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Israel

kolanuraven

Well-known member
The US supports Israel no matter what they want or do. We supply them with military supplies, money.....no telling what else.

It seems Congress looses sleep worrying about what else " we" can do for Israel.

I doubt that the politico establishment of Israel asks itself, " what can we do for the US?"


My question is: Name one thing...ONE THING...Israel has done for the United States.
 

TexasBred

Well-known member
How about "For The World".....In addition they give us "Eyes and Ears" in a part of the world where we are hated.

The 100th smallest country, with less than 1/1000th of the world’s population, can lay claim to the following:

The cell phone was first developed at the Motorola plant in Israel.

Most of the Windows NT and XP operating systems were developed by Microsoft-Israel.

The Pentium MMX Chip technology was designed in Israel at Intel.

Both the Pentium-4 microprocessor for desktop computers and the Centrino processor for laptops were entirely designed, developed and produced in Israel.

Voice mail technology was developed in Israel. The Israeli company Amdocs is the largest company in the world in this field.

Both Microsoft and Cisco built their only foreign-based research and development facilities in Israel.

The program ICQ, which is the technological basis for AOL Instant Messenger, was developed in 1996 by four young Israelis.

Disk on Key — a portable, virtual hard disk — was developed by the Israeli company M-Systems.

Israel has the highest number of personal computers per capita in the world.

Israel has the highest number of university degrees per capita in the world.

Israel produces more scientific papers per capita than any other nation by a large margin — 109 per 10,000 people — as well as one of the highest per capita rates of patents filed.

In proportion to its population, Israel has the largest number of startup companies in the world. In absolute terms, Israel has the largest number of startup companies than any other country in the world, except the US.

With more than 3,000 high-tech companies and startups, Israel has the highest concentration of hi-tech companies in the world — apart from Silicon Valley.

Israel is ranked #2 in the world for venture capital funds right behind the United States.

Outside the United States and Canada, Israel has the largest number of companies listed on NASDAQ.

Israel has the highest average living standards in the Middle East. The per capita income in 2000 was over $17,500, exceeding that of the United Kingdom.

On a per capita basis, Israel has the largest number of biotech startups.
Twenty four percent of Israel’s workforce holds university degrees — ranking third in the industrialized world, after the United States and Holland — and 12 percent hold advanced degrees.

Israel has the third highest rate of entrepreneurship — and the highest rate among women and among people over 55 in the world.

Relative to its population, Israel is the largest immigrant-absorbing nation on earth.

Israel has the world’s second highest supply of new books per capita.

Israel has more museums per capita than any other country.

Israeli scientists developed the first fully computerized, no-radiation diagnostic instrumentation for breast cancer.

An Israeli company developed a computerized system for ensuring proper administration of medications, thus removing human error from medical treatment. Every year in U. S. hospitals 7,000 patients die from treatment mistakes.

Israel’s Given Imaging developed the PillCam — the first ingestible video camera, which is so small it fits inside a pill. Used to view the small intestine from the inside, the camera helps doctors diagnose cancer and digestive disorders.

Researchers in Israel developed a new device that directly helps the heart pump blood. The new device is synchronized with the heart’s mechanical operations through a sophisticated system of sensors.

Israel leads the world in the number of scientists and technicians in the workforce, with 145 per 10,000, as opposed to 85 in the U.S., over 70 in Japan, and less than 60 in Germany.

A new acne treatment developed in Israel causes acne bacteria to self-destruct — all without damaging surroundings skin or tissue.

An Israeli company was the first to develop and install a large-scale solar-powered and fully functional electricity generating plant in Southern California’s Mojave Desert.

The first computer anti-virus software package was developed in Israel back in the 1970′s.

Major law enforcement agencies use Israeli technologies to monitor voices and messages on conventional phones, mobile phones and e-mails.

An Israeli company, Teva, is the world’s largest generic pharmaceutical company.

A new brain implant has been developed in Israel that can lower the risk of stroke by diverting blood clots away from sensitive areas of the brain.

IBM scientists in Israel are playing a vital role in a massive project of the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) to discover the origins of life on earth.

Israeli software company Check Point is the global leader in Virtual Private Network (VPN) and firewall technologies.

