If you are talking about 1948, isn't it obvious that it wasn't just an issue of the Palestinians somehow being here the culprits? Don't forget that when the British left, it was the neighboring Arab nations going on the attack NOT to liberate the Palestinians and create a Palestinian country, but simply to take land for themselves. It was free land for them to take...and perhaps kick back the Jewish Europeans, right? Palestinians came to be the focus when they couldn't get that land.It’s not a counterfactual (I’m still arguing for a past possibility). And if there was no such a time, then I don’t know why I should assume that Palestinians would “opt for peace, stability and prosperity in the region with good relations around to the present clusterfuck”. To me, it makes sense to assess possibilities for agents to determine their fate only in their given historical circumstances. So if the Palestinians couldn’t profit from that opportunity back then due to their historical grievances (which I do not need to question), I have even less reasons to believe that they would act otherwise later on when their historical grievances, say, doubled. — neomac
Exactly, now those political leaders could have prevailed if it genuinely would have brought peace. The real question is if really even with a written peace deal on paper celebrated on the White House lawn, would it have been carried through by the "River-to-the-Sea" Likud party and the "River-to-the-Sea" Palestine militant factions? Because all it takes is a small cabal of terrorists blowing up something... or one ultra-zionist assassin to shoot an Israeli prime minister.No I didn’t forget it but the Oslo accords came from vulnerable political leaders with little backing from the people they were supposed to represent, indeed they couldn’t stop Palestinian terrorist attacks and Israeli settlement expansions in the interim period of negotiations. — neomac
This reminds me of the axiomatic systems that perhaps some animals (or people) have: nothing, 1, 2,3,4, many. When you think of it, it's quite useful for up to a point.I have seen some ultrafinitists go so far as to challenge the existence of 2 100 2 100 as a natural number, in the sense of there being a series of “points” of that length
— Harvey Friedman, Philosophical Problems in Logic
That reminds me of intuitionists or at the very least of psychologists in the ontology of mathematics, where the number 2^100 does not exist until it is thought up. — Lionino
Yes, I've always pondered how few people go to a port or to the seashore and simply look at how large ships simply "sink" into the horizon far earlier than they become tiny specs. But I guess flat Earthers just have this habit of going with the crazy and being against the tyrannical science & math we "sheeple" so blindly accept and follow. It makes them special.You get the same effect when you take a boat on a reservoir, up toward the dam, the higher the dam the better. It's like empirical proof that the earth is flat, and you're at the edge of the world. — Metaphysician Undercover

That's true. And you can see from the example of Iraq how difficult these countries are to manage, when borders are drawn by actually thinking about the people living there.The promise wasn't to the Palestinians nor explicitly/specifically about Palestine, if you are referring to the Hussein-McMahon agreements (whose actual content is still disputed given its critical textual ambiguities). — neomac
With the UN we are already talking about post-WW2 era. Then the conflict between the Jewish and the Palestinians was already in full swing.What came after concerning Palestine were the decisions of a colonial power and the UN. — neomac
Of course it's an counterfactual, but your question was already a counterfactual!“Don't set up Mandates and colonies in the first place” refers to a counterfactual situation and a rather farfetched one since it is construed on the premise that colonial powers wouldn’t rule over their foreign territories the way they want if they can. — neomac
But that's totally counterfactual. There hasn't been such time. Or there may have been, but it's on the counterfactual. That possible time ended when Yigal Amir killed Yitzhak Rabin. Then it was over. And then you got the vicious circle of attacks and counterattacks which the hawks enjoyed on both sides. The hawks enjoyed each other so much, that actually Bibi supported Hamas by funding them! It makes perfect sense for Bibi.My question is about a time in the Palestinian history as it actually enfolded in which Arabs/Palestinians could show their good will to pursue peace and prosperity along with Israelis as an independent state — neomac
This is actually the real tragedy here. Because if it would have been another administration, then yes, naturally we would have had the war... but perhaps no ICJ ruling. No Israeli Cabinet members celebrating on a conference how they will put up new settlements in Gaza and no talk of 'voluntary' moving of Palestinians from Gaza. That would be just the "ordinary" political rhetoric going around in Israel which we wouldn't have to take seriously.October 7th was the first realistic chance they had to go full-on genocide. They couldn't have done that under the gaze of the rest of the world without a really good bit of provocation. And they got it. — bert1

Bibi and the Israeli leadership understands that for now they will have the support of those that will support them, but that can change if some "final solution" type razing to the ground is implemented. One thing is rhetoric, another thing is implementin strategies that the Roman Army or the Soviet Army in Afghanistan implemented. They do understand that in the prison camp called Gaza, people don't have anywhere to go in the end. Yet you have a 300 000 strong force, which the majority is land forces. Gaza is small: it's 40 kilometers wide and only 6 kilometers deep. Yes, even 100 000 troops are a large force on that kind of area.
