01-11-2009, 08:29 AM | #161 (permalink) |
Eccentric insomniac
Location: North Carolina
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No, I don't think the US should have installed a dictator. But I do think that hosting elections when the only two choices are between Bad and Horrible was a stupid thing to do. It backfired.
We should have either stayed away and let Gaza sort itself out a little more prior to the elections, provided support for Fatah to re-legitimize them prior to elections, or convinced the arab countries involved to prop up a completely different party that was more interested in peace than killing jews. Of course hindsight is 20/20 and now that it is done Israel is dealing with the consequences, for better or worse.
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"Socialism is a philosophy of failure, the creed of ignorance, and the gospel of envy, its inherent virtue is the equal sharing of misery." - Winston Churchill "All men dream: but not equally. Those who dream by night in the dusty recesses of their minds wake in the day to find that it was vanity: but the dreamers of the day are dangerous men, for they may act out their dream with open eyes, to make it possible." Seven Pillars of Wisdom, T.E. Lawrence |
01-11-2009, 08:51 AM | #162 (permalink) | ||
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Location: essex ma
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leaving that tic aside, and the mostly fictional framework it sets up around the gaza elections, the place where i agree with you slims is an assumption in your post--that once the election process was in motion, there was no rational choice for the israelis but to accept the results. if you want an idea of just how great the damage the israeli right is doing to israel itself in the longer run by way of this lunatic adventure in gaza, read this from naomi klein: Quote:
this link takes you to the original along with the first page of often very testy comments, as you can imagine. i post this because i think that like it or not you're going to see more of this--what i think a result of the gaza action is is that the israeli right's framing of its action and of the historical narrative that makes it appear rational is rapidly losing traction, and that along with this loss of traction you're starting to see a counter-discourse taking shape. in place of the romantic post-47 historical narrative, a more accurate post-67 narrative is being established---instead of the story of a heroic nation of jewish folk who are just trying to make a homeland for themselves after the shocking, horrific experience of world war 2 you have a post-67 narrative of colonialism and apartheid. the narrative of return to a homeland is being replaced with parallels to south africa. the question of racism is becoming central. israel is being recoded as a modern nation-state and is being inserted in a narrative that links it to other modern nation-states, and the standards for evaluating its actions are shifting along with this. i post this because it seems to me that this position expresses something that is far more abroad in the world that american supporters of the israeli right would like to think it is. and because the action in gaza is giving this narrative increasing traction. so from a strategic viewpoint--and the framing of narratives is a central element in strategy because it enables action to be coherent and to be marketed as coherent---i see nothing but self-defeating lunacy in what the idf is doing in gaza. time will tell whether my interpretation of the above is correct or not. 880 killed according to the latest information from medical sources within gaza. no update on the number of wounded, nor is there a new breakdown by category. the new phase of the israeli action is taking the military toward heavily populated areas. unless this is stopped, things are only going to get worse.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
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01-11-2009, 09:50 AM | #163 (permalink) | ||
undead
Location: Duisburg, Germany
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"It seems to me that the idea of a personal God is an anthropological concept which I cannot take seriously. I also cannot imagine some will or goal outside the human sphere. Science has been charged with undermining morality, but the charge is unjust. A man's ethical behavior should be based effectually on sympathy, education, and social ties and needs; no religious basis is necessary. Man would indeed be in a poor way if he had to be restrained by fear of punishment and hope of reward after death — Albert Einstein |
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01-11-2009, 12:14 PM | #164 (permalink) | |
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700 casualties are 700 to many. However, with a population of 3.3 million crammed into a small area, casualties could be much worse if a semblance of caution wasn't being used. Last edited by TheNasty; 01-11-2009 at 12:24 PM.. |
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01-11-2009, 12:28 PM | #165 (permalink) | |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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that post is surreal in its wholesale inaccuracy, in its bad faith. it is nothing more and nothing less than a repeat of the extreme rightwing's justifications for killing palestinians in great number and then congratulating themselves for being such humanitarians. the place you see this nonsense repeated almost verbatim is amongst the fringe rightwing settler parties. you know, the folk who embarrass most israelis.
i post the following because it provides a sense of the marketing bubble inside israel with respect to the horror in gaza and indicates that the source of it is a *particular* politica viewpoint that speaks neither for judiaism nor for israel as a whole. Quote:
sometimes you have more to say but find it so difficult to remain civil in saying it that it's better to hit not do it. this is one of them.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
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01-11-2009, 12:31 PM | #166 (permalink) |
I'm not a blonde! I'm knot! I'm knot! I'm knot!
