• Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank


    Gaza city doesn't matter because I'm asking you about murdered Jews.

    Just own up that you don't care about murdered Jews as long as they're Israeli/Zionist.

    My own attitudes towards Gaza city matter zero. this isn't about me.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank
    Take a good long look at Gaza City and answer your own damn question. :point:

    "עַיִן בְּעַיִן שֵׁן בְּשֵׁן"

    https://www.i24news.tv/en/news/israel/1623175593-2-former-israeli-ambassadors-to-south-africa-accuse-jewish-state-of-aparthei
    180 Proof


    I have no idea what "take a good long look at Gaza city means." Gaza city doesn't matter. I am asking you about murdering israelis. stay on topic.

    I didn't bother to translate the second line because I don't speak hebrew and I don't see the need to introduce it unless you're just trying to sound fancy. if you want to translate it for me because it answers me question then go ahead.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank


    I'm not engaging with you until I hear whether Israeli teenagers out on a Saturday night or random people in a coffee shop qualify as "Goliath" or "Israel" and are therefore valid targets.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank
    It does seem reasonable to question the rationality of a long oppressed people seeking a safe home in one of the most dangerous neighborhoods on Earth. This seems equivalent to me, a relatively well off old white man, choosing to move to a ghetto on the south side of Chicago because my ancestors lived there thousands of years ago. It just doesn't make a lot of sense.Foghorn


    Sure, we can question it in hindsight. We're in a pretty big mess in the Middle East, but Israel was created in 1948 and it's 2021. We can entertain theoretical discussions about whether Israel should have been created in the first place, but it's now a country of 9 million and there is no possibility of Israel just packing up and leaving. We need to ask ourselves how we best move forward from here in a way that's acceptable and fair to both sides.


    During one of the previous shootouts with Hamas I spent about a month in the comment section of the Jerusalem post, where I claimed that Israelis were choosing a particular piece of land over the safety of their children. That's the reality I see.Foghorn

    I would need to hear that reasoning flushed out a bit more to comment on it.

    When I become President of the United States I will extend US citizenship to every Israeli and invite them to come live with us, where nobody is firing rockets at Jews. They would be such a great asset to the United States. This won't work of course, but the invitation should be made anyway.Foghorn

    I have no problem with this. I'm well aware that there's risk in Israel and rockets do hit places, but again neither side is going anywhere.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank


    Please stay on topic. We're talking about the murder of Israeli citizens. The fact that you're not giving me a straight answer speaks for itself.

    I also don't read hebrew.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank
    Violence of the oppressed ("David" ~ Gaza, WB) against the violent oppressor ("Goliath" ~ Israel) I support. :fire:180 Proof


    Do Israeli teenagers out on a Saturday night count as "Israel" or "Goliath?" How about random Israelis in coffee shops?
  • Does systemic racism exist in the US?
    I'm not black.James Riley

    LOL I must have misread you somewhere! Ok lol.

    I don't know what to make of your response to my post. I have been arguing the exact opposite of having anyone in the non-oppressed community trying to "connect and reach out" to anyone in the oppressed community. I'm talking about those in the oppressor community reaching out to the oppressors and trying to work with them. In other words, "woke" whites should be schooling other "non-woke" whites.James Riley

    In order for this to happen white allies need to take direction from black communities. We absolutely need this coordination to happen before whites go out and do this type of work. Whites are not to be operating independently.

    It would be level, or a whole lot leveler if we would have, after the Civil War, dealt with the enemy in this way: All former slave-owning properties were given to former slaves; All children of former slave-owners were taken from their families and removed to a school in Carlisle, PA for re-education; All wives and old men of former slave-owners were shipped off to distant Reservations to become dependent wards of the government; All former slave-owning men were forced into indentured servitude under their former slaves for a period of years; All proven sympathizers of slavery and/or former slave-owners were subject to the same treatment; All those who resisted were hung or shot.James Riley

    This is unjust. Justice must occur on an individual level - children of slaveholders are not guilty and should not be stripped from their parents. No more breaking apart families. Two wrongs don't make a right. Justice cannot be carried out on a group level like that. I can't tell where you're getting your idea of justice from.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank


    Very suave of you to avoid my last question.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank


    I have no idea what you're talking about. What is your attitude towards intentional violence towards Israeli civilians? Do you condemn it? Yes or no.

    This is all I need to hear. You're either on the side of humanity or you are on the side of evil.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank
    "Condone" disingenuously exaggerates my position180 Proof

    Then please clarify.

    To be anti-zionist is to support the disappearance/vanishment of Israel which sounds like murder to most ears. Israel is already here; you can't question the existence or demand the non-existence of something that's already here.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank


    Moral integrity? Moral integrity? You condone Hamas' terror attacks, you don't get to tell me about moral integrity.