You can go literally check every building and shed there and then have the forces quite close. With a force of 100 000 you have basically one soldier watching over 20 Palestinians. Naturally it doesn't go like this, but it just shows the contrast here. (For example to Ukraine).
Because at some death toll that support that people have for Israelis will turn if the death toll of Palestinians goes very much up. — ssu
They naturally wanted independence, like was promised to them, but that came then after some lost uprisings and WW2. Needless to say they weren't consulted.I was referring to the kind of grievances the Arabs/Palestinians were voicing against the British since the dissolution of the Ottoman Empire. — neomac
Of course! Don't set up Mandates and colonies in the first place, but simply let the prior Ottoman provinces be independent. Like ummm.... Finland and the Baltic States and Poland after Russia lost them. Finland hadn't been independent prior. But you think we would have liked to be then under the Mandate of some other country or Sweden?was there any better time in which Arabs/Palestinians could show their good will to pursue peace and prosperity than at the end of the British mandate? — neomac
German militarism didn't end by a decree by the Allies. It died because of a persistent drive by West German officials to create a new Citizen-soldier army (Bundeswehr) and simply because the people saw what an epic fail it all had been. In fact the East German army represented far more the older Wehrmacht because they simply declared that they hadn't anything to do with Nazism.Prussia was abolished in 1947, deemed a "bearer of militarism and reaction" by the Allies. Could this be genocide? Genocide of the focal point of German militarism? — BitconnectCarlos
Umm... that's a school math book. Have you even studied a math course in the University? They are a bit different.Have you not read a single math book? If you read any math book, it will have Exercises and Examples after or in the middle of a chapter. The answers for the Exercises will be either at the back of the book, or as a separate Answer Book that you must acquire, if you needed it. — Corvus
What answer book?Math and Science pursues the answers in the answer book. — Corvus
It's usually the other way around: those people who think some culture is so wicked that it deserves to be destroyed... deserve to be destroyed themselves, or at least contained so not to spread their vitriol.Do you think a culture can ever be so wicked that it deserves to be destroyed? — BitconnectCarlos

I think you got it a bit wrong. Those who are obsessed about truth or falsity are mathematicians. Even if they sometimes have different axiomatic systems, then it's about right or wrong in that formal system.In Philosophy, they tend to analyse concepts and propositions for truth or falsity. That's what they do. End of the story.
