View Full Version : The victimization of Hamas
Here2Learn22
01-06-2009, 04:35 AM
I am so incredibly tired of hearing people defend Hamas and condemn Israel. You cannot victimize a group of people who use random intances of violence and death to get what they want.
I feel for the civilians being lost in the conflict in Gaza. I'm not proud of Israel's actions, but I understand their necessity. Hamas are hiding behind villages and settlements of innocent people that are being killed when Israel attempts to attack Hamas. They are using human sheilds and these people are called victims?
Sorry, I'm not sure if this applys to the forums. I just needed to vent.
andrewlittle
01-06-2009, 08:00 AM
I am so incredibly tired of hearing people defend Hamas and condemn Israel. You cannot victimize a group of people who use random intances of violence and death to get what they want.
I feel for the civilians being lost in the conflict in Gaza. I'm not proud of Israel's actions, but I understand their necessity. Hamas are hiding behind villages and settlements of innocent people that are being killed when Israel attempts to attack Hamas. They are using human sheilds and these people are called victims?
Sorry, I'm not sure if this applys to the forums. I just needed to vent.
I agree, basically, with the statement I have highlighted. Using that logic, however, leads one to condemn the authorities of both Israel and Hamas - not the country and not the general population.
Israel severely limits supplies that are essential to human survival - killing many "non-violently". Hamas conducts rocket attacks that kill small numbers of people, but that create a constant tension and fear. Israel responds by bombing and killing a hundred or so Palestinians and by shutting down the supply pipeline even further. Hamas responds by tripling the rocket attacks, which is entirely predictable, and kills another Israeli. Israel responds and the death toll reaches 230. Tit for tat, except for each person Hamas is responsible for killing, Israel kills about a 100 violently and uncounted numbers through lack of medical supplies, power and food. The Palestinian death toll is now over 500.
Not only is the response disproportionate, but the count of militant vs. civilian deaths is suspect. See the story below.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/7811386.stm
dsdrane
01-06-2009, 10:19 AM
...but I am 100% anti-Hamas.
Israel is no doubt inflicting tremendous pain on the people of Gaza right now. It's incredibly frustrating and gut-wrenching to watch.
I imagine it's no picnic for those doing the inflicting, either.
But the fault -- at least in the short term -- lies squarely with Hamas.
Hamas doesn't acknowledge Israel's right to exist...in fact, they go a step further by being dedicated to Israel's destruction. These are the people with whom Israel is supposed to "negotiate".
The fact that Gaza was then blockaded should surprise no one. Was Israel supposed to sit idly by while Hamas imported any numbers of weapons?
I find it curious that Hamas, despite the blockade, was still able to obtain these rockets that they keep flinging over the border, but somehow couldn't figure out how to smuggle in baby formula or medicine. And I particularly like how they use schools, mosques, and hospitals as shields for their weapons and fighters.
Egypt, Jordan, and even the Fatah government in the West Bank have figured out that Israel isn't going away. Hamas -- and the people of Gaza who democratically elected them -- need to grow up and do likewise.
Hamas has the power to stop this crisis right now.
Perhaps they should bone up on their Gandhi....
dsdrane
01-06-2009, 10:23 AM
This is an article (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/marty-kaplan/eyeless-in-gaza_b_155204.html) I read yesterday at The Huffington Post (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/). I think it sums up the incredible frustration so many of us find with the current situation.
Here2Learn22
01-06-2009, 02:03 PM
I agree, basically, with the statement I have highlighted. Using that logic, however, leads one to condemn the authorities of both Israel and Hamas - not the country and not the general population.
Israel severely limits supplies that are essential to human survival - killing many "non-violently". Hamas conducts rocket attacks that kill small numbers of people, but that create a constant tension and fear. Israel responds by bombing and killing a hundred or so Palestinians and by shutting down the supply pipeline even further. Hamas responds by tripling the rocket attacks, which is entirely predictable, and kills another Israeli. Israel responds and the death toll reaches 230. Tit for tat, except for each person Hamas is responsible for killing, Israel kills about a 100 violently and uncounted numbers through lack of medical supplies, power and food. The Palestinian death toll is now over 500.
