a_unique_person
Director of Hatcheries and Conditioning
OK, that's you're opinion, but the 'debunking' claimed the resolution stated something it did not.
AUP: That's 2 Jews down, and several more to go. You protest too much. Why not lay off America and Israel for a while and criticize Australia, like that crazy imam in Sydney who equates women with meat.
a_unique_person said:Mycroft is not Jewish, he is just someone who likes to throw disgusting accusations around, and make up motivations for people. It's not the race, it's the person.
I don't normally judge people but I would make this one an exception. What he did is to question my sanity instead of questioning the insanity of war. I suffered a lot because of my illness. The stigma associated with it made life difficult for me.
Instead of looking for the value of the statement, he looks at the man and says he is insane. What is wrong with the statement "Even if the lot adjuscent to my home is empty, I still have no right to claim it".
Mycroft said:There is nothing wrong with the statement in itself, but neither does it offer any particular insight into the conflict.
I don't normally judge people but I would make this one an exception. What he did is to question my sanity.
steverino said:You shared with us your battle with schizophrenia. It is valid then that we as readers look at your posts with a judgement about you as a person influenced by your unfortunate illness. If it was important enough for you to share your hallucinations with us in the context of your post, then please allow us to weave your unique circumstance into our conclusions about your political vision and accept your stigma.
If anyone dares to debate you on the issue in depth, it can only be because they are anti-semites who hate Jews.
You shared with us your battle with schizophrenia. It is valid then that we as readers look at your posts with a judgement about you as a person influenced by your unfortunate illness. If it was important enough for you to share your hallucinations with us in the context of your post, then please allow us to weave your unique circumstance into our conclusions about your political vision and accept your stigma.
"You're Jewishness...is of no concern to me."- A Unique Aussie
I assumed nothing about me was of any concern to you.
It seems no matter how many times I correct you on this, you keep pushing this lie.
Let's make this clear:
Many people disagree with me on Israel. The vast majority of them are not anti-Semites.
To be called an anti-Semite by me you have to go way above and beyond merely disagreeing and debating with me on Israel. Such things may include but not be limited to:
1) Showing extreme prejudice towards Israel, exaggerating all its wrongs and minimizing wrongs done to it.
2) Expressing grave concern over Jews exercising political power to influence the platform of Australian political parties.
3) Expressing grave concern over “extremists Zionist” Jewish “neo-cons” having too much influence in the United States government.
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?postid=394648#post394648
4) Showing extreme insensitivity towards Jewish people. You know, the infamous “Yarmulke” thread.
5) Revising history so one doesn’t have to change their opinion. Such as claiming that Arafat was really trying to end terrorism when the evidence is clear he was promoting more of it, or claiming there was no cease-fire so they wouldn’t have to admit Palestinians were breaking it, or calling 400 years of Ottoman rule “occupation” to de-legitimize Zionist talks with them.
6) Apologizing for Nazis (yes, actual Nazis) such as Haj Amin el-Husseini by claiming their genocidal hatred was motivated (and justified) by precognition.
Lot’s of people disagree with me on Israel. To be called an anti-Semite, one needs to do something special.
You are a loathsome person, twisting around what I say to suit your own perverted needs.
I have Jewish friends, as do my children.
Many people disagree with me on Israel. The vast majority of them are not anti-Semites.
It is frustrating to discuss, objectively, most of the matters in the Mid East when a partisan, emotionally driven pundit like Z-N (who at least is consistent in his approach and themes, and coherent in his presentation) accuses me of making "rationalizations" when I present cold, heartless analysis of the tensions between two sides of an extremely complex, and IMO generally unresolvable, political struggle.To be called an anti-Semite by me you have to go way above and beyond.
That would include me, on some topics.
You are a loathsome person, twisting around what I say to suit your own perverted needs. I have Jewish friends, as do my children. These people I know are nothing like you.
OK, that's you're opinion, but the 'debunking' claimed the resolution stated something it did not.
