• Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank
    When people are calling the actions of the Israeli government genocide, they are not just referring to the indiscriminate bombing and collective punishment that is going on in Gaza right now.

    They are referring to decades of Israeli policy which has already termed been by human rights organisations, UN legal bodies and even the Israelis themselves (Haaretz and B'Tselem, for example) to be ethnic cleansing and apartheid, among a whole slew of other human rights violations.

    When Israeli politicians today are stating outright that they wish to raze Gaza to the ground together with all its inhabitants, it appears they have started to 'say the quiet part out loud'.

    There is something rotten in the state of Israel. It's clear for all to see, except for people who cling to the delusion that Israel is a normal state and hand-wave dozens, probably hundreds of UN resolutions and human rights reports.

    Even the Israelis themselves see it. They are protesting for Netanyahu to step down as we speak. Many of them have long understood that staying on this path will not provide Israel with security, and will instead facilitate its demise. They want Israel to be on the right side of history.
  • Ukraine Crisis
    A lot of talk on the side of the West about the war in Ukraine having reached a stalemate, and Zelensky being pressured into talks with the Russians.

    Somewhat odd that considering the deteriorating situation for Ukraine it still seems to be Zelensky that is the obstacle for negotiations.

    Though, in some sense I cannot blame him. He was after all promised Western support to fight the Russians, and that support has clearly come up short to achieve what was promised, or at least what was suggested as the goal: Ukraine regaining the territory it has lost during the 2022 invasion, and even retaking Crimea.

    Or perhaps Zelensky is foreseeing that negotiations will not go anywhere, since interests on both sides are diametrically opposed.

    Russia will not accept any agreement in which Ukraine enters NATO, and the West/Ukraine is unlikely to accept any agreement in which Ukraine doesn't enter NATO.

    The same is roughly true for the issue of territory, though I think in the case of a Western concession vis-á-vis NATO membership, there's some chance that Russia will return territory to Ukraine.

    But if negotiations indeed turn out to be impossible, I wonder how the war will proceed. Perhaps it will turn into a frozen conflict. While Mearsheimer has in the past suggested that he believes Russia may make at least one more push for a substantial amount of territory, in my eyes Russia does not look particularly interested in launching any real offensives.

    The United States' international credibility is rapidly tanking due to its stance in the Israel-Gaza war, while the BRICS (with Russia taking a leading role) are looking to present themselves as the reasonable, mediating party.

    With the Middle-East conflict looking to take up more of the West's (and especially the United States') military capacity, there is less pressure on Russia in the Ukraine war.

    In other words, while the Middle-East conflict might present an opportunity for Russia to tighten the screws and press the issue in Ukraine, this does not seem to be in line with the image they are presenting of themselves in the wider international context, and this might be enough for the former not to take place.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank
    I have heard of them, and I know a little bit about the US Israel lobby, but it has never been entirely clear to me what the United States gets in return for billions of dollars in yearly 'financial aid' and unconditional military support.

    Election politics would be a decent explanation, were it not for the fact that this policy is basically bipartisan and criticism by politicians from either side never amounts to any action.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank
    Nothing says "moral high ground" like weeks of indiscriminate bombing, targetting civilians, wounded and medical personnel alike.

    Al-Shifa: Israel admits airstrike on ambulance near hospital

    The blatant disregard for humanity is appalling.

    What's perhaps worse is the complete inability of the Biden White House to put any meaningful pressure on Israel to stop its abhorrent practice. It seems content with virtue-signaling rhetoric while in fact doing absolutely nothing.

    One cannot help but wonder what kind of leverage the Israel lobby has for this to be the case.

    Or is it simply election politics?
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank
    This is a pointless way of discussing the issue.

    Moral acts are done by moral actors. Abstractions like Allies / Axis are not moral actors.

    But if we ignore that, looking for a moral high ground in something as awful as war is pointless too. Both sides participated in war crimes and the industrialized killing of millions. Both sides were irredeemable from any moral point of view.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank
    Ok, if that is the case, then both sides can be considered "genocidal" in their intentions.schopenhauer1

    Sure, but I'm not sure if being equated to a terrorist organisation is going to help the Israeli government's case.