Not only is the response disproportionate, but the count of militant vs. civilian deaths is suspect. See the story below.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/7811386.stm
You are right. I acknowledge Israel's faulty practices. I was just angry yesterday. It makes me happy when I get so many positive responses from everyone. Thank you.
NathanATX
01-06-2009, 02:45 PM
Violence is violence is violence.
A few weeks ago, I received a photo of a pile of dead Palestenian children that were killed during an Israeli bombing.
Friends, consider that the commitment we have to use the principles of non-violence in the work of LGBT equality is preparing us to be able to speak powerfully and effectively about other justice issues.
What kind of difference would a non violent approach make for Palestenians? For Israelis?
dsdrane
01-06-2009, 03:50 PM
A few weeks ago, I received a photo of a pile of dead Palestenian children that were killed during an Israeli bombing.
We're seeing these images every day now, and indeed they are extremely upsetting. And fury at the Israelis, while understandable, must be countered with fury at Hamas for putting these children in harm's way.
What kind of difference would a non violent approach make for Palestenians? For Israelis?
Someone once remarked about Yassir Arafat that he never missed an opportunity to miss an opportunity. In my own lifetime I've seen public sentiment grow sympathetic to the Palestinian cause only to be squandered by yet another hijacking, yet another failed peace initiative, etc.
"Violence is violence", yes, but the reality is this: the State of Israel is not going away, and any strikes against it will be met with the kind of disproportionate response that comes from two millennia of survival tactics. Israel is fully aware that this current conflict, now over 60 years old, cannot be won militarily, but that will not stop them from firing back when fired upon.
Go ahead and try to explain to these grandchildren of the Nazi's Final Solution about non-violence. The holocaust, sadly, is as much of a defining moment to Israelis as our revolution is to us. The safety of Israel -- the state and the "tribe" -- is paramount; they will never back down...basically because they cannot.
Fatah seems to understand this at long last, but Hamas still refuses. Until they understand they cannot win anything through violence, Israel will continue to answer violence with more violence.
Hamas, like I said earlier, has the power to stop this now. If they stop firing into Israel, the Israelis will no longer have any excuse to respond.
Then they can talk.
pnggrad79
01-06-2009, 06:12 PM
I know there are atrocities on both sides of this conflict. However, Israel must do what it can to curb the illegal bombings that Hamas and others like them perpetrate on them. Hamas and the like have a culture of death. They use women and children as human shields and then offer themselves up as martyrs to a cause that is spawned by hatred. Then the stupid media shows poor, helpless victims of Israel's retaliation, when it wasn't Israel that started it. They never show the Israeli victims of Hamas and Hezbollah and the PLO and Islamic Jihad...
It is a vicious cycle and no end in sight. One of my kids in class said today, "Why can't they all just coexist?" I said," I wonder that myself." If Israel lets the West Bank and Gaza be Palestinian then all these murderous idiots will build bombs and Iraq and Iran will pay these dumbass families $25,000 to their young sons and daughters to strap bombs to themselves and go blow themselves up along with some Jews. Until BOTH sides decide to stop this insanity, then it will just continue. Hamas will throw bombs, and send in the suicide bombers, and Israel will retaliate. It is a culture of death.
Daniel
01-06-2009, 06:42 PM
Expects the other to conceed, to go first, to fold. But it is unlikely that this will happen. Even if Israel is able to pound the Palestinian's into submission, it will be a phrryhic victory.
Rick336
01-06-2009, 06:51 PM
The scary thing about this is, if one of Hamas' missiles hits an Israeli nuclear plant then tens of thousands of people are probably going to die and this becomes a whole new ballgame.
Ancient religions and modern warfare is a very deadly mix. Let's hope this conflict ends soon.
Rick
dsdrane
01-06-2009, 07:18 PM
The scary thing about this is, if one of Hamas' missiles hits an Israeli nuclear plant then tens of thousands of people are probably going to die and this becomes a whole new ballgame.
