▲ 6 r/hummus

Following some posts here.. what do you eat your hummus with?

We see different posts from different countries. A lot of them have different side-dishes to complement the hummus, and I wonder what is more common and what is specific to a country.
It seems obvious that falafel, pine nuts and tahini is common for everyone more or less.
Does egg?
Zhug?
Onion?
All spice (wtf for me lol)?
Almonds?

What are common in your country, and what's a great combo you found but your country rejects?

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u/OhDamnNotAgainAndAga — 19 hours ago
▲ 48 r/hummus

For the love of hummus!

This amazing sub is getting ruined by people who don't really love hummus, they love fighting and arguing, and being racist assholes.
This is easy to see every time Israel or Palestine is mentioned.
So, for the benefit of the rest of us, please, all the people who want to argue or deny Israel/Palestine identities, comment to this post so the rest of us can block you and enjoy seeing beautiful photos of hummus bowls, share recipes and experiences about this amazing dish, understanding that the things that connect us are much more important than the things that divide us.
Peace and love to all.

Edit:
For the sake of all of us, I will update a block list here:
https://www.reddit.com/user/little-dude/
https://www.reddit.com/user/IronmanGooner/
https://www.reddit.com/user/NNM_01/
https://www.reddit.com/user/Jew_Diligence/
https://www.reddit.com/user/EastWrap8776/
https://www.reddit.com/user/Wonderful-Garden21/
https://www.reddit.com/user/SirWankzAlot420/
https://www.reddit.com/user/Various_Maize_4778/
https://www.reddit.com/user/Waldoh/
u/eldryanyy

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u/OhDamnNotAgainAndAga — 4 days ago

How significant and prevalent was Native American's involvement in the War of Independence?

This is a post about a sensitive topic, and in no way meant to be seen as justification for the Native American genocide what so ever!

I recently saw a chief of a Native American tribe explain that it was natural for the Native Americans to side with the British in the War of Independence, because the British had an agreement with them that the colonization ends in the Apalachees mountains, which the colonies didn't want to uphold. I didn't get to watch too much of it, but it continued to explain that at the end of the War of Independence there was a great animosity towards the Native Americans because of that. I was shocked because I thought the Native Americans just stayed out of it.
So I have two questions:

  1. (Titular) How significant was their involvement?
  2. How much did it really affect the perception of Native Americans by the Colonies? Did it really created or seriously boosted the animosity, or was it already there before?
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u/OhDamnNotAgainAndAga — 7 days ago