Of course it isn't. There's Ethiopian Jews, Ashkenazi, Sephardic, Mizrahi Jews, which are distinct ethnicities. Plenty of discrimination between those groups as well by the way although at least on paper they are equal. — Benkei
It's not their ancestral homeland. That's an idiotic religious claim that anybody that isn't a Jew doesn't recognise. — Benkei
As to the genetic makeup of modern peoples - especially those that have been dispersed from a relatively small original stock - why even bother to trace them? There are Americans the colour of ginger ale who consider themselves Black. People don't identify with their DNA; they identify with their community, religion, culture and shared past. And their story - no matter what percent of it is factual. — Vera Mont
He and I may agree on a lot of things, but we don't share a brain!I'm curious because Benkei was making claims to the contrary. — schopenhauer1
Some Jews? Most Jews? Everyone who identifies as Jewish? Fine.No one is being "racist" by saying Jews have a specific ethnic history, and understanding that, any more than how the Dutch people are different than (or similar to!) French, Belgian, or (other) German peoples. — schopenhauer1
Fine. But I don't see it as a contribution to excusing war crimes. — Vera Mont
In this case, not 'homeland' but 'ancestral homeland'. The difference being: Most of us have been living in many other places, but our long-ago ancestors used to live here, so the people who have been living here better get the hell out.
If you go by history, culture and genetics, why are the Palestinians' claim less valid than the European Jews'? — Vera Mont
With the difference that they actually built the houses and worked the farms.They too have a historical ancestral claim. — schopenhauer1
The dilemma wasn't over who had a valid reason to live there; it was over which promise to keep and which to break.Hence the dilemma. — schopenhauer1
Which very conveniently happens to coincide with Christian notions of the Holy Land. It doesn't seem to signify that, according to the same book, the Hebrews originally occupied that land by means of a sneak attack on people who had done them no harm.The Jews had a very specific geographic location they can point to — schopenhauer1
With the difference that they actually built the houses and worked the farms. — Vera Mont
The dilemma wasn't over who had a valid reason to live there; it was over which promise to keep and which to break. — Vera Mont
Which very conveniently happens to coincide with Christian notions of the Holy Land. It doesn't seem to signify that, according to the same book, the Hebrews originally occupied that land by means of a sneak attack on people who had done them no harm. — Vera Mont
There is no real analogy to Native Americans, who were here before the Europeans arrived and pushed them out or exterminated them. The question of which Natives lived exactly where is a red herring. Nor is there a real likeness to Africans who were captured and kidnapped and forfeited their right to claim any part of Africa because they don't each know where their ancestors were from. — Vera Mont
You're not alone.The question is should there be a Jewish state. My answer was yes. — schopenhauer1
I did.I didn’t say anything about taking over farms. — schopenhauer1
Indeed. The British authorities got Arab help in their war effort with promises of aid to their national aspirations. And the Rothchilds on board with a promise to aid Jewish aspirations. https://www.iwm.org.uk/history/why-did-britain-promise-palestine-to-arabs-and-zionistsThe original UN map was not agreed ti by Arab states and thus, here we are in a 75 year old battle of two peoples. — schopenhauer1
The injustice was real in every case. The Romans displaced the Jews from a land from which the Jews had previously displaced some other people. The British and Americans were complicit (after a couple of terror attacks) in the displacing Arabs to re-emplace the Jews. How the festering resentment is resolved depends on what people do to restore balance. In this instance, it wasn't a festering revenge fantasy, it was an act of penitence by the big countries that had rejected Jewish refugees and turned a blind eye to the holocaust, plus a calculated attempt to place an ally in the middle of a strategic, oil-rich region.My point with nation states and North American countries precisely highlights why strictly using property lost in a war or other means in a war might be just perpetuating a badlyheld notion of justice that just festers as perpetual revenge fantasies and vengeance rather than settling the perceived injustice. — schopenhauer1
This notion? Colonialism was what it was, it did the harm it did. We have to deal with the consequences. Point here being, both Palestine and Israel have the exact same claim, according to imperialist Britain, but only one of them has the backing of imperial powers.Look, there should be no Canada, Netherlands, Ireland, or France according to this notion. I’m ok if you’re equal across the board with historical violence and territories. — schopenhauer1
Colonialism was what it was, it did the harm it did. We have to deal with the consequences. Point here being, both Palestine and Israel have the exact same claim, according to imperialist Britain, but only one of them has the backing of imperial powers. — Vera Mont
My point with nation states and North American countries precisely highlights why strictly using property lost in a war or other means in a war might be just perpetuating a badly held notion of justice that just festers as perpetual revenge fantasies and vengeance rather than settling the perceived injustice. — schopenhauer1
If you only apply that bonded statement to what I was saying here: — schopenhauer1
I know. And 'homeland' was misapplied in this situation. One people's homeland was given to another people, who then systematically persecuted the natives. And are still doing so.My point was about the homeland. — schopenhauer1
I know. And 'homeland' was misapplied in this situation. One people's homeland was given to another people, who then systematically persecuted the natives. And are still doing so. — Vera Mont
taking the bigger and more productive half from a large Arab population and giving it to a smaller population of European immigrants. No, the Arabs didn't accept this plan and Ben Gurion only accepted it as an interim plan, always intending to expand his territory.The UN partitioned two states, — schopenhauer1
It's caused an awful lot of international strife and cost an awful lot of money. And it's not finished doing either by a long chalk. Still don't see how that justifies war crimes. But by all means, jerk elsewhere!Clearly, you not only don’t believe in two states, you wish Israel was never formed. Tough shit news for you, it was. — schopenhauer1
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