Mitt Romney Praises his Israeli 
		Masters for Stealing Palestinian and American Fortunes By 
		Hassan El-Najjar
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, July 31, 2012
The 
		U.S. Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney made his pilgrimage 
		to the Zionist, Apartheid, racist state of Israel, to pledge allegiance 
		and loyalty to his masters there.
He expressed his admiration of 
		his Zionist masters by telling them they are rich and their enemies, the 
		Palestinian people, are poor because of culture (below). Basically, he 
		implied that Palestinians are poor because they are Muslims and 
		Christians while Israeli 
		Zionists are rich because they are Jews.
Romney has chosen to 
		ignore the fact that Israeli Zionists have dispossessed the Palestinian 
		people of their homeland. They stole the whole country, with help from 
		world Zionists who control US-EU governments and force them, through 
		their control over corrupt politicians, to provide the Apartheid state 
		with continuous economic, financial, and military aid, since 1948.
		
Politicians like Romney are groomed and supported by Zionists until 
		they occupy the highest offices in the legislative and the executive 
		branches of governments. The objective is to make sure that the US-EU 
		governments continue their support to the Zionist state in its 
		continuous wars of destroying Arab and Muslim states to pave the way for 
		the emergence of the Israeli empire in energy-rich Middle Eastern 
		region.
So, Mitt, Israelis are not rich because of their 
		intelligence or hard work or innovations in service for the world peace and 
		civilization. They never did any of that. Rather, they are rich because 
		they stole the Holy Land of Palestine from its legal and rightful 
		owners, the Palestinian people, who have lived in their ancestral 
		homeland for thousands of years, even before Abraham arrived to Cana'an 
		from Iraq. 
Whether you like it or not, Mitt, the present-day 
		Palestinians are the true descendants of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, as 
		well as the Cana'anites and the Philistines. Most of them became 
		Christians then Muslims but they are still descendants of Abraham, 
		Isaac, and Jacob.
The Zionists you admire are mainly of Central 
		Asian, Khazari, and Eastern European origins. They have no roots in the 
		Middle East and no affinity to the Semites of the region. Because of 
		their continuous persecution of the Palestinian people and their 
		continuous wars on almost all nations of that region, they presented 
		themselves as the ultimate anti-Semitic ruthless invaders, who are not 
		interested in coexistence with other nations around them. 
The 
		other major reason why the Israelis are rich is the continuous 
		financial, economic, and military aid extracted from the US and EU 
		countries through crooked politicians. The U.S. is $15.4 trillion 
		in debt, mainly as a result of the Zionist global war on Muslims planned 
		by Wolfowitz-Pearle-Feith and implemented by Bush-Cheney-Rumsfeld. 
		However, corrupt politicians have not stopped sending more than $3 
		billion to the Zionist state every year.
By the way, pirates and 
		invaders were also rich throughout history by stealing fortunes of good 
		people. Gamblers of our time, like your Zionist backers and handlers, 
		are also rich. 
May God guide Americans to defeat you in this coming 
		elections, so the U.S. and Iran may be saved from the devastating war 
		your Israeli masters want you to launch on their behalf.
Amen.
		