In politics, semantics is everything.
For example, did you know that the PLO rejected resolution 242? Their reasoning was that it didn’t deal with Palestinian-Arabs as a people with national rights. This makes perfect sense, of course, as before 1967 they weren’t a people; the term Palestinian didn’t come into common usage until after 1967, prior to that they self-identified as Jordanians, or Egyptians or simply Arabs. Nope, the PLO didn’t accept Resolution 242 until 1988, and only after pressure from the United States which set it as a precondition to recognizing them.
But what about the resolution itself? What does it mean?
Well, let’s take a look at some statements from some of the diplomats of the time:
"To seek withdrawal without secure and recognized boundaries ... would be just as fruitless as to seek secure and recognized boundaries without withdrawal. Historically, there have never been secure or recognized boundaries in the area. Neither the armistice lines of 1949 nor the cease-fire lines of 1967 have answered that description... such boundaries have yet to be agreed upon. An agreement on that point is an absolute essential to a just and lasting peace just as withdrawal is... "
Arthur Goldberg, U.S. ambassador to the U.N
“The purposes are perfectly clear, the principle is stated in the preamble, the necessity for withdrawal is stated in the operative section. And then the essential phrase which is not sufficiently recognized is that withdrawal should take place to secure and recognized boundaries, and these words were very carefully chosen: they have to be secure and they have to be recognized. They will not be secure unless they are recognized. And that is why one has to work for agreement. This is essential. I would defend absolutely what we did. It was not for us to lay down exactly where the border should be. I know the 1967 border very well. It is not a satisfactory border, it is where troops had to stop in 1947, just where they happened to be that night, that is not a permanent boundary . . . "
Lord Caradon Britain’s representative to the U.N
"Until the states concerned in the dispute make peace in accordance with Resolution 242, the Security Council decided, Israel could remain in the territories it held after the Six Day War as occupying power. The legality and legitimacy of its presence as occupying power is thus certified by the Security Council"
Eugene V. Rostow U.S. Undersecretary of State.
So who cares what Eugene Rostow, Lord Caradon, and Arthur Goldberg think? Well, if you want to invoke UNSCR 242, you should. They’re the guys who wrote it.
Resolution 242 doesn’t call for Israel to withdraw from all the territories occupied in 1967. It presumes that a withdrawal will be a part of a negotiated peace between all parties involved, but it also presumes that the negotiated peace will include secure and defensible boundaries that are not the armistice lines of 1949.
I don't think him having done so either.I don't think Mycroft (or anyone else on this forum) called you an antisemite.
I share the concerns of some that the pro Israel lobby/advocacy groups wield an unhealthy influence on our Congress, but I also feel that lobby activities in general are becoming unhealthy influences on policy, Mid East and otherwise. (NAFTA expansion being one such concern.)Anyway, it is not so much the beliefs one holds about zionism or israel in theory, but the hatered of israel out of all proportion to its faults (while ignoring almost totally far worse crimes elsewhere) that is the mark of the antisemite. israel, for such people, is treated in the same way the jews in general are treated by antisemites--the double standard, the conspiracy theories, the desire to wipe it out.
"I have Jewish friends, as do my children. These people I know are nothing like you."
---- Mycroft is not jewish.
I don't think him having done so either.
I share the concerns of some that the pro Israel lobby/advocacy groups wield an unhealthy influence on our Congress, but I also feel that lobby activities in general are becoming unhealthy influences on policy, Mid East and otherwise. (NAFTA expansion being one such concern.)
In defense of said pro Israel lobbyists, can you blame them for trying? In defense of Israel, can you blame the Israelis for trying to line up allies and supporters? Trying to sit in the shoes of the leadership in Jerusalem, I can't find fault with that point of view. Their strategic position is precarious, or can become so with just a few changes in the amount of support they can rely on. That does not necessitate that America be the sole enabler/supporter of addressing those concerns.
DR