May 14, 2015 SnyderTalk: British Ex-MP: Anti-Semitism Cost Me My Seat

1--Intro Covering Israel and ME

“O magnify Yahweh with me, and let us exalt His Name together.” Psalm 34: 3

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2--SnyderTalk Lead Headline for use

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Cynthia Blank—British Ex-MP: Anti-Semitism Cost Me My Seat:

Defeated Conservative MP Lee Scott says ‘no question in my mind’ anti-Semitism contributed to loss of Ilford North constituency.

A Jewish politician from the United Kingdom is asserting that anti-Semitism cost him his seat in British parliament. 

Ousted Conservative MP Lee Scott was beaten during last Thursday’s general elections by Labor party’s Wes Streeting in the Ilford North constituency. He lost by only 589 votes. 

During the campaign, Scott received death threats and experienced anti-Jewish hatred, all of which he told the Jewish Chronicle on Sunday, contributed to his defeat. 

“There is no question in my mind,” Scott said. “I’d been through a lot with the death threats and other stuff going on.”

That is a reference to years of abuse the politician suffered from Islamists who called him an “enemy of Muslims.” Other constituents targeted the former MP for his Jewish heritage, and his vocalness in defending Israel in Parliament. 

Two years ago, Scott admitted to the Chronicle that he had cried after being called a “dirty Jewish pig” and receiving a death threat while on the campaign trail for re-election in 2010. After the incident, the former MP required police protection. 

[…]

To continue reading, click here.

SnyderTalk Comment: Trouble is brewing all over the world for Jewish people, but Europe may be their biggest problem.

In the Middle East, Israel can take care of herself and her people, but Jews in Europe don’t have that protection.

Is it time for Jewish people in Europe to go home?

I think that it has been time for a long time.  Jewish people who remain in Europe are taking an unnecessary risk.

Is this a dire warning?

No, but things have been getting progressively worse for Jews in Europe for years.

Remember that there was a time during the Third Reich when Jewish people could leave.  Suddenly, they couldn’t leave even if they wanted to.

I’ll leave it at that.

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13--Perspectives 2

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Joshua Mitnick: Israel Justice Post Goes to Pro-Settler—A few years ago, Ayelet Shaked was an obscure right-wing political activist with a day job as a marketing manager. Now, she is poised within days to be inaugurated as justice minister in Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s new conservative government, a role her opponents fear she will use to block a Palestinian state, marginalize Israel’s Arab minority and weaken the Supreme Court. “Making her justice minister is a red light,’’ Nachman Shai, an Israeli legislator from the liberal Zionist Union party who is concerned she will erode the high court’s authority. Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat accused Ms. Shaked of “openly calling for genocide and the ethnic cleansing of the Palestinian people.’’ Ms. Shaked’s spokeswoman said she was “fully committed to human rights” and “unequivocally condemns” violence or hatred toward civilians.

SnyderTalk Comment: I hate the descriptor “pro-settler” because it’s wrong and deceptive.

In the United States, people tend to associate “settlers” with the pioneers who moved west in the early days of this country.  They packed everything they owned into covered wagons and headed toward Missouri, Kansas, Colorado, Arizona, and California, for instance.

It took months of travel to get there, and there were obstacles galore along the way.  Not so with settlements in Israel.

Jerusalem, for example, is surrounded by “settlements”.  What people call a “settlement” in Jerusalem is what we call a neighborhood in the U.S.

When Katie and I visit Israel, we like to stay in Jerusalem.  Because of traffic congestion and the fact that we like to make frequent, unplanned stops to look around and talk with Jerusalemites, walking is our preferred mode of transportation.

We stay in the heart of Jerusalem at the top of Ben Yehuda on King George.  It’s a short walk to the Old City of Jerusalem, and it’s close to lots of other very interesting places.  I think it’s the best place to stay in Jerusalem.

From our hotel, we can walk to a number of “settlements” very easily.  A few years ago, we did walk to settlements on the Mount of Olives, for example, but not anymore.

