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I apologize if i came across as racist. I advice you to read a bit on history of banking, even if it's just the wikipedia page. No where did i come across that Banking was the only open profession to Jews. Interest based banking is forbidden for Jews just as much as it is for Christians and Muslims.

The highly profitable business of banking being left to "oppressed and persecuted" Jews seems highly contradictory, and your justification seems awfully convenient. It's as if you make the guy you hate the CEO of a big company and you prefer to do the menial jobs. Secondly, if you think something is wrong, why would you allow another person to do it in your sphere of influence?

I advice you to conduct an unbiased research on the topic instead of being misinformed by propaganda mouthpieces of the still oppressed and suffering Jews. I hope you don't end up being declared a Nazi and an anti-Semite in the process.

Seeing as you mentioned wikipedia

One form of economic antisemitism in the medieval period were legal restrictions imposed on the occupations and professions of Jews. Local rulers and church officials closed many professions to the Jews, pushing them into marginal occupations considered socially inferior, such as tax and rent collecting and moneylending, tolerated then as a "necessary evil". Catholic doctrine of the time held that lending money for interest was a sin, and forbidden to Christians. Not being subject to this restriction, Jews dominated this business. The Torah and later sections of the Hebrew Bible criticize Usury but interpretations of the Biblical prohibition vary. Since few other occupations were open to them, Jews were motivated to take up money lending. This was said to show Jews were usurers, and subsequently led to many negative stereotypes and propaganda. Natural tensions between creditors (typically Jews) and debtors (typically Christians) were added to social, political, religious, and economic strains. Peasants who were forced to pay their taxes to Jews could personify them as the people taking their earnings while remaining loyal to the lords on whose behalf the Jews worked.

Economic antisemitism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

You were engaging in economic anti-semitism. One of the oldest kinds of racism.

Jews also later dominated the textile industry, but that never gets mentioned because there's no "evil" conspiracy mileage in that for racists - so they concentrate on 'banking'.
 
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Same place in 1 year :

11146200_356639447875247_1937634297648846393_n.jpg


11149332_356639421208583_5656767695962564452_n.jpg
 
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Same place in 1 year :

11146200_356639447875247_1937634297648846393_n.jpg


11149332_356639421208583_5656767695962564452_n.jpg

This picture speaks a lot. These are the same people called 'Sunni revolutionaries' 2 years ago, protesting in Anbar, holding IS flags and cursing Shias, now look at them, how miserable, fleeing from their IS brethern towards 'Evil Shia' areas. They shouldn't allow them to escape, let them stay and enjoy under the same caliphate they invited and accepted with open arms.

@f1000n @Alshawi1234 @Malik Alashter

Now that Al-Abadi gave in to US pressure, some good but bitter developments are happening. After liberation of Tikrit (most of which achieved thanks to PMF and Shia groups), a mass propaganda by western media started against PMF, though it existed before. The propaganda was so massive that their media was busy bashing PMF with pathetic lies about burning homes which later proved to be a made up lie rather than focusing on ISIS virus. Then they zoomed on U.S role in liberation of Tikrit as if it was U.S who did the job. After that, PMF made a wise decision: To listen to Sunni tribesmen and U.S to retreat from Sunni areas, they barely fight these days. Now let's see what happened:

1- IS is advancing in Ramadi and has captured big areas around the city, some say the city will fall in coming days.
Now the same 'revolutionaries' who were holding IS flags two years ago in demonstrations, are now begging Shia and PMF groups to go to Anbar and stop IS from advancing and are fleeing towards Baghdad.
2- US trained Iraqi army (the same ones who retreated from Mosul and Tikrit in June) is now failing to push IS back in Baiji despite heavy air strikes by U.S and modern equipment and now IS has entered Iraq's largest oil refinery:

CCuL0YxWMAA-5zp.jpg


I don't know how many more Iraqis should die until Iraqis realize that U.S, Arab countries and some internal fifth columns don't want IS defeated easily. Just look how U.S is playing Iraq over the arm sales, they refuse to deliver Apaches and F-16s to Iraq for ridiculous reasons.