Location: Upper Michigan
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One thing that I'm not seeing in the news or anywhere is the number of Israelies that have been killed by this constant almost weekly bombing coming from the Hamas. The Palastinians in Gaza knew it was happening but I haven't heard of them doing anything to stop it. Doing nothing doesn't make you innocent, it actually implies guilt.
I feel that if you let something like that continue to happen in you own back yard and you do nothing to stop it, then I don't want to hear you crying about getting penalized for letting it happen. If I had a rabid dog in my back yard, knew about it and did nothing to get rid of it (not even calling to report it) and it constantly attacks passersby. I have a feeling that I might be held liable when he attacks the wrong person. So far I don't feel sorry for those who have drawn the ire of Israel. If you don't want to get hit, get out of the way. Quit allowing yourself to be a shield.
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"Always learn the rules so that you can break them properly." Dalai Lama My Karma just ran over your Dogma. |
01-11-2009, 12:37 PM | #167 (permalink) | |
... a sort of licensed troubleshooter.
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01-11-2009, 12:38 PM | #168 (permalink) |
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Location: essex ma
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there have been very few casualties in the period running up to the israeli ground action. li do not remember the numbers. since then, i have not seen that there have been any casualties from them, but i could be wrong.
[[edit---the stats that will posted are useful, but they count casualties since 2000. i was specifically talking about the casualties that accompanied the breakdown of the cease fire after 15 december. just to be clear.]] but there is something deeply offensive about comparing the palestinian population of gaza to rabid dogs. you might join most people in seeing hamas as a Problem in many ways, but to go from that to saying that palestianians as a whole are dogs is moving straight into kahane-type racist terrain. translated into policy, it's a logic of extermination, not negociation. why negociate with people that you think of as rabid dogs? geez. get a grip.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite Last edited by roachboy; 01-11-2009 at 12:42 PM.. |
01-11-2009, 01:03 PM | #169 (permalink) | ||||||
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-----Added 11/1/2009 at 04 : 06 : 33----- Quote:
This is not appropriate. Last edited by Willravel; 01-11-2009 at 01:06 PM.. Reason: Automerged Doublepost |
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01-11-2009, 01:34 PM | #170 (permalink) | |
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It would be a miracle if you replied to a post without developing a straw man. -----Added 11/1/2009 at 04 : 44 : 14----- If people in my community were firing rockets at the community 5 miles down the road, I certainly would do more than sit in my house, especially if I knew the community 5 miles away wouldn't do what many in this forum suggest and just ignore the rocket fire. Last edited by TheNasty; 01-11-2009 at 01:44 PM.. Reason: Automerged Doublepost |
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01-11-2009, 01:53 PM | #172 (permalink) | |
warrior bodhisattva
Super Moderator
Location: East-central Canada
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Also, I don't think the militants conducting the rocket attacks are open to suggestion. How would you go about doing "more than sit in your house"?
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Knowing that death is certain and that the time of death is uncertain, what's the most important thing? —Bhikkhuni Pema Chödrön Humankind cannot bear very much reality. —From "Burnt Norton," Four Quartets (1936), T. S. Eliot |
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01-11-2009, 03:01 PM | #173 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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all i did was to position your viewpoint in the space it belongs--the far right of the israeli political spectrum. and then, because i was inclined to actually take you a bit seriously in the context of this debate, i posted an article that demonstrated what i was saying.