But maybe the mathematicians and scientists do things differently — Corvus
Here's actually some advice to all non-mathematicians (from a non-mathematician):This isn't really the place to come to get people to agree with you. I think the math boys really did give you a good amount of feedback that would be hard to get anywhere else. So if you want to run something past us we'll tell you what we think and you can react accordingly. Most of what you say really irks a formally trained mathematician. — Mark Nyquist
That's actually a philosophical view in mathematics. And thus quite well fits a Philosophy Forum.You can build any sort of mathematics (if you wanna call it that) depending on what axioms you choose, the matter is whether it is useful to do and whether it matches at least something in reality. — Lionino
It's not a grievance: WW1 happened and the Ottoman Empire took part. It wasn't the only Empire to be cut into pieces, Austria-Hungary was also chopped and fell in bits too (Russia before that).Yet, I’m not sure what we have to do with such information. — neomac
What peace and prosperity was there to pursue when Mandate Palestine ended? The British had been fighting the Zionist terrorists already and the Zionists and the Palestinians were already engaged in hostilities. The end was just the Brits pulling out and leaving the locals to fight, which then invited neighbors to join in.And when it ended, did the Palestinians/Arabs pursue peace, stability and prosperity? — neomac

This is the strategic containment bullshit that just wrecks everything. At least Russia is one state and actually a real former empire, but what is then this Arab-Muslim entity to be confined? What just is wanted to be "contained"?And I’m certainly not underestimating or dodging the issue of American historical hegemonic ambitions: the very existence of Israel can be a way of containing regional powers to become more ambitious in a very strategic place for world balance, as much as an independent and military strong Ukraine (with which he US has no military alliance either) can support the containment of Russian imperial ambitions. — neomac
Which principle distinction? Of Bibi's reference to Amalek? Well, if Hamas was OK with 1967 border some time ago, perhaps the principle is different from Bibi's principles...If we are talking about civilian casualties, as far as I’ve understood, IDF can still play the card of proportionality of their military operation over collateral civilian casualties because they still can claim to follow the principle of distinction which Hamas doesn’t — neomac
Doomerism and alarmism has always been trendy. But note that it's not all exaggeration or nonsense, far from it.All those idiots protesting and pushing for nuclear disarmament for all those decades, screaming about how a nuclear war would be the “end of humanity.” Did it happen?? No! Just more doomerism/alarmism. — Mikie
if there are infinite whole numbers, and there are infinite decimals between 0 and 1, and there are infinite decimals between 0.1 and 0.12, and there are infinite decimals between 0.1111111 and 0.1111112, and (etc.) does that mean that there are infinitely infinite infinitely infinite infinitely infinite infinitely infinite infinitely… (etc.) infinities? — an-salad
As @180 Proof said, set theory goes like that. And since you gave in the example of just rational numbers (0,1111111 and 0,1111112,..) then this is equivalent to the infinity of natural numbers, a countable infinity. With real numbers we get into the more interesting questions.Georg Cantor thought so ... — 180 Proof
One reason, which should be trendy, old white European men with moustaches:If all those countries would just opt for peace, stability and prosperity in the region with good relations around to the present clusterfuck, why did they end up in this clusterfuck in the first place? — neomac


It is as interesting question like as why is US treating Israel so differently than any other of it's allies. (No wait, Israel isn't actually an ally of the US, meaning there is no actual defense treaty, hence Israel doesn't have to come to the aid of the US.)Indeed, why would Iran even care about the fate of Palestinians? — neomac
Trump's Abraham records was basically an attempt to bribe the countries in normalizing relations with Israel and simply to sideline the troublesome question of the Palestinians. This was indeed the worry of Hamas, and it thus went with the Al-Aqsa Flood operation, something that likely had been planned for years. I think it came as a surprise to Iran what Hamas did.Israel and Saudi Arabia were trying to overcome historical conflicts and that might have favoured peace, stability and prosperity, but Hamas and Iranians (at least) messed it up because not convenient to them. — neomac
Actually, you can understand it. And the more you understand it, the less hopeful you are of a negotiated peace deal.I’m afraid the is no recipe to get out of this mess, which nobody fully understand or dominate. — neomac
I feel the same way. What would be the reason why a two state solution would be reached? Perhaps that Bibi really fucks up and we aren't going to be talking about tens of thousands of killed Palestinians, but perhaps a hundred thousand killed. Or two hundred thousand. When does Israel loose the "beacon of democracy" role in the eyes of Americans? Americans don't like what is happening in Gaza, yet how about when it's even worse? And how after that will gentile Americans and Europeans feel towards Jews in general when Israel is in the international arena like white South Africa? Then some Benny Gantz has to do something to improve the image after "Mr. Security" Bibi Netanyahu.I find it very hard to be optimistic about it, though. — neomac
(See Hamas says October 7 attack was a ‘necessary step’, admits to ‘some faults’)The group said that avoiding harming civilians “is a religious and moral commitment” by fighters of Hamas’s armed wing, the Qassam Brigades. “If there was any case of targeting civilians; it happened accidentally and in the course of the confrontation with the occupation forces,” read the report.
It added that “maybe some faults happened” during the attack “due to the rapid collapse of the Israeli security and military system, and the chaos caused along the areas near Gaza.