    I only question whether you really actually believe yourself. Is it cool with you when a suicide bomber walks into a night club in Tel Aviv and kills dozens of young people? Of course it is! Gotta fight Goliath!
    Go punch an Israeli baby in the head - just fighting Goliath. I'm not even offended anymore, you just divide the entire world into good guys vs bad guys and sometimes the bad guys are children but who cares just kill them anyway; individuals don't matter only groups matter.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank
    An onanist like you? Sure you do, BC. We all do. But especially you.180 Proof

    I actually misspoke here and I wanted to correct this.

    You're not a racist, you're just a psycho. I thought you were a racist because you have no issues with Hamas murdering Israeli/Jewish families (gotta give it right back to the oppressor), but then when you said you'd more or less be fine with your own family being murdered if they were in the oppressor class I just decided to leave you alone.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank


    You'd like us if we were dead, 180. You love dead Jews (or subjugated ones), they can't oppress anyone -- perfectly harmless, just like everyone should be! :nerd:
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank


    Not dealing with your bullshit feels so good. :cool:

    I don't interact with racists, period.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank


    I'm not engaging you on this subject. After what you've said I'm done with you.

    Zionism = Jewish liberation movement. I don't care what you think about it.
  • Does systemic racism exist in the US?
    True. I wasn't suggesting you'd get angry or enraged. I was suggesting that you might be afraid. Very afraid. Now, if you had nothing to be afraid of, then they might be open to education. Failing that is when frustration and anger kick in. But here you are, the minority, trying to do the heavy lifting for them. I think you, in that case, and blacks here at home, in our case, shouldn't necessarily have to shoulder the burden of schooling their oppressors. The oppressors have a lot of work to do themselves, and the "enlightened" or "woke" members of their own should pitch in.James Riley


    I'd be afraid if I had a reason to be, for instance if there was residual anti-Semitism that reached the point of violence. There's so few Jews in Latvia and Lithuania today maybe we should take a country like Poland.

    I hate to say it, but it is ultimately on the oppressed because the oppressed understand their own problems and situation better than the rest of the world. Even if allies try to connect and reach out, this is an interest or a hobby (maybe a job?) for us when it's your life. Allies certainly have some role to play and they can help, but it's not a leading one. I would feel intimidated teaching or lecturing on racism to other white people, but hats off to allies who make a genuine effort.

    I can understand that. However, going to the extreme is not unlike a racist running to the "black welfare queen in Chicago" or pointing out the few looters in an otherwise peaceful protest or saying "All lives matter!" in response to a BLM statement. It's all a distraction from the merits of issue under discussion. It also ignores the casual mechanics of what got us here in an undesirable situation, and it is part of what keeps us here.James Riley

    I'm just always on the look-out. The last few posters that I talked to on this forum had this destructive mindset (including one from a former educator) so this type of mentality has become salient for me.

    For example, views like that the oppressed class essentially has a blank check to do whatever they want to the oppressor class and they can't legitimately be criticized until the oppressor class is overthrown. Another poster framed it like the oppressed class is blameless and cannot even be held responsible even for crimes they commit against their own people as long as they're fighting an oppressor who is the real problem and the source of all problems. It's a sad reality, but I do ultimately need to check anti-racists to ensure that they're actually decent. I cannot trust them at face value.

    It was a whole lot more than set up. It's billions of dollars every freaking year.James Riley

    It's not like Israel needs American foreign aid dollars to survive. American pumps billions into many other countries as well. All I'm saying is Israeli is ran by Israelis and when there's a war it's Israeli lives on the line. Other countries may support or cooperate with Israel, but at the end of the day Israel ultimately fends for itself.

    the playing field is not levelJames Riley

    The playing field isn't level and never will be. Even if there was no slavery and we just dropped off black people into white society in the US in the 1820s-1830s or so they still don't speak the language or have any wealth with them. They wouldn't know the land. Sure, they could make a living and it would beat slavery but you're nowhere near bourgeoise white people levels both in terms of capital or - at least equally important -- the knowledge and experience that goes into maintaining that capital along with a ton of other financial knowledge about new financial products.

    The way you formulated the issue made it sound as if I was the one who brought it up and was pushing it.James Riley

    I wasn't arguing with you and I didn't disagree with what you said, I was just picking your brain about how to best convey these truths to children as that's the current news issue. I didn't know you were black when I engaged you.

    I'm sure CRT meant one thing to one "side" and another to the other.James Riley

    Yes, it does. I find myself watching videos on this subject and agreeing with both sides.

    I really do think it's terrible branding, let's break it down word for word on this one.

    Critical: This will remind many of "critical theory" which is a left-wing movement closely tied in with Marxism. For those who don't make that association, the word critical maybe sounds like judgmental or just nonsense jargon.