    But if we start throwing around terms that matter because of their intent, ...schopenhauer1

    Israel has a history of ethnic cleansing, apartheid and other human rights violations that skirt the lines of genocide. We see the intent put into practice on a large scale.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank
    it makes a huge difference, because it's evidence of the claim.flannel jesus

    Evidence? You mean like Israeli politicians admitting intent, and decades of Israeli policy we can fall back on?

    It's an open and shut case.
  • People are starving, dying, and we eat, drink and are making merry
    You now don't know what a lie is. Super. I can't be sure there are other minds than mine either. This isn't a profound observation. It's just nonsense.Hanover

    If you're going to argue a moral obligation exists to tell the truth, you had better be able to delineate exactly what truth is. And obviously you can't - no one can.

    That's not nonsense. That's a massive hole in your argument which you're trying to disguise by posturing and indignation. Seen it all before.

    Your sentence could end with the words "to others," meaning how you treat others matters for ethical analysis, including whether you watch them suffer while you stand idly by.Hanover

    This is an inaccurate representation of cause and effect.

    When a man drowns, it is not the uninvolved person who remains uninvolved that made him drown.

    You said there is no ethical problem with watching a child get raped while eating a bowl of popcorn. If you do that from time to time, you would only be ethically bankrupt if that was unethical, but you've told me it's not.Hanover

    Yet here you are, doing the equivalent of eating popcorn while people are starving.

    You've yet to give me any reasoning for why that would be ok, other than alluding to there being some fundamental difference which you have yet to present.

    Also, what is with the preoccupation with children being harmed? Having to resort to extremes doesn't speak in favor of your argument, and it's unsavory.

    Like I said, maintain some class. It's possible for people to disagree and remain civil.

    It has to do with providing public safety.Hanover

    Oh?

    The truth is I don't think you think that, which means I don't take your position seriously. It's nonsense.Hanover

    I also don't believe you don't care if your community has law enforcement.Hanover

    Your arguments aren't persuasive, believable, or even intriguing.Hanover

    Yet here you are.

    The truth is, I think you're trying to find excuses not to deal with the problems in your reasoning as I have pointed them out, and you are now clutching at straws.

    Customs arise from what works in a society.Vera Mont

    Sure. I don't see how that is remotely connected to questions about morality, though.

    People have silly ideas about what makes their society 'work' all the time.

    Obligation can never extend beyond ability.Vera Mont

    That sounds reasonable on the surface, but I think people take up responsibilities that they cannot fulfill all the time. Taking up responsibilities (and thus moral obligations) that exceed one's ability is just a terribly unwise thing to do.

    Imagine I were to find a job as a lifeguard, but I myself am unable to swim. Obviously I have taken upon myself a moral obligation to save people from drowning, yet fulfilling it is something I can never do.

    Expressing any opinion about right and good is automatically bad and dishonest.Vera Mont

    Well no, that's obviously not what I meant.

    My problem is when people put forward standards for moral behavior with which they judge others, while simultaneously refusing to walk the talk themselves. That's hypocritical, and usually little more than empty virtue-signaling, ergo stroking of the ego.

    What a complete stinker Plato must have been!Vera Mont

    I like Plato. :blush:
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank
    Yet they have (large) increase in population, so it’s a highly unnsuccessful one?schopenhauer1

    I don't see how that makes any difference.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank
    'Ethnic cleansing' seems more apt than genocide.bert1

    It is probably both.

    Israeli policies in Gaza and the West Bank are deliberately put in place to make life impossible for the Palestinians living there.

    It's not hard to see how purposefully creating terrible living conditions can be seen as an active attempt to destroy a population, prevent births and be a form of physical and psychological torture.

    It also doesn't help that there are plenty of Israeli politicians blatantly stating that destroying the Palestinians is what they intend to do.

    I'd like to draw attention to the fact that Netanyahu called the Palestinians 'Amalekites' in a speech some days ago.

    A quick reminder of who the Amalekites were:

    Now go and smite Amalek, and utterly destroy all that they have, and spare them not; but slay both man and woman, infant and suckling, ox and sheep, camel and ass. — 1 Samuel 15:3

    And he took Agag the king of the Amalekites alive, and utterly destroyed all the people with the edge of the sword. — 1 Samuel 15:8
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank
    Biden administration thinks Netanyahu may not last politically

    More news articles are appearing about the relationship between Netanyahu and the Biden administration.

