davefoc
Philosopher
no
So why do you think there would be peace if all the settlements magically went away? Perhaps there is another cause for the conflict than the excuse du jour....ie:settlements.davefoc said:
Arafat has been out of the picture for three days and already negotiations have resumed without his usual interference. A good sign.RAMALLAH, West Bank - Senior Palestinian and Israeli leaders held separate meetings Sunday to plan a path forward in the absence of Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat, who was being examined in a French hospital for an unknown ailment.
Despite the spate of official meetings, it was clear that if Palestinians are now facing the post-Arafat era, there is no one with his stature ready to step in and rule.
Arafat has been the Palestinian leader since 1969 and has steadfastly refused to appoint a successor, preferring one-man rule.
zenith-nadir said:There was a time when over 120,000 Palestinians went inside Israel every day to work, now it is only a handful.
Jim Bowen said:You might find that building a great big wall makes it a bit tricky for Palestinians to get to work in Israel, or hadn't you thought that one through?![]()
Jim Bowen
Elind said:You think the wall is for that purpose, or that is the reason there are less of them working in Israel? Perhaps I misunderstood, or had you not thought that one through?![]()
Jim Bowen said:Sorry, Elind, I was being sarcastic to ZN, considering the title of this thread, I thought it pretty ironic that he is mentioning the lack of Palestinians managing to work inside Israel...
Jim Bowen (cursed with a sarcastic mind)
So why do you think there would be peace if all the settlements magically went away? Perhaps there is another cause for the conflict than the excuse du jour....ie:settlements.
It is stupid sarcastic remarks like that that leads me to believe you are just a mouth piece and not really knowledgeable about the issue Jim. It became too hard to weed out the fundamentalist suicide bombers from the workers who went to work in Israel every day. Palestinians do not work in Israel anymore Jim because of islamic fundamentalist terrorism not because of the security barrier.Jim Bowen said:You might find that building a great big wall makes it a bit tricky for Palestinians to get to work in Israel, or hadn't you thought that one through?
Jim Bowen
Thats correct. Palestinian violence by terrorists against Israel exsisted before 1967 and after 1967. Why? Islamic fundamentalism and it's xenophobic nature. See: Haj Amin Husseini, Nasser, Fateh and the PLO...today see the Hamas, Islamic Jihad or Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades.davefoc said:I do not know if all Palestinian violence by terrorists against Israel would have ended if the colonization started in 1967 hadn't happened. I doubt it.
No I do not buy the terrorism is resistance B.S. Dave. There were terror attacks before Israel exsisted and there were terror attacks after Israel exsisted. There were terror attacks before 1967 and after 1967.davefoc said:Do you have some reason to believe that it wouldn't have been reduced substantially?
So what better way to bring justice to the 800,000 Palestinians who lost their homes in 1948 - and the ones who became occupied because of another failed Arab war - than continue a losing 60-year guerilla campaign which has killed untold thousands in Jordan, Lebanon, Israel, Gaza and the West Bank. Brilliant plan. Sounds like a lesson from the "Mother of All Battles" Military school. What I find weird Dave is you tend to blame it all on "biblically inspired dreams" and not the failure of Arafat, the only Palestinian leader since 1969, to negotiate a just solution.davefoc said:Colonization efforts are often accompanied with violence that gradually fades away after the colonization effort has ended. This process of healing, acceptance and forgiving has been delayed by 37 years because of the continuation of a biblically inspired dream of founding a country on land that was occupied by somebody else.
What a load. The Palestinian Authority under Arafat has had ten years of negotiations with Israel and the terrorism has not stopped. And you call the settlement policy "crazy and unjust". I think that says everything about you we need to know.davefoc said:Someday peace will happen in Israel (if the world hasn't blown itself up by then) but now thanks to a crazy and unjust settlement policy the peace may not happen in my lifetime.
