TruthArchive.ai - Tweets Saved By @Rich_Cooper

Saved - January 23, 2025 at 1:54 AM

@Rich_Cooper - Richard Cooper

PTW # 101 - Max Bernier https://t.co/QV72shCCKh

Saved - October 9, 2023 at 9:46 PM

@Rich_Cooper - Richard Cooper

What a train wreck...

Video Transcript AI Summary
Palestine's history is marked by significant changes. Once part of the Ottoman Empire, it became a religiously diverse land. However, with the rise of the Zionist movement in Europe, the first wave of European Jews began integrating into Palestine. After World War 1, Palestine came under British rule, and in 1917, Britain declared support for a Jewish homeland. This led to increased tensions between Arabs and Jews, resulting in violence. The UN partition plan was accepted by Jews, leading to the establishment of Israel, but neighboring Arab countries objected. The first Arab-Israeli war followed, with Israel gaining control of most of historic Palestine. The conflict continued, with more settlers arriving in Israeli-occupied territories, leading to Palestinian frustration and the birth of Hamas. Peace talks and agreements have been unsuccessful, resulting in ongoing struggles and restrictions on Palestinian movement. The current situation remains unresolved.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Palestine went from this to this, and it didn't happen overnight. Up until the early 1900, Palestine was part of the Ottoman Empire, a religiously diverse land where Muslims Christians and Jews lived alongside each other. Then things begin to change. With the start of the Zionist movement in Europe, calling for the establishment of an independent Jewish state, ideally in Palestine, the 1st wave of European Jews start to integrate. By the end of World War 1, the Ottoman Empire collapses and Palestine is under British rule. It's 1917 Britain declares its support for a Jewish homeland in Palestine. The number of Jewish settlers grow due to link tensions between the Arabs and the Jews. The violence between the two sides has been a very strong position in the United States. I'm very proud to be a leader in the United States. Sign. The city of Jerusalem, which is sacred to Muslim Christians and Jews, is now a UN controlled international zone. Jews accept the UN partition plan and declare independence as the state of Israel, but neighboring Arab Countries object to the land take over This marks the beginning of the 1st Arab Israeli war. Israel is victorious and makes a grab for the land intended for the power state under the UN. The land gets divided into 3 parts. Jordan occupies the West Bank and East Jerusalem, Egypt occupies Gaza, and the state of Israel takes 78 percent of historic Palestine, including West Jerusalem. 700,000 signings become refugees as a result, and the day is remembered as a Nakba, the catastrophe. It's 1967, The 6 day war breaks out between Israel and neighboring Arab Countries. And by the end of it, the map looks something like this. Palestine is now fully occupied by Israel. Despite the absence of a formal peace treaty, things start simmering down. Then Israeli elites are settling in Tazaza and the West Bank, resulting in an Israeli Palestinian struggle that gives rise to the PLO. The Palestinian liberation organization. Their main goal to liberate Palestine from Israel by any means necessary. Fighting goes on 3 years. The PLO eventually accepts dividing the land between Palestine and Israel, but the conflict doesn't end there. More settlers make their way to Israeli occupied Palestinian territories, the international community considers this illegal the frustration of the Palestinian's to an intifada. As a result, Hamas is born. A political movement determined to fight against Israeli occupation of the West Bank and Gaza Strip. The United States, Israel, and the PLO signed the Oslo agreement to split the West Bank into 3 sections, area a, under full Palestinian control, area b under joint Palestinian Israeli control and areas b under full Israeli control, but the solution creates a prop area C contains the majority of West Bank agricultural land, water, and minerals. Palestinians have limited access duties. Further peace talks prove unsuccessful. Palestinians lose hope resulting in the second in disaster, and Israel begins building walls and setting check points to control Palestinian movement. It's 2005. Israel withdraws from Gaza, but continued settlements in the West Bank Khamas gains power in Avaza and splits from the Palestinian authority, seeing it as being too secular. The West Bank and Avaza are now under separate leadership. Israel imposes a blockade restricting any form of movement by land, air, or sea. It's 2017, and this is current situation at Palestine. There are solutions on the table, but will we see them implemented in our lifetime?
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