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Friday, November 13, 2015

FRIDAY THE 13 .. and the curse

... it's Friday / 13 & i have to look back...

I taken another look back at this... as a year approaches since the ABOMINATION ... and now discovered more info that I need to edit back into my blog to bring this up to date...
As the curse was placed, and needed to come to shed it's light... 

“The man clothed in linen, who was above the waters of the river, lifted his right hand and his left hand toward heaven, and I heard him swear by him who lives forever, saying, “It will be for a time, times and half a time. When the power of the holy people has been finally broken, all these things will be completed.””
‭‭Daniel‬ ‭12:7‬ ‭NIV‬‬

http://bible.com/111/dan.12.7.niv

Monday, October 26, 2015

Breaking news...

JERUSALEM (AP) — Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has ordered a review of the status of certain Palestinian neighborhoods in east Jerusalem, an official confirmed Monday, a decision that could potentially strip tens of thousands of Palestinians of their Israeli residency rights.

Saturday, October 24, 2015

DESOLATION insight


This hand picked Nut-in-yahoo .gov has already done too much damage to save Israel from getting in-2 the civil war (Jews and Gentiles) as it lifts Muslim age limit rule for worship at the Jerusalem shrine.

Now the reader should be able to get this picture at this time of how the  "DESOLATION" of Jerusalem IS REAlL 
In the news — Muslim prayers at a major Jerusalem shrine, the epicenter of weeks of unrest, ended Friday after Israel lifted restrictions on worshippers in what is known to Jews as the Temple Mount and as Haram al-Sharif to Muslim
In the latest upsurge of violence, at least eight Israelis have been killed and dozens wounded in knife or gun attacks by Palestinians, following rumours that Israel was planning to change the rules. 
Which they did duh.. that is why I say "damage is done" ...


As about 50 Palestinians, have been killed in recent weeks.

The current round of violence erupted in mid-September, with clashes at the Jerusalem shrine, revered by Muslims and Jews, quickly spreading to the rest of the city, as well as the West Bank and Gaza Strip.
Over the past few weeks, Israel had barred younger Muslim men — seen by police as the main potential trouble-makers — from entering the compound on Fridays, the main day of prayer in the Muslim religious week. The bans, which were put into place intermittently, had at times targeted men up to the age of 50.
Muslims view age restrictions as part of the perceived Israeli attempt to step up its control.
Meanwhile, barriers and checkpoints that Israel set up last week on the outskirts of Arab neighborhoods of the city remain in place.
Israel's Cabinet had approved the movement restrictions to try to stem a wave of recent stabbings. Many of the attackers come from traditionally Arab east Jerusalem, seized by Israel in the 1967 war and annexed in a move not recognized internationally.
The barriers had caused traffic jams and severely disrupted the daily lives of many of the city's more than 300,000 Palestinian residents, prompting complaints of collective punishment. 
According to U.N. figures released Friday, Israel set up 38 obstacles, including 17 manned checkpoints, 20 road barriers and one earth mound in nine neighborhoods. The count was conducted Wednesday, the U.N. said.

This cycle is already set in motion in which "NUT-in-yahoo" (.gov) core is bad, as it has promoted that Jews to arm themselves ... I would advise anyone who does not want to be caught in a war flee before the end of this month, as it well be to late if you get caught in the crossfire that is prophecies  

Thursday, October 22, 2015

This is how Nut-in-yahoo came to power after the abomination

As everyone can see how soon after the abomination, Netanyahu fired the government and called for a vote so he could wage war ... (A lot of people are going to die very soon)

Netanyahu: Hitler Didn't Want to Exterminate the Jews - Israel 
Netanyahu stated that a World War II-era Palestinian leader persuaded the Nazis to adopt their Final Solution to exterminate 6 million Jews. 
Prime minister words at the World Zionist Congress that Hitler only wanted to expel the Jews, but Haj Amin al-Husseini convinced him to exterminate them.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu sparked public uproar when on Wednesday he claimed that the Mufti of Jerusalem, Haj Amin al-Husseini, was the one who planted the idea of the extermination of European Jewry in Adolf Hitler's mind. The Nazi ruler, Netanyahu said, had no intention of killing the Jews, but only to expel them.
In a speech before the World Zionist Congress in Jerusalem, Netanyahu described a meeting between Husseini and Hitler in November, 1941: "Hitler didn't want to exterminate the Jews at the time, he wanted to expel the Jew. And Haj Amin al-Husseini went to Hitler and said, 'If you expel them, they'll all come here (to Palestine).' According to Netanyahu, Hitler then asked: "What should I do with them?" and the mufti replied: "Burn them."
Watch- https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=-Ju1w-iDR0o&time_continue=72&ebc=ANyPxKpt2JXgeh0gKn95zJS5oRkBAeFudnSp0FyQzK2B9u8qLgIIJFRJsQjxvaNhF8zwKwuAG9E784gFmTmzA5W6rqQVhXhlLQ

Wednesday, October 21, 2015

NUT-in-yahoo is blames Palestine ...