		
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Romney angers Palestinians with pro-Israel comment
		OCCUPIED JERUSALEM — 
		CBS News, July 30, 2012
		Mitt Romney's campaign stop in Israel left behind furious 
		Palestinians charging that the Republican presidential candidate hasn't 
		fully grasped the complexities of one of the world's most intractable 
		conflicts.
Romney's sweeping embrace of Israeli government 
		positions — especially on the Iranian nuclear program — came as no 
		surprise. But Palestinian — and some Israeli — critics say he overshot 
		by seeming to snub the Palestinians' President, dismiss their claims to 
		Jerusalem, and suggest their culture is inferior to Israel's.
		That came on Monday when Romney addressed the stark economic differences 
		between Israel — a high-tech powerhouse with the per capita income of a 
		developed nation — and the poorer Palestinians. Romney told an audience 
		of affluent Jewish donors — including gambling magnate Sheldon Adelson, 
		who is pumping millions into a crusade to defeat President Barack Obama 
		— that some economic historians have theorized that "culture makes all 
		the difference."
"You notice a 
		stark difference in economic vitality" between Israel and the 
		Palestinians, Romney said, proceeding to badly flub the 
		economic output numbers on both sides. "And as I come here and I look 
		out over this city and consider the accomplishments of the people of 
		this nation, I recognize the power of at least culture and a few other 
		things," he said, citing an innovative business climate and the Jewish 
		history of thriving in difficult circumstances.
Palestinian 
		leaders were outraged.
"The statement reflects
		a clear racist spirit," 
		said Palestinian Labor Minister Ahmed Majdalani. "If Romney came here to 
		rally Israeli and Jewish support in the U.S. election, he can do that 
		without insulting the Palestinian people."
As criticism mounted 
		as he traveled from Israel to Poland later Monday, campaign spokeswoman 
		Andrea Saul said the candidate's comments were "grossly 
		mischaracterized." The Republican's campaign contended Romney's 
		comparison of countries that are close to each other and have wide 
		income disparities — the U.S. and Mexico, Chile and Ecuador — showed his 
		comments were broader than just the comparison between Israel and 
		Palestine. While speaking to U.S. audiences, Romney often highlights 
		culture as a key to economic success and emphasizes the power of the 
		American entrepreneurial spirit compared to the values of other 
		countries.
Palestinians noted that 
		Romney's comments did not address the stifling effect of Israel's 
		occupation. Although Israel 
		withdrew its soldiers and settlers from Gaza in 2005, it continues to 
		(blockade the Palestinian territory and) restrict Palestinian trade and 
		movement there and in the West Bank. The World Bank and the 
		International Monetary Fund have said repeatedly the Palestinian economy 
		can only grow in a sustainable way of Israel lifts those restrictions.
		
Saeb Erekat, a senior Palestinian official, said Romney's comments 
		are hurting U.S. efforts to restore Washington's standing in the Muslim 
		and Arab world.
"There are 57 Muslim and Arab countries here, and 
		while U.S. diplomats are exerting every possible effort to explain their 
		position, here comes Romney, with no knowledge of the region, its 
		history and culture, and gives such statements, which will only serve as 
		ammunition in the hands of extremists in this region," Erekat said.
		
In recent years, the U.S. has remained constant in its support for 
		establishing a Palestinian state alongside Israel, regardless of whether 
		a Democrat or a Republican sat in the White House. But two decades of 
		on-again, off-again U.S.-led peace efforts have been bedeviled by 
		violence and have not nudged the sides towards a final peace deal that 
		would settle borders and other issues.
"We need the U.S. as an 
		honest broker for peace, between us and the Palestinians," said Alon 
		Liel, a former senior Israeli Foreign Ministry official. "It's not 
		enough being a friend. If we don't have the honest broker, we don't have 
		peace. There are no signs that Romney understands it."
Deputy 
		Israeli Foreign Minister Danny Ayalon, a former Israeli ambassador to 
		Washington, came to Romney's defense, saying he was impressed by "his 
		intellect, by his breadth of knowledge and his vision."
It's 
		become the norm for U.S. presidential hopefuls to make a stop in Israel 
		in hopes of winning support from Jewish voters in the U.S., and 
		Palestinian officials say Romney's embrace of Israel's positions was 
		expected, especially with polls showing a close race. Romney apparently 
		hoped to exploit the sense that Obama's relations with Israelis and the 
		government of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has been rocky.
		
Israeli officials received 
		Romney warmly as he agreed with Israel that Jerusalem is Israel's 
		capital, disregarding the Palestinians' claim to the war-won eastern 
		sector, annexed by Israel in 1967 in a move that is not internationally 
		recognized. Romney also suggested he was open to move the U.S. Embassy 
		from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, something the Israelis have long sought but 
		the U.S. has refused to do because it would imply recognition of Israeli 
		sovereignty over the entire city.
Romney also spoke 
		categorically about protecting Israel from Iran's nuclear ambitions, 
		which both Israel and the U.S. think are directed at producing bombs, 
		despite Tehran's denial. He also cancelled a planned meeting with 
		Israel's opposition Labor Party leader, sparking concerns among Israeli 
		commentators that Netanyahu and his visitor appeared so politically 
		allied that it might endanger Israel's standing in Washington if Obama 
		were reelected.
During his 36 hours in Israel, Romney did not 
		make the 30-minute trip to the West Bank or seek a meeting with 
		Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, though he did meet briefly with 
		Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad in Jerusalem. Romney left Israel 
		on Monday.
Romney's remarks also managed 
		to offend some Jews, who thought the talk about Jewish prosperity played 
		into an anti-Semitic stereotype. "When I heard the association between 
		Jews and money, it really caused me some uncomfortable feeling, I must 
		say, because that was what was said by anti-Semites all over the years," 
		said Abraham Diskin, a political science professor at the 
		Inter-Disciplinary Center outside Tel Aviv.
Laub 
		reported from the West Bank. Associated Press writers Diaa Hadid in 
		Jerusalem and Mohammed Daraghmeh in Ramallah, West Bank contributed 
		reporting.
		Palestinian officials say Romney undermining peace process
		
