I'd like to welcome everybody back to another episode of The Adam King Show, found at Infowarsband.video.
I am your host, Adam King, and this is the show after Thanksgiving.
I hope that everybody had a wonderful Thanksgiving with their families and their friends, with a lot of good food and good times.
I myself had a wonderful Thanksgiving with my family.
It was a celebration of Americana.
I love Thanksgiving.
It's my favorite holiday by far.
It's like everybody could relate to it.
And, you know, Thanksgiving is really the harvest holiday.
That's really what it's designed for.
It is, you know, by November 1st, which is Dia de los Muertos, the day of the dead, what happens then?
You cut down all your trees and all your plants at the farm.
Everything's cut down.
You got three weeks to process it.
To reap the abundance of your harvest, and then you throw this massive feast, and that's Thanksgiving.
So, I love Thanksgiving.
I find it's the most, that and the 4th of July are my two most favorite American holidays, and Daylight Savings Time, which happens in November also, when everything goes back to wintertime, which is the Actual Correct Time.
Because the oligarchs that govern our lives mess with our time with this Daylight Savings Time.
So yes, Daylight Savings Time Winter Edition is probably my absolute favorite.
American holiday. And it's not celebrated by anybody, but it's really like the ending of the massive PSYOP. If you could convince any population that five o'clock is really six o'clock and then six months later come back to that same population and say, no. Six o'clock?
Yeah, it's really five o'clock. And then six months after that, you go back to that same population and say, no. Five o'clock?
Yeah, yeah, yeah. It's really six o'clock.
Gosh. And you do this for 50...
Actually, the truth is, is Daylight Savings Time has been going on since the 1960s.
It's an old German custom in America that was brought to America and forced upon us.
And yeah, since the 1960s, it's been being observed.
So roughly like 60 years of this like mass brutality of mind control.
Because if you could convince that population that the times are different, you could convince them of anything.
It's the fundamental basis of mind control is convince them that they don't even know how to tell the time.
Anyways, that's neither here nor there.
It was daylight savings time a few weeks ago.
I missed you guys then. And then we had Thanksgiving and soon we will have the 4th of July and election day, which is like 350 days away or something like that.
So, we got a lot to look forward to in the coming months.
But this episode specifically, I wanted to do something a little bit different.
I got a great guest coming out.
He's from Israel.
And we're going to be going deep into the origins of Arab hostility towards Jews.
We're not going to focus on Hamas.
We're not going to focus on, you know...
Islamic what is called what what the West and all the based based right people want to say now is is just Islamic resistance.
What they want to call Islamic resistance.
I'm going to cover the entire subject of Islamic resistance on this episode.
And we're going to focus on it.
We're going to try to determine if it's really an Islamic resistance against some sort of oppression or Jewish occupation or any of these terms that the right, especially in our world here at Infowars, seems to gravitate towards the left on.
And align themselves with this real leftist ideology.
We're going to examine those.
We're going to put out all the evidence.
We're going to have a discussion. And for that, I brought my good friend, Yale historian Matthew Mausner to join me on this journey of understanding the situation in the Middle East a lot better.
You've seen him on previous episodes.
We have Ranger Ludd on Instagram.
He's got a great story feed.
I highly encourage everybody to go check out his story on Instagram.
But Matthew, I want to talk to you about Islamic Jihad, and I want to get to the origins of it.
And I want to understand the basis of this entire movement.
And I know that Arab hostilities towards Jews started a lot earlier than the state of Israel.
For instance, the Hebron massacre was in 1929.
Before we get started in the subject, let's give a little bit more about your background to the audience.
You're a Yale historian.
You focused on the Holocaust.
Tell us how you get started in this subject and why this is an important field of study.
That's a great question.
Yeah, I studied at Yale.
I did my thesis on Basically, the museum that the Nazis were building to memorialize the Jews, which was they were taking over the great synagogue in Prague.
In the middle of the Holocaust, they were bringing Jews there to create little dioramas of Jewish life experience.
And they just thought it would be self-evident in the Nazi future that Jews would be all gone.
And then it would be like an interesting museum to see like a disappeared people.
One of the lesser known subplots of the Holocaust, which I've been writing about more recently, is the Nazi origins of the Palestinian national movement.
So there really wasn't, there was an Arab nationalism movement that happened during the End of the Ottoman Empire, when the Ottoman Empire was falling apart from like the 1880s onward, there was a little bit of Arab groups that were trying to get out of the Ottoman Empire.
And the Grand Mufti, the guy who became known as the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem, he was kind of like a preacher in Jerusalem when the British took it over in 1917.
And they decided to make him Grand Mufti.
Within a couple of years, by 1919, 1921, He was actually one of the first people making modern suicide bombings against Jews and British.
And his speeches were so violent against Jews that he was banished by the British.
He was let back in a couple times, and each time he made things worse and worse, and he encouraged...
He was banished by the British.
He was banished from the land of Israel by the British.
Yeah, from the land of Israel.
He was allowed back in as a sort of compromise, and then he whipped up even more Jew hatred.
But he was such a nasty guy that his clan kept massacring other Palestinian or Arab clans.
So in the 30s, he became sort of an open advocate of joining with the Nazis who were saying, hey, Jews are the big evil thing.
This is Al-Husseini?
Yeah, Haji Mufti Al-Husseini.
Amin al-Hussain, you know, they always have tons and tons of names, but anyone can look him up as the Grand Mufti and you'll find him.
In 1939, 36 to 39, he led what was called the Great Arab Revolt.
And again, they were calling it the Arab Revolt.
It wasn't the Palestinians then.
The Great Arab Revolt against the British mandate.
And they had no, and it wasn't, was there a conception of a Palestinian at that time?
No. 1936, 19 to 39.
Yeah. There was a lot of Arab nationalism all across the Middle East and there was a sense that all of these little kingdoms that the British were helping create out of the carved up pieces of the Ottoman Empire, the British and French were just sort of carving it up and giving pieces to different tribes who had helped them in World War I so they would give This mandate to this king,
part became Saudi Arabia, part became Syria, part became Iraq, part became Jordan, part became Egypt.
They just carved them up and gave them to their friends, basically. But Arabs in general and Also, Muslims always had a sense that it should all be one big thing under one emperor who they call the Khalifate.
That's the Khalifate idea, correct?
Correct. Like a continuous body of Muslim land with no interruptions in between.
Right, and that's what it had been for most of the previous 1400 years.
The Ottomans were the last ones.
So, in 1920, Ataturk had a sort of revolution inside Turkey, and he abolished the caliphate.
So there was no longer a pope of Islam, basically.
And every Muslim in the world at a certain level feels a sense of pain about that lack.
What year was that?
Really painful for them. 1921.
Yeah, 1920 is when he stepped down, and 1923 is when he fully abdicated.
I learned about that, actually, when Osama bin Laden...
Everybody's reading about him on TikTok now, right?
Osama bin Laden...
He's like a sneaker and everybody's favorite hero all of a sudden.
It's like retarded. Yeah, when 9-11 happened, I read Osama bin Laden's manifesto being like, who is this guy and why is he blowing up my country?
Because I grew up in America.
I was already starting to move to Israel then.
So you read the manifesto actually in 2001.
Correct. And the first thing it says is, we are avenging the sin of 1920.
It was like, what the hell is 1920?
Why is he blowing up the World Trade Center because of 1920?
So to him, the great scene is that the Western powers overthrew the Ottoman Empire.
And then Ataturk, who's this great secular sinner, according to most, you know, religious fanatic Muslims abolished the caliphate.
And there hasn't been a it's sort of like your emperor and your pope.
Since then, it's almost like Islam has been theologically incomplete.
Very interesting.
I like how you phrased that, that Ataturk ended the papacy of Islam.
Correct. There was a big movement even among Arabs to sort of get over this religious backwardness and become more secular.
