israel vs the sewer/refuge camp

kalakala 3,361 Posts
edited July 2014 in Strut Central
ethnic cleansing anyone?
how about a 67 year protracted holocaust?
3 billion dollars a year of US taxpayer dollars sure does buy a nice amount of misery torture death and incarceration!
yay!
but wait there is a lot more to it than that......
go ahead and try to defend the failed state ..... i'm waiting for your knee jerk brainwashed religious oriented reaction and to be called an anti-Semite for this post


http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article34485.htm

The Staggering Cost of Israel to Americans

By Pamela Olson

April 02, 2013 "Information Clearing House" -"If Americans Knew" - Israel has a population of approximately 7.8 million, or a million fewer than the state of New Jersey. It is among the world's most affluent nations, with a per capita income similar to that of the European Union.[1] Israel's unemployment rate of 5.6% is much better than America's 9.1%,[2] and Israel's net trade, earnings, and payments is ranked 48th in the world while the US sits at a dismal 198th.[3]

Yet Israel receives approximately 10% of America's foreign aid budget every year.[4] The US has, in fact, given more aid to Israel than it has to all the countries of sub-Saharan Africa, Latin America, and the Caribbean combined???which have a total population of over a billion people.[5] And foreign aid is just one component of the staggering cost of our alliance with Israel.

Given the tremendous costs, it is critical to examine why we lavish so much aid on Israel, and whether it is worth Americans' hard-earned tax dollars. But first, let's take a look at what our alliance with Israel truly costs.
Before the Iraq War in 2003

Direct Foreign Aid

According to the Congressional Research Service , the amount of official US aid to Israel since its founding in 1948 tops $112 billion, and in the past few decades it has been on the order of $3 billion per year.[6](In 2011, for example, this amounted to over $8.2 million every single day.)

But this money is only part of the story. For one thing, Israel gets its aid money at the start of each year, unlike other nations.[7] This is significant: It means Israel can start earning interest on the money right away. And it costs the US more than the typical year-end disbursements because the US government operates at a deficit, so it must borrow this money to pay Israel and then pay interest on the amount all year.

Israel is also the only recipient of US military aid that is allowed to use a significant portion annually to purchase products made by Israeli companies instead of US companies. (The costs to Americans caused by this unique perk are discussed below.)

In addition, the US gives roughly $2 billion per year to Egypt and Jordan in aid packages arranged largely in exchange for peace treaties with Israel. The treaties don't include justice for Palestinians, and are therefore deeply unpopular with the local populations.[8]

On top of this, the US gives roughly half a billion to the Palestinian Authority each year,[9] much of it used to rebuild infrastructure destroyed by Israel and to bolster an economy stifled by the Israeli occupation.[10] This would be unnecessary if Israel were to end the occupation and allow the Palestinians to build a functioning and self-sustaining economy.

Yet there's still much more to the story, because parts of US aid to Israel are buried in the budgets of various US agencies, mostly the Department of Defense. For example, since at least 2006, the American Defense budget has included between $130 and $235 million per year for missile defense programs in Israel.[11]

In all, direct US disbursements to Israel amount to approximately 10% of all U.S. aid abroad, even though Israelis only make up 0.001% of the world's population. In other words, on average, Israelis receive 10,000 times more US foreign aid per capita than other people throughout the world, despite the fact that Israel is one of the world's more affluent nations.[12] And that number rises significantly when one considers disbursements to Egypt, Jordan, and the Palestinian Authority and Defense spending on behalf of Israel.

Additional Ad hoc support for Israel

Dr. Thomas Stauffer, a Harvard economist and Middle East studies professor who twice served in the Executive Office of the President, wrote a comprehensive report about all components of the alliance with Israel's cost to American taxpayers for the Washington Report on Middle East Affairs in 2003. He wrote:

"Another element is ad hoc support for Israel, which is not part of the formal foreign aid programs. No comprehensive compilation of US support for Israel has been publicly released. Additional known items include loan guarantees... special contracts for Israeli firms, legal and illegal[13] transfers of marketable US military technology, de facto exemption from US trade protection provisions, and discounted sales or free transfers of 'surplus' US military equipment. An unquantifiable element is the trade and other aid given to Romania and Russia to facilitate Jewish migration to Israel; this has accumulated to many billions of dollars."[14]

