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Questions to ask your pro-Israeli friends

Again not until you throw yourselves in their shoes you wont know what you are talking about...

Back to South America bombing America DAILY...for say 6 decades....with family friends everyone you know dead...You gonna sit in 1 corner and cry or do something about it? Yes your emotions will cloud your judgement....

Canada says hang in there mate we are with ya....and then gets some popcorn and watches you fight for what you believe in...Fight for your nation....fight even being labelled a terrorist ...fight even when accused of causing all the pain to your naiton...Fight for a hopeful tomorrow...Fight coz you believe truth shall win...

Orrr...you could just sit in the corner and cry while communism takes over America...and you dont even get anything called rights ...2nd class to 3rd class citizen rights are also a privilege! Or you go shake hands with Communism in the hope of being spared but guess what Communism doesnt know what sparing means and you are with the rest on rations ...even the water you drink is monitored and everyday you see soldiers breakding down doors and taking away teenagers "for questioning" for the security of the communist to ensure no rebellion group is being formed...to instill fear so that Americans become too weak to fight back or even too scared to voice against Communism...

Take your pick :D

Again, these are all direct consequences of mistakes past by the Palestinian leadership and people. They need to figure out a better way or continue to suffer as they are, sadly.
 
Again, these are all direct consequences of mistakes past by the Palestinian leadership and people. They need to figure out a better way or continue to suffer as they are, sadly.
Yea blame it all on the suffers utter not a single word against the transgressors! Oh wait they are your Fraandzzz so how could you? :D
 
Yea blame it all on the suffers utter not a single word against the transgressors! Oh wait they are your Fraandzzz so how could you? :D

I have said many times that Israel should also take the needed steps to ensure peace, because unless and until they accommodate the Palestinian's needs, they will also not have the security they seek. I deplore violence from both sides, including the rockets attacks by Hamas and the Israeli retaliation. This tit-for-tat violence has to stop if there is to be progress. May be the long term truce just announced will lead to a better situation and even a solution soon?
 
I have said many times that Israel should also take the needed steps to ensure peace, because unless and until they accommodate the Palestinian's needs, they will also not have the security they seek. I deplore violence from both sides, including the rockets attacks by Hamas and the Israeli retaliation. This tit-for-tat violence has to stop if there is to be progress. May be the long term truce just announced will lead to a better situation and even a solution soon?
Keep ya fingers crossed :D
 
I hope that the truce holds for long enough to make real progress.
Long enough to last decades....too much chaos everywhere...a little peace can really clear up the air :)
 
Long enough to last decades....too much chaos everywhere...a little peace can really clear up the air :)

A permanent peace will be best achieved by a two state solution. I hope that this outcome is achieved as soon as practically possible.
 
By Paul Kinzelman

Palestine_questions.jpg


… Daniel Patrick Moynihan once said that you’re entitled to your own opinion, but not your own facts.

However, one reason that genuine dialogue and finding a solution to the Gaza conflict are so elusive is because the two sides can agree on very few facts thanks to the perfection of propaganda campaigns featuring selective recall, rewriting of history, and the constant repeating of lies…

Thus, attempting to have a discussion of “facts” does not solve anything because there is little agreement on a common set of facts. Without a common basis of facts, any discussion will be unproductive and usually devolves into a shouting match as often seen on TV, thus polarizing the sides even more…

I’ve found that asking questions can be a more productive approach to discussion because answering well-crafted questions requires examination of beliefs instead of responding with prepared sound bites.

So if you find yourself in a discussion with a pro-Israel person who seems willing to have a rational conversation (as opposed to just shouting slogans), I’ve come up with a list of questions you might consider asking. Be careful of a lot of responses you might get – often they’re just hand-waving and exaggerations of minor exceptions to avoid directly confronting the question. Continue to bring the focus back to the cognitive dissonance between the pro-Israeli position and these questions. You can also get lot of good information from Richard Forer’s book Breakthrough, Transforming Fear Into Compassion.

Here are some questions to ask.