    If the administration can put its foot down and pressure Netanyahu into resiging, that would be a big step in the right direction - probably enough to prevent an escalation of the conflict. Perhaps it would be enough to cause a shift in Israeli politics.

    Netanyahu is politically finished anyway, and the question is whether he leaves now or after the conflict escalates and the massive war that would ensue.

    A US administration pressuring what is essentially regime change in Israel is unheard of though (is it?), and the domestic pressure on the administration will be enormous. But we're living in unprecedented times so who knows?
  • People are starving, dying, and we eat, drink and are making merry
    You have no moral obligation to me to tell the truth?Hanover

    Given the limited access people have to 'the truth', what would such a moral obligation even look like? Does answering "I don't know" to every question fulfill the obligation? It would be truthful.

    But keep in mind that 'telling the truth' is an action one undertakes, and as I said one bears responsibility for their own actions.

    If you see no difference between me sitting on a chair eating popcorn while watching a child slowly die from a fall off a swing and me not flying to Ethiopia to make a meal for a starving child in terms of ethical analysis, then I can't help you.Hanover

    There's a difference. It's just not a relevant one.

    I also don't think anyone within your community will find your response to watching the baby slowly die very persusive when you tell them they are just as bad as you are because they haven't solved the world hunger problem. The reason they will think you are an unethical person is because you would be, [...]Hanover

    I don't see how people's opinions are all that relevant to a discussion about morality. People used to believe witch hunts were moral.

    I'm also not sure why you are so keen on making this personal. The question isn't about what I would do, but about how I would judge someone who chooses not to get involved.

    Unless the moral obligation is does not include the requirement we must "make every effort to fulfill them."Hanover

    Sure. That's the point of a moral obligation. Shouldn't I make every effort to fulfill your supposed moral obligation of having to save the drowning man?

    Or do I get to choose how much effort I put in, and am I free to choose no effort at all?

    The rule that I must give to charity can be qualified howerver we determine that moral rule to be, which might be 10%, it might be a certain percentage of discretionary income, it might be limited to helping others after other duties (including those to one's self) are fulfilled.Hanover

    "Morality is whatever we want it to be." - I'm not convinced.

    Your approach to append an impossible standard on the rule is what makes it impossible, ...Hanover

    The impossible standard is inherent to the moral obligation(s) you're proposing. That's what I am objecting to.

    Your proposed solution is cherry-picking. Not very convincing either.

    Your system does provide you a convenient way to absolve yourself of all societal responsiblity and to live as selfishly as possible, so it does have that advantage, ...Hanover

    Why would that be an advantage?

    It's rather typical that you've been trying to frame me as being selfish when nothing we've discussed has anything to do with how I conduct myself.

    Maintain a bit of class. Assuming the other side is morally bankrupt is intellectual poverty.

    Since you don't think you have a duty to interfere in a child rapist's activities in the bathroom stall next to you, does anyone other than that child's parents have that right? I mean, why should society provide police and prosecutors to interfere in such conduct and impose upon themselves the rights and duties associated with that?Hanover

    Individuals who join the police force accept the responsibility that comes with that. So I'd say they can no longer choose not to get involved.

    Why society should provide police forces and prosecutors? Your guess is as good as mine. I don't really care either way.
  • People are starving, dying, and we eat, drink and are making merry
    What is your basis for this rule you just made up?Hanover

    People are responsible for their actions, so they are responsible for their children, so they have moral obligations towards their children.

    No you didn't. You just stated people don't have duties outside their own children, which is just a restatement of your thesis, not a basis for your position.Hanover

    I believe people have a right not to get involved, because without such a right a system of morality simply cannot make sense.

    That I can't do everything doesn't mean I am free to do nothing.Hanover

    The ethic you're advancing, which is that we must do everything we can to eliminate all suffering to the greatest extent humanely possible, is not an ethic I subscribe to, nor one that anyone I know does. That is to say, you're presenting a strawman.Hanover

    You believe it is unacceptable to let a drowning man drown. Why do you believe it is acceptable to let people in the third world starve?

    This cherry-picking is inherent to your view. You find inaction in one instance abhorrent, and don't bat an eye at the second. It's inconsistent, and your indignation hypocritical.

    My view accounts for this, by allowing one to freely choose what acts of charity one does and doesn't get involved in.