Israel has often used its privileged access to US military technology against both the US government and US corporate interests. According to the Associated Press in 2002, "In France, Turkey, The Netherlands and Finland, Israeli companies have edged such U.S. firms as Raytheon, Northrop Grumman and General Atomics out of arms deals worth hundreds of millions of dollars in recent years. The irony, experts say, is that tens of billions of U.S. tax dollars and transfers of American military technology helped create and nurture Israel's industry, in effect subsidizing a foreign competitor."

The AP article quoted a vice president at the Aerospace Industries Association of America, who bluntly said, "We give them money to build stuff for themselves and the U.S. taxpayer gets nothing in return."[15]

Meanwhile, according to the Christian Science Monitor , Israel has also "blocked some major US arms sales, such as F-15 fighter aircraft to Saudi Arabia in the mid-1980s. That cost $40 billion over 10 years."[16]

Even worse, Israeli weapons "buttress the arsenals of nations such as China that the United States considers strategic competitors, alarming US military planners," the Associated Press article went on to report. "[In 2001] US surveillance planes flying along China's coast were threatened by Chinese fighter jets armed with Israeli missiles... Had Chinese fighter pilots been given the order to fire, they could have brought down the US planes with Israeli Python III missiles... US defense chiefs say Israel sold China the missiles without informing the United States."[17]

Lost jobs, trade, and standing

One of the most devastating indirect costs of the US alliance with Israel was the Arab oil boycott of 1973. The Arab states imposed the boycott in protest of US support of Israel during the 1973 war, in which Arab countries attacked Israel to try to reclaim lands Israel had invaded and occupied in 1967.

"Washington's intervention triggered the Arab oil embargo which cost the U.S. doubly: first, due to the oil shortfall, the US lost about $300 billion to $600 billion in GDP; and, second, the US was saddled with another $450 billion in higher oil import costs," wrote Stauffer in the Washington Report on Middle East Affairs.[18]

Then there's the cost in lost jobs. "US policy and trade sanctions reduce US exports to the Middle East about $5 billion a year, costing 70,000 or so American jobs," Stauffer estimates. "Not requiring Israel to use its US aid to buy American goods, as is usual in foreign aid, costs another 125,000 jobs."[19]

But perhaps the most damaging cost to the US has been its loss of standing in the Arab and Muslim worlds, where US largesse towards Israel as it commits human rights violations[20] provokes deep resentment. "To many of the world's Muslims, it places the US taxpayer on the Israeli side of its conflicts with Arabs," observed the Associated Press article.[21]

According to Harvard professor Stephen Walt, "The 9/11 Commission reported that 9/11 plotter Khalid Sheikh Mohammed's 'animus toward the United States stemmed not from his experiences there as a student, but rather from his violent disagreement with US foreign policy favoring Israel.' Other anti-American terrorists???such as Ramzi Yousef, who led the 1993 bombing of the World Trade Center???have offered similar explanations for their anger toward the United States."[22]

There are many more potential categories of costs that are even more difficult to quantify. All in all, Stauffer estimates that Israel cost the US about $1.6 trillion between 1973 and 2003 alone???more than twice the cost of the Vietnam war.[23]
Costs since Stauffer's study in 2003

Israel's cost to American taxpayers has remained high since Stauffer's 2003 study. The US currently gives Israel an average of $3 billion a year in military aid, under an agreement signed by the Bush administration to transfer $30 billion to Israel over ten years, starting in 2009.[24]

All of the other extras and costs remain and in some cases have increased since 2003. For example, "Despite a tough economic climate and expected US budget cuts???including drastic cuts to the US military budget???US lawmakers will provide $236 million in fiscal 2012 for the Israeli development of three missile defense programs," reported Israeli newspaper Haaretz.[25]

In addition, the US government "has provided $205 million to support the Iron Dome, manufactured by Israel's state-owned Raphael Advanced Defense Systems Ltd. The system uses small radar-guided missiles to blow up in midair Katyusha-style rockets with ranges of 3 miles to 45 miles, as well as mortar bombs??? Legislation moving through the Republican-controlled US House of Representatives would give Israel additional $680 million for the Iron Dome system through 2015."[26]