Now Abadi is learning his lesson the hard way, at the cost of civilian blood, and the lesson is that some major players simply don't want IS out of Iraq soon and are deeply interested in seeing Shias and Sunnis killing each other.

It depends on Iraqis themselves what they will do: To please America and the gulf or to actually get their stuff together and fight IS regardless of what outsiders are spewing. U.S is the one responsible for the mess in Iraq and it's again the same one who is playing games in Iraq.
 
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This picture speaks a lot. These are the same people called 'Sunni revolutionaries' 2 years ago, protesting in Anbar, holding IS flags and cursing Shias, now look at them, how miserable, fleeing from their IS brethern towards 'Evil Shia' areas. They shouldn't allow them to escape, let them stay and enjoy under the same caliphate they invited and accepted with open arms.

@f1000n @Alshawi1234 @Malik Alashter

Now that Al-Abadi gave in to US pressure, some good but bitter developments are happening. After liberation of Tikrit (most of which achieved thanks to PMF and Shia groups), a mass propaganda by western media started against PMF, though it existed before. The propaganda was so massive that their media was busy bashing PMF with pathetic lies about burning homes which later proved to be a made up lie rather than focusing on ISIS virus. Then they zoomed on U.S role in liberation of Tikrit as if it was U.S who did the job. After that, PMF made a wise decision: To listen to Sunni tribesmen and U.S to retreat from Sunni areas, they barely fight these days. Now let's see what happened:

1- IS is advancing in Ramadi and has captured big areas around the city, some say the city will fall in coming days.
Now the same 'revolutionaries' who were holding IS flags two years ago in demonstrations, are now begging Shia and PMF groups to go to Anbar and stop IS from advancing and are fleeing towards Baghdad.
2- US trained Iraqi army (the same ones who retreated from Mosul and Tikrit in June) is now failing to push IS back in Baiji despite heavy air strikes by U.S and modern equipment and now IS has entered Iraq's largest oil refinery:

CCuL0YxWMAA-5zp.jpg


I don't know how many more Iraqis should die until Iraqis realize that U.S, Arab countries and some internal fifth columns don't want IS defeated easily. Just look how U.S is playing Iraq over the arm sales, they refuse to deliver Apaches and F-16s to Iraq for ridiculous reasons.

Now Abadi is learning his lesson the hard way, at the cost of civilian blood, and the lesson is that some major players simply don't want IS out of Iraq soon and are deeply interested in seeing Shias and Sunnis killing each other.

It depends on Iraqis themselves what they will do: To please America and the gulf or to actually get their stuff together and fight IS regardless of what outsiders are spewing. U.S is the one responsible for the mess in Iraq and it's again the same one who is playing games in Iraq.

Its good that Shia brigades have pulled out , I hope they don't enter Sunni areas because those pussies never deserve to be saved .

The US and Arab states in region are trying to divide the country into 3 state and these idiots are doing everything to get that .

They are the ones that back stabbed Shias in Tikrit and started the propaganda war against them to stop the operation against ISIS otherwise Baiji could have been liberated by now . But look , Ramadi is falling , ISIS is advancing in Baiji and Tikrit is again in the hands of bunch of traitors who will certainly flee if ISIS attacks again .
 
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@Serpentine

you and like of you are naive ...
These Sunni want to use this as excuse to go and live in Baghdad and change Baghdad population , soon we will see new wave of bombing and suicide attacks against Shiia in Baghdad ...

and why should they let these guys to come and live in their area when they clearly have the same idea about Shiia as their ISIS Brethren " kill 7 Shiia and you will guaranty a house in heaven for yourselves " ... maybe they run from ISIS but if they find an opportunity , they will behead shiia just like ISIS ...

these innocent Sunni will help ISIS if they attack Baghdad , I'm sure half of them are ISIS sleeper cells ...


but Iraqi shiia are naive and they will pay for it .... mark my word ...
 
