"We've" established no such thing. I've established your reading and comprehension difficulties given the dogshit statement below: — Maw
That's exactly correct, if I sound like a miserable person it's because I interact with dogshit illiterates, such as yourself, who filter videos of Jews cheering death and destruction after rockets murdered several dozen Palestinians and nearly a dozen children into braindead commentary like: — Maw
Unless the irony is lost on me, you're playing the racist card I see. That doublespeak is mighty MAGA/QAnon of you, BC. — 180 Proof
Don't really know what kind of glue you're sniffing in order to interpret things this way, but it must be pretty strong. — Maw
Help me win better. I don't follow - I don't understand - your comment. My bad. can you make it clearer? — tim wood
The apartheid colonialist State of Israel has demonstrated in the last few decades that the ineluctable lesson of history is that people more often than not refuse to learn from – not merely "forget" – their history. To wit: Nazis + "Lebensraum" —> genocide; Zionists + "Promised Land" —> ethnic cleansing. :eyes:
— 180 Proof
Breathe, 180, breathe. That's so far from being a parallel that you even first of all must see it. And with that there's naught else to say. — tim wood
Yeah nothing upsetting about Jews waving the Israeli flag, dancing and cheering as a fire breaks out near the third holiest site for Muslims. — Maw
I'm a pro-Palestine American Jew, and having been conditioned, if not demanded, to support Israel for 30 years, it's hard not to feel a tinge of self-disgust watching Jews dancing and cheering at the Western Wall, waving the Magen David. — Maw
has lead to the end result of Jewish self-hatred from Jews who support the right of Palestinians. — Maw
I'm here to discuss the murder of flesh and blood children by an apartheid state. — StreetlightX
What matters is what counts as such deliberate murder. That's why it's difficult for us to converse.
The difference is that I will not search high and low to come up with excuses for the among the world's most sophisticated military for it's war crimes and deliberate murder of children, while it does everything it can to exacerbate resentment among its subject population. — StreetlightX
I don't have 'an' attitude toward miltary action because I'm not so naive to think one can reason one's way to action from first principles. — StreetlightX
Answer the question. Is taking arms against an occupying army justifiable? Would you consider doing that if you were a Palestinian? — Baden
If you abstract these actions from the context in which they occur you render yourself cognitively incapacitated. And in that context, these actions are the deliberate murder of civilians. The universe doesn't operate on free-floating principles, unembedded in reality. — StreetlightX
So, presumably you believe war against Israel by the Palestinians is justified? Again, in their position, living under a foreign occupation, how would you react? — Baden
Again, cute thought experiment, but there's nothing 'necessary' about Isreali apartheid and settler colonialism. — StreetlightX
Yes. — StreetlightX
You don't get to use the "intention" excuse when civilian casualties are inevitable. Attacking civilian targets is a war crime regardless of your stated intention (as if that should be trusted). — Baden
As opposed to what exactly? The extensive tracts of 'non-civilian' land available to - oh wait, there isn't any, because Isreal is an imperialist land grabber which has confined an entire population to a shoebox, which it continues to eat away at, illegally and immorally.
But by all means, continue to defend the murder of children so that such land grabs may continue. — StreetlightX
It is certain — I believe so that for everyone — that Dostoevsky's philosophy reaches its highest significance with his theological solution, suggested in his mature work and life. Considering this, I return: is it possible to consider dostoevskian philosophy apart from its dogmatism and theological presuppositions? — Bertoldo
Even a moment's reflection is going to reveal to anyone with half a brain that its our existential lot to be dependent, in ways almost never of our own choosing, to things, people, environments, and systems around us which enbale (as much as constrain) any exercise of freedom. Yet these morons model freedom on a limit-case scenario that is so abstract that it converges, in last analysis, to non-existence as freedom's ultimate expression (if you don't exist, you're totally free!). These people need to go outside and stop modeling existence on Dungeons and Dragons. — StreetlightX
...but pretty much any human is born into webs of social, political and even ecological relations which pretty much everything around it, webs upon which they are dependent upon for their very existence.
— StreetlightX
None of which, at least initially, a result of his voluntary choice.
Therefore I believe none of these to hold any moral claim to him. — Tzeentch
But are we ever confident of that...unless we are the majority? — Pantagruel
People generally don't want trouble and they tend to shun those that are in any kind of trouble (such as being targeted by a racist; it can be anything from losing your job, to getting cancer or being robbed). — baker
Actually, I know a similar situation first-hand. What I do is I make an effort to be professional and that's it. Don't smile, don't chit chat, don't get involved. This always seems to be the best policy: not becoming too cordial too soon, but giving things time and waiting for facts to become known. — baker
Another example I remember back from college: A classmate whose father was a Serb told me about this. Another classmate told her to her face that Serbs should go "back where they came from". Meaning, one girl said to another girl that people like that other girl's father should go away (and presumably, her included, since she was also half-Serbian). Yet the girl who said that carried on as if all was well between the two. The girl whose father was a Serb told me that and asked me for advice on how to treat the other girl, given that up to that point, they were on very good terms. — baker
Indeed, there now exists a (potential) conflict of interests. Your status in the community, since you're now the target of someone's ism, is in question. Your relationship with other neighbors is now put to the test. Will they still accept you, will they demote you, or will they shun you because you've become the target of someone's ism? — baker
In short, we shouldn't give anyone the power to make such decisions, and we should tolerate everything short of action that impedes another's liberty. — NOS4A2
The problem with "hunting" such people is that they rarely will do you the nicety of being so explicit, and the act of the hunt itself,.trying to parse true intentions from either deception or misunderstanding, has its own pitfalls. — Count Timothy von Icarus
but there comes a point where ostracism is the only step to take, barring physical force. — Count Timothy von Icarus
You can continually challenge their world view and present facts and logical arguments, but when someone doesn't want to listen and takes any disagreement as signs of oppression and reacts with anger, discussion isn't fruitful. — Count Timothy von Icarus