And if, as many experts believe, the US would not have invaded Iraq without intense and sustained pressure from Washington insiders who advocate actively on behalf of Israel,[27] this adds yet another dimension of staggering cost to the equation: "hundreds of billions of dollars, 4,000-plus U.S. and allied fatalities, untold tens of thousands of Iraqi deaths, and many thousands of other US, allied, and Iraqi casualties," according to retired US foreign service officer Shirl McArthur.[28]

Nobel Prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz and Harvard professor Linda Bilmes put the cost of the Iraq War at over $3 trillion, and incalculably more if you take into account the opportunity costs of the resources spent on this unproductive war. For example, higher oil prices due to the war have had a devastating impact on America's economy, and so have the surging federal debt and the servicing of that debt. Without the war, the 2008 financial crisis almost certainly would not have been as severe, and the Afghanistan war most likely would have been shorter, cheaper, and more effective.[29]

The Israel lobby and partisans are currently gunning for a war with Iran with the same zeal they showed in the run-up to the 2003 invasion of Iraq.[30] By all estimates, the costs of a war with Iran will be much higher than the Iraq war. In addition to the loss of life, analysts predict, for example, that if Iran's oil production were taken out of the world market, gas prices would rise 25-70 percent.

If the Straits of Hormuz (straits adjacent to Iran through which 20% of the world's oil production passes on a daily basis) were attacked or blockaded, the cost of oil would skyrocket to a level never seen before, and the economic recession or depression that followed would be nothing short of "apocalyptic," according to Matthew Yglesias writing for Slate .[31]
Reasons and Consequences

So now we are back to the question of why America continues to pour money into a state that commits daily human rights violations, defies US strategic interests,[32] provokes rage and resentment among billions of people,[33] competes with and crowds out US interests using technology subsidized by US taxpayers, and sells America's military secrets to its enemies.[34]

The answer is simple and summed up well by professors Stephen Walt and John Mearsheimer in their ground-breaking article in the London Review of Books , "The Israel Lobby,"[35] and their book The Israel Lobby and US Foreign Policy .[36]

"Why has the US been willing to set aside its own security and that of many of its allies in order to advance the interests of another state?" the article asks. "One might assume that the bond between the two countries was based on shared strategic interests or compelling moral imperatives, but neither explanation can account for the remarkable level of material and diplomatic support that the US provides.

"Instead, the thrust of US policy in the region derives almost entirely from domestic politics, and especially the activities of the 'Israel Lobby.' Other special-interest groups have managed to skew foreign policy, but no lobby has managed to divert it as far from what the national interest would suggest, while simultaneously convincing Americans that US interests and those of the other country???in this case, Israel???are essentially identical."[37]

AIPAC, the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, is consistently ranked in the top two most powerful lobbies in Washington.[38] And it is only one arm of the much larger, multi-faceted, and well-financed Israel lobby.[39]

According to Congressman Jim Moran, "AIPAC is very well organized. The members are willing to be very generous with their personal wealth. But it's a two edged sword. If you cross AIPAC, AIPAC is unforgiving and will destroy you politically. Their means of communications, their ties to certain newspapers and magazines, and individuals in the media are substantial and intimidating. Every [Congress] member knows it's the best-organized national lobbying force."[40]

Senator Joseph Lieberman proudly stated, "Any attempt to pressure Israel, to force Israel to the negotiating table by denying Israel support, will not pass in Congress??? Congress will act against any attempt to do that."[41]

It's true: The US Congress, along with the executive branch, overwhelmingly support virtually any action or wish of the Israeli government, no matter how at odds with US national interest or security,[42] primarily because of the power of the Israel lobby.[43]

Even when two AIPAC employees were indicted on espionage charges in 2005, and it was determined that they had obtained classified US government information illegally and passed it to Israeli agents, the charges were quietly dropped on technicalities.[44] AIPAC fired both employees and issued a statement that they were fired because their actions did not comport with AIPAC standards.[45] One of the fired employees, Steven Rosen, filed a lawsuit for defamation, claiming his actions were, in fact, common practice at AIPAC.[46]