But that sort of secular Arabism, a lot of it got caught up in what became communism.
A lot of the groups in a lot of these countries, including the Ba'ath Party, who we'll get to in a minute, had a lot of communist influences, as well as, of course, Nazi influences.
The Ba'ath Party still rules.
Yeah, the Ba'athist Party that still rules Syria, or at least parts of Syria, where Assad is, was originally founded in the early 1940s explicitly as a Nazi ally.
Interesting. And the part of the story I was getting to, in 1939, the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem had basically made so many enemies here, both British and Jewish and Arab, that he had to escape.
He escaped, of all places, to Iraq.
And in Iraq, he conspired with a bunch of Ba'athist army officers.
And Iraq wasn't officially independent yet.
It was sort of a semi-independent province of the British Empire.
But what they did then was they had a coup.
They overthrew the person the British had appointed in charge, and they declared themselves independent as an Axis army.
They joined the Axis in April 1941?
Yeah, in April 1941, they literally joined the Axis for about a month and a half.
The Axis powers was Germany, Italy, Japan, and Iraq!
That's insane.
So, what's the first thing they did?
Well, of course, if you're an axis power, you're and you're a Nazi ally and you're really on board with I mean, by this point, the Mufti was the one who translated Mein Kampf into Arabic.
And there had been Arabic antisemitism before this, but now it became very shaped.
So the actual translation of Mein Kampf, when they find these Arabic translations of Mein Kampf all over Gaza, that's actually been translated by the Mufti al-Husseini?
I mean al-Husseini, yes.
That's crazy. That's insane that every single one of them is translated by him.
That blew my mind. Correct.
Then they did their little piece of the Holocaust, which was to massacre the Jews of Iraq.
That event we call, in Israel now it's known as the Farhoud, and the Iraqi community knows it as the Farhoud.
Although we lived for a long, long time with the Arabs without really having problems, but June the 1st, 1941, In our house, we heard a lot of noise outside, people shouting, which means cut the throat of the Jews.
I climbed the tree as high as I can just to try to see if I can what's happening outside.
You were then what?
Nine years old. Nine years old.
And I saw a lot of people there with swords in their hands, some rifles and shooting.
And I just couldn't understand why they're shouting, what the hell did I do at nine years old?
They were killing me.
And they killed about a thousand Iraqi Jews and a lot of the rest of them had to go into hiding or to escape.
So that was their little piece of the Holocaust.
Farhud was in April, May 1941.
Wow. Wow.
Yeah. So then in late May 1941, the British put together a sort of local army here.
They called it the Arab Legion.
It was British leadership and Arab soldiers from Jordan.
And they, including also the West Bank, And they marched over to Iraq and overthrew the Mufti and the Ba'ath Party.
And the Mufti then escaped...
So the British, in conjunction with the Jordanians, conquered the Iraqis to remove the Ba'ath Party of Iraq.
Exactly. And the Mufti escaped.
This is an amazing episode.
They were successful. I'm so grateful for this.
This is such cool information.
Thank you so much for coming today.
So they were successful and they chased the Ba'athists out of Iraq.
And then what happens after that?
Well, temporarily.
The Ba'athists would come back to Iraq.
Obviously, because Saddam Hussein was a Ba'athist.
Correct. The Mufti escaped to Europe.
Mm-hmm. And in Europe, he became one of the sort of inner circle of Hitler's known, you know, leader associates.
And he would appear all the time in public with Hitler and he would give radio appearances in Arabic speaking, basically preaching Nazism to the entire Arab world.
Interesting. And the Muslim world.
And his appeal, he was a very sort of powerful hypnotic speaker in Arabic.
And he became the main recruiter of Muslims into the larger, I'm sure, you know, people who know the Holocaust know that there were volunteer Nazis from most of the countries that the Nazis took over.
So there were Dutch, Nazis who joined the SS. We're all very familiar right now with the Ukrainian ones because the Canada situation where they honored that Ukrainian Nazi in Canada at the Parliament gave them a standing ovation.
Yeah, that was...
So we're familiar with them.
We're familiar with them in Ukraine.
We're familiar with them, you know, throughout Europe.
But I knew that Husseini started an SS division, but I didn't know that it reached it.
I didn't know any of this about Iraq, to tell you the truth.
Yeah, the Iraq tragedy or crime, you know, it was a giant war crime, happened in April 1941.
The Mufti then set about recruiting Muslims mostly in Southeast Europe, in the Balkans.
As we know, because of the existence of Kosovo, Albania, and Bosnia are three mostly Muslim countries in Europe.
Were they Muslim before he went there?
Or did he convert them?
Yeah, I mean, they're mixed up.
No, they were Muslim.
Those countries all have You know, minorities of Christians like Serbians, Croats, Ruthines, lots of these different nationalities and Gypsies who are also known as Roma.
So what happened in that part, what used to be Yugoslavia, a fascist group called the Ustasa, usually they're called Croatian, but they were actually, the president was Croatian and the vice president was a Bosnian Muslim.
And it was really the Croats And the Crots who are basically Catholic of that nationality, the Serbs are the Eastern Orthodox of that nationality.
So they speak almost the same language.
Don't let them hear you call them the same people.
But Crots and Serbs understand each other at Bosnia.
Right. I know that they've fought each other before and they've genocided.
There's a lot of pain there.
Lots of genocide. So the biggest genocide that happened in the Balkans was during World War II. So the Crots and the Bosnians Joined together to create a fascist state that was a close ally of Hitler.
And they created their own death camps all over the former Yugoslavia.
And in those death camps, they killed a shitload of Jews, Serbians, Roma, and basically anyone else they didn't like.
So probably over 300,000 people died at the hands of Bosnian and Kroat massacring, murdering armies and death camps.
And so there were tens of thousands of Muslims who served in the Waffen SS. And in 1948, a little later in our story...
Yeah, there were tens of thousands of Muslims who served, Bosnian Muslims primarily, Bosnian, Albanian, who served in the armies of the Ustasha, which was this Croatian-Bosnian fascist country.
Interesting. All during World War II. Yeah, that was a shit show.
That was a terrible part of the world to be in.
Yeah, I mean, my mind goes to that region and trying to understand modern, you know, conflict in the Balkans.
And but yeah, so and this was all that whole Balkany thing took place in the 40s, you're saying?
Early 40s? Yeah, that was during World War II. When I said the Mufti escaped from Iraq...
Did the Mufti control that element?
Did he control that Balkan Muslim element?
Was he the leader of it? I wouldn't put it in those terms.
He was never given official political power by the Nazis or by the Croatian Bosnian government, but he was recognized as kind of the spiritual leader of all Muslims by the Nazi world.
So he was considered the most authoritative Muslim in the world at the time.
And I should say, when he escaped Iraq, it wasn't just him alone.
He brought with him several of the Arabs from his family and from his allies in the Arab revolt against Jews and British.
He brought with him his nephew, Qadir al-Husseini, and another guy named Haim Salama.
And they were younger and they became trained as commandos by the Nazis during that time.
And Salama was parachuted by the Nazis into the Sinai in 1944, hoping to come sabotage All the British stuff in Egypt and in Israel and to kill as many Jews as possible.
And in 1947-48, when it became clear, you know, there's I don't need to tell all the story of the founding of the state of Israel, but the Nazi weapons were there in Sinai and they were trying to bring them out and put them into the hands of these Arab militias or wannabe armies.
that were attacking all of the Jewish towns in Israel.
So for the first half of the 1947-48 Israel Independence War, virtually every town in Israel, including Jerusalem, which was under siege, Tel Aviv, Jaffa, Haifa, everywhere where Jews were living, trying to get supplies anywhere to anywhere,
It was very difficult because this guy Kadir, the Mufti's nephew, had created a very effective guerrilla army because he had Nazi training.
