Understood.

But why is the convention to call the entity Isreal a State, always and invariably?

Not important at all, but I am now curious.

PS. Did anyone else catch a news story about a French best-selling book that claims 
Flight 77 never crashed into the Pentagon, that the whole thing was staged by the US 
government? I saw it once on the crawler on the bottom of CNN, but never saw it again. 
And there is no sign of it on CNN's website.

Jerry Johnson



>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] 04/01/02 09:43AM >>>
You could call Japan and France states. A state can also mean a country, it 
is a language thing.



At 09:43 AM 4/1/2002 -0500, you wrote:
>My father asked this question this weekend, which quickly stumped the crowd.
>
>Does anyone know why Isreal is called "The State of Isreal"? (At least 
>here in the US by the press and therefore by the citizenry)
>
>We never say "The State of Japan" or "The State of France" (Well, 
>sometimes, but the state is drunken).
>
>It is invariably called the State of Isreal.  Never "The Country of Isreal".
>
>Also, the proposed Palestinian country is always called "A Palestinian State".
>
>What gives?
>
>Jerry Johnson


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