When Israel attempted to sink a U.S. Navy ship, the USS Liberty , in 1967, killing 34 Americans and injuring over 170, it still failed to put a dent in aid to Israel.[47] Indeed, aid quadrupled the following year.[48]

Though Congressmen receive payments and support from the lobby in exchange for their loyalty, the American taxpayer is left footing the bill. As detailed above, the total cost has run from a bare minimum of $112 billion since 1948 (the cost of foreign aid alone) to $1.6 trillion or more, factoring in Defense appropriations, oil crises, the sinking of the USS Liberty , the heightened risk of terrorism, lost trade and co-opted technology, and countless other factors. If the Iraq war and the increased risk of a war with Iran are factored in, the cost skyrockets even higher.

Critics point out how much brighter our future would be if we had invested these billions or trillions in veteran rehabilitation and care, education, job creation, social security, housing, environmental clean-up and prevention, roads, bridges, health care, and scientific and health research. Or if Americans had simply held onto their tax dollars and used them as they saw fit, in our own economy. If some of the higher estimates are closer to the mark, our support for Israel could easily have covered the $700 billion TARP bailout with a great deal left over for massive stimulus spending and/or tax breaks.

If Israel were using these funds for a good purpose, one could debate whether the price was worth it. But Israel uses most of the money to prolong a 45-year military occupation (which regularly involves gross violations of international law),[49] commit egregious human rights violations,[50] and destroy billions of dollars worth of Palestinian homes and infrastructure[51] (resulting in still more U.S. tax money being sent to Palestinians to rebuild demolished homes, hospitals, and schools), while building illegal Jewish-only settlements on Palestinian land.[52]

It makes the prospect of peace ever more distant, creates dangerous hostility to the US, placing Americans in peril, and puts the US Congress in violation of the Arms Export Control Act,[53] all for the sake of campaign contributions.

There is no good reason to keep throwing good money after bad in a failed, ill-founded policy. It's long past time for a fundamental rethinking of the American government's blank check to Israel.


This report was produced by If Americans Knew analysts, particularly Pamela Olson, a President's Scholar at Stanford University 1998-2002 with a major in Physics, a minor in Political Science, and 1600 GRE scores. Before coming to IAK, Olson lived and worked in the West Bank; worked as a researcher in Moscow, Siberia, and China; and was a research analyst at the Institute for Defense Analysis. She is the author of Fast Times in Palestine.

This analysis updates the groundbreaking 1998 work by Richard Curtiss, "The Cost of Israel to U.S. Taxpayers," published in the Washington Report on Middle East Affairs. Mr. Curtiss, following military service in World War II, served for 30 years as a career Foreign Service Officer. He received the U.S. Information Agency's Superior Honor Award and the Edward R. Murrow award for excellence in Public Diplomacy, USIA's highest professional recognition. Upon retirement, Mr. Curtiss co-founded and the American Educational Trust, which produces the Washington Report on Middle East Affairs. He is also the author of two books on U.S.-Middle East relations. A more extensive bio can be read here.
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  Comments


  • rootlesscosmorootlesscosmo 12,848 Posts
    D.E.L.E.T.E.

  • HollafameHollafame 844 Posts
    rootlesscosmo said:
    D.E.L.E.T.E.

  • kalakala 3,361 Posts
    rootlesscosmo said:
    D.E.L.E.T.E.

    exactly!
    a well thought rebuttal dj
    delete as many Palestinians as possible

  • Bon VivantBon Vivant The Eye of the Storm 2,018 Posts
    This should be interesting.

  • FrankFrank 2,373 Posts
    Yeah, I was just waiting for some shit like this to pop up.

    All week I have to look at pictures of anti-semitic demonstrations in Berlin and other german cities inclusive sieg-heil-hrowing Arab demonstrators. Jews are bring chased through the streets of Berlin because they're wearing a Kippa...

    Who the fuck let this scum into my country?