The Kidron Valley separates the Old City from the Mount of Olives on the eastern side.  Israel has spent a lot of money beautifying the Kidron Valley.  They have constructed very nice walking trails for pilgrims who want to make the short trek to the Garden of Gethsemane at the base of the Mount of Olives.  It’s safe during the day, but in the evening, I won’t go there on foot anymore.

The City of David sits on the south side of the Old City.  It’s literally across the street from the Temple Mount.

The City of David sits at the base of Mount Moriah.  Yahweh’s Temple used to sit near the top of Mount Moriah on the Temple Mount.  References in the Bible to Jerusalem are referring to the area that we call the City of David today.

In the Bible, references to the City of David refer to Bethlehem or Beit Lechem.  It’s the town where David was born and raised.  It’s a few miles from Jerusalem.

Thankfully, the entrance to today’s City of David is very near the street separating the City of David from the Temple Mount, so visitors can walk there without taking undue risks.  But Silwan sits at the base of the City of David.  It’s a radical Muslim outpost where violence erupts frequently.  Katie and I used to walk all around the City of David, but not anymore.  It’s too risky.

I don’t want to leave anyone with the impression that you are putting your life on the line if you decide to walk around the City of David or to the Garden of Gethsemane or to the top of the Mount of Olives.  This is my point: juvenile delinquents who are pawns in the game of terror are more active today than they used to be.  They can be a problem, and they strike without warning.

Katie and I have had occasional minor problems in Jerusalem, but we knew that we were taking chances when we did.  Today, we stay clear of problem spots.  We know where they are, and we avoid them.

There are “settlements” in the City of David.  Leftist media types in Israel and around the world are trying to make Ayelet Shaked into something that she is not—a radical right-winger.  She is more accurately described as someone who believes what Yahweh said about the Promised Land, particularly about Judea and Samaria.

As I have said many times, this is a battle between good and evil.  Jewish people are in the battle by Yahweh’s design.  The Land of Israel is the center of the battle.  The Temple Mount is the epicenter of the battle.

Don’t let anyone confuse you by using inaccurate words.  The less you know about Israel, the more likely they can convince you that Israel is the villain.  Nothing could be further from the truth.

This article appears in the Wall Street Journal.  It’s not a leftist paper, but its writers make the mistake of using terms and phrases that were created by leftists to confuse readers.

Allen West: More ominous signs of Christian persecution—…There was a young man doing the checkout and another Walmart employee came over and put up a sign, “No alcohol products in this lane.” So being the inquisitive fella I am, I used my additional set of eyes — glasses — to see the young checkout man’s name. Let me just say it was NOT “Steve.” I pointed the sign out to Aubrey and her response was a simple question, how is it that this Muslim employee could refuse service to customers based on his religious beliefs, but Christians are being forced to participate in specific events contrary to their religious beliefs?

Benjamin Weinthal: Why does Germany’s young generation hold negative views of Israel?— The peerless Middle East historian Bernard Lewis wrote nearly 30 years ago in his groundbreaking book Semites and Anti-Semites that German guilt after the Holocaust contributed to the positive response to the founding of Israel. However, he warned presciently that “such feelings are a dwindling asset to Israel, and must inevitably die away as the memory of Nazi crimes recedes into the past.” Lewis’s words carry great urgency for today’s 50th anniversary of diplomatic reconciliation between Germany and Israel. In an email to The Jerusalem Post, Israel’s Ambassador to Germany Yakov Hadas Handelsman said the “young generation will stand in the center of this year’s anniversary.”

Tom Rogan: Why steering clear of the Middle East is a terrible idea— Much as the United States may like to, staying out the Middle East just isn’t an option — not if security is a priority. Last month, Jeff Stein and Jonathan Broder wrote an article at Newsweek. It’s worth reading. Defending President Barack Obama’s foreign policy, the authors reference Roman strategy to suggest that America “may have to learn to live” with Middle Eastern chaos: “As the Roman historian Tacitus wrote… ‘The Germanic tribes, left alone, would become divided again and cease to be dangerous.’ That might well be the hard lesson America has to learn.” It’s a tempting argument, after years of war that have killed or wounded tens of thousands of Americans — and cost trillions of dollars. As former Defense Secretary Robert Gates put it in 2011, “any future defense secretary who again advises the president to send a large army into Asia or the Middle East or Africa should have his head examined.” I share that sentiment.