    Charity is a free and selfless act. A moral obligation is not.

    If I am coerced to tell the truth, I am not ethical, even though it was my obligation.Hanover

    I'm assuming you meant 'unethical'?

    The difference between moral obligation and legal obligation is precisely that the former is not coerced and the latter is.Vera Mont

    I disagree.

    As I said to Hanover, there is something at stake when we speak of moral obligations: one's moral integrity. To many people that matters a great deal, otherwise we wouldn't be having this conversation.

    The threat is clearly there - the threat of being judged an immoral person.

    In case one's moral system is derived from religion, the threat is even more overt - the threat of divine punishment.

    Moral obligation is part of the unwritten social contract, ...Vera Mont

    In that case 'moral obligation' would be little more than a fancy term for social custom, to make it sound more authoritative.

    Personally, I think social customs tell us very little about morality.

    As to whether that obligation extends to people other than one's own family, community or nation, that is a matter of individual world-view.Vera Mont

    Well, no.

    One may believe they have all sorts of moral obligations to their nation, or even the entire world. But this is nonsensical, because such obligations one cannot fulfill.

    People who claim they have moral obligations and subsequently are not making every effort to fulfill them are just fooling themselves, in my opinion.

    Maybe it makes them feel good about themselves to claim they have such lofty ambitions towards the Good, but I view it as empty virtue-signaling. Even worse when they use such so-called "obligations" to judge others.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank
    If the logic in that sentence sounds threatening to you, then draw your conclusions, I suppose. It's the logic being forwarded by the Israeli government and its supporters.

    I'm merely drawing attention to the fact that such rhetoric can easily be turned around to justify the killing of Israeli civilians.
  • People are starving, dying, and we eat, drink and are making merry
    What is it about parental duty that makes it subject to a differing sort of analysis than neighborly duty?Hanover

    One carries responsibility for their child. Not for their neighbor, at least not by default.

    And the same towards one's duties towards other children.Hanover

    Other children are not one's responsibility, unless one has voluntarily taken up responsibility to care for them.

    In other words, voluntarily taking up responsibilities might incur moral obligations.

    My question is whether you have a moral duty to do anything at all when you hear a child being raped in the bathroom stall next to you. Yes or no?Hanover

    No. It might be a moral good, but it is not a moral obligation. I have already given my objections for why I believe that is.

    You are currently aware that many people are suffering in the world, yet you choose inaction towards the vast majority of them. Now you point at a specific instance of suffering and claim that inaction is impermissible. I don't see the basis for it. It seems hypocritical.

    This does not draw a distinction between charity and moral obligation. This draws a distinction between voluntary and coerced.

    If I perform an ethical act, like telling the truth, that act is ethical if it is "voluntary," but the opposite of voluntary is "coerced." The opposite of coerced is discretionary. So, if I tell the truth with a gun to my head and under such duress that it can be said that I have been relinquished of my free will, so much so that the act is no longer something you will judge me moral or not, then I cannot be said to be moral when I told the truth. The opposite holds true as well, meaning if I lie under the same sort of duress, I would be morally excused from that conduct because it was not the result of my free will.

    That I am "obligated" to do something does not mean I have been coerced into doing it. I am obligated to stop at stop signs, but maybe sometimes I don't. When I don't, it has nothing to do with my being coerced to run the stop sign. It might just be that sometimes I choose to be disobedient. The point being, I have the discretion to run the stop sign or not, but I am obligated to stop there, but when I do stop, it is not the result from a loss of free will coercing me to do as I must.

    As it pertains to morality, I am morally obligated to tell the truth. That is what I must do to be a moral person. It is no coincidence that the ten commandments are commandments, meaning they are obligatory. They are not general guidelines to think about. Kant refers to his standard as the catagorical imparitive. That is, it is what must be done. This is not to say you lack the ability and discretion to do otherwise. In fact, the ability to do otherwise is what makes matters subject to ethical evaluation. If I had no ability but to tell the truth, then I would not be ethical when I told the truth. I'd just be a machine.
    Hanover

    Obligation clearly implies coercion - the threat is that of not being an ethical person, which to a lot of people matters a great deal.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank


    A lot of people busying this type of rhetoric now. Making comparisons to WW2, stating that there is no limit to the amount of civilian deaths that should be accepted, etc.