Israeli company Elta is responsible for the world’s first civilian aircraft equipped with technology designed to protect airliners from a missile attack.

Mashav, the Israeli Foreign Ministry’s Center for International Cooperation has trained over 200,000 international aid workers that have traveled to dozens of countries to help with medicine, agriculture, disaster relief, and many other issues.

Israel has, for many years, held the world record in milk production.

Rummikub, the third highest selling board game in the world, is manufactured in a family-run plant in the small southern Israeli town of Arad.

Drip irrigation — the system that is based on using plastic pipes that release small amounts of water next to crops or plants — was developed by the Israeli engineer Simcha Blas in the 1970′s. The invention caused a revolution in agriculture.

A design submitted by Israeli-born Michael Arad has been chosen for the World Trade Center Memorial, from amongst 5,000 entries from around the world.

Israeli company Retalix created the grocery scanners used at such stores as Costco, Albertson’s, and 7-11, as well as 25,000 additional stores and quick-service restaurants throughout the United States.

Primate research at Hebrew University is leading to the development of a robotic arm that can respond to the brain commands of a paralyzed person.

Two Israeli researchers are generating cancer-killing molecules that will recognize cancerous cells and target them aggressively, while not affecting normal cells.

Israeli researchers developed a novel stem cell therapy to treat Parkinson’s Disease — using a patient’s own bone marrow stem cells to produce the missing chemical that enables restoration of motor movement.

Israeli company Silent Communications has developed a type of silent conversation system for cell phones, so users can carry on conversations without saying a word.

The Israeli company Wondernet is currently dominating the world market in document signature authentication, with its unique scientific method of verifying handwritten signatures.

Israeli Professor Yehuda Finkelstein has discovered the cause of and cure for halitosis (bad breath).

Cherry tomatoes were originally supposed to be a snack when they were designed by a group of scientists led by professor Nahum Keidar from the agriculture faculty at the Weizmann Institute of Science, with the cooperation of the Israeli company Zera.

The Quicktionary, a pen size scanner that scans a word or a sentence and translates it to a different language, was developed by the Wizcom Company, based in Jerusalem.

Professor Ehud Keinan from the Technion Israel Institute of Technology developed a pen that identifies an improvised explosive.

The Israeli company Insightec developed an ultrasound system for removing tumors without surgery.

Researchers at the Technion have developed an antibiotic that destroys anthrax bacteria as well as the toxins it secretes into the bloodstream of the infected body.

Epilady, an electric hair removal system, was developed by Yair Dar and Shimon Yahav from the Goshrim Kibbutz.

The sun-heated water tank, a device that converts solar energy into thermal energy and that saves about 4% of the national energy supply, was developed by an engineer from Jerusalem.

Dr. Gal Yadid, Dr. Rachel Mayan, and Professor Abraham Weizmann from Bar Ilan University developed a form of drug rehabilitation using a natural steroid that is inserted into the brain and develops a resistance for the drugs.

Alon Moses from Hadassah Medical Center in Jerusalem and Imanuel Hensky and Carlos Hidelgo-Grass from Hebrew University decoded the mechanism for Streptococcus A.
 

Mike

Well-known member
Why does this Administration want to give $20 billion in advanced jet fighters and other sophisticated weaponry to Egypt -- home of the Muslim Brotherhood , and to Saudi Arabia -- home for fifteen of the nineteen 9/11 hijackers, and two countries with the worst human rights records?

While you're pondering that, let me tell you what we get back for our buck to Israel.

U.S. government aid to Israel is one of the most cost-effective investments that Americans make in support of their international interests. Why, you ask?

Because virtually the entire annual $1.2 billion economic aid is returned back to the United States in the form of debt repayment. Not only that, $1.325 of the $1.8 billion annual military aid must, by law, be spent in the United States, creating tens of thousands of American jobs.

As they say on TV, "WAIT, there's more!"

By comparison, U.S. expenditures in support of European allies in NATO are still many times the size of the aid to Israel. While the U.S. defense budget is divided functionally, not regionally, roughly 40 to 50 percent--or $80 to $112 billion--can be estimated to directly or indirectly support American defense commitments to Europe.