Yes Israel is evil we all know that already from a_u_p and crew.davefoc said:Israel, for those 37 years has taken advantage of their superior military power and their skill at manipulating the American political process to extract subidies to drive their settlements into Palestinian land. To what end? What many in Israel have known all along is that Israeli success and security will not come by the unjust treatment of the Palestinians.
Blowing up buses is misguided and not resistance, blowing up restaurants is misguided and not resistance, blowing up shopping malls, discos, pool halls and seders is misguided and not resistance. Terrorism against Israeli civilians is not resistance it is terrorism Dave. When a Palestinian killed RFK was he resisting the settlements? When Palestinians killed U.S. Ambassador Cleo A. Noel was that resisting the settlements? When planes were hijacked during Black September by Palestinian terrorists was that resisting the settlements? When Jordanian Prime Minister Wash Tel was killed by Palestinians was that resisting the settlements? When the athletes were killed at the Munich Olympics by Palestinian terrorists was that resisting the settlements? Enough with the terrorism is resistance crap.davefoc said:Each of these thread involves ZN telling us how misguided or evil the Palestinians are because some of them resist the Israelis with violence and others of them don't condemn the violence.
The violence exsisted before "Israeli extremists use the violence to justify the expansion"davefoc said:What in all that time you have failed to acknowledge is the quid pro quo that has developed between the Palestinian extremists and the Israeli extremists to continue the violence. The Israeli extremists use the violence to justify the expansion and the Palestinians use the expansion to justify their violence.
No I do not buy the terrorism is resistance B.S. Dave. There were terror attacks before Israel exsisted and there were terror attacks after Israel exsisted. There were terror attacks before 1967 and after 1967.
Originally posted by davefoc
ZN worte:
So your view is that a bunch of antisemitic, Islamofacist Palestinians are blowing themselves and others up for no other reason than they hate Jews and or Israel and there is nothing that Israel will ever be able to do about it.
Yes. There are islamic fundamentalists that hate non-muslims, especially "the zionist entity". F.Y.I. I don't hate Palestinians, I don't think they are evil. Palestinians are people who by a cruel stroke of fate have been led into a dark deadly corner because they have been led there by dictators. These dictators, Haj Amin Husseini and Yasser Arafat, were and are islamic fundamentalists and frankly, hard-core racists.davefoc said:So your view is that a bunch of antisemitic, Islamofacist Palestinians are blowing themselves and others up for no other reason than they hate Jews and or Israel and there is nothing that Israel will ever be able to do about it.
Israel tried recognizing the PLO and the terror didn't stop. Israel tried negotiations with the PLO and the terror didn't stop. Israel let The Tunisians return from exile and the terror didn't stop. Israel tried cooperative security measures with the Palestinian Authority and the terror didn't stop. Israel tried several peace treaties with the Palestinian Authority and the terror didn't stop. Israel tried bulldozing Palestinian suicide bombers homes and the terror didn't stop. Israel tried building a security barrier and still the terror doesn't stop. The wall is a desperate measure to stop people who decide that it is their duty to Allah to kill Kafirs.davefoc said:OK, then Israel could build a wall on land which is widely recognized to be theirs and prevent these people from coming into Israel.
Yes Israel does. It ruins homes and olive groves to build a security barrier to stop terrorism. Israelis don't care anymore they just want the terrorism to stop and will do anything they have to do stop it. Terrorism predates the security barrier , the security barrier does not predate terrorism.davefoc said:But Israel doesn't do that. Do they? Israel builds a wall through Palestinian villages on Palestinian land. Why? Could it have anything to do with the fact that Israel wants Palestinian land?
Lets get something straight. The Palestinians do not get the choice to make peace, only Yasser Arafat speaks for every Palestinian on earth. America has tried, Europe has tried, Israel has tried, the U.N. has tried to make peace with Arafat since 1993. All have failed. So how is that Israel's fault again?davefoc said:You repeatedly blame the Palestinians for their problems. Have you ever thought about how incompetent or just intentionally antagonistic Israel has been that after all these years that it has not been able to make peace with the Palestinians.