    What this implies is that the conflict in Gaza should be fought according to the same principles WW2 was fought: total war.

    I'm sure these lowbrow demagogues think that sounds like an awful 'cool' thing to say - at least while they feel like they're in control.

    I wonder how they'll react when other actors in the region get involved in this conflict and start operating on the same principles.
  • People are starving, dying, and we eat, drink and are making merry
    Your objection was that there was no obligation to help others because I couldn't quantify the extent of that obligation.Hanover

    I simply asked you to quantify the obligation, which you couldn't. Your defense was, 'just because I cannot quantify it, doesn't mean it's not a moral obligation'. Well, if you cannot quantify what you consider to be moral obligations, then I cannot take them seriously.

    You now claim there will be no difficulty in quantifying one's obligations to one's own children because, well, that's just easily done.Hanover

    I never said it was easily done, but in the case of parenthood I think it's quite realistic.

    My response is that it is no harder or easier to quantify one's obligations to one's own children as it is to others.Hanover

    I disagree. Since one's children are born of one's own actions, one is responsible for them. Responsibility, in my view, is a critical component for moral obligations, I'd say almost obviously so.

    Since you've now said I do have an obligation to my own children, I suppose I'm immoral because right this second, I'm doing nothing for them.Hanover

    I wouldn't suppose that. It's quite possible for one to do their moral duties in regards to their children without being occupied 100% of the time.

    I highly doubt it would be possible for one to fulfill their moral duties to all children without being occupied 100% of the time. In fact, it's clearly impossible to fulfill such a supposed moral duty.

    I simply come up with what I think is reasonable for the respective children.Hanover

    Yes, as does everyone. But what you think is reasonable is not a basis for a moral obligation, assuming you mean with moral obligation something along the lines of 'something everybody should always adhere to'.

    You may wish to say that the person who passes by the drowning child without simply bending down to lift him up is ethically neutral, but I don't. I think that person sucks as a human being and is unethical. I recall a case where a man heard a child being raped in the bathroom stall next to him and insisted he was under no duty to do anything at all. Maybe you would see a horrible wreck on an otherwise deserted road and feel no obligation to make an emergency call and then drive home and snuggle up in your bed without any worry about your ethical decision. If that is you, and I really doubt it is, then you are an unethical person.Hanover

    What this seems to imply is that awareness of some perceived harm produces a moral duty to alleviate said harm. This produces once again a supposed moral duty that's impossible to fulfill.

    You are aware of a lot of harm being done right now, so why aren't you doing your moral duty? Every moment that goes by, you are the person who is passing the drowning child and refusing to undertake the actions required to stop them from drowning.

    All you're doing is pointing at a specific instance of refusing to get involved and calling it unethical, when in fact one is doing the exact same thing in less obvious ways.

    Perhaps a fair question one could ask the person who refuses to do good when it seems 'easy' is why one would pass up on such a great opportunity to do a good deed.

    The best I can discern from what you've written is that you want to limit communal concern to the greatest extent possible and insist that each family unit is entirely responsible for their existence without any expectation from anyone not within their direct blood line. It has this hyper-tribal Randian feel to it, but it's too unworkable to be taken seriously.Hanover

    I guess you'll have to try harder then, because I see nothing in this paragraph that remotely connects to my views.


    Lastly, I'd like to mention a comment made earlier, which I believe gets at a crucial difference between charity and moral obligation:

    Arguing about charitable giving loses sight of the fact that by definition it is voluntary, that is free of moral obligation. If it was obligatory it wouldn't be a charity, it would be a tax.LuckyR

    When I undertake an act of charity, I do so out of a desire to do good. Not out of fear of being unethical.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank
    They started to use their propaganda to brainwash the people.javi2541997

    This propaganda is age-old. The problem for Israel is that no one is believing their bullshit anymore, and the world is now rallying against it and the United States.

    I've heard several analysts claim that unless a cease-fire is put into action, multiple actors are gearing up to join the war on Friday (a prayer day for Muslims). Among them Iran.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank
    4ZSRZJMA3RZU7VRVGZGHAX46Q4.jpg

    Wearing the symbol of victims of the holocaust while engaging in genocidal crimes against civilians in Gaza. Shameless and vomit-inducing.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank
    I'm willing to entertain the idea that Hamas is directly funded and operated by a secret branch of the Israeli government for obvious reasons.Merkwurdichliebe

    It's pretty much an accepted fact that the Netanyahu government at various points in time supported Hamas in order to disenfranchise the more moderate elements within Palestine.

