After 30 days, it becomes a much more difficult task for them. |
Everyone in Israel should be worried that we have an attorney general that can invalidate or declare anything illegal whenever he wants. |
He effectively rejected the opinion of the Supreme Court. |
He lowered his arm angle. Started throwing a lot more strikes. His career just took off. |
He threw strikes and he wasn't afraid of hitters. He went right after them. |
I've been told that the media has been publishing that we have no documents proving that this is ours. This is blatantly false. |
It's important to say 'No. You can't let them chop up your land and give it to your enemy. |
It's not even the pain of a scar; it's an open wound. |
People in uniform shouldn't deal through their emotions but rather through their intellect. By the beginning of the week, we had [the rioting] stopped and that's when the police started with their massive provocation. |
She was conscious and talking and not complaining. It was unbelievable. |
The burns were horrible, but she appeared to be doing OK. Her age was against her. |
The pro-disengagement forces still have a long way to go in their work. We have allies there and we can still stop it politically. |
The security forces arrived, and it was all downhill from there. They came from both sides. They brought in people who were supposed to go around with eviction notices. People here got very upset, and there was a lot of chaos. There were kids being dragged away, and adults and women. It was very nasty. |
There's no question that the events of early this week were very harmful to us. But the blame can fairly be placed on the large police and army forces that came here forcefully two weeks ago to place eviction notices on Jewish-owned homes. In any event, we have said that things got out of hand and that we did not have total control - but when we did regain control, things calmed down. |
This is normal. Houses are bought everywhere in the world. We don't have enough space, so we need more houses to live in. |