    I'm sick of having to hear this damn "waaahhwwaaaahhhwaaahh look at the children" whining. Fucking shove it already. Don't fire your missiles from schools or from civilian buildings. Don't fire any missiles period and your fucking children would not be bothered. If these shits can manage to smuggle tens of thousands of missiles into Gaza then they could have just as well smuggled in medication and their doctors wouldn't have to whine and complain to reporters how they don't have any supplies to treat the wounded.

    Hamas needs to go at all cost.

  • DuderonomyDuderonomy Haut de la Garenne 7,789 Posts
    Frank said:

    Hamas needs to go at all cost.

    This I agree with. But why is Hamas there? Israel apologists seem to think that Hamas has appeared out of nowhere, completely (and this is the word I see time and time again that makes me gag) unprovoked. Hamas is the ANC but with large doses of religious fundamentalism thrown in - fighting fire with fire.

    You don't need to be a blind supporter of Hamas to be critical of what Israel is doing. Numbers are always being thrown about in the headlines, refuted by one side and then underlined by the other - but they're there for a reason. Numbers don't have any political affiliation. Numbers don't have nuance. They are the only "pure" thing in a horrific and dirty fight down in the sewer that can't be hidden from or argued against. Numbers are what sway international opinion.

    Iran, Pakistan, North Korea. These are your peers Israel.

    So right now I say fuck Israel.

    Is that too simplistic?

    Oh, wait, wait a minute, I know - I'm being antisemitic. My pre-emptive response to that charge is fuck you. Look at the numbers. They don't lie.

  • FrankFrank 2,373 Posts
    Duderonomy said:
    But why is Hamas there?

    because of opportunity. They are the occupiers of Gaza who have taken these people hostage and it doesn't matter to them in which numbers they sacrifice them. Sure, those numbers don't lie, they are the result of Hamas shooting from civilian buildings and stockpiling weapons in them.



    Duderonomy said:
    Israel apologists

    There is no need to apologize for Israel. I'm a supporter and not an apologist.




    Duderonomy said:
    Look at the numbers. They don't lie.

    Tell that to Hamas, they're responsible for those numbers. They are using Gaza as a human shield and these numbers are the result.

  • rootlesscosmorootlesscosmo 12,848 Posts


    Iran, Pakistan, North Korea. These are your peers Israel.
    [/i].

    you talk about how pure numbers/statistics are...and then you present an *opinion* poll as proof of something?

    if Israel listened to world opinion it would have ceased to exist about 5 wars ago.

    you think the world really gives a fuck if Israel is even around or not? only people that care are the Israelis themselves and their small number of supporters elsewhere. luckily for them the world is not run according to popularity polls.

  • DuderonomyDuderonomy Haut de la Garenne 7,789 Posts


    Iran, Pakistan, North Korea. These are your peers Israel.
    [/i].

    you talk about how pure numbers/statistics are...and then you present an *opinion* poll as proof of something?

    It's proof of opinion. Again, you can't argue with numbers.

  • FrankFrank 2,373 Posts


    Iran, Pakistan, North Korea. These are your peers Israel.
    [/i].

    you talk about how pure numbers/statistics are...and then you present an *opinion* poll as proof of something?

    It's proof of opinion. Again, you can't argue with numbers.

    The thing with opinions is that they matter as much or as little as the people who hold them. depending of course on one's subjective perspective.


    If you care so much about numbers (that don't lie) then go ahead and eat shit. Trillions of flies can't be wrong

  • rootlesscosmorootlesscosmo 12,848 Posts
    lol @ "proof of opinion." genius concept.

    normal, sane people don't need poll data to prove that much of the world has an opinion of Israel that is totally divorced from reality.

    but thanks for providing said data anyway; who knows maybe it will be enlightening to some folks in here.

  • DuderonomyDuderonomy Haut de la Garenne 7,789 Posts


    Iran, Pakistan, North Korea. These are your peers Israel.
    [/i].

    you talk about how pure numbers/statistics are...and then you present an *opinion* poll as proof of something?

    It's proof of opinion. Again, you can't argue with numbers.

    The thing with opinions is that they matter as much or as little as the people who hold them. depending of course on one's subjective perspective.


