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> Israel expressed outrage Monday at a European Commission >opinion poll suggesting more EU citizens see Israel as a >threat to world peace than any other country including Iran, >Iraq and North Korea.
Despite Europe's legacy of anti-Jewish behavior, Europeans are wholly correct: Israel is indeed, beyond a shadow of a doubt, more of a threat to world peace than any Third World rogue state.
This claim is not only an accurate one it is corroborated by an observation made by General Lee Butler, head of Clinton's Strategic Command in the early 90s, that "it is dangerous in the extreme that in the cauldron of animosities that we call the Middle East, one nation has armed itself, ostensibly, with stockpiles of nuclear weapons, perhaps numbering in the hundreds, and that inspires other nations to do so."
He's talking about Israel of course. The Is- raeli military authorities claim to have air and armored forces that are larger and more advanced than those of any European NATO power (Yitzhak ben Israel, Ha'aretz, 4-16-02, Hebrew). They also announce that 12% of their bombers and fighter aircraft are permanently stationed in Eastern Turkey, along with comparable naval and submarine forces in Turkish bases, and armored forces as well, in case it becomes necessary to resort to extreme violence once again to subdue Turkey's Kurdish population, as in the Clinton years.
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The Rand (Paul or Ayn) philosophy, putting private property rights at the same level of human rights, equates the status of things with the status of human beings. If property is considered equal
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