Sunday, October 26, 2008

UN: Israel violated Geneva Conventions

Oct 25, 2008 22:41 | Updated Oct 26, 2008 1:33

By ALLISON HOFFMAN, JPOST CORRESPONDENT IN NEW YORK

The UN's special rapporteur on human rights in the territories has accused Israel of failing to halt settlement expansion in keeping with the Annapolis protocols and of violating the Geneva Conventions in Gaza






Palestinian walks past West Bank checkpoint; inset: Professor Richard Falk.
Photo: AP

Richard Falk, an American Jewish law professor who has been an outspoken critic of Israel's treatment of Palestinians, recommended Thursday that the UN resume economic assistance to Gaza irrespective of whether Hamas satisfies political conditions set by Israel.

He also suggested that the General Assembly ask the International Court of Justice to conduct an assessment of Israeli actions in Gaza and said the UN should ask Switzerland to convene a review of Israel's compliance with the Geneva Conventions.

He added that the world body should "explore its own responsibility with respect to the well-being of the Palestinians living under the unlawful conditions of occupation."

Falk, who described Israel's approach to Gaza as a "siege," pointed to the difficulty of obtaining exit visas from Gaza for medical care as evidence of Israel's "collective punishment" of Gazans.

He cited increased checkpoint security in the West Bank as evidence that the Israeli government was reneging on promises made at Annapolis, which were "specifically understood to commit Israel both to ease restrictions on movement of Palestinians subject to occupation and to freeze settlement activity."

The presentation to the General Assembly's social and humanitarian committee, chaired by the Dutch, was Falk's first since taking over as rapporteur in May from John Dugard, a South African expert on apartheid.

It accompanied Falk's report, submitted to the committee by UN Secretary-General Ban Ki Moon in September, in which he insisted that Gaza remains under occupation despite the 2005 disengagement, and therefore is subject to protection under international law.

Israeli envoy Ady Schonmann, a human rights expert in the Foreign Ministry, appeared before the committee to criticize the report, saying that it reflected the "partisan political position which has taken root at the Human Rights Council."

The council, the successor body to the UN Human Rights Commission, has included reviews of alleged human rights abuses by Israel as a regular agenda item sponsored by Islamic countries.

Schonmann protested the "unbalanced nature" of Falk's report, which did not take into account terrorist acts perpetrated by the Palestinians and legitimized Hamas while ignoring "the fact that Hamas's own leaders continue to call for the total destruction of the State of Israel, to reject a two-state solution, to reject the Annapolis process and to declare their active support for terrorism."

Schonmann also criticized Falk for relying on anonymous sources and cherry-picking academics to support his claims.

Falk, for his part, returned the jab by criticizing Israel for refusing to grant him a visa.

Falk's appointment by the UN's Human Rights Council was roundly rejected by Israel, which cited Falk's comparison in 2007 of Israeli treatment of Palestinians to Nazi treatment of Jews in Germany.

Falk told the BBC in an April interview that he made the comparison to shock Americans, adding that he felt the Gaza situation was akin to the crisis in Darfur or the repression of Tibet.

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

'Israel has highest poverty in the West'








A poor man sifts through garbage in Jerusalem.
Photo: Ariel Jerozolimski


'Israel has highest poverty in the West'
By JPOST.COM STAFF
Oct 22, 2008 9:42 | Updated Oct 22, 2008 9:50


Israel has the highest poverty level in the western world, with one in four Israelis below the poverty line, according to an Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) report.

According to the findings released Tuesday, poverty in Israel is 2.5 times the average in the developed world.

The report also stated that Israel's socioeconomic divide was the third highest, below Turkey and Mexico, and Israel was criticized by OECD for the failure of its fiscal policies to bridge the gap between the rich and poor.

On the whole, the OECD report found that economic growth of recent decades has benefited the rich more than the poor. In some countries, such as Canada, Finland, Germany, Italy, Norway and the United States, the gap also increased between the rich and the middle-class.

Launching the report in Paris, OECD Secretary-General Angel GurrĂ­a said, "Growing inequality is divisive. It polarizes societies, it divides regions within countries, and it carves up the world between rich and poor. Greater income inequality stifles upward mobility between generations, making it harder for talented and hard-working people to get the rewards they deserve. Ignoring increasing inequality is not an option."

Monday, October 20, 2008

Fortuna mayor John Campbell has passed

What can I say? I am a sad man today. I highly respected this man who took on this counterculture hippie activist in 1991 because he was big enough to see past my environmental politics and into what I really believed, which it turned wasn't all that much different from his own concerns. Humboldt County owes John Campbell more than they know in his Pacific Lumber Company stewardship under the strain of Maxxam's ever increasing demand for more trees. Like Roger Rodoni going on ahead, we all will be short another very good man here in Humboldt County once again this year.

Saturday, October 18, 2008

When Settlers get Abusive, Israeli Soldiers Attack the Abused, but the Sun Shines on All

By Sami Awad
Posted on

On Thursday the 16th of October, hundreds of Israeli settlers / squatters gathered in a Palestinian hill known as Oush Gurab located in Beit Sahour (Shepherd’s Filed). This location was used for many years as an Israeli military outpost. Palestinians who live in its vicinity recall daily the violence and terror they experienced from Israeli soldiers stationed there. When the location lost its strategic advantage to the illegal separation barrier, the Israeli military evacuated the location. They no longer had to be in the middle of a Palestinian residential area, they can move to the other side of the prison walls now. After the evacuation, Palestinians returned to Oush Gurab and began working on numerous humanitarian and recreational projects including a children’s hospital and an outdoor activity park.

The aim of these settlers / squatters who showed up on this Thursday was to stop all Palestinian activity there and eventually confiscate this hill and build a new settlement. If built, the settlement will violate the policy of the Israeli government and military for this area. The irony of the matter is that for the settlers it does not matter, their movement is above policy and above the law and it is so strong that the Israeli government, military and police are bound to not only “protect” the settlers when they show up in such high numbers but to facilitate their agenda before political pressure is applied.