For instance, the $3 billion dollars recently guaranteed to Israel should be measured against the major threat to Israel's security from Iran, Syria, the Palestinian organizations and militant Islam. This aid dwarfs in comparison to the aid provided to European countries in World War II and again during the Cold War.

The cost of deploying 40,000 American troops at the DMZ on the Korean Peninsula far exceeds annual aid to Israel. Mobilizing U.S. forces in Europe twice in the past century — once against Nazism and then against communism — was unprecedented in the history of foreign aid.

Americans understood that the fall of Europe would bring about the same fate in the United States. This analogy explains the rationale for American support of Israel against extreme Islamists. The difference is that Israel has never asked for foreign troops to defend it — another reason aid is supported by the American public.

Israel as the only democratic country in the Middle East, and the most effective ally in the entire world to halt the expansion of radical Islam.

Israel is America's only, reliable ally in the Middle East, and is the only nation there that publicly declares is support for America.

Do you remember a few months back when we were able to intercept a falling satellite and blow it out of the sky -- proving the validity of a missle defense system?

Guess who developed the technology to do that: Israel. Israel had worked jointly with the US in developing the Arrow anti-missle system as well as the Boost Phase Intercept program and the Tactical High Energy Laser program, in which a high-energy laser beam mounted on an airplane can be used to knock out incoming missles.

Oh, and do you know about our "Secure Border Initiative?" This is the latest attempt by our government to use technology to secure its borders, stop smuggling, and prevent illegal immigration. The project was thrown open to bidders around the world. What was unique about this grant proposal was that Homeland Security gave the bidders total freedom to create new ideas of how to apply both new and old technology to secure the US borders.

Guess who won the rights to build it? Who knows more about protecting its borders against terrorist attacks?

Kollsman Inc., an American subsidiary of Elbit, an Israeli company. Elbit was selected because of its ability to bring together global resources with decades of technological experience and capabilities securing borders in extreme cold, mountainous regions, as well as hot, desert terrains

There are hundreds of other technological modifications and improvements in weapons systems that Israel has supplied to American armed forces, including those operating in Iraq.

What do our other, alleged allies in the Middle East offer us?

Let's take one of the other Middle Eastern countries that the US bankrolls: Pakistan. Pakistan's quality of life index is somewhere south of Haiti's, and is in worse shape than either North Korea or Burma. Yet the US has rewarded Musharraf's government with a 45,000 percent increase in US aid since 2001, upping assistance levels to more than $10 billion -- which is five times more than received by any other country (including Israel).

Has Pakistan helped us to find Bin Laden and made us safer from terrorist attacks, especially nuclear ones?

Is Hitler a humanitarian?

Not that long ago, Bush cancelled a $1 billion debt that Pakistan owes to America and instituted a new $3 billion military and economic assistance package to Pakistan, where its leader stands on very, shaky ground.

If anyone has bothered to pick up a book to read (instead of a blog) on nuclear proliferation, they would have learned that America not only turned a blind eye to Pakistan's nuclear bomb project for decades but had covered it up for imperative geopolitical reasons, even when Islamabad began trading its secret technology.

Right now, at least 17 of the worst Sunni terror groups banned by the US and the UN have been allowed to operate openly in Pakistan and launch recruitment drives, using flimsy cover-names, most of them operating within sight of the Pakistan military.

Pakistan's unsecured nuclear arsenal becomes increasingly more vulnerable as terrorists continue gain ground in Islamabad.

Did you know that the Pentagon considers Pakistan to be a greater nuclear threat to the world than is Iran?

I'd say, I want a President in the White House who will continue to fully support real allies like Israel rather than flaky ones like Egypt & Saudi Arabia.
 

kolanuraven

Well-known member
TexasBred said:
How about "For The World".....In addition they give us "Eyes and Ears" in a part of the world where we are hated.

The 100th smallest country, with less than 1/1000th of the world’s population, can lay claim to the following:

The cell phone was first developed at the Motorola plant in Israel.

Most of the Windows NT and XP operating systems were developed by Microsoft-Israel.

The Pentium MMX Chip technology was designed in Israel at Intel.

Both the Pentium-4 microprocessor for desktop computers and the Centrino processor for laptops were entirely designed, developed and produced in Israel.

Voice mail technology was developed in Israel. The Israeli company Amdocs is the largest company in the world in this field.

