This is so true. The talking heads on the tube and our government never state it this way. Even if the Arab Israelis didn't vote in one block, the country would totally change.Quote:
Originally Posted by Tippster
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This is so true. The talking heads on the tube and our government never state it this way. Even if the Arab Israelis didn't vote in one block, the country would totally change.Quote:
Originally Posted by Tippster
I would say that the last thing I would want is a full scale war. But I do believe that Israel has the right to protect itself by whatever means the elected government chooses. You make valid points and inevitably this argument will continue like most other political arguments do on this board. People inevitably have opinions that they believe are true and will try their hardest to defend their positions. Not surprisingly, i don't expect to change your opinion and vice versa, while pragmatic about the situation, I don't expect you to change my opinion on the matter.Quote:
Originally Posted by CherryMoon
:eek:Quote:
Originally Posted by Rontele
Given that a vast majority of Israeli's are immigrants - many 2nd and 3rd generation, but immigrants nonetheless I have difficulty seeing how their reliance on ancient texts is superior to the rights of people who's families were actually living there for many generations.
Diaspora, Zionism, reinhabiting the Middle East, all valid points, but for thousands of years there was a Jewish state in Palestine.Quote:
Originally Posted by cj001f
I am going back to Sprocket Rockets.
What a purile argument.Quote:
Originally Posted by Rontele
Zionism is rascism and breeds hatred, contempt and violence. Time for the whole area to stop considering people by their ethnicity or religon and treat each other as humans who can peacefully coexist. Impossible for that to happen while Israel claims to have some divine right to the land.
I think i'm right in saying that at the moment the majority of immigrants to Israel are actually converts to Judasim. Israel actively recruits such immigrants to boost it's otherwise shrinking population.Quote:
Originally Posted by cj001f
I wonder how a similar Palestinian policy would be regarded by Israel or it's apologists?
I agree and if you read my earlier post you would have seen that I think the biggest losers are the Palestinain people.Quote:
Originally Posted by CherryMoon
But I do think that Israel has reason to be suspicious of Hamas' motives considering until recently the basic tenet underlying Hamas' existance has been the destruction of Israel.
comeon, that's sophistry of the highest order - there hasn't been a Jewish state for millenia - and the archeological evidence (actual concrete evidence) is different than the theological evidence for the existance/history of states prior to the romans.Quote:
Originally Posted by Rontele
This is a valuable post. Hezbollah IS traditionally an outlet for Iran's anti-Israel efforts, but the thing to remember is that Syria stands between Lebanon and Iran. THere is no transhipment of arms and material w/o a de facto approval from Damascus.Quote:
Originally Posted by skideeppow
Tipp: I'd also like to know where you're getting that info on, cause you're pretty far off.
I also think that characterizing those who believe that there should be a Jewish state as "Zionists" is equally racist.Quote:
Originally Posted by PNWbrit
The western wall?Quote:
Originally Posted by cj001f
Ok, so we all have our viewpoints. But what does the international community do at the current juncture? Do we somehow step in to ensure war is not re-instated or watch silently as these people slaugther themselves? If so, how do we do that without stepping on toes?
I guarantee you the US is pressuring the Israelis hard to not escalate the violence. The EU is probably working with the Lebanese, Syrians, and Iranians to ensure that there is no escalation on their side.Quote:
Originally Posted by CherryMoon
wheeeeee. This is even more inflammatory than abortion. Good god.
Ron, I don't doubt that Israelis are peace lovers, my point is that so long as the Israeli Arabs are treated as a second class, there will never be peace. No bloc of humanity enjoys being subjugated by a foreign (as perceived by the palestinians), peoples. Sure, the israelis have a historical claim to the land, and as a state, they have the right to exist. But they also need to act with a little bit of a lighter hand in their affairs. Their heavy responses may have been suitable in the 50' 60's and 70's, but not any more, they need to find a better path.
If you look at civilizations throughout history, this exact situation has been played out before, and the outcome was never brought about peacefully (usually they involed biblical plagues, ethnic cleansing, or never ending war).
