People can be right about some things and wrong about others from a place of sincere conviction. I would put Avi Yemeni, who is indeed a Zionist, (but categorically not a nazi) in that category. Gotta love the T shirt he wore when he got off the plane at Auckland Airport though: "Kia Ora North Korea." I couldn't have said it better.
People can be right about some things and wrong about others from a place of sincere conviction. I would put Avi Yemeni, who is indeed a Zionist, (but categorically not a nazi) in that category. Gotta love the T shirt he wore when he got off the plane at Auckland Airport though: "Kia Ora North Korea." I couldn't have said it better.
I wonder how many know that Australia has political prisoners, not only the poor happless lovely young man Martin Bryant, who in spite of his simplicity as is common with intellectually disabled (a very very high percentage in australia no doubt due to vaccinations and mothers on drugs while pregnant) even held in isolation he refused to plead guilty to something he wasn't even capable of, but also a Korean Australian citizen who is incarcerated as part of the policy to send a message to anyone, in the words of the Australien Crime Sinister of the day "not to EVEN THINK of giving (humanitarian) support to North Korea), but Australiens happily went about their lives just trusting the media that this man must be guilty or he wouldn't be accused and locked up... and that's just two that we KNOW about.
Yes, they can be right about some things and wrong on others, but if it is that fundamental and important since those zionists hold an inordinate amount of power compared to any others, then they should probably be given a wide berth and not trusted to go into battle with you.
We have political prisoners in NZ too. We have a young Māori man sentenced to several years in prison (and called a white supremacist in our media) for filming himself shooting can's with Horse Face Cindy (our beloved, er, em, former PM)'s face on it. And another (elderly) Māori man, a minister, who is facing prison time, and has spent 90,000$ so far defending charges, for peacefully protesting against lockdowns. We also have political parties, currently in parliament, organizing violent mobs to attack women attempting to exercise their right to freedom of speech.
If I think about the way my country has gone, I start to feel a mixture of grief, hopelessness and depression.
People can be right about some things and wrong about others from a place of sincere conviction. I would put Avi Yemeni, who is indeed a Zionist, (but categorically not a nazi) in that category. Gotta love the T shirt he wore when he got off the plane at Auckland Airport though: "Kia Ora North Korea." I couldn't have said it better.
I wonder how many know that Australia has political prisoners, not only the poor happless lovely young man Martin Bryant, who in spite of his simplicity as is common with intellectually disabled (a very very high percentage in australia no doubt due to vaccinations and mothers on drugs while pregnant) even held in isolation he refused to plead guilty to something he wasn't even capable of, but also a Korean Australian citizen who is incarcerated as part of the policy to send a message to anyone, in the words of the Australien Crime Sinister of the day "not to EVEN THINK of giving (humanitarian) support to North Korea), but Australiens happily went about their lives just trusting the media that this man must be guilty or he wouldn't be accused and locked up... and that's just two that we KNOW about.
Yes, they can be right about some things and wrong on others, but if it is that fundamental and important since those zionists hold an inordinate amount of power compared to any others, then they should probably be given a wide berth and not trusted to go into battle with you.
We have political prisoners in NZ too. We have a young Māori man sentenced to several years in prison (and called a white supremacist in our media) for filming himself shooting can's with Horse Face Cindy (our beloved, er, em, former PM)'s face on it. And another (elderly) Māori man, a minister, who is facing prison time, and has spent 90,000$ so far defending charges, for peacefully protesting against lockdowns. We also have political parties, currently in parliament, organizing violent mobs to attack women attempting to exercise their right to freedom of speech.
If I think about the way my country has gone, I start to feel a mixture of grief, hopelessness and depression.