This is the real issue. The only reason Israeli deaths are not greater is because Hamas lacks the resources -- in firepower, perhaps in marksmanship, perhaps both -- to inflict more damage. If they could, they would. They've said as much.
Israel, on the other hand, has the capability to level the place...but doesn't. It would be barbaric, inhuman and evil, of course.
So, what we're left with is one side who would if they could, and the other who can but won't...while still reserving the right to make sure that the ones who would if they could never can.
The violence is appalling, to be sure...but we would be having a very different conversation if Hamas and others had the capability to do what they have publically expressed wanting to do. As someone who experienced the WTC towers fall 4 blocks from my apartment, I do not delude myself that the threat is very real....
How many times do we have to see the unthinkable happen before we realize the unthinkable can happen?
Ancient religions and modern warfare is a very deadly mix. Let's hope this conflict ends soon.
Rick
Amen.
Every military participant with half a brain on either side must know that this conflict will never be settled with weapons. The only way to settle it is politically, and one has to wonder whether the political will exists in sufficient quantity on either or both sides for that to happen.
What's going on now is an attempt by both parties to "change reality on the ground." Why? Because there are two political dates looming: Jan. 20 when Barack Obama is inaugurated and Feb. 10 when Israel holds general elections.
Politically, this is about what Hillary Clinton will inherit as secretary of state and whether Israeli voters will be willing to change leaders during an armed conflict. I haven't read much political analysis from the Palestinian/Hamas point of view, but I can only think their political aim is to raise international ire against Israel's military intervention.
It makes it hard to belieive that politics is about the art of the possible, doesn't it?
pnggrad79
01-07-2009, 01:40 PM
There won't be peace until Hamas decides to quick lobbing rockets into Israeli towns. You don't see Israeli suicide bombers and such. Hamas may have legitimate concerns, but throwing rockets into Israeli towns is not going to do anything but breed more violence. Since its birth in 1948, Israel has had to be on constant standby due to the threat of 22 Arab nations surrounding it who want nothing more than its absolute destruction. That is why Osama exists. That is why the PLO exists.
I am not saying the Palestinians have been treated fairly, however, it seems that with every concession these people get, they use it to create more violence. They deserve self determination and a government of their own, but they don't have the right to impinge on the same freedom of Israel. Israeli towns were victimized first by homemade bombs from Gaza compliments of Hamas. There are innocent victims on both sides, and when Hamas stops using their wives and children as shields for their murderous activities, then maybe the innocent victims will not exist.
Let's stop saying Poor Hamas! That's like saying to the bully in the school yard, "You poor little thing, you threw a rock and hit that little girl and she had the nerve to throw one right back. TSK, TSK!"
Here2Learn22
01-07-2009, 03:57 PM
There won't be peace until Hamas decides to quick lobbing rockets into Israeli towns. You don't see Israeli suicide bombers and such. Hamas may have legitimate concerns, but throwing rockets into Israeli towns is not going to do anything but breed more violence. Since its birth in 1948, Israel has had to be on constant standby due to the threat of 22 Arab nations surrounding it who want nothing more than its absolute destruction. That is why Osama exists. That is why the PLO exists.
I am not saying the Palestinians have been treated fairly, however, it seems that with every concession these people get, they use it to create more violence. They deserve self determination and a government of their own, but they don't have the right to impinge on the same freedom of Israel. Israeli towns were victimized first by homemade bombs from Gaza compliments of Hamas. There are innocent victims on both sides, and when Hamas stops using their wives and children as shields for their murderous activities, then maybe the innocent victims will not exist.
Let's stop saying Poor Hamas! That's like saying to the bully in the school yard, "You poor little thing, you threw a rock and hit that little girl and she had the nerve to throw one right back. TSK, TSK!"
I agree with you, but keep in mind that Hamas is a very small part of the Palastinian population. Yes there is a huge anti-Israeli sentiment among Palastinians, but not all of them are terrorists. Most are victims. Be careful when you use the term "these people" as it has dangerous implications.
Otherwise, well said.
Rick336
01-07-2009, 04:50 PM
Yes there is a huge anti-Israeli sentiment among Palastinians, but not all of them are terrorists. Most are victims.
