Jonathan, I can only assume that the points of mine which you don't refer to are those that you agree with, or those that are irrelevant (or ones that were admittedly, a lot of bad language). I assume that your ignoring of my point about the Israel/Arab dilemma being a primarily moral one is something that you agree with, and hence you didn't see fit to devote any more time to it. I assume that your ignoring of the charge that your accusations of anti-Semitism doing more harm than good is something you cannot defend, hence you do not.
JonathanM said:
Yeah, so where is the thread on Rwanda, on the countless other issues? The answer is that there aren't any, and that's my point - everyone is focused on Israel.
And for good reason: Because Israel deserves to have attention put on it. Attention
at the expense of other problems in other countries? Possibly not in all cases. In the case of the flotilla, absolutely. Nations don't go around killing unarmed, or at the least, barely armed, aid activists every day. It is an action that is, in the scope of Western society, fairly unique to Israel. Sadly, it's not an action new to Israel either (Rachel Corrie et al). The attention given to Israel in wake of this event is justified.
However, no matter how much attention is given to Israel does not change the fact that we (I, you, BoS) ought to hold Israel accountable for its actions, regardless of the attention paid to it by the media. If somebody does wrong, they ought to be investigated and challenged. If somebody kills a man, they ought to be charged with murder
even if there are others getting away with it for whatever reason. Similarly, while genocide occuring in Sudan is tragic, it does not change the fact that Israel has killed nine people unnessecarily, with questionable legal right and very questionable moral right.
The wrong here is not our attention on Israel, for our attention on Israel is justified. What is wrong, is our lack of attention on other issues. This is the key issue. And once more, if you want to make a thread on Rwanda I'll be happy to participate.
"People don't care about those in Africa, they care about those in Israel" - those people who just so happen to be Jewish. Look at what you've written here, you've just admitted that there is a huge double standard, that people are caring more about the lives of those living in Israel then those in Africa. You admit that it is sad, but you also admit that it is true. So there exists a double standard, which you've been arguing against, and I am standing against this double standard. Maybe I'm wrong, maybe it's not anti-Semitism, maybe it's just plain old racism, of people not caring about blacks, or of people not caring about those who are poor?
Firstly, my point has always been that regardless of double standards, we ought to still pile attention on those that do wrong. You cannot excuse Israel's actions based on evil elsewhere. This has been my point, and it has been constant. Other than that, I conceded above that a double standard might exist, but I absolutely emphasise that this double standard is biased
against the Africans and so on, and not
against Israel. As far as I and other humanitarians are concerned, Israel is treated fairly. It is an aggressor, it has a history of this, it is justifiably watched closely. The tragedy is not the attention lumped on Israel, it is the lack of attention focused elsewhere. I cannot make that more clear to you now, and it's the point I've been arguing from the get go.
And I think the boldface part is probably the best explanation.
I can't stand those who partake in the Gaza campaign and who have no connection with the actual conflict (i.e. they're not Israeli or Palestinian, the vast majority of those connected with the campaign) who feign horror at the "human deaths" but don't give a flying fuck about anyone else. Or even those Muslims who are concerned for their "brothers and sisters" in Palestine (I hear that rhetoric a lot) but don't give a shit about their brothers and sisters in Afghanistan, Iraq and Pakistan. I think they just partake in the chorus against Israel as a pastime, to vent their frustration and anger.
I think that attention given to these events by outside actors is a great thing. Independant arbitration is probably what's going to solve this conflict at some point down the road (so long as it is done fairly, unlike in 1947), because one thing is for sure now, and it is that neither side is capable of settling the Israel/Arab dilemma.
You're right in that there are too many extremists on both sides. You, for one.
You just compared Northern Ireland with the Middle-East conflict - apart from the broad umbrella topics you've provided and a few others, they have nothing in common. 'Nuf said. And you're talking merely about attention?
Yes. Do you agree with this point? Have you any counter evidence to the wall of attention given to the conflict in Northern Ireland as it relates to the attention given to Israel. I provided you with a clear cut instance of a non-Jewish, land related conflict being given massive amounts of media and pop culture attention as a counter point to your insistence that people only care about Israel because they're anti-Semites.
