another beautiful iranian woman
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THE_Tetsuo — 19 years ago(January 27, 2007 01:05 AM)
"Jerusalem has been majority Jewish since the 1840's"
ROFLOL, sure it has; and Bush was behind 9/11 too!
Spare us your zionist propaganda and lies.
"This year I'm voting Republican. The Democrats left a bad taste in my mouth."
-Monica Lewinsky -
THE_Tetsuo — 19 years ago(January 29, 2007 10:08 AM)
http://tinyurl.com/yudt34
Oops! I guess you were caught in another lie. Learn how to speak proper English before trying to argue your "point" on here.
"This year I'm voting Republican. The Democrats left a bad taste in my mouth."
-Monica Lewinsky -
THE_Tetsuo — 19 years ago(January 31, 2007 10:33 AM)
Linking to Jewish propaganda sites does not count as proof. It just means that you only know how to reiterate a lie. Come up with some census statistics and I'll believe you. Otherwise, all you're doing is arguing for the sake of arguing.
But I'll beat you one step further. One lie perpetuated by zionists is that there has never been a "Palestinian state." They're partly right. There had never been a sovereign state on that land before 1947. So of course you'll lie about it being "majority Jewish" for thousands of years!
But here's the weak point in your logic: if you zionists think that Arabs are such "evil animals," then Jews never would have been able to maintain a majority on such holy sites as the Al-Aqsa Temple Mount w/o getting along with the Arabs. So either you people decided to get greedy when Israel was formed, or there never was a Jewish majority there to begin with. I don't doubt that there was always a Jewish presence there; but to call it a majority is ridiculous; otherwise you would have always had a homeland there for thousands of years and there never would have been a need for the creation of Israel.
Besides, you forgot about a little event known as the Diaspora.
"This year I'm voting Republican. The Democrats left a bad taste in my mouth."
-Monica Lewinsky -
THE_Tetsuo — 19 years ago(February 01, 2007 09:05 AM)
"Is English your first language?"
This coming from an Israeli! It's typical for you people to deflect attention from your own illiteracy by accusing opponents of being illiterate.
"I never once ever called Arabs "evil animals" you imbecile and even further you freaking moron,"
LOL, see what I mean? It's hard to take you seriously when you constantly prove yourself to be a hypocrite.
"I am not Jewish and I am not a Christian either."
Sure you're not. And even if that's the case, then I wonder what your native language is, because it's clearly not English.
The rest of your drivel is easily dismissed. No matter what, you're never going to admit you're wrong because you keep changing your argument every post. The idea that Jews were a majority in a holy city like Jerusalem (which is a weak argument, at best) doesn't translate into Jews forming a whole country controlling several holy cities in the land. And if you only want to look back to the 1840's, then keep in mind that there was no Jewish state going back to the that time before 1947.
Try to grow up too. There's no need for childish name-calling just because you look foolish. You can pretend to be objective, but you're the one who injected this zionish propaganda into a thread that didn't call for it.
"This year I'm voting Republican. The Democrats left a bad taste in my mouth."
-Monica Lewinsky -
THE_Tetsuo — 19 years ago(February 03, 2007 09:00 PM)
"An Israeli? I have never been to Israel in my life. I have never spoken to an Israeli in person in my life."
Sure you haven't! That's why you jumped into a thread about an actress spouting off all kinds of nonsensical zionist propaganda and have become more and more vitriolic when you've been exposed for being a shallow-minded troll.
Face it: you were caught and instead of just admitting this, you behave more and more like an idiot hoping to get the last word in, as if it somehow validates the garbage you pass off as an argument.
"This year I'm voting Republican. The Democrats left a bad taste in my mouth."
-Monica Lewinsky -
LammysSecret — 18 years ago(March 10, 2008 07:33 PM)
Just because I was born in the states, it doesn't make me any less Cuban or Brazilian.. like it doesn't make Sarah and less Iranian. She is proud of who she is and where she came from. and she should be.. the Iranian culture is a rich and beautiful one.
Another example. all the people born in the states who claim to be Irish or Italian.. they are proud of their heritage nothing more nothing less.
Besides. American is such a broad term.. anyone living in the Western hemisphere is "American". -
sensationofeuphoria — 18 years ago(March 12, 2008 09:36 PM)
No, you're wrong. Sarah Shahi is not Iranian, since she is not from Iran, her father is, not her; Sarah Shahi is from the United States of America. My sister was born here in the USA to Brazilian parents, and she is never labeled as Brazilian by either I, herself, or our parents, my sister is simply an American. Now, you can call Sarah Shahi an Iranian American and a Spanish American, since she is an American with Iranian and Spanish ancestry, but to call her an Iranian would be incorrect and ignorant. Funny thing is that the majority of all the people hailing from the Americas have foreign ancestry. I was born in Brazil to a Brazilian mother of Portuguese descent and a Brazilian father of African, Portuguese, Italian, and Andalusian descent, so just because I have African, Portuguese, Italian, and Andalusian ancestry, does not mean that I can claim those titles. My ethnic background is more Portuguese than anything else, but I am in no means a Portuguese person, since Portuguese people must be born in Portugal. LammysSecret, you are not Cuban or Brazilian, you are an American, and if you want to acknowledge your ancestry, then you may call yourself a Cuban American or Brazilian Ame111crican, but Cuban and Brazilian, you are not. You can be proud of your heritage, but you also need to acknowledge your nationality. I am proud of my African heritage, but I don't ignore my Brazilian nationality. Brazilians are even more ethnically diverse than Americans. Sarah Shahi never called herself an Iranian nor a Spaniard, so we should never refer to her as such. If you want to refer to her by also acknowledging her ancestry at the same time, then refer to her as an Iranian American and a Spanish American.