    If you care so much about numbers (that don't lie) then go ahead and eat shit. Trillions of flies can't be wrong

    For a guy with a commendably stubborn streak I shouldn't be surprised by your stance.

    Let's say I was told some people had set up a country that had the sole intention of furthering my interests. Duderville. Duderville couldn't appear out of nowhere, so following a story you may be aware of, a number of people were displaced to make space for Duderville.To avoid long and tedious arguments about who did what to who first, lets fast-forward a few generations. I'm told that Duderville is prosperous, but has unfortunately had to round-up the displaced, fence them in, seal-off their borders, and control what is allowed in and out of their ever-decreasing land. These actions have been necessitated by the simple fact that for Duderville to be prosperous, it has to expand. And the only space for it to expand into is the land of the displaced. The displaced have for some reason been most un-Duderish, and taken exception to the entire enterprise from it's inception. The harder they have resisted, the harder Duderville has punished the displaced, for it is not really a fight, more a contest to see who sinks lowest, but Duderville always has the upper hand.
    Keenly aware of the old adage that no man is an island, I wonder how my neighbours and other countries feel about this state of affairs, and I am told not to worry, Duderville is only one of the four most hated countries on the planet.

  • tabiratabira 856 Posts
    Bad leadership. Reasonable Jews, Arabs and the world at large - we need a Palestinian Gandhi/Mandela

  • DuderonomyDuderonomy Haut de la Garenne 7,789 Posts
    tabira said:
    Bad leadership. Reasonable Jews, Arabs and the world at large - we need a Palestinian Gandhi/Mandela

    There is one. Imprisoned.

  • discos_almadiscos_alma discos_alma 2,164 Posts
    Re: the lopsided death toll, it was my impression that the Iron Dome missile defense system has prevented the vast majority of rockets fired by Hamas from hitting Israeli targets and, thus, prevented casualties on that side. Hamas has been trying to kill as many people as possible during the recent fighting, but they are out-gunned. It should also be noted that there are many other resistance movements in the Palestinian territories aside from Hamas. They will never stop fighting Israel unless productive peace talks take place.

    Israel needs to stop supporting Jewish "settlements" in Palestinian territory and Hamas needs to stop firing missiles. The ever-growing settlements in the West Bank are a major slap in the face to any sort of future peace talks between both sides. Last summer saw a crucial step toward solving this issue, but a year later Israel keeps expanding their settlements in spite of the UN's decision:

    http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/jul/16/eu-guidelines-israeli-settlements-message

    There is a halfway decent map on this page, but I can't vouch for the reporting:
    http://www.themuslimtimes.org/2013/07/countries/israel/israel-angry-as-eu-blocks-funding-in-settlements

    The United States & Israel dropped their significant funding (despite their signature and promises) to UNESCO, after UNESCO recognized Palestine as a formal member state by the name of "Occupied Palestinian Territories" in 2011. Under pressure from Israel, the USA now has zero say in the United Nations' global education and cultural heritage projects, where it previously had held a key and productive roll. Almost $100 Million does not get spent on projects each year as a result of Israel's insistence that Palestine not be internationally recognized as an independent state.

    http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/nov/08/us-unesco-voting-funds-palestine-decision

  • rootlesscosmorootlesscosmo 12,848 Posts
    The establishment of a Palestinian state is supposed to be achieved through negotiation, not unilateral action. That principle is enshrined in tons of agreements that Israel AND the Palestinians (and US) have signed. We can argue as to the efficacy of negotiations, but anyway that's why you saw opposition to that move in the UNESCO thing.

  • DuderonomyDuderonomy Haut de la Garenne 7,789 Posts
    Frank said:
    Duderonomy said:
    But why is Hamas there?

    because of opportunity. They are the occupiers of Gaza who have taken these people hostage and it doesn't matter to them in which numbers they sacrifice them. Sure, those numbers don't lie, they are the result of Hamas shooting from civilian buildings and stockpiling weapons in them.

    Duderonomy said:
    Look at the numbers. They don't lie.