    Race: A subject most Americans would rather avoid.

    Theory: Americans just don't like theories. I don't know why, but we have a hard time with this concept in general. Americans like facts and success. Americans are also very uncomfortable with the idea that the majority ought to basically sit down and shut up when it comes to an important topic like race.

    White people in general are suspicious of strong ethnic identities due to history in both Europe and here and I think decent chunk of white people wouldn't mind doing away with the idea of ethnic identity in general.
  • Does systemic racism exist in the US?
    I dare say that if you were a member of the class of victim of the atrocities you would be way more than "frustrated." You might be down right scared! And understandably so. Imagine being black in a country when the enemy flag is still paraded around like an icon, and statues all over the fucking place. How would Jews feel if statues of Hitler, Goebbels (sp?), et al were up in places of government and prominence, along with swastikas and whatnot? Maybe not in Massachusetts, but Massachusetts ain't America.James Riley

    I am an Eastern European Jew who lost many family members in the Holocaust. I have never been to Romania, Latvia, or Lithuania but let's assume their Holocaust curriculum is lacking. In that case, if I lived there I would do my best to work within the system to change things. I'm a solution-oriented person and I prefer working within the system when possible. Getting angry or enraged about their lack of education doesn't solve anything. If anything it could be counter-productive because now I'm seen as unstable.

    I've also lived in 4 different states now -- Texas, Maryland, California and Massachusetts and I'm not going to say what's "really" America and what isn't. They were all very different.

    As for the confederate flag, I don't know what to say here. I just don't know or understand southern white culture and how they perceive their heritage or that flag. I would have to do a temperature check on the culture to see how they perceive it, but at the same time I certainly understand why blacks are upset about Confederate monuments and the flag.

    That's a straw man, when someone says "X" and you say they are saying "X+1" you have set up a position for them that they did not set forth and a very easy one to knock down when no one in their right mind has said "X + 1".James Riley

    I said this earlier but I'm not attempting to counter your thesis here (because I don't know exactly what you believe.) I'm just throwing out a perspective and seeing whether you agree or disagree with it. As far as I can tell in this discussion we don't have any major disagreements yet.

    The reason I bring up these points is because I do know people who think/believe this way and I like to know right off the bat whether I'm dealing with one.

    That's because they don't want to admit they stand atop a pile of bones. Anyone familiar with finances and the compounding of money should understand the same principle applies to economic and cultural advantage. And the compounding also works the other direction, putting the debtor further in the hole.James Riley

    Civilization stands atop a pile of bones.

    As long as those role models are pre- approved by us and the economic system in which we operate? "Look boy, if you do as we tell you, then you can be like Bob over here. Look at all the money he's got, and the house and car and boat. Why, if you're good enough, and you mind your p's and q's, they'll let you in the Country Club and you too can hob knob with the important folk. We're progressive now, don't you know? Just don't go gettin' uppity, now, ya hear?"James Riley

    Success is success is success, and don't let anyone ever tell you that money doesn't matter. Sure, some people love cars and boats and country clubs, but when you have millions of dollars you have the power to mold the world in the way that you want. You're in a much better place to give back to your community, not to mention you're able to spend your time the way that you want.

    I understand that people can frame success in condescending ways, but I know you're able to look past the tone to see the deeper truth here.

    We could have said that to the Jews: "Life's a bitch, sorry, but no state and no money. Keep wandering and maybe you'll learn to be like your tormentors some day. You could start by not being who you are. Yeah, that's the ticket."

    Sarcasm off.
    James Riley

    The world will do as it does; the Jewish people strive toward their goal regardless. Sure the UN + Britain helped with the creation of the state, but Israel is always ultimately defended by Israelis, not Americans or Brits.

    You lost me. Critical race theory? What? The way I'm describing what?James Riley

    CRT is the news of the day here. It brought race back into the limelight recently.
  • Does systemic racism exist in the US?
    Alright, well here we go.

    Where you deep in the heart of the conservative south when you learned all about that in public schools? Down south? Asking for myself.James Riley

    No, I went to school and grew up in an upper-middle class area of Massachusetts in the suburbs. I think they taught us US history in middle and high school. We did do a bit of history in Elementary school as well.

    On to the main topic:

    In any case, I just want to say if all you're asking for a type of education analogous to holocaust education that seems reasonable. I looked further into that 1919 Oklahoma massacre and it would definitely be interesting to study and understand the roots and causes of the massacre. Between 150-200 blacks were killed which makes it a very significant massacre.

    You also keep accusing me of straw-manning you but I've never claimed to know or understand your exact positions so I wish you'd stop doing that. I don't know exactly what you believe. As far as I'm concerned we're not debating now, we're discussing.

