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2007-03-24 02:04:53 · 31 answers · asked by Anonymous in Travel Africa & Middle East Lebanon

31 answers

the world would be much better without Israel, that is for sure Dear...peace in the Palestinian no more blood and............

but i don't know why those stupid people are here answer our Q ..... you should know that we don't need your answers at all go away ...to the Hill forever .... ensallah

2007-03-24 04:58:08 · answer #1 · answered by Ashu 2 · 4 5

a better place in the world but the real question is how would the world be without bush ???? ill answer that PEACE even if israel did exist

2007-03-25 11:50:18 · answer #2 · answered by Chequinah C 2 · 3 2

The Israel pre 1947 would be fine.
It is what has happened since that is so immoral.
Driven by the attitude of greed and lust for power the refugees from Europe brought with them. The new population have succeeded in turning it into a country that no God could be proud of saying "These are my children, this is their work in my name".

2007-03-24 20:50:20 · answer #3 · answered by sistablu...Maat 7 · 3 3

Without Israel....

-there would be nothing to stop Iran from making Lebanon it's little b*tch. We all know how much you would all love to live under Iranian domination (never mind the fact that you wouldn't be able to post in Yahoo Answers as your freedoms would be revoked).
-there would be no safe refuge for homosexual Palestinians
-there would be no protection for the rights of Christians in the Middle East
-there would be no medical charity programs such as Save a Child's Heart (http://www.saveachildsheart.com/) or the medical hospital in Metula, Israel, which provides free medical care for people in Southern Lebanon
-there would be none of the following inventions (many of which, you all benefit from): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-ri_gtIl_Zk


Anyhow, if Israel were to just cease to exist, it wouldn't do anything to solve the myriad other conflicts in the region (between Sunni and Shia, for example).

2007-03-24 11:40:31 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 3 4

Hmmm...I have a great imagination..
World would be better without them.....for sure !!!!..........but, for other side..
Who would Hezbos fight against and have as a excuse to be inside Lebanon.
What would USA do without Israel in the region?? Which country will them support???
Which would be the reason for Hamas to exist if Israel doesnt exist.

Middle East wouldnt be the same without them........but ...I know....to dream is free!!!!

2007-03-24 10:09:12 · answer #5 · answered by حلاَمبرا hallambra 6 · 5 4

I was not going to answer this question before "smiles4dacamera" commented. I just want to point out is some facts which you can learn.


For Israel, the story hasn't changed in many years. Israelis have settled in to lands that Palestinians call home, and these Israelis believe that they have the right to live there and call it home themselves. Palestinians want the Israeli "occupiers" to leave, and they desperately want a homeland of their own, a country of their own.

Great Britain had the most troops in Palestine when the war ended, and so Britain "won" the right to administer Palestine. Other territories became independent; Palestine did not.

One of the many actions taken by the British government and army was the announcement and enforcement of the Balfour Declaration, which stated that the British people and soldiers supported the construction of a homeland for the Jewish people—in Palestine. This was way back in 1917, long before the Holocaust.

Beginning in 1922, large numbers of Jewish people migrated to Palestine, pursuant to the Balfour Declaration. This migration continued for the rest of the decade and accelerated in the 1930s and 1940s. The people who called Palestine their homeland at this time didn't take too well to large numbers of new people moving in, especially since those "new neighbors" were Jewish and the majority of the people who were living in Palestine at the time were Muslim. In 1937, many Palestinians rebelled, calling for an independent nation, just like their neighbors were granted. Great Britain tried to find a way to satisfy both sides but gave up and, after the end of World War II, turned the problem over to the newly formed United Nations.

The U.N. proposed side-by-side Israeli and Palestinian states, with Jerusalem being part of both. Jews flocked to the area by the thousands after the Holocaust. Israel proclaimed its independence in 1948 and promptly set about occupying three-quarters of the Palestinian state, including part of Jerusalem. Jordan and Egypt occupied the other part, and most of the Palestinians fled for their lives.

Tensions flared between the neighboring nations for years. In 1967, Israel struck out against Egypt and Jordan. This was the Six-Day War, and it resulted in the expansion of Israel into all of Palestinian territory and land formerly claimed by Egypt and Jordan, including the Sinai Peninsula, the West Bank, the Gaza Strip, the Golan Heights, and (of course) all of Jerusalem.

The United Nations called on Israel to give back the territory it had seized, but the calls fell on deaf ears. Israel controls this territory to this day.
After this, Israel continued to insist that it had earned the right to occupy these territories. Palestinians, on the other hand, expressed what they saw as their right to live in a land that the U.N. recognized as theirs.

Wars of words led to wars with bullets and tanks. Both sides had "hawks" who thought that violence was the answer. One of the main hawks on the Palestinian side was Yasser Arafat, leader of the Palestine Liberation Organization and of Fatah, a guerilla movement that had violence as its goal. Members of Fatah were responsible for the slaughter of Israeli athletes at the Olympic Games in Munich in 1972.

But Israelis weren't innocent, either. Israeli leaders tended to make statements and take actions that inflamed the situation. Israeli Prime Ministers refused to even address Arafat as the Palestinian leader. Arafat refused to call off the hijackings, bombings, and kidnappings.

An increase in Israeli attacks on Palestinian leaders and territory led to the declaration of an intifada ("uprising") in 1987. It lasted six years, and it led Palestinian people to question Israeli people and methods with guns and bombs and widespread distrust. Israel, of course, responded with even more determination to keep the upper hand. Often, Israeli "demonstrations of force" aimed at keeping Palestinian guerrillas in line led to civilian casualties.

I know its not simple, but people keep getting it wrong, and I dont like to hear such monstrosities accused of Lebanon.

Youll agree I've made my point?

Toushka

2007-03-26 04:06:04 · answer #6 · answered by .... 4 · 2 1

omg if you want a world without israel, why dont you just leave israel alone, the only reason that their is so much violence going on is because the muslims WANT israel for themselves, so just leave israel alone, and israel will leave you alone, hundreds of years ago, the jews and the muslims worked together and lived side by side in peace, but now just because everyone wants to live in israel, they are enemys. Leave israel alone, and i promise you israel will not try and take over any other countrys or anything like u are trying to take over it.

2007-03-24 12:20:36 · answer #7 · answered by Smiles4daCamera 3 · 5 6

perfect world without Israel.

2007-03-24 14:24:01 · answer #8 · answered by beauty mirna 3 · 5 5

LMAO@Ghanouge

Ok im imagining the world without Israel,im imgaining,
im there,i can see it,oh yes,yes its a fine peace world!

2007-03-24 09:34:16 · answer #9 · answered by Pinky 6 · 10 4

I think it would be sooooo peaceful without them (You have no idea how much I hate israel I'm palestinian) there wouldn't be distruction in Palestine or in Lebnon I would love the world without them

2007-03-24 12:34:21 · answer #10 · answered by dream_angel 3 · 6 4

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