1:Israel – 1984

Big Brother is watching you!

Netanyahu warns West, allies in Arab world they'll be 'next’ target of ...

This post is parody – and art! For sure it is – High Literature!

The biggest mistake in the history of the Jews, was to put these Dark-eyed Warriors for Israel in front of the cameras after the hideous attack by Hamas, in order to show how ruthless Israel will be on Hamas. These ghouls were like Nazis at the Nuremberg Trials – risen from the dead! I was bowled over. There black pitted eyes were glaring at Hamas leaders in their underground lairs – and not the world as a whole – who were on the side of the Jews! What’s going wrong? Anti-Semitism is breaking out all over!

What I saw week after week was the worst, and most amateur Propaganda Campaign – ever launched! Right away it was designed to answer the question – Is Israel committing War Crimes! Idiots! No one was considering that – until Netanyahu’s War College circled the wagons around this idea. What is the Master Plan?

CNN broadcast Netanyahu’s sloppy declaration of The Right to Bomb Non-Stop – with a continuous bombing scene alongside him. Then we heard from a guy with a British accent. Mark Regev caused George Orwell to roll over in his grave. He is Big Brother’s Warrior in Chief. See his bio below, and understand Americans know NOTHING about Israel. NOTHING! These people do not live in the Modern World. What kind of world – do they live in? Were’ talking bout nine million people – the population of New York.

What amazed me was to see the flares descend over a town in Gaza. I was amazed how it looked like the Star of Bethlehem – which I just posted on! To declare Oct. 7th. was BIGGER than 911 – was a huge mistake – along with the American bombs over Nazi Germany – going astray!

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maccabi_Hatzair

P.S. I took a break and saw Regev on MSNBC trying to explain there are Safe Haven for the citizens of Gaza – but they have to start footing it down south – and become refugees;

“My father was a refugee!”

So, this makes it right to keep bombing all of Gaza while parents are on the road – south! Regen is blaming Hamas for the death of Palestinians. If they would just march out of their tunnels into a open place, and allow Israel’s air force – to destroy them, then thousands of children will not die. One of the reasons people hate the Jews, is they think they can outsmart everyone using their big brains. We see Jesus up against The Smart Ones. If the Gaza had their own bombers, than they would be bombing Tel Aviv to rubble! We saw this in World War Two. The allied and Nazis sent wave after wave of bombers over each other cities – while the Jews were in concentration camps. How many citizens lost their lives due to this terrorizing bombing – that both sides called – WAR CRIMES?

What I suspect the plan is, to reduce Northern Gaza, to rubble, than tell the Palestinians to march North, and live in the rubble, while they level Southern Gaza! Then they will call upon Europe to come rescue the people – they champion – because they are Anti-Semitic. Europe did not take the Jews in at the end of World War Two. This will be – REVENGE upon Gentile members of NATO!

Hail Big Brother Israel! We own an – extra right to exist – thanks to Hitler!”

And, so it goes. This is why I am all for the New Israel in South Dakota.

I declare this war – Biblical Warfare – and will label the new Bible, thus…2:Israel – 1984.

John Presco

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strategic_bombing_during_World_War_II

Play both videos at the same time.

https://tubitv.com/movies/300443/1984

Mark Regev (Hebrew: מארק רגב; born 1960) is an Israeli diplomat, government advisor and civil servant.[1] Between June 2020 and April 2021, he served as the Prime Minister‘s Senior Advisor for Foreign Affairs and International Communications. From 2016 to 2020 Regev was Ambassador of Israel to the United Kingdom. Previously, he was the International Spokesperson for the Prime Minister’s Office (2007 to 2016).

Early life[edit]

Regev was born Mark Freiberg in Melbourne, where he was raised, in VictoriaAustralia, in 1960 to Martin and Freda Freiberg, two German Jews.[2][3] He was educated at Mount Scopus Memorial College, a Jewish day school in Melbourne.[4] He received his bachelor’s degree in political science and history at the University of Melbourne, and master’s degrees in political science from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, and in management from Boston University.[5][better source needed]

In his youth, Freiberg was a prominent member of the Socialist Zionist youth movement Ichud Habonim and was active in the Melbourne University Jewish Students Society.[6] In 1982, he emigrated to Israel and worked at kibbutz Tel Katzir.[6] In Israel, he Hebraicized his surname from Freiberg to Regev.[6] He served as a combat soldier in the Nahal Brigade of the Israel Defense Forces (IDF).[7]

Career[edit]

Regev at an International Holocaust Remembrance Day event at the Foreign & Commonwealth Office in London on January 23, 2019.