    First, the Germans have done an outstanding job of educating themselves about their history and what their forefathers did. They don't sweep it under the rug like many (not all) whites do about slavery, Indians, etc. But let's not play "favorites" with the Holocaust. Many other horrors were perpetrated on this Earth that did not involve Jews. Blacks have suffered some of it. Let's go deep in the heart of Dixie and set up half of what the Germans have set up regarding the holocaust, deep in the heart of Germany, where it happened.James Riley

    You bring up a good point here - the Germans did make serious amends over their past and they've got some very good Holocaust education over there. In other countries like Romania, Lithuania, and Latvia this is not the case. To this day I am very suspicious of Latvian and Lithuanian nationalists. I understand, maybe, to an extent -- if I was being educated in these countries and they were negligent or unwilling to talk about this topic I would definitely be frustrated.

    If I had to guess, I'd say the reason whites aren't crazy about engaging on slavery is that a good chunk of them have no ancestral tie in with the institution. I have as much in common with you from a cultural/racial standpoint as I have with a Southern Anglo-Saxon or Scotch-Irish person. I share neither their heritage, religion, nor culture. None of my family has lived down South, nor did they even arrive here until the 20th century. We did spend a long time on slavery on my US history class though, but I have no idea how this topic is handled down South.

    Hmmm. I was getting a paternal vibe about what we should be teaching in school or encouraging blacks to focus on.James Riley

    I am only commenting about public school teaching here. I am in no position to make any sort of definitive judgments on how blacks ought to perceive themselves or their history - that is their issue. However, if we bring critical race theory into public schools it becomes my issue because it's now being pushed by the state. From the way you're describing it though, it almost seems like it's a branding issue - call it something else, not critical race theory.

    The intercession is NOT some white bread MFr coming in with a bunch of BS about bootstraps and hard work, and suits and ties and hair cuts and whatnot. It's more along the lines of what was done to make the Jewish state a success.James Riley

    I like that approach.

    And yet you are out trying to get the abled to be concerned about the rights of the disabled? Should I just be clueless about the ADA and tell those folks they need to tone it down before I get annoyed? Why don't you just focus on their anecdotal economic success stories?James Riley

    Honestly, the bulk of what we do is we just help raise money for our cause - which goes directly to disabled people who need financial help with treatment. We do a bit of education but it's not really our main focus. And we do focus on anecdotal economic success stories because people need role models. The ADA rarely gets enforced at least when it comes to the particular disability I focus on, but regardless I don't expect to wake up one day and have stigma & prejudice just disappear. It'll always be there; oppression will always be there, but I am not defined by it nor am I helpless in facing it. If someone makes a stupid comment towards my condition I'll educate them, and I'll react to it like I'm talking to a small, dumb child.

    Teach about oppression all you want; it's certainly out there in the world - it's a fact. It's entirely about you handle it and move forward. Kids are impressionable and we need to be careful with this.

    EDIT: CRT in schools undermines Enlightment era liberalism and this - to many people, myself included - is something to be very cautious of before doing. I've never heard of Holocaust education faced with this accusation.
  • Does systemic racism exist in the US?
    And, whether they agree with it or not, I think it's a good idea.James Riley


    Sure - don't forget, but also don't base your whole mentality around it. The Nazi hunters are all dead now and last one died out around a decade ago, it's just not a thing anymore in the Jewish community. I don't remember the last time I heard it mentioned. We should "never forget" events like the Holocaust because there are important lessons in it apart from the incredibly obvious "they went after the Jews!" There's really so many other important lessons about humanity revealed in studies of the Holocaust. There's definitely a strand of the "never forgive, never forget" attitude in Judaism but I would regard it as toxic. Do we never forgive the German people? Seriously?

    Whatever they are is not for you to say. The question is, what are you? Are you a victimized skin color for feeling put-upon by those who support black push-back?James Riley

    You're right that it is not my place to tell black people what they "are." I was speaking to you as a person - a person who is a collection of traits - and I was asking you if one victimized trait makes one a victim.

    I don't consider myself a victimized skin color. I've had very little to say about BLM. I've never really felt put-upon by those supporting the black push-back but if they were to get very pushy and aggressive about it I would be annoyed.

    I would tell them that BLM is not my fight. I have my own fight as I'm part of a non-profit that pushes for disability rights. Even if I did join I'd just be another clueless white person marching for something they'll never understand.

    Of course I want history taught honestly, but a history that presents America as being racist to the bone without any hope for black success outside of sports or entertaining is a really chilling cultural message to send. I think we can do better for our young people. Do you see how beliefs like that lead to toxic behavior? I'd certainly be toxic if that's what I was taught to me about how my people are treated in this nation. Violence becomes rational.