He knew what he was doing. And a big sort of subplot of that Israel independence war was that eventually 500 Waffen-SS Bosnian Muslims came to Israel to try to kill Jews, to try to join with the...
It was about 500 at the end of the day.
They were hoping it would be a lot more.
The Muslims were.
But sometimes when you are on the side of the war against the Nazis, you know who the Nazis actually are?
That's who the Nazis are.
I have a picture of...
Literally the Nazis. So that's the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem's grand...
His nephew.
His nephew. And we have a picture of him right here.
He was understood by Jews at the time.
He's this guy right here.
Yeah, the guy in the middle with the vandalier.
Yeah. So that's Qadir al-Husseini.
And he was actually probably the most effective Arab tactical leader in the 1948 independence war.
And probably the reason that Israel successfully became independent and the Nakba happened was that Qadir was killed at the Battle of Castel on about April 7th, 1948. Is that like Chateau du Castel?
Which was the biggest battle so far.
Castel is right next to M'Ebeceration.
Yeah, is that Chateau du Castel, the winery?
They did build a winery there.
That's actually where our rabbi's vineyard used to be.
I actually have been...
The owner of that winery invited me once to go check out the whole...
I hung out with him the whole day.
And we went into the wine cellars.
And we had the best of all of his.
That is the best kosher wine in the entire world.
Petit du Castel, it's called.
It is by far the best kosher wine on earth.
And I wonder if it's now hearing that he died in Castel, he was killed.
Was it a battle? What was the situation?
Yeah, the Battle of Castel.
Makes sense why the wine is so good there, you know?
Yeah. Well, that's traditionally where they used to make the wine for the Holy Temple 3,000 years ago, near Motza.
Motza's the valley, and Castel was literally the castle at the top of the valley.
So that's right next to the...
Motza's where they have that really nice...
What are they? Like the banyas over there, the lakes.
Am I right? No, Motza.
Oh, you mean that little lake by Beit Zeit?
No, it's like a mikvah.
There was a beautiful mikvah there.
Yes, exactly. There was a beautiful mikvah there.
I think it was destroyed when they fixed up the freeway.
Didn't Rabbi Sokol own that mikvah?
He owned the vineyard right next to it, yeah.
Interesting. Yeah, I would always go there.
That was such a beautiful spot.
So they destroyed that mikvah?
Yeah, they built a brand new highway and a fancy...
What ignorant, disgusting bastards.
What did they do with the creek that runs through it?
I think it's because of the construction of the...
The railway, we have a fancier railway now and a fancier highway.
So they just let it go and there's a creek that runs through there now and they just destroyed this ancient mikvah?
Correct. That's a shame that they didn't just build on top of it.
Anyways, neither here nor there.
Let's get back to the story.
It's great that the audience knows that Israel is a really holy place and that the government of Israel pretty much steamrolls over everything and builds on top of the most amazing ancient Jewish monuments and relics.
That was like a 2,000-year-old mikvah.
I used to bathe there all the time.
It was so biblical. It was...
One of the nicest places that I've ever toiveled in my life.
That's such a shame to hear. The guy was killed in Castel.
Let's get back to the story.
For the first several months of Israel's independence, the Mufti was in Egypt and basically directing his nephew, Qadir al-Husseini, To create this army to destroy the Zionists, right?
And he was succeeding.
He was winning. And the British were still occupying.
We have a picture of the Mufti.
I'm going to throw him up just so that people could see.
This is an actual picture of Adolf Hitler with the Grand Mufti of Israel.
Of Jerusalem. Right there.
And so the guy on the left, his son, you're saying, his nephew is Kaider.
And here he is again.
What are we looking at right here?
What is this image?
These are Bosnian Muslim SS troops that he recruited.
And there he is. Do you know who's the guy to the right of him with the eye patch?
Isn't that who I think it is?
I think it is. He was a very famous Nazi.
This is the most famous Palestinian, and he is a great Nazi.
Who is that Nazi with the eye patch?
I don't remember, so I don't want to say for sure.
It looks like one of the evil ones, you know, the famous ones, but I... The picture didn't say, so I don't know for certain.
Quick Google search. I don't know. Doesn't yield anything.
We'll figure it out who that Nazi is.
But I thought that was like Himmler or something.
No, Himmler was a little taller and skinnier and had more of a monocle, not an eyepatch.
But yeah, these are...
Look, there were no good guys marching...
There were no good guys on the side of the Nazis.
...for Nazi armies. Exactly.
I mean, I think if we can't agree that that's pretty much a self-defining definition, then I don't even know what we're talking about.
All the Nazis were bad.
Really simple. You know?
Okay, so we're in the...
This is 1942, you're saying?
And what year does Kader die?
No, so Kadir, yeah, he infiltrates back into Israel during the 1947.
You know, there's the partition plan is announced and there's like a low scale guerilla war in Israel from 47 until May 1948.
So in May 1948, the British leave.
So the British were still here in Israel.
literally as a military-occupying army.
And the Jews defeated the occupying British in that guerrilla war?
Yes. What were the Arabs doing during the War of Independence when the Jews were fighting the British?
Were they just on the sidelines watching?
No, they were fighting their own guerrilla war trying to kill Jews.
So the Jews were fighting the Arabs and the British?
Correct. And the British were allied with the Arabs at the time?
The British were really just kind of like in the way they've done a lot of colonial places.
They were kind of against everybody and they didn't really want to leave.
Most of the Jewish forces were not fighting against the British, but the Irgun, also known as the Leahy and the subgroup of that, the Stern Gang, were explicitly trying to blow up as many British soldiers as possible to get the British to leave.
By that point, the Haganah was trying...
At least trying to cooperate with the British, but the British weren't being very cooperative.
So the Haganah was trying to cooperate with the British, the Irgun was fighting the British with the Stern gang, and the Arabs were attacking Jews on all sides.
Correct. And there were other Arab militias infiltrating from other countries, from Jordan and from Syria and even from Iraq.
trying to also come and kill Jews.
And so this army was founded called the Army of the Holy War by Qadir al-Husseini.
And it was explicitly, you know, the Mufti considered it his own army, although it was his nephew officially commanding it, basically said, we're here to complete the final solution.
We're here to kill all the rest of the Jews.
And he would give these radio addresses saying, Hey, Arab world!
Hey, Muslim world! We're here to finish the final solution.
Even though the Nazis lost the war, we can at least finish their greatest mission, which was to kill all the Jews.
So, Qadir was actually succeeding.
Yeah, he was actually succeeding, and the Battle of Castel, he actually defeated the Haganah, and the Haganah was retreating in disarray.
That's actually what led Dariusin is the village in between Castel and Jerusalem.
They're only a few hundred meters apart.
It's just like one mountain over.
You know what those look like if you've been to Jerusalem.
And because we lost the Battle of Castel initially, we thought everything was lost.
We thought we were going to lose Jerusalem, lose all the hundred thousand Jews of Jerusalem, lose our independence, lose everything. And that's what led the Irgun to try to take over Dariusin.
There was one of those really thick fogs that comes into the Jerusalem area, which you've experienced, I'm sure.
Yeah. Those super, super thick fogs.
And in that fog, I mean, it almost...
To Jews, it seems like divine intervention.
There's a natural mystic blowing through the air.
Yeah, so in that fog, Kadir, who had been...
Basically tactically brilliant up until that point, but he was shot.
There's probably a whole story to that, and some people suspect that other Arabs betrayed him.
But anyway, Qadir was shot and killed, and the entire kind of local Arab movement to have their own army fell apart.
The Army of the Holy War basically fell apart at that point.
So the Bosnian SS soldiers did arrive a couple months later, but they were too late to save that army.
And that's why in the later part of the 1948 war, there was no local Palestinian army.