    Tell that to Hamas, they're responsible for those numbers. They are using Gaza as a human shield and these numbers are the result.

    http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/jul/24/gaza-hamas-fighters-military-bases-guerrilla-war-civilians-israel-idf

    UNRWA reports that more than 140,000 people have sought shelter in its properties; churches and mosques have been overwhelmed by displaced civilians; the grounds of the Shifa hospital in Gaza City have begun to resemble a makeshift refugee camp. These families are in fear of their lives, but they overwhelmingly cite Israeli bombing and shelling as the cause, rather than threats from Hamas.

    Gaza is one of the most overcrowded places on earth. Almost two million people are crammed into a strip of land just 25 miles long and between three and a half and seven miles wide. In general there are few opportunities to leave; and in the midst of a conflict such as this, there is no exit.

  • DuderonomyDuderonomy Haut de la Garenne 7,789 Posts

  • DuderonomyDuderonomy Haut de la Garenne 7,789 Posts


  • tabiratabira 856 Posts
    Duderonomy said:
    tabira said:
    Bad leadership. Reasonable Jews, Arabs and the world at large - we need a Palestinian Gandhi/Mandela

    There is one. Imprisoned.

    That's a start. Was the making of King, Gandhi and Mandela. Focus a nation on freedom rather than martyrdom. Pacific marches against jewish settlements and the blockade to be violently repressed by trigger happy Israeli security forces. Make reasonable Israelis ashamed of their government. Present an alternative to rocket firing muslim-cowboys. Generations sold short by undemocratic (Arafat), uncharasmatic (Abbas) and radicalised (Hamas) leadership.

  • discos_almadiscos_alma discos_alma 2,164 Posts
    rootlesscosmo said:
    The establishment of a Palestinian state is supposed to be achieved through negotiation, not unilateral action. That principle is enshrined in tons of agreements that Israel AND the Palestinians (and US) have signed. We can argue as to the efficacy of negotiations, but anyway that's why you saw opposition to that move in the UNESCO thing.


    I don't know, man. Israel has made it clear exactly what they'd like at the end of the day: as much of the West Bank as they can get. They obviously never want to see a Palestinian state of any significance that includes the major areas of the WB. I agree unilateral action is a no no, but they straight violating. The majority of the UN member states agree on that point.

    Palestine should be it's own state, with free international and maritime trade rights and full control of its own borders. This bullshit limbo hell of statehood that they are in cannot stand. (Man!)

  • GaryGary 3,982 Posts
    I find it impossible to have an opinion about this becuase I don't know enough about it. My general impression is that it sucks for just about everybody.


    When I think about how long we as humans have existed it pains me to think that we still haven't found a better way to resolve issues than fighting. I mean, we've had thousands of years, and its the same shit over and over again. Whether its jews, arabs, vietnamese, russians, americans, its the same thing over and over again. It's ridiculous. That we can split an atom and peer into galaxies millions of light years away, but but when it comes to living together we can't do any better than "GET OFF MY LAWN OR I SHOOT"

  • rootlesscosmorootlesscosmo 12,848 Posts
    MusicaDelAlma said:
    rootlesscosmo said:
    The establishment of a Palestinian state is supposed to be achieved through negotiation, not unilateral action. That principle is enshrined in tons of agreements that Israel AND the Palestinians (and US) have signed. We can argue as to the efficacy of negotiations, but anyway that's why you saw opposition to that move in the UNESCO thing.


    I don't know, man. Israel has made it clear exactly what they'd like at the end of the day: as much of the West Bank as they can get. They obviously never want to see a Palestinian state of any significance that includes the major areas of the WB. I agree unilateral action is a no no, but they straight violating. The majority of the UN member states agree on that point.

    Palestine should be it's own state, with free international and maritime trade rights and full control of its own borders. This bullshit limbo hell of statehood that they are in cannot stand. (Man!)

    you posted about UNESCO; I'm just explaining what happened in that instance.

  • DuderonomyDuderonomy Haut de la Garenne 7,789 Posts
    Pacifi[ist] marches against jewish settlements and the blockade to be violently repressed by trigger happy Israeli security forces.

    There's already yootoobs of that happening last time Israel decided to "cast lead". There are reasonable Israelis who condemn their government's actions, but not the majority.