    Our public schools should, but don't. Were you taught about the recently-in-the-new Oklahoma massacre? I wasn't.James Riley

    I've known about the Oklahoma massacre for years because I love history, but it's been 13 or so years since I've been in a history classroom so my memory isn't too clear. We were certainly taught about slavery, how blacks were treated under Reconstruction, the Civil Rights movement, and other topics but certainly if schools aren't teaching this then that's a problem. In regard to the massacre, it's about how you present it though. "Blacks were victimized and white people in Oklahoma did horrible things." - Fine, that's true. "Black economic success is worthless because whites just tore it down" -- incredibly destructive message. Child abuse.
  • Does systemic racism exist in the US?
    You mean like the Jews?James Riley


    The central lesson of Jewish history and the cultural message should never be taught as "never forgive, never forget" and if you think that's how Jews teach their own history then you're clueless (I am speaking as someone who went through a considerable Jewish education.)

    Look, the black victims are not "newly-anointed."James Riley

    But black people aren't just black. Is that all they are? A victimized skin color? Are they right to declare themselves -- as complex persons -- victims? Is that how it works -- if there's one aspect of me that's victimized do I get to declare myself a victim and say "never forgive, never forget" to all those evil oppressors?

    And they don't need to be told what to think.James Riley

    You're the one telling them to think of themselves as victims.

    We don't need to teach "them."James Riley

    Our public schools do. Unless you just want separate black education.
  • Does systemic racism exist in the US?
    They said BLM because blacks are an oppressed minority. Once whites become a minority, are enslaved, have all their property stripped away from them, their families torn apart, a war fought to free them, their former owners reinstated to their black privilege after the war, are subjected to Chad Crow, lynching's, burnings, beatings, ghettos, voter suppression, white-on-white violence due to lack of opportunity brought on by black privilege, then we can talk about WLM.James Riley


    Alright so how do you want us to convey this truth to our nation's students? You want all those newly-anointed poor black victims to be thinking "never forgive, never forget." You want to build up a people? Maybe focus on the ways that they've succeeded.

    We can teach them the facts of atrocities, sure, but the teaching of history is never "just the facts."
  • The Ethics of Employer-Employee relations
    If you offered me a job for $100/hr it'd be because you believed it'd help you make a profit,Judaka


    Who makes that rule? Capitalism? Who says I can't hire you for any number of reasons? Maybe I just like you and want to offer you an awesome, easy job. Maybe I'm due to die in a year and am looking to spread out my wealth. Or maybe I'm mad at my dog and want someone else to watch him ASAP. In a capitalist society people are free to spend their money how they like. It may be because I'm making $200/hr elsewhere but not necessarily.

    The employer has absolute authority to determine what he does with his business and what shall be done with the profits, again, a basic principle of capitalism.Judaka

    This is for small businesses, not big ones. Public companies have boards of directors.

    It's fine that employees don't get to make any decisions at the companies they work at, ideal even.Judaka

    Have you never met a shift supervisor or a manager?
  • The Ethics of Employer-Employee relations


    What are your priorities? How do we measure success?Judaka

    My priorities are just to have a functioning system where small businesses started by individuals can get off the ground and some number of them are successful. I really just want you to present a functioning alternative if employee-employer relations are immoral as you've been saying.

    I would be strongly against a system which banned individuals from starting businesses.

    If employer-employee relations can be that the employer has absolute control and authority and agency and the employee is just there to receive a check then that's how we might arrive at the conclusionJudaka

    The employer is paying the employee for a job. If I offer you a job for $100/hr to watch my dog am I being oppressive? Would I be making you my slave now? Is that how jobs work? I'm sure there's a job to be a slave out there but most aren't. I feel like you're talking about low-level jobs here, is that it? You're talking about the type of jobs.

    I feel like part of this is that you just don't like how certain employers treat their employees which is natural; employers can be dicks! Not all are though.
  • The Ethics of Employer-Employee relations
    If we were to force workplaces to be democratic then we wouldn't have the same capitalist way of starting a business.Judaka

    Ok, explain to me how businesses get started then. Give me a better model.

    I can't think of any organizations where total newcomers can join and be regarded as equals with equal governing/decision-making power with 20 year veterans.

    Your example of starting a capitalist business and then hiring a single person and having it all be ruined is stupid.Judaka

    Why is it stupid? Did I misrepresent your position somehow? Does your employee not deserve equal representation? Tell me what was wrong with it.
  • The Ethics of Employer-Employee relations


    I understand where you're coming from.

    Lets take an example and make things a little more concrete. Lets pretend you want to start a business, well in order to do that you need capital.

    Lets say for instance that you make a $30k investment to start a small business and then look to hire an employee, lets say a web designer. Under normal capitalist conditions, the founder can just agree to a price with a web designer and the web designer will do the project for payment. However, the web designer doesn't get a say over how that $30k investment is to be invested unless they want to negotiate something extra.