SnyderTalk Comment: Thanks to Yahweh, steering clear of the Middle East is impossible.  He has made Israel and Jewish people tests of faith.  Everyone must choose.

You can’t be against Israel and Jewish people and be for Yahweh.  Those who think they can are fooling themselves.

YiYi Chen: China is destined to intervene in the conflict between Israel and Palestine— In June 1954, the leaders of China, India, and Burma (now Myanmar) issued a joint statement affirming the Five Principles of Peaceful Coexistence—mutual respect for sovereignty and territorial integrity, mutual non-aggression, non-interference in each other’s internal affairs, equality and mutual benefit, and peaceful coexistence—as the basis for conducting international relations. Since then, China has adhered strictly to the principle of non-interference in other countries’ domestic turmoil, as displayed prominently over the past several years in Beijing’s response to the Syrian civil war.

SnyderTalk Comment: China’s intervention in the Middle East is inevitable for a lot of reasons.  That’s why China is one of the countries that SnyderTalk follows closely.

Khaled Abu Toameh: Palestinian Authority’s “Crimes of High Treason”— The Palestinian Authority (PA) leadership continues to give false hope to Palestinians regarding the “right of return” to their former villages and towns in Israel, as do the leaderships of most Arab countries. This is what the Arab and Palestinian leaders have been doing since the establishment of Israel in 1948 — and why millions of Palestinians continue to live in refugee camps throughout the West Bank, Gaza Strip, Lebanon, Jordan and Syria. Instead of helping the refugees and encouraging them to move on with their lives, Arab and Palestinian leaders continue to ask them to stay where they are because, they will are told, they will return to the homes of their grandfathers and great grandfathers inside Israel. Arab and Palestinian leaders are afraid to confront the refugees with the truth sixty-seven years later, namely that the majority, if not all, will never return to towns and villages that no longer exist inside Israel.

Ben-Dror Yemini: Lies and Deception about the Bedouins in Israel—Last week, Israel’s Supreme Court decided to approve the evacuation of Bedouins from Umm al-Hiran to allow the construction of the new town of Hiran. The facts are, first of all, that the Bedouin expansion to the land allotted to Hiran began only after the decision was made by the state to build there. There are aerial photos that prove it. Second, most of the Bedouins in the area willingly accepted the arrangement proposed by the state, which included allotments of land nearby without cost, no payment for infrastructure, and additional compensation for the transfer. Bedouin families are not being thrown out on the street but are receiving a generous arrangement from the state.

David P. Goldman: Postscript: How could the world have gotten Israel so wrong?— M.K. Bhadrakumar writes off-line: “Interesting! How could the international community have got Israel so hopelessly wrong? Anti-Semitism?” There is enough of that, particularly among Europeans (who will never forgive the Jews for Auschwitz), but it is ridiculous to think that Chancellor Angela Merkel, by far the most poweful European leader, is anti-Semitic. Nor for that matter is Indian Prime Minister Modi, who congratulated Prime Minister Netanyahu on his re-elction in a Hebrew-language message, and who in any case may abandon support for a Palestinian state at the UN. The League of Nations did not betray China in 1931 out prejudice towards Chinese, but out of cynicism. But the West’s great weakness in such matters, as I wrote back in 2004, is something else: Horror and humiliation are the two great themes of world affairs in our time. The Islamic world cannot stand humiliation and the West cannot stand horror. The notion that nations may destroy themselves out of despair overwhelms Western sensibilities, and especially those of Western liberals, whose reason for being there is the premise that enlightened policy can heal all ills. Never in the entire history of warfare, as I observed in my post yesterday, has a belligerent done what Hamas did during the Gaza War, namely maximize civilian casualties on its own side in order to win sympathy. There is a reflex in the West to declare the deaths of civilians “unacceptable” even if it is engineered by Hamas, by placing rockets in civilian areas and preventing in many cases the evacuation of civilians. Under these circumstances civilian deaths, even very large numbers of them, are entirely justified.

