wouldn't mind, and think it right that jews get to live or die by the will of the muslim majority.
Anyway...on a lighter note, a quotation from an Israeli that i like (i'm remembering it the best i can):
" The problem the Europeans have with Israel is that they dreamed of having a new European state in the Middle East, but what they got was a new Middle Eastern state in the Middle East"
Tribesman
09-30-11, 05:52 AM
effectively all the old jewish centers in the middle-east are empty now, with most of the former ME jewish population living in isreal.
I could have sworn that the US, France and South America were the primary destinations for the former middle eastern populations, with the exception of the Morrocans and Iraqi in the 1950s who mainly went to Israel.
egypt simply expelled ALL the jews after the 6-day war - a move that has not been associated with much international rending of hair and gnashing of teeth
Did they?
CAPS LOCK strikes again.
My understanding is that previous Jewish state was defeated and conquered by Roman Republic in 63 BC. Its successor Roman Empire made its best to destroy anything left of Judea in 1st and 2nd centuries anno domini.
Depending how you want to count there wasn't Jewish state in around 1800-2000 years (rounded numbers), next being modern Israel from 1948. After the Roman time it have been just part of various empires or countries.
Please correct me if I'm wrong somewhere (I'm not perfect) and tell me how Jewish people have more valid claim to Palestine (one name among others) than people now referred to as Palestinians?
Here we go again....
There wasn't Jewish state for 2000 years blah blah blah....Still there are Jewish people.
From my perspective there is no difference between 2000 years and 20 years
Jews had been hunted all over Europe including modern "civilised" history.
Return to land of Israel was always Jewish dream which seriously began with mostly secular Zionist movement.
Do palestinians deserve their own state?
Facts on the ground are as such that Jews and Palestinians need to compromise.
Question is what is the nature of compromise and if compromise will end the conflict.
Abu mazen talk about settlements because it sounds right for his cause.
At the same time PA official put out statement that Palestinian state must be Jews free while they argue about returning millions of Palestinian refugees into Israel.
Thing is that when you ask politically involved Palestinian about peace process he will tell you that two state solution is just a temporary step toward whole Palestine.
Creating Palestinian state just to win some sympathy of a Fin or Swed is the easy part question is if this will end the conflict.
Question is what will happen when Abu Mazen is gone and West bank will become terrorist habitat for continuation of struggle against Zionist.
Will UN back Israelis killing women and children when missiles from west bank fall on Tel Aviv?
Blood_splat
09-30-11, 06:05 AM
http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_5UvCgYWxsKY/SxGAVLm_4xI/AAAAAAAAAM4/4pSoYb21rSI/s1600/Beating_a_dead_horse.jpg
I could have sworn that the US, France and South America were the primary destinations for the former middle eastern populations, with the exception of the Morrocans and Iraqi in the 1950s who mainly went to Israel.
You would have sworn.:har:
Tribesman
09-30-11, 06:18 AM
Will UN back Israelis killing women and children when missiles from west bank fall on Tel Aviv?
Bunker mentality again.:doh:
Have you ever perhaps thought that killing women and children isn't very efffective if you are trying to target missiles.
Bunker mentality again.:doh:
Have you ever perhaps thought that killing women and children isn't very efffective if you are trying to target missiles.
What ever Tribesman...
Bunker mentality is adequate for the situation.
I would be very glad if you just could describe to me proper strategy to deal with the issue.
Tribesman
09-30-11, 06:36 AM
What ever Tribesman...
Bunker mentality is adequate for the situation.
Bunker mentality is a major part of the problem.
I would be very glad if you just could describe to me proper strategy to deal with the issue.
What again?
you will only hunker down and insist that the narrow view from your bunker is the only reality and no one else can have any view as their perspective is different so can't be valid.
What again?
you will only hunker down and insist that the narrow view from your bunker is the only reality and no one else can have any view as their perspective is different so can't be valid.
Again?
Don't bother just put a link where you did - my ME indisputable affair expert.
Besides writing few sentences in English must be much easier for you than it is for me.
If i don't and most likely will not agree with you and...try to take your view apart then let it be....its not that your world will crumble around you will it?
Damn MH, will you stop feeding the troll? You let him crap up every thread you post to by replying to him. Put him on ignore and have done with it.
kraznyi_oktjabr
09-30-11, 08:12 AM
Here we go again....
There wasn't Jewish state for 2000 years blah blah blah....Still there are Jewish people.
From my perspective there is no difference between 2000 years and 20 years
Jews had been hunted all over Europe including modern "civilised" history.
Return to land of Israel was always Jewish dream which seriously began with mostly secular Zionist movement.Thank you for your answer and opinion.