Yes, most are victims of an insane holy book that demands that they kill unbelievers.
Rick
pnggrad79
01-08-2009, 02:07 PM
They are victims only because they allow terrorists to use them as shields and to make their homes into bomb factories. I don't call them victims, they are aiding and abetting criminal activities. I call them accomplices. The sad thing is that Hamas values human life only minimally and it shows when they strap bombs to 18 month old children and command them to blow themselves up. It is a culture of death.:(
dsdrane
01-08-2009, 03:05 PM
The Gazans, the Palestinians, the Israelis...they're all victims.
They're victims of having inherited a millennia-long, futile struggle for dominance of a tiny part of the world with very limited resources.
A quick walk through the Old City in Jerusalem shows the strata of this historic tug-of-war.
Unfortunately, though perhaps understandably, the price has been radicalism on both sides. There are Israelis who provoke by planting settlements where they do not belong, and there Palestinian who provoke by lobbing rockets over the border. We can argue about who is worse, but the bottom line is that both knowingly provoke.
The great majority of Palestinians alive today were born after the modern-day state of Israel was born. They were weaned on the stories and/or realities of war and occupation in much the same way that Israelis were weaned on the horrors of the Holocaust. Encouraged by the larger Arab world, however, many bought into this notion that the clock could be turned back and the state of Israel destroyed. We could have had a two-state solution at the end of the Clinton Administration, but the Arab world left Yassir Arafat flapping in the breeze and he ultimately demurred. The Israelis were ready; the PLO/Fatah government was ready; but the Arab world was not yet ready.
Neither, apparently, is Hamas.
Yes, ultimately, it is up to the people of Gaza (the ones who voted for Hamas, anyway) to realize that the Hamas government has been, at best, counterproductive, and at worst, a disaster. However, we should give them some slack in the "thinking clearly" department.
The real tradegy -- over and above the obvious harm to lives and limbs -- is the fact that clashes like this harden opinions even more. That's why it's so important to support both sides in finding a way to a cease fire; they can't do it by themselves.
My personal wish is that Egypt conspires with other moderate voices in the Middle East to leash and muzzle Hamas. I believe they could do it if they really wanted to....
Rick336
01-08-2009, 03:48 PM
There are Israelis who provoke by planting settlements where they do not belong....
Yes. They believe God gave them that land. :rolleyes:
I think God wants me to have California. All you Californians better start packing.
Rick
dsdrane
01-08-2009, 09:57 PM
They believe God gave them that land. :rolleyes:
I think God wants me to have California. All you Californians better start packing.
He also gave it to their cousins, the Palestinians.
And you, too, should you desire to relocate. Or California...whichever. (Both are lovely...at times with strikingly similar terrains, come to think of it...and both have lots of Jews and Muslims...hey, wait a minute...are we onto something here!?!?)
Eugene
01-09-2009, 07:06 AM
I say this after noting that I grew up in a premillennial environment where support for Israel was considered a Christian obligation ...
And I say this knowing that Zechariah says that, "in the last days, I will make Jerusalem a burdensome stone for all nations," and I still believe on some level that we are living in that time ...
I hope President Obama finds some way to end America's subsidy of the nation of Israel. We can't afford it -- politically or economically.
dsdrane
01-09-2009, 11:07 AM
I hope President Obama finds some way to end America's subsidy of the nation of Israel. We can't afford it -- politically or economically.
Don't forget that we pay beaucoup bucks to Egypt, too. We essentially have been paying Eqypt and Israel not to fight...since 1979.
pnggrad79
01-09-2009, 08:27 PM
If we have been paying Egypt to keep peace with Israel, then why the hell do we keep giving millions of dollars to the Saudis so they can turn right around and finance so many suicide missions? They are paying these poor families to sacrifice their unmarried sons and daughters to blow up Israelis.