All the Palestinians who were against Israel, basically after that battle, they thought that we would do to them what they were planning to do to us.
So they mostly fled and that's what became known as the Nakba.
And then you had the Egyptian army, the Syrian army, the Jordanian army, the Lebanese army, and the Iraqi army all invade Israel.
And they told the Arabs who were living here to leave as well so that they could massacre all the Jews and that when they were done massacring the Jews, they could come back and take all of our property too.
So that's what led to this huge flight of a lot of Arabs.
And they said this is what you get when you side with Nazis, which is again what's happening today.
So there you have it.
So nobody knows who killed Qadir.
There was an Israeli army post that shot at him.
He had been really good at knowing our passwords.
Like when you walk up towards an army post, if you don't know the password, they're going to shoot you, right?
Up until then, he knew a lot of our passwords, which was how he had such success with ambushing us many times.
But on that day, I guess we had changed the passwords.
It's sort of like a retreating Israeli army post shot him.
An Israeli medic actually tried to give him some first aid, a guy from the Haganah, but he expired.
We had to abandon him because the Arabs were winning the battle.
The Arabs took over that hill and then there was a huge funeral for Qadir on the Mount of Olives on April 9th at the same time that all the Dariusine refugees We're coming out of Dariusin is what's today Harnoff, the neighborhood of Harnoff. And basically, it was a whole funny thing.
Dariusin was actually a pretty tough battle.
The Irgun was actually not very well armed and basically had to fight house to house.
And Dariusin, which they believed in that fog, had been helping Qadir in the Battle of Castell.
It's not clear whether they were or not.
But anyway, they fought. About 116 people were killed, but in a proper battle, house to house. Ben-Gurion decided to try to make it seem like the Irgun was really irresponsible and claimed that the number was much higher, said 248 people were killed.
It was basically fake news, but the Irgun was like, hey, we like this fake news because it's going to make the Arabs fear us more.
So they went with the story of 248.
Now everybody in Jerusalem at that funeral knew how many people had been killed, but they all decided to go with the fake news story too because they wanted to whip up this perception of an atrocity.
248 Jews or 248 Muslims?
248 Arabs from the village of Duryasim.
But actually only 116 were killed, correct.
116, but the Arabs used the number 248 and ran with it.
And I'm so glad you touched on that because they talk about all these babies that are killed.
And Alex had a whole segment on the show where he had this Palestinian child, this grandfather mourning this Palestinian child, and he was talking about them.
And it's important to know that the numbers of reported deaths are being reported by Hamas to the BBC. And that's how they're getting their death tolls.
And these numbers are going completely unquestioned.
Even on social media, to question them, you get fact-checked by the fact-checkers and the AI bots, and you get censored for questioning these numbers of Palestinian death tolls in the Israeli bombings.
Now, I know that as Israel goes into Gaza, because I've seen the videos, I get really good footage of Jewish stuff.
And they're sending mass flyers out of airplanes.
They're raining flyers on people that say, you have 48 hours to leave this entire neighborhood.
This building, this building, this building, and this building are about to be demolished.
Get out. And that's how they conquered northern Gaza so quickly.
Plus phone calls.
And they were calling them on the phone, you're saying?
They made several hundred thousand phone calls to each person in each apartment in northern Gaza, telling them, we're going to bomb your building.
You need to leave. Get the other people out.
Yeah. Several hundred thousand phone calls.
So the actual death toll, I don't even know the actual death toll, but I know that there's been reports from Gaza that Hamas will wait outside of their buildings with guns and they force them to be killed inside of the buildings.
They're keeping them prisoners in the buildings so that there will be death tolls.
Because I remember in some of the first bombings, the first bombings in the conflict when everybody fled, Hamas didn't have so much control and there were like no death tolls.
Very, very few death tolls in the initial carpet bombings of buildings.
There were very few death tolls on the part of the Arab side.
Because I saw them, I remember seeing the absolute destruction of And I have a video of it somewhere, if I could find it. And it's absolutely quiet.
You can hear a pin drop.
You can hear birds chirping in the background.
There's nobody crying over buildings.
There's nobody like saying, you know, there's no mothers crying over the rubble trying to find Mustafa.
You know, there's nothing like that.
This is the village of Abu Al-Qaas.
It's called the village of Rimal.
I'm going to try to put it on your feet as I can.
I mean, my God!
This is this was And like,
you wonder like, you know, shortly after they start claiming that, I think the official death toll is like, according to the Hamas, is like 14,000 people and like hundreds of babies, hundreds and hundreds of babies.
I'm sure there's casualties of war, but the actual numbers are...
Yeah, I have no idea.
You know, the real numbers, the nature of a war like this, we're not going to know the real numbers for a while.
I mean, even the October 7th massacre, it took Israel several weeks to add up and count all the bodies and identify them.
And, you know, somewhere around 1500 Hamas fighters, or monsters or whatever you want to call them, were killed on October 7th, as well as, you know, How many people from Hamas actually ran in on October 7th?
How many of them were there? I've heard somewhere around 3,000.
Also, that a lot of them were not Hamas...
We're not actual, you know, Hamas or Lion's Den or Palestinian Islamic Jihad who are the three main groups in Gaza.
They were just other Gazans who were like, hey, it's time to go kill and rape Jews.
Let's go do it. So there are individual Gazan families who are also holding some of the hostages that are independent of the terror groups.
This is kind of a national effort, you might say.
This is not just Hamas, not just Palestinian Islamic Jihad and not just I think the other one's called Lionsgate or something.
You're saying that some of the hostages are not controlled by Hamas.
They're just controlled by random people trying to come up on some money or something.
Correct. That's insane.
I mean, I'm not saying that, but I've read that.
Yeah, it's...
Look, we're talking about people who are as bad as Nazis.
There's really no...
I do want to say also about the numbers of people dead.
We have seen footage of the humanitarian corridors that the IDF created for Palestinian civilians to escape parts of Gaza City, and Hamas is actually sniping at the Palestinian civilians, both to discourage them for leaving and also because they know any of the ones that they kill, they add to the claim of how many Gazans Israel has killed.
One out of every five rockets that the three terror groups have been shooting at Israel falls short and lands inside Gaza.
So you remember the famous thing with the hospital where it actually hit the hospital parking lot and it was actually shot by Islamic Jihad and killed 60 Palestinians, Gazans, whatever you want to call them.
That's been happening thousands of times that their rockets have landed on their own people.
And killed their own people.
And they claim that Israel killed them with the bombing.
So the truth is, there might be a shitload of Palestinian babies getting killed by Islamic Jihad rockets and Hamas rockets because they're like the opposite of careful.
They're happy if it kills Gazans and they're happy if it kills Israelis.
Right, they get a political win abroad.
If they kill Gazans, they get a political win abroad because all the Western media embraces them like they're like these poor victims.
And at the expense of the dead of their own that they've killed.
And then if it happens to not backfire, then they kill Jews and they're happy because they killed Jews.
So for them, it's like a double win, such an incentive.
And they don't care about...
I mean, I hope they would care about the life of their children, but I know that this is happening quite frequently.
Anyways, I want to get back to the history lesson.
Stay away from modern politics today because it's so convoluted and so many people have their opinions and everybody Everybody wants to be involved.
I hosted this show, Counter Narrative, for Christy Lee, who's a big voiceover here at Infowars.
I had a guest, Mudder Zaran, who actually, I don't know if you're familiar with him, he's a Palestinian opposition leader inside of Jordan who fights for Palestinian rights inside of Jordan.
I'll post a link to the episode in post-production because it was truly, truly incredible.
But he said something very profound.
He said, you know, you get players like Germany and the West wanting these big protests in their countries because they have no say-so in the Middle East.
And they have no assets in the Middle East and they have nothing in the Middle East anymore.
They're bankrupt from the Middle East.
