
By Paul Zanetti
I can only assume these genocidal demonstrators around the world are uninformed, ignorant fools, dancing to the tunes of Islamic puppeteers, because it’s unimaginable anyone would willingly support the rape, murder and extermination of women, children, infirmed elderly and anyone else based on religious or racial heritage.
The Palestinian people voted for Hamas as its leadership.
The Hamas Charter, (Article 7) concludes with these words:
“The Day of Judgment will not come until Muslims fight the Jews, when the Jew will hide behind stones and trees. The stones and trees will say, ‘O Muslim, O servant of God, there is a Jew behind me, come and kill him.'”
These words are more than 1400 years old, drawn directly from founding texts of Islam (Hadith).
This is why, after the October 7 slaughter of Jews by Hamas, we witnessed a lynch mob of blood thirsty Muslims gathered at the steps of our beautiful iconic Opera House, burning the Israeli flag, shouting “Gas The Jews, gas the Jews!”
The Jews are the most persecuted people in history. Yet they have survived, almost miraculously, by their courage, by their ingenuity, by their education, and now by the necessity to invest in their superior military systems and personnel. Israel is an island, the only true democracy, surrounded by a sea of Islamic enemies whose purpose each minute of every day, is to wipe Israel from the face of the earth.
We are also witnessing the rise of global fascism that would make Hitler proud.
Genocidal fascists are embedded in our universities and colleges, in our unions, in our parliament and in the media. They support the extermination of Jews.
They shout “From the River to the sea, Palestine must be free…”
This is no innocent call for “freedom”. This is a call to exterminate Israel (The Jews), as instructed by Islamic commands. A call for ‘freedom’ need not include the words, “From the river to the sea…” except when it calls for the genocide of a race.
The phrase was originally formulated by the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), now adopted by the proscribed terrorist organisation, Hamas which has claimed the slogan in their rejection of Israel stating, “Hamas rejects any alternative to the full and complete liberation of Palestine, from the river to the sea,” This is stated in the Hamas 2017 constitution.
England’s home secretary, Suella Braverman, tweeted after recent UK protests – in which thousands chanted “from the river to the sea, Palestine will be free” – that the slogan was “widely understood as a demand for the destruction of Israel”. She added: “Attempts to pretend otherwise are disingenuous.”
In 1966, the Syrian leader Hafez al-Assad, the father of the country’s current dictator, said: “We shall only accept war and the restoration of the usurped land … to oust you, aggressors, and throw you into the sea for good.”
You cannot support Palestine’s code for a call for ‘freedom’ without also supporting the extermination of the most persecuted people on earth.
When you support extermination of the Jews, you are no better than the fascist Adolf Hitler.
Do these protestors own a mirror?
The following opinion article was published in this weekend’s The Australian, written by Gemma Tognini.
WARNING: The first paragraph is difficult to comprehend if you have a heart, but will be dismissed or excused by the fascist supporters of genocide.
CRISIS OF COURAGE IN THE FACE OF UNSPEAKABLE HAMAS BARBARISM.
By Gemma Tognini
The Australian
November 4, 2023
A family of four. Two young children, a boy and a girl, six and eight years old. They sat at their breakfast table and were made to watch as their father had his eyes gouged out in front of them. Then someone cut off their mother’s breast. The same savages turned then to the little girl, the eight-year-old, and cut off her foot before turning to her little brother. Just six years old. They sliced the fingers from his hand. Only then was this family killed. After their execution, the Hamas terrorists sat down and helped themselves to a meal.
I’m willing to bet some of you couldn’t finish reading those words. Maybe you skimmed over them; reading them was too much.
It’s understandable. Who wants to believe something so barbaric, so inhuman, could be real? Who wants to chance these words taking shape and lodging themselves in the imagination?
To you I’d say, go back. Read it again. Let the words break your heart as they did mine. Face the truth of what happened, feel the devastating weight of it. This isn’t the time for sanitising facts or avoiding them to preserve some falsely constructed idea of comfort.
