Thursday, April 14, 2011

During WWII, in the countries occupied by Nazis, the murder of a Nazi was solved in a very traditional manner. Suspects would be rounded up, beaten, their families terrorized, their homes wrecked. In the aftermath of a killing of a Nazi soldier by a Polish partisan in Radom, the Germans went to every factory, picked out 9 persons at random: "Du, und du, und du..." Then they hanged them and left the bodies there swaying against the walls of the building.
The Israeli Army surrounded the camps, providing the murderers with all the support, aid and facilities necessary for them to carry out their appalling crime. They supplied them with bulldozers and with the necessary pictures and maps. In addition, they set off incandescent bombs in the air in order to turn night into day so that none of the Palestinians would be able to escape death's grip. And those who did flee - women, children and the elderly - were brought back inside the camps by Israeli soldiers to face their destiny. At noon on Friday, the second day of the terrorist massacre, and with the approval of the Israeli Army, the kata'ib forces began receiving more ammunition, while the forces which had been in the camps were replaced by other, "fresh" forces. On Saturday morning, September 18, 1982, the massacre had reached its peak, and thousands of Sabra and Shatila camp residents had been annihilated.
REAL NICE JEWS!!!

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