To confirm the rightful Palestinian ownership of Oush Gurab and as a sign of protest to the illegal presence of the settlers, a small group of Palestinian and international activists began a walk around the location to monitor the environmental damage that was being caused in the area where open sewage pounds are forming. The Israeli military is not allowing the Palestinian Authority to treat waist water there. The trip also included monitoring of wild life (especially birds) in that area. Dr. Mazin Qumsiyeh from Bethlehem University led the group and explained the environmental disaster that was taking place there.

We were quickly followed by several Israeli soldiers who interrupted our walk and asked us to leave, admitting that they had no order to stop us, we continued our walk and reached a side dirt road that was being used by the settlers to go up the hill. Hundreds of settlers were there accompanied by Israeli soldiers and police.

As we stood there, some settlers began to taunt and curse us and then one took his machine gun, pointed it straight at us and yelled “Go him you F—ks or I will kill every one of you.” The Israeli soldiers smiled and one simply asked him to leave, but he just stood there. This reminded me of an incident a few weeks ago in the same location when Marwan from our office was attacked by a settler. The settler threw a boulder in the middle of Marwan’s back (still getting treatment). When he went to one of the Israeli captains and complained, the captain asked Marwan if he had done anything in retaliation, Marwan said no. The Israeli captain smiled and told Marwan “good, you would have been in deep trouble” and walked away.

We made it a clear intention not to talk to or respond to the settlers in any way, but the abuse and threat of the settlers was getting louder and it either became too much for the soldiers or it provoked them enough to attack us instead of controlling the settlers and asking them to leave the area (which they could have easily done).

It began with immediate pushing and shoving even though by that time we were ready to leave, but as we began to move back they jumped to arrest one person who was walking just behind me in what may have been a slower manner. I tried to grab him only to be chocked by a very large policeman and had my arms twisted by another Israeli soldier. As I was trying with incredible difficulty to take one breath I saw how they engaged in all out attack on what truly was a small group that was not there to confront.

I was thrown to the ground, arms pulled behind me and tied with plastic handcuffs that only become tighter with any movement. With this, and even though there was no intention on my part to move and I informed them of this, the same police officer seemed to have felt that he had just hunted down a big game in the jungles of Africa and wanted to show off to his friends and settlers, so he put his foot on my side as a sign of victory.

I was then taken and thrown to the side of the road where the settlers were walking and eventually six others, one Palestinian and five international, joined me. From there, they took us to an area away from the main roads and while remaining in handcuffs demanded (some of them with extreme foul language) to keep our heads down and not talk, even threatening to tie one person’s head to his feet. The only reason he was moving was because he was badly hurt in his neck and back.

After a few hours in the same position and with the same handcuffs, one captain who knew me from previous nonviolent actions came and told me of their intention to let us go. The captain tried to convince me that he was releasing us because of me, but I can not and will not allow such a statement to take any value in my life. The reason; while his knowledge of my commitment to nonviolence may have helped and may have even created in him and his superiors some acknowledgment and respect, my task is not to allow him to place this as a burden on me and have it become a tool he or others may use in the future to try and hinder my commitment and resolve; the most complimenting of statements combined with the slightest of an improper intention can lead to the most detrimental results. So my task is to push and challenge him even more now not with the intention of having him declare his approval or disapproval of what I do, but with the intention to truly free him from his own handcuffs and shackles.

At the end of the day, they released most of us because (in my opinion) they truly had no reason to keep us. They kept one of the international volunteers and drove of with him in a police car. The reason was never made clear to us.

A moment before that same captain came to me to inform me of their decision; the sun began to set behind Bethlehem and the beams were breaking through some white and gray clouds. There was a slight and beautiful chill from the autumn air. I gave thanks for that beautiful day and for the fact that the sun does not know Palestinian from Israeli, Christian from Muslim or Jew, and Asian from American or African, and I asked myself, if the sun shines on all of us as one, how much more does the sun’s creator see and love us all as one?

Thursday, October 16, 2008

Occupation End Notes October 16, 2008


Occupation End Notes

October 16, 2008

Volume 6 Number 15

Dear Stephen,

Please see below for a new edition of Occupation End Notes!

1. US Campaign Update: National Membership & Outreach Coordinator in San Francisco; Virtual Garage Sale: Everything MUST Go; October Book of the Month Club

2. Boycott & Divestment Update: Don't Buy Apartheid? Don't Buy Motorola Pledge

3. Standing Against Apartheid Update: Anti-Apartheid Speaking Tour Cities for November 9th - 23rd Organizing Tour

4. Challenging U.S. Policy Update: We've Been to the DNC & RNC; Now It's Your Turn to Bird-Dog the Candidates

5. Expressions of Nakba Update: Expressions of Nakba Exhibit Coming to a City Near You

6. Membership Update: New Member Groups; Rachel Corrie Foundation Peace Works Conference; Protest the 2008 AIPAC National Summit in Chicago; Global Exchange Reality Tour; 7th International Sabeel Conference

7. Resources & Events: Son of Nun Hits the Road; Slingshot Hip-Hop in Washington, D.C.; BPFNA Friendship Tour to the Holy Land

8. Opportunities to Visit Israel and Palestine: Israeli Committee Against House Demolitions; Interfaith Peace-Builders; Resource Center for Nonviolence; Global Exchange; Christian Peacemaker Teams; Middle East Fellowship; The Health and Human Rights Project (formerly Jewish American Medical Project)


1. US CAMPAIGN UPDATE:

* National Membership & Outreach Coordinator in San Francisco; October 27-29

The US Campaign's National Membership & Outreach Coordinator, Omar Masri, will be in San Francisco, CA from October 27-29 and would like to meet up with member organizations and supporters in the area to discuss our plans for 2009.

If you would like to set up a meeting with Omar, please contact him by email: office@endtheoccupation.org or call him at 202-332-0994


*Fall Blow Out Sale: Virtual Garage Sale! Everything MUST Go

We are selling all our merchandise, including books, pins, posters, DVD's, olive oil, and embroidered items.

Support the US Campaign by purchasing pins, embroidery, olive oil, books, and posters (Please note: For all international shipping, please contact the US Campaign office directly at 202-332-0994 or office@endtheoccupation.org before you make your purchase). Call us for bulk pricing on these items!

Click here to find out what's up for grabs!