Both Microsoft and Cisco built their only foreign-based research and development facilities in Israel.

The program ICQ, which is the technological basis for AOL Instant Messenger, was developed in 1996 by four young Israelis.

Disk on Key — a portable, virtual hard disk — was developed by the Israeli company M-Systems.

Israel has the highest number of personal computers per capita in the world.

Israel has the highest number of university degrees per capita in the world.

Israel produces more scientific papers per capita than any other nation by a large margin — 109 per 10,000 people — as well as one of the highest per capita rates of patents filed.

In proportion to its population, Israel has the largest number of startup companies in the world. In absolute terms, Israel has the largest number of startup companies than any other country in the world, except the US.

With more than 3,000 high-tech companies and startups, Israel has the highest concentration of hi-tech companies in the world — apart from Silicon Valley.

Israel is ranked #2 in the world for venture capital funds right behind the United States.

Outside the United States and Canada, Israel has the largest number of companies listed on NASDAQ.

Israel has the highest average living standards in the Middle East. The per capita income in 2000 was over $17,500, exceeding that of the United Kingdom.

On a per capita basis, Israel has the largest number of biotech startups.
Twenty four percent of Israel’s workforce holds university degrees — ranking third in the industrialized world, after the United States and Holland — and 12 percent hold advanced degrees.

Israel has the third highest rate of entrepreneurship — and the highest rate among women and among people over 55 in the world.

Relative to its population, Israel is the largest immigrant-absorbing nation on earth.

Israel has the world’s second highest supply of new books per capita.

Israel has more museums per capita than any other country.

Israeli scientists developed the first fully computerized, no-radiation diagnostic instrumentation for breast cancer.

An Israeli company developed a computerized system for ensuring proper administration of medications, thus removing human error from medical treatment. Every year in U. S. hospitals 7,000 patients die from treatment mistakes.

Israel’s Given Imaging developed the PillCam — the first ingestible video camera, which is so small it fits inside a pill. Used to view the small intestine from the inside, the camera helps doctors diagnose cancer and digestive disorders.

Researchers in Israel developed a new device that directly helps the heart pump blood. The new device is synchronized with the heart’s mechanical operations through a sophisticated system of sensors.

Israel leads the world in the number of scientists and technicians in the workforce, with 145 per 10,000, as opposed to 85 in the U.S., over 70 in Japan, and less than 60 in Germany.

A new acne treatment developed in Israel causes acne bacteria to self-destruct — all without damaging surroundings skin or tissue.

An Israeli company was the first to develop and install a large-scale solar-powered and fully functional electricity generating plant in Southern California’s Mojave Desert.

The first computer anti-virus software package was developed in Israel back in the 1970′s.

Major law enforcement agencies use Israeli technologies to monitor voices and messages on conventional phones, mobile phones and e-mails.

An Israeli company, Teva, is the world’s largest generic pharmaceutical company.

A new brain implant has been developed in Israel that can lower the risk of stroke by diverting blood clots away from sensitive areas of the brain.

IBM scientists in Israel are playing a vital role in a massive project of the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) to discover the origins of life on earth.

Israeli software company Check Point is the global leader in Virtual Private Network (VPN) and firewall technologies.

Israeli company Elta is responsible for the world’s first civilian aircraft equipped with technology designed to protect airliners from a missile attack.

Mashav, the Israeli Foreign Ministry’s Center for International Cooperation has trained over 200,000 international aid workers that have traveled to dozens of countries to help with medicine, agriculture, disaster relief, and many other issues.

Israel has, for many years, held the world record in milk production.

Rummikub, the third highest selling board game in the world, is manufactured in a family-run plant in the small southern Israeli town of Arad.

Drip irrigation — the system that is based on using plastic pipes that release small amounts of water next to crops or plants — was developed by the Israeli engineer Simcha Blas in the 1970′s. The invention caused a revolution in agriculture.

A design submitted by Israeli-born Michael Arad has been chosen for the World Trade Center Memorial, from amongst 5,000 entries from around the world.

Israeli company Retalix created the grocery scanners used at such stores as Costco, Albertson’s, and 7-11, as well as 25,000 additional stores and quick-service restaurants throughout the United States.

