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Re: Hamas Israel War
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Your support for collective punishment remains despicable. Quote:
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Re: Hamas Israel War
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As for the 'suck on that' comment, I was pointing out that people should be careful what they wish for when they vote. Hamas was voted into power, so they bear some responsibility for where we are now. |
Re: Hamas Israel War
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Those are punitive measures. There’s nothing “self-defence” about it. You are either too stupid to understand what you are witnessing, too stupid to understand self-defence isn’t an exemption from international law, or both. The crux of your position: Quote:
If you can’t integrate reality into your own “insight” then I can’t help you. |
Re: Hamas Israel War
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Problem with this part of the discussion is that both of you are right. OB is basically saying that retaliation by Israel was inevitable given the Hamas atrocities and the severity of that retaliation is thereby justified. What else was Israel to do? Ask the stupid UN to sort it out? And the people of Gaza voted for Hamas, so there. jfman is saying that the calamitous effect on innocent people is deplorable. Seph is saying that Hamas are the bar stewards here, hiding among the people they've screwed over in their hatred of Israel and its Jews. The innocent people, for that's what they are, are the victims of Hamas' callousness. |
Re: Hamas Israel War
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How will Israel account for its bombings in the south? On another note, I've been reading that Egypt is getting annoyed at western requests to open its borders. It is struggling financially and doesn't want a million refugees especially in a border region with poor infrastructure. Things are looking bleak for the Palestinians in Gaza. The best hope I can think of is aid and for Israel to step back. |
Re: Hamas Israel War
Blinken has clearly been getting rebuked all round his tour of Arab states who clearly hold Israel and Israel alone responsible for events unfolding in Gaza hence the need for Biden to intervene.
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Re: Hamas Israel War
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I repeated my request to Seph when he made comments about people choosing either to blame, or ignore, British foreign policy (especially in the context of empire). The British ruled the territory in question under authorisation from the United Nations via the Mandate for Palestine from 1920 to 1948 and many of the reasons why it has been impossible to get the parties to come to terms are rooted in that period (though not exclusively - you really have to go back to the mid 19th century to really understand how we got to where we are now). Sadly, on both occasions, Seph has chosen to ignore my requests. |
Re: Hamas Israel War
No - I haven't ignored; I just hadn't noticed a request from Chris.
And, of course I'll respond when I'm not stuck in a Stop Oil protest in London. Btw, I would have started the WW2 potted history at around 1915. |
Re: Hamas Israel War
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I don't like to dodge a question and I appreciate the reminder. You used the term "potted history". Indeed, that is what I intended. There was no selectivity about it, 1948 seemed the correct starting point because that was when the first war between Israel and its neighbours started. I don't see what the British mandate had to do with any of this current stuff, which is rooted in the ideological clash between certain Arabs and Israel as a whole. The Ottoman stuff is irrelevant. Arabs with guns hate Jews and last week murdered hundreds. Jews with guns will fight Arabs with guns but won't murder ordinary civilians. |
Re: Hamas Israel War
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First, as I said, (and as you appeared to agree), if you start your examination when the guns start firing you will not understand why the guns are firing. You can’t understand WW2 from 1939 and you can’t understand Israel-Palestine from 1948. Second, it was during the British mandate that Palestinian political consciousness was born. Prior to the inter-communal riots of the 1920s - which occurred under British rule and which the British Mandate authorities did little to address - the concept of Palestinian nationhood simply did not exist. That’s not to say the ethnic Arab inhabitants there had no aspirations to self-determination, but there was no politically driven, common Palestinian identity as there is today. The British influence in the very existence of the concept of Palestine as a national identity cannot be overlooked. Third, again, under the British Mandate, Arabs were prevented from unifying effectively under their developing Palestinian identity because the British authorities actively worked to keep the various factions squabbling with each other. This was standard Empire tactics designed to make administration easier (basically, divide and rule). The British ruled by the issuing of patronage, in ways that were deliberately fuzzy around the edges. In Jerusalem, for example, civic and religious order were given to two rival factions. Jerusalem being what it always has been, that was always going to be a recipe for chaos. Fourth, the Ottoman stuff is absolutely not irrelevant. Your dismissal of it in this way indicates that you actually don’t understand the Ottoman stuff at all. Perhaps if you prove me wrong by outlining *why* you think it’s irrelevant, I’ll respond by demonstrating why it absolutely is. Remember, the Palestine-Israel conflict is never just about resolving the latest flare-up. It is the intractable search for a lasting peace in which two deeply opposed groups of people can learn to live side by side. Dismissing their mutual history - which you are so obviously doing, even while pretending you’re not - is exactly the way to ensure no such settlement occurs. |
Re: Hamas Israel War
There seems to be a popular trend amongst right-wingers to dismiss history and in particular the history of British colonialism as woke, so it should be ignored. It sits in their minds alongside other things they perceive as woke like the BBC, Disney, London, Greta Thunberg, 20 mph speed limits and avocados.
That's either plain laziness or a means of ignoring evidence that doesn't suit their world view. |
Re: Hamas Israel War
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The problem with where we are now may have started way back in history, but the problem now is getting a just solution to the problems history has created. That must commence with peace talks, which is not possible while Hamas is in this poisonous mix. As for colonialism, this is a left wing obsession. Colonialism was before my time, and yours. |
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