I have a bias.
Is it wrong to be biased?
Well, here’s part of the story referenced in the title:
The demolition of an east Jerusalem hotel to make way for Jewish homes in a predominantly Palestinian neighborhood is sparking concerns from Europe to Egypt, which suggests a new intifada could break out as a result.
The Shepherd Hotel project will bring only 20 Jewish homes to Sheikh Jarrah, but it is at the forefront of a broader, intensely controversial Jewish campaign to establish a foothold in Arab neighborhoods circling the heart of Jerusalem.
Proponents see the efforts as a way to secure Jews’ rightful claims to the city as their “undivided and eternal capital.” Opponents, including much of the international community, say such efforts will preclude the possibility of creating a Palestinian state with a capital in east Jerusalem, thus rendering the two-state solution null and void.
“If current trends are not stopped as a matter of urgency, the prospect of east Jerusalem as the future capital of a Palestinian state becomes increasingly unlikely and unworkable,” wrote 25 consuls-general from European Union member states in Jerusalem in a new confidential report obtained by the Independent. “This, in turn, seriously endangers the chances of a sustainable peace on the basis of two states, with Jerusalem as their future capital.”
[…]
After the 1967 war and its annexation of east Jerusalem, Israel took possession of the hotel under its absentee property laws, which apply to buildings whose owners are absent or considered members of an enemy state.
Source: Shrewd development deal likely to preclude possibility of creating Palestinian state
Regarding Jerusalem and the “West Bank” (How much more time must pass before it becomes the “East Bank”?!) and the 1967 war, surely there’s a parallel to this not-so-long-ago perspective in American domestic politics:
“Elections have consequences.”
“I won.”
But I don’t expect anything I say to make a difference, so I’ll just not say more.
I’ll just quote somebody else, “Pray for the peace of Jerusalem.”
The Bible makes it very clear that the state of Israel, including Jerusalem, belongs to the Jewish people. God told Abraham that He would give him and his seed all the land from the Euphrates river to the Mediteranian Sea, and from Lebanon to Egypt for a perpetual habitation. So the Arabs in this area have NO claim to the land at all! Interestingly, the Arabs surveyed recently in East Jerusalem were 49% in favor of remaining under Israeli rule – a goodly number of those said that they would move out of East Jerusalem if the Palestinians were given the control!