Actually the last war between the Nordic states happened between Sweden and Norway in 1814, which was the last war Sweden has fought (and actually was victorious). And just think what needed to happen in Europe for Europeans to want integrate and be so peaceful. We had to have WW1 and WW2 where millions of died.Maybe states can’t easily skip historical stages: Nordic countries evolved to nation-state status through all the bloody wars of the Middle Ages. — neomac
Yeah right, seems to be then a lot of military infrastructure in Gaza, when now half of the buildings have already "contained military infrastructure":Israel does not bomb neighborhoods because the residents are sympathetic to Hamas; it bombs them because they contain military infrastructure. — BitconnectCarlos
(Times of Israel, Jan 1st 2024) Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s two senior far-right partners endorsed the rebuilding of settlements in the Gaza Strip and the encouraging of “voluntary emigration” of Palestinians on Monday, while hawkish opposition MK Avigdor Liberman called for Israel to reoccupy southern Lebanon.
Speaking during their parties’ respective faction meetings in the Knesset, National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir and Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich presented the migration of Palestinian civilians as a solution to the long-running conflict and as a prerequisite for securing the stability necessary to allow residents of southern Israel to return to their homes.
The war presents an “opportunity to concentrate on encouraging the migration of the residents of Gaza,” Ben Gvir told reporters and members of his far-right Otzma Yehudit party, calling such a policy “a correct, just, moral and humane solution.”
“We cannot withdraw from any territory we are in in the Gaza Strip. Not only do I not rule out Jewish settlement there, I believe it is also an important thing,” he said.
The “correct solution” to the ongoing Israeli-Palestinian conflict is “to encourage the voluntary migration of Gaza’s residents to countries that will agree to take in the refugees,” Smotrich told members of his Religious Zionism party, predicting that “Israel will permanently control the territory of the Gaza Strip,” including through the establishment of settlements.
(Times of Israel, 3rd January 2024) The “voluntary” resettlement of Palestinians from Gaza is slowly becoming a key official policy of the government, with a senior official saying that Israel has held talks with several countries for their potential absorption.
Zman Israel, The Times of Israel’s Hebrew sister site, has learned that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s coalition is conducting secret contacts for accepting thousands of immigrants from Gaza with Congo, in addition to other nations.
“Congo will be willing to take in migrants, and we’re in talks with others,” a senior source in the security cabinet said.
Exactly. And let's look how difficult it is even them to take a peace process seriously. Both sides have actually genuinely thought about peace when there has been the fear of losing their main backers: PLO chose to seek the peace process after Arafat had angered the Gulf States by backing Saddam Hussein in his invasion of Kuwait. Israel on the other hand thought that after the Cold War had ended and the Soviet Union dissolved, the US wouldn't need it around anymore so it took quite seriously the peace proposals and the Madrid process started by the US. Only afterwards Bibi understood that American Evangelists are diehard supporters of Israel, hence he really can go for greater Israel because no American politician will ever stand against him and the Zionist cause (because of the crazy religious people waiting for the rupture, supporting Israel isn't a foreign policy issue, it's a faith issue).This is entirely true and which is why a staggered approach is necessary. What's particularly troublesome is, is that neither party can be trusted (the IDF least of all) to adhere to any ceasefire. So the conditions for building trust while you negotiate all the various points aren't there and that way you'll never reach the end goal. — Benkei
This attitude just shows how fucked up this is.Besides Israel bears a big weight on its shoulder given its geopolitical environment: being in a very strategic position between the mediterranean and the Middle East, and in potential competition with 3 hegemonic powers Turkey (cradle of the Ottoman empire), Iran (cradle of Persian empire), Saudi Arabia (cradle of the Islamic empire). — neomac
Ungrateful? I think here it's necessary just to compare the US and Europe and the cooperation what has be produced to how the US acts on other continents and how the cooperation with other countries has gone.Yes. Isolationism has been a goal of the US conservatives for a long time now. We're tired of transplanting our ideals of democracy to ungrateful foreign lands. — magritte