Mark A. Heller: The Limits of Saudi-Israeli Convergence—Saudi Arabia is increasingly apprehensive about Iran, increasingly distrustful of the Obama administration’s ability or willingness to contain Iran’s hegemonial ambitions, and increasingly bent on confronting Iran itself – with or without American approval. The most plausible explanation for more forward-leaning Saudi behavior is the conviction, cemented by the course of nuclear negotiations with Iran, that America is determined to reach a broad accommodation with Iran, apparently extending to other regional issues, as well. Israel also sees Iran as its most dangerous adversary, and also has serious doubts whether the U.S. is still a reliable reed on which to lean. It may well be the case that convergent threat assessments do facilitate some covert contact between the security echelons of Israel and some of the Arab states concerned about the shadow of Iranian hegemony, and the potential may exist for expanded ties. But while Iran is feared and loathed in many Sunni Arab countries, Israel, though perhaps less feared, is no less loathed.

Herb Keinon: Analysis: Israel’s best friend in Europe is now a given—To grasp just how far Israeli-German relations have developed since formal diplomatic ties were established 50 years ago on Tuesday, contrast the following. On August 19, 1965, three months after ties were established with West Germany, Bonn’s emissary Rolf Pauls arrived in Jerusalem to submit his credentials to the president. Rioting broke out in the streets of Jerusalem, and his car was pelted with rocks and bottles. Just a few months earlier, in a Knesset debate on whether to formally establish ties, Herut head Menachem Begin, then an opposition MK, said “every German deserves to die… their hands are covered with Jewish blood… Therefore, there is neither absolution nor forgiveness, and no normal relations will ever be possible between us.” Then-prime minister Levi Eshkol took the opposite position in the Knesset, defending the move and saying that “reason must prevail over sentiment.” He argued that the country “must seize every opportunity we have to fortify the nation in its new homeland.”

Thomas Doherty: The Forbidden Films of the Third Reich— From its first great eye-popping expression, Leni Riefenstahl’s Triumph of the Will (1935), still the go-to source for archival images of the übermensch, up to and beyond Quentin Tarantino’s Inglourious Basterds (2009), a counter-factual mash-up of all things swastika-bedecked, moviegoers have been transfixed by the pageantry and pathology of Nazism on screen, as if by gazing into the images a clue might be found to unlock the madness. In Forbidden Films: The Hidden Legacy of Nazi Films the German documentarian Felix Moeller presents a selection of rare snippets from the Third Reich’s marquee programming—material that in another context might be billed as treasures from the vault. “Between 1933 and 1945, 1,200 feature films were made in Germany,” an omniscient script declares by way of introduction. “After the war the Allies banned over 300 films as propaganda. There are still restrictions on over 40 of these films today.” (Moeller, who previously surveyed the terrain in the poignant Harlan—in the Shadow of the Jew Süss [2008], means restrictions in Germany, where the public availability and exhibition of the Nazi oeuvre is strictly controlled.)

Eliezer Sherman: ‘Unintended Consequence of Out of State Tuition: Antisemitism’— An “unintended consequence” of bringing in greater numbers of out of state and foreign students who pay higher tuition into the University of California school system is a spike in antisemitism on campus, argued syndicated columnist Thomas B. Elias in an article published last week. Elias drew a correlation between the number of reported antisemitic incidents on campus over the past few years — including student government votes over anti-Israel boycott, divestment and sanctions measures — and an increase in the number of students the UCs have accepted from countries such as Iran, Malaysia and Saudi Arabia. The rise in antisemitism “makes some wonder whether the upsurge of campus anti-Semitism is linked to greater numbers of students from strongly anti-Israel countries, including Malaysia, which sent 164 undergraduates to UC last fall,” he wrote.

SnyderTalk Comment: That’s not an exaggeration.  It’s a real problem, and it’s more subtle on college campuses than U.S. born-and-raised students can appreciate.  Stated another way, a lot of our college students are being brainwashed.