If the US finds other energy sources and pulls back on their use of Saudi oil, hmmm, where will these Muslim nations make their money? In China?:rolleyes:
Unmasked
01-13-2009, 11:12 PM
I am an absolute anti-Zionist. The Jews lived peacefully among the Arabs before Israel was established. Christians say that the land belongs to the Jews, but the Torah says that the Jews will not have their homeland. The very existence of Israel violates the Jewish faith. It is time for the dissolution of Israel. Let them live among the nations.
pnggrad79
01-14-2009, 05:17 PM
I must respectfully disagree with you Unmasked. It is because of Israel's dispersion that led to so much persecution of them. They need and deserve a place of their own. The land of Palestine is historically and rightfully the Jewish people's home. The Palestinians came there after the Jews were forced out by the Roman Empire in 70AD. The Palestinians are racially Syrian, Lebanese or Jordanian. These countries have refused to allow them back in, wanting them to be stirred up constantly, unemployed, uneducated, and poor in order to keep them discontent with Israel. It wasn't Israel who started these wars. They have responded like any nation attacked. Why can't they live peaceably side by side? Because they have been enemies for 6-7000 years.
I am wholeheartedly Zionist. I believe the Jews have a right to the land of Israel, and if the Palestinians want to live there, they need to stop making the bombs and doing suicide missions. The Israelis need to set up job programs for the Palestinians, and get them into the political process where they feel they have a voice. But years of propaganda and radical Islamist dogma prevent this from ever happening. When they start strapping bombs to 18 month old babies, something is wrong... They have a culture of death.
andrewlittle
01-14-2009, 09:08 PM
That is the title of an article by Shlomo Sand, the well respected professor of history at Tel Aviv university.
The articles can be read here (translated from French since it was in a French magazine): http://mondediplo.com/2008/09/07israel
Excerpts:
Then there is the question of the exile of 70 AD. There has been no real research into this turning point in Jewish history, the cause of the diaspora. And for a simple reason: the Romans never exiled any nation from anywhere on the eastern seaboard of the Mediterranean. Apart from enslaved prisoners, the population of Judea continued to live on their lands, even after the destruction of the second temple. Some converted to Christianity in the 4th century, while the majority embraced Islam during the 7th century Arab conquest.
But if there was no exile after 70 AD, where did all the Jews who have populated the Mediterranean since antiquity come from? The smokescreen of national historiography hides an astonishing reality. From the Maccabean revolt of the mid-2nd century BC to the Bar Kokhba revolt of the 2nd century AD, Judaism was the most actively proselytising religion. ...The 1st century AD saw the emergence in modern Kurdistan of the Jewish kingdom of Adiabene, just one of many that converted.
Although the early 4th century triumph of Christianity did not mark the end of Jewish expansion, it relegated Jewish proselytism to the margins of the Christian cultural world. During the 5th century, in modern Yemen, a vigorous Jewish kingdom emerged in Himyar, whose descendants preserved their faith through the Islamic conquest and down to the present day. Arab chronicles tell of the existence, during the 7th century, of Judaised Berber tribes; and at the end of the century the legendary Jewish queen Dihya contested the Arab advance into northwest Africa. Jewish Berbers participated in the conquest of the Iberian peninsula and helped establish the unique symbiosis between Jews and Muslims that characterised Hispano-Arabic culture.
"The Palestinians are racially Syrian, Lebanese or Jordanian." Yes, actually, if you go back several centuries before, they were called Canaanites.
Eugene
01-14-2009, 11:32 PM
I am wholeheartedly American. I think it is time the United States stopped involving itself in the conflicts of people who are perpetually at war. And frankly, I don't care about Zionism or anti-Zionism because I have divorced myself from religious sentiment in the matter. I have more cultural sympathy with Jewish people, but my Jewish friends are Americans, not Israelis.
Yes, actually, if you go back several centuries before, they were called Canaanites.
Whatever they were "called", I don't consider Palestinian Arabs to be Canaanites. Canaanites predated Abraham.
dsdrane
01-15-2009, 10:32 AM
And frankly, I don't care about Zionism or anti-Zionism because I have divorced myself from religious sentiment in the matter.
So did the early Zionists; the people pushing for Jewish self-determination were largely secular Europeans tired of the endless progroms and discrimation and persecution in Christian Europe.
