Isaac Naot
500 posts


@Cornishpasty3 @slickalsal79 @DrEliDavid Eg. Israel pulled out at 2005. Blockade was imposed at 2007 post Hamas violent coup slaughtering Fatah opponents.
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@TheNitzik @slickalsal79 @DrEliDavid There was a "temporary" blockade of Gaza from the moment Israel pulled out its settlements. The blockade was made permanent in 2007. Israel never gave anything like full autonomy.
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@Cornishpasty3 @slickalsal79 @DrEliDavid Factually wrong. The blockade was not imposed and the borders were not closed until Hamas was elected and proceeded to target innocents.
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@agelender "I am Jewish but I am also anti Jewish." There were alot like you cooperating with the Nazis in WW2
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Number of Palestinians killed each day since Israel's invasion:
Day 1: 198
Day 2: 58
Day 3: 180
Day 4: 329
Day 5: 290
Day 6: 148
Day 7: 506
Day 8: 506
Day 9: 235
Day 10: 358
Day 11: 198
Day 12: 472
Day 13: 307
Day 14: 352
Day 15: 248
Day 16: 266
Day 17: 436
Day 18: 704
Day 19: 755
Day 20: 482
Day 21: 298
Day 22: 377
Day 23: 302
Day 24: 301
Day 25: 219
Day 26: 280
Day 27: 256
Day 28: 196
Day 29: 231
Day 30: 282
Day 31: 230
Day 32: 328
Day 33: 241
Day 34: 249
Day 35: 260
Day 36: 51
Day 37: 51
Day 38: 60
Day 39: 80
Day 40: 180
Day 41: 500
Day 42: NA
Day 43: 300
Day 44: 700
Day 45: 300
Day 46: 828
Day 47: 404
Day 48: 322
Day 49: 146
Day 50: NA
Day 51: NA
Day 52: NA
Day 53: NA
Day 54: NA
Day 55: NA
Day 56: 110
Day 57: 97
Day 58: 316
Day 59: 376
Day 60: 349
Day 61: 579
Day 62: 350
Day 63: 310
Day 64: 213
Day 65: 297
Day 66: 208
Day 67: 207
Day 68: 196
Day 69: 179
Day 70: 13
Day 71: 217
Day 72: 218
Day 73: 218
Day 74: 214
Day 75: 130
Day 76: 130
Day 77: 130
Day 78: 201
Day 79: 166
Day 80: 250
Day 81: 241
Day 82: 195
Day 83: 210
Day 84: 187
Day 85: 165
Day 86: 150
Day 87: 156
Day 88: 207
Day 89: 128
Day 90: 125
Day 91: 162
Day 92: 122
Day 93: 113
Day 94: 249
Day 95: 126
Day 96: 147
Day 97: 112
Day 98: 239
Day 99: 135
Day 100: 125
Day 101: 132
Day 102: 185
Day 103: 163
Day 104: 172
Day 105: 142
Day 106: 165
Day 107: 178
Day 108: 190
Day 109: 195
Day 110: 210
Day 111: 200
Day 112: 183
Day 113: 174
Day 114: 165
Day 115: 215
Day 116: 114
Day 117: 150
Day 118: 118
Day 119: 112
Day 120: 107
Day 121: 127
Day 122: 113
Day 123: 107
Day 124: 123
Day 125: 130
Day 126: 107
Day 127 (Feb 10, 2024): 117
Total : 28,064
Source: Gaza Ministry of Health
Those are Humans not Numbers !!
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@dahrinoor2 I wonder if because Greece would control their border with Turkey, Albania, and the rest... does that make these countries open-air prisons? Theoretically, if the UK bothered controlling their border that would make Ireland and the rest of Europe an open-air prison!
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@Azhar_ARahman @dahrinoor2 You mean to say Israel controls its border like every nation and puts security measures against a hostile entity that targets their civilians!? Please say you jest!
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Isaac Naot retweetledi