Tipp: a quick run through Wikipedia shows that 17% of Israeli citizens are Arabs.
All of these folks can (and do) vote.
About 80% of them are Muslim.
They have 9 representatives in a 120 seat parliamentry body. Obviously, they don't have a fully proportional representation of their population, but then again black folks are ~10% of the U.S. population and they get ONE senator. Hispanics are just as underrepresented. Not justifying anything. Both systems could be better, but comparing Israel's politics to apartheid is way off.
I hate to say it, but there really isn't that much we can do.Quote:
Originally Posted by CherryMoon
The Old Testament does not give Isreal a right to exist. The UN did, not god.
In defense of the Israelis they tried a less heavy handed approach in 1998 with the Road Map to peace that Arafat walked away from. From 2001 until now they have tried disengagement through a unilateral establishment of the border between palestine and israel (obviously an objectionable tactic). The problem is that from the ISraeli perspective they believe they have never had a partner on the other side willing to make the sacrifices necessary for peace.Quote:
Originally Posted by MassLiberal
What worries me is that how rational can expect Hezbollah to act in all of this considering WHO their backers are (Assad and Mullahs in Iran). That is most worriesome of this situation as we have no idea if they could or would yield to international diplomatic pressure to not escalate the situation if the US is correspondingly de-escalating the situation on the Israeli side.
If you include the populations of the Gaza Strip & West Bank - areas under de facto Israeli control - the numbers are closer to TippsQuote:
Originally Posted by shamrockpow
Yes, but I would also point to the fact that the greatest hope for peace existed during the Camp David period. Rabin brought hope for peace, untile he was assisinated by an extremist israeli, and Arafat walked away from the accords because he would have become irrelevant. Why not try and return to that era?
Totally pointless electro-geek aside: Not amps, but volts. The threashold is called the "breakdown voltage", and yes, it takes a higher voltage to start current flow than it does to keep it going. Arc welding is a great demo of this effect in action.Quote:
Originally Posted by iceman
Voltage is analogous to PSI/water preasure vs Amps which is like GPM/volume per second of flow.
Because unfortunately I do not think the Israelis believe that the Palestinians are committed to a peaceful resolution when they elect Hamas as their government.Quote:
Originally Posted by MassLiberal
And you hit the nail on the head, Arafat walked away because he would have become irrelevant. Underscores that the Palestinian people have probably NEVER have had anyone look out for their interests. Just power hunger demagouges or idealogues intersted in preserving their own power. Sad story.
Which Info?Quote:
Originally Posted by shamrockpow
The areas that just had their own elections and which Israel has given up annexing?Quote:
Originally Posted by cj001f
Whose elections Isreal refuses to support on the basis that their preferred candidate didn't win?Quote:
Originally Posted by shamrockpow
edg
Complete nonsense. This is not true, and is rather demeaning to those who actually did live under apartheid.Quote:
Originally Posted by Tippster
Israeli Arabs vote and have the same rights guaranteed to Jewish citizens, except for compulsory military service, although some do serve.
It's funny (but maybe not unexpected) that everyone squawks about the rights of Arabs in Israel, where they actually do have guaranteed rights, but no one ever refers to the rights of Jews in Arab countries (aside from their all too clear right to suffer and be killed/expelled).
Another irony to all this is that Israeli Arabs in general have more rights and better civil rights protections than their counterparts in Arab countries, which are almost uniformly monarchic dictatorships. To wit:
Arabs in Israel have equal voting rights; in fact, it is one of the few places in the Middle East where Arab women may vote. Arabs currently hold 8 seats in the 120-seat Knesset. Israeli Arabs have also held various government posts, including one who served as Israel's ambassador to Finland and the current deputy mayor of Tel Aviv. Oscar Abu Razaq was appointed Director General of the Ministry of Interior, the first Arab citizen to become chief executive of a key government ministry. Ariel Sharon's original cabinet included the first Arab minister, Salah Tarif, a Druze who served as a minister without portfolio. An Arab is also a Supreme Court justice.