They were also leftists, believing that only through farming and labor could the Jewish people finally become self-sufficient. Though the strength of that movemet has faded, many young American Jews (and others) still travel to Israel for a stint on a kibbutz. (The spa at the Dead Sea is even a kibbutz: Ein-Gedi.) The idea is to plant, to stay put.
In fact, it is only in the last generation that orthodox Jews have accepted the reality of the Jewish state, but only then because they realized it was politically expedient to do so. Add to these some crazy American cousins from Brooklyn and you get a more national zionism that plants Jewish settlements in an attempt to grab as much land as possible.
Anyone familiar with Israeli politics knows how precarious every government there is because of all the various parties. No one party can ever garner enough votes to rule alone, so the government is always made up of a coalition so fragile that a handful of members can bolt and bring it down.
The one thing, however, that unites them all is dealing with any threat to the state's existence. Normally, the scenes in the Knesset make the British House of Commons look like a tea party; but, lob a rocket over the border into Israel, and you'll find a nation united with the knowledge that no one else will defend them. This (http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/13/world/middleeast/13israel.html?partner=permalink&exprod=permalink) recent article in the NY Times sums it up well.
I have more cultural sympathy with Jewish people, but my Jewish friends are Americans, not Israelis.
Yes, but they are still Jews, and they and their allies fight for Israel because they know, if the chips are down, there is a place for them. They may not live there (60% of the world's Jews do not), but they (and Israel) reserve the right for them to go there. It's the ultimate peace of mind...the ultimate "in case of emergency, break glass".
Once a month, Dash has a gig singing at a North Shore synagogue for the sabbath service. I often go along because a) it's different, cool, interesting, and beautiful and b) I do loves me some Jews. :D (A trip to Israel in the late 80s, and an adulthood spent largely in Manhattan and South Florida will do that.) And, mind you, this is a reformed and very liberal congregation...hardly a bunch of neo-con hawks, but their solidarity with the Jewish state (Israeli politics aside) is unbreakable. It's not about politics; it's about family.
This is a rambling post...sorry. I guess my main point is: don't conflate zionism with religious fervor. What's happening in the Middle East is more complex than "mere" religious differences.
Eugene
01-15-2009, 09:04 PM
Yes, but they are still Jews, and they and their allies fight for Israel because they know, if the chips are down, there is a place for them. They may not live there (60% of the world's Jews do not), but they (and Israel) reserve the right for them to go there. It's the ultimate peace of mind...the ultimate "in case of emergency, break glass".
In my opinion, your statement illustrates exactly what is wrong with the Israeli lobby in America.
Rick336
01-15-2009, 09:17 PM
And I say this knowing that Zechariah says that, "in the last days, I will make Jerusalem a burdensome stone for all nations," and I still believe on some level that we are living in that time ...
I disagree. I'm 57 years old and I've been hearing that we're living in the last days for the past 57 years. According to one author, Jesus was supposed to usher in the last days when he returned in 2008. Except, he never showed up. He probably got tied up with business.....again!
But if you're waiting for the last days, you're probably going to need to stick around until the year 20000000009. I think that's the year the earth is supposed to collide into the sun.
Not me. I'll probably hang out for another 30 years but then I'm going to go lay in a cemetery and wait there for Jesus. They keep saying he's supposed to return by then but I won't be holding my breath.
Oh wait.... I guess I will.
Rick
dsdrane
01-16-2009, 08:43 AM
In my opinion, your statement illustrates exactly what is wrong with the Israeli lobby in America.
In what respect?
nmwolfboy
01-16-2009, 11:14 AM
The folks behind Tikkun Magazine have been spearheading a campaign to get a much ignored American Jewish perspective on the Gaza/Israeli conflict more exposure within the public fora. Unfortunately, their efforts have had to rely on buying ad space in print media, presumably because their perspective is ignored by a corporate media in thrall to the hard-line right Israeli lobby. Whether that's true or not, i do think it important to be cognizant that the issues of Israel/Palestine are not a matter of either/or, black v. white positions.