Primate research at Hebrew University is leading to the development of a robotic arm that can respond to the brain commands of a paralyzed person.

Two Israeli researchers are generating cancer-killing molecules that will recognize cancerous cells and target them aggressively, while not affecting normal cells.

Israeli researchers developed a novel stem cell therapy to treat Parkinson’s Disease — using a patient’s own bone marrow stem cells to produce the missing chemical that enables restoration of motor movement.

Israeli company Silent Communications has developed a type of silent conversation system for cell phones, so users can carry on conversations without saying a word.

The Israeli company Wondernet is currently dominating the world market in document signature authentication, with its unique scientific method of verifying handwritten signatures.

Israeli Professor Yehuda Finkelstein has discovered the cause of and cure for halitosis (bad breath).

Cherry tomatoes were originally supposed to be a snack when they were designed by a group of scientists led by professor Nahum Keidar from the agriculture faculty at the Weizmann Institute of Science, with the cooperation of the Israeli company Zera.

The Quicktionary, a pen size scanner that scans a word or a sentence and translates it to a different language, was developed by the Wizcom Company, based in Jerusalem.

Professor Ehud Keinan from the Technion Israel Institute of Technology developed a pen that identifies an improvised explosive.

The Israeli company Insightec developed an ultrasound system for removing tumors without surgery.

Researchers at the Technion have developed an antibiotic that destroys anthrax bacteria as well as the toxins it secretes into the bloodstream of the infected body.

Epilady, an electric hair removal system, was developed by Yair Dar and Shimon Yahav from the Goshrim Kibbutz.

The sun-heated water tank, a device that converts solar energy into thermal energy and that saves about 4% of the national energy supply, was developed by an engineer from Jerusalem.

Dr. Gal Yadid, Dr. Rachel Mayan, and Professor Abraham Weizmann from Bar Ilan University developed a form of drug rehabilitation using a natural steroid that is inserted into the brain and develops a resistance for the drugs.

Alon Moses from Hadassah Medical Center in Jerusalem and Imanuel Hensky and Carlos Hidelgo-Grass from Hebrew University decoded the mechanism for Streptococcus A.


This is NOT an answer.

This is what they have given to the WORLD....


I want to know what they have done ONLY FOR THE UNITED STATES and no one else?

Example: we gave them the Iron Dome...we didn't give it to the world,...we gave it to THEM and THEM alone.
 

TexasBred

Well-known member
Because virtually the entire annual $1.2 billion economic aid is returned back to the United States in the form of debt repayment. Not only that, $1.325 of the $1.8 billion annual military aid must, by law, be spent in the United States, creating tens of thousands of American jobs.

Now this is something the United States is definitely not used to receiving from anyone except ISRAEL.
 

Big Muddy rancher

Well-known member
kolanuraven said:
TexasBred said:
How about "For The World".....In addition they give us "Eyes and Ears" in a part of the world where we are hated.

The 100th smallest country, with less than 1/1000th of the world’s population, can lay claim to the following:

The cell phone was first developed at the Motorola plant in Israel.

Most of the Windows NT and XP operating systems were developed by Microsoft-Israel.

The Pentium MMX Chip technology was designed in Israel at Intel.

Both the Pentium-4 microprocessor for desktop computers and the Centrino processor for laptops were entirely designed, developed and produced in Israel.

Voice mail technology was developed in Israel. The Israeli company Amdocs is the largest company in the world in this field.

Both Microsoft and Cisco built their only foreign-based research and development facilities in Israel.

The program ICQ, which is the technological basis for AOL Instant Messenger, was developed in 1996 by four young Israelis.

Disk on Key — a portable, virtual hard disk — was developed by the Israeli company M-Systems.

Israel has the highest number of personal computers per capita in the world.

Israel has the highest number of university degrees per capita in the world.

Israel produces more scientific papers per capita than any other nation by a large margin — 109 per 10,000 people — as well as one of the highest per capita rates of patents filed.

In proportion to its population, Israel has the largest number of startup companies in the world. In absolute terms, Israel has the largest number of startup companies than any other country in the world, except the US.

With more than 3,000 high-tech companies and startups, Israel has the highest concentration of hi-tech companies in the world — apart from Silicon Valley.