When Israel and the Palestinians quarrel, They like this mass Western publicity in favor of the Palestinians because it gives them this ability, at least on camera, to weigh in on the Middle East and appear to be some sort of moral authority that has some sort of say-so in some sort of direction that they want to project soft power into the region.
It was a really interesting perspective because you see people like Britain and Germany Germany and France and America.
I mean, America has much more vested physical interest and asset in the Middle East than these other countries.
But you see them all weighing in.
Why do these people care so much if they're neither Palestinian nor Jew?
Why do they care so much?
And it is to gain influence in the region.
So there's this initiative of Western countries To have, like, tremendous media uproar about anything that happens in the region because it's the only way that they feel that they're able to influence in any way, shape, or form or participate in regional politics.
So I thought that was quite interesting.
But I want to stay away from the modern stuff because the modern stuff is just so toxic.
Everybody's got their opinion.
Everybody wants to fight everybody and say the most Offensive, offensive stuff possible.
It's crazy.
It's absolutely crazy. But I want to stay on this story, and I want to pick up where you left off, and I want to focus and build the bridge from that time period, from the death of Qaeda to the modern institutions of Islamic Jihad and what they call Islamic resistance against Jewish occupation.
What they call. It's not what it is.
That's just what they call Islamic resistance to Jewish occupation, which is the media campaign in the West that gets everybody so soft-hearted and bleeding hearts for Palestine.
So I want to just connect the dots in one solid episode.
We saw the Grand Mufti Husseini.
What happened after Qaeda died with the Mufti and Let's pick up from there and start working our way into the more modern age with the creation of Hamas and Lion's Den and some of these other Islamic Jihad organizations that you mentioned.
The Muslim Brotherhood was founded in Egypt in the 20s.
The Grand Mufti was influential on it and it had its own Egyptian leaders as well.
Qadir certainly was influenced by it.
There was a guy named Sayyid Qutb who became a huge sort of writer influence of all of the Muslim Brotherhood.
There's Muslim Brotherhood chapters all over the world in many, many countries, but they actually after the death of Qadir and the sort of defeat and dissolution of the army of the holy war, secular Arab nationalism became sort of ascendant.
Nasser sort of tried to unify the Arab world under secular Arab ideas.
They would pay lip service to Islamism, but they would also try to suppress the Muslim Brotherhood with limited success.
So I'm sure you've heard of...
The big missing chapter here, the bridge, was actually the communists.
The KGB in the 60s decided to take the Arab side.
They actually had sort of helped Israel in the 1948 war.
Stalin thought that the Kibbutzim were sort of communists, so he helped Israel in the 48 war.
He sent some weapons by Czechoslovakia, and he voted for the foundation of Israel.
But by the 60s, the Arabs decided they were against all, quote, brown people against Any European people.
And they decided to make the Jews into European colonizers.
That was basically a KGB plot.
So they started to try to influence all these Western communist-leaning socialist activist groups to think that the Palestinians were worthy of being considered another oppressed people.
So that was kind of the missing bridge point.
When Sadat made peace with Israel in 1979, he was considered such an enemy of Islam because Islamic Jihad, like you said, these Muslim Brotherhood ideas, considered it unthinkable to ever accept any non-Muslim sovereign presence anywhere in the Middle East.
They don't even accept Spain because Spain used to be part of the Muslim Empire.
So even Spain, as far as they're concerned, is an occupying power.
So Muslim Brotherhood people assassinated Sadat in 1981.
And Hosni Mubarak, when he reasserted power, hung 7,000 Muslim Brotherhood members from lampposts all over Egypt, killed a shitload of them.
And, you know, if you've been following the news, I mean, we could go into 10 other countries where the Muslim Brotherhood and the Jihad has tried to rise up.
Jews are among the least of their victims.
Syria had its own civil war in 1982 against the Muslim Brotherhood.
That's the famous Homs and Hama massacres, where there were two cities that rose up against Hafez al-Assad, the Ba'ath guy, the Nazi.
The jihadists are worse.
So you got basically Nazis against Nazis.
Anyway, but Assad surrounded a city, poison gassed it, bulldozed it with all the people inside, and then paved it over with concrete.
So probably about 12,000, maybe 20,000 people were killed.
This is how the Arabs deal with jihadists when they have to fight them.
So this is basically Hamas is a not very imaginative offshoot of the Muslim Brotherhood, but they're all basically the same thing.
The Saudis have been killing a ton of the Muslim Brotherhood as well.
They've been recognizing that it's also an existential threat to their country.
So the Muslim Brotherhood, its origins in the land of Israel, its origins in the Holy Land, we'll just call it.
Let's focus on that.
But first I want to ask you, is Hosni Mubarak still alive?
No. He was executed.
No, he didn't. He was executed by the Arab Spring, I believe.
Look, I am not the best historian of the insider track of the Muslim Brotherhood.
He was executed by Mohamed Morsi who took over when the Muslim Brotherhood took over Egypt.
More or less, yeah.
So fascinating, Egyptian politics.
Keep in mind, there was no separate Holy Land and Egypt.
Everything was kind of one big mess under the British after World War I. So the Muslim Brotherhood sort of arose In those places.
But, you know, people like Yasser Arafat, the only other famous Palestinian, was born in Egypt.
There was no real difference between an Egyptian and a Syrian and a Jordanian.
There was no such thing as Jordan.
This was all just Arabs.
These were Arabs in the Ottoman Empire.
These were Arabs in the British mandates under the Ottoman Empire.
These were Arabs under the French mandates in the Ottoman Empire.
There wasn't really a separate It was just like driving between Cairo to Jaffa.
It's like driving from LA to Santa Barbara.
You could just go there. What happens to Husseini after Kyder is killed?
Where does his life lead?
He died a couple years later in Egypt.
The Egyptians never let him actually go.
The Egyptians were sort of afraid of him and they never wanted to let him actually have power.
When Kadir died, he was the last sort of Palestinian who had any real power on his own.
But the Arab countries have never wanted these crazy jihadis to have real power.
So the Egyptians basically kept the Mufti around until his death a couple of years later.
Interesting. So the Mufti died and the bridge...
So obviously there's this established tremendous Nazi presence.
The Jews weren't just fighting the British for their independence.
They were actually fighting Nazi factions that...
colonized the Arabs, Nazi colonizers, actual German-rooted Nazi colonizers of the Arabs that led these attempted genocides of all the Jews that were living in, hundreds and hundreds of thousands of Jews that were living in the land.
The Holy Land at the time.
So the Nazis had...
What happened to Nazism as a whole?
Now that we've established the death of the leaders of that movement, the 500 Bosnian SS high-level soldiers, what happened to them?
I'd like to try to understand post these events, what happened to these people?
Can you touch on that a little?
Yeah, so look, Israel won the War of Independence against the five invading Arab armies.
One of those Arab armies basically dissolved the Army of the Holy War.
So when they did, those SS soldiers either joined the Arab armies as volunteers, or they returned to Europe.
These were Arabs.
They were no longer calling themselves Nazis just because they shared the goals of killing all the Jews.
Nobody in the world, as you like to talk about, nobody in the world identified as a Nazi after 1946 or so, right? You kind of had to pretend you were something else.
So all these Arabs, I don't know if they were ever Nazis in the sense we think of it.
The Waffen-SS in Bosnia certainly We're proud to be fighting in the SS, but after World War II, they just became patriotic, or they pretended to be patriotic Yugoslavs.
You know what I mean? Everybody just puts on a different mask, whatever's going to keep them alive.
In the Arab world, it stayed a polite thing to do to say that you should kill all the Jews, and It still is to this day.
I mean, it's still a normal thing to say, even in Ilhan Omar's family, you know, where she grew up.
It's like, oh, yeah, let's kill all the Jews.
Like that was like normal dinner table conversation in Sudan and Somalia and all these places around the world.
