Puppycow
Penultimate Amazing
WALSH: Myth of a two-state solution (Joe Walsh in The Washington Times)
It's interesting to see a Tea Party congressman propose a one-state solution given all of the outrage on the right and the pro-Israel left a couple months ago when Harvard hosted a conference to discuss a one-state solution for Israel-Palestine:
Goldberg: Anti-Israel One-State Plan Gets Harvard Outlet (Jeffrey Goldberg on Bloomberg)
Harvard's Anti-Israel Hate Fest Demands Scrutiny (Alan Dershowitz in Newsmax)
Harvard’s Anti-Israel “One State Conference” (Emily Schrader on The College Fix)
So is proposing a one-state solution is now acceptable again, since it's being proposed by the right?
I'd like to hear more details about exactly what rights former Palestinians would have in the new state. What does Walsh mean by "limited voting power"? Would former Palestinians get half a vote? A quarter vote? And what does "all the economic and civil rights of Israeli citizens" really mean? Is the right to vote not a civil right? Is the right to move anywhere within the borders of the country that other citizens allowed included? It appears to me that the proposal is for a one-state-two-class solution, i.e., one state but two classes of citizenship. Already there is some pushback from the left on this, but I'm interested to hear what pro-Israel people think of the idea, and what they will say about the man who proposed it (will words like "hate" and "anti-Semitism" be used?).
The only viable solution for the Middle East is a one-state solution: one contiguous Israeli state from the Jordan River to the Mediterranean Sea. There will not and cannot be lasting peace in the Middle East until then.
. . .
This solution is the best for everyone, especially the Palestinians. They will trade their two corrupt and inept governments and societies for a stable, free and prosperous one. Those Palestinians who wish to may leave their Fatah- and Hamas-created slums and move to the original Palestinian state: Jordan. The British Mandate for Palestine created Jordan as the country for the Palestinians. That is the only justification for its creation. Even now, 75 percent of its population is of Palestinian descent. Those Palestinians who remain behind in Israel will maintain limited voting power but will be awarded all the economic and civil rights of Israeli citizens. They will be free to raise families, start businesses and live in peace, all of which are impossible under current Arab rule.
It's interesting to see a Tea Party congressman propose a one-state solution given all of the outrage on the right and the pro-Israel left a couple months ago when Harvard hosted a conference to discuss a one-state solution for Israel-Palestine:
Goldberg: Anti-Israel One-State Plan Gets Harvard Outlet (Jeffrey Goldberg on Bloomberg)
This group argues for the “one-state solution,” the merging of the Palestinian and Jewish populations between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea into a single political entity. It is an entirely unworkable and offensive idea, but because it is couched in the language of equality and human rights, rather than murder and anti-Semitism, it has gained currency in certain not-entirely-marginal circles.
Harvard's Anti-Israel Hate Fest Demands Scrutiny (Alan Dershowitz in Newsmax)
Let there be no doubt that the call for a single state solution is a euphemism for ending the existence of Israel as the nation state of the Jewish people. The major proponents of this ruse acknowledge—indeed proclaim—that this is their true goal. Tony Judt, who was the academic godfather of the "one state" ploy, saw it as an alternative to Israel as the nation-state of the Jewish people, which he believed was a mistake. Many of those speaking at the Harvard conference are on record opposing the existence of Israel. Leon Wieseltier was right when he observed that the one state gambit is not “the alternative for Israel. It is the alternative to Israel.”
The "one state" solution failed in the former Yugoslavia. It failed in India. And it would fail in the Mid East. That's why most Palestinians and nearly all Israelis are against it. They favor a two state solution, as does most of the rest of the world.
Harvard’s Anti-Israel “One State Conference” (Emily Schrader on The College Fix)
Freedom of speech and critical examination of new ideas should be a staple of the American university – but Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government didn’t get it quite right at its recent One State Conference, which focused on solving the Israeli-Palestinian conflict with the creation of one democratic state for Palestinians and Israelis (in which Jews would be the minority), a move that would bring about the end of the Jewish state of Israel as we know it.
The stated goal of the conference was “to educate ourselves and others about the possible contours of a one-state solution and the challenges that stand in the way of its realization,” which sounds like a perfectly reasonable topic for academic discussion. But with a plethora of anti-Israel speakers on hand (Ilan Pappe, Diana Buttu, Susan Akram and Ali Abunimah) and nobody representing an alternative viewpoint, the conference was weak on critical examination – and strong on demonizing Israel.
Even Harvard Kennedy School Dean David Ellwood issued a statement in advance, distancing his school from the conference and expressing disappointment with the one-sided nature of the invited speakers. “Without the balance of divergent views that characterize the most enriching discussions, the credibility and intellectual value of any event is open to question,” Ellwood explained.
And he was not alone. Massachusetts Senator Scott Brown also issued a statement, condemning the conference and requesting that Harvard cancel it, due to “dangerous thinking that gives comfort to Israel’s enemies… Harvard has a right to do it, but that doesn’t make it right to do it.”
So is proposing a one-state solution is now acceptable again, since it's being proposed by the right?
I'd like to hear more details about exactly what rights former Palestinians would have in the new state. What does Walsh mean by "limited voting power"? Would former Palestinians get half a vote? A quarter vote? And what does "all the economic and civil rights of Israeli citizens" really mean? Is the right to vote not a civil right? Is the right to move anywhere within the borders of the country that other citizens allowed included? It appears to me that the proposal is for a one-state-two-class solution, i.e., one state but two classes of citizenship. Already there is some pushback from the left on this, but I'm interested to hear what pro-Israel people think of the idea, and what they will say about the man who proposed it (will words like "hate" and "anti-Semitism" be used?).