Israel is ranked #2 in the world for venture capital funds right behind the United States.

Outside the United States and Canada, Israel has the largest number of companies listed on NASDAQ.

Israel has the highest average living standards in the Middle East. The per capita income in 2000 was over $17,500, exceeding that of the United Kingdom.

On a per capita basis, Israel has the largest number of biotech startups.
Twenty four percent of Israel’s workforce holds university degrees — ranking third in the industrialized world, after the United States and Holland — and 12 percent hold advanced degrees.

Israel has the third highest rate of entrepreneurship — and the highest rate among women and among people over 55 in the world.

Relative to its population, Israel is the largest immigrant-absorbing nation on earth.

Israel has the world’s second highest supply of new books per capita.

Israel has more museums per capita than any other country.

Israeli scientists developed the first fully computerized, no-radiation diagnostic instrumentation for breast cancer.

An Israeli company developed a computerized system for ensuring proper administration of medications, thus removing human error from medical treatment. Every year in U. S. hospitals 7,000 patients die from treatment mistakes.

Israel’s Given Imaging developed the PillCam — the first ingestible video camera, which is so small it fits inside a pill. Used to view the small intestine from the inside, the camera helps doctors diagnose cancer and digestive disorders.

Researchers in Israel developed a new device that directly helps the heart pump blood. The new device is synchronized with the heart’s mechanical operations through a sophisticated system of sensors.

Israel leads the world in the number of scientists and technicians in the workforce, with 145 per 10,000, as opposed to 85 in the U.S., over 70 in Japan, and less than 60 in Germany.

A new acne treatment developed in Israel causes acne bacteria to self-destruct — all without damaging surroundings skin or tissue.

An Israeli company was the first to develop and install a large-scale solar-powered and fully functional electricity generating plant in Southern California’s Mojave Desert.

The first computer anti-virus software package was developed in Israel back in the 1970′s.

Major law enforcement agencies use Israeli technologies to monitor voices and messages on conventional phones, mobile phones and e-mails.

An Israeli company, Teva, is the world’s largest generic pharmaceutical company.

A new brain implant has been developed in Israel that can lower the risk of stroke by diverting blood clots away from sensitive areas of the brain.

IBM scientists in Israel are playing a vital role in a massive project of the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) to discover the origins of life on earth.

Israeli software company Check Point is the global leader in Virtual Private Network (VPN) and firewall technologies.

Israeli company Elta is responsible for the world’s first civilian aircraft equipped with technology designed to protect airliners from a missile attack.

Mashav, the Israeli Foreign Ministry’s Center for International Cooperation has trained over 200,000 international aid workers that have traveled to dozens of countries to help with medicine, agriculture, disaster relief, and many other issues.

Israel has, for many years, held the world record in milk production.

Rummikub, the third highest selling board game in the world, is manufactured in a family-run plant in the small southern Israeli town of Arad.

Drip irrigation — the system that is based on using plastic pipes that release small amounts of water next to crops or plants — was developed by the Israeli engineer Simcha Blas in the 1970′s. The invention caused a revolution in agriculture.

A design submitted by Israeli-born Michael Arad has been chosen for the World Trade Center Memorial, from amongst 5,000 entries from around the world.

Israeli company Retalix created the grocery scanners used at such stores as Costco, Albertson’s, and 7-11, as well as 25,000 additional stores and quick-service restaurants throughout the United States.

Primate research at Hebrew University is leading to the development of a robotic arm that can respond to the brain commands of a paralyzed person.

Two Israeli researchers are generating cancer-killing molecules that will recognize cancerous cells and target them aggressively, while not affecting normal cells.

Israeli researchers developed a novel stem cell therapy to treat Parkinson’s Disease — using a patient’s own bone marrow stem cells to produce the missing chemical that enables restoration of motor movement.

Israeli company Silent Communications has developed a type of silent conversation system for cell phones, so users can carry on conversations without saying a word.

The Israeli company Wondernet is currently dominating the world market in document signature authentication, with its unique scientific method of verifying handwritten signatures.

Israeli Professor Yehuda Finkelstein has discovered the cause of and cure for halitosis (bad breath).