  • DuderonomyDuderonomy Haut de la Garenne 7,789 Posts
    http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/jul/24/israeli-strike-un-school-gaza-kills-women-children

    International scrutiny of Israel's assault on the Gaza Strip intensified on Thursday when more than 15 Palestinians were killed and 200 injured in a strike on a UN school in northern Gaza crowded with hundreds of displaced civilians.

    Most of the injured were women and children. Among the dead was a mother and her one-year-old baby. UN staff had been attempting to organise the school's evacuation when the attack took place.

    Ban Ki-moon, secretary general of the UN, condemned the attack, which came hours after the agency had warned that Israel's actions in the Palestinian enclave could constitute war crimes. "Today's attack underscores the imperative for the killing to stop and to stop now," Ban said.

    The Israeli military first claimed, in a text sent to journalists, that the school could have been hit by Hamas missiles that fell short. Later, a series of tweets from the Israel Defence Forces appeared to confirm the deaths were the result of an Israeli strike.

    "Today Hamas continued firing from Beit Hanoun. The IDF responded by targeting the source of the fire."

    "Last night, we told Red Cross to evacuate civilians from UNRWA's shelter in Beit Hanoun btw 10am & 2pm. UNRWA & Red Cross got the message. Hamas prevented civilians from evacuating the area during the window that we gave them."

    Chris Gunness, spokesman for the United Nations Relief and Works agency said there had earlier been "firing around the compound" and his organisation had asked the Israeli army for time to evacuate civilians. "We spent much of the day trying to negotiate or to coordinate a window so that civilians, including our staff, could leave. That was never granted  and the consequences of that appear to be tragic." Gunness said the Israeli military were supplied with coordinates of UN schools where those displaced were sheltering. UN sources told the Guardian a call was placed to the Israeli military at 10.55am requesting permission to evacuate but their call was not returned.

    The deaths in Beit Hanoun raised the overall Palestinian death toll in the conflict that began on 8 July to at least 751. Israel has lost 32 soldiers ÔÇô all since 17 July, when it widened its air campaign into a full-scale ground operation ÔÇô and three civilians.

  • FrankFrank 2,373 Posts
    I'm not at all interested in engaging in a discussion, I already said all I wanted to say and the origins of these links alone told me more than I needed to hear.

    Duderonomy said:

    Duderonomy said:

    Duderonomy said:

  • rootlesscosmorootlesscosmo 12,848 Posts
    Duderonomy said:

    are we gonna go link-for-link here? is that what this thread is gonna become? you post about Israel's air strikes and we post about Hamas hiding weapons in schools and blowing up buses and smashing Jewish shop windows in Paris and Berlin? I mean, we can go if you want; not sure what it will achieve.

    of course there's more dead Palis: the Israelis have better weapons and better protection.

    you wanna talk about what this conflict would look like if the same weapons were in Hamas' hands?

    don't take my word for it; read their charter and get back to me.

  • Duderonomy said:
    Frank said:

    Hamas needs to go at all cost.

    This I agree with. But why is Hamas there? Israel apologists seem to think that Hamas has appeared out of nowhere, completely (and this is the word I see time and time again that makes me gag) unprovoked. Hamas is the ANC but with large doses of religious fundamentalism thrown in - fighting fire with fire.

    You don't need to be a blind supporter of Hamas to be critical of what Israel is doing. Numbers are always being thrown about in the headlines, refuted by one side and then underlined by the other - but they're there for a reason. Numbers don't have any political affiliation. Numbers don't have nuance. They are the only "pure" thing in a horrific and dirty fight down in the sewer that can't be hidden from or argued against. Numbers are what sway international opinion.

    Iran, Pakistan, North Korea. These are your peers Israel.

    So right now I say fuck Israel.

    Is that too simplistic?

    Oh, wait, wait a minute, I know - I'm being antisemitic. My pre-emptive response to that charge is fuck you. Look at the numbers. They don't lie.

    There are actually quite a few Israelis who oppose the war. That's why I get tired when people moan about Jews or Israelis. Not saying you are but there are many idiots out there who like to pretend it's hip to support the Palestinian cause or just be Jew bashing..

  • Third intifada yo.
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