Anonymous ID: 9ae9fc July 5, 2021, 6:17 p.m. No.14062856   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>2910

>>14062801

>This is awesomeโ€ฆ..

this is still as fake as it was in 2012

 

I am the owner of the home and would love to share my side of the story. I bought the black home after it caught fire the owner did not want to deal with the "historical preservation commission" so he decided to demo the building and donate the property to habitat (for humanity). Luckily I knew the demo co. so bought this home and rebuilt the entire inside of it. Yes, the black house is beautiful inside, with brand new everything. This whole battle was personal, with individuals abusing their power. The bottom line I'm a landlord they hate, also I own over ten properties in the historical area, and you should see them too, that would better show what my development company does.

 

[Branden Spear, 05/23/2012]

 

https://www.roadsideamerica.com/tip/27935

 

>>14062817

Anonymous ID: 9ae9fc July 5, 2021, 6:28 p.m. No.14062916   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>2959

>>14062851

"The United States will continue its warm friendship with Israel," Lyndon B.

Johnson assured Golda Meir at the reception following Kennedy's funeral on 25

November 1963. "Israel can count on this."67 Time and again over the next five

years, Johnson would make good on that promise, selling Israel tanks and jet

planes, cold-shouldering Nasser and the Arab radicals, and acquiescing in Tel

Aviv's territorial gains after the Six Day War in June 1967. Johnson's sympathy for

Israel dated from his stint as Senate majority leader during the Eisenhower era. He

opposed U.N. sanctions against Israel during the 1957 Gaza crisis and proposed

U.S. military aid for Tel Aviv two years later.68 By the early 1960s, AIPAC's Si

Kenen recalled long afterward, the Israel lobby counted Vice-President Lyndon

Johnson among its most loyal allies in Washington. "You have lost a great friend,"

Johnson told an Israeli diplomat shortly after Kennedy's death, "but you have

found a better one."

 

Yet in the end, Johnson's efforts to convert Israel into a strategic asset seem to

have backfired, leaving America with far less economic and military leverage and

the Israelis with far more bargaining power than anyone in Washington could

have imagined a generation ago.

 

, Dean Rusk discussed a peace settlement with Abba

Eban. Distressed to learn that the Israelis intended to keep much of the land seized

from Jordan during the Six Day War, Rusk reminded Eban that Israel had always

denied having any territorial ambitions. "We have changed our minds," Eban

retorted. Worried that Israel might also change its mind about the atomic bomb,

Rusk shot back: "Don't you be the first power to introduce nuclear weapons into the

Middle East." "No," Eban replied with a smile, "but we won't be the second."

 

http://ismi.emory.edu/home/documents/Readings/Little%20Making%20of%20special%20relationship%201957-1968.pdf