They sort of drank in a lot of Nazi propaganda about who Jews are.
They still have the kind of hallucinatory antisemitism that the Nazis taught.
It's different than previous Arab and Muslim antisemitism, which was much more just like seeing us as third-class citizens who should never be on a, you know, you could never be on a horse if an Arab was walking on foot.
You always had to get down and walk.
Things like that.
And they would tax us and they would occasionally kill us.
It was pretty similar to Europe.
But it wasn't like Nazi version until the Nazi ideas penetrated the Arab world because of the Mufti.
So those ideas, you can see they're still there.
You can see, you know, they have been flying swastikas in Gaza.
I want to touch on Yasser Arafat a little bit because I know in the 50s he was busy raising funds in Kuwait and stuff like that.
And I know that Mahmoud Abbas, born in 1935, was also Alive during this time.
I want to touch on them.
Do you know anything about their origin stories and their connections to previous movements like the Holy Army or whatever it was called?
What did you say? The Army of the Holy War?
The Army of the Holy War.
I think they were both too young at that time.
It's my understanding that Abbas was a kid in Tzfat.
And he and his family escaped in 1948 during that war.
The story of Arafat, I mean, he was an Egyptian guy.
And by about 1964, he had made himself the leader of the Palestine Liberation Organization and started doing terrorist attacks against Israel and made himself famous.
He's basically invented modern terrorism.
Both of them were really more from the secular factions of the communist-influenced factions.
They tried to use the Muslims, but they always tried to keep them less powerful because they knew that the more jihadist factions would kill them if they had a chance.
And you saw that in 2007.
When Hamas did a coup against the Palestinian Authority in Gaza, killed about 700 of Mahmoud Abbas's people.
I remember that. And that's what's divided to this day, Gaza and the West Bank, was that civil war. Correct.
I mean, there's more to it than that.
We're oversimplifying, but yeah.
So early origins of the Palestinians and their influences.
On one hand, you have clear Nazi colonization.
Another influence, you have clear Russian communist infiltration and colonization.
Nothing Western whatsoever.
At best, it's secular Nasserism, the governing influence of these people, which is also largely backed by Russian Communism.
So, clearly the Palestinians culturally represent kind of like this I would say antithesis of the West.
Kind of like they represent all the traditional archetypal oppositions to Western ideology and Western culture.
I find it so fascinating that the modern...
Obviously people have been so stripped from their histories, but...
The more modern Westerner finds themselves so sympathetic with the Palestinians whom they call colonizers, whom they say are these poor colonized group of the West.
That being said, I'm glad we got to touch on the origins of the Palestinian people today.
Leading up to 1948, we didn't really touch so much on the modern age of Palestinians.
But maybe before, as we're closing out this segment, we can keep it a close...
A shorter episode, but maybe you could touch a little bit on on Jordan and the Palestinian involvement in Jordan and you know These claims of palace that Jordan is the home of the Palestinians Jordan is largely 90 percent Palestinian today If you could touch a little bit about the history of Palestinian Jordan and how that ties into the whole equation Yeah,
the whole thing, the Mandate of Palestine included what's today Jordan, Israel, the West Bank, and Gaza was all one thing.
It was called the Mandate of Palestine.
The original idea was to partition it into two, part for Arabs and part for Jews.
In 1922, they partitioned the part across the Jordan River and gave it to a Saudi guy, Because he had helped the British during World War I. So they just made him the king of this basically part of the Palestine mandate.
And in the 48 War, most of the moderate Arabs were on this side.
You're talking about King Hussein's father.
Yeah, yeah.
I keep forgetting because they alternate between the names Hussein and Abdullah and Hussein and Abdullah, but basically...
The one who was the king from 1922.
In 1948, a lot of the moderate Arabs who were living in the land, who had been the enemies of the Mufti in the 1930s.
The Mufti and his factions had killed about seven, eight, maybe as many as 10,000 other Arabs here.
So those clans, which included the Nashashibis and some of the other clans, they basically allied with Jordan, with the King of Jordan.
It was only just becoming called Jordan.
They didn't necessarily call themselves Palestinians then.
They considered themselves Jordanians.
And in 1948, Jordan controlled the old city of Jerusalem and what became the West Bank and annexed it.
He made it part of Jordan.
And nobody... For the next 19 years claimed that that should be part of Palestine.
It was simply an occupied part of Jordan.
So in 67, when Israel took it over, took over the West Bank, many of the Arabs here fled into Jordan.
And it was only then that the world started to claim that the West Bank was somehow Palestine.
Nobody had recognized the Jordanian occupation of the West Bank.
It was considered illegitimate by everyone, I think, except for Britain and Pakistan.
Even the other Arab countries didn't recognize it.
Yeah, there's a lot of Arabs here.
Jordan is effectively the Palestinian state.
You're saying up until 1967, it was not considered Palestine.
It was considered Jordan.
The whole West Bank.
Correct. Correct.
The King of Jordan had his palace here in Jerusalem.
Interesting. Very, very interesting.
Look, I don't want to say there's a lot of complexity to the so-called Palestinian narrative and the people.
We were touching on their leaders and the ideological inspirations of their leaders.
But in societies that in 1948 it was a mostly illiterate society and also it's a very fragmented and brainwashed society.
You know, we're hearing about these UN schools that are just teaching them to hate Jews and blow themselves up.
UNRWA schools. Yeah, so it's like American taxpayer money is going to teach.
Yeah. Exactly.
So like, look, I feel bad.
Whoever these people are, whether you want to call them Palestinian or just displaced Arabs, they've been brainwashed and kicked around.
And they're basically like, you know, a bunch of people without a country with a horrible ideology.
And every other country, Jordan, if you wanted to hear more about that.
So in 1970, the PLO Was trying to basically take over Jordan.
They were saying, hey, this is actually a Palestinian country.
Why don't we just kill the king and take over?
And they tried and they failed.
It was called Black September, September 1970.
They hijacked a whole bunch of Israeli planes.
My friend was on one of those planes as a 13 year old kid.
He was, you know, kidnapped.
And held hostage on a plane in the deserts of Jordan for, I think, a couple weeks. Anyway, the Jordanian king managed to get his shit together and to kill a lot of the PLO. Somewhere between 3,000 and 10,000 Palestinians were killed, or Arabs, or whoever you want to call them.
Anyway, so that was not a pretty picture.
Also, Lebanon has had its own terrible civil war, mostly against Palestinians.
Killed a lot of Palestinians up there, too.
So, it's a shit show.
I feel bad for the Palestinians, because it's like, we're here, we're not going anywhere.
It'd be really nice if they could get along with the Arabs and get on with their lives, but it seems like they can't.
I think the clear solution to the Palestinian issue is the removal of the King of Jordan and the establishment of a Palestinian state in Jordan.
I think that's very clear.
If you look at the Jordanian flag versus the Palestinian flag, it's the exact same thing except the Jordanian flag has a star in the middle of it to symbolize the capital of the Palestinian people.
I very strongly feel that the most logical and de-escalating situation, something that would de-escalate the situation very, very quickly, would be the removal of the King of Jordan.
I would imagine that would cause a mass migration of Palestinians.
seeking a better life of self-governance and sovereignty for themselves.
I know currently there's three states of Palestine.
There's Gaza, which is controlled by Hamas.
There is the West Bank, which is controlled by Fatah.
And ironically, in the West Bank, they're in love with Hamas.
And then there's Jordan, where 90 % of the Palestinians in the world actually live.
And they are ruled by an Arab king, the Hussein dynasty.
He's actually descended of Muhammad.
He's one of the pure-blooded descendants of Muhammad.
And when the... The Saudi family took over the Arabian Peninsula.
The Hussein family was originally the kings of Arabia at the time, and they were chased out and given that province by the British, as you said, established as kings over Jordan.