which i do not expect you actually read. notnasty. your position requires no actual information, so it's not surprising, somehow, that there is no particular need to acquire any. one of the most tiresome tasks that has come up over and over in this thread, and in nearly every other debate involving palestine and israel, it pushing back at this tendency on the part mostly of american supporters of israel who seem imagine that because they only know one political line on the topic that there is only one political line. over and over the same thing. it is ultimately not my problem that you appear to know nothing about the political spectrum in israel, that you appear to know nothing about the diversity of views in israel. if you knew what you were talking about, you wouldn't be so quick to buy into this one-dimensional narratives that are free of any context and so are free of any danger of actually addressing what's happening. over and over, the reverse side of this one-dimensional view of gaza is another--that somehow if you are critical of the patent lunacy of the israeli action that you support hamas, that if you focus on the civilian population of gaza which is trapped in place BECAUSE of the israeli blockade that you are somehow excusing rocket attacks. sometimes, in particularly delightful examples of one-dimensional thinking on this, you get these quaint little scenarios involving abstract house number one and abstract house number two, in which one house is full of people who just decided one fine day to start lobbing rockets at the other. no context, no information, no nothing. every last bit of these arguments is made up of nothing but strawmen, lined up one after another. things get complicated when you start actually look at and thinking about a world that is not locked into moralizing fables the sole function of which is to justify the occupation in general, the actions within the occupation, the demonization of palestinians and by extension to rationalize away what is by any rational standard a sequence of atrocities interspersed with an all-considered, self-defeating military action.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
01-12-2009, 06:12 PM | #174 (permalink) |
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Israel bans Arab parties from running in upcoming elections - Haaretz - Israel News
BBC NEWS | Middle East | Israel disqualifies Arab parties Israel has disqualified two Arab parties from running in upcoming parliamentary elections. |
01-12-2009, 06:16 PM | #175 (permalink) | |
... a sort of licensed troubleshooter.
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Maybe it's time for a Mediterranean tea party? |
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01-12-2009, 06:23 PM | #176 (permalink) |
warrior bodhisattva
Super Moderator
Location: East-central Canada
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It's interesting how the parties that filed for the ban are on the far right, while the parties that were banned are progressive (ostensibly...I'm open to being enlightened otherwise).
Don't disqualify the Arab lists - Haaretz - Israel News
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Knowing that death is certain and that the time of death is uncertain, what's the most important thing? —Bhikkhuni Pema Chödrön Humankind cannot bear very much reality. —From "Burnt Norton," Four Quartets (1936), T. S. Eliot Last edited by Baraka_Guru; 01-12-2009 at 06:37 PM.. |
01-12-2009, 07:22 PM | #177 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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this is a digression-->if i were to blame the poisoning of the political atomosphere after 67 on one thing--and this includes the modalities of occupation--it would be the settlements in general and the far right politics that has taken hold amongst the settlements in particular. because the israeli parliament was so fractured---WHICH WOULD NOT BE POSSIBLE WERE THE RIGHT'S THE ONLY VIEWPOINT HELD BY ISRAELIS--likud entered a period of coalitions with the far right: to my mind, things were not great before that, but this is the point at which things started to really turn to shit. it caused an ideological shift within the right. and that was not good. not good at all.<----this is the end of the digression.
yeah, see, this is the kind of thing that raises the memory of apartheid pretty explicitly.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
01-12-2009, 08:06 PM | #178 (permalink) | |
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If I'm not understanding the position correctly, that's my fault, but it sounds really close to "ignore the rocket attacks" to me. At this point in my view it's pretty clear that a political solution isn't going to work as long as the ability to produce home made rockets exists. There might be a large segment of the Palestinian population that might want to live in peace with Israel. For whatever reasons, that segment of the population is unable to prevent their government from launching rockets and conducting suicide bombings inside of Israel. With around 700 casualties in an area crammed with 3.1 million people, Israel has to be using some semblance of caution while executing this military engagement. Maybe they really are just trying to go after Hamas's ability to make and launch home made rockets, and aren't really embarking on wholesale slaughter of the Palestinian people. |
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01-12-2009, 08:11 PM | #179 (permalink) | |
I'm not a blonde! I'm knot! I'm knot! I'm knot!
Location: Upper Michigan
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"Always learn the rules so that you can break them properly." Dalai Lama My Karma just ran over your Dogma. |
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01-12-2009, 08:12 PM | #180 (permalink) | |
... a sort of licensed troubleshooter.