Do palestinians deserve their own state?
Facts on the ground are as such that Jews and Palestinians need to compromise.
Question is what is the nature of compromise and if compromise will end the conflict.I don't support one state solution, because I don't see any hope of peace with it. I support too state option as bad alternative which may or may not bring peace. What I would like to know from you is that how serious Israel really is about peace? Also how declaring Jerusalem as undividable capital of Israel helps negotiations?
Abu mazen talk about settlements because it sounds right for his cause.
At the same time PA official put out statement that Palestinian state must be Jews free while they argue about returning millions of Palestinian refugees into Israel.As I said earlier, I'm not perfect. I don't know every thing and that was reason to my question in first place. Btw I didn't know about Jew free requirement although that is not really surprising and I strongly disagree with idea of Palestinian refugees returning to Israel if they get their own country.
Thing is that when you ask politically involved Palestinian about peace process he will tell you that two state solution is just a temporary step toward whole Palestine.:doh: Link please? I had never hear this kind of claim.
Creating Palestinian state just to win some sympathy of a Fin or Swed is the easy part question is if this will end the conflict.
Question is what will happen when Abu Mazen is gone and West bank will become terrorist habitat for continuation of struggle against Zionist.Valid concern and I don't have answer to that question.
Will UN back Israelis killing women and children when missiles from west bank fall on Tel Aviv?Do you imply that deaths of women and children during your country's responses to terrorist attacks is intentional instead of accidental?!
Tribesman
09-30-11, 08:36 AM
August is at it again:rotfl2:
Hey august why not take your own advice and stop trolling, once again you add nothing to the topic but just do your drive-by trolling again and again.
If i don't and most likely will not agree with you and...try to take your view apart then let it be....its not that your world will crumble around you will it?
Not in the slightest, but unfortunately the policies you support are pretty much guaranteed to ensure your world will.
Link please? I had never hear this kind of claim.
That is fairly common, though vital words are missing from what MH wrote, then again if the words were included then the statement he wrote would have no impact.
Do you imply that deaths of women and children during your country's responses to terrorist attacks is intentional instead of accidental?!
Did you notice that it made no sense?
Penguin
09-30-11, 08:42 AM
Thing is that when you ask politically involved Palestinian about peace process he will tell you that two state solution is just a temporary step toward whole Palestine.
:doh: Link please? I had never hear this kind of claim.
this article is about a poll where Palestinians claim that: http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/poll-most-palestinians-see-two-state-solution-as-precursor-to-single-state-1.325793
note: the poll above is made by a pro-Israeli organization, especially in emotional biased topics like this, it is exteremely important to check out who makes a poll and - if possible - the exact questions, as little changes in the questions can make enormous differences; do you want Pepsi?, do you want Coke?, do you want Pepsi or Coke? do you want a Pepsi if you can't have a Coke?
Also take a look at these polls: most Palestinians want a two-state-solution (http://www.haaretz.com/news/poll-most-palestinians-israelis-want-two-state-solution-1.274607) (from AP)
and this from a pro-Palestinian organization: 70 percent of the Palestinians want a one-state-solution (http://electronicintifada.net/content/survey-70-percent-palestinians-support-one-state-solution/6773) - together with 75% of Palestinians who deny Israel's right to exist
IF all those surveys are correct, one can come to the come to the conclusion, that a two-state-solution is seen as temporary, or more blunt: first the Pepsi, then the Coke
Penguin
09-30-11, 08:50 AM
Bunker mentality again.:doh:
Have you ever perhaps thought that killing women and children isn't very efffective
Yes, it's a shame. However these little buggers are hard to target due to their size. It also makes it more complicated that those brats often hide near their moms, so women are unfortunately a collateral loss :arrgh!:
Tribesman
09-30-11, 09:00 AM
and this from a pro-Palestinian organization......
In principle?
In principle that should be 100% not 75% and it should be 100% across the board.
That is an undeniable fact, its written in black and white, signed sealed and delivered.
However events have turned out differently and they now have to deal with the reality
joegrundman
09-30-11, 09:36 AM
I could have sworn that the US, France and South America were the primary destinations for the former middle eastern populations, with the exception of the Morrocans and Iraqi in the 1950s who mainly went to Israel.
Did they?