* October Book of the Month Club! The End of Spring

In The End of Spring, Sahar Khalifeh chronicles the struggle of the Palestinian people with a humane depiction of Palestinian resistance fighters during the 2002 siege of Yasir Arafat's official headquarters. Khalifeh's tender and moving portrayal of her protagonists delves into the inner consciences of the men and women and children who were involved in the actual resistance-or were simply caught in the middle. These characters come alive through Khalifeh's use of Palestinian colloquial diction, as does the setting, through her measured attention to the details of the natural surroundings in which the characters live, fight, and die.

Click here to purchase this book!

Contact office [at] endtheoccupation [dot] org to suggest the next book of the month.


2. BOYCOTT & DIVESTMENT UPDATE:

* Don't Buy Apartheid? Don't Buy Motorola!

After a year of research and corporate engagement with Motorola they still support Israeli apartheid. Now we're putting our money where our mouth is and boycotting Motorola. Motorola claims to be a good corporate citizen, but they can't explain why they support apartheid in Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territories. Click on the image to the left to sign our pledge not to buy Moto products until they respect international law and Palestinian human rights.

Read More »


3. STANDING AGAINST APARTHEID UPDATE:

* Separate Is Never Equal: Stories from South Africa and Palestine

This national speaking tour will bring internationally recognized human rights advocates Rev. Eddie Makue, Secretary General of the South African Council of Churches, and Diana Buttu, former legal adviser to the Palestinian negotiating team, to 11 U.S. cities between November 10th and 23rd, 2008.

Click here to read more!


4. CHALLENGING U.S. POLICY:

* We've Been to the DNC & RNC; Now It's Your Turn to Bird-Dog the Candidates

We've been to Denver for the Democratic National Convention (DNC) and St. Paul for the Republican National Convention (RNC) to protest, distribute information, get in the media, and talk to delegates and candidates about our issues.

Now it's your turn. Between now and Election Day, November 4, candidates for public office will attend thousands of town hall meetings, debates, and community events, and shake hands with and kiss the babies of millions of voters.

Click here to learn more about bird-dogging the candidates and sign up for a bird-dogging packet.



5. EXPRESSIONS OF NAKBA UPDATE:

* Expressions of Nakba Exhibit Coming to a City Near You!

The US Campaign will be offering member groups the opportunity to bring the exhibit directly to your city.

If you wish to have the exhibit come to your town or city, please contact our National Organizer, Katherine Fuchs: organize@endtheoccupation.org for more details.

If you have not done so already, check out the winning pieces available on the Expressions of Nakba online gallery. Please visit: http://expressionsofnakba.org/gallery/entrance


6. MEMBERSHIP UPDATE:

In an effort to better help our coalition members network and for us to better gauge the coalition's regional diversity, we have put together a map with all 257 coalition members represented by state:

If you don't see your state represented within the US Campaign: Join us!

­Please help the US Campaign welcome the following groups to our growing coalition!

  1. American Friends Service Committee - Pacific Mountain Region

AFSC San Francisco coordinates various programs and activities related to homeless organizing, peace building, and public education. For more than thirty years, AFSC has brought Arabs and Israelis, Jews, Christians and Muslims together in common cause to work for justice and peace in the Middle East. In this region, the Middle East Peace Program is a clearinghouse for Middle East work in the Greater San Francisco Bay Area, organizing speaking tours, public events, and education campaigns and working for change in policy and practice to ensure Israeli security and Palestinian self-determination and to end the US war against Iraq.

Click here to find out more about them!

  1. American Jews For A Just Peace

American Jews for a Just Peace (AJJP) is an alliance of progressive and predominantly Jewish activists in the United States working to ensure equal rights, safety, and dignity for all the people of historic Palestine. AJJP operates as an alliance of autonomous chapters and individual members across the United States. AJJP is a grassroots, membership-driven network with the goal of coordinating our collective work under a shared name and agreed statement of Common Ground principles.

Click here to find out more about them!

  1. Corvallis-Albany Friends of Middle East Peace

Contact Valori George to find out more about them! Valori [at] peak [dot] org


* September 12th - October 20th, 2008: Save Our Kindergarten Speaking Tour

At the US Campaign's 7th Annual National Organizers' Conference, our membership voted to cosponsor the Rebuilding Alliance's speaking tour, featuring the mayor of Al Aqabah village, focusing on Israel's program of illegal demolition in the occupied territories.

The Kindergarten in the village of Al Aqabah is scheduled to be demolished along with the entire village including the mosque, the medical center, and almost all the homes. The Rebuilding Alliance Team will tell their story, ask your help to save the Kindergarten, and make the village thrive!

From Washington DC, the team travels to New York City, Houston, Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Seattle for their speaking tour, Rebuilding Hope: a Speaking Tour to Save a Kindergarten and Help a Palestinian Village Thrive.

Click here to find more about this exciting speaking tour with a list of the scheduled stops and more.



* October 17th - 19th, 2008: Rachel Corrie Foundation Peace Works Conference

"Dual Occupations: Sovereignty and Freedom from Iraq to Palestine"
A Week-end Conference, October 17-19th at
The Evergreen State College, Olympia, Washington.

Purchase Tickets | Read About the Exciting Speakers | Download Registration Form

This multi-generational conference will connect communities working to end occupation and war in the Middle East and assist those who work in this movement in sharing skills and fresh ideas to become more effective in organizing. Participants will educate each other and build skills to challenge injustice through political, media, and gender analysis, with new knowledge of our roles in the dynamics of the Middle East and US foreign policy. Through bridging communities and acknowledging differences, we intend to find new strategies to build a broader and more effective movement


* October 26th - 27th, 2008: Protest the 2008 AIPAC National Summit in Chicago

The AIPAC National Summit

October 26-27 in Chicago

Sheraton Chicago Hotel & Towers
301 E. N. Water Street
(Between N. Columbus Drive & N. Park Drive )

Chicagoans Against Apartheid in Palestine (CAAP) is issuing a public call to action against the AIPAC National Summit which will take place in Chicago on October 26-27. The AIPAC National Summit is exclusively for those who contribute a minimum of $3,600 annually to AIPAC. We are calling for protest actions that will include a diversity of tactics. Organizations willing to endorse and participate in the planning should contact us.