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1) Respond with extreme force or 2) Sit there and twiddle your thumbs There are a lot of options. |
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01-12-2009, 08:25 PM | #182 (permalink) | ||
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It is my opinion that those in Palestine that want peace with Israel aren't doing much to ensure that happens. Quote:
Quite the Catch 22, on one hand you could try to change your own government and likely be tortured and killed. On the other, your government continues to launch missles and conduct suicide bombings within Israel and you get to deal with the IAF. The difference, the later gets forum warriors the world around in an uproar. To be serious though, I honestly don't know what could be done, but I can't help but think not much is being done by the segment of the population that wants peace with Israel. The whole situation has been circular for a long, long time. Political cease fires aren't going to work, Hamas and other organizations won't follow them, but the only real answer is for them TO follow them. If Israel, tomorrow, would remove all blockades and Israeli nationals out of the Palestinian territories, suicide bombings and rocket fire wouldn't stop, for multiple reasons already brought up in this thread. A cease-fire continues the circular nature of this confrontation that has been on going for longer than most of us have been alive. In essence I think that everything over the past 40-50-60 years has created a situation where these guys just have to fight it out. Not every situation in this world has an ending that is fair, or logical, or just. I really think this is one of them. The question becomes, what happens next? At some point we've got to accept an all out offensive from Israel into Palestine is inevitable, once we create the baseline we can then try to control future moves in the chess game to minimize the global implications of any war. Earlier in this thread, on the first page, Roachboy discussed what has Israel's policy got them so far? My question is what has Palestine's policy got them so far? Surely the people of Palestine knew what Hamas stood for, I know that Hamas built schools and roads and what not for the people of Palestine, but surely they realized that if elected they would be legitimizing Hamas's effort against Israel. The only legitimate ending for this centuries old conflict is for one side to stop throwing stones (or bombs.) One side of the fight believes, justly or not, that if they stay strong that they will be eliminated. If Hamas/Palestine/whoever would, starting tomorrow, leave Israel alone I believe everything would be over. I don't believe that would apply if the roles were reversed. The only ending is for Hamas, and other organizations that terrorize Israel and her people, to stop. Or be forced to stop. Just my opinion, if the 10 or so months I've been reading and not participating on these forums have taught me anything the majority will likely disagree. Last edited by TheNasty; 01-12-2009 at 08:30 PM.. |
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01-12-2009, 08:28 PM | #183 (permalink) | |
... a sort of licensed troubleshooter.
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Even if rb wasn't a member of the staff, I can't imagine this being appropriate. |
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01-12-2009, 08:36 PM | #184 (permalink) | |
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Peace process in the Israeli?Palestinian conflict - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Again, this isn't advocating either side, but with so many peace treaties/agreements/talks/whatever failing, it does beg the question of how long can the circular nature of this conflict continue? We're quickly approaching the point where it is either Respond with force or twiddle your thumbs. For a crude analogy, that isn't painting one side or the other as the victim or the bully. A bully picks on you and you try to solve it by asking him to stop, by talking with your parents, by talking with the teacher, by talking with the principal, and by trying to avoid him. Eventually the only solution is to punch the bully in the nose. I think we're to option (F) in the Israel/Palestinian conflict. Israel's punch is bombs and tanks. Palestine's is crude home made rockets. |
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01-12-2009, 09:00 PM | #185 (permalink) |
... a sort of licensed troubleshooter.
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Very few things in life are black and white, especially when it comes to war. Okay, there's a third option. We have blow them up, do nothing, or political solution, and it's in the latter that I suspect we'll find an answer.