I feel as if we are caught in a moment. Suspended, like a bracing breath held in fear of what’s next. The movement of a hand on a clock, in painful, drawn-out slow motion.
This thought, this imagery, has been fluttering around my head and my heart all week, like a butterfly hovering to and fro looking for a place to land.
I felt this way days before I watched the testimony of barbarism, recounted by US Secretary of State Antony Blinken to the US congress and to the world, the words of which I transcribed above. All week I’ve been wrestling with the sense that we are living in a significant moment in history.
Does it feel like that to you? Because it does to me.
Seventy-five years after we promised the Jewish world never again, on Monday the Israeli ambassador to the UN wore a Star of David on his jacket while addressing the Security Council with fire in his belly and truth on his tongue. The same weak-kneed, complicit and hypocritical UN that last May appointed Iran to chair this week’s Human Rights Council Social Forum.
We are witnessing the most sickening outbreak of anti-Semitism around the globe in generations. A flight from Israel lands in the Russian republic of Dagestan and is overrun by savages “looking for the Jews”, and not to offer them post-flight refreshments either. Looking to murder them simply for being Jewish.
Throughout Europe, the homes of Jews are being marked with a Star of David. Australia has become known for chants of “Gas the Jews” and burning Israeli flags, a violent scene set against a stunning night-time view of the Sydney Opera House.
When one of the more than 230 hostages being held by Hamas in Gaza was rescued by the Israel Security Agency, known as Shin Bet, large sections of the hard-left media instead reported that she had been surrendered by the terrorists. A blatant lie, just one of many.
It has been an instructive, terrible, fraught, critical month since October 7. Illuminating, in the sense that so many have declared their hand via sins of omission and commission.
I’d never have believed the level of anti-Semitism I’ve witnessed in Australia this past month. I’d never have believed there’d come a day when we had to remind people of how the Holocaust happened. I always wondered how. Now we know.
Spending the past week working from London has brought me closer in a geographical sense to the conflict. This has naturally framed certain things through a different lens. But the temporary distance from home has likewise brought a different perspective that has led me to conclude one thing: We are facing a crisis of courage.
Something about this past month, the terrible events of October 7 and the response of large parts of the Western world have shaken me. In fact, it’s not just about what happened on October 7 that has brought me to this conclusion; rather, the response to it from many in Australia’s political, academic and cultural elite.
And perhaps, in a perverse way, the response to it is a reflection of our own culpability. All of a sudden, a phrase such as “Free Palestine” is being used to justify the most horrific things.
A crisis of courage. Courage to stand. Courage to adjust course. Courage to count the cost of truth and, in one of the great Australian colloquialisms, the courage to call bullshit on a wide range of things we know not to be true but, for whatever reasons, have been tolerated. Things like the bitter, deceptive lies that underpin identity politics in all its forms. That all we have is identity, that the colour of our skin or our sexuality matters more than a person’s character. That we have no agency. That resilience doesn’t matter. A culture that celebrates, honours and even venerates victimhood in all its forms.
Has our tolerance of such self-indulgent folly, over time, at least in part created a culture of moral weakness? Has it led us down a path towards this moment we seem horribly unprepared to face?
The West hasn’t faced a serious threat since 9/11. I don’t recall anyone calling for restraint then. Have we already forgotten? It could be argued that we have forgotten our history, our story, become lazy.
Focused on consensus at all costs. Favoured the road most travelled. Avoiding conflict. Avoiding those things that might require courage.
That savages who would deliberately mutilate parents in front of their children, before dismembering the kids while they’re still alive, deserve to be hunted down and wiped out should be the ultimate unity ticket. It shouldn’t be open to question.
Yet here we are. There’s truth to the saying that a crisis doesn’t create character, it reveals it. This crisis continues to be a mirror to many and the moment we’re facing must be met with courage lest it pass unchallenged.
Gemma Tognini
The Australian