CAPS LOCK strikes again.
oh wow! capslock strikes again! that's big of you to don the mantle of patroller of proper form in internet discussion. I used limited uppercase for emphasis.
what's your justification for your excessive and childish use of emoticons, that renders that such a superior form of polite discussion and allows you to stand on the giddy heights and pass disdain on someone who may press the shift button for the occasional word?
anyway, it's true many jews also settled in france. South America i know less about. Argentina took in a large number of ashkenazi just before ww2, but that's different.
around the time of the 6-day war, jews in several arab countries had their citizenships revoked, and for other reasons life became difficult in those countries. Israel was prepared to settle them all within her borders and give them citizenship.
you may contrast this with the response to Palestinians arriving as refugees in neighbouring arab countries.
One might be led to think there was some overarching policy behind these differing experiences.
Tribesman
09-30-11, 10:14 AM
oh wow! capslock strikes again! that's big of you to don the mantle of patroller of proper form in internet discussion. I used limited uppercase for emphasis.
Yes, and you put the emphasis on a point that isn't actually true. Thats when CAPSLOCK strikes
Its a frequent occurance when someone puts the emphasis in big letters, they draw attention to the very thing that diminishes their point rather than emphasises it.
You could have chosen any of whole pile of nasty crap Egypt did to its Jewish population over a period of several decades, but if you want to claim that at one specific point they did something to ALL then you had better be sure it was all, you ought to also check about the international protests about its actions too over the expulsions, imprisonments and murders.
Which of course could tie in nicely with peace plan proposalsd concerning jewish refugees from arab/muslim states and the occupied territories as six of the recent different proposals from different factions/states deal with the problem of that too.
what's your justification for your excessive and childish use of emoticons
excessive? childish?:har::har::har::har::har:
A picture paints a thousand words.
One might be led to think there was some overarching policy behind these differing experiences.
Really, you mean one might be desperate to bring in as many people as possible from outside to try and address the local demographic inbalance it has always had and probably always will have.
this article is about a poll where Palestinians claim that: http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/poll-most-palestinians-see-two-state-solution-as-precursor-to-single-state-1.325793
note: the poll above is made by a pro-Israeli organization, especially in emotional biased topics like this, it is exteremely important to check out who makes a poll and - if possible - the exact questions, as little changes in the questions can make enormous differences; do you want Pepsi?, do you want Coke?, do you want Pepsi or Coke? do you want a Pepsi if you can't have a Coke?
Also take a look at these polls: most Palestinians want a two-state-solution (http://www.haaretz.com/news/poll-most-palestinians-israelis-want-two-state-solution-1.274607) (from AP)
and this from a pro-Palestinian organization: 70 percent of the Palestinians want a one-state-solution (http://electronicintifada.net/content/survey-70-percent-palestinians-support-one-state-solution/6773) - together with 75% of Palestinians who deny Israel's right to exist
IF all those surveys are correct, one can come to the come to the conclusion, that a two-state-solution is seen as temporary, or more blunt: first the Pepsi, then the Coke
Thanks for the links because i had none.
My view was based on some observations and real life chit chats which may be problematic in Internet discussions.
I don't support one state solution, because I don't see any hope of peace with it. I support too state option as bad alternative which may or may not bring peace. What I would like to know from you is that how serious Israel really is about peace? Also how declaring Jerusalem as undividable capital of Israel helps negotiations?
Eastern Jerusalem had been offered to Palestinians when Ehud Barak was PM and by other previous governments.
When precondition to peace talks is stopping construction in Gilo neighborhood or Har'Homa and Male'Adumim there is nothing to talk about.
Those are whole Jewish parts of Jerusalem and its like demanding freeze of constructions in Tel-Aviv.
Totally nuts....again it looks great...Jews are building again.
I would like someone to point out to all the illegal settlements that are dismantled inside west bank by IDF and Police.
That's again -ground reality from my perspective.
Israelis did not ask for all the wars and its small price for arabs to pay for peace.
Historically they never had regard for human life...they start war then lose then UN votes as nothing happens-what do they have to lose?
1967 borders as precondition are out of question.
From my perspective(i'm quite leftist i guess) i don't mind giving Palestinian populated parts of Jerusalem to PA.
Question is if this will ensure peace and stability or simply cause every idiot with 50mm mortal to be able to shell city centre.
Oh...you would have to run a poll with Israeli Arabs there...do they really want to be part of PA?
You just might be surprised.:03:
Do you imply that deaths of women and children during your country's responses to terrorist attacks is intentional instead of accidental?!
No.. but its unavoidable.
The tactics used by terrorists ensures this since it further damages view about Israel in public opinion around the world.
Operation "cast lead" and goldstone report is good recent example.
It took long time for goldstone to conclude that he might be wrong but the damage was done.
Israelis are baby killers anyway.
The absurd..Tzipi Livni who is in opposition from left to current government was charged with war crimes and could not enter UK.
