Facebook Palestine Debate
20 10 2007International debate:
‘Israeli-Palestine-Facebook’
The Israeli-Palestinian conflict is an ongoing dispute between the State of Israel and Arab Palestinians. The Israeli-Palestinian conflict is part of the wider Arab-Israeli conflict. The conflict can be traced to the late 19th century, when Zionist Jews expressed their desire to create a modern state in the ancient land of the Israelites, which they considered to be their rightful homeland. To further that objective, the World Zionist Organization encouraged immigration to the land and purchasing land, which was then part of the Ottoman Empire.
Histories, and different perceptions of history, are perhaps the most important factors in the Arab-Israeli conflict. Accounts of history, interpreting history in different ways, are used to justify claims and to negate claims, to vilify the enemy and to glorify “our own” side
“No two historians ever agree on what happened, and the damn thing is they both think they’re telling the truth.”
Harry S. Truman.
Here’s another example of Never Never thinking: ‘You want to get rid of Hamas in Gaza? Make Gazans miserable, then they’ll overthrow them.’The West Bank, Checkpoints block economic development. An example shows us the process in detail, as we visit a factory that produces Soap for Sindyanna.
Is this called the humanity?
Now Facebook ,
Before October 2006, Palestine was a part of the geographic identification of Facebook. Facebook mysteriously outraged the members of the “Palestine” network after October 2006.
How can you do this to a country and its people, now what network these people will be joining, since Palestine was no longer an option? It is it extremely offensive that Facebook does not acknowledge Palestine as a nation. Clearly, such acts are anti-Palestinian.
After so much of the hatred, many suggestions, finally, responding to pressure from Palestinian petitions and letters, Facebook re-added Palestine to the list of countries in early 2007. No press release was ever issued by Facebook regarding either the elimination or the reinstatement of Palestine - an a typical decision by Zuckerberg and his team, who post roughly once a week on their blog of happenings and additions to the site, regularly update the site’s “What’s new” section and give public access to all press releases about Facebook.
Despite repeated efforts to uncover why the site originally removed Palestine from the list, Facebook did not respond by press time.
Creator Mark Zuckerberg started Facebook in February 2004 as a small networking site among Harvard, Stanford, and Columbia and Yale universities; he never would have thought that his site will face such controversies.






I don’t quite understand why they did this either? Were they getting pressure from someone else to take them down? I don’t see why it would be too hard to put back up?
Maybe they took it down because facebook developers detected that Palestinians were using facebook as a conduit for terrorism? Maybe.