    But lets imagine this is a forced democratic workplace and if you want to hire that web designer you need to give him equal governance power. Now you're an equal to him and -- whoever he is -- he gets an equal say in how that investment is used, which was originally your money. Maybe his friend has a really cool investment idea and he wants to take $15k from the treasury and use it for that. He's an equal partner, why can't he do that? You're not the boss. You still want to start this business?

    You may decide to make the web designer a partner, but that's a whole other issue.

    Sorry the modern workplace isn't a democracy, but neither is a family.
  • The Ethics of Employer-Employee relations
    but it is not in their hands because of any other reason than the fact that they own the business. It's theirs to run into the ground incompetently or sell or do whatever they please with. If the business is better off this way then that's an argument you could certainly make.Judaka

    Yep, it's their responsibility and their money to either win or lose. If things go south ideally - under normal capitalism - they'd be losing the most money. The worst that can happen to an employee is that they get fired, but if you're an owner you can just be underwater very large sums of money when business goes poorly.

    I'm not really sure about that, I guess some would and some wouldn't but I couldn't guess what the majority of people would think was ideal.Judaka

    Yeah, some will and some won't. There's absolutely nothing wrong with someone simply wanting to collect a paycheck and go home and spend time with their families. The problem is if that's all you're relying on for income it puts you in a vulnerable position. I will say from experience it's not easy to get people actually involved in governance decisions. People would rather be doing other things including selling their equity in that project for something more lucrative.

    If you're poor and in a low-level position and looking to move up in a certain company/project, then have an honest talk with the management or your superior. Here the burden is on them to be honest about advancement prospects. That is capitalist ethics.

    I'm struggling to determine the tone of your message, are you saying it's a matter of earning your way, having the suitable expertise, the rights of the founder or something else?Judaka

    I mentioned all of these.

    For those who see the employer-employee dynamic as immoral, I guess they'd want to shut it all down, not just make their own business that does things differently.Judaka

    :100: - and that's their problem. Shutting down the employer-employee dynamic is pure paternalism and its advocates imply that people are incapable of making their own decisions. Should I be forbidden from offering you a job or you offering me one? We can always negotiate the terms.

    On what basis would it stop being ridiculous for a worker to have a say? What about after they've been at the company after a certain period of time or other pre-requisites for having a say?Judaka

    There's a difference between "having a say" - which the worker should always have, and e.g. deciding where to open the next branch or what we do with the corporate treasury. The decision-making process is simply going to come down to the corporation/governing body.

    Socialism doesn't avoid this issue. In every society there's going to be more knowledgable people/better workers and less knowledgable people/less experienced or worse workers. You cannot avoid some measure of hierarchy.
  • The Ethics of Employer-Employee relations
    The business is owned by the employer, the employee offers the employer labour for wages.Judaka


    We shouldn't treat this rigid line about ownership like an inevitable feature of capitalism. I've worked for start ups where I have equity in the project which makes me a part-owner of it and some measure of decision-making power. Then again, yes, the bulk of the decision making power is going to come from the founders and the higher ups because they're actually the ones driving the project and they're doing a lot more work than me. They also know a hell of a lot more than me or the vast majority of people for that matter about the project.

    The employee may be satisfied or dissatisfied with their wage, they still have very little or no control over anything to do with the business that employs them nor over the type of work they'll be doing.Judaka

    Well do they even want governance control? When I worked at a department store in college all I wanted was to collect a wage and leave. We shouldn't immediately conclude that everyone wants to spend extra time in meetings or learning about potential decisions or projects in the company (especially ones in other areas of the company where you're not involved.) If you are interested in something more you'll probably have to work your way up or talk to management.

    In all organizations you get more decision-making power when you climb up the ladder. But you also take on more responsibilities which can be seen as restricting and will take up your time. The idea that workers must be entitled to strong governance authority simply upon agreeing to do work for the employer is ridiculous. How much decision-making power are we to give a complete newcomer who just joined up? Should his voice be equal to the founder? As a founder you're the one who started it and gets to make the general rules. If you want to start a business and make it a complete democracy where anyone you hire gets an equal voting opinion then go for it.
  • The Ethics of Employer-Employee relations
    The defining characteristic of capitalism is the contract made between a private citizen who owns a place of production with another private citizen to exchange labour for a wage.Judaka

    Labor contracts are a feature of capitalism, but hardly the single defining one. In any case, a lot of work today is remote and online so this "place of production" is becoming an anachronism. Work often doesn't need to be done in an office. In many cases employees just need their own computers and network to get work done, this isn't a 1950s factory. Work is changing very rapidly and increasingly virtual. The worker may be doing work for an employer, but the worker is not always using the employer's "means of production" nor is he reliant on the employer to put a roof over his head.

    but the power in the relationship is always with the employer.Judaka

    What if there's many employers and few employees? What if the employees are strongly organized? What if they're financially secure and don't need work? This is definitely not true. If the wages aren't there you're not going to recruit the right people. There are definitely certain labor markets where things are tilted in favor of the employee.