If i remember just last month the charges had been dismissed.
Simply put it the UN and international law created atmosphere for terrorism to thrive.
its a win or nothing to lose situation for them...all they need is to manage it well.
joegrundman
09-30-11, 11:23 AM
Really, you mean one might be desperate to bring in as many people as possible from outside to try and address the local demographic inbalance it has always had and probably always will have.
i am aware of the inherent demographic tension regarding israel as a jewish democratic state - but i am not convinced that was as significant a factor in the politics of the 50's - 60's as it is today. At the time i would say it was more a response to the question of "What is Israel for?"
but you don't wonder about the contrasting treatment of arab refugees. this was also a political decision.
excessive? childish?
A picture paints a thousand words.
as you say..
Yes, and you put the emphasis on a point that isn't actually true. Thats when CAPSLOCK strikes
Its a frequent occurance when someone puts the emphasis in big letters, they draw attention to the very thing that diminishes their point rather than emphasises it.
You could have chosen any of whole pile of nasty crap Egypt did to its Jewish population over a period of several decades, but if you want to claim that at one specific point they did something to ALL then you had better be sure it was all, you ought to also check about the international protests about its actions too over the expulsions, imprisonments and murders.
Which of course could tie in nicely with peace plan proposalsd concerning jewish refugees from arab/muslim states and the occupied territories as six of the recent different proposals from different factions/states deal with the problem of that too.
oh whatever! yes, we are all outraged about the expulsion of middle eastern jews now. i read about it everyday. there's always a footnote about it whenever there's an article about the plight of palestinians.
And omg the difference between ALL and all and practically all. Expulsion without mentioning accompanying pogroms, murders, arson, dispossession of property, and mentioning Egypt without also mentioning Iran, Iraq, Libya and whoever else. Holy smokes. And failing to mention that although many went to Israel, some also went to France and america. I can feel the whole case just collapsing around me.
Yes you are completely right and i was completely wrong. I'm going to go and drown my sorrows in a friday evening beer.
And Tribesman, I promise I will never use caps again, and henceforth will join you in the art of emoticon usage
:har::har::har::har::har::har::har::har::har::har: :har::har::har::har::har:
i think it makes the point rather well - how does it come across to you?
What about eastern european Jews that went to USA and Sweden or Germany...some even stayed in Poland....
Tribesman
09-30-11, 12:02 PM
i am aware of the inherent demographic tension regarding israel as a jewish democratic state - but i am not convinced that was as significant a factor in the politics of the 50's - 60's as it is today. At the time i would say it was more a response to the question of "What is Israel for?"
May I suggest you look into it a bit more, you can even go back to the 1800s as the problem right back to congress. The Aliyah figures are also good as they show the waves of the problem of not just getting people to go, but of getting people who go to stay there. Its repeated right up to modern times with the post USSR movement.
but you don't wonder about the contrasting treatment of arab refugees.
That is true, I don't wonder. I wondered very briefly a long time ago but the answer is so obvious I don't have to wonder any more.
The way you go on its like its some surprising revelation you just discovered.
You should look at the mandates more, they are very interesting and should put your "wonder" to bed.
oh whatever! yes, we are all outraged about the expulsion of middle eastern jews now.
You really need to get some basics straight before you go off on one.:yawn:
And omg the difference between ALL and all and practically all.
"All" is very definate, as there is only all. If you want to call it ALL for emphasis then you should ensure it is all. The facts are enough exagerating them only diminishes your arguements
Start here for some basics...http://www.justiceforjews.com/....
Though the late Ami Isseroffs web collection has far more varied and detailed material
And failing to mention that although many went to Israel, some also went to France and america.
You made two seperate points both were badly flawed, they were addressed seperately.
i think it makes the point rather well - how does it come across to you?
As you failed to make any real point or to counter anything of substance I take it you are laughing at your own nonsense and how ridiculous it looks... in which case well done.:up:
http://www.down.co.il/DB/MOVIES/Israelis/Hagiga_Basnuker/Z_Hagiga_Basnuker105721297104.jpg
Betonov
09-30-11, 12:30 PM
Is Israel in a windy region ??
I think I'll sell them the windmill idea :hmmm:
Is Israel in a windy region ??
I think I'll sell them the windmill idea :hmmm:
It can be in winter-when some rain falls.
Israel is more into utilising solar energy though.
There is one in Jerusalem for study if needed...
http://www.jerusalem.muni.il/imagedb/n_14729144144.JPG
Jimbuna
09-30-11, 04:44 PM
Anyone for tennis?
http://imgcash6.imageshack.us/img104/2807/icontennisyk3.gif
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