And I know it's not worked perfectly in the past, but you have to admit that Oslo demonstrated that it's possible. There can be a peaceful solution. |
01-13-2009, 05:15 AM | #186 (permalink) | |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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thenasty---i haven't necessarily been arguing a clear and simple line in this thread in part because there isn't one, not that makes sense anyway. i don't buy your bully analogy for example--the palestinians have been under occupation since 1867, there has been a substantial official/unofficial policy of settlements---israel is a militarily by far the most powerful country in the region--on and on. within this, there has been a political dynamic in which all parties have played their part in the cycle of deterioration--but i see israeli policy choices as in some cases reacting to problems, but in many cases driving them. there's alot of information in the thread, so i'll just refer back to it from here.
i've linked the horror in gaza to a specific set of political choices made by israel and the united states in jan 06. i've linked that in turn the the logic that has been driving that deterioration, which is the same logic that informed the imposition of a seige---that a military substitute for good-faith peace negociations and ultimately an independen viable palestine makes sense, will work---it doesn't, it hasn't, it won't. i see gaza as a kind of psychotic demonstration of the impotence of the logic of force. where does this logic of force come from? what enables it politically and ideologically? the israel right. does this mean i think the palestinian population has been well-served politically by the organizations there? hell no. does that mean i think there is no responsibility for, in this case, hamas? i don't know how many times i have to say that i hold hamas in part accountable for this wreckage--but the cause of the incursion, really, is the policy choices that the israeli right made from january 06 onward. as for the idea that the palestinians are "bullies"--consider today's casualty counts. as of this morning, medical sources in gaza say that 935 palestinians have been killed and 4,300 injured. in the context of a siege, in the context of reduced medical supplies, erratic water and electricity. there have been 13 israeli casualties. 10 of them are soldiers. then there's the following: Quote:
are these charges true? some are entirely consistent with information that's been coming out of gaza. some it's impossible to know about. but the palestinians are the "bullies"? what on earth are you talking about? i maintain a few shreds of optimism about this situation. i would hope that the israeli right would implode as a function of information concerning the needlessness of this entire situation, the brutality of the siege itself, the ill-advised ground incursion, the appalling consequences of launching in it in a situation where the civilian population is trapped in place. but that may be naive. conservatives seem to benefit from panic and to be able to conflate irrational responses to panic with forcefulness. i would hope that this relation between israel and palestine is internationalized, and the sooner the better. this because it seem to me so long as the framework that has been in place remains in place, there will be nothing but carnage---inflicted on both sides---but disproportionate bourne by palestinians. the american position has to change. getting rid of george w bush is a positive step, but i am not yet convinced that obama's administration will be particularly radical in their break with the nitwit policies of the past 8 years. but so far, he has said little. so we wait, like everyone else does, for the end of the bush administration and hope that no more damage comes while their ghosts trail about the house. and to be clear, israel is a fact. it's existence is in no danger. it is given, it isn't going anywhere. it's well past time for israel to be understood as a nation-state like any other, obliged to act like a part of the international community which is bound by the same rules. on the other hand, there are fundamental, seemingly intractable problems--like the settlements in the west bank and ESPECIALLY the disproportionate ideological influence of the extreme right---that could be addressed but not in the context of the nation-state based approach that's been the only game in town so far. internationalize the conflict. remove the settlements. all of them. move toward a two-state solution. my underlying assumption is that the cycle of colonial domination and resistance to it leads to nothing but excuses for continuing the domination which leads to nothing but reasons to try to fight back against it. all sides are trapped in this, and nothing will change until the logic itself is undermined. and on this, i hope i'm right. it seems reasonable as a way of looking at post 67 reality, but no-one knows for sure whether things are in fact as simple as they seem when you project an idea forward in time. but it seems worth a try. this sure as hell hasn't worked. i've made this as clear as i can in this thread. i'd prefer to think folk read the thread before they post. even raeanna, who obviously did not.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite Last edited by roachboy; 01-13-2009 at 05:17 AM.. |
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01-13-2009, 07:16 AM | #187 (permalink) | |
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I mean, they were bombing both N.I. and the mainland - with American dollars! (mostly)
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"I do not agree that the dog in a manger has the final right to the manger even though he may have lain there for a very long time. I do not admit that right. I do not admit for instance, that a great wrong has been done to the Red Indians of America or the black people of Australia. I do not admit that a wrong has been done to these people by the fact that a stronger race, a higher-grade race, a more worldly wise race to put it that way, has come in and taken their place." - Winston Churchill, 1937 --{ORLY?}-- Last edited by tisonlyi; 01-13-2009 at 07:19 AM.. |
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01-13-2009, 09:27 AM | #188 (permalink) | |||
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Location: Detroit, MI
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Most of the nations within the Middle East contain conquered people and conquerors. For an example right next door to the Palestinians, consider that the rulers and bulk of the population in Egypt are Arab conquerors who swept in from the southeast. The conquered indigenous people are the Copts, the descendants of the ancient Egyptians who built the pyramids and temples so familiar to tourists. The Copts converted to Christianity during the Roman Empire and have suffered from religious, political, and economic oppression for 1300 years, ever since the Arab conquest. Copts are periodically murdered by Arab-Muslim mobs and generally the Arabs are not prosecuted for the killings. You could read about this in U.S. Copts Association but you probably won't because the Copts are not violent.
