Comments by "Deborah Freedman" (@deborahfreedman333) on "TV7 Israel News"
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If only there were not so much easily obtainable oil, in the Arabian peninsula. Then, perhaps, nations would be guide more by what was right, and less by a desire to appease the Arabs. I doubt, if the Arabs had not had so much oil, if your country would have broken its promise, to allow any Jew to return to their homeland, not divide Israel, and not allow Arabs to flood the country. Instead, to keep access to oil, the UK divided off 70% of Israel, to form Jordan, and kept Jews from going to Israel. If the UK had kept its promise, there would not have been a Holocaust, as Jews could have fled Europe for Israel.
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I grew up on the San Andreas fault, and we had a serious earthquake, at least once a year. We were taught the safest place to be, during an earthquake, was in a doorframe. But, most of our homes were stick built, which flexes during an earthquake. During the Northridge quake, our home in Van Nuys had little damage, except the cinder block fence and the brick chimney came down. In Israel, most homes are built of brick and stone, which does not flex, but rather crumbles during a quake. Also, Israeli building codes are insufficient, and often flouted. Is it safer to stand in a doorframe, or get outside during a quake in Israel?
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It's probable that if Israel divides itself into districts, Knesset members will be more responsible to the electorate, and more seats will shift to the larger parties. The first result would be good because there are lots of petty problems that plague Israeli citizens, like cops that don't give a damn about crime, lack of parking (so people park on the sidewalks), poor building inspection, and inefficient bureaucracies. The second would reduce representation of minority creeds, but might make it possible to form a government without a coalition. If it took the power of datim to dictate who is a Jew, who can pray, when we can shop and take buses, and how we marry, that would be wonderful.
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