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News & Analysis.


SOCIAL MEDIA MODERATORS should wear black hoods

5/15/2019

Comments

 
The moderators (censors) of Quora pulled a post of mine regarding the atrocities committed by the Zionists at the founding of Israel.
 
I am able to open my post at the below URL. Perhaps because I am the author? Or perhaps because they forgot to delete it? (Let us know if you can open it).
 
https://www.quora.com/Why-is-the-official-history-of-Israel-as-presented-by-Israeli-government-highly-distorted-to-say-the-least-compared-to-what-actually-happened/answer/Vince-Dhimos?__nsrc__=4&__snid3__=4440847037
 
Like all social media moderators (ie, censors), when Quora pulls a post, they never tell the author why they did so. Typically, if the author asks why, social media moderators will send the author a list of the rules and regulations. Usually, there is no rule that the author can see that he has violated. That’s like a judge in a criminal court sentencing a defendant but failing to tell the accused what he is charged with and instead, handing the accused a pile of law-books and saying “see for yourself.”
 
Below is the post that was pulled. Let me know if you can guess why the moderators didn’t like this post.
 
I also lost my Twitter account months ago after posting about how the IDF shoots unarmed Palestinian demonstrators. It would appear that the topic of Israel and Zionism is the most highly censored of all topics in the Land of the Free. At the same time, it is the topic concerning the most aggrieved victims group on the planet. But Israel enjoys unswerving support of US Evangelicals (and also many Catholics) and their president. Neither US pastors nor the Trump administration even so much as acknowledge the existence of these ongoing atrocities. And that is, or course, why they continue unabated with no mercy shown to the victims. The real culprit is US cultists who think they are Christians.
 
But injustice is a distortion, and distortions naturally seek a resolution – just as a coil spring that is compressed will fly into the air when the pressure is released. It’s only a matter of time.
 
Here is an article on the censoring of Israeli atrocities in the founding of Israel: https://www.zochrot.org/en/educationUnit2/all
 
MY CENSORED POST
 
Why is the official history of Israel as presented by Israeli government highly distorted, to say the least, compared to what actually happened?
 
https://www.zochrot.org/en/educationUnit2/all
 
Vince Dhimos, Editor-in-Chief at New Silk Strategies (2016-present)
 
Your answer to this question has been deleted by Quora Moderation.
 
I think this question deserves an explanation more than an answer. Israel’s true history — the story of the Nakba — is so well hidden that I suspect very few are aware of the tragic atrocities against the Palestinians.
 
I had written about this in Spanish at Quora. Respuesta de Vince Dhimos a ¿Tiene derecho a existir el Estado de Israel? ¿Por qué o por qué no?)
 
Here is a redacted translation of that answer:
 
The issue of whether Israel has the right to exist is generally falsely and slyly framed as the question of its right to be a nation-state.
 
Therefore, people who discuss this issue always present it as a nationality problem, but that is almost irrelevant in the real human rights context, which is invariably ignored. Specifically, what is ignored is the cold-blooded murder of human beings by the Zionist terrorist gangs, whose lives are portrayed as less than those of an animal. The rationale for this heartless view of the Palestinians is that they are Muslims and are therefore the enemy of civilization. This view dominates US right-wing politics today and is held unquestioningly among most Americans who consider themselves conservative Christians.
 
This is the main reason the Arabs’ right to life is ignored by Western commentators.
 
Meanwhile, the Zionists slyly remind us that Palestine is not a distinct identity and that the Palestinians have never had a nation of their own, but that Israel had been a nation millennia ago. Therefore, if supposedly follows that the Arabs who had occupied Palestine for millennia prior to the arrival of the Zionists from Europe and elsewhere simply had to go. Immediately. Because they were trespassers on land that they mistakenly thought was theirs. And the methods used to expel them were, of course, unimportant. This Zionist mentality, fully supported by the majority of US Evangelicals, set the stage for the gruesome murder of thousands of the people unfortunate enough to have been born in the territory claimed by the Zionists and their allies in Britain and the US in the decades leading up to the UN declaration of Israel as a state.
 
But the issue that is never raised is whether they are humans with the right to life, and that issue is cunningly masked by the argument purely concerning nationhood. And, of course, in the US, the issue is dominated by a very large population of Evangelicals, who consider themselves “Christian” Zionists. These folks make up the largest voting bloc in the US and have managed to capture the current president who grovels more submissively to Israel than any other president in US history, and is now flirting with a big war against Iran, just to please Israel. I have detailed the problem of this dangerous cult and its fatally flawed reading of the scriptures here:
 
Vince on Quora: Why does the US show unwavering support for Israel and not Palestine?
 
The important question regarding Israel – the one that is ignored by all parties involved – is: did the Arabs who were living in Palestine at the beginning of the 20th century have the right to live? Or did the Zionists have the right to kill them? In this context, the question of their right to be a nation fades into the background. But it is very important if the Arabs had the right to live or if they had the right to stay in the land where they lived when the Zionists and the British came and forced them to leave at gun point. This puts the anger of the Palestinians in a different light.
 