At the Potsdam Conference the Allies granted Eastern European nations the right to expel their ethnic German citizens, i.e., people who had been living in these areas for generations but whose forebears were German and who spoke the German language. Roughly 12 million of these volksdeutsche were in fact expelled, their property confiscated, and as many as two million may have been killed in the process. The surviving volksdeutsche settled in crummy houses in Germany and Austria and integrated themselves with those societies. If there were a Volksdeutsche Liberation Army murdering Czech, Polish, and Hungarian civilians the world might pay some attention to the injustices suffered by this group. The 870,000 Jews expelled from Arabs countries in the 1940s and 1950s similarly settled quietly in the U.S., Europe, and Israel. They aren't out there blowing up Iraqi, Moroccan, and Algerian embassies or airplanes, which is why you probably never think about them. The list of people who were displaced by the events of World War II and decolonialization is endless. The only group that anyone pays attention to is the Palestinians. If the Palestinians were to stop blowing up airplanes and pizza shops people would stop paying attention. Arab leaders don't care about non-violent Palestinians. If you were an Arab leader there is no reason to care about your own subjects, much less members of very distant tribes. The only Arab nation that has ever offered Palestinians citizenship is Jordan; a Palestinian family that has lived in Egypt or Saudi Arabia for several generations will still be aliens with no right to permanent residence. Thus there are more than 4 million people officially classified as Palestinian refugees despite the fact that the final British census before the 1948 war found only about 1 million people of all religions living in Palestine. The primary agency for these stateless souls is the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA). If you visit their Web site, UNRWA Official Homepage (United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East), you'll see that the U.S. and European nations provide almost all of the funding. Historically in fact the Western nations provided 100 percent of the funding for UNRWA but in recent years Saudi Arabia has been shamed into chipping in. For 2006 the Saudis contributed $5.8 million, compared to a U.S. contribution of $120 million and Britain's $30 million. Most Arab countries contribute less than the cost of a new Mercedes automobile. Violent Palestinians, by contrast, have no trouble getting support from fellow Arabs. In April 2002 the Saudi state television network ran a telethon that raised more than $100 million to aid the families of Palestinian suicide bombers (Associated Press, April 13, 2002). Iraq, which contributes nothing to UNRWA, had been donating roughly $10 million per year to the families of suicide bombers. Iran, another state that contributes nothing to UNRWA, sends weapons and money to anti-Israel groups such as Hezbollah and Hmas and the ex-PLO, most notably a 50-ton shipment of rockets and plastic explosives in January 2002 (notable because it was in violation of the agreements that Arafat had signed and because it was discovered and intercepted by the Israeli Navy). The only way that a Palestinian can get his or her hands on a share of Arab oil wealth is by becoming a suicide bomber. "[Izzidene al Masri] lived with his 12 brothers and sisters and his parents in a neat, tile-floored house" (Knight Ridder, April 1, 2002, on the Sbarro pizza shop bomber). If you lived in poverty it might make sense to trade your life for the knowledge that Saudi Arabians would support your parents, grandparents, and 11 siblings in comfort for the rest of their lives. This kind of poverty is likely to endure because Palestinians combine a low level of education and a high level of illiteracy (30 percent) with perhaps the highest birthrate of any world population, estimated for 2007 at 5 percent per annum by passia.org. This means that Palestinians need to generate economic growth of 5 percent per year, and preserve that growth from kleptocratic politicians, merely to maintain their standard of living. For comparison, the most rapidly growing population with which most Americans are familiar is Mexico; its population is growing at an annual rate of 1.47 percent (CIA Factbook 2007). In the 1990s, according to the World Bank, the average country enjoyed a 2.5 percent annual growth rate. Even if they succeeded in liberating all of Palestine, the Palestinians would have a difficult time growing at any rate close to 5 percent per year. They'd have one of the most densely populated countries in the world, one of the poorest in natural resources, especially water, and a complete lack of industry. It may be a mistake to look too deep into Palestinian poverty for the roots of Palestinian violence. For most violent Palestinians we need not conjecture as to the motivation for their violence because they've explained it in their own words. Here is an except from The Palestinian National Charter, July 1-17, 1968: Quote:
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01-13-2009, 09:52 AM | #189 (permalink) | |
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Jeremy Bowen from his journal in the BBC today:
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01-13-2009, 09:58 AM | #190 (permalink) |
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Powerclown summarized the situation better than I could have ever hoped to.
