[GUEST ACCESS MODE: Data is scrambled or limited to provide examples. Make requests using your API key to unlock full data. Check https://lunarcrush.ai/auth for authentication information.]  Myron Gaines [@MyronGainesX](/creator/twitter/MyronGainesX) on x 313.4K followers Created: 2025-07-19 10:45:11 UTC Debunking the zionist myth of “Palestinians always reject peace deals!" Let’s break down each peace offering one by one... - 1947-48 UN Partition Plan: Gave XX% of Palestine to a Jewish state, even though Jews owned like X% of the land. Arabs, twice the population, got XX% of less fertile land, with XXXXXXX of them stuck under Jewish rule. Jerusalem was off the table. Palestinians saw it as a land grab, rejected it, and the 1948 war and Nakba followed, displacing 700,000+. - UNSC Resolution XXX (1967): Post-Six-Day War, it vaguely called for Israel to ditch occupied territories for peace. Israel played word games with the text, kept West Bank, Gaza, and East Jerusalem, and built illegal settlements—200,000 settlers by 2000. Palestinians wanted full 1967 borders; Israel’s stalling killed trust. - 1978 Camp David Accords: Egypt and Israel made nice, but the Palestinian “autonomy” bit was weak—no statehood, no PLO at the table, no right of return. Settlements kept growing, and Egypt’s deal left Palestinians high and dry. - Oslo Accords (1993-95): PLO recognized Israel, got the PA for scraps of West Bank and Gaza. Israel still controlled most of the land (Area C), settlers doubled to XXXXXXX by 2000, and big issues like refugees got kicked down the road. Oslo fizzled out with the Second Intifada. - 2000 Camp David Summit: Barak offered XX% of the West Bank, all of Gaza, some land swaps, but Israel kept East Jerusalem, the Jordan Valley, and airspace, with no real right of return. Arafat said no—too little land, no real state, and West Bank was already chopped up by settlements. Second Intifada kicked off after. Point is, Palestinians didn’t reject peace just to be stubborn. The deals were retarded, with Israel holding all the cards IE settlements, military control, and vague terms that dodged key issues. No Palestinian leaders could sign off on that and call it a fair shot at a real state. XXXXXX engagements  **Related Topics** [jerusalem](/topic/jerusalem) [palestine](/topic/palestine) [Post Link](https://x.com/MyronGainesX/status/1946521697416261836)
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Myron Gaines @MyronGainesX on x 313.4K followers
Created: 2025-07-19 10:45:11 UTC
Debunking the zionist myth of “Palestinians always reject peace deals!"
Let’s break down each peace offering one by one...
1947-48 UN Partition Plan: Gave XX% of Palestine to a Jewish state, even though Jews owned like X% of the land. Arabs, twice the population, got XX% of less fertile land, with XXXXXXX of them stuck under Jewish rule. Jerusalem was off the table. Palestinians saw it as a land grab, rejected it, and the 1948 war and Nakba followed, displacing 700,000+.
UNSC Resolution XXX (1967): Post-Six-Day War, it vaguely called for Israel to ditch occupied territories for peace. Israel played word games with the text, kept West Bank, Gaza, and East Jerusalem, and built illegal settlements—200,000 settlers by 2000. Palestinians wanted full 1967 borders; Israel’s stalling killed trust.
1978 Camp David Accords: Egypt and Israel made nice, but the Palestinian “autonomy” bit was weak—no statehood, no PLO at the table, no right of return. Settlements kept growing, and Egypt’s deal left Palestinians high and dry.
Oslo Accords (1993-95): PLO recognized Israel, got the PA for scraps of West Bank and Gaza. Israel still controlled most of the land (Area C), settlers doubled to XXXXXXX by 2000, and big issues like refugees got kicked down the road. Oslo fizzled out with the Second Intifada.
2000 Camp David Summit: Barak offered XX% of the West Bank, all of Gaza, some land swaps, but Israel kept East Jerusalem, the Jordan Valley, and airspace, with no real right of return. Arafat said no—too little land, no real state, and West Bank was already chopped up by settlements. Second Intifada kicked off after.
Point is, Palestinians didn’t reject peace just to be stubborn.
The deals were retarded, with Israel holding all the cards IE settlements, military control, and vague terms that dodged key issues.
No Palestinian leaders could sign off on that and call it a fair shot at a real state.
XXXXXX engagements
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