Question 1
What should have been done (and what should be done now) with the many thousands of Palestinians who had lived on their land for centuries when the state of Israel was founded?

How is forcing them off their ancestral land and into refugee camps any different from what we did to the Native Americans in the 1800s (other than the time period) which is now almost universally regarded as genocide? Both situations feature intimidation, killing and the taking of land.

Even though there is much controversy as to whether the Palestinians left voluntarily, a number of even Israeli – including military – sources say that the exodus was primarily involuntary and due to the deliberate actions of the Israelis. Rich Forer’s book covers this in detail.

But let’s assume for the moment that the myth of voluntary (without any threat or intimidation) exodus is predominantly correct. How does that change anything? I can understand some people leaving to escape a war zone, but when the active conflict is over, why should they not be able to go back to their home, orchards and fields, and continue their life from where they left off? Why should Israel have rights to the land on which the Palestinians had been living for hundreds of years?

Reports indicate that over 1 million Iraqis have fled their homes in northern Iraq. By leaving “voluntarily” in the face of the intimidation and brutality of the so-called “Islamic State” (formerly called Islamic State in Iraq and the Syria, or ISIS), have they given up their rights to return to their homes?

If you leave your home, and it later gets occupied, you have forfeited your rights to live there,
and are at the mercy of the occupiers.
At least I have not found any International Law that gives you right to return.

If you leave your country after it is occupied, you do have the right of return
according to the fourth Geneva Convention.

Question 2
By what right does Israel continue to take over more Palestinian land, and continue to bulldoze Palestinian homes and orchards and build settlements in the territories that were declared to be Palestinian by the United Nations in 1948?

The rest of the world (even the US) has declared the settlements to be illegal, yet Israel continues to take more land. US leaders are all apparently too intimidated to stand up to Israel to force it to stop its illegal expansion. We continue to send it massive amounts of money and equipment. Again, how is that expansion different from the genocide and forced migrations perpetrated by the US on the Native Americans?

As an occupier of the West Bank, Israel has the right to relocate people for valid military reasons.

Legally, it is a mess, since Israel only have to apply the Geneva Convention when in conflict with parties
which accepts the Geneva Convention. Palestinians only signed the necessary treaties in 2014.
It is therefore possible to claim in court that only land occupied after the treaties are ratified.
Obviously that is an extreme position.

Since Turkey has renounced its claim on what is now Israel and the West Bank, and Jordan has done the same,
and the PA never has fulfilled the normal requirements for a state, I.E. control over its territory,
there is a basis for claiming that the West Bank is not Palestinian territory, but contested territory.
Again an extreme interpretation.

The partition of the former British Mandate of Palestine by the United Nations
was made through a vote in the General Assembly, which is more or less a recommendation,
and as such a good legal basis to form a state, but it is not as significant as a vote in the UNSC.

Israels borders has never been defined, and one reason is that the war of 1948 is still ongoing,
even though Israel has made peace with Egypt.
Legally an occupation can continue until there is a peace agreement.

According to the accepted international definition of genocide, Israel has never even been close to that.

Question 3
Given Israel’s relentless expansion, consistently over decades, beyond its given territory, how can anyone conclude anything other than that Israel’s covert plan is eventually to annex all of Palestine (again, like what we did to the Native American lands)?

Question is factually wrong. Israel has both expanded and contracted.
Obviously some Israelis want the West Bank, with or preferrably without Palestinians.

A democracy does not have "plans". Political parties may have policies and agendas,
and some policies may be agreed by all parties, but it is very uncommon.

Israeli voters vote for security, and if the party perceived to be best suited to provide security,
also wants to take over the West Bank and build more settlements, then that will not
significantly hurt their vote figures. What Palestinians needs to do is to show Israelis,
that they can live in security, even with an independent state of Palestine.

That is the time, the current settler friendly government can be replaces.

Question 4
If you agree that expansion to annex all of Palestine is the covert goal of Israel, how could you possibly conclude that Israel has ever negotiated anything in good faith?

