Israeli businesses in Judea and Samaria (dubbed "The West Bank" by Jordanian aggressors in 1948) employ both Israelis and Palestinian workers and serve both Israeli and Palestinian consumers. Those businesses should be lauded for proving that Israelis and Palestinians can live side-by-side in peace. It's Palestinian leaders who are more …
Israeli businesses in Judea and Samaria (dubbed "The West Bank" by Jordanian aggressors in 1948) employ both Israelis and Palestinian workers and serve both Israeli and Palestinian consumers. Those businesses should be lauded for proving that Israelis and Palestinians can live side-by-side in peace. It's Palestinian leaders who are more interested in destroying the nation-state of the Jews than in creating societies in which Palestinians can become productive citizens. See Bassam Tawil on "What do Palestinians really want?" in Gatestone.
Israeli businesses in Judea and Samaria (dubbed "The West Bank" by Jordanian aggressors in 1948) employ both Israelis and Palestinian workers and serve both Israeli and Palestinian consumers. Those businesses should be lauded for proving that Israelis and Palestinians can live side-by-side in peace. It's Palestinian leaders who are more interested in destroying the nation-state of the Jews than in creating societies in which Palestinians can become productive citizens. See Bassam Tawil on "What do Palestinians really want?" in Gatestone.