Moderator: Community Team
I didn't realize Beck had been canned. Who's paying for his antics now?Beck, who was deemed too extreme even for Fox television after 400 advertisers pulled their commercials from his show earlier this year, had come to Jerusalem to "restore courage" to the Jewish state and salute Israelis as "people who stand against the entire tide of global opinion". "The world is burning," he said. "Whatever we've grown to think is solid and strong and durable is under siege. The threats are mounting. The evil is growing. Darkness is falling."
Chariot of Fire wrote:As for GreecePwns.....yeah, what? A massive debt. Get a job you slacker.
Viceroy wrote:[The Biblical creation story] was written in a time when there was no way to confirm this fact and is in fact a statement of the facts.

He has long claimed to be a friend of Israel. Many Israelis are not so sure they want that kind of friend. Others are happy to have almost any allieSymmetry wrote:Tea Party bombs in Jerusalem
Anyone else following this?
Where will they take their ideas next? Which other international capitals will see a Tea Party bomb?
I heard about this vaguely. I'm not sure it's a Tea Party thing so much as a Glenn Beck thing, although I think Beck has also self-identified as a Tea Partier.Symmetry wrote:Tea Party bombs in Jerusalem
Anyone else following this?
Where will they take their ideas next? Which other international capitals will see a Tea Party bomb?
thegreekdog wrote:I heard about this vaguely. I'm not sure it's a Tea Party thing so much as a Glenn Beck thing, although I think Beck has also self-identified as a Tea Partier.Symmetry wrote:Tea Party bombs in Jerusalem
Anyone else following this?
Where will they take their ideas next? Which other international capitals will see a Tea Party bomb?
If you value your intelligence and sanity, I would urge you not to pay attention to Glenn Beck.
Strife wrote:I hereby state Martin Ronne has inappropriately touched me. I would like to file charges against this sick bastard and expect he be sent to prison.
I see, a guy is an absolute jerk pretty much bashing anyone who disagrees with him, and that some people don't like him is evidence of prejudice against conservatives>Night Strike wrote:If Beck is the dangerous one, why is that the people around him receive death threats just for being associated with him and/or Israel??
http://www.theblaze.com/stories/beck-re ... o-threats/
The three groups that it's ok in this P.C. world to bash and threaten: conservatives, Christians, and Jews.
Because it is. It's conservatives who are bigoted, racist, or homophobic (just pick the appropriate word for the situation). If comments like how Herman Cain is an Uncle Tom were said about a black liberal, the person who said that would be excoriated. But it's ok to make those comments about a black conservative. Christians are constantly being called bigoted and intolerant for disagreeing with things like whether or not women should be pastors, yet the fact that Islam requires their women to be covered from head to toe is completely ignored. The things still today said about Jews is just downright vile. People think it's ok to wipe the Jews off the map. And as was seen with Beck's event in Israel, people will be threatened or even killed if they chose to even state that Jews have a right to exist. Yet Israel still gets condemned for trying to defend themselves instead of condemning the people who are trying to wipe them out.PLAYER57832 wrote:OH.. and those "bashing" him above were Jews, so not sure how you get that its "OK" to bash conservatives, Christians and Jews.
http://www.foxnews.com/world/2011/08/26 ... z1WCI1QMqfTEHRAN, Iran – The Iranian president said on Friday there will be no room for Israel in the region after the formation of a Palestinian state, and that once the state is established, the liberation of all Palestinian lands should follow.
The comments by Mahmoud Ahmadinejad reflected his typical anti-Israeli rhetoric, which has drawn international condemnation since he first said in 2005 that Israel should be "wiped off the map."
Ahmadinejad spoke at a Tehran ceremony following nationwide pro-Palestinian rallies marking Quds Day. Quds is the Arabic word for Jerusalem. The annual demonstration is an occasion for Iranian officials to show off their support for Palestinians and condemn archenemy Israel.
The remarks come as the Palestinians are pushing this year to achieve recognition at the United Nations during the General Assembly meeting in September. The statehood bid comes amid stalled Israeli-Palestinian peace negotiations and although the U.N. vote in New York will be largely symbolic, the Palestinians believe it will send a powerful message to Israel.
"Do not assume you will be boosted with a (U.N.) recognition of a Palestinian state," Ahmadinejad said, addressing Israel. "There is no room for you in the region."
"Recognition of a Palestinian state is the first step in the liberation of the entire Palestine," he added.
Since the 1979 Islamic revolution that brought hardline Islamists to power in Tehran, Iran's leadership has been hostile to Israel, backing anti-Israel groups like the Palestinian Hamas and Lebanon's Hezbollah.
Ahmadinejad also urged the West to stop supporting Israel.
"You (the West) and the Zionist regime will have no base in the Middle East," he warned, and dismissed the West's support for a two-state solution as a tactic meant "to save" Israel.
Reiterating his anti-Holocaust rhetoric, Ahmadinejad also said Israel was created on lies and added, "the Zionist regime is the axis of unity among all thieves and criminals of the world."
He also called on rival Palestinian factions Fatah and Hamas to form as strong, unified state and not "consider it sufficient to have minor and weak governments in a small area."
In 2007, the militant Hamas took control of the Gaza Strip, leaving Fatah only in control of the West Bank.
Iran faces increased pressure from the West over its controversial nuclear program that Israel, the United States and others contend is intended for nuclear weapons making. Tehran denies the charge, insisting the program is for peaceful purposes only, such as generating power.
Tens of thousands attended the Quds Day rally in Tehran. State TV said millions of Iranians participated in the rallies in cities and towns across Iran.