| Liad,
Two points:
1) I live in Texas and Texas shares a major portion of the USA border with Mexico. I've been to the Texas/Mexico border many times. I've never seen that wall you described or anything that even remotely resembles it.
There are some problems caused by the number and sometimes the types of Mexicans, who cross that border, when they are not suppossed to. But it is absolutely impossible to separate the Mexican and Non-Mexican cultures in Texas and all along the border States. After all, the Mexicans were here first. We were strangers in their land before they became strangers in ours. I have some very good friends who are Mexicans. I love their food. They have some of the most beautiful women in the world. Rafael Mendez has been one of my heros since my youth. We do not have the type of religious differences with Mexico that you have with the Palestinians. So our situation with Mexico is no where near the situation you have in Isreal.
2) Millions of Americans are sympathetic to the existance and survival of the State of Isreal. I don't know anyone personally who is sympethetic to the Palestinians. If I ever run into such a person, I will suggest he check out a copy of "The Haj" by Leon Uris from the nearest library and then reexamine his position. It's just possible his position will have changed. You have a lot more support among ordinary Americans than you may know.
As long as there is a Christian influence in the US with a dispensational slant on Biblical interpretation, you will have support in the States, (not that everyone who supports you is a dispensational Christian). But us Christians after all worship the Jewish Messiah, Jesus Christ. |