		Ma'an, 30/07/2012 
		(Reuters/Jason Reed) By
		
		Jihan Abdalla
		RAMALLAH (Reuters) -- 
		Palestinian officials accused US Republican presidential candidate
		Mitt Romney on Monday of
		undermining peace prospects by calling Jerusalem 
		"the capital of Israel", ignoring Palestinian rights and most 
		world opinion.
Romney used the term on Sunday to sustained 
		applause from his Israeli audience in the Holy City, during a trip to 
		present himself as Israel's closest ally ahead of the Nov. 6 election 
		contest with President Barack Obama.
"We 
		condemn his statements. Those who speak about the two-state 
		solution should know that there can be no Palestinian state without East 
		Jerusalem," Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat told Reuters on Monday.
		
"What this man is doing here is just 
		promoting extremism, violence and hatred, and this is absolutely 
		unacceptable," he said. "His statements are just rewarding the (illegal 
		Israeli military) occupation and aggression."
Israel seized 
		eastern Jerusalem during a 1967 war. A UN 
		Security Council resolution condemns a 1980 Israeli law that declared 
		Jerusalem the "complete and undivided" capital of the country as a 
		violation of international law.
		Most countries, including the United States, have not recognized 
		Israel's declaration and have kept their embassies in the coastal city 
		of Tel Aviv.
Previous US presidential candidates, 
		including Senator Obama in June 2008, have referred to Jerusalem as 
		Israel's capital ahead of elections, only to row back when taking power 
		and suggest the issue should be resolved by negotiations.
A 
		senior aide to President Mahmoud Abbas, Nabil Abu Rudainah, said 
		Romney's statements were unhelpful, stood in the way of a peace 
		settlement and "contradict the previous positions 
		held by the American administration".
Palestine Liberation 
		Organization secretary-general Yasser Abed Rabbo said: "American policy 
		makers must abandon hypocrisy and stop 
		attempting to gain votes at the expense of the Palestinian people's 
		rights."
Hedging bets
He added: "Mr Romney must understand 
		that such an era has ended and Arab nations who are rebelling for the 
		sake of freedom and dignity will not allow him to mess with their fates 
		in order to win some votes."
Romney met Palestinian Authority 
		Prime Minister Salam Fayyad briefly in Jerusalem on Sunday, but did not 
		travel to the nearby occupied West Bank, focusing primarily on Israeli 
		leaders.
In an interview with CNN, Romney refused to be pinned 
		down on whether he would recognize Jerusalem as Israel's capital if he 
		beats Obama and wins the White House.
"A nation has the capacity 
		to choose its own capital city, and Jerusalem is Israel's capital," he 
		said.
"I think it's long been the policy of our country to 
		ultimately have our embassy in the nation's capital, Jerusalem. The 
		decision to actually make the move is one, if I were president, I would 
		want to take in consultation with the leadership of the (Israeli) 
		government which exists at that time. So I would follow the same policy 
		we have in the past."
Pressed on whether he would make the move 
		on becoming president, Romney said: "I'm not going to make foreign 
		policy for my nation, particularly while I'm on foreign soil. My 
		understanding is the policy of our nation has been a desire to move our 
		embassy ultimately to the capital."
Seeking American Jewish and 
		fundamentalist Christian votes, Romney has criticized Obama on Israel, 
		alleging last year that the President had "thrown Israel under a bus" in 
		pushing hard for a two-state solution between Israel and the 
		Palestinians.
Direct peace talks brokered by Washington ground to 
		a halt in 2010 and attempts to get the two sides back to the negotiating 
		table have since failed.
Romney did not criticize Obama by name 
		during his two-day stay but made some pointed criticisms of his 
		policies.
Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak made clear on 
		Monday he was happy with the support received from the US president.
		
