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So please bear this in mind when posting your comments. Seeing lots of complaints (and spam) instead of feedback about the game given away will not persuade other developers to give their games away for free. I truly believe that if we get lots of decent feedback about the games we get here, more developers will be happy to give away their games. I am posting this in light of the massive increase in negative comments not related to the game being given away, inappropriate comments and spam (Almost 700 spam comments were posted in one day a few weeks ago ) that have occurred over the past several months since the site was updated and in particular since the site started to give away games from the Steam world and since they started using Facebook. Have a walk in the sights-packed Old Town, take a stroll around the newer suburbs of the West Jerusalem, and pay a visit to predominantly Palestinian Silwan neighborhood to get the wider point of view on the situation.Please only post comments about today's game giveaway other comments either not appropriate, or not about the game will be deleted at the moderator or administrators discretion however a little light banter among community members and with the moderator to keep this a friendly place to visit will be allowed, and will be judged by the moderator as to whether it is suitable or not to be left. However difficult the geopolitical tribulations may be, they shouldn’t prevent you from a thorough exploration of one of the most intriguing places in the world. Although the city was reunited in 1967 after Israel took control over the east, the religious and ethnic divide lives on in Jerusalem, where the air can be so politically tense you can almost feel it. The most painful division came after the 1948 Arab-Israeli War when one city was split in two: Israeli-controlled West Jerusalem and Jordan-controlled East Jerusalem. It was also religion that brought on the conflict that separated this walled city of worship. Founded more than 4,000 years ago, this town is one of the oldest and holiest places on Earth and is considered sacred to Christians, Muslims, and Jews. There may be no better illustration of a divided city than Jerusalem. The area where the Green Line ran was largely reconstructed and rejuvenated with only one building evoking the tragic divide: Beit Beirut, a museum that details the city’s history and civil war, retains the decrepit look to serve as a stark reminder of the past hardships. Although it’s gone now, the effects of the devastating divide still echo today with the unspoken local codes of conduct in the reunited capital. This demarcation between the predominantly Muslim West Beirut and predominantly Christian East Beirut defined life in the city for three decades. That was a reality for the civil war-torn Lebanese capital, a city split by the Green Line, so nicknamed because of the color of the foliage that started growing there. Looking at the lively Damascus street in downtown Beirut today, it’s almost impossible to imagine that from 1975 to 1990 it looked like a post-apocalyptic wasteland, a graveyard of the decaying buildings conquered by lush vegetation where street fighting was occasionally taking place.









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