For more information or to endorse contact Chicagoans Against Apartheid in Palestine, email caap_mail@yahoo.com


* November 6th - 16th, 2008: Global Exchange - Fair Olive Harvest Tour

Global Exchange partners with the Palestine Fair Trade Association (PFTA) for a tour of Palestine/Israel combining the realities of occupation with the positive effects of fair trade on the economic lives of the Palestinians. The tour includes historic Nablus and Jenin, Roman ruins in olive country, 5 nights with Palestinian farm families while helping bring in the olive harvest, and participation in the Jenin Harvest Festival. Program days in Jerusalem, Bethlehem, Ramallah and the Negev include meetings with Palestinian and Israeli peace groups focusing on land and water rights, prisoner rights, home demolitions and other human rights issues. Explore beautiful Palestine, and learn how fair trade promotes self-sufficiency and solidarity.

Contact Sanaz with any questions about this trip - sanaz@globalexchange.org - or call toll-free 1-800-497-1994 ext. 251. On the Web: http://www.globalexchange.org/tours/957.html


* November 12th - 19th, 2008: Beyond Remembrance: Facing the Challenges of the Future, Sixty Years After The Nakba

7th International Sabeel Conference
November 12-19, 2008

The conference will focus on the commemoration of the 60th anniversary of the Nakba, and the complex issues of memory, narrative, and identity raised by the events of 1948.

Lectures, workshops, discussions, and cultural events focusing on the last 60 years and the future for Christians living in Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territories

Mark your calendars, and spread the word!

For more information, email: conf2008@sabeel.org or call: (972) 2-532-7136 (This is the phone number for Sabeel in Jerusalem. )



8. RESOURCES AND EVENTS:

* October 18th - November 20th, 2008: Son of Nun's Art of Struggle Tour

We're excited to announce that US Campaign has recently teamed up with political hip-hop artist and activist Son of Nun, whose Art of Struggle Tour overlaps with our Separate Is Never Equal speaking tour. We'll be plugging each other during our respective events, and this means that our member groups are welcome and encouraged to do outreach at Son of Nun's upcoming shows.

Known best for his song "Free Palestine," Son stands unapologetically for equal rights and equal access for people everywhere. The Art of Struggle Tour will visit 10 cities from Oct. 18-Nov. 20, helping to mobilize movements fighting for change - before and after the election. Son of Nun's music reflects voices from the struggles he's been a part of, and he's giving the US Campaign the opportunity to add our voices to the mix. If you're interested, contact Son at
sonemcee@yahoo.com

Here's the schedule:

Oct. 18 - NYC
Oct. 25 - Baltimore, MD
Oct. 26 - Chapel Hill/Carrboro, NC
Oct. 27 - Asheville, NC
Oct. 29 - Atlanta, GA
Oct. 30 - Gainesville, FL
Nov 1 - Storrs, CT
Nov 14 - San Francisco, CA
Nov 18 - Chicago, IL
Nov 19 - Detroit, MI
Nov 20 - Columbus, OH

For more details and to sample Son of Nun's music visit www.sonofnun.net.


* October 26th, 2008: Slingshot Hip-Hop in Washington, D.C.

Come watch the amazing and inspiring film and official selection of the Sundance Film Festival, Slingshot Hip Hop, Sunday, October 26th at the E Street Cinema. The film is put of by Arabian Sights and will screen at 5:00pm, to be followed by Q&A with the director, Jackie Reem Salloum and hip hop artists from the film, DAM and Abeer. DAM and Abeer then will be part of a special performance at the Hard Rock Cafe at 7:45.


Sunday, October 26, 2008

Time:

5:00pm - 10:00pm

Location:

Hard Rock Cafe & Landmark's E Street Cinema

Street:

999 E Street, N.W.

City/Town:

Washington, DC

View Map


Contact Info

Phone:

4023120418

Email:

filmfestdc@filmfestdc.org

Landmark's E Street Cinema is located at 555 11th Street, NW, Washington, DC. Take Metro Red, Orange or Blue line to Metro Center. Theatre entrance on E Street between 10th and 11th Street.


* February 15th - March 2nd, 2009: BPFNA Friendship Tour to the Holy Land

Baptist Peace Fellowship of North America is sponsoring a Friendship Tour to the Holy Land from February 15 to March 2, 2009. Plans are to visit Lebanon, Jordan, Israel and the West Bank, with transit through Syria. Included will be visits to refugee camps, historical and religious sites, as well as discussions with representatives of many groups active in the region.

To learn more, visit www.bpfna.org or contact the tour leader, Barbara Taft, at beejayssite@yahoo.com.


9. OPPORTUNITIES TO VISIT ISRAEL AND PALESTINE:

* Israeli Committee Against House Demolitions Delegations to Israel/Palestine


* Interfaith Peace-Builders Delegations to Israel/Palestine



* Fall 2007 Schedule: December 2nd - 12th: Global Exchange's Delegations to Palestine & Israel



* NEW Christian Peacemaker Teams Delegations to PALESTINE/ISRAEL


* NEW Middle East Fellowship Delegations to Israel/Palestine


* The Health and Human Rights Project (formerly Jewish American Medical

Project) Delegation to Israel/Palestine


Occupation End Notes is the US Campaign bi-monthly newsletter, designed as a tool for activists. For this newsletter to be successful, we need your participation. Use us to promote events, give feedback on recent actions, recommend resources, or just learn from other activists in the movement. If you or your organization are planning an event aimed at ending the occupation, or you have information for the Newsletter, please contact the US Campaign at office@endtheoccupation.org.


The US Campaign aims to change U.S. policies that sustain Israel's 41-year occupation of the Palestinian West Bank, Gaza Strip and East Jerusalem, and that deny equal rights for all.

US Campaign to End the Israeli Occupation

DONATE | SUBSCRIBE | UNSUBSCRIBE

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Wikipedia is censoring anti-Judaism information

Looking for more information on the Maxims of George Washington I found a site that claims Wikipedia is in Jewish hands (see below) and they are censoring anti-Jewish information. You can see this for yourself by typing in "Maxims of George Washington" which contain George's warning against trusting Jews in America. While you can find pages and pages of such information on a Google search, try it for Wikipedia..