Ruth Wisse: Anti-Semitism Goes to School— “I never dreamed that it could come to this!” In February, a Jewish college student was hospitalized after being punched in the face at a pro-Palestinian demonstration on a campus in upstate New York. His family has insisted on maintaining the boy’s privacy, but other such incidents, some caught on camera, include a male student punched in the face at Temple University, a female student at Ohio University harassed for defending Israel, and a male student at Cornell threatened physically for protesting anti-Israel propaganda. On three successive days last summer, the Boston police had to protect a student rally for Israel from pro-Palestinian mobs shouting “Jews back to Birkenau!” At the University of California-Irvine, this year’s Israel Independence Day festivities were blocked and shouted down by anti-Israel demonstrators. Every year, some 200 campuses now host a multiday hate-the-Jews fest, its malignancy encapsulated in its title: “Israel Apartheid Week.”

SnyderTalk Comment: It’s much worse in Europe, but this is America—land of the free and home of the brave, right?

We’ve lost touch with Yahweh.  There’s a payday for that.

Rafael Medoff: An American Trapped in the 1948 Siege of Jerusalem— “We are so used to bombs and the sound of firing guns that we don’t get upset anymore.” In choosing those words, Florence Bar Ilan probably hoped to convey that there was a certain stability to her daily life, but one can imagine her parents, Rachel and Samuel Ribakove, back in the Williamsburg section of Brooklyn, trembling as they read the letter their daughter sent from besieged Jerusalem during Israel’s 1948 War of Independence. “Dear Florence, Dear Mother and Dad,” a collection of letters between Florence and her American relatives from the 1930s through the 1960s, has been published by family members ahead of Yom Yerushalayim (Jerusalem Day) 2015, which falls on May 17. The collection is not only a way to document the family’s legacy, but also provides scholars, students, and the general public with a remarkable eyewitness account of an American immigrant’s life in Israel, including a riveting description of daily life during the 1948 siege of Jerusalem.

Jeffrey Birnbaum: Avoiding the trap of Hillary amnesia— Hillary Clinton is lucky to be beleaguered by controversy. Not in a literal sense, but it terms of timing. Getting bad news out of the way early is a huge advantage in an era when memories are so short. Mrs. Clinton’s email missteps and her family foundation’s dalliance with foreign governments will be so far in the rearview mirror by election time that the Clintons and their allies will dismiss them as old news. Plenty of voters will probably agree. We live in an amnesiac time. Yesterday’s big story — even if it was front-page news and the focus of news channel coverage — will quickly be forgotten. Now if the drumbeat of criticism manages to persist, Mrs. Clinton’s prospects will be hurt. Fresh fodder for the news cycle — even if its genesis is an old story — can be quite damaging, especially if it pops up in an election year. The Benghazi tragedy might become the albatross that Mrs. Clinton’s detractors want it to be if new and substantial allegations eventually surface.

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SnyderTalk Comment: Babies aren’t accidents and they aren’t tissue.  How babies come into the world is not a mystery.

Murder is a crime.  Yahweh’s definition of murder is not the same as ours.

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9--Jerusalem Post

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Poll: Most Israelis give Netanyahu bad grade on coalition building

Merkel to Rivlin: Nuclear agreement unlikely to be reached with Iran

SnyderTalk Comment: I believe that.

European rabbis honor French PM Valls for combating anti-Semitism

Syrian rebels claim Nasrallah suffered stroke

SnyderTalk Comment: I’m not surprised.  Nasrallah looks like a sinister Pillsbury Dough Boy with a beard.

That’s a polite way of saying that he hasn’t seen a meal that he didn’t like, and he’s seen far too many meals.

Obama summit with Gulf leaders to focus on ‘aggressive’ Iran, Saudi FM says

Pew Report: Jews and Hindus are most highly-educated in US

SnyderTalk Comment: At the University of Virginia while I was there, that was probably true, but I would add this caveat: non-U.S. students were routinely better educated on a broad range of issues than U.S. students.

Israel gears up for International Hummus Day

How the mighty have fallen

SnyderTalk Comment: This article isn’t about Barack Obama.  It’s about Rabbi Pinto, but the title applies to both of them.