Cherry tomatoes were originally supposed to be a snack when they were designed by a group of scientists led by professor Nahum Keidar from the agriculture faculty at the Weizmann Institute of Science, with the cooperation of the Israeli company Zera.

The Quicktionary, a pen size scanner that scans a word or a sentence and translates it to a different language, was developed by the Wizcom Company, based in Jerusalem.

Professor Ehud Keinan from the Technion Israel Institute of Technology developed a pen that identifies an improvised explosive.

The Israeli company Insightec developed an ultrasound system for removing tumors without surgery.

Researchers at the Technion have developed an antibiotic that destroys anthrax bacteria as well as the toxins it secretes into the bloodstream of the infected body.

Epilady, an electric hair removal system, was developed by Yair Dar and Shimon Yahav from the Goshrim Kibbutz.

The sun-heated water tank, a device that converts solar energy into thermal energy and that saves about 4% of the national energy supply, was developed by an engineer from Jerusalem.

Dr. Gal Yadid, Dr. Rachel Mayan, and Professor Abraham Weizmann from Bar Ilan University developed a form of drug rehabilitation using a natural steroid that is inserted into the brain and develops a resistance for the drugs.

Alon Moses from Hadassah Medical Center in Jerusalem and Imanuel Hensky and Carlos Hidelgo-Grass from Hebrew University decoded the mechanism for Streptococcus A.


This is NOT an answer.

This is what they have given to the WORLD....


I want to know what they have done ONLY FOR THE UNITED STATES and no one else?

Example: we gave them the Iron Dome...we didn't give it to the world,...we gave it to THEM and THEM alone.


With out the Epilady just think how "Hairy" you would be. :p :lol: :lol: :lol:
 

TexasBred

Well-known member
Big Muddy rancher said:
With out the Epilady just think how "Hairy" you would be. :p :lol: :lol: :lol:

Probably wouldn't hurt Kola to send a donation or at least a thank you note to Professor Finkelstein.



Israeli Professor Yehuda Finkelstein has discovered the cause of and cure for halitosis (bad breath).
 

Mike

Well-known member
Colon wrote:
Example: we gave them the Iron Dome...we didn't give it to the world,...we gave it to THEM and THEM alone.

The "Iron Dome" system was engineered, created, and manufactured in Israel by Rafael. The U.S. did supply loans/grants for the project to the tune of about $200 Million, but the cost was much higher. Estimates are around $50,000.00 Million, or $50 Billion before being finished with all batteries in place.

In other words, we did not "Give" it to them, "and them alone"....... :roll:
 
A

Anonymous

Guest
Mike said:
Colon wrote:
Example: we gave them the Iron Dome...we didn't give it to the world,...we gave it to THEM and THEM alone.

The "Iron Dome" system was engineered, created, and manufactured in Israel by Rafael. The U.S. did supply loans/grants for the project to the tune of about $200 Million, but the cost was much higher. Estimates are around $50,000.00 Million, or $50 Billion before being finished with all batteries in place.

In other words, we did not "Give" it to them, "and them alone"....... :roll:

I wonder how many American students could go to college with $200 Million- or how much infrastructure like roads, bridges, pipelines, etc. could be built IN THE USA with $200 Million... It would be better spent giving it to some US Medical programs that are searching for cures for cancer...

254201_483094408411396_113611130_n_zpsd71a3d3c.jpg
 

Mike

Well-known member
And I wonder how many Party's at the White House and how many Vacations Buckwheat and his Pic-A-Ninny's can take.

A "True" ally cannot be measured in money. Like has been said, Israel is an aircraft carrier in the Middle East that cannot be sunk.............

Besides, Buckwheat brokered the U.S.loans/grants for a fraction of the Iron Dome. :lol:

Hope you don't use John Deere Net Wrap for hay. It all comes from Israel.
 

Whitewing

Well-known member
Mike said:
And I wonder how many Party's at the White House and how many Vacations Buckwheat and his Pic-A-Ninny's can take.

A "True" ally cannot be measured in money. Like has been said, Israel is an aircraft carrier in the Middle East that cannot be sunk.............