Actually, likely no. What I think that a Trump administration will eagerly promote is simply that "Europeans should defend themselves Europe more and not totally rely on the US" and that US will take a more passive role. That's the most likely outcome. You see, Trump's tweets and Trump's rhetoric is a bit different what actually the Trump administration will end up doing. Trump is an orator, not a leader. And foreign policy is a bigger process than a speech or a remark from the POTUS.The MRGA crowd, sorry, I meant MAGA will likely sweep the elections here. Trump will gain dictatorial powers and align us with the Kremlin. This might prevent a world war but at a very high cost (we're sorry, Ukraine). — magritte
Was Putin also ready to hold hands with Zelenskyi and sing Kumbayah? :snicker:Yes denazification and Russian-speacking population, and blah blah blah from Putin were cosmetic, political seasoning. But such Russian propaganda arguments to dupe the masses were the ones you cared so much to regurgitate in this thread. Just neutrality was fine for Putin to have peace, go figure. — neomac
And I've stated from the start that then fight as the US did in Iraq. Do understand that killing a lot of civilians will refute and squash any victory you get from killing the terrorists. Stop with the genocidal rhetoric. The US would at the same time fight Sunni fighters and then take care of the civilian population. The saddest thing is that it actually beat the Al Qaeda, but then went away.The purpose is to draw world sympathy away from the State of Israel and to direct sympathy to the Palestinian people who endure but still support Hamas. — magritte
Do not even attempt to find any logic in the racist/anti-racist narrative. There isn't any. For example being "white" is as changing as ever.Some of these groups are nationalities, others are religions -- can one not question an ideology? Or should we just immediately accept it if it's a religion? I'm wary of any religion which seeks to convert the world to its creed. — BitconnectCarlos
Likely he isn't. But just as he knows how to play the game with the Americans, so can he do with the religious fanatics. Yet once the administration itself depends on the participation of smaller parties, then you get into the bind that Bibi is in now.I'm no expert on Israeli politics, but Netanyahu, while certainly right wing, does not strike me as a religious extremist. I would question his level of observance/religious outlook and I do not group him in with e.g Kach although I understand the relationship between the two groups is nuanced and do share some common goals. — BitconnectCarlos
Stop here.I dislike comparisons between the IRA conflict with Britain and the Israel-Palestine conflict. When 1200 are murdered I'm fine with shelling. I'm fine with air strikes.
Catholics and Protestants are the same religion. — BitconnectCarlos

I would get your point if this would be about something that has happened some time ago. Unfortunately the war is going on right now. It isn't at all abstract now, hasn't been abstract for a long time. This isn't just a thing with the Palestinian diaspora, this is a thing with those people now there. That it has gone for 75 years is the sad part. This problem ought to have solved when the Cold War was over, but it didn't.So, that Palestine this or that, or that Palestinians this or that, then, is of abstract interest now. And a failure to rigorously account for any significance now allows for people now to claim benefit for an offense committed against someone else long ago, that might not even have been an offense, was not committed against them, and that they use and ground and warrant - their excuse - to murder without scruple or responsibility for their actions. This being in part what i call above a kind of professional victimhood. — tim wood
And it's not helpful that this issue becomes part of the moronic culture war, and isn't being able to be talked as an foreign policy issue.I see it as an early sign of things to come especially if this remains unchecked. — BitconnectCarlos
Just shows how absolutely crazy these "anti-racism" racists are. But naturally there's no logic to these stupidities, it is only a matter of convenience what the present hated or feared group is by the haters, be they the Jews, the Irish, the Muslims, the Japanese, the Chinese, whoever and whatever.DEI has ignored Jews for decades, portraying them as white oppressors. — BitconnectCarlos
That is true. And that makes my point that religious zealots have hijacked the situation on both sides. I still would think that the majority of people would be OK if there would negotiated two-state solution and then actual peace. But that majority is silenced and naturally takes the side.Many if not most of the kibbutzim that Hamas attacked on 10/7 were some of the most left-leaning, pro-integrationist settlements in Israel. They would employ Palestinians, drive them to hospitals, etc. It was those Palestinians who gave Hamas the intel it needed to successfully attack. And we wonder why people like Ben Gvir rise to power. — BitconnectCarlos
