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originally posted by: KrustyKrab
originally posted by: Astrocometus
a reply to: KrustyKrab
I bet you didn’t know you were a grandpa with dementia now did ya?🤣
This transitioning thing must really be real. 🍻
Here's the topic:
US and Israel Reportedly Conclude Most Hostages Still Held in Gaza Are Dead
Try and remember that.
🙄🙄🙄Lighten up Francis. A little humor isn’t the end of your world is it?
originally posted by: CarlLaFong
How many of the dead hostages were US citizens?
originally posted by: Astrocometus
a reply to: FlyersFan
More Muslims murdering the innocent. "Oh but Christians are bad
people too".
My ASS!
originally posted by: FlyersFan
originally posted by: CarlLaFong
How many of the dead hostages were US citizens?
Last I heard, we are still missing 10 people over there.
And there were at least 29 Americans killed on Oct 7.
ABC News
apnews.com...
Six surviving hostages are American, the State Department said in January. Efforts by the United States, Qatar and Egypt to broker a cease-fire appear stalled. In the meantime, the deceased hostages’ remains are being held by Hamas as bargaining chips.
originally posted by: FlyersFan
a reply to: KrustyKrab
Can you imagine holding the remains of the hostages like this for months and months? What kind of condition the corpses are in? Kidnapping them was bad. Murdering them even worse. Now holding rotting bodies. Pretty sick stuff.
originally posted by: KrustyKrab
Yet, people think they’re the good guys? Yeah sure🙄. Stupid is as stupid does. To much stupid in the world.
originally posted by: CarlLaFong
IF there are ANY hostages still alive...why isn't Hamas able to offer any proof of life?
originally posted by: CarlLaFong
IF there are ANY hostages still alive...why isn't Hamas able to offer any proof of life?
originally posted by: FlyersFan
Hamas Raped most of them.
originally posted by: YourFaceAgain
Part of it is because Hamas didn't take all the hostages.
Palestinian "civilians" took a lot of the hostages.
originally posted by: FlyersFan
originally posted by: YourFaceAgain
Part of it is because Hamas didn't take all the hostages.
Palestinian "civilians" took a lot of the hostages.
Some of the released hostages said that there are no 'civilians' among the people of Gaza. That they are all in on it. The hostages were paraded through the streets and thousands of 'civilian' Gazans cheered and tried to grab for them etc etc. One of the hostages gave an interview and said she was kept in a 'civilian' home. There was a man, his wife, and the children. The man was assaulting her with the wife right in the home.
I've given the links for those facts before.
I'm not going to go hunt them down here.
originally posted by: YourFaceAgain
And posting it for the terrorist supporters here won't do any good.
....he was confronted by a sight he will never forget: his neighbors' three-year-old daughter shaking with fear and drenched in blood....'It wasn't her blood, it was her parents' blood,' Hagar explains in her first sit-down interview. 'She saw how terrorists, dressed in military uniforms, killed her mother.
When they arrived in Gaza, thousands of Palestinians were lining the streets, cheering and dancing, and all were desperate to get a glimpse of the hostages.
'The terrorists opened the car doors and pulled my hair [to show me off] to the thousands of people in the streets,' says Hagar. 'Then they grabbed my daughter by her shirt and showed her off to the crowd. They were boasting that they had stolen a little Israeli girl. All the people were cheering.'
'Every day we got less and less food. We were starving. The kids were starving. They were fighting with each other for crumbs and scraps on the floor. I would give them most of my food and eat a little bit just to survive.
Thousands of people lined the route, eager to catch sight of the soon-to-be-released captives.
Hagar, the children, and all the other hostages were then made to walk to the Red Cross car parked 50 metres away.
'You think 50 metres is a short distance. It isn't,' she says. 'It is a really long distance when you have to walk 50 metres past a screaming, cheering crowd that is jumping at you and trying to grab you. It was completely terrifying.
'And the entire time we were driving through the streets of Gaza, people in the streets were shouting at us and jumping on the car.'