Besides, Buckwheat brokered the U.S.loans/grants for a fraction of the Iron Dome. :lol:

I had a dream the King just sent $250 million to the Egyptians. I wonder how many young minds full of mush we could have sent to college with that money. :roll:
 

Mike

Well-known member
Whitewing said:
Mike said:
And I wonder how many Party's at the White House and how many Vacations Buckwheat and his Pic-A-Ninny's can take.

A "True" ally cannot be measured in money. Like has been said, Israel is an aircraft carrier in the Middle East that cannot be sunk.............

Besides, Buckwheat brokered the U.S.loans/grants for a fraction of the Iron Dome. :lol:

I had a dream the King just sent $250 million to the Egyptians. I wonder how many young minds full of mush we could have sent to college with that money. :roll:

It was more than that................ More like $1.5 Billion when totaled up on the "Credit Card"..

Wonder if OT approved of that? :lol: :lol:
 

TexasBred

Well-known member
Oldtimer said:
I wonder how many American students could go to college with $200 Million- or how much infrastructure like roads, bridges, pipelines, etc. could be built IN THE USA with $200 Million... It would be better spent giving it to some US Medical programs that are searching for cures for cancer...

About the same number of miles as the money given to Egypt would pave or half as many miles as the money given to Solyndra would pave. At $1 to $5 million per mile depending on the type of highway it wouldn't amount to a hill of beans. As for cancer cure. OT you sound like Judas bytching about Jesus not selling the anointing oil and giving the money to the poor. I believe that was when Jesus told him "The poor you will have always". Just a fact Jack.

BTW, the cartoon is not appropriate. Israel does not hate us. They do however, have a very well earned low opinion of our current President.
 

Mike

Well-known member
TexasBred said:
Oldtimer said:
I wonder how many American students could go to college with $200 Million- or how much infrastructure like roads, bridges, pipelines, etc. could be built IN THE USA with $200 Million... It would be better spent giving it to some US Medical programs that are searching for cures for cancer...

About the same number of miles as the money given to Egypt would pave or half as many miles as the money given to Solyndra would pave. At $1 to $5 million per mile depending on the type of highway it wouldn't amount to a hill of beans. As for cancer cure. OT you sound like Judas bytching about Jesus not selling the anointing oil and giving the money to the poor. I believe that was when Jesus told him "The poor you will have always". Just a fact Jack.

BTW, the cartoon is not appropriate. Israel does not hate us. They do however, have a very well earned low opinion of our current President.

Correct, I have never seen Israeli's rioting in the streets and burning the U.S. flag either.

Now let's go over the ones that have.................... :roll:

WASHINGTON — President Obama urged the Israeli government to loosen its blockade of Gaza on Wednesday, as the United States continued to scramble to find a way out of the stalemate in the Middle East and address the outcry over Israel’s deadly raid on a Gaza-bound flotilla last week.

Mr. Obama, meeting with the Palestinian president, Mahmoud Abbas, at the White House, also promised a $400 million aid package for the West Bank and Gaza, though only about $70 million represented a new commitment.

The details of how the aid would be used in Gaza remained unclear. Nor was it immediately clear how Mr. Abbas, who has authority in the West Bank but not in Gaza, would be able to administer it.
 

TexasBred

Well-known member
he details of how the aid would be used in Gaza remained unclear. Nor was it immediately clear how Mr. Abbas, who has authority in the West Bank but not in Gaza, would be able to administer it.

The way all arab countries "administer" money....one for you, two for me, one for you, two for me.
 

Mike

Well-known member
TexasBred said:
he details of how the aid would be used in Gaza remained unclear. Nor was it immediately clear how Mr. Abbas, who has authority in the West Bank but not in Gaza, would be able to administer it.

The way all arab countries "administer" money....one for you, two for me, one for you, two for me.
Arafat left $MILLION$ in a Swiss bank account. Is that how he acquired it? :lol: :lol:
 

Whitewing

Well-known member
Mike said:
TexasBred said:
he details of how the aid would be used in Gaza remained unclear. Nor was it immediately clear how Mr. Abbas, who has authority in the West Bank but not in Gaza, would be able to administer it.

The way all arab countries "administer" money....one for you, two for me, one for you, two for me.
Arafat left $MILLION$ in a Swiss bank account. Is that how he acquired it? :lol: :lol:

That Pizza Hut table cloth he wore on his head is what got him those millions.

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