    The Israeli newspaper Haaretz even calls it the 'Netanyahu-Hamas Alliance'.

    But I think this is a classic example of 'feeding the beast', only for it to turn on you. US and Israeli Middle-East policy is rampacked with examples like this.

    Islamic Jihad, the Taliban, Al-Qaeda - I could go on. There's scarcely an extremist group in the Middle-East that doesn't have Uncle Sam's greasy fingerprints all over it. Even modern-day Iran is a direct result of continuous divide & conquer strategy to keep the Persian Gulf weak (and thus easily influenced by the US for oil).

    The problem for Israel now is that much of the Middle-East seems to have caught on to this pattern. In fact, one could argue the whole world is catching on to this.
  • People are starving, dying, and we eat, drink and are making merry
    You seem to believe you have a moral obligation to save children. Well, there is no shortage of children in need. Why aren't you saving them right now? It seems to me you're neglecting your moral obligation/duty.

    Unless you're able to detail said obligations and duties, it follows that every moment you spend doing something else, you're neglecting them. I'm open to hearing why charity should be a moral obligation. By asking for details I'm trying to coax this thread into producing something worthy of discussion.

    Personally, I don't believe a moral obligation for charity exists. Pursuing charity as an obligation simply encourages behavior that I would call 'naive do-goodery' - actions with the right intention but lacking wisdom.

    That is, I have a moral obligation to care for the children I bring into this world, but because that obligation lacks a specific checklist doesn't allow me to walk away without effort.Hanover

    I'd agree with that, but the key word here is responsibility. One is responsible for bringing a child into this world, therefore moral obligations may follow from that, and I do believe we could come up with a pretty exhaustive checklist of what that obligation (parenthood) entails.

    To loop it back to my first point, we have limited the moral obligation of 'saving children' to 'saving one's own children' - already a lot more reasonable.

    None of this is to say that it cannot be moral to save children. If one is successful, then one has obviously done a good deed. It's the obligatory part that I take issue with.

    And I also believe people have a right to remain uninvolved, which ultimately means that there is no obligation to save a stranger from drowning, but why one would do that is another question.
  • People are starving, dying, and we eat, drink and are making merry
    That you can't pinpoint the precise amount you might be required to love your neighbor as yourself doesn't mean you are fine to avoid it.Hanover

    If one cannot pinpoint it (or at least give an exhaustive explanation), they have no business calling it a moral obligation. That was my point.

    A common idea running throughout this thread is that charity doesn't work, so why give it at all if all you're doing is temporarily postponing the inevitable. I'd just say that because we can't cure the problem is not a reason not to reduce the problem. If we can reduce a person's suffering on Monday only for him to die on Tuesday, I'd think we would be obligated to do that, especially considering how precious and sacred that Monday was, it being his last day.Hanover

    I would fundamentally disagree with calling that an obligation.

    A person has a right to remain uninvolved.

    If not, how come you are here writing posts on a philosophy forum rather than fulfilling your moral obligation of helping people who are suffering? There's no shortage of the latter.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank
    Israel is now bombing refugee camps several days in a row, and not even throwing up nonsense propaganda anymore to try and cover its tracks.

    Israeli airstrikes hit refugee camp for a second day

    Where Israel is going, there will be no coming back from.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank
    In what world is that irrelevant? :lol:

    Amidst all this hand-waving of genocide, I feel like I'm getting a real good look at some of TPF's denizens.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank
    Look at this shit:

    South into the Sinai: Will Israel Force Palestinians Out of Gaza? (Carnegie, 2023)

    Since the October 7 Hamas attacks, Israel has sustained an unprecedentedly brutal assault on the Gaza Strip. The Israeli government has stated that its aim is to eliminate Hamas and seems to be preparing for a full ground invasion. But it is becoming increasingly clear that the war is in pursuit of a second goal: the mass expulsion of Palestinians from the Gaza Strip. Israeli politicians and officials from the Israeli defense establishment have called for a second nakba and urged the military to flatten Gaza. Some suggest that Palestinians should flee Gaza through the Rafah border crossing with Egypt and seek refuge in the Sinai Peninsula, including former Brigadier General Amir Avivi and the former Israeli ambassador to the United States Danny Ayalon.