What's your take on that?
Well I'm talking about more than that - was there ever a host of nations calling for the destruction of Northern Ireland? For it to no longer exist?
No. Why should there be? Israel was founded upon questionable morals, by taking land that wasn't theirs. Northern Ireland was not. Nobody focuses on the termination of Northern Ireland because it is not relevant.
Nor was there discrimination coming from the United Nations, which didn't give a shit about Northern Ireland.
Plain untrue.
Every year there is an average of 18 resolutions against Israel
With good reason. Israel acts as a rogue state with a law for me and a law for thee. It has absolute disregard for human life amongst its neighbours. It conducts unneccesary and violent operations with bare justification. It obfuscates the truth. It engages in apartheid, it participates in collective punishment. I listed five instances of why Israel ought to have resolutions leveled against it. Each of those would have a number of specific examples. I think eighteen resolutions is actually a bit low, as far as Israel goes.
as well as it being barred from committees and having, in one particular motion, suicide bombing justified as a means of Palestinian resistance.
I had a big long reply to this section typed out, but I'm not going to include it for a few reasons. A summary is this: Terrorism sucks. Suicide bombing is terrorism when it relates to an ideology. When suicide bombings are carried out not for the purposes of ideology, but for a struggle against an occupying army (the struggle of the Palestinians against Israel, the occupier, is legal), the illegality of a suicide bombing becomes questionable. Obviously, a cafe filled with civillians is not an occupying army. This would be termed terrorism and this would be morally and legally impermissible.
But suppose a suicide bomber approached a military checkpoint - filled only with IDF members. Does this then become an acceptable form of armed struggle against an occupying force?
1. Algeria: 70,000 killed
2. Bosnia: 200,000 killed
3. Burma: 500,000 displaced
4. Chechnya: 160,000 killed
5. Cambodia: 1.5-3 million killed
6. Congo: 3.1-4.7 million killed
7. Iraq (Under Saddam Hussein):
445,000 killed
138,000 displaced
8. Mozambique: 1.5 million killed
9. North Korea: 1.4-2.4 million killed
360,000 displaced
10. Rwanda: 1.2 million killed
11. Somalia: 1 million killed
12. Sudan (Darfur Confiict):
450,000 killed
2 million displaced
13. Syria: 10,000-30,000 killed
Sources for each please.
As it relates to the UN's approach to the former Yugoslavia -
NATO/SFOR : UN Resolutions
As it relates to Myanmar -
SECURITY COUNCIL DEPLORES VIOLENCE USED AGAINST MYANMAR DEMONSTRATORS, STRESSES IMPORTANCE OF EARLY RELEASE FOR ALL POLITICAL PRISONERS
As it relates to Chechnya -
International response to the Second Chechen War - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Need I go on? I found something for three of the first four - only for Algeria could I not find information. I could keep going for the rest of them but I think my point has been made. Just to be clear; your point:
"And there has been no condemnation for most of these countries from the UN, only for Israel."
My point: There obviously has.
Legal opinion as opposed to the actual laws themselves.
Provide the article as well if you want to use it as an argument.
It is within the thread. It is on the Flotilla article. I'm not going to get it for you, you're capable of doing it yourself. The application of law relating to the flotilla is difficult and questionable. It is not, as you say, "legal by US, UK, UN law." It is
questionably legal, and somewhat illegal. And it's certainly immoral - even moreso when framed against the wider context of Israel's behaviour.
Are you fucked in the head? You've seen the videos. The activists on the deck of the boat, including those who were killed were clearly all armed, it's right in front of your eyes and yet you still deny it - and your crowd calls us brain washed.
Armed with steel pipes as opposed to IDF commandos - amongst the most well trained in the world - armed with pistols and so on? That's like saying a bee has a chance against my shoe because it has a stinger.
But even if they were armed, you cannot refocus my attention on the specifics as your side so desperately wants. These people are dead. They ought to not be dead. The IDF has every means available to it to respond to these type of situations without lethal force. They chose not to go down that route, and they ought to be held accountable to their use of disproportionate force against aid workers and activists.
