bikerdruid
Philosopher
Nothing to see here, there's no anti-semitism on the left...
i don't think that anyone here has said that.
skeptic's claim that communists are necessarily anti-semitic is what is at issue here.
Nothing to see here, there's no anti-semitism on the left...
Right. Which is why my claim that Asian (not communist) anti-Semitism was greater than zero. Exactly appropriate to the evidence presented.
Socialist, so Communism minus the form of government. All the laws, rules and regulations of the Israeli government apply to these kibbutzim. The issue of landownership is, unless its a moshav, collectively owned by the kibbutz.Bigjelmapro, since you have lived on 7 kibbutzim, perhaps you would be able to describe how the current kibbutz model defers from the past?
My understanding is that one definition of communism is that all property is publicly owned and that people work according to their abilities and are paid according to their needs.
Since the kibbutzim are within the boundaries of Israel, a parliamentary democracy, and its members are citizens of Israel -- to whatever extent that kibbutzim were and are communist has to be due to how they were managed internally.
What's difficult to understand about an urban kibbutz? It simply is one residing in or in close proximity to an urban area. This would in most cases imply that a portion of the residents would be working outside the kibbutz and that there would possibly be less emphasis on agriculture.If you have the info, I'd like to hear more about what the typical model is now (if in fact the 270 or so kibbutzim are similar enough to have a typical model) before I give my opinion as to whether they could still be considered a communist economic model for their members at least as far as their internal affairs.
I'm particularly interested in what the typical model is for an "urban kibbutz". Per this Wiki article there are about a 100 of them. But I've not been able to find out how a typical urban model is set up and managed. Do they have to have a means of bringing in income by owning a factory or a store for example? Or do some of them just share expenses?
How would it be? The kibbutz model, as stated before, was based on a socialist communal model mostly out of necessity (ie many immigrants arriving with only the clothes on their back in a poorly developed area) rather than strict adherence to any certain ideology, albeit, there are some hardcore supporters of the strict socialist model.Capitalist kibbutz? Isn't that an oxymoron? If the Wiki article is accurate I would say that at least 72% of the kibbutzim no longer fit the communist model.
The Japanese hate all non-Japanese equally. You're either Japanese or Gaijin.Proof that the Japenese didn't share this particular prejudice with the Nazis. One reason is probably that while their were Jews in Japan, they were not a large enough minority to attract prejudice.
Yes, I understand what correlation is and yes, I understand statistics. You're the one who presented the existence of Asian communism as evidence that overall communists would be less anti-Semitic, presumably because their levels of anti-Semitism would be watered down by the non-anti-Semitic Asians. If that's not what you meant, then please clarify.
So in your opinion communist anti-Semitism would be comparable to baseline anti-Semitism?
Right. Which is why my claim that Asian (not communist) anti-Semitism was greater than zero. Exactly appropriate to the evidence presented.
I'm not claiming they're less or more or anything...
I'm not the one who claimed a correlation either way. Support your correlation claim, really.
A more moderate version of an unsupported libel is still an unsupported libel. E.g., I'm pretty sure that if I were to say "Mycoft blows his wage on booze and beats his wife on pay day" or "there's a strong correlation between payday and Mycoft blowing his wage on booze and beating his wife", it would still be an insulting libel either way.
At least she has the excuse of having gone round the bend because of a terrible trauma. What's the excuse of those who do it voluntarily?
Second, even that would not mean antisemitism.
Basically same as supporting the independence of the ex-USSR countries doesn't mean being anti-Russian,
1. What, every single Palestinian, including the women and children and all, are for that?
2. I don't remember the right to self-determination or the applicable international treaties being contingent on liking each other.
3. Generally, last I heard, law and international law were concerned with what someone does, not with what you think someone's intention is, nor with slippery slope kind of arguments.
otherwise we would have to bomb the vatican...
Of course not, but that's irrelevant. The leadership and the ideology and the guiding policy are for that. Also, unfortunately, many survery show that quite a few Palestinians -- 40% or so, IIRC -- support just, presumably including many women and children.
So the Palestinians should just get the territories for nothing, not even an agreement to not continue to kill Jews?
That's right. And international law does not require a country that captured territories in a war of agression against it to return them unconditionally.
If the Vatican had sent thousands of terrorists and tens of thousands of rockets into Italy as part of a religious war to wipe Italy off the face of the earth -- as the pope repeatedly declares -- you can bet your behind they would be bombed.
The problem is the Palestinians do not just think, or dislike; they engage in a terror war whose purpose is Israel's destruction and they openly declare getting a state would be a tool to continue that war.
What are you trying to hard to rewrite the OP of this thread?Skeptic, is communism inherently anti-Semitic? If so, how? Earlier you said that Judaism and communism contradict each other. How? Does a thing being contradictory to Judaism make that thing inherently anti-Semitic?
Join the other thread regarding this topic and you'll find out that the majority of the peace loving Palestinians support a two-state as a stepping stone to a one-state solution devoid of Israel, which is anti-Israel, wouldn't you say?Right. So that would leave, what, 60% who don't? Seems to me like one can still sympathise with the majority of the population in there, without having some shared anti-Israel agenda. Much less an anti-semitic agenda.
For both the OP and your attempt to rewrite it, Communist and Socialist leaders of the past and present, from philosophers to political leaders, overwhelmingly viewed religion in the negative to its effect on society and its development,