    Avivi and Ayalon insist that evacuating Palestinians out of Gaza is simply a humanitarian measure, protecting civilians while Israel conducts its military operations. But other reports suggest that Palestinians would be permanently resettled outside of Gaza, in an act of ethnic cleansing. On October 17, the Misgav Institute for National Security and Zionist Strategy—an Israeli think tank founded and led by former defense and security officials—published a paper urging the Israeli government to take advantage of the “unique and rare opportunity to evacuate the whole Gaza Strip,” and resettle Palestinians in Cairo with the assistance of the Egyptian government. Separately, a leaked document from the Israeli Intelligence Ministry recommended forcibly resettling 2.2 million Palestinians from Gaza in the Northern Sinai and constructing a buffer zone along the Israeli border to prevent their return.

    Israel is actually considering ethnically cleansing Gaza at the top level, with US support.

    At this point it's hardly a surprise, I suppose. But it does show how deep the West has sunk, and that it's still looking to explore ever deeper depths.

    I'm reminded of a popular Mitchell and Webb sketch: "Hans, are we the baddies?"
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank
    There are dozens if not hundreds of similar reports I could pick from and they will all say the same thing: Israel belligerently occupies the Palestinian territories.

    But since you asked for it, here is UN Security Council Resolution 2334 from 2016.

    9. Urges in this regard the intensification and acceleration of international
    and regional diplomatic efforts and support aimed at achieving, without delay a
    comprehensive, just and lasting peace in the Middle East on the basis of the relevant
    United Nations resolutions, the Madrid terms of reference, including the principle of
    land for peace, the Arab Peace Initiative and the Quartet Roadmap and an end to the
    Israeli occupation that began in 1967;
    UN Security Council Resolution 2334

    Oh, and why don't we throw another one in for good measure?

    Condemning all measures aimed at altering the demographic composition, character and status of the Palestinian Territory occupied since 1967, including East Jerusalem, including, inter alia, the construction and expansion of settlements, transfer of Israeli settlers, confiscation of land, demolition of homes and displacement of Palestinian civilians, in violation of international humanitarian law and relevant resolutions,UN Security Council Resolution 2334

    That's ethnic cleansing, by the way.

    Note also that 'Occupied Palestinian Territories' is used so often they turned it into an acronym.

    Stop spinning apologetics. Stop coping. Accept the facts. So should Shapiro.

    I have just tried reading it. Maybe you should try reading it.tim wood

    You clown.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank
    Not a year has gone by in which the UN hasn't made a report about Israel's belligerent occupation of the occupied Palestinian territories.

    Here's one of the more recent ones: Study of the legality of the Israeli occupation of the OPT including East Jerusalem

    But I guess
    The UN is an Israel-hating joke.RogueAI
    :nerd:
  • Antisemitism. What is the origin?
    Arabs are Semites too.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank
    I don't know where you pulled that quote from, but it isn't mine so I'm not sure what your point is.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank
    Going "not my problem," to a ground invasion they provoked seems like something that could fatally hurt their reputation.Count Timothy von Icarus

    It will be easy for Hamas to frame it in a way that suits their purposes, especially when the harassment of Israeli occupation forces begins - if they even occupy Gaza, which I suspect they won't. That can then easily be spun into a victory for Hamas.

    The Hamas playbook basically writes itself here, enabled largely by Israel itself. The hatred among Palestinians for Hamas will never exceed the hatred they feel for the Israelis. The arguments you put forward are theoretical minutiae - Hamas has basically already won and all it needs to do is survive.

    And Israel is never going to be more vulnerable to ambushes than when they first enter the Strip.Count Timothy von Icarus

    It sounds like you're grossly underestimating the amount of firepower Israel has at its disposal.

    The Israelis don't really care about the civilian casualties they cause. Anything that looks like the barrel of a gun will be flattened immediately.

    Engaging in conventional battle with the IDF, even from ambush, would be suicide, and pointless.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank
    It's Israel that has to care about optics. Hamas doesn't care about optics.

    The optics right now are that Israel is acting like a bull in a china shop with the people of Gaza as its victims.

    That suits Hamas perfectly well. No need to stick their neck out to engage in a fight that they cannot win militarily.

