That's an interesting interpretation of how Israel was founded. An alternate interpretation might be that Jews were the targets of racism (just a little) at the time, and so were concerned specifically with protecting themselves as a race rather than attacking others.
This is silly. The racism from developing Jewish neighborhoods instead of Arab Israeli neighborhoods isn't based on "compulsory identification of Israeli citizens into classes" any more than redlining was based on blacks having some sort of compulsory identification. They were arabs/blacks, not jews/whites. I know we rag on racists as being stupid, but I don't think they need to slap labels on the out-group to figure out who to discriminate against.
the ability to easily tell what class a citizen is from is what allows the discrimination to occur. Remove the ability to tell who is a jew and who is not a jew in an application for housing and bingo...the champions of racial discrimination are buggered.
Depends on how you define modern democracy.
have never been able to massage inequality of citizenship into any acceptable definition of democracy.
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If you do it based on what it calls itself or how it acts. Apart from housing development and employment discrimination, it does pretty well. I don't say that to brush those issues under the rug, but when you put it up against the thugocracies that surround it and get so much more international sympathy, they start to look
relatively minor.
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everyone does pretty well so long as you pick a suitable thing to compare them to. So stuff it...lets just compare everything to amin era uganda and we'll call ourselves brilliant.
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In other words, I condemn the racist actions of Israel. However, I support Israel as a country against Hamas-Palestine, Fatah-Palestine, Syria, Lebanon, Iran, etc. as they make Israel look like a shining city on a hill.[/QUOTE]
everyone could be a shining light on a hill if you pick someone crappy enough to compare yourself to.
Israel demands it be compared to modern democracies....how do you think it compares? Can you think of any other modern democracies that have different classes of citizenship?