Regev began his career as a lecturer on international relations and strategy at the Israel Defense Forces Staff College.[5] He joined Israel’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs in 1990, serving as deputy chief of mission at the Consulate General in Hong Kong, and spokesman at the Israeli Embassy in Beijing.[8][better source needed]

Regev has received both prominence and criticism in international media when he has presented the Israeli position in interviews to English language TV[9] and radio channels[10] during the 2006 Lebanon War, the 2008–09 Gaza War, the 2012 Operation Pillar of Defense, the 2014 Israel–Gaza conflict and Operation Brother’s Keeper, and the 2021 Operation Guardian of the Walls.

As ambassador, Regev was involved in interfaith activities. He hosted an iftar dinner at his residence for members of Britain’s Muslim leadership.[7]

He is also the chair of the Abba Eban Institute for Diplomacy and Foreign Relations at Reichman University.[11][non-primary source needed]

Zionist youth movement (Hebrew: תנועות הנוער היהודיות הציוניות tnuot hanoar hayehudiot hatsioniot) is an organization formed for Jewish children and adolescents for educational, social, and ideological development, including a belief in Jewish nationalism as represented in the State of Israel. Youth leaders in modern youth movements use informal education approaches to educate toward the movement’s ideological goals.

History[edit]

Most Zionist youth movements were established in Eastern Europe in the early twentieth century, desiring the national revival of the Jewish people in their own homeland, and soon formed an active and integral part of the Zionist movement. All emphasised aliyah (emigration to the Land of Israel) and community, with many also focussing on a return to nature.

Blau-Weiss is considered by some[citation needed] to have been the first Zionist youth movement. Established in Germany in 1912, its youth leaders were inspired by the culture of outings and hikes prevalent in the German youth movement. Adopting an official Zionist platform in 1922, the movement stressed an agricultural way of life, leading many of its members to the Kibbutz movement in Mandatory Palestine.

With the upsurge in European nationalism and anti-Semitismpogroms in Eastern Europe and the barring of Jewish members from German youth groups incubated the Zionist national consciousness of the Jewish youth, appealing to their idealism.

Youth movements played a considerable role in politics, Jewish education, community organisation and Zionism, particularly between the two world wars. Within Europe, they were the nucleus of the Jewish resistance movements in the ghettos and camps of the Holocaust, and the partisans. They also led the escape (Beriha) from Europe following the war, particularly to Palestine, where most surviving members settled. According to the International School for Holocaust Studies, the stated aim was bringing Jews to Palestine, out of a sense of Zionism. Some also saw immigration to Palestine as a first step towards the survivors’ recuperation and return to normal life.

Many of Eastern Europe’s movements established themselves as worldwide organisations, although these were less influential. Alumni in Palestine organised their movements there from the 1920s, with an emphasis on pioneering and personal fulfillment (hagshama atzmit). There they strengthened the settlement organisations, particularly building the Kibbutz movement and most affiliated with or established Israel‘s political parties.

After Israel’s establishment in 1948, some of the movements’ roles, such as education, were taken on by the State. With the growth and development of the country, movements’ aims have been adjusted, despite a lesser public interest in the pioneering ideals of earlier Zionism.

In the Jewish diaspora, the nature of Zionist youth movements has varied in time and place. During periods when the general Zionist movement has been strong, such as that preceding the Six-Day War, movements have been particularly active. As well as acting towards Zionist causes, the movements have been seen as an important Jewish education and socialisation when it has not been otherwise available. Hence, with the development of stronger community structures, youth movements have often played a lesser role. Many youths, particularly in the large Jewish population of North America, have opted for Jewish social groups without ideological pursuits.

Educational methods[edit]

Youth movements employ informal education methods to educate an ideology to their members. This is often achieved through regular meetings that socialise participants within their groups, as well as camps. Particularly on camps, but in all interactions movements create a counter-culture that produces a particular social environment where members can express themselves freely, although with an underlying focus towards the movement’s ideology. Recently, there have been suggestion that youth movement counter-culture is waning, and needs to be revived.[1]

Activities and camps are essentially peer-led, usually by youth leaders who are often a few years older than the participants. Because of this, a friendly relationship is created between leaders and participants that encourages leadership by personal example (dugma ishit), whereby a leader’s method of education is by being a moral, active and ideological member of the movement themself.