But they originally were the ancestral lineage of Mecca from the time of Muhammad up until their expulsion by the Ibn Saud family.
So, Arab politics are so dynamic.
And you're right. And especially Palestinian politics, they're so nuanced and intricate.
And I think the West would love it if the storyline was exactly how they believe it to be.
Because they don't want to exhibit any more energy than they have to, trying to understand such a complex and nuanced culture as the Palestinian culture.
And the easy answer is just to blame the Jews, as in every scapegoat case of Jewish hatred throughout the ages.
But But especially in this, when Western medias allow agencies like Hamas to report the death tolls in the Gaza Strip and blasted everywhere, you know, just here in California, a man by the name of Paul Kessler was killed on the street waving an Israeli flag.
And the thing that was so ironic was he was killed by a university professor With a megaphone who struck him in the head.
He was going around hitting people with his megaphone.
And he struck this guy in the head, caused a brain aneurysm, and he died.
And he was an Arab university professor.
And when I saw that it was a professor of a university, that's when it...
Really, really got to me, because these aren't just radicalized youth who don't know anything about the world.
These are American university professors who are purporting violence abroad, and it's all based in this radicalization that takes place around this concept of the poor-suffering Palestinian.
absolving all the blame on the, of any Arab misdoings to Palestinians and, um, focusing solely all that blame on Israel is kind of like this Western colonial power.
which is ironic since Israel won its independence and sovereignty, fighting the most notorious colonial power in all of human existence.
I think that this is a great episode.
I really hope that Some people have learned some really important history lessons and facts.
I'm excited to read the feedback in the comments in this video.
Yeah, I want to say just a couple things.
Since 1948, the so-called Palestinians have basically been created as a homeless encampment in the Middle East.
The actual conditions here, they might be solvable if the sovereign state of Israel and the sovereign kings of the Arab world could solve it.
But the West keeps propping it up, basically giving money to the homeless, basically giving money to these brainwashing jihad schools.
If they would stop doing that, if they would stop intervening and stop pretending to have sympathy, one of the thinkers that I like calls the protests in the West, he calls it Gaza Floyd.
It's like these giant protests and most of these people don't know anything about the Middle East and don't really care.
It's just another excuse to be against Western power, whatever that is.
Whoever's against Western power, I'm on their side.
That's the attitude of a lot of these university professors and all this garbage.
So, look, you know, most people don't know what they're talking about and the history is complicated.
I don't know a lot about lots of parts of this history and I know way more than most people.
If it's not your business, please stay out of it, I would say.
I'm not saying people should trust all the media.
I usually don't trust the media.
I agree with you, Adam, about a lot of the stuff about COVID, as you know, and I don't trust a lot of our Western leaders.
I do think that a lot of things are Let's say selective presentations of the truth.
But in this case, Hamas actually is a jihadist group that takes a lot of its inspiration from the Nazis and we really do have to defeat them.
Yeah, I think that's the general consensus now is that and I know, Matt, that you and I have had discussions on the infiltration of Nazis into Israel and the infiltration of I don't want to call it the infiltration.
I want to call it the subjugation of Jewish sovereignty over Israel by foreign entities.
And it's really emerged that not only does Israel need to conquer Hamas entirely for Israel, The Jews, but also for the Palestinians.
That if the Palestinians are going to have any hopeful future whatsoever, that Hamas needs to be completely wiped out.
Right now we're in this ceasefire.
Coming out of the ceasefire, I've been perplexed about the natures of war and whatnot.
Did Israel allow this to happen?
Did Israel...
Was this an organic situation?
Did Israel stand down?
All these questions are being asked.
Because it is alarming, and Jews do need to know who is controlling the fate of our lives, especially in situations where Jewish sovereignty could be exerted quickly.
Jewish influence can be exerted quickly.
For instance, Jewish prayer rites on the Temple Mount.
It could be done just on a decision on a whim.
But status quo, this concept of status quo is the antithesis of progress in the region because it denies the Jews our national ambitions to To unveil what it is we want to contribute to the global quilt of humanity.
I know a lot of media outlets are really Obsessed with this topic, but it doesn't change the fact that the war is pretty much halfway over.
Israel, the IDF, and what they've accomplished in the war has been, you know, everybody's going to criticize this video and say, oh, genocide, genocide, genocide.
Well, if it was genocide, they would just simply, you know, kill all the people, you know, overnight.
They wouldn't have leafleted. They wouldn't have...
Called people and told them to leave their homes.
But the eradication of Hamas, the eradication of the tunnels...
Yeah, we're bad at it. We're bad at genocide.
Very bad at genocide, but very good at eradicating Hamas.
I mean, they practically wiped them out.
In another two to three weeks of engagement, Hamas could not exist and Khalid Mashal could be killed.
Khalid Mashal, Ismail Haniyeh, all these men could be killed.
And wouldn't that be good for the world?
I remember when Trump killed Qasem.
Inshallah. I remember when Trump killed Qasem Soleimani, nobody cared about that one.
These are people who are worse than Qasem Soleimani.
And less influential in the world than Qasem Soleimani.
And more inhibiting to the Palestinian people.
If people truly cared about Palestinian lives, they would absolutely care about the removal of Ismail Haniyeh and Khalid Mashal from this world.
So I hope that people see that.
I know that there's a lot of...
Blame on Israel and blame on the Jews and people are really drunk right now, especially on Infowars.
People are drunk on that narrative.
And it's hard to watch because, you know, everybody I think it's because everybody wants to fight globalism.
And the truth is, is Israel has some very dubious relationships with World Economic Forum.
I don't want to say Israel.
Israeli leaders have dubious relationships.
In regard to World Economic Forum, the Mossad has some very dubious relationships.
I don't think it's far-fetched to think.
I know that Mossad and Hamas have been doing deals together forever.
I know a lot of people comment that Hamas was created A lot of people on this network claim that Hamas was created by the Mossad.
It's too clerical for that.
I don't see how that's possible.
Hamas is actually a very clerical organization with real Muslim scholars inside of it.
So I don't see Israel being able to have done something like that.
But I do know that the Mossad Does do deals with very dubious parties, including Hamas.
That being said...
I don't know what they do.
That being said, the complete removal of Hamas is the only way to ensure actual Jewish sovereignty over the government of Israel.
I know that the powers that be that rule Israel want to keep status quo, which means leave a contingency of Hamas for them to rebuild and radicalize for a future conflict.
But the removal of Hamas, complete removal of Hamas, is really the only way to purge the Israeli government of the influences that seek to oppress Jews and undermine Jewish sovereignty over our own national ambitions.
Sorry for that. I wish I knew.
No, it's okay. I wish I knew.
I know that I don't know.
I know that the official stories about October 7th don't add up.
I know that we didn't create Hamas.
The Muslim Brotherhood has been around since the 1920s, way before the State of Israel.
It was a branch of the Muslim Brotherhood.
At one point, I think Israel hoped that Hamas would be less corrupt than the Palestinian Authority.
It might be less corrupt than the Palestinian Authority.
That's a low bar.
You know, more, you might say, loyal to their goal of killing Jews than they are to just becoming rich, although it does seem like the leaders have become billionaires.
I doubt that. I mean, Khalid Mashal is worth $5 billion.
Ismail Haniyeh is worth $11 billion.
I mean, it's a real Vladimir Zelensky move to get rich off of rebellion.
Yeah, unfortunately. I mean, maybe afterwards when you won your war and you won your people's independence, but when you're $11 billion living in Doha and your people are suffering in Gaza and you're just using them as cannon fodder for a war against Jews.
Anyways, sorry to interrupt.
Well, it's worse than cannon fodder.
I've given a talk about Algeria, that Hamas explicitly says they want to be like Algeria.
