are we capable of manipulating or surpassing its terms? — The Abyss
That is, I would say that the whole premise that you have any sense of certainty of knowledge or existence within one’s own mind cannot happen without knowledge of one’s embodiment within some external context — Sir Philo Sophia
Descartes did not presuppose the existence of "I". He experienced his thought and that gave rise to the inescapable, irrefutable truth, that he exists; — god must be atheist
A state will do what is in its power to stop terrorism or threat to its population. — schopenhauer1
don't know what you really meant by counterfactual history. What I meant was that a major part of history is analyzing the decisions that were made and how that negatively or positively affected a later outcome — schopenhauer1
When did Palestinians ever have a chance to "negotiate" with Israelis?When did Jews in Europe ever have a chance to "negotiate" with Hitler? — schopenhauer1
As you have correctly noted, the Israeli/Palestinian situation is not unique. While each situation has it's own unique history (and range of solutions) there is still the underlying question - how to resolve disputes over land ownership. — EricH
Yet, that is exactly how history can be analyzed. — schopenhauer1
I don't see anything you said as countering the fact that this is about an issue of the inability to negotiate. — schopenhauer1
But I know the counter argument that two wrongs don't make a right. I agree. But, let's look at the facts on the ground. The West Bank and Gaza did not want to form into a state between 1948-1967. Or at least, Jordan and Egypt didn't want to encourage this. They wanted the whole thing or nothing at all. Israel got the West Bank and Gaza, and the Sinai, after being threatened from imminent attack in 1967 and again in 1973.
Then came an intractable problem — schopenhauer1
In any case, if Jews were to lose power then the Arabs would take control and Jews would once again be second class citizens as they are in other Arab countries and open themselves up to the possibility of massacres as they have faced in the past. — BitconnectCarlos
All ethnic states are established to the detriment of minorities. In the case of Israel there are specific laws and practices against native Palestinians: citizenship, land ownership, right of return, mixed marriages, etc. Amnesty International regularly reports on massive violations of basic rights. That is why Nobel Prize winner Desmond Tutu called Israel a new form of apartheid. He knew well what he was talking about.This clearly excludes Arabs and Muslims. 20% of Israel's population. Self-determination is a fundamental human right. — Tzeentch
You are wrong. The unified Jewish kingdom only existed in the mythical period of Saul, David and Solomon. After that, the Jewish people were divided among several countries mostly under foreign occupation. When Rome occupied Palestine, the two main kingdoms were Judah and Israel.Firstly - and this is a minor point - these are not legends. There is a clear historical record that there was an autonomous Jewish nation prior to being taken over by Rome. — EricH
Many times it is not an easy question. Other times it is clear, at least in a negative way. Not by means of war. Not appealing to mythical claims. Not because of some alleged 2,000-year-old right. If these perverse foundations of law became widespread, there would be oppression, chaos and universal violence. As in fact already happens in Palestine.But this does not answer my question - how do we resolve situations where multiple groups of people lay claim to the same physical land? — EricH
What gives any nation authority or legitimacy? — schopenhauer1
A similar thing could be said about every healthy democracy. — Tzeentch
But if there are no guidelines/rules/laws at all, then there will be no way to resolve these issues. — EricH
n your comparison you are equating the Sioux with the Israelis, i.e. the Sioux are not allowed to reclaim their historic homeland. My point was that we should be equating the Sioux with the Palestinians - they are the aggrieved party. Apologies if I was not clear on that. — EricH
Just think WHY did Israel start the Peace process in the first place? — ssu
Hence the rules are decided by peers called sovereign states. — ssu
Of course, the UN does not have an army and relies on other nations to provide troops. That makes the exercise of authority difficult in certain cases, but it does have that authority. — Tzeentch
Ukraine? — ssu
Australia, Bélgica, Bielorrusia, Bolivia, Brasil, Canadá, Checoslovaquia, Costa Rica, Dinamarca, República Dominicana, Ecuador, Estados Unidos, Filipinas, Francia, Guatemala, Haití, Holanda, Islandia, Liberia, Luxemburgo, Nueva Zelandia, Nicaragua, Noruega, Panamá, Paraguay, Perú, Polonia, Suecia, Sudáfrica, la Unión Soviética, Ucrania, Uruguay y Venezuela. — Embajada de Israel en la República Dominicana.
So superficially you seem to be answering my question - 125 years is the time limit. — EricH
And just what institution would have the authority to say so? — ssu
Every conflict is rooted in force. — ssu
Can the descendants of ABC fight and kill the descendants of DEF?
If yes, then for how long? — EricH
EDIT: Oh, and the Israelis as well the US (the Palestinians won't directly deal with the Israelis) have offered self-determination the Palestinians many times among...I believe the past 3 administrations: Clinton, Bush, and Obama. The Palestinians have zero interest. — BitconnectCarlos
How do you define a nation? — EricH
it's just about jewish self determination and in turn preventing these types of massacres. — BitconnectCarlos
My point is that war is terrible, but war is basically the status quo in human history. People are and always have been awful. — Noah Te Stroete
but to blame it on zionism is absurd victim blaming and immigration levels were at a relatively low level during that time (1929). — BitconnectCarlos
Zionist funds had to be diverted from investments in productive capital works in order to provide for the welfare and social services demanded by a Jewish population which increased from 70,000 in 1920 to 140,000 in 1927.
(League of Nations (31 December 1927) “Report by His Britannic Majesty's Government to the Council of the League of Nations on the Administration of Palestine and Trans-Jordan for the Year 1927”.) — League of Nations
The intervention of Jewish armed groups led by Zeev Jabotinsky and the British army against the Palestinians are two elements that you will not find in any pogrom.David, most of those arabs were killed by the british, not by any sort of significant jewish security apparatus. — BitconnectCarlos
That legitimizes Zionism. — Tzeentch
if it's not a pogram or a massacre then would you mind enlightening me as to what it actually was when hundreds of arabs murdered jews in their living spaces with household tools? — BitconnectCarlos
The victims of the 1929 Hebron massacre would like a word with you. — BitconnectCarlos