I can prove to you in one word that the alleged “Pro-Palestinian” protests worldwide are:
At best, anti-Israel based on ignorance;
At worst, wildly antisemitic and/or hatefully anti-Israel; and
The one thing they are NOT is “pro-Palestinian.”
That word?
Yarmouk.
Yarmouk was, only ~12 years ago, the Syrian city with the world’s largest Palestinian community. At least ~160,000 Palestinians lived there.
Once Syrian dictator and butcher Bashar al-#Assad got his grimy hands on Yarmouk, it wasn’t long before journalists were calling the city “the worst place on earth.”
Why? Several reasons; and I’ll tell you those reasons along with the world’s reaction to them. Then, you decide what that means.
On Dec 16, 2012, the Syrian air force bombed Yarmouk killing at least “dozens” of civilians (the real number may never be known). The streets of #NewYork, #LosAngeles, #Chicago, #Toronto, #London, #Paris, #Rome, #Dublin, etc.? All quiet.
Tens of thousands of Palestinians fled Yarmouk & were displaced without anywhere to go & without knowing if/when they may ever return.
For the Palestinians who stayed in Yarmouk, they could not possibly have imagined the #dystopian hellscape that awaited them over the next six+ years.
First, Assad enforced a brutal and complete one-year-long #siege on Yarmouk. He then continued that siege, only with a few exceptions, for another 5-6 years after that.
Were the streets of the world filled with protestors?
No.
There was no electricity in Yarmouk for a year, and very little electrictiy for the next five years.
No protests.
There was no piped water whatsoever in Yarmouk for a year, and very little drinkable water for the next five years.
No protests.
There was no access to or very minimal access to any food for a year & very little food for the next five years.
No protests.
Medical supplies were next to zero, as Assad did not want to risk them ending up in the hands of opposition fighters hiding in Yarmouk - Palestinian civilians be damned.
Even worse - after the initial fleeing of tens of thousands, the remaining Palestinians of Yarmouk were not allowed to leave the city - Assad made them stay there.
So, in the largest Palestinian city in Syria, Palestinian civilians were indiscriminately slaughtered, tens of thousands fled, and then Assad laid total siege to the remaining tens of thousands of Palestinians during which men, women, children, the elderly, the infirm, & babies were all forced to stay in Yarmouk without electricity, without water, with minimal access to food, and with little to no access to any medication or first aid of any kind.
And there were no #protests.
The number of Palestinians who died of malnutrition and the number of Palestinian women & their babies who died in childbirth during the siege is unknown to this day.
There was no worldwide outcry.
There was no push for real numbers of the dead and the suffering.
There were no protests.
There was near total silence.
Much has been made about the humanitarian corridors & humanitarian aide that Israel has allowed to flow into Gaza despite Hamas terrorists using the corridors to escape, and despite well over 50% of that aide being stolen by Hamas.
Well, in Syria, Assad refused to provide a humanitarian corridor; and he refused to allow humanitarian relief into Yarmouk.
The streets of the world?
Silent.
One Palestinian woman in Yarmouk described the scene:
“You couldn’t buy bread. At the worst point a kilo of rice cost 12,000 Syrian pounds (£41), now it is 800 pounds (£2.75) compared to 100 Syrian pounds (34p) in central Damascus. It was 900 pounds (£3.10) for a kilo of tomatoes … we used to eat wild plants. We picked and cooked them. In every family there was hepatitis because of a lack of sugar. The water was dirty. People had fevers. Your joints and bones felt stiff. My middle daughter had brucellosis and there was no medication.”
Silence. Deafening silence.
So many Palestinians in Yarmouk were dying from malnutrition that Yarmouk’s largest #mosque gave a religious decree (fatwa) that permitted the consumption of dogs, cats, and donkeys.
Shocking silence.
In 2014, testing on a random sample of Palestinians in Yarmouk showed 40% had typhoid.
Silence.
All 28 of Yarmouk’s schools were shuttered.
Silence.
Even after the initial total siege ended, the water supply was not restored. The city’s water pipes were damaged in fighting in September 2014 - leading to ~four more years during which Yarmouk’s Palestinians had to drink untreated groundwater.
Where were the protestors?
During and after the complete siege, Assad began a campaign of particularly heavy indiscriminate bombing of Yarmouk that saw civilians, including children on playgrounds, blown up. How many? We can say “thousands,” but we will probably never know how many for sure.
The world? Silent.
A #UN official anonymously admitted about Yarmouk, “Conditions are far worse than #Gaza … Palestinians always had dignity, hope, resilience. Now after four years of war I see people giving up. They find it hard to accept there are no options.”
Even the virulently anti-Israel commentator, #Mehdi Hasan, who recently lost his job for being too viciously anti-Israel even for #MSNBC (!) admitted in April of 2015:
“Let’s be honest: how different, how vocal and passionate, would our reaction be if the people besieging Yarmouk were wearing the uniforms of the IDF?”
By that point in time, Yarmouk was widely called the city with the “worst humanitarian crisis” since World War II.
But the streets of the world were not filled with protestors. There was barely a peep.
Meanwhile, many of the long-suffering Palestinians of Yarmouk started obtaining desperately needed medical assistance from what many may consider an unlikely source: Israel.
Starting in June 2016, the #IDF launched “Operation Good Neighbor” to help civilians in #Syria.
At first, #Syrians who could make it across the border were transported to #Israeli hospitals, and later Israel opened a field hospital close to the border since so many civilians started seeking Israel’s help.
One Palestinian from Yarmouk feared enough for her son’s life to seek help from “enemy” #doctors in Israel. When her son was treated with care and humanity and nursed back to health, she told journalists, anonymously for her own safety back home, “I used to see Israel as an occupying power, but not anymore. My whole opinion of Israel has changed.”
In total, Israel treated at least between 5,000-10,000 wounded and often starving civilians who crossed the border from Syria.
Israel even started a donation drive & collected supplies like toys, crayons, games, & candies for suffering children; and Israel got those donations across the border quietly, along with government-donated dire necessities like food, fuel, clothing, & baby care.
How many stood up to praise Israel for its humanity?
Very, very few. And outside the #Jewish world, almost none.
The worst of the dire situation in Yarmouk went on for more than six years.
In April of 2018, Yarmouk was being bombed twice every 90 seconds. By the end of that month, Al Jazeera estimated at least 60% of Yarmouk had been completely destroyed & an unknown number of Palestinian families were trapped under the rubble.
By May of 2018, journalists simplified it: “Yarmouk is gone” (see photo below).
How many pro-Palestinian protests in how many cities do you recall in April and May of 2018?
How many protests do you recall for the entirety of those six years from 2012-2018?
Sadly, for those innocent #Palestinian civilians who lived under the yoke of #dictatorship - whether #Assad or Hamas - their outrageously inhumane plight was almost entirely ignored by a disinterested world.
Yet, how many streets of how many cities across the world were already filled with protestors during the first days and weeks after the Hamas #October7Massacre of more than 1,200 #Israelis?
The streets worldwide were filled even before Israel had begun its counter-offensive to rescue the more than 240 hostages taken by #Hamas and to bring Hamas #terrorists to justice and forever end Hamas’ ability to make war on Israel.
What more evidence could anyone need?
The worldwide protests are all about being anti-Israel and/or #antisemitic.
They certainly are not about saving any Palestinians.
Sadly, when the #Palestinians have needed the world to save them from other #Arabs, nobody marched.
Only when #Jews are involved - that’s when the venom, the hate, the motivation, and the organization to protest and intimidate comes out.
#Education #Israel #Palestine

