To try and get this back on topic:
After thinking on it for a bit, the difference between Jocko/Mycroft and myself is the topic of non-violence itself. I think (and I admit that I could be wrong) that the Jocko/Mycroft side sees non-violence as the Palestinians laying down their arms and getting on with building schools and infrastructure and good government, which will so impress the Israelis that negotiations for a permanent peace will soon be concluded.
If that is what you think, and I rather hope that I am wrong, I may have to deploy the "P" word into this debate.
demon said:
The idea is that if Palestinians will show an ethical example by refusing to retaliate to the violence offered to them daily by the IDF, the nice Israeli government will see the error of their ways, return the lands taken since 1948 and make Arafat the new leader of a united country and there will be butterflies and birdsong and the rivers of milk and honey will flow once more.
While I don't agree with demon on a lot of things, occassionally he will write something usable. There is no evidence to the best of my knowledge, that in pre-intafada times Israel stopped building settlements or entered negotiations in any serious way. Now I admit that I'm out on a limb here and don't have the proofs you'll want, so if some of the more rabid debaters can temper themselves and provide information (pro and con) regarding negotiations with a relatively peaceful Palestine, I (and I think others) would be interested.
Now, my view of non-violence is in the same mien as Ghandi and ML King, as I have said before. It may be non-violent, but it is still a
struggle against what is seen as an 'oppressor'. And those peaceful protests, while non-violent, WERE provacative and WERE meant to draw a reaction...you don't march across a bridge in Selma, Alabama into the teeth of hundreds of cops (of which in the 60's all were white and many were probably racist) when you are breaking the law without an expectation of confrontation.
Now what I'd like to present to you and Jocko is a challenge of sorts. I have stated as my thesis that non-violent protest as a challege to the 'other side' often leads to violent action against the protesters, which in a moral society sets up a dichotomy between what the society believes is fair and what they see happening, which leads to a settlement that is seen as fair to the non-violent protesters. As evidence of my thesis I have presented the US Civil Rights Movement and the Indian Independence Movement, both non-violent, both met with violence, and both eventually reaching their goals (albeit not in the ways they expected, for such is History).
My challenge to you is to find instances where one side became non-violent while the other side retained the full spectrum of violent tools and that a firm and lasting (i.e., fair) peace was arrived at. I don't think you can find one, but I have learned a fair but here and am willing to learn more.