"This American administration of Obama has been giving unprecedented 
		backing to Israel's security ... This administration has done a lot to 
		maintain Israel's qualitative advantage," he told Israel Radio.
		Romney courts Jewish donors, says occupied Jerusalem capital 
		of Israel 
		[ 30/07/2012 - 02:04 PM ] 
		OCCUPIED JERUSALEM, (PIC)-- 
		US right-wing republican candidate Mitt Romney claimed on Sunday that 
		the occupied city of Jerusalem is the capital of Israel and vowed to 
		move the US embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem if elected president.
		In a speech described as an attempt to bootlick the Jewish audience 
		and donors of his presidential campaign, Romney emphasized, during a 
		visit to Jerusalem, the shared interests and values between the US and 
		the Israeli regime.
		He also gave a solemn pledge to block Iran from achieving its nuclear 
		aspirations and to stand by Israel if it decided to use military force 
		against Iran.
		"The ayatollahs in Iran are testing our moral defenses. They want to 
		know who will object and who will look the other way," he said. "We will 
		not look away nor will our country ever look away from our passion and 
		commitment to Israel."
		Political analysts opined that Romney declared himself in advance as 
		a warmonger when he made an irresponsible full commitment to siding with 
		Israel against its enemies by every conceivable means.
		Mitt Romney arrived in the occupied Palestinian territories late on 
		Saturday to meet top Israeli officials, deliver a public speech and hold 
		a major fundraiser for his presidential campaign.
		Romney raises over $1 million at end of Israel trip 
		
		July 29. (Reuters/Nir Elias) By
		
		Steve Holland
JERUSALEM (Reuters) -- 
		US Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney on Monday tapped 
		Jewish-American donors for more than $1 million, ending a trip to Israel 
		that aimed to show he would be a better ally than President Barack 
		Obama.
After days in which Romney spoke mostly on foreign policy 
		issues, the fundraiser returned him to more comfortable turf -- the 
		state of the US economy, which he sees as the main issue in the Nov. 6 
		election.
It was the second fundraiser of Romney's trip abroad. 
		He picked up $2 million from Americans in London, as the candidates 
		compete for cash for the expected multi-million-dollar burst of 
		political TV ads in the last 100 days of the campaign.
		Las Vegas casino owner Sheldon Adelson, an ally 
		of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as well, sat to Romney's 
		left at the breakfast event in Jerusalem.
Adelson had 
		backed Romney rival Newt Gingrich in the Republican primary, but has 
		turned his support to the former Massachusetts governor.
		Adelson has contributed some $10 million to a "Superpac" 
		that supports Romney. A Superpac is an outside group not directly 
		affiliated with a campaign that can support a candidate.
		 (This is one way of how Zionists control 
		the U.S. political system, in addition to their control and ownership of 
		the mass media).
		'Stark Difference' of Income Between Israelis and 
		Palestinians
Romney received a warm welcome from 
		Israeli leaders as he tried to portray himself as a better friend of 
		Israel than Obama, whose relationship with Netanyahu has been testy.
		
While Romney carried a clear pro-Israel message, he also noted a 
		"stark difference" in the average incomes of Israelis and Palestinians 
		-- $25,000 and $1,000, respectively.
Palestinian Authority Prime 
		Minister Salam Fayyad, who held a brief meeting with Romney on Sunday, 
		told Reuters in a Twitter exchange they had discussed "the peace process 
		and the economical challenges in Palestine."
But on Monday, 
		Palestinians accused Romney of undermining peace prospects by calling 
		Jerusalem "the capital of Israel," ignoring their own claims to the city 
		and most world opinion.
Romney used the term on Sunday to 
		sustained applause from his Israeli audience in Jerusalem.
"We 
		condemn his statements. Those who speak about the two-state solution 
		should know that there can be no Palestinian state without East 
		Jerusalem," chief Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat told Reuters.
		
Romney began his foreign trip in London, where he irked Britons by 
		questioning their readiness to host the Summer Olympics.
Romney 
		heads to Poland later on Monday, where he is scheduled to meet with 
		Solidarity leader Lech Walesa in Gdansk, as well as Polish Prime 
		Minister Donald Tusk and to visit a World War Two memorial.