Well you point to something important. If we go back far enough, everybody's an invader or colonialist of some kind. Maybe not the Aborigines in Australia. But in many parts of the world this is the case. — Manuel
Considering there aren't any hominin than us, Homo Sapiens, around, I wouldn't give any people a waiver in this case.If we go back far enough, everybody's an invader or colonialist of some kind. Maybe not the Aborigines in Australia. — Manuel
:sweat:This is a rare occasion when I can agree with Benkei, 180, Street and NOS in the same breath! Hurrah! — bert1
If you are neutral in situations of injustice, you have chosen the side of the oppressor. — Desmond Tutu
Indifference, to me, is the epitome of evil. — Elie Wiesel
No amount of evidence can persuade an idiot. — Mark Twain
:up:Never seen such fucking low-level discussion in a place dedicated to rational thought. — Christoffer
Knee jerk reaction? I'm speaking about settler colonialism. — Manuel
1. Sure and Israel has offered to give them a state in the past, but with Hamas in power Israel is absolutely under no obligation to go in that direction these days. Hamas is a terrorist group, not a legitimate government. Giving them independent statehood is a serious security concern for Israel. — BitconnectCarlos
"revert to its inhabitants" is just rhetoric. they just wanted to maintain the status quo with arabs in charge. It's always been fine if there's a state where Arabs are in charge with a Jewish minority. — BitconnectCarlos
Israelis did not aggress in '67. But you can uproot the forces that were trying to destroy you. russia was still defending when it pressed into germany. were the allies "aggressing" by pressing into germany? sure you can say that they were going on the offensive, but to describe them as the "aggressors" in the conflict seems strange to me.
In 1948 the arabs declared war on Israel and sought to wipe it out. there was talk of a second holocaust at the time. Land taken and held in '48 was a necessary security measure and I'm not going to apologize for it. Israel was extremely vulnerable w/ 1947 boundaries.
8. Could you just expound a little further on this?
Hamas believes that no part of the land of Palestine shall be
compromised or conceded, irrespective of the causes, the circumstances
and the pressures and no matter how long the occupation lasts. Hamas
rejects any alternative to the full and complete liberation of Palestine,
from the river to the sea. However, without compromising its rejection of
the Zionist entity and without relinquishing any Palestinian rights, Hamas
considers the establishment of a fully sovereign and independent
Palestinian state, with Jerusalem as its capital along the lines of the 4th of
June 1967, with the return of the refugees and the displaced to their
homes from which they were expelled, to be a formula of national
consensus. — Hamas
i'll agree with you that the israeli government is more recalcitrant that it was in the past and this is due to several factors, but then again so is hamas. neither side right now has a serious interest in peace.
You're making these demands of Israel but it's never going to be your family who bears the repercussions. It's easy to tell Israel to loosen their security or to let Hamas import anything completely unrestricted or to give back half their land when you're halfway around the world.
If there was a homeless problem in your community would you be willing to let some live in your home? How would you feel about fundamentalists muslims as your neighbors? They need a place to live too, why not next to you? They can invite their friends over too.
For the victims, it is not complicated. — Manuel
We can speak of how the Palestinians could have accepted the UN partition which would have given them 45% of Palestine, which was once 100% — Manuel
Exactly what the Jews said in 1947. — counterpunch
But the British were in a terrible state after WWII, and couldn't maintain their commitments. Resolution 181 was based on demographics. The Jews accepted it. The Arabs rejected it and launched militia attacks on Jews that then led to a wider conflict. — counterpunch
Irgun and Lehi (the latter also known as the Stern Gang) followed their strategy of placing bombs in crowded markets and bus-stops.
peaceful too. — Manuel
I am well aware of the history. What is translates to in the present day is, as Brooks put it, a sheer asymmetry of power that is being unilaterally exercised by a brutal apartheid regime for the sake of settler colonialism. It's that's simple. — StreetlightX
Fine. The point is most of the people living in Palestine were Palestinians. Why should they accept some other people coming in to take their land? — Manuel
This is not the point of the thread. I've already stated the point many times. If you want to start another thread dealing with the conditions of how Israel was created and why it was complicated, you can do that. — Manuel
I completely accept that the Palestinians have suffered - and I have sympathy for that, but they've also inflicted suffering, and have done so to resist political compromise solutions. The zero sum Arab solution is, and always has been the eradication of Israel. Is that what you want too? — counterpunch
*
Those who refuse to learn from history are doomed to repeat it. If you merely want to weep over the Palestinian causalities, I'll leave you alone with your grief. — counterpunch
This is asymmetrical terrorism carried out by a state which holds all the power. — StreetlightX
No one is going to compromise without reasonable demands being made on them. — Andrew4Handel
Agreed. It is reasonable that Israel cease its genocide of the Palestinian people, immediately remove all its illegal settlements, and compensate the Palestinian territories for the nearly incalculable damage it has inflicted upon it - all of which counts as among Israel's monumental acts of aggression, thinly masquerading under the veneer of 'defence' by the sycophants who continually draw attention away from its world-historical cruelty. — StreetlightX
You want The Jews expelled from the Middle east and to have no internal security — Andrew4Handel
And Israel's internal security would be inestimably improved by not deliberately cultivating an entire population whose misery and poverty is a direct result of Israeli state policy. — StreetlightX
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.