No, the reality is that if the Palestinian cause hadn't become one of the banners for Islamic terrorism which seeks to bring an end to our way of life, then 50 well trained mercenaries wouldn't have boarded one of the activists boats, then you wouldn't see the passengers of that boat being told prior to the boarding to kill the Israeli soldiers and throw them from the boat (the video is on you-tube) and you wouldn't see Iran and Syria trying to supply weapons to Hamas so there wouldn't be a blockade in the first place.
No, the reality is that if the IDF hadn't have been so trigger happy against the Turks on board, then noone would have been killed. The reality is that if the IDF had have resorted to less provocative means of capturing those vessels in international waters, then there'd have been no deaths. If Israel had have reacted to the situation with a fucking grain of restraint like every other developed and civilised country in the world, then there'd have been no deaths.
See how I managed to form a pragmatic response to this situation without acting like a general dipshit, yabbering on about Islamic terrorism and such? Give it a try champ.
It's very simple, and I have facts to back me up - when there is less terrorism, more supplies go into Gaza. Stop terrorism, and the possibilities for peace are endless.
I'd like to see those facts. But hey, you're right! Stop terrorism and the peace process would ordinarily get better. Not really the case with Israel though, is it? Hamas extends a ceasefire, Israel responds with aggression, the building of an illegal wall, the the expansion of illegal settlements. And somehow the blame comes back to Hamas. Go Israel! Peace yay!
The Israeli government and the IDF have no interest in peace. This is a shame, because most Israeli citizens do want peace.
Ok, well first of all that is exactly what I'm insinuating,
Right, well, that proves my general thesis that you're a lunatic.
and you're fucking retarded if you think that Israel was allowed to be created because of the Holocaust. Sure, it sped up the process,
Right, small difference.
Ok, well first of all that is exactly what I'm insinuating, and you're fucking retarded if you think that Israel was allowed to be created because of the Holocaust. Sure, it sped up the process, but the mass migration of Jews to Palestine had already begun, as had the Jewish independence movement (Zionism was founded by Herzl way before the Holocaust).
The difference between what you're saying and what I'm saying is small. My point here was not all that important, but to restate, it was that the holocaust was a factor in the creation of the
State of Israel, with UN backing.
And the partition plan was completely fair to the Arabs - it literally gave land, in a completely illogical manner to wherever the population centres were - where there was a clear Jewish majority, the Jews were given land, and vice versa). And of the land the Jews were given, 60% of it was not arable, just desert - this was not the same for the Arabs, yet the Jews still accepted it.
1. It makes no sense to me, nor anyone else with an iota of neutrality in this issue (as opposed to being Israeli, Arab, or a lunatic like yourself) as to how it was fair for the Arabs to suffer a net loss of land. This is what occured. Land was taken from the Arabs, and given to the Jews, so that they could start a viable nationstate. The image is well known.
See how those specks of white became large masses in 1947?
2. If any method of land division is fair, it is based upon populations. What else would you base it on? Religious assumptions? Division of resources? Lines of longitude?
3. The Jews had no right to arable land that they did not own. Let me make a point clear to you: The Jews were entitled to the land that they owned, purchased through legitimate means. They had no right to land that they did not own (though they were given that land anyway). Under what assumptions are you pretending that they did? Of course they accepted the plan, because they had won a great deal of land that otherwise did not belong to them.
I'm willing to accept that the image I provided above is not 100% accurate, but you'll have a tough time proving that the image has a degree of error such that the Jews were somehow entitled to land that was not theirs for the taking.
Let's move foward 60 years or so and forget it though. The reality on the ground is that what's done is done, and there's no going back to pre-1947. A comprimise must be found.
Furthermore, it's not an apartheid wall,
It segregates groups, and it does so based on race.
Israeli policies are motivated by the need to protect the lives of its citizens in an environment of constant siege and indiscriminate murder (when the Palestinians from the Territories launched a terrorist campaign of suicide bombing against Israeli civilians in September 2000, Israel had to protect its citizens. Checkpoints, bypass roads, and the security barrier were all temporary measures to stem terrorists’ access to Israeli civilian centers. They were designed to separate terrorists from their Israeli victims.)
