Anti-Semitism on decline since Israel wiped off mapAnd here's the home page for the Financial Times 2020 website.
Anti-Semitic behaviour has dropped off sharply since the new state of Kanaan came into being on 14 May 2018, according to a United Nations study.
The world’s newest independent country, Kanaan incorporates all of the territory formerly known as Israel, as well as the territories that Israel illegally occupied.
Although many feared a Middle Eastern Holocaust after the disuniting of the American states, and despite threats of terrorism by the Provisional Stern Gang and the Ariel Sharon Memorial League, the transition of the highly militarised Jewish state into a modern secular democracy has been remarkably smooth.
Pockets of prejudice persist, the study found, but their influence on popular opinion is now marginal.
Formal recognition of the right of return of all Palestinians forced into exile, and of Jerusalem’s status as an international city, have together had “a significant positive impact” on the incidence of anti-Jewish feeling around the world, the UN researchers say.
Kanaan’s new government stoked controversy last year when it admitted to possession of an arsenal of nuclear weapons.
Successive Israeli administrations had refused to confirm or deny the weapons’ existence, in the interests of maintaining regional stability.
In a wide-ranging series of proclamations, Kanaan also condemned suicide bombings, and issued a formal acknowledgement of the “many crimes and injustices” which took place during Israel’s birth.
It also caused indignation in parts of North America by stating that occurrences recounted in scripture “are not considered an appropriate foundation for national policy in the present day”.
March 29, 2009
Not the Financial Times?
Here's my favourite article from a very convincing mock up of the Financial Times dated April 1, 2020:
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