"Monday, 21 March 2005
Wikipedia - Unbiased Encyclopedia or a 'Jewish Tool'


"They (the Jews) work more effectively against us than the enemy's armies. They are a hundred times more dangerous to our liberties and the great cause we are engaged in.....and the greatest enemies we have to the happiness of America."
-George Washington (Maxims of George Washington by A.A. Appleton & Co.)

Wikipedia is a carbon copy or wholesale plagiarism of Encyclopedia Dramatica design and ideas

James Wales Is The Founder

The 'Wikipedians' or Moderators

What Is Wikipedia?

Wikipedia is an internet encyclopedia, that anyone can edit and add information. Wikipedia claims it's articles are based on a totally neutral point of view. It's size is formidable, at 2.5 billion views a month.

Once you get below the surface, you find moderators that follow an agenda, which clearly takes a Pro-Jewish point of view.

History Of Wikipedia

Larry Sanger, and Jim Wales, founded Wikipedia in Jan. of 2001. It was an offshoot of Nupedia, an more formal encyclopedia.

Wales is presently in charge. Sanger left in 2002, and is a professor/lecturer at Ohio State.

Names like Jeremy Rosenfeld, Benjamin Kovitz, Seth Cohen, dot the landscape of technical staff.

Moderators openly admit to a pro-Jewish bias.


James Wales History

Wales who was born in Huntsville, Alabama, went to the exclusive Randolph prep school, and onto the University of Alabama. Wales graduates, and becomes a Futures Trader in Chicago. Next he opens Bomis, an 'Adult Content' website, which is followed by Nupedia, which morphs into Wikipedia.

Wales is the darling of the Jewish crowd at Harvard, being a fellow at the Berkman Center for Internet and Society, at the Harvard Law School.


Who Is Bomis.Com?

Basically 'Bomis' is an adult site, started by Wales, but Wikipedia calls it erotica. Typical picture , and a typical site (caution - extremely pornographic)

Wikipedia System Of Control

Wikipedians (Jewish volunteers) will concentrate on a certain subject, and actively moderate any new replies. Once an individual edits an article, his ISP number is recorded, and he is assigned a sayanim that will monitor all his future writings.

Individual contributors are assigned a tracking page, and an open record of all writings. Through out the cycle the contributor this will be monitored by Hillel, ADL, SPLC, type control agents.


Examples Of Censorship

In 1967, with Lyndon Johnson's blessing, Israel attacked Egypt in a surprise assault. In an attempt to create a 'False Flag' pointing at Egypt, the Zionists attacked the USS Liberty, killing 44 and wounding 177. The attack failed when three attacking torpedo boats were on their final run, they collided, and their shots missed the ship. The Liberty got an SOS off to the USS Saratoga, and Israel was forced to abort the attack.

Wikipedia's Stance

Their interpretation is the attack was an innocent mistake, the torpedo boats were actually rescue vehicles, which the USS fired on, and innocent Israelis had to defend themselves.


Dr. Fredrick Toben

Dr. Toben is German historian and scholar, that grew up in Australia, and runs the Adelaide Institue. He is noted for his investigation of the 'Jewish Holocaust'. Wikipedia contributors wrote a slanderous page on him, and when he went to refute it, the sayanims deleted all his comments.

Wikipedia's Stance

Toben is a monster, who associates with criminals, and himself was a convict


Theresienstadt

In 1941, Germany gave Jewish artists their own experimental town as prototype refuge, to protect Jews. Subsequently the Jews have altered history, and refer to it as a death camp.

When a 1943 documentary film was edited into Wikipedia's Theresienstadt page, the Hillel Wikipedians immediately deleted, saying it was propaganda and holocaust denial

Wikipedia's Stance

Theresienstadt was Nazi hellhole, where Jews were starved to death, and then sent on to Auschwitz.


Where Does Wikipedia Get It's Funds?

According to it's founder, James Wales, it lives on grants and small individual contributions.

What's The Real Story?

From all the available information, it appears Wikipedia was started by a two Jewish kids, one a programmer, and the other an 'Adult Site' operator. It's dynamic success (800,000 pages) stems from 10,000 + individual contributors, which are monitored by core sayanims.

Wikipedia's claim: ~ 'We are an internet encyclopedia with a neutral stance' ~ is absurd.

This project is an attempt to control student research on the Internet. Any subject Googled will show Wikipedia as one of the first entries. Type in the word Bolshevik, and the first entry is Wikipedia. Explore their version, and you won't be the slightest mention that the movement was a Jewish instigated bloodbath, that was responsible for 20,000,000 deaths.

Wikipedia: What it Doesn't Say

I have just spent several frustrating hours trying to revise and improve the entry on "Scholars for 9/11 Truth", only to discover that my rewrites were being over-ridden by someone at Wikipedia. I find that offensive. The present entry has a warning label stating, "The neutrality of this article is disputed." From what I can discern from reviewing the "Talk Page", persons with scant or biased knowledge of the society appear to be determining the contents. So I agree with the warning but not for the reasons that may have motivated it. Here is what I tried to post in its place.

James H. Fetzer
Founder and Co-Chair
Scholars for 9/11 Truth

What Is The Controversy?

Wikipedia, which is becoming the cyber library to the world, is on a campaign to disallow any discussions that portray Jewish history in an unfavorable manner. For example James Bacque, who is not an anti Semite, or revisionist, still crosses the line, and Wikipedia seeks to defame him.

From UK daily Mail:

Wicked-pedia: 'Why the online encyclopedia makes me want to scream'

The following is an incomplete list of those suspected to be members of, or to be the "useful idiots" of, the so-called "Elders of Wikipedia" (the Zionist cabal which has Wikipedia in its grip). Those at the top of the list are definite members and are the most ruthless and vicious of the bunch; those at the bottom I'm less sure about. Monitor the activities of the first 5 on the list (watch their user contribution pages and their user talk pages) and you'll have a good idea of what the entire gang is up to.