The fence was partially motivated by security - I'll agree to that. I'll also suggest that its purpose was not limited to this, in that its purpose was a land grab, and to assist in Sharon et al's greater purpose of segregating Israel from its unpleasant, unwanted neighbour. A neighbour that had every right to have land rights well beyond that fence. A neighbour whose tactics which provided half of the reason for the erection of that fence, were born as a result of Israel's policy towards them.
But hey, again, way to address the other points I made there. I'll just assume you agree with everything else I said.
Wait, so it's somehow Israel's fault that the leader of the PA, Yasser Arafat, corruptly handled the gratuitous amount of aid given to the Palestinian Authority by the US and other organisations?
Nice strawman bro! I'll say it again: The ineptitude of the Palestinian Authority is not the fault of the Palestinian people. Can I make that any clearer?
I want to make something else very clear to you: I am not stupid enough to be distracted from the key issues at hand. You, like a lot of pro-Israeli PR activists, attempt to distract from the issues at hand. Distract from the flotilla by talking about terrorism. Distract from a rephrensible comment about Palestinian people by talking about Arafat's shopping habits. It's not going to work here.
Both Hamas and Fatah were built upon foundations of not recognising the state of Israel and of aspiring to its destruction, how are they viable peace partners? The following quotes are in Hamas's founding charter:
And Israel was built upon land it didn't own.
WAKE THE FUCK UP AND DEAL WITH WHAT IS IN FRONT OF YOU
Hamas controls Gaza, and Fatah controls the West Bank. Deal with it you insipid moron. Stop throwing about blame and realise that Fatah and Hamas are there to stay, that they are the democratic representatives of the Palestinians and that they are willing to negotiate. I'm not making this up. I provided to you a book, written by an Israeli, chock full of examples of these two organisations being willing to negotiate. If the Israeli side actually makes a fucking concession for the first time in 60 years, there's a good fucking chance that the Palestinians will see this and make moves towards peace. Some absurd number like 70% of Europeans believe that Israel is the biggest barrier to peace in the Middle East. I believe this. Everyone believes this with the exception of the neocons, and Israel. Hamas sucks balls. Get over it, build towards peace, and they'll go away.
Absolute dickheads like yourself don't give a rats arse about peace. You, and people like you, are the reason why peace is not coming to Israel/Palestine. You're a pathetic, insipid, disgusting animal.
And don't let me hear any nonsense about the Israelis willingness for peace - it's there, and the Palestinians have repeatedly dismissed genuine Israeli offers for peace. Before the Road Map, at Camp David, Ehud Barak offered Arafat all of the Gaza Strip, 98% of the West Bank (forget 90-94%, which Tanya Reinhart supports), which he and the King Hussein turned down.
Concessions moron, concessions. The Palestinians have a right to something. Israel suffered a net gain since 1948. The Palestinians have suffered a net loss. If they get a good deal of land back, and have autonomy, there will be peace. 98% of the West Bank and no autonomy is not an acceptable deal. Those deals failed because they were shit deals offered by Israel, not because the Palestinians were pigheaded idiots.
How was it advantageous for Israel?
Net gain of land.
The land it was given was also incredibly strategically weak from a military point of view. Also, the supporters of the Palestinians always chant the mantra "pre-1967 borders," but you never actually realise that this would include having to give the strategically important Golan Heights back to Syria (you never hear anything about their human rights abuses, do you?)
The Golan Heights does belong to Syria, dipshit. Concessions. Israel has to make concessions. The Arabs have made a tonne since 1967 - about 100 times more dead Arabs than dead Israeli's, a massive loss of land, sanctions, road blocks, barriers - the list is endless. I'm not Arab, but here's a plan I think might just work.
-Total ceasefire on both sides
-An autonomous Palestinian State
-Golan Heights back to Syria
-Sheeba Farms to Lebanon
-100% of the West Bank to Palestine
-100% of Gaza to Palestine with a guaranteed communcation route between the two
-Jerusalem under UN control
-A portion of Israeli land given to Palestine, outside of the West Bank and Gaza.