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Iraqi security forces deploy April 1 to fight the Islamic State group.(Photo: Khalid Mohammed/AP)
635648588062084708-Iraqi-forces.jpg


Iraqi forces recapture 2 towns near crucial refinery

BAGHDAD — Iraqi security forces have gained full control over a contested area south of the country's largest oil refinery Friday as part of ongoing operations to secure the rest of Salahuddin province following the recapturing of Tikrit, a senior Iraqi military official said.

General Ayad al-Lahabi, a commander with the Salahuddin Command Center, said the military, backed by coalition airstrikes and Shiite and Sunni militias dubbed the Popular Mobilization Forces, gained control of the towns of al-Malha and al-Mazraah, located 3 kilometers (1.9 miles) south of the Beiji oil refinery, killing at least 160 militants with the Islamic State group.

Al-Lahabi said security forces are trying to secure two corridors around the refinery itself after the Sunni militants launched a large-scale attack on the complex earlier this week, hitting the refinery walls with explosive-laced Humvees.

Extremists from the Islamic State group seized much of Salahuddin province last summer during their advance across northern and western Iraq. The battle for Tikrit was seen as a key step toward eventually driving the militants out of Mosul, Iraq's second-largest city and the capital of Nineveh province. In November, Iraqi security forces said they had recaptured the town of Beiji from the militant group. The refinery had never been captured by the militants but has been subjected to frequent attacks by the group.

In Iraq's western Anbar province, meanwhile, Iraqi special forces maintained control of the provincial capital, Ramadi, after days of intense clashes with the Islamic State group left the city at risk. Sabah Nuaman, a special forces commander in Anbar, said the situation had improved early Friday after airstrikes hit key militant targets on the city's fringes.

Sabah al-Karhout, head of Anbar's provincial council, said there were no major attacks on the city Friday but that the militants still maintained control of three villages to the east of Ramadi, which they captured Wednesday, sending thousands of civilians fleeing for safety.
 
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Dispatches
Michael J. Totten
The Kurds' Heroic Struggle Against ISIS
13 April 2015
Kurdistan%20Wikimedia%20Commons.jpg

ISIS is getting its *** kicked by the Kurds.

In Syria's Hasaka Province, where the Iraqi and Turkish borders converge, YPG fighters have ISIS on the run, and they've just retaken two more villagesoutside the long-besieged city of Kobane on the Turkish-Syrian border.

Meanwhile, the Iraqi Kurdish Peshmerga forced ISIS to flee Sinjar near Mosul, Iraq's second-largest city, the site of horrible massacres against the Yezidi minority last year. As many as 5,000 civilians were killed, thousands of women were dragged off as sex slaves, and tens of thousands were forced to flee onto a mountaintop without food or water.

Sinjar was the penultimate straw for Washington and the start of the war between Iraqi Kurdistan and ISIS. The last straw for Washington came just weeks later when an ISIS column made a beeline for Erbil, Iraq's Kurdish capital, in American Humvees stolen from the Iraqi army in Mosul.

The Kurds are the only people in the region whose willingness to fight matches that of ISIS, and unlike ISIS nearly all their fighters are recruited internally. They haven't issued any worldwide calls for enlistment. They don't troll social media looking for disgruntled young people abroad. With just a handful of exceptions, no one from outside the region volunteers to fight alongside them. They receive little support from the West and no support from the neighbors.

On the one hand it's astonishing that they're able to maintain a firewall hundreds of miles long against so vicious an enemy with so little help, but the Kurds have fielded better fighting forces than the Arab states for decades. Shortly after the first Persian Gulf War, Iraq's Shias and Kurds mounted simultaneous uprisings against the government, together wresting control of most of Iraq from Saddam Hussein. He managed to massacre his way into retaking the Shia parts of the country, but his army—the fourth-largest in the world at the time—was no match for the Kurds in north. Women and children left the cities on foot and took refuge in the mountains while the men stayed behind to purge the regime more than a decade before the rest of the country was finally rid of it.