Islamic fundamentalism.davefoc said:Sure some of it is because of skapegoating by local Arab leaders, but what has Israel done to so inflame the local population that many of them die willingly to attack Israel?
No one had to suffer greatly as a result of the founding of Israel.davefoc said:But no matter that, the inidigenous population of Palestine suffered greatly as a result of the founding of Israel, some of them were massacred, some of them lost land and homes that they and their ancestors had lived on for thousands of years....But, for me the colonization of what remained of Palestinian land by Israel after the 1967 war was unjust.
Fast forward 20 years while the Arabs occupied Gaza and the West Bank as no Palestinian state was formed. Now it's 1967, Nasser - arch enemy of Israel - orders the UN troops out of the Sinai, blockades Israeli shipping and forms an alliance with Jordan. Their combined forces mobilize as Syrian aircraft bomb Israeli towns from the north.davefoc said:But in 1967, regardless of whatever injustices had been done to the Jews and the Palestinians Israel was a fact and a great many of the original inhabitants of Palesintine had been shoved on to a much smaller area than they had origininally.
Quack alert. zenith-nadir claims to know what every single Palestinian on earth is beholden to. How does he do it?originally posted by zenith-nadir
Additionally, doesn't it strike you as problematic that every Palestinian on earth is beholden to Yasser Arafat and his every wish?
Mycroft said:Then I also realized my attitute of expecting Israel to solve the problem despite the Palestinian-Arabs was founded in racism. Anti-Arab racism. My expectation that Israel should "turn the other cheek" was based on a fundamental assumption that the Arabs were less civilized and thus less capable of civilized behavior.
And that's wrong. Whatever the realities of their leadership and their culture, to expect less of them just because they are Arabic is racism. They are human beings, just like the Israelis, just like Europeans or Americans, and they are capable of reason and compromize. Just like Germans turned away from Nazism, just like the Japanese turned away from their Emperor worship, and just like the nations of the former Soviet Union are turning away from communism and oppression, so too are the Palestinian-Arabs capable of turning away from violence and xenophobia.
But not if we pander to it and pretend it's normal.
Elind, I don't think Mycroft has trivialized the cultural and religious gulf between the parties involved. I think you trivialize the race effect involved. Do you think the Jews think of themselves as a race distinct from Arabs? Do you think that the Arabs think they are distinct from Palestinians? Do you think the Persians feel distinct from them all?Elind said:Why don't you instead focus on the cultural, or even religious, issues that actually do define how people behave? Race doesn't!
zenith-nadir said:
I agree Dave. So many injustices. The Palestinians haven't had a break since 1900. But unlike you I feel the 10th century machinations of a handful of Arab dictators has been far more unjust to the Palestinians than the foundation of Israel ever was.
Atlas said:Elind, I don't think Mycroft has trivialized the cultural and religious gulf between the parties involved. I think you trivialize the race effect involved. Do you think the Jews think of themselves as a race distinct from Arabs? Do you think that the Arabs think they are distinct from Palestinians? Do you think the Persians feel distinct from them all?
I liked Mycroft's point and I even thought it had relevance in the way various American races perceive themselves.
When we begin to accept the hype that some peoples just can't do it, maybe it's because they are stupid or victims or women or disadvantaged, we are not being realistic or true to what we believe about humanity. We can expect more of the muslim peoples and we should.
I don't know Elind, your dictionary will say something like: Race - people who are believed to belong to the same genetic stock.Elind said:Either you didn't understand my point, or you insist on redefining the English language; or perhaps both. Race has meaning if you use it correctly, but when you turn into a feel-good catch-all for differences that have nothing to do with race, then you trivialize the real racist issues, and muddy the others into something that nobody any longer has the same words to describe as the person they are talking to. Ever read George Orwell?
As to how people perceive themselves; all jews I know think of themselves as white (caucasian) and they know the difference between their race and their culture and their religion. You and Mycroft apparently don't.
The black jews in Israel, and elsewhere I am sure, also know the distinction between their skin color and their religion and culture. You and Mycroft apparently don't.