Tuesday, November 28, 2017

Genocidal Anti-Semites Attack Israel, and Seek to Destroy Her

Re-posted by Nicholas Stix

“Jewish human rights groups.”

Anytime I see the phrase “human rights groups,” Jewish or otherwise, I reach for my gun with one hand, and my wallet with the other. That’s because the phrase has become a political code for racial socialists.

They’re protecting 40,000 African grifters. But it’s not about 40,000. With these mopes, it never is.

Their mission is to simultaneously get rich, while committing genocide against every Western country.

“Israel’s failure to follow the Jewish imperative to protect and care for the gerim—the landless sojourners who seek refuge among us—is a far greater threat to the Jewish character of the state than is the community of African migrants and asylum seekers who have escaped forced military service, torture and crimes against humanity in Eritrea and Sudan and sought safe haven in Israel,” Rabbi Michael Lezak, co-chairman of T’ruah, a human rights group, told Newsweek.”
I’m no Torah scholar or Talmudist but you don’t have to be to know that Judaism is not a suicide pact.

“Rabbi” Michael Lezak is yet another of the legions of Marxist sophists. Lezak’s little game is to set up a logic in which, whatever the Jewish state does, it must perish. If it defends itself from invasion by gentiles, and Moslem blacks at that, it somehow morally perish. If it embraces them, it will be physically annihilated.

And why is “forced military service” a horror? “Torture and crimes against humanity”? Please do tell. And why did he forget to play the mass rape card? “Rabbi” Lezak isn’t even trying very hard.

And what is it with these “Eritreans”? Until 1993, they were all Ethiopians. But for years, they demanded independence from Ethiopia in their own county, Eritrea. But as soon as they got their own country, they sought to trade up for Western saps, and fled.

And why would any civilized country want Sudanese?

“Rabbi” Lezak doesn’t discuss any of this. He’s used to crybullying people with sanctimony.

HIAS once cared about Jews, but has clearly gone over to the dark side.
“A Jewish humanitarian nonprofit organization that provides assistance to refugees.”

As Ann Coulter wrote in Adios, America, 95% of “refugees” are frauds, and the other 5% just haven’t been caught yet.

“Humanitarian” is another one of those masks that sanctimonious evildoers wear.

Amnestying the first 40,000 grifters would lead to them sending for jihad wives, and then each having 6-12 kids. So, now you’ve got about 400,000 stone aged black African Jihadi bums, sucking the Jews of Israel dry. What do you do then? Demand that the Jews take in another 100,000 African jihadis (plus wives plus eight kids each).

The sub-Saharan black Africans would join with the Arab Moslem Israelis to run the Jews into the sea.

The problem isn’t innumeracy; the problem is genocidal evil.

The “humanitarians” denounce Bibi Netanyahu not in spite of his patriotism, but because of it.
 

Jewish Groups Denounce Israel’s Plans to Deport 40,000 African Asylum Seekers
By Carlos Ballesteros
11/24/17 at 10:42 A.M.
Newsweek

Jewish human rights groups are denouncing Israel’s plans to deport almost 40,000 African asylum seekers, defending refugees whom Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu calls “infiltrators.”

On Sunday, Netanyahu’s 28-member executive cabinet voted unanimously to close the Holot detention center and give African asylum seekers three months to leave the country or face deportation to an undisclosed country. If they refuse to go, they will be imprisoned indefinitely. The proposal will now be considered by the Israeli legislature, where it is expected to pass.

“The infiltrators will have the option to be imprisoned or leave the country,” Israel’s Ministry of Public Security said in a statement. Officials also said that the mass deportations are meant “to protect the Jewish and democratic character” of Israel.

But opponents reject the deportations as a violation of Israel’s founding principles.

“Israel’s failure to follow the Jewish imperative to protect and care for the gerim—the landless sojourners who seek refuge among us—is a far greater threat to the Jewish character of the state than is the community of African migrants and asylum seekers who have escaped forced military service, torture and crimes against humanity in Eritrea and Sudan and sought safe haven in Israel,” Rabbi Michael Lezak, co-chairman of T’ruah, a human rights group, told Newsweek.