Historical movements[edit]

  • Avukah:[2] Founded 1925 by Rabbi Phineas Smoller[3]
  • Betar: The initials of Brit Yosef Trumpeldor, was established in 1923 in Riga, Latvia. The youth arm of the Revisionist Zionists and later the Herut party. Its ideology included territorial ambitions, establishment of a just society, anti-socialist sentiments, and military training for pioneers.[4]
  • Blau-Weiss: Established in Germany in 1912. Emphasized agricultural labor and kibbutz settlement. Disbanded in 1929.[4]
  • Bnei Akiva Religious Zionist movement founded in 1929 with a philosophy of Torah Va’Avodah.[5]
  • Dror: Founded in Russia before the First World War. Emphasized socialist ideology and Jewish self-defense. In 1925 joined with Poalei Zion. In 1938 merged with Hehalutz Hatza’ir.[5]
  • Ezra (Hebrew עזרא):[6] Founded in Germany in 1919 and had some original affiliation with Agudat Israel party.[6]
  • Gordonia: 1925–1951. Associated with Labour Zionism and its namesake A. D. Gordon. Founded in Poland, and active in Palestine from 1937. Idealized manual labor, mutual aid and human values. After helping to establish the United Kibbutz Movement, it merged with other youth movements.
  • Habonim: Founded in London in 1930 and affiliated with Zionist Labor Movement.[7][circular reference] In 1958 it was the largest youth Zionist movement with 20,000 members. Its members established many kibbutzim. Merged with Hanoar Ha’oved in 1959.
  • Hanoar Ha’oved: Established in 1926 by the Histadrut, the General Federation of Jewish Labor.[8][circular reference] It emphasized active participation in a working society. Merged with Hnoar Ha’oved in 1959 to establish Hanoar Ha’oved Vehalomed and Hanoar Hadati Ha’oved Vehalomed.
  • HaNoar HaTzioni: Founded in 1926 by Yitzhak Steiger and established in 1931. The movement contains six kibbutzim in Israel and is formally against teaching young children to believe in a certain political way (like most youth movements at the time). Children are taught to argue and form their own opinion even if that opinion is contrary to the groups opinion. All thoughts are welcome except for extreme ones. Yitzhak Steiger had this idea after leaving the marxist movement Hashomer Hatzair.
  • Haoved Hadati: Founded in Poland in the 1930s by national religious scouts. The Vilna branch was called “Torah Va’Avodah”.[9] Later established in the United States with groups in New York, Chicago, Cleveland, and other cities. There was a Hachshara in New Jersey, and a Camp Moshava The Vilna group was established in 1922.[9]
  • Hashomer Hatzair: (Hebrew: הַשׁוֹמֵר הַצָעִיר, IPA: [haʃoˈmeʁ hatsaˈʔiʁ], The Young Guard) a Labor Zionist, secular Jewish youth movement founded in 1913 in the Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria, Austria-Hungary
  • Hatzofim (Hebrew Scouts Federation)
  • Hehalutz: First meeting held in Moscow in 1919. Ideology was strongly influenced by Joseph Trumpeldor. In 1935 membership reached 100,000.
  • Maccabi Hatzair: Founded in Germany in 1926. In 1933 the youth group was a strong basis for the World Maccabi Organization, which was involved in sports, aliya, and settling Israel.
  • Hamahanot Haolim: Started by groups from the Herzliya Gymnasium in 1926. Eventually merged with Kibbutz Hameuhad.
  • Young Judaea: Founded in 1909 in the USA by the Zionist Organization of America. In 1967 Hadassah became its patron.

Modern movements[edit]

Hebrew Scouts uniform

Zionist youth movements, both in Israel and the diaspora, continue to play a large role in community organisation, Jewish education, welfare, politics and activism. While upholding and adjusting their individual movement ideologies, diaspora movements commonly idealise Jewish continuity and identity in opposition to cultural assimilation, and Zionism in the way of active community involvement while living in Israel (termed by some as aliyah nimshechet or continuing ascent), with importance placed upon leadership skills and personal development. In some countries, resistance in response to anti-Semitism is also a significant political focus.

Movements generally focus on education for school-age youths, who are known as chanichim (Hebrew for educatees; singular chanich or chanicha), approximately aged 8 to 18. The nucleus of movement leaders (madrichim, singular madrich/a; literally guides) are graduates (bogrim, singular boger/et) of the movement, although it is popular for senior chanichim to also lead junior groups.

Much of a movement’s activity is carried out through regular meetings or events, in many countries weekly, as well as camps one or more times a year. Leaders use methods of informal education to inspire and teach chanichim within a particular ideological framework or to induce discussion and thought. Such events are also highly social and often involve recreational activity., making the educational and ideological pursuits more enjoyable for participating youths.

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