The suspected "Elders of Wikipedia" are:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Jayjg
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Jfdwolff
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:RK
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Gzuckier
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:IZAK
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Eliezer
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:TShilo12
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Max_rspct
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Ezra_Wax
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:MathKnight
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:Leifern
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Humus_sapiens
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Fintor"

I have no idea of the veracity of this guy's posted references but I do know that the anti-Jewish statements attributed to both George Washington and Benjamin Franklin would be far more in keeping with the general attitude of Gentile businessmen dealing with usury, the tool of Jewish economic control and protection in otherwise hostile Christian nations.

For American Jews, Dissent Against Israel Has Become Mainstream

By Tony Karon, Tomdispatch.com.
Posted September 15, 2007.

The exceedingly narrow range of "correct opinion" on Israel for American Jews isn't holding together like it used to. Is a Jewish glasnost coming to America?

First, a confession: It may tell me that I hate myself, but I can't help loving Masada2000, the website maintained by militant right-wing Zionist followers of Rabbi Meir Kahane. The reason I love it is its D.I.R.T. list -- that's "Dense anti-Israel Repugnant Traitors" (also published as the S.H.I.T. list of "Self-Hating and Israel-Threatening" Jews). And that's not because I get a bigger entry than -- staying in the Ks -- Henry Kissinger, Michael Kinsley, Naomi Klein, or Ted Koppel. The Kahanists are a pretty flaky lot, counting everyone from Woody Allen to present Prime Minister Ehud Olmert on their list of Jewish traitors. But the habit of branding Jewish dissidents -- those of us who reject the nationalist notion that as Jews, our fate is tied to that of Israel, or the idea that our people's historic suffering somehow exempts Israel from moral reproach for its abuses against others -- as "self-haters" is not unfamiliar to me.

In 1981, my father went, as a delegate of the B'nai B'rith Jewish service organization, to a meeting of the Cape Town chapter of the Jewish Board of Deputies, the governing body of South Africa's Jewish communal institutions. The topic of the meeting was "Anti-Semitism on Campus." My father was pretty shocked and deeply embarrassed when Exhibit A of this phenomenon turned out to be something I'd published in a student newspaper condemning an Israeli raid on Lebanon.

By then, I was an activist in the anti-apartheid movement in South Africa, which was consuming most of my energies. Having been an active left-Zionist in my teenage years, I had, however, retained an interest in the Middle East -- and, of course, we all knew that Israel was the South African white apartheid regime's most important ally, arming its security forces in defiance of a UN arms embargo. Even back then, the connection between the circumstances of black people under apartheid, and those of Palestinians under occupation in the West Bank and Gaza, seemed obvious enough to me and to many other Jews in the South African liberation movement: Both were peoples harshly ruled over by a state that denied them the rights of citizenship.

Still, this was a first. I could recite the kiddush from memory, sing old kibbutznik anthems and curse in Yiddish. I had been called a "bloody Jew" many times, but never an anti-Semite or a self-hating Jew. What quickly became clear to me, though, was the purpose of that "self-hating" smear -- to marginalize Jews who dissent from Zionism, the nationalist ideology of Jewish statehood, in order to warn others off expressing similar views.

What I like about the S.H.I.T. list's approach to the job -- other than the "Dangerous Minds" theme music that plays as you read it -- is the way it embraces literally thousands of names, including many of my favorite Jews. Memo to the sages at Masada2000: If you're trying to paint dissenters as demented traitors, you really have to keep the numbers down. Instead, Masada2000's inadvertent message is: "Think critically about Israel and you'll join Woody Allen and a cast of thousands..."

A New Landscape of Jewish Dissent

The Kahanists are a fringe movement, but their self-defeating list may nonetheless be a metaphor for the coming crisis in more mainstream nationalist efforts to police Jewish identity. The Zionist establishment has had remarkable success over the past half-century in convincing others that Israel and its supporters speak for, and represent, "the Jews." The value to their cause of making Israel indistinguishable from Jews at large is that it becomes a lot easier to shield Israel from reproach. It suggests, in the most emphatic terms, that serious criticism of Israel amounts to criticism of Jews. More than a millennium of violent Christian persecution of Jews, culminating in the Holocaust, has made many in the West rightly sensitive towards any claims of anti-Semitism, a sensitivity many Zionists like to exploit to gain a carte blanche exemption from criticism for a state they claim to be the very personification of Jewishness.

So, despite Israel's ongoing dispossession and oppression of the Palestinians in the occupied territories, then-Harvard president Larry Summers evidently had no trouble saying, in 2002, that harsh criticisms of Israel are "anti-Semitic in their effect if not in their intent."

Robin Shepherd of the usually sensible British think-tank Chatham House has gone even further, arguing that comparing Israel with apartheid South Africa is "objective anti-Semitism."

Says Shepherd: "Of course one can criticize Israel, but there is a litmus test, and that is when the critics begin using constant key references to South Africa and the Nazis, using terms such as ‘bantustans.' None of these people, of course, will admit to being racist, but this kind of anti-Semitism is a much more sophisticated form of racism, and the kind of hate-filled rhetoric and imagery are on the same moral level as racism, so gross and distorted that they are defaming an entire people, since Israel is an essentially Jewish project."

I'd agree that the Nazi analogy is specious -- not only wrong but offensive in its intent, although not "racist". But the logic of suggesting it is "racist" to compare Israel to apartheid South Africa is simply bizarre. What if Israel objectively behaves like apartheid South Africa? What then?

Actually, Mr. Shepherd, I'd be more inclined to pin the racist label on anyone who conflates the world's 13 million Jews with a country in which 8.2 million of them -- almost two thirds -- have chosen not to live.

Although you wouldn't know it -- not if you followed Jewish life simply through the activities of such major Jewish communal bodies as the Conference of Presidents of American Jewish Organizations and the Anti-Defamation League -- the extent to which the eight million Jews of the Diaspora identify with Israel is increasingly open to question (much to the horror of the Zionist-oriented Jewish establishment). In a recent study funded by the Andrea and Charles Bronfman Philanthropies (an important donor to Jewish communal organizations), Professors Steven M. Cohen and Ari Y. Kelman revealed that their survey data had yielded some extraordinary findings: In order to measure the depth of attachment of American Jews to Israel, the researchers asked whether respondents would consider the destruction of the State of Israel a "personal tragedy." Less than half of those aged under 35 answered "yes" and only 54% percent of those aged 35-50 agreed (compared with 78% of those over 65). The study found that only 54% of those under 35 felt comfortable with the very idea of a Jewish state.