From Tikkun's appeal:
Cease Fire Now in Gaza!
President-elect Obama:
It’s Time to End the Violence in the Middle East—Once and for All
Convene an International Middle East Peace Conference to facilitate a lasting and just settlement for all parties.
The world’s attention is focused on the Middle East for a fleeting moment. Let’s seize this opportunity to insist on an end to this struggle in all its dimensions.
A Call for Lasting Peace
President-elect Obama: When you become president, please call for an immediate CEASE-FIRE in GAZA and for an International Peace Conference to implement a fair and lasting solution to all aspects of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. The solution must also address the conflict between Israel and other states in the region. The international community must stop the violence and terror against Israeli civilians and against Palestinian civilians in Gaza and the West Bank. The international community must also stop the hidden but persistent violence of the Occupation itself.
Read the full appeal here (http://files.tikkun.org/current/article.php/20090115143817967).
andrewlittle
01-17-2009, 07:42 AM
Let's see, the toll so far is well over a thousand dead (a reasonable retribution for the less than two dozen Israelis), one hospital destroyed and two others damaged by direct hits, UN headquarters destroyed, a Near East Council of Churches clinic for mothers and babies destroyed, a UN school destroyed killing 40 and who knows how many other atrocities. But it's okay, right? They're our allies.
In the case of the school, the Israeli leaders responded to criticism by saying that the school was "targeted" because it was shielding rocket-firing militants. These militants, evidently, are the same kind of menace as Bush's weapons of mass destruction and about as equally real. Since the international public outcry, the Israelis have investigated and said it wasn't targeted after all but was the result of a stray mortar. We said we meant to hit it, but we were mistaken. I guess the standard answer that militants are using civilian facilities as shields may or may not be accurate - maybe, maybe not, but it's our story and we're sticking to it - as long as we have stray mortar fire to fall back on. Mortar, no less, in an urban environment where the Israelis are pursuing a precision military operation "aimed at minimizing civilian casualties."
Since there is no evidence that white phosphorus is actually being used - well, no credible evidence incontrovertible proof - it seems a little hasty for the UN to be pushing for war crimes investigations. Doesn't US status as untouchable extend to our allies?
Of course, the UN and the hospitals are probably complicit in strapping those bombs on women, children and babies.
Daniel
01-17-2009, 10:11 AM
An eye for your family. And a tooth for a city block.
Eugene
01-17-2009, 11:31 AM
I disagree. I'm 57 years old and I've been hearing that we're living in the last days for the past 57 years. According to one author, Jesus was supposed to usher in the last days when he returned in 2008.
I've been hearing about it just slightly less years than you've been hearing about it. In 1988, somebody gave me the "88 Reasons Why Jesus Will Return in 1988". Prior to that I went through college expecting every semester to be delivered from final exams by the rapture.
I don't believe in the rapture or Left Behind fairy tales anymore. But I still believe in the end times. It's as deep inside as being gay.
Unmasked
01-18-2009, 06:26 PM
Check out http://www.nkusa.org. It's a group of anti-Zionist, Orthodox Jews.
Here2Learn22
01-19-2009, 03:18 AM
I am wholeheartedly American. I think it is time the United States stopped involving itself in the conflicts of people who are perpetually at war. And frankly, I don't care about Zionism or anti-Zionism because I have divorced myself from religious sentiment in the matter. I have more cultural sympathy with Jewish people, but my Jewish friends are Americans, not Israelis.
Whatever they were "called", I don't consider Palestinian Arabs to be Canaanites. Canaanites predated Abraham.
All Jews have de facto citizenship with their country and Israel. Washing your hands of a situation and preaching isolationist policy will take the world nowhere.
Do you know what Israeli intelligence is dedicated to doing? They've been calling the phones of different military targets and informing them of possible raids. They tell them to get their women and children out of the area. Do you know what Hamas does? They bring more women and children into the area, allow them to be killed by Israeli mortars, and then blame the Israeli's for the slaughter. I'm not saying that all casualties are Hamas's fault, but this is a tactical conflict carried out in order to destroy an organization dedicated to the destruction of Israel, and every Jew around the world. Hamas has declared every Jewish person a legitamate target. I'm a terrorist target... How can you victimize a group of people who use human shields?
