The Balfour Declaration (2 November 1917) was a public statement issued
by the British government during World War I announcing support for the
establishment of a "national home for the Jewish people" in Palestine,
then an Ottoman region with a minority Jewish population. It represented
the first expression of public support for Zionism by a major political
power. The term "national home" had no precedent in international law,
and was intentionally vague as to whether a Jewish state was
contemplated. The second half of the declaration was added to satisfy
opponents, who had claimed that it would otherwise prejudice the
position of the local population of Palestine and encourage antisemitism
against Jews worldwide. While the declaration called for political
rights in Palestine for Jews, rights for the vast majority of the local
population, the Palestinian Arabs, were limited to the civil and
religious spheres. The declaration greatly increased popular support for
Zionism, and led to the creation of Mandatory Palestine, which later
became Israel and the Palestinian territories. Historians consider it
one of the causes of the ongoing Israeli–Palestinian conflict.

Read more: <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Balfour_Declaration>

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Today's selected anniversaries:

619:

Emperor Gaozu allowed the assassination of a khagan of the
Western Turkic Khaganate by Eastern Turkic rivals, one of the earliest
events in the Tang campaigns against the Western Turks.
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tang_campaigns_against_the_Western_Turks>

1932:

The Australian military began a "war against emus", a
flightless native bird (specimen pictured) blamed for widespread damage
to crops in Western Australia.
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emu_War>

1949:

The Dutch–Indonesian Round Table Conference ended with the
Netherlands agreeing to transfer sovereignty of the Dutch East Indies to
the United States of Indonesia.
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dutch%E2%80%93Indonesian_Round_Table_Conference>

1957:

A large number of people witnessed a fiery object in the sky
near Levelland, Texas, which the United States Air Force said was ball
lightning.
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Levelland_UFO_Case>

2007:

In Tbilisi, Georgia, up to 100,000 people demonstrated against
the allegedly corrupt government of president Mikheil Saakashvili.
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2007_Georgian_demonstrations>

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Wiktionary's word of the day:

forlorn:
1. Abandoned, deserted, left behind.
2. Miserable, as when lonely after being abandoned.
3. Unlikely to succeed.
<https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/forlorn>

___________________________
Wikiquote quote of the day:

     The general laws of Nature are not, for the most part, immediate
objects of perception. They are either inductive inferences from a large
body of facts, the common truth in which they express, or, in their
origin at least, physical hypotheses of a causal nature serving to
explain phenomena with undeviating precision, and to enable us to
predict new combinations of them. They are in all cases, and in the
strictest sense of the term, probable conclusions, approaching, indeed,
ever and ever nearer to certainty, as they receive more and more of the
confirmation of experience. But of the character of probability, in the
strict and proper sense of that term, they are never wholly divested. On
the other hand, the knowledge of the laws of the mind does not require
as its basis any extensive collection of observations. The general truth
is seen in the particular instance, and it is not confirmed by the
repetition of instances.       
  --George Boole
<https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/George_Boole>

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