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Daryl Bradford Smith
interviews Reuven Schossen

Israeli Captain seeks asylum in USA
in his first public interview.

Reuven Schossen was raised in a Kibutz in Israel. He became a captain in the Israel Army, and then went on to a university.

Schossen claims to have became disappointed with the immoral behavior he witnessed in Israel, especially the behavior of Israel in response to a bombing at a hotel in the city of Netanya in Israel on 27 March 2002.

He also personally observed the Dow Chemical Company passing secret technology to Israel.

He complains that Israel "is using this rule of fear in order to control its own population". He asks us Americans:

"...how is it that you are giving 6 billion dollars every year to a country that doesn't have a constitution and does not respect the most basic human rights of its citizens?"


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Schossen, June 15, 2006   7.3 mb

Some of the issues mentioned:
 

The marriage laws of Israel would be considered "racist" if any other nation adopted them. Here is one news article about it:
www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?SectionID=107&ItemID=10321

Imagine laws in America that try to prevent marriages between Catholics and Protestants or between Jews and goyim? Schossen asks us a good question, why do we give Israel $6 billion a year?

 

He mentions the concept of the Shabbat Goy as an example of the immorality he sees in Israel. A Jew is not supposed to do certain activities on Saturday, so some Jews will hire a goyim to do those particular duties. They refer to them as Shabbat Goys.

While this may seem to be clever, it is an attempt to get around the rules that somebody is supposed to follow. Schossen points out that this attitude is equivalent to a person who is not allowed to murder, so he hires somebody else to do his killings. Is that clever?

We see this attitude throughout the world, not just Israel. Lawyers, businessmen, and citizens routinely look for ways to work around the laws.

Are people really "clever" when they figure out how to get around a law? Are they clever when they figure out how to break into a locked house? Are they clever when they figure out how to evade security cameras at a retail store?

If a group of people don't like the laws they must follow, they should change the laws, not find ways to evade them.

And if religious people don't like the rules of their religion, they should leave the religion. Schossen did exactly that; instead of finding "clever" ways to avoid the rules of his Jewish religion, he became a Christian. He also left Israel.

 

Schossen was in the Israeli military at the time of the bombing at the hotel in Netanya, Israel on 27 March 2002. He was sent to the area to deal with the Arabs. Here is a news article about the bombing:
http://archives.cnn.com/2002/WORLD/meast/03/27/mideast/

Considering how many terrorist attacks were actually staged by Israel, why should we assume it was a bombing by Arabs?

 

Schossen believes that most of Israel follows the Talmud, not the Torah. What is the difference? And is the difference significant to us goyim? Why are some rabbis complaining about the Talmud and insisting that real Jews follow the Torah? For example:
http://www.jewsagainstzionism.com/

 

Schossen did not know about Benjamin Freedman! Or he was pretending not to know.

Please help us get this information out to people around the world.
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