Transcript [00:00] The only beheading groups in the world [00:01] today to the best of my knowledge are [00:03] Arab or Muslim. [00:04] >> Why do you think that is in your [00:05] estimation? [00:06] >> Why do I think that is? Sad to say it [00:08] was answered by Arab intellectuals at [00:10] the United Nations. And that has nothing [00:12] to do with individual Arabs who may be [00:14] saintly. But that is the that is the [00:16] dominant moral state as if Britain and [00:20] Mali are on the same moral level. That [00:23] is to give up on hope for humanity. [00:25] claimed that there is no that has [00:27] produced something better than something [00:29] else. So that is the tragic reason [00:31] they're not beheading people uh in in [00:33] Western civilization. [00:35] >> Hey everyone, back in 2015, Dennis [00:37] Prager spoke at the Oxford Union and he [00:39] spoke about Hamas and he compared Kamas [00:44] to Nazi Germany a couple of times in his [00:46] talk. I want to go back and watch this [00:48] clip and then I want to share something [00:51] very interesting with you about it. Have [00:54] a look at this. [00:56] >> [applause] [00:58] >> Uh thank you, Mr. President. And uh I [01:01] hope my accent uh enables my words to be [01:03] heard uh as clearly as I hope to present [01:06] them. Uh I find it remarkable. Two [01:08] things were remarkable. I must say when [01:10] I was first invited, one is I actually [01:13] did not believe the proposition. It was [01:15] and I read it. This house believes that [01:17] Kamas is a greater uh threat to peace [01:19] than Israel. And I I give you my word of [01:23] honor. I actually called Oxford. I I [01:26] went online. I couldn't believe this was [01:29] an actual proposition. You mean that's [01:32] debatable? [01:34] I I I it I I thought I actually thought [01:37] for a moment that pro-Israel forces at [01:40] Oxford had somehow put this into the [01:43] lineup as we call it in America when you [01:45] when you put a lineup for for your [01:47] players on your team. I I I was stunned. [01:50] The other was when I realized by God [01:52] they really are serious. It must be an [01:54] academic institution. And I realized as [01:58] Orwell said some things are so foolish [02:00] only an intellectual could believe them. [02:02] And I realized okay this is it. This is [02:05] a a a western world tragedy. The amount [02:08] of nonsense that is often believed in [02:11] academia. And and so this is a debatable [02:14] proposition at such an illustrious [02:16] institution. It's actually sad as I will [02:19] point out in uh over and over just [02:22] appealing to your common sense. You need [02:24] know nothing about the the Middle East [02:26] to understand how absurd the proposition [02:28] is. It's it's of course valid but that [02:31] it's debatable is an absurdity. The [02:32] other is my biography. I must say I I [02:35] have been called many things including [02:37] controversial but of my long resume just [02:40] to be described as controversial. May I [02:42] say to you that to the millions of [02:44] people that I broadcast to every day, I [02:46] am not controversial whatsoever. So [02:48] clearly those who invited me find it [02:50] controversial. All right. [02:53] Uh let me just give you an analogy. I [02:57] didn't check. I should have. In the [02:59] 1930s, was there a debate at this [03:03] apicious place? Was there a debate over [03:06] the following proposition [03:09] that uh that Nazi Germany that Great [03:13] Britain is a greater threat to peace [03:15] than Nazi Germany or Nazi Germany is a [03:18] greater threat to peace than Great [03:20] Britain? Was there a debate in the 1930s [03:24] that is a perfect analogy to what we are [03:27] debating tonight? Nazi Germany is to [03:31] Israel what uh Nazi Germany was to [03:34] Britain what kamas is to Israel whether [03:37] you agree with Israeli policies or not [03:41] and I don't agree with all Israeli [03:42] policies it is irrelevant the question [03:45] is is that analogy fair so let me ask [03:50] you a question I'll take you in a moment [03:52] actually in two moments but let me let [03:55] me begin who is the greater threat to [03:58] peace Let's forget Israel, okay? Who is [04:01] the greater threat to peace uh in Syria, [04:05] ISIS or Israel? [04:08] Who is the greater threat to peace in [04:10] Lebanon? Hezbollah or Israel? Who is the [04:14] greater threat to peace in Egypt? The [04:16] Muslim Brotherhood or Israel? Do you [04:19] understand? In every case, everyone in [04:22] this room would acknowledge that ISIS is [04:25] a greater threat to