"Louis Theroux spends time with a small and very committed subculture of ultra-nationalist Jewish settlers. He discovers a group of people who consider it their religious and political obligation to populate some of the most sensitive and disputed areas of the West Bank, especially those with a spiritual significance dating back to the Bible.
Throughout his journey, Louis gets close to the people most involved with driving the extreme end of the Jewish settler movement - finding them warm, friendly, humorous, and deeply troubling."
A few thoughts.
- It's funny that LT is (on the record) not jewish, yet several people in the comments presume he is. A mistake one would be forgiven for making, I think.
- Strange that the BBC would run documentaries like this. Until a few years ago the MO was to not talk about zionism at all, in case people happened to notice. Now I get the impression the game has changed, perhaps in line with Albert K...ahem, Pike's 'Grand' plan for WW3. Incite the arabs against the zionists.
- The Christian-Zionists (35 mins)...oh boy. What a brainwashed bunch of people. Do they know what their masters really think of them? Matthew 27:25.
- Interesting that in the same part of the video, we see Talmudic rules being observed. While seeing that segment with the kosher wine, keep in mind the horror evoked by reminding people of 'seperate water fountains' in America - compare and contrast. I had read this, but it's a lot more real to see it being observed. Unbelieveable, willing slaves picking grapes they then aren't 'clean' enough to touch.
- Perhaps you could view the new media line, against 'extremist' settlers, as a kind of 'damage limitation' by the Israeli govt, to deflect responsibility. Like, oh it's a few wild extremists who are trouble making, what can we do. The Israeli govt along with Hamas keep the violence going. Most wars are rackets, this one being no exception. The "globalists" sit atop the hate. Any ideology whose aim is to disenfranchise and 'cleanse' out 'other' humans, you usually find the Masonic hand behind it.
AdamS I noted a shift in the GGT, which is the one that counts, reportage when it comes to RCE/TA over 5 years ago. I think that J Bowen got a permission slip to start it. Why a deliberate change in tak that has been slowly ramped up since?
ReplyDeleteDunno, but the amount of folks legging it to Patagonia, just like they cleared out of Europe in the 1930s and before that in the 1900s tells us that someone expects a large body count north of Equador/Sudan/Thailand again I guess.
BTW did you notice that during the screaming and yelling in Egypt the antiquities got stolen, just like Bagdad?
Oh f' me you're right...ha!
ReplyDelete"LONDON (Reuters) – International museums are on high alert for looted Egyptian artifacts and some archaeologists have even offered to fly to the country to help safeguard its ancient treasures, museums said Wednesday.
Egypt has been rocked by an unprecedented nine days of demonstrations against President Hosni Mubarak's 30-year-rule, and fears are high for the country's priceless heritage after looters broke into the Egyptian Museum in Cairo last week.
The specter of the fall of Baghdad in 2003 looms large in the minds of Egyptologists, when thousands millennia-old artifacts were stolen or smashed by looters in the chaos following the fall of Saddam Hussein.
"The situation during the fall of Baghdad is the worst case scenario, but we think that's not going to happen because there is such a movement to protect the antiquities," said Karen Exell, chairwoman of Britain's Egypt Exploration Society and curator of the Egypt collection at the Manchester Museum."
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20110202/sc_nm/us_britain_egypt_antiquities