As groups such as the Jewish Agency in Israel (which aims to promote Jewish immigration) and the American Jewish committee expressed dismay over the findings, Cohen and Kelman had more bad news: They believed they were seeing a long-term trend that was unlikely to be reversed, as each generation of American Jews becomes even more integrated into the American mainstream than its parents and grandparents had been. The study, said Cohen, reflected "very significant shifts that have been occurring in what it means to be a Jew."

Cohen's and Kelman's startling figures alone underscore the absurdity of Shepherd's suggestion that to challenge Israel is to "defame an entire people." They also help frame the context for what I would call an emerging Jewish glasnost in which Jewish critics of Israel are increasingly willing to make themselves known. When I arrived in the United States 13 years ago, I was often surprised to find that people with whom I seemed to share a progressive, cosmopolitan worldview would suddenly morph into raging ultranationalists when the conversation turned to Israel. Back then, it would have seemed unthinkable for historian Tony Judt to advocate a binational state for Israelis and Palestinians or for Washington Post columnist Richard Cohen to write that "Israel itself is a mistake. It is an honest mistake, a well-intentioned mistake, a mistake for which no one is culpable, but the idea of creating a nation of European Jews in an area of Arab Muslims (and some Christians) has produced a century of warfare and terrorism of the sort we are seeing now." Unthinkable, too, was the angry renunciation of Zionism by Avrum Burg, former speaker of Israel's Knesset.

And, in those days, with the internet still in its infancy, the online Jewish dissident landscape that today ranges from groups in the Zionist peace camp like Tikkun, Americans for Peace Now, and the Israel Policy Forum, among others, to anti-Zionist Jews of the left such as Not in My Name and Jewish Voices for Peace, had not yet taken shape. Indeed, there was no Ha'aretz online English edition in which the reality of Israel was being candidly reported and debated in terms that would still be deemed heretical in much of the U.S. media.

Thirteen years ago, there certainly was no organization around like "Birthright Unplugged," which aims to subvert the "Taglit-Birthright Program," funded by Zionist groups and the government of Israel, that provides free trips to Israel for young Jewish Americans in order to encourage them to identify with the State. (The "Unplugged" version encourages young Jews from the U.S. to take the Birthright tour and its free air travel, and then stay on for a two-week program of visits to the West Bank, to Israeli human rights organizations, and to peace groups. The goal is to see another side of Israel, the side experienced by its victims -- and by Israelis who oppose the occupation of the West Bank.)

Clearly, much has changed, and the ability of the Zionist establishment -- the America Israel Political Action Committee, the American Jewish Committee, the Anti-Defamation League, and others -- to impose nationalist boundaries on Jewish identity is being eroded. It's worth remembering in this context that anti-Zionism was originally a Jewish movement -- the majority of European Jews before World War II rejected the Zionist movement and its calls for a mass migration from Europe to build a Jewish nation-state in Palestine. The most popular Jewish political organization in Europe had been the Yiddishe Arbeiter Bund, a Jewish socialist party that was militantly anti-Zionist. Even among the rabbis of Europe, there was considerable opposition to the idea of Jews taking control of Zion before the arrival of the Messiah (and there still is, of course, from a sizable minority of the ultra-Orthodox).

Of course, the Holocaust changed all that. For hundreds of thousands of survivors, a safe haven in Palestine became a historic necessity.

But the world has changed since then, and as the research cited above suggests, the trends clearly don't favor the Zionists. I was reared on the idea that a Jewish nation-state in the Middle East was the "manifest destiny" of the Jews. I learned in the Zionist movement that Jewish life in the Diaspora was inevitably stunted and ultimately doomed. But history may have decided otherwise. The majority of us have chosen to live elsewhere, thereby voting with our feet. Indeed, according to Israeli government figures, some 750,000 Israeli Jews (15% of Israel's Jewish population) are now living abroad, further undermining the Zionist premise that the Diaspora is an innately hostile and anti-Semitic place.

The Ferocity of Nationalism, The Universality of Justice

Increasingly anxious that most of us have no intention of going to Israel to boost Jewish numbers, the Israel-based Jewish Agency -- apparently oblivious to the irony of its own actions -- has complained to Germany over official policies that make life there so attractive to Jewish immigrants from former Soviet territories, thus discouraging them from going to Israel. More immediately threatening to the Zionist establishment, however, is another reality: Many Jews are beginning to make once unthinkable criticisms of Israel's behavior. If you want to bludgeon Jewish critics with the charge of "anti-Semitism" when they challenge Israel's actions, then it's hardly helpful to have other Jews standing up and expressing the same thoughts. It undermines the sense, treasured by Israel's most fervent advocates, that they represent a cast-iron consensus among American Jews in particular.

That much has been clear in the response to the publication of John Mearsheimer and Steven Walt's controversial new book The Israeli Lobby and U.S. Foreign Policy, which challenges the wisdom and morality of the unashamed and absolute bias in U.S. foreign policy towards Israel. In an exchange on the NPR show Fresh Air, Walt was at pains to stress, as in his book, that the Israel Lobby, as he sees it, is not a Jewish lobby, but rather an association of groupings with a right-wing political agenda often at odds with majority American-Jewish opinion.

Abe Foxman of the Anti-Defamation League, argued exactly the opposite: Walt and Mearsheimer, he claimed, were effectively promoting anti-Semitism, because the Israel lobby is nothing more (or less) than the collective will of the American Jewish community. Which, of course, it isn't. In fact, in the American Jewish community you can increasingly hear open echoes of Mearsheimer and Walt's skepticism over whether the lobby's efforts are good for Israel.

But Foxman's case is undercut by something far broader -- an emerging Jewish glasnost. Of course, like any break with a long-established nationalist consensus, the burgeoning of dissent has provoked a backlash. Norman Finkelstein -- the noted Holocaust scholar and fierce critic of Zionism recently hounded out of De Paul University in a campaign of vilification based precisely on the idea that fierce criticism of Israel is the equivalent of "hate speech" -- could be forgiven for being skeptical of the idea that the grip of the ultranationalists is weakening.

