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What does the term Zionist means

that means i am a zionist and i didn't even know that
Zionism - The Real Enemy of the Jews

The key to understanding zionism is knowledge of the difference between Judaism and Zionism.
Judaism is the religion of Jews, Like Christianity and Islam, Judaism has at its core a set of moral
values and ethical principles.

Zionism is Jewish nationalism in the form of a sectarian, colonial enterprise which has no moral
values & ethical principles and the human and political rights of the Palestinians.

Israel, the child of Zionism, became its own worst enemy and a threat not only to the peace
of the region and the world, but also to the best interests of Jews everywhere and the moral
integrity of Judaism itself.

The reality is that Judaism and Zionism are total opposites, and knowledge of the difference is
the key to understanding two things. Zionist idealogy is totally opposite to traditional Jewish law
and beliefs and the teachings of the Holy Torah.

Most Jews don't realize how Zionism has deceived and sacraficed them to the collective myth
and they don't realize the cost they have paid. and Thats why its wrong to blame all Jews
everywhere for the crimes of the hard core Zionist done.

That's why i think, for example, Nazi holocaust survivor Dr. Hajo Meyer titled his latest book
An Ethical Tradition Betrayed, The End of Judaism .
 
good for you but Islamism is independent of Zionism except, well, for Islamists wanting destruction of the Land of Zion. :D
Islamism doesn't want destruction of Zion Land, we want destruction of Zionist terrorists. :tup:
 
Zionism has nothing to do with Pakistan, so I don't understand why it's brought up. And more people who aren't even Pakistani use the term Zionism..

Zionism is a nationalist movement for Jews & a form of upholding their Jewish culture. Zionists don't support Jews moving to other countries and they want to advocate all Jews to return to the land of Israel and uphold their Jewish culture. Zionism can be, to some extent, considered as a racist and colonial movement.

But asking people to come back to Israel does not sound anything bad at all. It sounds like being nationalist thinking about their nation, nothing wrong in this at all. I will not feel bad when someone calls a Zionist. It is way better than other stereotypes where people have desire to capture other nations.
 
some people couldn't help it, even had to troll on a simple thread. :toast_sign:
 
Does anyone get the feeling that if muslims put half the energy into a space program as they did checking under the bed for "zionist" they would already have a colony on Mars?

Haha, the best post I have seen so far, I mean seriously.
 
Zionism is Zion Hamid's revolutionary school of thought and the followers of his doctrine are Zionists. Oh snap!
 
Does anyone get the feeling that if muslims put half the energy into a space program as they did checking under the bed for "zionist" they would already have a colony on Mars?
and if the Zionists quit terrorizing the Muslims they would have discovered a new universe by now :triniti:
 
Does anyone get the feeling that if muslims put half the energy into a space program as they did checking under the bed for "zionist" they would already have a colony on Mars?
for the first time ever, i agree with you
 
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Michael Totten

“Are you Zionists?”

My colleague Armin Rosen and I were supposed to be conducting the interview. Instead, we were put on the defensive before we could even ask our first question.

“Of course not,” I said.

“Nope,” Armin said. “I don’t have a Zionist bone in my body.”

We were at the headquarters for the UGGT, Tunisia’s biggest labor union, in the small city of Kasserine just down the road from Sidi Bouzid where the revolution—and the region-wide Arab Spring generally—began at the tail end of 2010 when fruit vendor Mohammad Bouazizi set himself on fire to protest crooked and onerous government regulation.

Four men sat in the union office with us. Armin and I wanted to hear about what happened in the early days of the revolt against Zine El Abidine Ben Ali’s autocratic regime, but they were in no mood to share such information with Zionists.

Our translator Ahmed Medien, a young and—shall we say—more cosmopolitan journalist based in the capital, Tunis, sat with us.

“What if we were Zionists?” I said, directing my question to Ahmed as much as to our interlocutors.

“They wouldn’t talk to you,” he said.

I was annoyed and tempted to say, never mind then, we’re done here. How would they feel if I opened an interview by asking if they were terrorists? Part of me wanted to get thrown out of their office, not because I itch for fights on the job, but because I learn as much from one interview that goes off the rails as I do from six that are predictable. But I don’t sabotage interviews. That’s up to the folks on the other side of the table. And anyway, conversations like this one that merely go wobbly, rather than implode catastrophically, can also be more revealing than typical ones.

Did I lie when I said I wasn’t a Zionist? What’s a Zionist, anyway? A person who thinks Israel has a right to exist? If so, then, yes, I suppose I’m a Zionist, or perhaps just a Zionist sympathizer since I am not Jewish. But these working-class mustachios in Tunisia’s back-of-beyond have another, more phantasmagorical, definition of the notorious Z-word. I’m certainly not a Zionist as they define one. Neither is Armin Rosen.

“We are not against Jews,” said the man behind the desk in whose office we sat, “but Zionists didn’t go to Palestine to coexist peacefully with Arab nations. They went there to take land from Palestinians and kill them. This is not a country that wants to peacefully coexist. This is a country that wants war between Arab nations.”

This is nonsense on stilts, of course, and since he and his colleagues wanted to know if Armin and I support that, then, no, neither of us lied, not really, when we said we weren’t Zionists.

Tunisia is moderate and even liberal compared with other Arabic-speaking countries, but the place still suffers from a heady case of Israel Derangement Syndrome. More than half the people I interviewed complained about Israel at least once even when I didn’t ask about it. Not a single one of these people—not a one—based their complaint in reality. They were jousting with a fantasy Israel that only exists in their minds...

Where the Arab Spring Began
 
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