No. The success of the October 7th attacks lies on the false assumption that a high tech wall can make Israel safe. The falsehood was here that the wall was intended for minor breakthrough attempts, not a large-scale well planned operation similar to a military operation. The wall was simply not built for that. They simply didn't anticipate this kind of attack. Yet likely Hamas had been for years thinking of this while digging all those tunnels.It was those Palestinians who gave Hamas the intel it needed to successfully attack. — BitconnectCarlos
That rise only shows the failure of "Mr. Security", prime minister Netanyahu. Because to assume that people like Ben Gvir will fix the problem is simply delusional. (Far more worse than thinking that Trump is the God-Emperor saviour for the US.) As if the "voluntary removal" of 2 million Palestinians and the building of new settlements in a Palestinian free-Gaza (forgot what the Jewish name for the place is) will be the success story you can dance about. Nope, this is just going to be one disaster among the many disasters that the Jewish people have endured. And so for the Palestinians too.And we wonder why people like Ben Gvir rise to power. — BitconnectCarlos
Being a citizen of a country that survived WW2 and is seen as being part of the Axis (even if we fought the Germans later), you really should think twice when countries have to do "the honorable work of rebuilding and self-rehabilitiation, with appropriate rewards at every step."But for sheer possibility, let's look at the post war history of the Axis powers of WWII. They had defeat forced upon them and then they undertook the honorable work of rebuilding and self-rehabilitation, with appropriate rewards at every step. And they have done pretty well. Not a possibility for the Palestinians? Who says? — tim wood
Bibi needs his coalition partners, who actually are quite close to Meir Kahane. That's the problem here. They really are former terrorists... or terrorists that got free and to positions to further their agenda now.Or is Netanyahu actually Meir Kahane in disguise, back from the dead? — BitconnectCarlos
So what's your argument for the reason of Indonesia and Malesia wanting to attack Israel? :snicker:It very well can be; it depends on the scale. Are we talking just the IDF vs Hamas? Then obviously no. But what if it's Israel versus the muslim world/those who strive to spread Islam? Then it does start to look a bit like that. — BitconnectCarlos
Survival of the Palestinians in Gaza shouldn't be taken as a given!Israel's survival should not be taken as a given. — BitconnectCarlos
Personally I don't have anything against Jews or Israeli Jews. I've met few, they were very smart people and actually didn't like how politics were going in their country, but naturally were very patriotic. Yes, the truth is that those lunatics dancing around in meetings and purposing new settlements in Gaza with the "voluntary removal" of Palestinians won't create empathy for the Jewish cause.Regarding anti-semitism, the scale of it is shocking if you look at the stats. Cultural factors have me worried as well. Jews are the canary in the coal mine. — BitconnectCarlos
Ability to do something is important also. And naturally with the Palestinians, the PA has been quite well sidelined and the message hammered to the Palestinians that they are going to be pushed out (in Gaza now, but perhaps in the West Bank later too), so only way is to fight.Apparently, that doesn't apply to Palestinians, in any case though, so ... oh well. — AmadeusD
It's telling how Israel has changed.This has been my point for nearly a decade because of what Likud stands for and Herut before that. This is just accelerating due to the 7 October attack and now obvious but it's been the game plan for them for decades now. — Benkei
Yes. I would add that this is the result when both sides, actually, approach the issue really from a religious position with religious determination. For Hamas the Palestinians killed are martyrs, for the religious right in Israel this war is an opportunity, which you can celebrate by dancing.I mean Israel has now crossed the Rubicon. In the future even if they are able to have good relations with their neighbours, they will always be vulnerable to terrorist attacks. Because their action will spawn many anti-Israel terrorists. — Punshhh
I would emphasis the importance of history of a society here, which defines also government culture. Past history is something that has made us what we are now and the political situation in the present.Is there a correct size for government to be?
How would you determine the right size? By population? By complexity? By economy? — Vera Mont
This one is simple: to have recognition from it's peers, other sovereign states.More specifically:
What is the minimum function and authority that a national government must have? — Vera Mont
More difficult. Perhaps I'd resort to something like Max Weber and say if the citizens are happy with the control, then it's OK.What is the maximum it should be allowed to have? — Vera Mont
That optimality depends quite a lot of the history of the country, the governance culture, the geostrategic situation of the country. Things like that. Not an easy issue to optimize.What is the optimal scope and power and responsibility for an effective government? — Vera Mont
