Israel is fighting a fight in which the other side does not wish to surrender and denounce the desire to fight and kill Israelis.They’re the results of Israel fucking murdering them!
There is nothing more forced upon a side than that.
Israel is fighting a fight in which the other side does not wish to surrender and denounce the desire to fight and kill Israelis.They’re the results of Israel fucking murdering them!
Not so simple if a person who has killed an Israeli is also thereThere’s always the option of not firing into civilians wanting help, or schools, or hospitals, or bombing restaurants.
What if a family in your neighborhood declares a war on your family which is also in the neighborhood and kills a bunch of your family.What if the person who killed an Israeli was in an Israeli hospital, rathar than a Gaza one, would you still blow it up?
“Not so simple if a person who has killed an Israeli is also there.”
“There’s always the option of not firing into civilians wanting help.”
The lack of self awareness is huge.Not so simple if a person who has killed an Israeli is also there
I don't know why he wasn't banned ages ago.
I thought there was a way of perma-banning these punters.He was. Then he popped up again under his 3rd alias.
It's good to see how some people think imo. Censorship never achieves much.
Posters can be permanently banned but, as Mamma's post above yours indicates, doing that just because you disagree with someone (however strongly) is censorship pure and simple.
I've been tempted to engage you in this discussion lately as I cannot fathom your views not being changed by events over the past year.
It would be interesting to know how you feel at the moment about what is actually going on.
Have any of your views altered over the past 12 months?
I'm torn in different directions by the awful tragedy of what's happening in Gaza.
I'm on record as supporting Israel's decision to finish Hamas militarily after the Oct.7th atrocities and I haven't changed my view on that one iota. Israel could already have done so many times but held back for decades from taking such action. Oct.7th changed everything because it made two things clear: (a) Hamas retains the objective of wiping out Israel and its people, and (b) Israel's restraint up until then had achieved nothing except strengthen its self-declared mortal enemies. After Oct.7th Israel was faced with a choice: put an end to Hamas' military threat, or leave its own citizens in the firing line for however many repeat atrocities Hamas chose to commit. No government could be expected to accept the latter.
However, it seems to me that Israel's right to take action to end a mortal threat has been infiltrated and taken over by the settlement agenda and that that's what drives far too much of what's currently happening. I've always been of the view that the establishment of peace and justice in the region is going to have to involve Israelis as well as Palestinians accepting that they have to abandon absolutist positions. TorresElNino is absolutely right to say that the Jews were the original inhabitants of those lands and were ethnically cleansed from them back in the day, but those who moved in afterwards have now been there for a millennium and a half themselves and must also have their rights respected.
I'm now hoping that Trump - yes, Trump - might just make a difference in the right direction now that he's staked at least part of his own reputation on bringing about some kind of peaceful resolution. Almost half a century ago when Egyptian President Anwar Al-Sadat took the incredibly brave step of beginning a peace process in the Middle East (for which he eventually paid with his own life at the hands of Islamist extremists in his own army) it was a former terrorist, Menachem Begin, who was strong enough as Israeli Premier to accept the olive branch and give peace a chance. Peace can come from the most unlikely directions sometimes, because regrettably it has to.
So far he has:Posters can be permanently banned but, as Mamma's post above yours indicates, doing that just because you disagree with someone (however strongly) is censorship pure and simple.
So far he has:
- Called entire ethnic or religious groups “backwards,” “barbaric,” and “worthless”
- Argued that democracy doesn’t work for Arabs or Muslims
- Repeatedly framed Muslims as a threat by default
I'm not sure we should be give this stuff a platform, no matter how small a forum SCM is. Unless you're all up for allowing people to say whatever.
Dude, your anti-semitism is showing!better to watch the rats run than pretend they aren’t there.
@Judge Jules I always appreciate how thoughtful and grounded your posts are — even when we come at things from different angles.
One bit I keep turning over in my mind is the “original inhabitants” idea. You mention that Jews were ethnically cleansed from the land long ago, and I don’t dispute that there’s a painful history there. But I’m curious: is that kind of historical claim something we apply elsewhere?
For example, in modern-day South Africa, Australia, or the US, we acknowledge indigenous dispossession, but we don’t propose nation-states be reconstituted based on ancient tribal presence. In most parts of the world, we accept that borders and populations shift over time — and that rights should be grounded in the present, not in ancient ancestry.
So I guess my question is: why is this kind of ancestral claim taken as foundational in the case of Israel/Palestine, when it’s not used to settle other long-standing injustices? Is there a moral principle here that we apply selectively — or is the exception somehow justified in this case?
Genuinely asking — I’m still trying to understand how we reconcile historical justice with current realities in a way that’s fair and consistent.
It’s awful to read sometimes — but also educational. It helps sharpen our own thinking, and it leaves a public record for future readers to see what this kind of mindset looks like laid bare.
I don’t have a final answer on this, but I lean toward keep the sewer lid open
Thank you for your kind words.
IMO your final para.contains the key word, namely "reconcile". Not all such situations, in fact probably very few of them, boil down to right vs.wrong. More often than not there are arguments to be made for both sides and for their genuine respective rights, and the way forward has to consist of reconciling two or more positions which are all soundly based, at least in part.
One difference that I can see between Israel/Palestine and the other situations you mention is quite simply that of demand. The Jewish people have always wanted to return to their homeland and have made that clear in their known religious practices. South Africa is an unusual case because the white population (whose ancestors were established in the country before those of most of the current black population which, I believe, is widely descended from incomers) did of course try and preserve their control but eventually had to give way to a changed reality. My guess is that the reason the indigenous populations of Australia and the US didn't follow suit is a mixture of powerlessness and inculturation.
I'm not enough of an expert on the UN to know what arguments formed the basis for its decision to create the state of Israel after WW2. The practical reality however is that it was the UN which took that decision, in consequence of which Jewish people returned to reestablish and populate the country. TorresElNino is right to remind other posters of the historical facts that, when this happened, those dispossessed were offered but mostly refused Israeli citizenship, tried to move to neighbouring Arab countries and were uniformly rejected, so it wasn't the Jewish people who failed to accept that borders and populations shift over time.