Thursday, October 26, 2023

Megyn Kelly slams Jordan's Queen Rania for 'trying to spin the lie that children weren't killed' by Hamas in Israel terror attacks

 



Megyn Kelly has slammed Queen Rania of Jordan after her fiery interview speaking out against Palestinian deaths and accused the queen of denying the deaths of Israeli babies.

The queen, who is of Palestinian descent, told CNN's Christiane Amanpour on Tuesday that she was angry at 'glaring double standards' in coverage of Israeli and Palestinian deaths.

She accused the world's media of immediately accepting Israel's official line, but being skeptical about a Palestinian perspective.

'The CNN website at the beginning of the conflict reported a headline of Israeli children found butchered in an Israeli kibbutz, and when you read through the story, it's not been independently verified,' said Rania.

It was unclear what Rania was referring to, and there is no doubt that Hamas terrorists murdered babies, riddling their bodies with bullets.

Kelly reacted with disgust. 'Unbelievable. She's actually trying to spin the lie – the queen – that children weren't killed,' she said.

And it's just shocking to the Arab world,' she told veteran reporter Christiane Amanpour, before questioning whether babies had been 'butchered' by Hamas. 

'I'm not arguing accuracy, Christiane, I'm arguing equivalence and double standards here,' she fumed. 

Amanpour fired back that it had been verified both by CNN's reporters and other foreign media on the ground that Hamas was butchering babies, but stopped short of demanding a condemnation from the queen of the terror group's practices. 

Amanpour did directly appeal for sympathy for Israelis and condemnation of Hamas, asking if Queen Rania 'accepted' that they had brought suffering on Palestinians. 

Queen Rania made a brief concession, but then returned to criticizing Israel and its allies. 

'These are the rules of war and they need to apply to everybody. Yes, there is the shock and there was the condemnation [towards Hamas]. But why isn't there equal condemnation to what is happening now?' 

'Even if Israel defeats every last Hamas member, then what? Haven't they left a trail of terrible memories that will create a new generation of resistance that is fiercer and more violent?' 

Amanpour began by asking the 53-year-old how she had felt since the Hamas attack of October 7 'as an Arab, as a Palestinian, as a mother, as a human being'.

Rania replied: 'I cannot begin to describe to you the depth of the grief, the pain and the shock that we are feeling here in Jordan. 

She said her country, home to the world's largest Palestinian population, was 'united in grief, regardless of our origin'.





'I just want to remind the world that Palestinian mothers love their children just as much as any other mother in the world,' she added. 

'Six thousand civilians killed so far, 2,400 children – how is that self-defense? We are seeing butchery at a mass scale using precision weapons. 

'I just want to emphasize that this conflict did not begin on October 7, although it has been portrayed as that,' Rania continued.

'You know, most networks are covering the story under the title of Israel at War.

'But for many Palestinians on the other side of the separation wall, and the other side of the barbed wire, war has never left.

'This is a 75-year-old story - a story of overwhelming death and displacement to the Palestinian people.

'It is a story of an occupation under an apartheid regime that occupies land, that demolishes houses, confiscates land, military incursions, night raids.

'You know, the context of a nuclear-armed regional superpower that occupies, oppresses and commits daily documented crimes against Palestinians is missing from the narrative.'

Amanpour told her that her words were likely to be received with great anger by Israel.

'Let me just emphasize that that apartheid is a designation that was given not by Arabs, but by Israeli and international human rights organizations,' she replied.

The mother of four said Palestinians 'suffer daily indignities and human rights violations' - saying there was no freedom of movement, and condemning the 500 checkpoints across the West Bank; the 'aggressive expansion of settlements on Palestinian land'; and the 'humiliation' of her people.

She said Israel violated UN resolutions, and ignored international law.

'There's a hyper fixation on Hamas now because of all that happened the last couple of weeks,' she said.

'But this is a problem that far precedes Hamas and will continue after Hamas.

'This is a fight for freedom and for justice, and that is what needs to be heard.'

8 comments:

  1. There is a reason why lie detectors don't work on Palis.
    There is no division between truth and lies in their collective minds. A lie rolls over their tongue totally effortless as it was a truthfully spoken word. They are raised in a self-deceiving culture of lies, which ends up a danger to the society at large.
    No redeeming factor here for generations to come.

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    1. I'm not sure many people realize this. In the West if you get caught lying there is some level of shame attached to it. In the Arab world it's the norm. I've always told my kids not to lie as no-one will ever believe anything you say. Makes society difficult to function.

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    2. Din
      Have a look
      https://vinnews.com/2023/10/26/brandeis-university-student-senate-votes-not-to-denounce-hamas/

      Delete
  2. Of course Rania lied. She's a so-called Palestinian. That's all they do.

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  3. Let the queen or Jordan open her borders to all the palis. Afterall, before there was a made up fictional kingdom called Jordan, it was Palestine, than trans-palistine. The palis living there were for years segregated (can you say apartheid).

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  4. Surprising actually that the despicable Iranian machshayfa Amanpour didn't side with Hussein of Jordan's Palestinian Queen. Amanpour has a long history of being a passive-aggressive anti-Semite. She is after all married to the self-hating Jew James Rubin who was a Clinton Administration insider. Their shadchan had a sense of humor because Rubin talks out the side of his mouth & Amanpour talks as if she just sucked in a tube of lidocaine numbing agent.

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  5. Pronounced Sfatcheem which is Italian slang for scum. It bothered Mario Cuomo to no end that the Rebbe R' Bob Grant got millions of his listeners to call him by that vile insult. Cuomo couldn't even get R' Bob in trouble with the FCC or the networks because you will not find that word in any dictionary. A minor role bit actor in The Sopranos who is an older immigrant gentleman from Italy (& the real life uncle of major cast member "Furio") explained this to me. He couldn't contain his laughter over it & almost fell over. He thought it was even funnier that a heimishe Yid could pronounce it correctly. I then recounted to him that R' Bob got an entire ballroom full of Satmar chevra at the annual Willy Shomrim dinner to chant it along with him too. When word got back to Cuomo he put in an infuriated phone call to Leib Glantz to demand an explanation as to why yeden Satmar macher in town is mocking him tzezamen mit zein archenemy R' Bob. Glantz farentfered that the oylam didn't know what the word meant, LOL!

    Back to Amanpour, what was one of R' Bob's funniest shticks was when he mocked her British influenced Farsi accent - an obnoxious combination - calling out her name Christiane Amanpour with extra emphasis whining. LOLOLOL!!

    R' Bob despised her for her anti-Israel & her anti-American bias.

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  6. Your husband Rania has banned any Palestinian refugees from coming into Jordan. You are a 2 faced lying witch. Your “sympathies for the Palestinians” is so “heartfelt”

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