peace in Syria than [04:27] Israel. In every person in this room, I [04:30] have to believe, even Professor Schlain, [04:33] would have to agree that ISIS is a [04:35] greater threat, that the Muslim [04:37] Brotherhood is a greater threat, and [04:39] that Hezbollah is a greater threat. All [04:41] of a sudden, we change the entire [04:43] scenario because it is now Hamas instead [04:46] of Hezbollah or ISIS or Muslim [04:49] Brotherhood. [04:52] Number two on on on on just on this [04:54] issue, just appealing to your common [04:56] sense. [04:58] In modern in modern history, every war [05:01] has been between a three-state and a [05:03] police state or two police states. I [05:06] cannot think of a 20th century uh uh [05:10] example of any other. And the same holds [05:14] true here. You have the police state of [05:16] kamas. If you differ with kamas, they [05:18] kill you. [05:20] Where in the world other than Israel [05:24] does anyone ever argue that the free [05:26] state doesn't want peace and the police [05:29] state wants peace? There is no other [05:31] example on earth. There is no other [05:34] example on earth of a country targeted [05:37] for extinction. None. 220 some odd [05:42] countries in this world. Only Israel is [05:44] targeted for extinction. And we have a [05:46] debate on whether the the the state [05:49] targeted for extinction is the barrier [05:51] to peace. That is quite a leap of faith. [05:55] In the age of beheadings, as you have [05:58] tragically experienced here in the UK, [06:01] you we have a debate. Hamas is a kindred [06:03] spirit to ISIS and Hezbollah and Boo [06:06] Haram. What do you think? They're an [06:08] exception. All of those are monstrous. [06:10] But Hamas, they're they're a terrific [06:13] bunch who really want peace. If it only [06:16] weren't for settlements. There were no [06:19] settlements prior to 1967. [06:22] Why wasn't there peace? Israel would [06:25] dismantle the settlements for real peace [06:27] in a moment because the Israeli people [06:29] are much more interested in sending [06:31] their kids to college and in having a [06:34] peaceful life and in making a good [06:36] living and inventing more medical and [06:38] technological devices than they are in [06:41] fighting wars. This would be the first [06:43] free state in history to prefer war to [06:46] peace. [06:47] >> Look, most people don't know this [06:49] history I'm about to tell you, but once [06:51] you understand it, a lot of things will [06:53] make sense and it'll shed some [06:54] interesting light on what Dennis Prager [06:56] just said. There is a direct ideological [06:59] line connecting Nazi Germany to modern [07:03] Islamist movements. Okay? It runs [07:05] straight through the Muslim Brotherhood [07:06] which is the founding organization which [07:09] gave rise to kamas and al-Qaeda and and [07:12] ISIS. So I mean he's using it as an [07:15] analogy but it goes much much deeper [07:17] than that. Let me explain. Let's start [07:18] with World War II. The most influential [07:20] Arab Arab the most influential Arab [07:23] religious leader in mandatory Palestine. [07:25] Sorry, just uh stumbling over my words [07:28] uh at the time of World War II was a guy [07:30] by the name of Haj Amin al- Husini. He [07:33] and now he wasn't just an anti-ionist. [07:36] He was an active Nazi collaborator. He [07:39] was very close with Hitler. In 1941, he [07:41] met with Hitler in Berlin. He supported [07:43] the final solution, wiping out all the [07:45] Jews, and he worked to block Jewish [07:47] refugees from escaping Europe. He also [07:50] urged the Nazis to extend their [07:53] extermination program of the Jews, their [07:55] genocide of the Jews to the Middle East. [07:57] He also broadcast Arabic language Nazi [08:00] propaganda calling on Muslims to kill [08:03] Jews wherever they found them. This was [08:04] all coordinated with Hitler. The Muslim [08:07] Brotherhood, you've heard of them, [08:09] right? They were founded in Egypt in [08:11] 1928 [08:12] by a guy named Hassan Albana. Okay, now [08:14] I'm going to bring this together with [08:15] Hajamin Aluseni. So in the 1930s and 40s [08:19] the brotherhood openly admired Hitler [08:21] also and they adopted the fascist style [08:25] mass mobilization and they absorbed uh [08:28] European anti-semitic uh conspiracy [08:31] theories the type of stuff Hitler was [08:32] promulgating especially the idea that [08:35] Jews secretly controlled global politics [08:37] finance and culture. If you ever look at [08:39] like anti-semitic cartoons from the [08:41] Muslim world and from the Nazi