Do antysemitów

IP: *.chl.asp.gda.pl 30.03.01, 23:34
Każdy inteligentny człowiek (celowo nie precyzuję
narodowości) wie , że jakiekolwiek uprzedzenia rasowe,
wyznaniowe to odruch bezwarunkowy występujący u osób
zakompleksionych i ograniczonych...Smutno mi kiedy
czytam te pełne nienawiści teksty.
Żal mi was, szczególnie gdy wyobrażę sobie wasze
małe ,zaciśnięte piąstki,którymi wygrażacie wszystkim
dookoła...
Pamiętajcie tylko,że Żydzi (obecni w Polsce od ponad
700 lat) mogą być także waszymi przodkami...
aleksandra r.
    • Gość: RAF Re: Do Aleksandra IP: *.atr.bydgoszcz.pl 30.03.01, 23:53
      Nie wszyscy są zakompleksieni ,a patriotyzm to szlachetna cecha!!!
      I nie uważam, że przyznawanie się do swojej narodowości to przejaw kretynizmu.
      Właśnie każdy myślący człowiek będzie bronił swojej naci i będzie dumny ze
      swojego pochodzenia.
      Tylko tchórz boi się powiedzieć kim jest ,a prawidłowo myślący człowiek nigdy
      nie wyrzeknie się swoich korzeni.
      Brak poczucia przynależności to przejaw demoralizacji.
    • Gość: RAF Re: Do antysemitów IP: *.atr.bydgoszcz.pl 30.03.01, 23:55
      Jeszcze jedno zdanie.
      Poczucie przynalezności to na pewno nie antysemityzm!!!!!!!!
    • Gość: Irek Re: Do antysemitów IP: 152.163.213.* 31.03.01, 02:50

      Gość portalu: alex napisał(a):

      > Każdy inteligentny człowiek (celowo nie precyzuję
      > narodowości) wie , że jakiekolwiek uprzedzenia rasowe,
      > wyznaniowe to odruch bezwarunkowy występujący u osób
      > zakompleksionych i ograniczonych...

      Czy to oznacza ze Zydzi sa zakompleksienie i
      ograniczeni umyslowo ? W Izraelu precyzowanie
      narodowosci obywateli jest ustawowo obowiazujace
      i kazdy musi miec to wpisane w dowodzie tozsamosci.
      Jak Kali krasc krowy to dobrze, ale jak Kalemu
      ukrasc krowe to antysemityzm. Oto jeden z setek
      przykladow ograniczenia Zydow, prosto z izraelskiej
      gazety:


      http://www3.haaretz.co.il/eng/scripts/article.asp?id=45779&mador=4
      Wednesday, May 5, 1999

      Discrimination and denial

      By Amira Hass

      There are no Palestinians except for Yasser Arafat, Sheikh Yassin and, sometimes, Faisal Husseini. There are no dates beyond
      May 4.This is the sum and substance of public debate in Hebrew-speaking Israel on the eve of elections. When no news items
      force themselves into the Israeli public's consciousness, these are the standard limits within which Jewish Israelis view the
      Palestinian question. These limits are so narrow that they can best be described as "denial."

      About 3.5 million Arabs live today west of the Jordan in what was once British Mandate Palestine. This is their homeland; and
      it's the homeland of another 3 million Palestinian refugees who live in neighboring countries and elsewhere in the world.

      Blood-soaked historical circumstances, from World War II to the War of Independence and the Palestinian "nakba," have
      made the Jews the majority population but have not erased Palestinian ties to this land. Consistent Jewish Israeli policies,
      crossing party lines, aim at maintaining this demographic edge and, if possible, increasing it.

      According to this policy's clear but undeclared parameters, the Palestinian population consists of three subgroups, identifiable by
      the varying discriminatory regimes imposed upon them.

      The three subgroups are: Arab Israeli citizens, Palestinians who are "permanent residents" of Jerusalem, and Palestinians living in
      self-administered enclaves (which both One Israel and Meretz strangely term a "state"). The present context does not allow a
      detailed description of the categories or their history; suffice it to say that the basis of their classification has always been land.

      The principal common denominator in discrimination against the three groups is ownership rights to, access to and use of land
      resources. In Nazareth and Jaffa, Hebron and Khan Yunis, Jabal Mukkaber and Anata, and other Arab communities, a policy
      of evicting Arabs and confiscating private Arab land in favor of Jews, forbidding use of public lands and employing
      discriminatory practices in infrastructure development has created a uniform landscape of overcrowding and suffocation and has
      accelerated the conversion of agricultural land into construction sites.

      Together with restrictive economic legislation, this policy has produced a vast reservoir of cheap labor discriminated against in
      job opportunities, pay and working conditions. Yet Israeli Jews have the right and opportunity to live and work wherever they
      want in this land - on either side of the Green Line.

      Various laws and regulations make it easy to cancel the residency rights of Palestinians, revoke their citizenship, and deny
      citizenship and residence to their spouses. East Jerusalem's annexation forced that area's Palestinian inhabitants to become
      "permanent residents" deprived of basic rights. In 1995, prior to the interim agreement's implementation on the West Bank, the
      government authorized the Interior Ministry to revoke this imposed status (which, from the start, ignored these native
      Jerusalemites' natural rights) if the individual in question worked overseas or had been forced to seek housing outside
      Jerusalem's boundaries.

      Until the Palestinian Authority's establishment, various military regulations caused tens of thousands of Palestinians to forfeit their
      residency status on the West Bank and in Gaza. Israel continues to prevent them and their families from returning to their homes.
      In contrast, Jews can come here from anywhere in the world, be granted citizenship immediately and live anywhere they wish on
      either side of the Green Line.

      Over the past eight years, Israel has consolidated and, with ever-increasing rigor, enforced a policy of denying freedom of
      movement to 2.5 million Palestinians on the West Bank and in Gaza. Limits have been imposed on their private lives, family
      relations, and economic, cultural and religious activities as well as on the effective functioning of the PA's institutions and of
      non-governmental Palestinian agencies. Palestinian individuals and institutions are completely dependent on movement permits
      issued by the Israeli military authorities. Only 100,000 Palestinians possess these permits. In contrast, Israeli Jews have
      unrestricted freedom of movement on either side of the Green Line, except for administrative entry limitations on PA-controlled
      areas in Gaza.

      The morality and survival of any regime of structured discrimination is a gamble in the long run. But does that point interest
      anyone driven by short-term considerations
    • Gość: Gienio O czym ty dziewcze? IP: *.246.104.33.NewYork1.Level3.net 31.03.01, 07:04
      Uprzedzenia to efekt warunkowy. Nabyte moga byc w wyniku doswiadczen lub
      indoktrynacji.
      W zadnym wypadku nie jest to "odruch bezwarunkowy występujący u osób
      zakompleksionych i ograniczonych."
      Oczywiscie nie sa rzecza, ktora inteligentny czlowiek powinien sie cechowac.

      Mylisz jednak krytyke Izraela, judaizmu i szowinizmu zydowskiego z
      antysemityzmem. Nie sa to uprzedzenia, a krytyka.
      Semici to glownie Arabowie (ktorzy nota bene nie lubia Zydow). A Zydzi to
      bardzo niewielka czesc tej rasy.

      Inteligentny czlowiek powinien przemyslec swoje wypowiedzi. Propagandowe hasla
      pasuja do fanatykow.
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