I didn't compare them at all,
Yes you just did.
As usual, the argument quickly turns into personal attacks.
But you are a moral relativist.
I didn't compare them at all,
As usual, the argument quickly turns into personal attacks.
You call the Holocaust a "bad time"?
Damned moral relativists, you have no idea of the scale of the atrocity. These events absolutely don't compare.
You're the one saying that people shouldn't worry about stuff that happened 60 years ago that can't be changed.
The thing here that can't be changed is the existence of the state of Israel, just like there is nothing we can do about the injustice done to the native peoples of the Americas. Canada, the US and Mexico exist now.
We can still do something about the Holocaust, and that is to stop antisemitism and not allow for something to happen like this again.
You can't change the fact that a state now exists, but you can sure do something about the hatred and insanity behind genocide.
You're using the same word to mean two different things. Stopping antisemitism today is a valuable thing, but it won't reach back into history and stop Hitler retroactively, and you know it.
Then tell us exactly what happened. Are you saying the movie is inaccurate? What are you saying? Please explain yourself.Except that's not exactly what happened, and not for the same reasons.
No, of course what happened afterward doesn't compare and I never attempted to compare it even if others did. I'm specifically addressing that one particular early aspect of the persecution of Jews that I mentioned, where Jews were evicted from their own homes so that Germans could move in.Andmore happened afterwards that absolutely don't compare.![]()
The thing here that can't be changed is the existence of the state of Israel, just like there is nothing we can do about the injustice done to the native peoples of the Americas. Canada, the US and Mexico exist now.
We can still do something about the Holocaust, and that is to stop antisemitism and not allow for something to happen like this again.
You can't change the fact that a state now exists, but you can sure do something about the hatred and insanity behind genocide.
Then tell us exactly what happened. Are you saying the movie is inaccurate? What are you saying? Please explain yourself.
Huh? You're shifting the goal posts. The Holocaust happened ca. 60 years ago, the "Final Solution" of the Nazis. Current antisemitism is not part of the Holocaust.
Hey, you're comparing apples to oranges. A genocide and the creation of a state are not the same thing.You can't do anything about that either, to use your own words: those ca. 6 mn. Jews are dead, and nothing changes that.
"Nakba" is used to keep the Palestinians resentful of the existence of Israel, as long as they see Israel as their Holocaust, they will never accept its existence and live side by side with it. The only way "Nabka" can be amended is for Israel to be destroyed.Basis for a peace with which the majority of the people on both sides can live is to understand the perception of the "other". Apparently, Netanyahu does not want that to happen on the Israeli side?
Thank you very much. I don't want you to and I never asked you to. However, I would appreciate it if you would explain what I actually asked you to explain.I'm not going to explain how the reasons behind the Holocaust are diametrically different than the reasons behind the creation of the State of Israel.
Thank you very much. I don't want you to and I never asked you to. However, I would appreciate it if you would explain what I actually asked you to explain.
I'm beginning to realize that you are deliberately misinterpreting my arguments and are responding with flagrant straw man responses, as if you expect the good folks here to naively fall for that and overlook your argumentative fallacies. Believe me, it's not going to work.
So to you:
The Holocaust = removing people from their homes
The creation of Israel = removing people from their homes
Sorry, I'm not going to entertain your simplistic and flawed view of history.
And isn't that boiled down view you give above essentially correct?
Creates resentment, doesn't it?
And how does exactly commemorating that resentment going to help move forward and reconciliate?
which is the original point I was agreeing with Marc, before we all got derailed into idiotic comparisons with the Holocaust.
And how does "it happened to you (someone else) a long time ago, get over it already" help anything move forward or do anything to move people towards reconciliation?
That's a clear admission you're shifting the goalposts. The discussion was about the Holocaust, not about what it could lead to.But it can lead to another.
No, you're calling an apple an orange. The Naqba refers to the ethnic cleansing of the Arabs, not to the declaration of independence of Israel.Hey, you're comparing apples to oranges. A genocide and the creation of a state are not the same thing.
Evidence?"Nakba" is used to keep the Palestinians resentful of the existence of Israel, as long as they see Israel as their Holocaust, they will never accept its existence and live side by side with it. The only way "Nabka" can be amended is for Israel to be destroyed.
Again, evidence? The word refers to an historic fact. Is the name "Trail of Tears" a reminder of a state of injustice? And I'm sure that you, as a Canadian, or a_u_p as Australian, can come up with words used to describe the treatment of the native populations.To me, that doesn't sound constructive.
The word is a constant reminder that there is a state of injustice, and even war, between them. How can the two reconciliate this way?
Okay, I'm done feeding the troll. He either doesn't know what straw man arguments are, or he's enjoying himself by flagrantly repeating them just to cause frustration. The rest of you can keep banging your heads against the wall but I'm out of here.So to you:
The Holocaust = removing people from their homes
That's a clear admission you're shifting the goalposts. The discussion was about the Holocaust, not about what it could lead to.
No, you're calling an apple an orange. The Naqba refers to the ethnic cleansing of the Arabs, not to the declaration of independence of Israel.
Evidence?
And how did the US, Canada, Australia cope with the injustice done to the native populations? By acknowledging the injustice, offering apologies and programs to address their dire situation.
Israel, on the other hand, doesn't even acknowledge injustice has been done to the Palestinians, the native population
I'm for the underdog, by nature. Now I look at the Israel/"Palestine"situation, and I see an oppressed side and an oppressor.