Hollywood stars raise $60 million for US taxpayer-funded Israeli military

Sbp

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We will have to do something about this israeli problem in this country sooner or later


Especially when majority of israelis are merely europeans pretending to be Jewish.
I don't think that will happen breh. I recently had a conversation about Israel with a dude who used to be in the military and the way he explained it was Isreal is really just an American colony for Jews but actually called that.
 

Moody

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We will have to do something about this israeli problem in this country sooner or later


Especially when majority of israelis are merely europeans pretending to be Jewish.

Majority of their haplogroups autosomal results are full on East European.

Sam Harris too

All on his organised religion doesn’t have a place in politics etc

What about your support of Israel..a self described Jewish state with organised religion playing a major part of its identity?

Sam Harris: *insert Juelz gif*

Admittedly they are rather atheistic overall.

But yes they are an ethnoreligious state and heavily discriminate against actual Semitic Jews who have lived in the Levant for thousands of years.
 

newworldafro

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Russians aint shyt either.

Dont know why you are caping for them

But the israelis are far worse and have been waging info warfare against the American public for far longer

I'm not caping, but the fact we spent 2 years faking rhe funk like Russia has anything to do with the outcome of 2016 election as a form of foreign election meddling (with still no proof), which led to 2 years of chasing ghosts on social media, leading to censorship of voices online.....is my point.
 

loyola llothta

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Drb7PNeWsAAZY3b.jpg
 

Koichos

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Majority of their haplogroups autosomal results are full on East European.
Our European component (as well as for the Sephardim) is almost entirely Southern European. The low-level Northern and Eastern European ancestry is male-mediated, likely the result of rape in most cases (based on the social circumstances).

(Seldin et al., 2006)
Using a genome-wide single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) panel, we observed population structure in a diverse group of Europeans and European Americans. Under a variety of conditions and tests, there is a consistent and reproducible distinction between ‘‘northern’’ and ‘‘southern’’ European population groups: most individual participants with southern European ancestry (Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, and Greek) have >85% membership in the ‘‘southern’’ population; and most northern, western, eastern, and central Europeans have >90% in the ‘‘northern’’ population group. Ashkenazi Jewish as well as Sephardic Jewish origin also showed >85% membership in the ‘‘southern’’ population, consistent with a later Mediterranean origin of these ethnic groups.

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Admittedly they are rather atheistic overall.

But yes they are an ethnoreligious state and heavily discriminate against actual Semitic Jews who have lived in the Levant for thousands of years.
Ashkenazim are closely related to the Jews who have lived in the Middle East for millennia.

(Atzmon et al., 2010)
This study touches upon an issue that was raised over a century ago by Maurice Fishberg, Joseph Jacobs, and others about whether the Jews constitute a race, a religious group, or something else. In this study, Jewish populations from the major Jewish Diaspora groups—Ashkenazi, Sephardic, and Mizrahi—formed a distinctive population cluster by PCA analysis . . . Within the study, each of the Jewish populations formed its own cluster as part of the larger Jewish cluster. Each group demonstrated Middle Eastern ancestry and variable admixture with European populations. This was observed in the structure plots and in the Fst analysis by the proximity of all Jewish populations one to another, to non-Jewish Middle Eastern populations, and to non-Jewish Southern European (French, Northern Italian, and Sardinian) populations.


(Behar et al., 2013)
Finally, the fifth and largest Jewish group unites Ashkenazi, North African, and Sephardi Jews. While these populations do differ slightly in the proportions of clusters k2 (light red), k4, and k5, their genetic similarity is striking. Minimal distinction is visible between the Western and Eastern Ashkenazi Jews, but a minutely elevated membership is visible in the Eastern Ashkenazi group for the largely East Asian clusters k9 (yellow) and k10 (orange) . . . For the Jewish populations included in a large group containing Ashkenazi, North African, and Sephardi Jews, most of the populations with the highest similarity of cluster membership coefficients are other Jewish populations . . . Ashkenazi Jewish samples share the greatest genetic ancestry with other Jewish populations, and among non-Jewish populations, with groups from Mediterranean Europe and the Middle East.


(Campbell et al., 2012)
Two major subgroups were identified by principal component, neighbor joining tree, and identity-by-descent analysis—Moroccan/ Algerian and Djerban/Libyan—that varied in their degree of European admixture. These populations showed a high degree of endogamy and were part of a larger Ashkenazi and Sephardic Jewish group . . . using genome-wide SNP and copy number variation data, we demonstrated that Sephardic (Greek and Turkish), Ashkenazi (Eastern European), and Mizrahi (Iranian, Iraqi, and Syrian) Jews were more related to each other than to their non-Jewish contemporary neighbors (16). We showed that this relatedness could be explained on the basis of sharing DNA segments identical by descent (IBD) within and between populations . . . A global study of Jewish population genetics from 2010 partitioned most Jewish genomes into Ashkenazi–North African–Sephardic, Caucasus–Middle Eastern, and Yemenite subclusters.


(Behar et al., 2010)
An illustrative example at K = 8 (Fig. 3 and Supplementary Note 3) is the pattern of membership of Ashkenazi, Caucasus (Azerbaijani and Georgian), Middle Eastern (Iranian and Iraqi), north African (Moroccan), Sephardi (Bulgarian and Turkish) and Yemenite Jewish communities . . . which is similar to that observed for Middle Eastern non-Jewish populations, suggesting a shared regional origin of these Jewish communities. This inference is consistent with historical records describing the dispersion of the people of ancient Israel throughout the Old World. The tight cluster comprising the Ashkenazi, Caucasus, Middle Eastern, north African and Sephardi Jewish communities, as well as Samaritans, strongly overlaps Israeli Druze and is centrally located on the principal component analysis (PCA) plot when compared with Middle Eastern, European Mediterranean, Anatolian and Caucasus non-Jewish populations (Fig. 1).


(Kleiman, 1999)
The finding of a common set of genetic markers in both Ashkenazic and Sephardic Cohanim worldwide clearly indicates an origin pre-dating the separate development of the two communities around 1000 CE. Date calculation based on the variation of the mutations among Cohanim today yields a time frame of 106 generations from the ancestral founder of the line, some 3,300 years, the approximate time of the exodus from Egypt, the lifetime of Aharon HaCohen. Professor Hammer was recently in Israel for the Jewish Genome Conference. He confirmed that his findings are consistent: over 80% of self-identified Cohanim have a common set of markers. Jewish status is determined by the mother. Tribe membership follows the father’s family line. Calculations based on the high rate of genetic similarity of today’s Cohanim resulted in the highest “paternity-certainty” rate ever recorded in population genetics studies — a scientific testimony to family faithfulness. Wider genetic studies of diverse present day Jewish communities show a remarkable genetic cohesiveness. Jews from Iran, Iraq, Yemen, North Africa and European Ashkenazim all cluster together with other Semitic groups, with their origin in the Middle East. A common geographical origin can be seen for all mainstream Jewish groups studied.
 

BaggerofTea

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Our European component (as well as for the Sephardim) is almost entirely Southern European. The low-level Northern and Eastern European ancestry is male-mediated, likely the result of rape in most cases (based on the social circumstances).




Ashkenazim are closely related to the Jews who have lived in the Middle East for millennia.



This make sense. But that does prove any connection to the ancient 12 tribes of Israel.
 
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