Very nice job. Every day Joe Palestinian is stuck between a rock and a hard place, any decent person would feel for them. That being said, this problem won't ever be solved if the answer is Political. Hamas/Hezbollah/militant arabs aren't seeking a political answer. |
01-13-2009, 10:05 AM | #191 (permalink) |
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The IRA clearly stated they would not lay down their arms until the island of Ireland was one nation. What people say and write down to convince other people that they're really, really committed isn't necessarily what they'll agree to in genuine efforts at negotiation.
With the notable exception of the Copts, whose plight I know nothing about, the others were not and are not the subjects of 40 years up to the present day of ongoing oppression, humiliation, torture, siege (which i'm pretty sure counts as collective punishment...), assassinations(some carried out in person by the current defence minister, that lefty labor peacenik man), killings (ditto) and massacres (take your pick of all the Zionist revisionists on the Israeli political scene) at the hands of an organised, modern state funded by the hegemonic superpower of the world. History is bloody, everyone knows it. History is not an excuse for the knowing slaughter of innocents NOW, and it really doesn't matter that they're 'not deliberately targeted' which is as disingenuous a phrase as you'll find (and very much reminds me of Catch 22, with others telling Yossarian to calm down, because they're not really trying to kill him, they're trying to kill everyone!). Hopefully, after another couple of weeks of this mindless barbarity, the Israeli people themselves might cry out for a halt to the insanity... It's a long shot, but stranger things have happened. Eventually people will start finding videos on the net... Maybe there's a possibility of some sort of sane political party emerging in Israel. I think it was Machiavelli who said that you either treat an opponent well, or wipe them out completely. People have the strange habit of seeking revenge for past, non-genocidal crimes against them.
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"I do not agree that the dog in a manger has the final right to the manger even though he may have lain there for a very long time. I do not admit that right. I do not admit for instance, that a great wrong has been done to the Red Indians of America or the black people of Australia. I do not admit that a wrong has been done to these people by the fact that a stronger race, a higher-grade race, a more worldly wise race to put it that way, has come in and taken their place." - Winston Churchill, 1937 --{ORLY?}-- Last edited by tisonlyi; 01-13-2009 at 10:08 AM.. |
01-13-2009, 10:11 AM | #192 (permalink) | ||
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01-13-2009, 10:15 AM | #193 (permalink) | |
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And if the answer isn't political, then it's time to stop pussy-footing around and get busy with the extermination camps, forced evacuations and ethnic cleansing in an honest fashion.
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"I do not agree that the dog in a manger has the final right to the manger even though he may have lain there for a very long time. I do not admit that right. I do not admit for instance, that a great wrong has been done to the Red Indians of America or the black people of Australia. I do not admit that a wrong has been done to these people by the fact that a stronger race, a higher-grade race, a more worldly wise race to put it that way, has come in and taken their place." - Winston Churchill, 1937 --{ORLY?}-- |
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01-13-2009, 10:22 AM | #194 (permalink) |
... a sort of licensed troubleshooter.
