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You have to ask why she was considered fit for employment by the BBC in the first place BT, her views were known, she didn't hide them.
And the reason is, the BBC is infested with people who sympathise with her views. it would never occur to the mindset of those running the BBC that her views could be considered 'problematic'. She wouldn't have been awarded the position of 'Palestine Specialist' by accident, the hierarchy at the BBC would have thought her ideally suited to the job, the perfect candidate.
Six of us (shock, awe!) had a very pleasant dinner last night and the after dinner conversation found its way to anti-Semitism.
Please bear in mind we are located nearer to the Prestwich/Whitefield area than you are sinkov so we see the issue happening before our very eyes.
Sadly, we all had to agree anti-Semitism is rife in this country.
Two of our fellow diners happen to be Jewish, and some of the tales and testimonies they were telling were spine tingling and really quite shocking.
I can honestly inform you they are a lot more scared of people like Tala Halawa than Jeremy Corbyn. We have a problem in this country, it's the big elephant in the room, they worship some dude from the eighth century and we are not allowed to even draw a caricature of the guy in case we cause a riot.
We live in fearful times. Jews especially.![]()
I do know the area BT, we always drive through it on our not infrequent visits to Manchester. Mrs S invariably comments as we drive through, 'Jewish people never cause us a problem, just like the even more numerous Chinese, they just go about their business and get on with their lives', I tend to agree with her, which is always a good idea anyway.![]()
How data and AI drove the IDF operation in Gaza
https://www.ynetnews.com/magazine/ar...S6Y00#autoplay
A small rocket lands on the roof of a house in Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip, at the height of the fighting earlier this month. Fired from an Israeli military aircraft, it is designed to serve as a warning to the residents and neighbours of the house that an airstrike was on the way. The targeted house belongs to Muhammad Bawab, leader of Hamas' East Rafah Brigade.
Several members of the Israeli security forces, including reservists from the Intelligence Directorate and Shin Bet operatives, crowd together in a room, monitoring video footage filmed by an IDF drone hovering over the house.
The room is an "attack cell." "Bawab was in charge of the unit that seized the bodies of Hadar Goldin and Oron Shaul," referring to the two IDF soldiers whose remains have been held in Gaza since the 2014 war in which they fell.
Now his home is seconds away from being attacked, as happened to many other senior officials of Hamas and the Palestinian Islamic Jihad. The mission is halted when an officer says that the drone's operator has spotted a group of people under a palm tree near the house and that they are at risk of getting hurt.
The latter picks up the phone, dialed and began speaking in Arabic with a distinct Palestinian accent, his tone soft and courteous.
The person on the other end is Bawab's neighbour, whose number the Shin Bet obtained before the operation, should such a situation arise.
"You are under the palm tree, near the house. Go away, there's a one-ton bomb coming and you are going to get hurt," the Shin Bet operative says in Arabic. The neighbor assures him that he would move the group of people away, and after several minutes they begin to disperse. But the drone operator sees three people still at the scene and informs the officer they are not leaving. The people in the room decide to launch a small rocket at the nearby road to make them truly understand they are in danger.
Fif**** seconds later, an aircraft launches an anti-tank missile that does not spread shrapnel when it explodes. After it hits the nearby asphalt, the people under the palm tree start scattering.
The head of the cell nods to the other officer, who gives permission to the pilot to attack.
The room falls silent as a timer started counting down 15 seconds. The bomb hits, sending plumes of smoke into the air from the rubble of the house.
The "next thing" the army and the Shin Bet are working on is a strategy to prevent the massive rocket salvos without using ground forces to neutralize the launchers. Military officials are also sure that what the army has demonstrated it can do during the fighting in Gaza could also be implemented in a possible war against Hezbollah or even Syria or Iran.
When you need security guards to protect the congregation who wish to peacefully practice their religion, we are in trouble as a society sinkov.
What I fail to understand is why a political party built on the premise of law and order allows this $hit to happen? Perhaps they are more anti-Semitic than Comrade Corbyn never was?![]()
How are they supposed to prevent it BT, anti-semitism is rife in this country, it's rife in HM opposition, it's rife in our national broadcaster, that it manifests itself on the streets is not surprising. We ARE in trouble as a society, but if you think we have a problem, have a look at France, the army generals there are telling Macron they'll send the tanks in if he doesn't get a grip, we haven't got to that stage yet, possibly because we don't have many tanks.
BT: Without really thinking about it a sense of Morality is lacking!! That is in all Governments.
The real question is, ''What can be done to bring morality to all Governments ?''
Your lads been at it again Balan..?
https://www.standard.co.uk/news/worl...n-b938339.html