    When some of the smoke has settled and Israel has to scale back its military presence and force disposition, that's likely when the 'death-by-a-thousand-cuts' will happen.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank
    I am sort of at a loss to explain this. The IDF appears to have already moved more than halfway to the sea and now has an orthogonal spearhead moving down the coast. I assumed Hamas' whole plan was to provoke an attack so that they could attack the IDF in Gaza, but they don't seem to be defending particularly vigorously. The original attack also would have made more sense if they had developed some sort of air defenses, but it doesn't seem that they have.Count Timothy von Icarus

    Why would they meet Israel's offensive head-on?

    Hamas doesn't need to fight, since Israel doesn't have an endgame here. What are they going to do? Occupy Gaza?

    Israel wants to 'defeat Hamas', but has no way to cope with the fact that Hamas fighters can go back to looking like civilians at any point they wish.

    Meanwhile, Israel is damaging itself through its disproportionate reaction in ways that Hamas could only dream of.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank
    Yep, and that's why you don't get what actually happens in the World.ssu

    What's actually happening in the world? Enlighten us please. :roll:

    The topic wasn't anymore about Ukraine, fyi.ssu

    That's why I didn't understand why you mentioned March/April 2022 in relation to the Israel-Palestine issue.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank
    I think popular opinion within Europe is generally more critical of Israel, if that is what you're asking. The term 'anti-Israel' would be a misrepresentation, though.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank
    Just curious, do you think the inverse is true? As you imply the US has a (insert common trope Israeli lobby), European countries might have an Anti-Israeli bias/lobby?schopenhauer1

    I view the European countries as little more than US vassals. What they do or think is generally irrelevant, because on important issues they fall in lockstep with the US.

    But in its actions Europe has largely been as supportive of Israel as the US has, and all my criticisms apply to Europe as well.

    What happened in March/April 2022 with Israel and the Palestinians?ssu

    I'm not sure if I follow the link to the Israel-Palestine conflict, but what I'm referring to are the failed negotiations that took place.

    I think in March/April the Russians still believed NATO did not really want a war with Russia, and therefore could be negotiated with if Russia showed it wasn't bluffing with their red lines.

    Only after the blocked negotiations did the Russians realize that the Biden administration was serious about pursuing regime change in Russia and trying to destroy Russia economically, etc.

    In my view that was the definitive point of no return.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank
    It's one of the groups that make up the lobby, but they don't go into much detail.

    It's more about how the lobby functions, and what historical impact it has had.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank
    The tone of your reply doesn't really invite an elaborate response, so I'll keep it short:

    Putin has virtually for his entire time in power attempted to foster close ties with Europe. He probably felt Europe and the US were potentially more reliable allies than China (also given historical animosity).

    I don't think that train left the station until March/April 2022, but now it certainly has and the Russia-China alliance is a fact of life. I share Mearsheimer's view that this is largely due to the conscious, but ultimately misguided, effort of the United States.

    Just why is the US so close to Israel isn't explained.ssu

    Mearsheimer wrote a book together with Stephen Walt, and gave many lectures about the US Israel lobby.

    A must-read/watch, in my opinion.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank
    Also: how nice it is a pansy leftist like me can finally agree on something with your conservative ass... :razz:Benkei

    In terms of politics I fancy myself more of a classic liberal, but I'll take it. :pray:
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank
    Mearsheimer actually makes a good point about why the possibility for Jews and Muslims to live together in a single state is basically never considered.

    There are roughly as many Jews living in 'Greater Israel' as there are Muslims, which means that as soon as Muslims get equal rights, Israel ceases to be a Jewish state. In addition, due to demographic factors Muslims will start to outnumber Jews in the span of several decades, further compounding the issue.

    So there you have it.

    Under the paradigm that Israel must be a Jewish state, your flavors are apartheid or ethnic cleansing and genocide.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank
    John Mearsheimer recently gave this talk at the Centre for Independent Studies in Brisbane, Australia.

    As usual he delivers a straightforward, realist analysis of the situation in Ukraine and Israel, and provides some wider context. This is part 1 of that talk. Part 2 is yet to come out.



    Timestamps:

    0:00 - 21:05 Russia-Ukraine War
    21:05 - 37:18 Israel-Gaza War