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No one is saying to ignore attacks. What I think most are saying, though, is that this asymmetrical military response that Israel adores so much is clearly causing more problems than it's solving. Israel is killing a lot of innocent people along with the few guilty ones, and that's fuel on the fire of hatred towards Israel. And this isn't some kind of secret, a child could figure this out. If Israel wanted peace, they wouldn't be trying to exterminate the Palestinians, which leads us to...
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01-13-2009, 10:24 AM | #195 (permalink) | ||
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There aren't just 2 options. Either you set out on a policy of massacre or you ignore the rockets fired at you... Can't you think of any other potential lines of progress from here? The big stick doesn't work... the more Israel uses the iron fist, the more money will flow to the extremists, which they won't be using for flower arranging classes and pilates sessions.
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"I do not agree that the dog in a manger has the final right to the manger even though he may have lain there for a very long time. I do not admit that right. I do not admit for instance, that a great wrong has been done to the Red Indians of America or the black people of Australia. I do not admit that a wrong has been done to these people by the fact that a stronger race, a higher-grade race, a more worldly wise race to put it that way, has come in and taken their place." - Winston Churchill, 1937 --{ORLY?}-- |
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01-13-2009, 10:26 AM | #196 (permalink) | ||
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Israel doesn't want that, and they've shown they haven't wanted that continually through their actions. |
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01-13-2009, 10:34 AM | #198 (permalink) |
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Location: essex ma
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powerclown's narrative manages somehow to erase the fact of occupation. so the claims concerning poverty and their correlate in some strange essentialist distinction between the violent and non-violent end up being cast as eternal conditions.
if one integrates empirical and/or historical reality into this circular, self-justifying narrative, the sole function of which is to justify anything and everything the israeli right does--you'd end up in a position quite far from where powerclown himself does. if you're going to tell "historical" narratives, there are rules. including factors that have for over 40 years now fundamentally conditioned the cycle within which the factoids you adduce have happened is a rule. if you don't do it, you're making fables and that's all you're doing. similarly, it is self-evident that what an organization's official line is and what it's unofficial lines might be in negociation can be entirely different, and that it is somewhere between amateruish and disengenuous to pretend the contrary, the sole reason for including the bit about saudi money going to unrwa is to delegitimate information coming from that organization about what israel is doing on the ground. i call bullshit on the move. there's 40 years of debacle to show that the dominant approaches to this situation have produced nothing but suffering on both sides, violence on both sides. the logic itself is the problem---the logic that has shaped these approaches. i see nothing but repetitions of that same logic from the folk who support anything and everything the israeli right puts into motion, who can excuse what's happening in gaza because they prefer to look at some pseudo-historical story that departs from and leads back to "kill em all and let god sort em out" 971 dead. 4,418 injured. every once in a while through the fog of disinformation, these numbers are broken down into plausible fighter vs children, women, and (only sometimes) the elderly.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
01-13-2009, 10:36 AM | #199 (permalink) | |
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Time. Patience. Tolerance. You do know that Israel is massacring civilians on a daily basis at the moment, right? Flick on the TV, it's all over the news! Really!
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"I do not agree that the dog in a manger has the final right to the manger even though he may have lain there for a very long time. I do not admit that right. I do not admit for instance, that a great wrong has been done to the Red Indians of America or the black people of Australia. I do not admit that a wrong has been done to these people by the fact that a stronger race, a higher-grade race, a more worldly wise race to put it that way, has come in and taken their place." - Winston Churchill, 1937 --{ORLY?}-- |
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01-13-2009, 10:37 AM | #200 (permalink) | ||||
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This goes back to my original statement of, with around 700 casualties so far in this conflict there has to be some semblance of caution being used in this fight. I lean toward Israel is actually trying to remove Hamas' ability to attack them. I understand that when you read that you roll your eyes. Quote:
-----Added 13/1/2009 at 01 : 38 : 13----- Quote:
..... I don't paint situations with words as dramatic as possible to imply one side as bad and the other as victims. Last edited by TheNasty; 01-13-2009 at 10:39 AM.. Reason: Automerged Doublepost |
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gaza, redux |
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