Picking a fight with the Kurds is a little like going to war against Lebanon's Druze or the Israelis. It's like trying to invade and occupy Texas. Only ISIS leaders, at this point in history, are drunk enough on their own ideological belligerence to think they can best the people who whooped Saddam Hussein's military machine while everyone else who tried was gunned into ditches.

But ISIS is learning, and its commanders are asking the Peshmerga for a ceasefire. The Kurds, though, are even less likely to negotiate with who the Kirkuk chief of police calls “blind snakes” than Americans are. We have two continents and an ocean between ourselves and ISIS, but a hardy person could walk from Mosul to the Kurdish autonomous region in a less than a day, and that border is as potentially porous as the Mexican-American border.

Iraq's central government and the Kurdistan Regional Government are planning operations to reclaim Mosul from ISIS later this year, but Baghdad is loathe to give the Kurds much help in the meantime. Kurdistan is still at least technically part of Iraq, and its officials have to ask the central government for money and weapons. At times Baghdad grudgingly says yes and other times it says no. Everyone knows the Kurds want their own state, and the central government doesn't want them to grow so strong that they can finally tell the rest of Iraq to sod off and damn the consequences.

So they need help from outside, but they aren't getting much. Bayan Rahman, the Kurdistan Regional Government's representative to the US, says most of the promised American weapons shipments still haven't arrived.

Washington is so afraid of cheesing off Baghdad and Turkey, which are both hostile to Kurdish independence, that it's still willing to largely blow off its only genuine and competent allies in that part of the Middle East. The Kurds are by far the most pro-American people over there, more so even than the Israelis, and the only reason they aren't yet powerful enough to be reckoned with internationally is because they haven't achieved full independence. They are still, after all these years, the world's largest stateless people and treated as second-class allies in favor of Turkey, which has been obnoxiously unhelpful in the Middle East for more than a decade, and Iraq, which is a de-facto Iranian client state.

The US may eventually get its alliance priorities straight. In the meantime, the Kurds are doing yeoman's work nearly alone and without even much recognition, let alone thanks.
 
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If only everybody were blessed by nonstop US airstrikes. Indeed it is quite tasty to see all those ISIS scumbags being slaughtered from above.
 
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Updated: April 17, 2015 18:39 IST
Bomb blasts kill 12 people in Iraq - The Hindu
AP

Iraqi authorities say bombings targeting public places and pro-government Sunni fighters have killed 12 people around the capital in Baghdad.

Police officials say a bomb blast on a commercial street on Friday killed 4 people and wounded nine others in Baghdad’s south eastern New Baghdad district.

Also, a bomb exploded near an outdoor market in Baghdad’s Dora neighbourhood, killing three shoppers. Another bomb blast near a cafe killed three people in the capital’s southeastern suburbs.

Police say a roadside bomb exploded near a patrol of Sahwa fighters in southern Baghdad, killing two members. The Sunni Sahwa fighters joined forces with U.S. troops at the height of the Iraq insurgency to fight Sunni militants.

Medical officials confirmed the casualties. All officials spoke on condition of anonymity as they weren’t authorized to release the information.
 
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A large part of the blame on ISIS is due to the kind of people we see in this board. They either hate Iran so much or Shiasm so much, that it blinds them to paths that can be beneficial to their brethren.

Three things that they keep coming up to undermine the efforts of anti-ISIS groups,
1) But they didn't do anything! It was all because of American air strikes!
Answer: Airstrikes alone can never capture a city. I'm surprised people in a MILITARY FORUM have so little knowledge of warfare.

2) But Iran is fighting ISIS so they can take over the region!
Answer: Then let Saudi Arabia & brave GCC come and wipe out ISIS in Iraq & Syria instead of bombing Yemen

3) But the soldiers are LOOTING!!
Answer: There are always exceptions, but which do you prefer, a group that beheads civilians or a soldier that saves your city and one of them steals a chicken??