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@a_noble_woman @DrEliDavid Considering that many Palestinians align with Hitler's vision, Nazism, their leaders in the past actually allied with them, and numerous of Mein Kampf copies were found in the strip, I'd throw that prediction right back at your face.
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@DrEliDavid Just keep the same energy when Israel is charged with genocide and Zionism is equated with Nazism.
What sweet nanny goat, run belly.
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Isaac Naot retweetledi

@AvivaKlompas .The hostages were *literally* held in "cvillian" homes. I'm thinking if you're holding hostages kidnapped from their homes violently, then you're no longer a civilian you're just another terrorist.
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@Israel_katz @UN @antonioguterres @FranceskAlbs Israel has always treated the UN with the utmost disdain. There is absolutely no reason why the UN should “regain its credibility” in the eyes of a vicious, unhinged, genocidal Zionist regime.
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Isaac Naot retweetledi

The time for Jewish silence is past. For the @UN to regain its credibility, its leadership @antonioguterres must unequivocally renounce the anti-Semitic statements made by their "Special Envoy" @FranceskAlbs and remove her from her position immediately. Barring her entry to Israel will serve as a stark reminder of the atrocities committed by Hamas, including the ruthless targeting of innocents.
Amichai Stein@AmichaiStein1
#BREAKING: UN's @franceskalbs, United Nations Special Rapporteur on the Palestinian Territories, will not be allowed to enter Israel or the Palestinian territories after recent comment - Israel's foreign minister @Israel_katz and interior minister Moshe Arbel announce
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@Israel_katz @UN @antonioguterres @FranceskAlbs No, it’s time for people like you to shut up and quit screaming antisemitism, start obeying international law, quit killing innocent civilians and start telling the truth.
Is that such a tall list??
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@Hind_Gaza Clearly, it seems this graffiti is 100% right judging by the state of the Palestinians and the people who perpetuate their crisis like you.
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@moee_mfx You wouldn't know what truth is if it hit you in the face. Shame that is, mate.
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@gman_1888 Israel is not committing a genocide. Hamas is trying to maximize civilian casualties to recruit useful idiots like you while Israel is doing absolutely everything it can to avoid them while protecting their own civilians as is their duty.
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Isaac Naot retweetledi

Hi @UNLazzarini 👋
Hamas' entire data center in the tunnel is powered by your electricity (photo shows power cables in @UNRWA server room going down to the tunnel).
Are you sure you “didn't know”? 🤡

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