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10--Arutz Sheva

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Watch: Knesset Storm as Leftists, Nationalists Clash

Senior Hamas Official: Military, Political Wings Work Together

Survey Shows Quarter of US Jews Leaving Their Faith

SnyderTalk Comment: You can’t leave something you never had.  There is a huge difference between having faith and saying that you have faith.  The evidence of faith is what you do, not what you say.

White House Marks 1,000 Days Since Reporter’s Abduction in Syria

Turkey Urges NATO Action on ISIS Threat

SnyderTalk Comment: Turkey shouldn’t be in NATO.

Israelis Asked ‘Are Ethiopians Jews?’ Answers Might Surprise You

Poll: Most Israelis Unhappy with Coalition Results

Netanyahu Welcomes Home IDF Delegation to Nepal 

Defense Ministry Demolishes Buildings in Tekoa

Jerusalem Arab Jailed for Online Incitement

PM: New Threats Uniting Israel, Arab States

IDF Commander: Multiple Wars with Hamas Inevitable

Hezbollah ‘Apparently Already Has Chlorine Gas’

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11--THE TIMES OF ISRAEL

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White House hosts US-Palestinian teen beaten by Israeli cops

Hamas, beholden to Iran, lets Shiite group operate in Gaza

At least 42 killed as another large quake hits Nepal

Iran is ‘greatest challenge’ to Middle East, PM tells German minister

Breaking the Silence bids to place IDF, Hamas on level field

IDF sees no alternative to Hamas rule in Gaza

Hamas gives Gazan 15 years for spying for Israel

Think tank fumes at foreign diplomats for skipping anti-Semitism event

SnyderTalk Comment: Those who are “fuming” are not well-versed in the language of politics.  A no-show is a show of non-support.

Israel, US tight-lipped on Kerry’s curious TV plea for help on UNESCO vote

US poll: Many approve Iran deal, but most don’t trust Tehran

SnyderTalk Comment: I love articles that reference polling data in the U.S.  What they fail to mention is that the typical U.S. person is totally ignorant.  Many of them can’t even tell you what the U.S. capital is.  If you think I’m exaggerating, you haven’t seen the data.

I’ll bet a dollar to a do-nut that most of those polled couldn’t find Iran or a map.  Concerning the Iran deal, its particulars are still secret.  Stated another way, they don’t know anything, but they have opinions.  Even worse, they think their opinions matter.

Well, their opinions do matter, but not the way they think.

White House denies Obama’s Gulf overtures on Iran are unraveling

SnyderTalk Comment: Despite growing evidence to the contrary.

White House denies claims it misled public on bin Laden killing

SnyderTalk Comment: The White House sure is doing a lot of denying.  That’s telling.

Opposition to put up fierce fight against bill to expand cabinet

Arsenal found in elderly woman’s attic

SnyderTalk Comment: The choice of the word “arsenal” is designed to create a false impression.  In South Carolina, we would call that “arsenal” a good start for a novice firearms collector.

High Court okays Jerusalem Day march through Muslim Quarter

SnyderTalk Comment: See the Jerusalem Day 2014 video below.

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12a--Other News

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Netanyahu’s new coalition passes first test

German president to Rivlin: We stand by Israel 

German defense minister begins state visit to Israel

Middle East nuclear weapons ban proposal stumbles at UN

Not believing in God is dangerous for bloggers in Bangladesh

EU draws up plans for military attacks on Libya targets to stop migrant boats

EU seeks UN approval for strong action on migrant-smugglers

“Ottawa considering hate charges against those who boycott Israel”

Qatar criticises Security Council for failing the Middle East

The Status of Western Military Aid to Iraqi Kurdish Peshmerga Forces 

Publication of Israeli Soldiers’ Accounts Clouded by Political Agenda

A Manipulation of Human Rights

Unpaid Hamas Civil Servants Go on Strike in Gaza

Mubarak and Two Sons Freed

Senate Dems block key plank of Obama trade agenda

Christian share of population in N.J. drops, survey shows

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SnyderTalk Comment: This video was taken on Jerusalem Day 2014.  Katie and I will be in Jerusalem for Jerusalem Day 2015, as well.  In Israel, it’s called Yom Yerushalayim.