Since the question mentions "rights," the important thing is the way the Zionists forced the Arabs to leave. Here is a description of how they respected the "rights" of the Arabs who lived in this area:
 
El horror del terrorismo judío
 
Prologue of the book "Violence and terror of the Zionists, before and after the State of Israel", Editorial Canaan
 
"The horror of Jewish terrorism ..." Golda Meir
 
On 9 April, 69 years will have passed since the entry of the hordes of Zionist Khazars in Palestine and of the massacres and crimes against humanity committed against the Palestinian populations. There were no war crimes because there was no war. These were undoubtedly imprescriptible crimes against humanity that still await justice and condemnation of their perpetrators: Menahem Begin and Yitzhak Shamir and their murderous gangs.
 
The great Colombian writer Gabriel García Márquez, in a memorable letter, awarded Menahem Begin and his general Arik Sharon with the "Nobel Prize for Death," for their responsibility in the massacres in the Palestinian neighbourhoods of Sabra and Shatila, in the Lebanese capital Beirut in 1982. [Remembering Sabra And Shatila Massacre]
 
Dr. Teresa Aranguren, [2] in an enlightening book, recounts the events that took place, and I want to extract from her book only a few moving paragraphs:
 
"On April 9, 1948, the armed groups Irgun and Stern (whose leaders included two future prime ministers of Israel, Menahem Begin and Yitzhak Shamir) carried out the massacre of the inhabitants of Deir Yassin. [Testimonies from the censored Deir Yassin massacre: 'They piled bodies and burned them' Testimonies From the Censored Deir Yassin Massacre: 'They Piled Bodies and Burned Them'
 
A young fellow tied to a tree and set on fire. A woman and an old man shot in back. Girls lined up against a wall and shot with a submachine gun. The testimonies collected by filmmaker Neta Shoshani about the massacre in Deir Yassin are difficult to process even 70 years after the fact]
 
The delegate of the Red Cross in the area, Jacques de Reynier, was the first person to arrive at the place while the Irgun militias were still present: "Among the troops there were some very young people, almost adolescents, all in military clothing and helmets, men and women armed to the teeth with pistols, machine guns, grenades and also big knives, most of them still bloodied. A very beautiful young woman showed me her blood still dripping like a trophy [from her knife]...
 
I made my way between them and entered a house. The first room was dark with everything in disarray but nobody could be seen. In the next room I found, under the furniture and the busted mattresses, several corpses aIready cold.
 
The cleansing operation had been done first with machine guns, then with grenades and finally with the long knives, without any worries that it would be discovered. The same scene we found in the next room but as I was about to leave I heard what I thought was a sigh.
 
I removed the corpses until I touched a small foot that was still warm. She was a ten-year-old girl, badly injured by a grenade but still alive. I picked her up and one of the officers tried to block me at the door, I pushed him and left with my precious body ...
 
We check the other houses and in all of them we find the same spooky scene. We only found two other people alive, two women, one of them an old woman huddled in the kitchen, she had been hiding there for hours ...
 
The village had four hundred inhabitants, some fifty managed to flee, three had survived, the rest had been thoroughly massacred, following the orders of their chiefs as they are admirably disciplined troops ... "[3]
 
Jacques de Reynier gives the figure of 347 dead in the killing of Deir Yassin; other sources speak of 250. In any case, it is not about the number of victims – because in those months of 1948 there were similar massacres in many other villages of Palestine – but about the echo that the killing had, the panic movement it provoked, which made Deir Yassin one of the keys to the exodus of the Palestinian peasants.
 
[In my debates with Israelis and Zionits at Quora, I keep encountering the argument that the Arabs left of their own free will and that the Zionists are not responsible for this. They never mention these massacres, of course. Vince]
 
In fact it became one of the elements of the military strategy to achieve the "spontaneous" evacuation of the Arab population of rural Palestine. A pattern that was repeated with assiduity was to surround the villages and broadcast through speakers a messages to its inhabitants: Leave the village or you will get the Deir Yassin treatment.
 
Below is a link to a video that will help you understand how the first Zionists got their "rights" to the land (it’s in English with Spanish subs):
 
Al Nakba: premiado documental de Al-Jazeera subtitulado al español
 
In view of the above, it seems that when the Israelis say they have a right to this land, what they really mean is that the Arabs have no rights, not even the right to life, and that the Israelis have the right to kill them with impunity.
 
Then let's forget about the question you asked at Quora, and ask the important question:
 
If the Israelis have a right to this land, does this not imply that the Arabs have no right, not even the right to live?
 
​END TRANSLATION
 
The really chilling part of this is that an Israeli lady commented at the site that the Zionists had every right to commit these atrocities because of things that these Palestinians and the Arab community had done to the Jews. I could hardly believe anyone could defend these atrocities against unarmed men, women and children! The arguments she used were the same ones I had heard many times before from Isrealis, many of whom are thoroughly brainwashed by their government.
 
In my response to her I said that despite the excuses given by German anti-Semites, I had always argued in defense of the Jews who were killed by Hitler, saying there was no excuse for what Hitler did.
 
And I asked her: Do you think I was wrong?
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