world [08:43] they're very similar. That's a an [08:44] example, but it was also in texts. And [08:48] the Muslim Brotherhood supported the [08:50] 1936 to 1939 Arab revolt in Palestine, [08:54] which was a violent revolt against the [08:56] Jews, which Hajamin al- Husini [08:59] organized. And Hassan Albana appointed [09:02] Hajamin al- Husini as his official [09:04] representative of the Muslim Brotherhood [09:07] activities in Palestine. Okay, so this [09:09] is this is important to understand. [09:12] The Muslim Brotherhood didn't just [09:14] create this Islamist politics that we're [09:17] seeing today. It actually [09:20] involved European anti-semitic ideas and [09:22] it brought them into Islam and it [09:25] adopted them into Islam. Okay? And [09:28] that's why there's a lot of other [09:29] moderate Islam in other parts of the [09:30] world where that that are not Muslim [09:33] Brotherhood. Okay? So the Muslim [09:34] Brotherhood used actually used Nazi [09:38] European anti-Semitic thinking. So after [09:41] World War II, [09:43] the Nazi ideology while it was defeated [09:46] in Europe, it didn't disappear. It [09:49] spread in other ways. So former Nazi [09:51] propagandists and intelligence officials [09:54] actually found refuge in Arab states [09:56] like Egypt and Syria. Uh and you also [09:59] had uh you also had Muslim, you know, [10:02] terrorist leaders who were hiding out [10:03] with Nazis in South America. Like they [10:05] they became sort of one community. and [10:08] these Nazi propagandists and [10:10] intelligence officials who moved to [10:12] these Arab states that were starting to [10:14] wage their wars, their information wars [10:17] and their actual wars on Israel. They [10:19] were advising these Nazi guys were [10:22] advising Arab governments and they [10:24] helped shape the anti-Semitic media [10:26] narratives. At the same time, the Muslim [10:28] Brotherhood became the ideological [10:30] incubator for all these other jihadist [10:32] movements that we've seen since then. [10:33] Like kamas is literally the brother the [10:37] Muslim Brotherhood's Gaza branch. That's [10:39] how it was founded. Okay. Al Qaeda is a [10:41] an offshoot of the Muslim Brotherhood. [10:43] ISIS is an offshoot of the Muslim [10:45] Brotherhood. So when you read Kamas's [10:47] charter, you can see this continuity. [10:50] Article 7 of Kamas's charter doesn't [10:52] just talk about Israel. It talks about [10:54] killing Jews everywhere in the world. [10:56] And it quotes a hadith about Muslims [10:59] hunting Jews behind stones and trees. [11:02] Right? It's a religious text. Article 22 [11:05] of their charter claims that Jews [11:06] control the media, revolutions, world [11:08] wars. That's more like Nazi language. So [11:11] you have this merger of Islamist and [11:13] Nazi language, right? Claims about Jews [11:16] controlling the media and world wars and [11:18] revolutions. That's like European [11:20] anti-semitic stuff. Okay? It's not [11:23] really Islamic theology. So you have the [11:26] Nazi conspiracy theories dressed up in [11:28] Islamic language. That's really what [11:30] this jihadist anti-Jewish stuff is. So, [11:35] this is all a long way of saying that [11:37] when Dennis Prager compares Hamas to [11:40] Nazi Germany, he's absolutely right. But [11:43] I think he's actually understating the [11:45] case because it isn't just a comparison. [11:49] It isn't just similar to Nazism. It is [11:53] Nazism that has survived and migrated [11:56] and mutated a little bit and adapted, [11:59] but it's the same demonology. It's the [12:01] same obsession with Jews as a cosmic [12:03] evil. It's the same belief that the [12:06] world can only be redeemed through the [12:08] destruction of the Jews. Right? So once [12:10] you understand that, Kamas's behavior [12:12] makes perfect sense. This is why they [12:14] don't negotiate. This is why they [12:15] glorify death. This is why October 7th [12:18] wasn't about strategic thinking or a [12:21] two-state solution. It was about [12:23] massacre. [12:25] You can't reason with an ideology that [12:28] believes that history itself demands [12:32] that it commit a genocide. Okay? You [12:34] can't appease it. You can't you have to [12:37] defeat it or it keeps resurfacing [12:40] generation after generation. Um it can [12:43] it can take on new names. [12:46] It might speak a different language, but [12:50] it's the same hatred. That's what it is. [12:53] Um, all right, folks. I hope you found [12:56] this interesting. If so, please share [12:58] this. 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