For the first time in your life, some of you should take your head out of your butts and applaud ISIS being destroyed, not try to somehow claim you don't like ISIS, but you also don't like the anti-ISIS group.
 
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The shiite will be stung real bad soon by the same snakes!>

I really can't believe these people why they acting so stupid like that.

they acting like a fish eat the same bate frequently from the same place.
 
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IS latest push on Ramadi has caused tens of thousands of civilians to flee towards Baghdad and Karbala.

400 sunnis were captured and executed during this latest advance on Ramadi. No report about it in the news. Yet we see that Alarabiya and aljazeera had the theft of fridges in Tikrit on the front pages.

I kind of feel bad for the sunnis. They lost everything in Iraq. Their wealth, Their political and social influence, their respect, and their prestige. What's makes it worse is they got it to themselves. They either get killed fighting for IS or get killed fighting against IS.


The latest push on Ramadi was the result of US foolishness. They wanted the PMF out and in exchange they promised the sunnis support and increased air support. In exchange they loose large areas to IS and get massacred.

Most of the shia soldiers in the army are getting sick of the foolish decisions and prefer to join the PMF instead.

Now the Tribes in Anbar has called on the PMF to come back after asking them to leave. Although there were a few tribes who wanted the PMF to stay in the first place.


In other news house to house searches continue in Tikrit, with occasional clashes with IS members hiding in buildings or homes resulting in casualties from both sides.

IS has pushed against Baiji refinery with over 400 members and managed to take some strategic areas inside the refinery.

PMF and iraqi forces have pushed against Baiji town and counter-attacked IS in Baiji refinery. It was and extremely intense and large battle in which the iraqi army lost lots of equipments at first including once Abrams tank, t-72, a btr, and many humvees/ trucks.

The counterattack resulted in the killing and injuring about 300 IS members. Including 20 captured and executed. While sources in shirqat stayed that 80 recovered IS bodies have been taken to the town.

Photos emerging show tens of IS bodies piled up together or scattered throughout the fields of the refinery. Latest new state that the iraqi forces broke the siege off the trapped units inside and have regained most of the refinery.

The legendary refinery which has become mission impossible for IS, costing them over 1,500 casualties in their repeated attempts to take it since July 2014.
 
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IS latest push on Ramadi has caused tens of thousands of civilians to flee towards Baghdad and Karbala.

400 sunnis were captured and executed during this latest advance on Ramadi. No report about it in the news. Yet we see that Alarabiya and aljazeera had the theft of fridges in Tikrit on the front pages.

I kind of feel bad for the sunnis. They lost everything in Iraq. Their wealth, Their political and social influence, their respect, and their prestige. What's makes it worse is they got it to themselves. They either get killed fighting for IS or get killed fighting against IS.


The latest push on Ramadi was the result of US foolishness. They wanted the PMF out and in exchange they promised the sunnis support and increased air support. In exchange they loose large areas to IS and get massacred.

Most of the shia soldiers in the army are getting sick of the foolish decisions and prefer to join the PMF instead.

Now the Tribes in Anbar has called on the PMF to come back after asking them to leave. Although there were a few tribes who wanted the PMF to stay in the first place.


In other news house to house searches continue in Tikrit, with occasional clashes with IS members hiding in buildings or homes resulting in casualties from both sides.

IS has pushed against Baiji refinery with over 400 members and managed to take some strategic areas inside the refinery.

PMF and iraqi forces have pushed against Baiji town and counter-attacked IS in Baiji refinery. It was and extremely intense and large battle in which the iraqi army lost lots of equipments at first including once Abrams tank, t-72, a btr, and many humvees/ trucks.

The counterattack resulted in the killing and injuring about 300 IS members. Including 20 captured and executed. While sources in shirqat stayed that 80 recovered IS bodies have been taken to the town.

Photos emerging show tens of IS bodies piled up together or scattered throughout the fields of the refinery. Latest new state that the iraqi forces broke the siege off the trapped units inside and have regained most of the refinery.

