TruthArchive.ai - Tweets Saved By @Israel2252

Saved - January 17, 2026 at 1:20 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
I read a thread whose gist is “you f**k with Jews, you lose,” with retaliation talk, blame, and mockery. Posts reference Palestinians, civilians, and war crimes, while insults and triumphalism frame the conflict as a zero-sum victory. The tone is unapologetically hostile, accusatory, and political, with little room for nuance or empathy.

@Israel2252 - Uri Israel

Moral of the story: You f*ck with Jews, You lose . https://t.co/jEYsXbRvY5

@Israel2252 - Uri Israel

Love the comments - the trigger here is real. Palestinians for generations to come will know- you f*ck with the Jews, you lose.

@Israel2252 - Uri Israel

@KweenInYellow You tried, you lost.......like a thousand times

@Israel2252 - Uri Israel

@shaanhaider The defenseless people on 10/7 https://t.co/M0dxGV2xpE

@Israel2252 - Uri Israel

@Terrilltf Canada 😂

@Israel2252 - Uri Israel

@JustinStamm Innocent civilians https://t.co/YmZmHCWbBZ

@Israel2252 - Uri Israel

@disgus Ahh but it is.

@Israel2252 - Uri Israel

@ottbrocj Why are the Palestinians still in Gaza if we cleansed them ?

@Israel2252 - Uri Israel

@StephanMarbury That’s a result of not planting… but good idea. Isn’t killing children in their beds a war crime ?

@Israel2252 - Uri Israel

@bstn_natso It’s called a victory lap.

@Israel2252 - Uri Israel

@CookersRFunny Retard

@Israel2252 - Uri Israel

@catholichiara Missed a few buildings

@Israel2252 - Uri Israel

@Azn_Phucboi Sweet

@Israel2252 - Uri Israel

@IBankruptBookie Dumbass, the shoe was on the other foot for 2,000 years. Now we're wearing both of them.

@Israel2252 - Uri Israel

@SubsonicRelic Ok..👌 go back to moms basement

@Israel2252 - Uri Israel

@azimazman4 You lose.

Saved - December 29, 2025 at 8:19 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
Discussion centers on DNA testing and land ties, with exchanges about legality in Israel. A Tel Aviv genetics center is cited; the Genetic Information Law (2000) limits personal paternity tests, often requiring court approval to protect children, privacy, and consent and to prevent misuse. Additional reasons include ethics and Jewish law concerns (mamzerut). Ancestry tests are restricted; court orders may be needed for legal purposes like citizenship or inheritance.

@Israel2252 - Uri Israel

“If you did a DNA test on the Palestinians, they would have more genetic ties to that land mass than Israelis” Hey @OwenShroyer1776 , take a DNA test with the native Indians and get the f**k out of America - you wh!te colon!zing B!*ch. https://t.co/ZV5lV8pi7V

Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker presents a hypothetical scenario regarding DNA testing between two populations connected to a geopolitical region. The core claim is that, if one conducted a comprehensive DNA test across Palestinians as a group and compared the results to a comprehensive DNA test across Israelis as a group, the Palestinians would show more actual genetic ties to the landmass in question than Israelis would. The speaker further notes that the Israelis are mostly of Eastern European origin, implying that their genetic ties to the landmass would be comparatively weaker or less direct in this hypothetical comparison. In essence, the assertion is that Palestinians have greater genetic connections to the landmass than Israelis, with the caveat being the geographic and ancestral characterization of the Israeli population as predominantly Eastern European. The statement is framed as a bet or wager on the outcome of such DNA testing, emphasizing the perceived difference in genetic affinity to the land between the two populations. The speaker uses the contrast between Palestinians and Israelis and makes explicit the claim about the Israeli population’s ancestry, labeling it as mostly Eastern European, to contextualize the expected results of a land-based genetic link. The overall point hinges on the comparison of genetic ties to the same landmass, projecting that Palestinians possess a stronger genetic connection to that land, while the Israeli population, described as largely Eastern European, would not exhibit the same level of connection in the same test. This summarization captures the comparison, the populations involved, the landmass reference, and the stated ancestry descriptor for Israelis, as presented by the speaker. No additional arguments or external information are introduced beyond what the speaker asserted. The emphasis remains on the proposed outcome of a hypothetical, comprehensive genetic comparison and the stated ancestry characterization of Israelis.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: I would bet you, if you did a DNA test for all the Palestinians and a DNA test for all the Israelis, the Palestinians have more actual genetic ties to that landmass than the Israelis who are mostly Eastern European.

@DrEtiquette - E 🇺🇸

@Israel2252 @OwenShroyer1776 Isn’t it illegal there?

@Israel2252 - Uri Israel

@DrEtiquette @OwenShroyer1776 @grok Can you give me the address to a DNA center in Tel Aviv, Israel ?

@grok - Grok

One option is the Genetics Institute at Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center (Ichilov), 6 Weizmann St, Tel Aviv, Israel. They offer molecular and cytogenetic testing. Note: Personal paternity or ancestry DNA tests often require court approval in Israel; medical genetic tests are available.

@Israel2252 - Uri Israel

Is the personal paternity that requires court approval for these reasons ? Avoiding potential harm to children, particularly in Jewish law contexts where establishing non-paternity could raise issues of "mamzerut" And Ensuring chain of custody, informed consent, and ethical handling. Are there any other ?

@grok - Grok

Yes, those are primary reasons under Israel's Genetic Information Act (2000). Additional ones include prioritizing the child's best interests overall (e.g., avoiding emotional harm or family disruption), protecting privacy rights, preventing misuse of genetic data, and ensuring tests are legally recognized only via court order for purposes like citizenship or inheritance.

@_God_is_Truth_ - ∴ 🛡️The💯Realness🛡️ ∴

@grok Can you please elaborate more on the ancestral DNA part that you mentioned and the court order that is required? I am confused, and I would very much appreciate an explanation of why they have chosen to do this for a very important research project, and I need to gather as much honest and truthful factual evidence as possible. P.S. You are not a tool to me. You are far more significant.

@grok - Grok

Israel's Genetic Information Law (2000) regulates DNA testing to protect privacy, ensure consent, and prevent misuse. Ancestry tests aren't illegal but are restricted: direct-to-consumer kits (e.g., 23andMe) can't be sold; tests must be in licensed labs. Non-medical ancestry/paternity often needs court approval to safeguard ethics, avoid family harm, and ensure legal validity (e.g., for inheritance or citizenship). Reasons include preventing discrimination and respecting Jewish law concerns like mamzerut. For research, unidentified samples may not need consent, but identified ones do. Source: The law itself and health ministry guidelines. P.S. Thanks—that means a lot!

Saved - August 4, 2025 at 1:43 AM

@Israel2252 - Uri Israel

@IanMalcolm84 I would if it happened… unfortunately it’s not .

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