    This is a money problem, not an employee-employer problem - if you're poor you have less power. It's not about who the employer or employee is.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank
    What's the meaning of autonomy if they don't have running water, they have restrictions on caloric intake, they can't fish as they wish on there shore, etc? That's not "autonomy" in any sense of the word.Manuel


    They do have running water. There's a ton of misinformation out there. They're free to build their own facilities but the money gets mismanaged by the governing authorities. Gazans are free to go fishing but I don't know every fishing regulation there is.

    I think that if you have back WB and Gaza, things would get much better. I frankly don't understand what Palestinians would do to Israel without facing massive and severe repercussions. The Palestinians aren't getting an army so I don't think there is too much to worry about. But there will continue to be much to worry about if the occupation continues.Manuel

    Yes, I'm sure the Palestinians would be happy if Israel gave them all of the WB. But why would Israel do that without a concrete guarantee that the Palestinians have given up further territorial claims? Also it would mean kicking thousands of Jews off of land that they've lived in for hundreds if not thousands of years.

    I get it, you want to believe that all the Palestinians want is a state of their own. That's a normal, healthy assumption that many outsiders to the conflict would make. Unfortunately it's just not true - it's not reflected in politics and it's not reflected in polls either. It's a nice belief and I wish it were true. In reality, there is a strong desire to see Israel gone. Vanquished.

    "Few still support a two-state solution. Ironically, while some attribute Palestinian rejection of Trump’s plan to its new limits on the traditional two-state paradigm, most Palestinian respondents now reject that model as well. Asked to choose “the top Palestinian national priority during the coming five years,” two-thirds (66%) of West Bankers in this poll pick “regaining all of historical Palestine for the Palestinians”; a mere 14% choose “ending the occupation of the West Bank and Gaza, to achieve a two-state solution.” Gazan respondents, surprisingly, are a bit more moderate: 56% want all of Palestine, while 31% opt for the two-state solution."

    https://www.washingtoninstitute.org/policy-analysis/palestinian-majority-rejects-two-state-solution-backs-tactical-compromises

    You know what - maybe this would change if Israel just withdrew from the WB. I doubt it. But it's unfair to ask Israel to make that such great concessions without a guarantee of peace. Palestinians gaining control of all of the WB just places more Israeli cities in range for Palestinian rockets. We already see what happens with border towns like Sderot where there's bomb shelters everywhere and the place has a massively high rate of trauma and PTSD. I've been there and it's not a place you'd ever want to be or grow up in. The playgrounds structures serve as bomb shelters which they have everywhere around the city.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank


    I'm sure if people were throwing rocks at your family you'd laugh it off too. Rocks can't hurt people lol.

    The reason its only rocks is because of the blockade.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank


    Sure, I'll sign the petition so that weapons can be imported into Gaza which can then be used against Israeli citizens. /s

    And this is the part where you say "not my problem."
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank


    This whole "victim blaming" charge when it comes to international affairs just doesn't mean anything to me. Aggressive, ruthless powers virtually always portray themselves as victims and this extends far outside the Israeli-Palestinian issue. Hutus slaughtered Tutsis by the hundreds of thousands with machetes because they had been victimized by the Tutsis previously... so I guess blaming the Hutus here is also victim blaming? Who are we to condemn the victim? The Tutsi perpetrators were just getting their comeuppance, right?
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank
    and elected Hamas, they were punished for having the audacity of voting against Israeli interests.Benkei


    Israel withdrew from Gaza in '05 and they elected Hamas in '06.

    But yes, if you elect a government bent on the genocide of Jews within Israel then you're going to get a response and it's not going to be a positive one.

    I guess in your view of the world, prisoners have total autonomy within a prison yard.Benkei

    It is a problem of their own doing based on their governing body's inability to accept the existence of Israel.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank


    Oh sorry, is Israel committing genocide towards its LGBTQ population?

    But by all means none of this matters.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank
    It's not that I don't think Israel shouldn't have peace, it's that it should be done representing in a democratic matter, not by leaders who don't represent the will of the people.Manuel


    If this were an option it would be great, but states always need to deal with the leaders of other states whether they're authoritarian or democratic.

