Daily Stormer
May 22, 2015
It really is almost impossible to believe that a state like Israel is allowed to exist in this modern age.
All that you should have to do to prove the overwhelming influence Jews have on Western nations is point to the fact that Israel is allowed to publicly make statements like this and continue to go unquestioned by the liberal media.
I mean, this woman is literally saying “our god gave us a right to commit a genocide, and that’s just what we’re going to do.”
Israel’s new deputy foreign minister on Thursday delivered a defiant message to the international community, saying that Israel owes no apologies for its policies in the Holy Land and citing religious texts to back her belief that it belongs to the Jewish people.
The speech by Tzipi Hotovely illustrated the influence of hardliners in Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu’s new government, and the challenges he will face as he tries to persuade the world that he is serious about pursuing peace with the Palestinians.
Hotovely, 36, is among a generation of young hardliners in Netanyahu’s Likud party who support West Bank settlement construction and oppose ceding captured land to the Palestinians. Since Netanyahu has a slim one-seat majority in parliament, these lawmakers could complicate any attempt to revive peace talks.
With Netanyahu also serving as the acting foreign minister, Hotovely is currently the country’s top full-time diplomat.
In an inaugural address to Israeli diplomats, Hotovely said Israel has tried too hard to appease the world and must stand up for itself.
“We need to return to the basic truth of our rights to this country,” she said. “This land is ours. All of it is ours. We did not come here to apologise for that.”
Hotovely, an Orthodox Jew, laced her speech with biblical commentaries in which God promised the land of Israel to the Jews. Speaking later in English, she signalled that she would try to rally global recognition for West Bank settlements, which are widely opposed.
She quoted the Talmud to support her argument. That’s what the Guardian means by “biblical commentaries. They don’t say “she quoted the Talmud,” because most goyim are too uninformed to even know what that is.