Nut-in-yahoo shows his character under color of authority

Netanyahu criticized for saying Holocaust was mufti's idea, not Hitler's


There's no video or audio, not even a transcript, that can definitively prove Netanyahu's account of the conversation between Hitler and Husseini, who as grand mufti oversaw Muslim sites in Jerusalem. But it quickly spurred criticism in Israel and the Palestinian territories, with some claiming that Netanyahu had effectively absolved Hitler of the Holocaust's most gruesome, deplorable aspect and instead blamed Husseini -- then and now a renowned figure in Palestinian circles -- for the systemic killing of more than 6 million Jews using gas chambers and firing squads.

PLO: Statements 'deepened the divide'

Palestinian Liberation Organization Secretary General Saeb Erakat strongly refuted Netanyahu's claim. He pointed to Palestinians who fought with the Allies during World War II and said, "Palestinian efforts against the Nazi regime are a deep-rooted part of our history."
Even worse, according to Erakat, is that this statement comes as world leaders like U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon have publicly and privately urged Netanyahu to ease the rhetoric in order to calm tensions that have flared in recent weeks
Eight Israelis have been killed after being stabbed, shot and run over. On the other side, at least 45 Palestinians have been killed either for their part in those attacks or in clashes with Israeli authorities in the West Bank, Jerusalem and Gaza, according to the Palestinian Health Ministry.
"(Netanyahu's) regrettable statements have deepened the divide during a time when a just and lasting peace is needed most," Erakat said. "(They are) further fueling the political issue into a religious one, and underscoring his commitment to the continued occupation and violence against Palestinians."

Israeli opposition: 'Dangerous distortion'

It's not just Palestinians who are upset.
Netanyahu has also been blasted in Israel. Isaac Herzog, the head of that country's opposition Zionist Union party, said Netanyahu, through his comments, "has forgotten that he is not only the Israeli Prime Minister but also the Prime Minister of the Jewish people."
"This is a dangerous distortion of history and I demand that Netanyahu fix it immediately, because it trivializes the Holocaust, trivializes the Nazis and the share of the terrible dictator Adolf Hitler's terrible tragedy of our people during the Holocaust," Herzog wrote on his Facebook page.
"It falls like a ripe fruit straight into the hands of Holocaust deniers and puts them in conflict with the Palestinians."

Not backing down

The Israeli leader rarely backtracks or backs down, and he isn't in this case either. Talking before a trip to Berlin -- the same place where Hitler and Husseini met -- he called the criticisms "absurd" and insisted he "had no intention to absolve Hitler of responsibility for his diabolical destruction of European Jewry."
And Netanyahu stood by his condemnation of Husseini "for encouraging and urging Hitler," citing testimony by a deputy of key Nazi figure Adolf Eichmann during his trial for his role in the Holocaust.
"The mufti was instrumental in the decision to exterminate the Jews of Europe," the Israeli leader said. 
" ... My intention was not to absolve Hitler, but rather to show that the forefathers of the Palestinian nation -- without a country and without the so-called 'occupation,' without land and without settlements -- even then aspired to systematic incitement to exterminate the Jews."

Hitler's anti-Semitism years in the making

The full truth of what transpired between Hitler (who died in Berlin in 1945) and Husseini (who died in Beirut, Lebanon, in 1974) died with them. Yet clues can be derived by exploring their lives before (and, in Husseini's case, after) the horrors of Auschwitz, Buchenwald, Treblinka and other concentration camps. 
Hitler's anti-Semitism has been well-documented. One early indicator is a 1919 letter to a German army captain that articulated his notion that Judaism was a race (not a religion) that threatened German society. 
"The final goal must be the removal of Jews," Hitler wrote, according to the letter found in the Nazi Archives in Nuremberg and now at the Simon Wiesenthal Center. "To accomplish these goals, only a government of national power is capable."
He would eventually head such a government, overseeing policies that -- through legislation, deportation into ghettos, killing squads and ultimately death camps -- targeted Jews. 
As Erakat noted, it's a fact that many Muslims sided with the Allies and fought against Hitler. But the Fuehrer did have at least one notable Muslim ally, according to a U.S. National Archives publication citing U.S. documents and officials -- Husseini.

Mufti denied favoring 'elimination of the Jews'

That same U.S. report noted that Husseini had led anti-Jewish revolts in what was then Palestine (and run by the British) in 1929 and 1936. 
In a 1952 interview with Life magazine, the grand mufti said he ended up in Germany during World War II because first the English, then the French attempted to capture him and he couldn't find refuge in Iraq, then Iran, then Turkey.
"I had to go to Europe. Where in Europe could I go? England? France?" Husseini said. "The only place was Germany."
Once there, according to the National Archives report, Husseini appeared on pro-Nazi propaganda broadcasts aimed at the Arab world, helped recruit Muslims in Croatia to fight for the Axis and was bankrolled by the German state. He also had interactions with SS leader Heinrich Himmler and Eichmann, according to testimony at the latter's 1961 trial in Israel.
The grand mufti ended up bouncing around from Switzerland to France to Syria to Egypt before eventually settling in Lebanon. "The Allies knew enough about Husseini's wartime activities to consider him a war criminal," the U.S. report says, citing declassified CIA and Army files. Yet he never was charged with war crimes.
In his Life interview, Husseini challenged claims that he was ever a Hitlerite. In fact, he insisted that he and fellow Muslims "don't mean to eliminate the Jews. Not at all."
"No, the elimination of the Jews is not in our program," said Husseini. "We have no idea of wiping them out. The Jews lived among us for 13 centuries as a minority, and we protected them."