GoWest, just stop making things up. It's pathetic. It is obvious you are just making things up as you go, and equally obvious that you know very little about this topic, about the UN, or about Israel or Palestine. Practically everything you posted is just false.
The Security Council DID NOT reject Palestinian statehood. It rejected Palestinian UN membership, which is something completely different than statehood. It certainly did not disagree with or over-rule or contradict the UN GA declaration of a Palestinian state.
It is just blatantly false that only the UN security council can grant statehood: Switzerland was certainly a state before 2002, as is the Vatican today. There is no such rule that only the UN SC can create states, you just wholesale MADE THAT UP. Moreover your whole "theory" that the UN SC serves as some sort of overlord countermanding the UN GA is just ludicrous. The UN SC has very specific responsibilities, laid out explicitly in the UN charter, like approving applications for UN membership, and most famously authorizing any use of force, but it is not in any way an overseer of the General Assembly.
The Prime Minister of Israel did not say there would never be a Palestinian state -- you are LYING about that, as has been repeatedly pointed out. He said it wouldn't happen while he was PM, which is only for a few years, and then he went on to say he supports the creation of a Palestinian State. And it's obvious it won't happen in the next few years he's just being factual -- Palestinians aren't currently even negotiating with Israel. But that doesn't mean it will never happen, and he didn't say it will never happen. Moreover it isn't even up to him -- it's up to the Knesset, of which less than a quarter are from his party.
Your point 4 is some sort of ridiculous attempt at logic based on a whole lot of falsehoods.
As for 5, even if the Palestinians don't create a state that DOES NOT mean that it will "stay part of Israel', particularly since it isn't part of Israel now. There are lots of other more likely things that could happen to that territory in the event it doesn't achieve independence and there is absolutely NO REASON to think that it would become part of Israel. More likely it would become part of Jordan, or Egypt, or wind up under some permanent UN oversight. Becoming part of Israel is just about the least likely outcome.