The legendary refinery which has become mission impossible for IS, costing them over 1,500 casualties in their repeated attempts to take it since July 2014.

The important question we shouldn't forget about Ramadi. Are the fridges safe?
 
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The important question we shouldn't forget about Ramadi. Are the fridges safe?

People forgot to notice video's of fridges being boobytrapped in Tikrit. Once you open the door the bomb would go off, this is why some fridges were taken in trucks for detonation outside the city.

Now that Al-Abadi gave in to US pressure, some good but bitter developments are happening. After liberation of Tikrit (most of which achieved thanks to PMF and Shia groups), a mass propaganda by western media started against PMF, though it existed before. The propaganda was so massive that their media was busy bashing PMF with pathetic lies about burning homes which later proved to be a made up lie rather than focusing on ISIS virus. Then they zoomed on U.S role in liberation of Tikrit as if it was U.S who did the job. After that, PMF made a wise decision: To listen to Sunni tribesmen and U.S to retreat from Sunni areas, they barely fight these days. Now let's see what happened:

1- IS is advancing in Ramadi and has captured big areas around the city, some say the city will fall in coming days.
Now the same 'revolutionaries' who were holding IS flags two years ago in demonstrations, are now begging Shia and PMF groups to go to Anbar and stop IS from advancing and are fleeing towards Baghdad.
2- US trained Iraqi army (the same ones who retreated from Mosul and Tikrit in June) is now failing to push IS back in Baiji despite heavy air strikes by U.S and modern equipment and now IS has entered Iraq's largest oil refinery:

I don't know how many more Iraqis should die until Iraqis realize that U.S, Arab countries and some internal fifth columns don't want IS defeated easily. Just look how U.S is playing Iraq over the arm sales, they refuse to deliver Apaches and F-16s to Iraq for ridiculous reasons.

Now Abadi is learning his lesson the hard way, at the cost of civilian blood, and the lesson is that some major players simply don't want IS out of Iraq soon and are deeply interested in seeing Shias and Sunnis killing each other.

It depends on Iraqis themselves what they will do: To please America and the gulf or to actually get their stuff together and fight IS regardless of what outsiders are spewing. U.S is the one responsible for the mess in Iraq and it's again the same one who is playing games in Iraq.

That's not true, Abadi is doing a good job by working closely with the US. There is no regional power which has a non Islamist leadership. All of them have an agenda which will turn Iraq into a proxy battleground. Only US presence can deter them from that which is why the US can be beneficial. Say Abadi allied with Iran against the US/Gulf, what do you think others will do ? Pour in arms en masse like in Syria and no one could stop it. Only the US is currently deterring them from doing so openly and on a large scale, if not for them they would do it. Iran would do so as well and the result will be hell.

Not the US, it's Obama which is not willing to intensify assistance whereas for example John Boehner from GOP states the US should do more sending forward advisors and forward air controllers. Forward advisors & forward air controllers would have a big impact as IA/PMF units lack quality battlefield leaders. You can see this with Abrams tanks being lost by being sent in area's tanks don't belong in (marshes,trenches with dense foliage making a perfect environment for ISIS ambush ) all due to poor decisions by the tank commander. Wouldn't have happened with forward advisors.

Not that everything the US did has been good, after all they're the ones imposing inclusiveness which means many terrorists in parliament in the army but to drop them and ally with a neighbor will have far worse consequences. Allied with the Arabs means the entire Iranian front becomes hostile whilst this country has weak armed forces, allied with Iran means groups like Kataib Hezbollah will grow and be used for external wars, that will allow the US and others to bomb the country. Hence i'm in favor of larger US presence, we cannot trust local politicians neither any neighbors. All of them have plans which are to use this country for further regional wars. Maliki shouldn't have kicked out the US in 2011, none of this would've happened on such a scale if he extended the SOFA. This country will need at least 10 years of foreign military presence to deter others before it can stand alone again, and I think Syria will have the same afterwards if they're left on their own they'll be kicked around by the region whoever rules it.
 
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