الشعوب يا أختي العزيزة لا تتحرر بسهولة الروس قدموا 30 مليون ضحية في الحرب العالمية الثانية حتى يتحرروا من هجوم هتلر عليهم الشعب الفيتنامي قدم 3 مليون ونصف بني آدم حتى هزموا الأمريكان الأفغارستان هزمت الاتحاد السيوفتي أولا ثم أمريكا بملايين من الشهداء الشعب الجزائري 6 ملايين شهيد عبر 130 عاما شعب الفلسطيني مثل ومثل كل شعوب.
ما في شعب يتحرب بدون تضحيات.
كيف تطارب الغرب والعالم بأن يناصر القضية الفلسطينية؟ وما يتصدر المشهد الآن هي الممارسات التي ارتكبتها حماس باتجاه المدنيين الإسرائيليين.
سيد خالد أنت تعلم أن هناك تعاطف كبير اكتسبته إسرائيل من هذه المشاهد.
هل في فكر وعخيدة حماس التعامل هكذا مع المدنيين؟ They want to martyr a million Gazans.
They want that. They want their own people to die because they believe that's what a glorious war of national liberation looks like.
Algeria was this violent uprising of some Algerian jihadis against the French.
The French were willing to make all Algerians full French citizens.
And instead, the jihadists went and just had a violent uprising, had a massacre of hundreds of French people, and basically just forced the French to keep killing them from 1958 to 1962.
Until the French got so sick of killing them that they just left and went back to Europe.
So that's what the Hamas believes is happening here.
That we'll get so sick of killing them that we'll just give up and leave.
We're not going to leave.
We have nowhere to go. But that's what they believe.
That's what they say. I believe them.
Yeah. You know, it's quite amazing.
And we're coming up to the end of this segment at the hour and a half mark.
I like this 90-minute interview style.
But I wanted to, I guess, touch base on the...
It always makes me laugh when I turn on, you know, propaganda and I see them talking about Jesus was a Palestinian and, like, there's no such thing as Jewish history in the land of Israel and...
And the Holy Land is devoid of anything remotely Jewish.
And they go on and on and on about Ashkenazis are descended of Khazars and the Talmud is evil and all this stuff.
I wonder if you could touch on a little bit of that last words as we're closing out.
And feel free to take as much time as you can about real Jewish antiquity in the land of Israel and why it was that the Jews...
Why we felt so inclined to return and choose that as a dwelling.
Take a much longer segment and explain also the size of the population of Jews that were living in the land prior to the formation of the State of Israel and prior to the early Zionism and whatnot.
If you could touch on those subjects as we approach our hour and a half mark.
Yeah, I mean, Jews are Jews.
We've been here forever.
There was about 8 million Jews in the area during Roman times.
The Romans violently conquered us and then put down two really nasty rebellions.
We tried to become independent against the Romans.
And after the second uprising, the Bar Kokhba rebellion in 136 or so AD, the Romans enslaved About a third of us and killed about a third of us.
And a small number of Jews in the city of Yavna, which is near Tel Aviv, made a deal with the Romans that they would keep their heads down and become pacifists if we could stay.
So Jews became pacifists throughout most of the world.
We were scattered by the Romans and the Romans continued to rule this land until The 600s, the Byzantine Empire, was basically the Romans.
The Arabs still call them the Rum.
This was the Roman area.
And they wouldn't let Jews move back.
Then the Arabs took over. They also mostly wouldn't let Jews move back.
But we still came back. There was always Jews here.
The Crusaders came and killed a shitload of Jews here and Muslims.
And then when the Muslims took back over Saladin, the first thing he did was move Jewish families back to Jerusalem.
Then, and whatever, the Muslims didn't care that much about Palestine then, even though they claimed to.
but they gave it back a few years later.
The Ottomans controlled this whole area, everything from Turkey all the way to Morocco, all the way to Yemen and Oman, for about 500 years until the The British took it over and that gets into the stories that we've been telling.
But look, you know, you and I have lived here, I still live here, and you can walk around anywhere here and you'll literally trip over Jewish ruins from 2500 years ago.
The town where you and I learned together, we were in...
A hilltop in what's today called the West Bank settlement.
But right across 40 feet from where we were sitting, there's ruins of a Jewish mikvah and a Jewish town that's at least 2,200 years old.
So this is our land.
I moved here because I grew up in America and was doing activist work with American Indians.
And they said to me, oh, you're Jewish.
You guys won your homeland back.
I decolonized America.
I moved back to Israel to be in my homeland.
So look, nobody ever talked about Palestinian history until they decided to hate Jews.
Nobody even talked about Palestinians until 1964.
I'm not saying there aren't a whole bunch of so-called Palestinians that are suffering, but when you're talking about history, there's really only one side of the conversation.
I would put it like that.
And you are the historian, my friend Matthew Mausner, the Yale historian, found on all social media at Ranger Ludd.
I want to thank you for coming on the show today.
It's always fun talking to you.
You have such a depth of history and understanding of the region and other things, too.
I mean, you're very based. You know, I love our conversations about Nazis in Antarctica.
That's my favorite. Before you go, I did want to ask you one quick question, and I'll segue this into a future episode with you.
I recently finished this book by David DeJong called Nazi Billionaires.
Have you seen this one? This one is amazing, and it details all these billionaires that Adolf Hitler made, and one of them, August von Fink, I think that's his name, yeah, August von Fink, went on this, I think he was, he built these museums for Adolf Hitler, like he went around building museums.
I wondered if you ever came across his, he was Baron August von Fink, Did you come across him in any of your studies?
Would you like to join me for an episode about Nazi billionaires at a later date?
Get that on the calendar.
I would be happy to look into it.
Yeah, I want to encourage everybody to pick up this book.
This book is amazing because a lot of these families, it basically documents the families that were around during that time, and a lot of them are still here, participating heavily at the World Economic Forum, like the Quants and the Von Finks and the Porsches and the Peaches and the Reinmans.
There's a lot of them. The Kozlowskis.
The Gorings, obviously.
But the main ones that it really follows are the quants and the flicks.
There's a ton of them. Buy this book.
It's a great book. Understand the world that we live in a little bit better by understanding who became rich during that time and who's still around.
I again want to thank our guest Matthew Mauser for joining us on The Adam King Show.
Thank you for tuning in to a very informative episode on the origins of the Palestinian people prior to the creation of the State of Israel.
I am your host, Adam King.
I will be conducting more episodes.
I know I have not been posting that much lately.
I want to assure you I've been very busy and also laying low during this Israel thing because it's been hot, let's just say. But I want to assure you all that I am recommitted.
I'm going to be posting a lot more to my page, both Band, Rumble.
On all platforms.
And I really love your comments.
Please write comments.
Let us know what you thought about the episode.
Stay tuned for more episodes on The Adam King Show found at InfowarsBand.video.
I am your gracious host, Adam King, saying goodnight.
Peace! Hold on.
You've reached the Gaza Hostage Service.
How can I direct your call? Oh, I'm sorry to hear that.
No, we actually don't deal with infant hostages.
Oh, you're calling about a male hostage.
Yes. All the male hostages, I believe, are with PFLP, the popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine.
So it looks like they're down in the tunnels, which means their phones are all in tunnel mode.
Here, if you hold on, I will put you on hold and you can leave a voicemail.
Well, assalamu alaikum!
You've reached the PFLP, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine.
How may I direct your call today?
Oh, you're the one calling about the infant.
Yeah, so I think you were supposed to get routed to the PIJ, the Palestinian Islamic Jihad.
So if you could just hold the line and I will send you there shortly.
Thanks for calling. We really appreciate it.
That's why we're so popular.
Girl, like, on Allah, my hijab is not cooperating to—oh, uh, yes, hello? Yes, this is the PIJHS, the Palestinian Islamic Jihad hostage services—oh,