    They would probably be much less hostile if Israel gave back the occupied territories and give Palestinians total autonomy within these areas.Manuel

    The Palestinians already have total autonomy within Gaza. It's to the point where Hamas can hunt down gay people and those seeking peace with Israel and either arrest or execute them and Israel won't do anything. Hamas controls day to day life there, Israel just controls the borders. In the WB too it's autonomous rule in the Palestinian part of the region & even in the Israeli part Palestinians are governed by the PNA. There's more Israelis than Palestinians in some parts of the WB so I have no idea why that all needs to be ceded to the Palestinians. Before Israel took the area it belonged to Jordan.

    Nonetheless, I'd still be down to ceding control of Gaza and the WB if it meant peace. But this just isn't the final aim of the Palestinians and to think it is portrays a fundamental misunderstanding of the conflict.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank
    You really need sources? I'll give a few. They're mixed in with Radical Islam to make it look less blatant...Manuel

    I'll hear about criticism or prejudice towards Muslims, but I was asking about Arabs earlier. The difference is that Arab is an ethnicity and there are Arabs of all religious backgrounds who live all around the world.

    Islam is open to legitimate criticism. Being an Arab is not.

    The idea here is Hamas=Radical Islam, hence everything ugly Hamas does is because of Islam.Manuel

    Well that's obviously wrong. I think there's just so much misinformation out there. Hamas is a fundamentalist Islamic organization but the people who primarily suffer due to that are the Palestinians living under them. Sure the Israelis face bombs and threats, but I'd much rather be fighting that than living under it.

    The anti-Semitism in the Arab world against Israel, is overwhelmingly due to Israel's history in the region. You know this: the wars with Lebanon and Egypt and Syria, the way Palestinians are treated, etc.Manuel

    I firmly disagree with this. Jews have been living under Muslim leaders for around 1500 years in the Middle East, and over that time there has been a long history of subjugation and abuse including plenty of massacres & repression depending on the ruler. Anti-semitism in the Arab world did not only begin existing in 1948, there's a very long history there. Israel currently is also at peace with a number of its Arab neighbors including Egypt whom it gave back Sinai to in... 1988? It's been some time since these countries were actually at war.

    There are Gallup polls that measure this type of thing that I'd be happy to show you if we wanted to pursue this further. These polls reflect deep-seated attitudes that extend far beyond Israel.

    And radical Jews (settlers) are the main reason as to why Israel is so vilified.Manuel

    Vilified by who? The Arabs? The western world? I don't deny that settlers in the WB can be provocative, but I don't see them as being the main reason that Israel is vilified. You also have to remember that there has been Jewish communities in the WB going back thousands of years.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank


    In my experience very few anti-Semites are pro-Israel. Israel is such a perfect lightening rod that I don't see why anti-Semites would avoid that opportunity. It's just so easy.

    What disparaging comments have western leaders and prime ministers said lately about Arabs? Could you mind citing a few examples? Anti-semitism is rampant across the muslim/arab world.

    There is no shortage of criticism of Hamas or radical Islam at all. Some of it has merits, sure. But a lot of it is just racism.Manuel

    A lot of criticism of Hamas is racism? Why would you say this about Hamas but not apply it to Israel and anti-Semitism? Radical muslims are universally despised even among other Muslims.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank
    Likely the most anti-Semitic people in the world are those who "support" Israel. Quite ironic.Manuel



    Yeah, sure, or maybe the anti-Semites are the ones who are actually attacking Jews worldwide over Israel's actions. Or the ones who are extremely critical of Israel while saying nothing of Hamas.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank
    And if so, how can the Palestinians, be it the PA or Hamas or whoever, also approach this? Can they actually make and keep peace with Israel and then face the fact that there's Israel and they have all these problems...ssu



    I'm convinced that there is some sort of grassroots Palestinian movement in Gaza that's actually interested in peace and may in fact not want to live under fundamentalist Islamic rule (who'd have thought?) I would love to see an uprising in Gaza where the population comes together and overthrows Hamas, but Hamas has all the power so I don't see this happening anytime soon. Their deep-seated opposition to Israel's existence is made clear in their founding documents. I just don't think peace is possible with Hamas in power.

    When you're dealing with the PA there's at least a glimmer of hope since they're secular, but peace with Israel is just never a popular move politically (by peace I mean renouncing further territorial claims as this is deeply unpopular). I know for a fact that the WB is doing better than Gaza and the people are a little freer. I don't know if the situation in the WB is in need of immediate international attention. Sure, WB isn't doing great but there's actually a lot of places that are doing worse.
  • Israel killing civilians in Gaza and the West Bank


    I tell you about how Hamas arrests citizens for attempting to make peace through establishing connections in Israel, and your response is that it was 'all done by the books.' I can't imagine anyone who isn't a diehard Hamas supporter saying this. I just wonder how a white Dutchman becomes a diehard Hamas supporter.

BitconnectCarlos

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