So, too, could Joel Kovel. After all, he found his important book Overcoming Zionism pulled by his American distributor, the University of Michigan Press, also on the "hate speech" charge. (This decision was later reversed, but it may have long-term consequences for the distributor's relationship with Kovel's publisher, the British imprint Pluto.)

Jimmy Carter -- who was called a "Holocaust denier" (yes, a Holocaust denier!) for using the apartheid analogy in his book on Israel -- and Mearsheimer and Walt might have reason for skepticism as well. But I'd argue that the renewed ferocity of recent attacks on those who have strayed from the nationalist straight and narrow has been a product of panic in the Jewish establishment -- a panic born of the fact that its losing its grip. As in the former Soviet Union with the actual glasnost moment, this is a process, once started, that's only likely to be accelerated by such witch-hunting.

Last year, a very cranky academic by the name of Alvin Rosenfeld, on behalf of the oldest Jewish advocacy group in the U.S., the American Jewish Committee, got a flurry of attention by warning that liberal Jews such as playwright Tony Kushner, Tony Judt and Richard Cohen, all of whom had recently offered fundamental criticisms of Israel, were giving comfort to a "new anti-Semitism."

"They're helping to make [anti-Semitic] views about the Jewish state respectable -- for example, that it's a Nazi-like state, comparable to South African apartheid; that it engages in ethnic cleansing and genocide. These charges are not true and can have the effect of delegitimizing Israel."

In reality, though, whether or not you agree with the views of those critics, they simply can't legitimately be called anti-Semitic. Actually, I doubt any of those he cited have accused Israel of genocide or compared it in any way to the Nazi state. (Former Israeli Knesset Speaker Avram Burg, however, recently did write, in reference to Israeli militarism and hostility to Arabs, "It is sometimes difficult for me to distinguish between the primeval National-Socialism and some national cultural doctrines of the here-and-now."). But the ethnic-cleansing in which the Israelis expelled 750,000 Palestinians in 1948 and the apartheid character of Israel's present occupation of the West Bank are objective realities. Rosenfeld is suggesting that, to take an honest look at either the occupation or the events of 1948, as so many Israeli writers, journalists, and politicians have done, is to "delegitimize" Israel and promote anti-Semitism.

Just last week, Danny Rubinstein, senior correspondent covering Palestinian affairs for the Israeli newspaper Haaretz, was slated to speak to the British Zionist Federation – and then, at the last minute, his speech was canceled. The reason? Rubinstein had pointed out that "today Israel is an apartheid state with different status for different communities." (While many liberal Jewish Americans can't bring themselves to accept the apartheid comparison, that's not true of their Israeli counterparts who actually know what's going on in the West Bank. Former education minister Shulamit Aloni, for example, or journalist Amira Hass use the comparison. (The comparison first occurred to me on a visit to Kibbutz Yizreel in 1978, when the elders of my Zionist youth movement, Habonim, who had emigrated from South Africa to Israel, warned that the settlement policy of the then-new Likud government was designed to prevent Israel letting go of the West Bank. The population there, they told us, would never be given the right to vote in Israel, and so the result would be, as they presciently put it, "an apartheid situation.")

Use of the term "apartheid" in reference to the occupation does draw the attention of those who prefer to look away from the fact that Israel is routinely engaged in behavior democratic society has deemed morally odious and unacceptable when it has occurred in other contexts. It is precisely because that fact makes them uncomfortable, I suspect, that they react so emotionally to the A-word. Take black South Africans who suffered under apartheid on a visit to the West Bank -- a mild-mannered moderate Nobel Peace Prize winner such as Bishop Desmond Tutu, for example -- ask them about the validity of the comparison, and you know the answer you're going to get.

Moreover, it's an answer with which a growing number of Jews, who place the universal, ethical and social justice traditions of their faith above those of narrow tribalism, are willing to deal.

In an earlier commentary, perhaps presaging his break with Zionism, Burg noted in 2002:

"Yes, we Israelis have revived the Hebrew language, created a marvelous theater and a strong national currency. Our Jewish minds are as sharp as ever. We are traded on the Nasdaq. But is this why we created a state? The Jewish people did not survive for two millennia in order to pioneer new weaponry, computer security programs or antimissile missiles. We were supposed to be a light unto the nations. In this we have failed. It turns out that the 2,000-year struggle for Jewish survival comes down to a state of settlements, run by an amoral clique of corrupt lawbreakers who are deaf both to their citizens and to their enemies. A state lacking justice cannot survive. More and more Israelis are coming to understand this as they ask their children where they expect to live in 25 years. Children who are honest admit, to their parents' shock, that they do not know."

Although I am not religious, I share Burg's view that universal justice is at the heart of the Jewish tradition.

Growing up in apartheid South Africa was an object lesson in Jewish ethics. Yes, there was plenty of anti-Semitism in the colonial white society of my childhood, but the mantle of victimhood belonged to others. And if you responded to the in-no-way-exclusively-so, but very Jewish impulse to seek justice, you found yourself working side by side not only with the remarkable number of Jews who filled leadership roles in the liberation movement, but also with Christians, Muslims, Hindus, and others.

Judaism's universal ethical calling can't really be answered if we live only among ourselves -- and Israel's own experience suggests it's essentially impossible to do so without doing injustice to others. Israel is only 59 years old, a brief moment in the sweep of Jewish history, and I'd argue that Judaism's survival depends instead on its ability to offer a sustaining moral and ethical anchor in a world where the concepts of nation and nationality are in decline (but the ferocity of nationalism may not be). Israel's relevance to Judaism's survival depends first and foremost on its ability, as Burg points out, to deliver justice, not only to its citizens, but to those it has hurt.

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Prophesy bearer for four religious traditions, revealer of Christ's Sword, revealer of Josephine bearing the Spirit of Christ, revealer of the identity of God, revealer of the Celestial Torah astro-theological code within the Bible. Celestial Torah Christian Theologian, Climax Civilization theorist and activist, Eco-Village Organizer, Master Psychedelic Artist, Inventor of the Next Big Thing in wearable tech, and always your Prophet-At-Large.