African asylum seekers, mostly from Eritrea, take part in a protest against Israel’s deportation policy in front of the Israeli Knesset in Jerusalem, on January 26. On Sunday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s 28-member executive cabinet voted unanimously to close Israel’s Holot detention center and give African asylum seekers three months to leave the country or face deportation to an undisclosed country.

The Israeli government says that there are 38,043 African migrants living in the country, most of them hailing from war-torn countries such as Eritrea and South Sudan, having illegally crossed the Israeli border between 2007 and 2012.

Some Israelis argue that African asylum seekers have worsened living conditions in Tel Aviv and other communities in southern Israel.

“This is the right policy to ease the suffering of residents in South Tel Aviv and other neighborhoods where the infiltrators reside,” Interior Minister Aryeh Deri, who initiated the deportation proposal, said on Sunday, according to Voice of America. “My duty is to return peace and quiet to South Tel Aviv and many neighborhoods across the country.”

Netanyahu has even promised that he will “return South Tel Aviv to the citizens of Israel,” claiming that the African migrants “are not refugees, but infiltrators looking for work.”

But human rights advocates say the migrants deserve a fair hearing.

“Without that, they should not be removed, regardless of what the situation is in Tel Aviv,” Melanie Nezer, senior vice president for public affairs at HIAS, a Jewish humanitarian nonprofit organization that provides assistance to refugees, told Newsweek.

Nezer argued that as a signatory to the U.N.’s 1951 Refugee Convention, Israel is both legally and morally obligated to protect refugees and other persons in need of international protection.

“The Refugee Convention came about after the Holocaust because the international community wanted to make sure that something like it never happened again,” Nezer said. “As the first signatory to the convention, Israel has a responsibility to uphold its standards.”

Nezer also noted that Israel should remember its own history, as the nation was founded as a refuge for Jews who had escaped the horrors of World War II and built on the premise “Never again.”

“Israel needs to do right by these African asylum seekers,” she said.

The U.N. High Council for Human Rights (UNHCR) has also criticized the move, saying that Israel should be more forthright and transparent about its relocation plans.

“Due to the secrecy surrounding this policy and the lack of transparency concerning its implementation, it has been very difficult for UNHCR to follow up and systematically monitor the situation of people relocated to these African countries,” the organization said in a statement. “UNHCR, however, is concerned that these persons have not found adequate safety or a durable solution to their plight and that many have subsequently attempted dangerous onward movements within Africa or to Europe.”

Furthermore, Israel has restricted the freedom of asylum seekers through a series of policies aimed at encouraging self-departure, a UNHCR official said on Sunday, according to Al-Jazeera.
 


Teklit Michael, 29, an asylum seeker from Eritrea, works in the kitchen of a restaurant in Tel Aviv, Israel, on June 25, 2017.
 

Critics say that Israel’s acceptance rate of asylum seekers from these nations is considerably lower than that of most developed countries; according to the United Nations High Commission for Human Rights, Israel has recognized only eight Eritrean and two Sudanese asylum seekers as refugees since 2009. And, according to Al-Jazeera, “Two hundred Sudanese refugees from the Darfur region were also granted humanitarian status.”

Israel reportedly has agreements with Rwanda and Uganda to take in the asylum seekers that Israel wants to deport and that Israel pays up to $5,000 for each deportee taken in by the third parties.

Israel and its partner governments say that it plans to give asylum seekers the basic necessities to start their new lives in a new country.

But a 2014 investigation by Haaretz found that asylum seekers who “voluntarily departed” Israel for Rwanda “arrived in the country with no status, no permits and no path to livelihood.” Furthermore, “some were directed from Rwanda to Uganda with no warning and no infrastructure in place.”

The Sunday vote comes after an Israeli High Court upheld the country’s controversial practice of deporting undocumented migrants to an unnamed third country without their consent in August.

As noted by The Times of Israel, deportations to a third country are rare in the Western world. Only two other countries—Italy and Australia—have attempted to deport migrants and asylum seekers to third countries, but local courts in both countries shot down the move because it was found to be in violation of the 1951 Refugee Convention.

2 comments:

Glaivester said...

I think you need a better term to describe these groups. Auto-antisemites?

Anonymous said...

Give the "migrants" some money to make them comfortable in their own land and make them leave. Then seal the borders [mostly done already] so no more can return. Sounds fair.

South Philly, south side of Chicago, the Deep South, South Tel Aviv. Always south.