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12b--TRIC

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Airstrikes target Yemen’s capital just hours ahead of planned cease-fire

Kerry has ‘frank’ talks with Putin about Ukraine, Syria

With Plane Delivery, Iran Sanctions Collapsing Already

Iran Promises Not to Reverse Engineer Russian S-300 Missile Defense System

SnyderTalk Comment: I wish you could see me laughing.

You can say what you want about Iran’s leaders, but they really do know how to tell a good joke.

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Email Distribution List:

I have created an email distribution list that I use to notify people when I post a new SnyderTalk.  If you would like to be on that list, send your email address to nhsny@yahoo.com, and put “add me to your distribution list” in the subject line.  If you know others who are interested in SnyderTalk content, tell them to send me their email address, and I’ll put them on the list.

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4--Scripture of the Day Yahweh

Exodus 10

1 Then Yahweh said to Moses, “Go to Pharaoh, for I have hardened his heart and the heart of his servants, that I may perform these signs of Mine among them, 2 and that you may tell in the hearing of your son, and of your grandson, how I made a mockery of the Egyptians and how I performed My signs among them, that you may know that I am Yahweh.”

SnyderTalk Comment: Read His Name is Yahweh.

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5--HNIY Print form

His Name is Yahweh explains why the Name of God, Yahweh, is so important.  It’s available in eBook format and in paperback.  It’s also available for free in PDF format.

  • God also said to Moses, “Say to the Israelites, ‘Yahweh, the God of your fathers—the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac and the God of Jacob—has sent me to you.’ This [Yahweh] is my name forever, the name by which I am to be remembered from generation to generation.” (Exodus 3: 15)
  • “Therefore behold, I am going to make them know—this time I will make them know My power and My might; and they shall know that My name is Yahweh.” (Jeremiah 16: 21)
  • “Behold, the days are coming,” declares Yahweh, “when I will raise up for David a righteous Branch; and He will reign as king and act wisely and do justice and righteousness in the land. In His days Judah will be saved, and Israel will dwell securely; and this is His name by which He will be called, ‘Yahweh our righteousness.’” (Jeremiah 23: 5-6)
  • Yeshua said to them, “Truly, truly, I say to you, before Abraham was born, I am.” (John 8: 58)

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6--His Name is Yahweh Audio Presentation 5

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Paul said Jesus is Yahweh

Click here to download the entire audio presentation for free and with no strings attached.  Share it as often as you want.

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14--Blessings from Revelation 2

Blessings in the Book of Revelation is a book that you need to read, especially now.  There are blessings throughout the Scriptures but Revelation is the only book in the Bible actually containing a specific blessing for reading it. It’s repeated twice, once at the beginning and again at the end. This is the reason that I believe Revelation should be the first step toward studying biblical prophecy. Though not easy to do, Revelation can be broken down and understood by anyone, not just the academic elite. So, Revelation’s blessings are for everyone.  Click here to order the eBook.  Click here to order the paperback.

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Other Books by Neil Snyder

  • Stand! is a suspense novel that exposes the lies, corruption, and greed underlying the theory that man-made CO2 emissions are responsible for global warming. Professor Wes Carlyle and Karen Sterling, his research collaborator, carefully scan the audience for their would-be attacker—a member of the enviro-gestapo who has been following them for days.  Wes spots his man in the back of the room leaning against the wall.  Suddenly, another man in the audience steps forward and moves toward Karen at a menacing pace.  With a vicious stroke, he swings a billy club at her head.  Click here to order the eBook.  Click here to order the paperback.
  • What Will You Do with the Rest of Your Life? deals with a question that every Christian has to consider: what should I do with my life? Click here to order the eBook.  Click here to order the paperback.
  • Falsely Accused is a true story about a young woman who was accused of committing a double homicide. It’s about a travesty of justice, and it reveals Yahweh intervening in the life of a believer to rescue her from danger in the face of seemingly insurmountable odds.  Everyone will enjoy the book, but young people in particular need to read it because the mistakes made that led to the problem could have been avoided.  They were the kinds of mistakes that young people are prone to make.  As they say, forewarned is forearmed.  Click here to order the eBook.  Click here to order the paperback.

15--Concentric Circles 5

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