Whether you believe it or not, the state of Israel is necessary. It is our ultimate safety net.
A place where Jews can go and live among Jews with a Jewish calender, Jewish traditions, and a Jewish community. Anti-Semitism is real and present in every country. It is an accelerating and subtle process, and it has only recently been held back thanks to the establishment of Israel.
dsdrane
01-19-2009, 10:48 AM
The New York Times reports on the cease-fire in Gaza. Read the article here (http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/20/world/middleeast/20mideast.html?_r=1&hp).
I'm cautiously optomistic, but, then, we've seen this movie before.
There's one passage I'd like to highlight for those who express so much outrage at the disproportionate response by Israel to the rocket attacks from Gaza:
In a speech broadcast Sunday night on Hamas’s Al Aqsa television, the Hamas leader Ismail Haniya, who has been in hiding for the past three weeks, claimed victory against Israel. He pledged to provide compensation to families who suffered damage during the war.
On Monday, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, called Khaled Meshal, Hamas’s senior exiled leader, in Damascus to tell him that: "Today is the beginning of victory and perseverance will complete the links of victory,” the Iranian IRNA news agency reported.
I would ask critics of Israel: do you think that sworn enemies would hesitate to make good on their promise to destroy Israel? If you agree that there is a very real mortal danger, what exactly would you have Israel do?
Eugene
01-19-2009, 09:11 PM
Do you know what Israeli intelligence is dedicated to doing? They've been calling the phones of different military targets and informing them of possible raids. They tell them to get their women and children out of the area. Do you know what Hamas does? They bring more women and children into the area, allow them to be killed by Israeli mortars, and then blame the Israeli's for the slaughter. I'm not saying that all casualties are Hamas's fault, but this is a tactical conflict carried out in order to destroy an organization dedicated to the destruction of Israel, and every Jew around the world. Hamas has declared every Jewish person a legitamate target. I'm a terrorist target... How can you victimize a group of people who use human shields?
You will excuse me for not taking propaganda from the Israeli government as gospel truth. Just as I don't take propaganda from the United States government as gospel truth. Every government has its own agenda and an interest in presenting itself as blameless when waging war.
What I believe is what is reported in the international media. And it is appalling.
It is a trite saying, but it is true: violence breeds violence. This seems to be just the latest round in a perpetual cycle of Mid East violence. What Israel has done is only going to harden the situation, in my opinion.
You must also excuse me for expressing my opinion as a Christian. There won't be any peace in Israel until the 2nd coming.
Here2Learn22
01-20-2009, 12:04 PM
You will excuse me for not taking propaganda from the Israeli government as gospel truth. Just as I don't take propaganda from the United States government as gospel truth. Every government has its own agenda and an interest in presenting itself as blameless when waging war.
What I believe is what is reported in the international media. And it is appalling.
It is a trite saying, but it is true: violence breeds violence. This seems to be just the latest round in a perpetual cycle of Mid East violence. What Israel has done is only going to harden the situation, in my opinion.
You must also excuse me for expressing my opinion as a Christian. There won't be any peace in Israel until the 2nd coming.
I'm not basing my opinion on government propaganda. I know four Israeli's involved in the Israeli government. Two of them are members of Israeli intelligence. I consider these people long time friends, and I've been told that they and several of their peers have called several locations to warn against raids. I believe word of mouth from good friends.
Violence may breed violence, but what else can you expect Israel to do? Hamas is not interested in negotiation. They are not interested in a peaceful world with Israel in it. This is a war for survival, and survival tactics, learned over a period of over 2000 years, are the only thing that will keep the nation of Israel safe.
dsdrane
01-20-2009, 12:10 PM
You must also excuse me for expressing my opinion as a Christian. There won't be any peace in Israel until the 2nd coming.
And you must also excuse me for expressing my opinion as a Christian that the residents of Palestine and Israel, the region and the world simply can't wait that long.
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