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.
Yes, it will also increase anti-semitism as there are those that are prone to hate all people of certain group for the actions of either governments or some people (like terrorists). Hatred of Russians is another perfect example of this. But many Russians here were shocked by what Putin had done when attacking Ukraine. Hence I'm not going to for example ban Russian restaurants... they don't have President Putin's photo or the orange-black colours or "Z" up on their walls.
And what "Canary in the coal mine" are you talking about? — ssu
Netanyahu has no right to speak of deradicalizing anyone. He's a radical himself. Hamas is his baby. The murder of Yitzhak Rabin is his brain child. The death of Israel will be in large part his doing. — Tzeentch
But I guess it's convenient to portray Israel as the little guy facing off a huge powerful menace. — ssu
Although in their propaganda they say that it's them who are on the verge of being wiped out. — ssu
It's almost like they don't really believe a genocide is going on.
— RogueAI
No. — Mikie
Once again: understand what an analogy is. Everybody understands beating a dog just makes it aggressive; this is no different than people. Why abused kids often become abusers, why dangerous neighbourhoods raise dangerous people.
And you have it reversed. Their actions result in who's better or worse. It's because Israel had no rights to the occupied territory, so armed resistance is just. It's Israel having collectively punished Gazans for decades. It's a matter of applying legal and moral principles as a result of which Israel is much worse than Hamas. Any tragedy visited in Israeli citizens is by their own making, Jews sacrificed on the Zionist altar.
Except I'm not. As I've stated before I don't condone all their methods. But nuance is difficult. The point is, why don't you demand Israel to deradicalise their insane colonisation policy, apartheid regime and war crime tactics? No, in your mind, Hamas and PA need to take steps to become peace loving hippies while being ethnically cleansed by their neighbours. It's an idiotic ask. When Israel stops its crimes, then you can expect these things. — Benkei
So when a Palestinian cheers an Israeli death, it's not the same thing. If an Israeli is killed in this conflict, it's not the same thing. To interpret the violence between these two groups as morally equivalent is wilfully ignoring context. — Benkei
Hamas isn't the Palestine state, just like Hezbollah isn't Lebanon. — ssu
...and then has the occupied territories, where non-Jewish people are have different laws (military law) to the Jewish people there. In addition to that, it has laws like the 'Citizenship and Entry into Israel Law', which prohibits inhabitants of the West Bank and Gaza Strip ineligible for the automatic granting of Israeli citizenship and residency permits that are usually available through marriage to an Israeli citizen (i.e., family reunification).
But South Africa was too a democracy under the Apartheid era... to the whites. — ssu
You are equivocating a people with a religious movement. I said the Jewish people. This is a racial group, it just happens to correspond also to the members of the Jewish religious group, but I was not referring to the members of the Jewish religious group, but to the racial group.
Who other than Netanyahu speaks for the Jewish people and to be more pertinent, who conducts foreign policy, provides security for this group? — Punshhh
Then who does represent the Jewish people here? Ask someone in a neighbouring state who represents the Jewish people here?
Or do we have a vacuum of leadership/representation of the Jewish people? — Punshhh
You've glossed over what i've said. Hamas is an interloper, not an actual Government and Ismail is not an actual head-of-state. I did point this out... — AmadeusD
I find this wanting of fact. I do not see any clear-cut policy whereby this is actually happening. Particularly given the Israeli propensity to literally refer to Palestinians as animals and worthy of eradication.. — AmadeusD
This doesn't have anything to do with which individuals are liable to be attacked. But i understand the emotional behind that fact. It just isn't what i've asked about. — AmadeusD
Not trying to stir anything up, but surely this kind of thinking also exculpates all Palestinians who would not be represented by Hamas? — AmadeusD
I'm not pretending you don't see the distinction, but in the Israel case, Netanyahu is the actual head-of-state, not an interloper, which Hamas can be seen as. — AmadeusD
Surely, the proportionality question, comes, in some sense, down to who is actually liable to attack?
As I see it, Israel has already lost and Netanyahu, who represents the Jewish people, in this, has blood on his hands. — Punshhh
I also don't see an Israel that doesn't fully destroy Arab history and culture in greater Palestine — Benkei
I mean, that's one thing which would come under that banner, imo.
Unsure what you're intimating though, so will refrain from comment beyond that. — AmadeusD
‘The Axial Age, a term coined by the philosopher Karl Jaspers, refers to a pivotal period in human history, roughly between 800 and 200 BCE. This era was remarkable for its profound and simultaneous intellectual, philosophical, and religious transformations across various civilizations, including those in Greece, Persia, India, and China.
During the Axial Age, there was a significant shift in thought patterns, moving away from mythological frameworks towards more rational and abstract reasoning. This period saw the rise of some of the world's most enduring philosophies and religions: in Greece, the emergence of classical philosophy with figures like Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle; in Persia, the rise of Zoroastrianism; in India, the development of Buddhism and Jainism, as well as critical developments in Hinduism; and in China, the foundational teachings of Confucianism and Taoism.
The Axial Age is considered crucial in the history of humanity as it laid the foundational structures of thought and belief systems that continue to shape cultures and societies around the world.’
Most of what is considered ‘ancient wisdom’ is rooted in this period. And it endures. — Wayfarer
Hence no Heaven.
Everyone else is shit to Jews — Vaskane
I am literally 100% excluded from ever belonging to their ethnoreligion I can never be a Jew. — Vaskane
Hence why Jews created Christianity, for the non Jews.
Oh, and yet, in the account of the lives of Jesus Christ, the Gospels, there is no such thing as sin, guilt, punishment and reward, merely Jesus and the Glad Tidings. It's the disciples who introduce ever aspect of Judaism back into Christianity. — Vaskane
it states those who do not follow the ways of Jesus will remain under God's angry judgment, under the Judaic tradition — Vaskane
not the Judaic dogma of slavish hate and resentment towards objective values. — Vaskane
Hate is in all of those objective commandments. Detailing how one must live. — Vaskane
Jesus born a Jew and within such a shitty way of life and tradition rejected the whole of the Jewish tradition and faith by representing God's undying love and faithfulness. — Vaskane
In fact, the Jews apparently treated Jesus like dirt because he rejected Judaism. — Vaskane
Blacks never popularized an objective us vs them morality. One that infected the globe because it says the weak alone are the good. — Vaskane