Note that even while accepting the 1947 UN Partition Resolution, David Ben-Gurion pledged to his party that the borders established were “not final”, thus their acceptance was merely a tactical necessity as a prelude to further expansion. Why would Israel genuinely agree to any ending of hostilities if its actual (covert) goal is to expand Israel to include all of Palestine? What would you do if full annexation were your actual goal from the start?

Note also that for the 1947 partition, the Palestinians were neither consulted nor compensated, so how could that plan be the basis for peace? How could you expect the Palestinians not to fight back against that existential assault?

Since I disagree that this is a covert goal of the state, no problem.
Some political parties in Israel may have this goal.

Question 5
If you agree that Israel has the (above) covert agenda, how can you conclude that any peace discussions or dialogue would possibly result in a peaceful solution to the conflict?

Of course, some Muslims have the covert agenda of establishing a Shari’ah law theocracy, and there are many Muslim (and non-Muslim) countries with abhorrent records of the treatment of women, for instance, but that does not justify Israel’s assault and annexation of Palestinian land. Furthermore, many Palestinian leaders are secular and understand the dangers of theocracies.

The current government of Israel does not believe that real peace is a possibility.
Trying to discuss peace with Bibi will not give any results, and the right wingers
are even worse. Obviously it is totally meaningless discussing peace with
Hamas and even more extreme organisations like Islamic Jihad.

Question 6
Given the above, how do you think Palestinians should respond to such insults and atrocities?

How would you respond if you were a Palestinian whose home and/or livelihood (orchards, farmland, etc.) was just bulldozed with little to no notice and with no compensation – to make room for a new settlement of Jews who are actually subsidised to live on what had been your land for hundreds of years?

Bibi believes Status Quo is the best deal Israel can get, and the Palestinians has proved him right over and over again.
Palestinians must prove him wrong.

Hamas, Islamic Jihad etc must be thrown out, and a new leadership must emerge, which
is not tainted by PA corruption.
By signing the ICC treaties, and extraditing Palestinian war criminals (most Gaza leadership)
Palestinians can get rid of fanatics blocking an agreement.

Also need to learn peaceful resistance.

Question 7
In what way is the Goldstone report on the 2008-09 War on Gaza inaccurate in finding that the vast majority of war crimes were perpetrated by Israel?

The author is a well-regarded Jewish jurist from South Africa who was commissioned to investigate war crimes. He initially refused when the mandate was to investigate only Israeli war crimes. Once the scope of the investigation was enlarged to look at war crimes perpetrated by both sides, he was willing to participate. Note that he documents war crimes on both sides; it’s not all about Israel, but Israel holds the cards. The Palestinian options available for responding to Israel’s occupation are severely limited because of Israel’s military and technological advantages.

Here are some quotes from the report:

Military objectives as stated by the government of Israel do not explain the facts ascertained by the mission, nor are they congruous with the patterns identified by the mission during the investigation.

While the Israeli government has sought to portray its operations as essentially a response to rocket attacks in the exercise of its right to self-defence, the mission considers the plan to have been directed, at least in part, at a different target: the people of Gaza as a whole.

It is clear from evidence gathered by the mission that the destruction of food supply installations, water sanitation systems, concrete factories and residential houses was the result of a deliberate and systematic policy by the Israeli armed forces. It was not carried out because those objects presented a military threat or opportunity, but to make the daily process of living, and dignified living, more difficult for the civilian population.

The most important part of the investigation was that Palestinian Rockets and Israeli Blockade
amounted to "Crimes vs Humanity". He later retracted the Blockade part, so the most important
conclusion is that Palestinians are worse criminals.

Question 8
Why do you suppose that many Jews, including Israelis, at risk of being hit by rockets and subject to governmental persecution, and especially those who have actually been to Gaza, support Palestinian rights?

I once heard the saying that if there are two Israelis in a room, then there are at least three different opinions.

In fact, just this week (16 August 2014) there was a massive (estimates of 10,000 people) anti-Gaza war demonstration in Tel Aviv. On the other hand, you’d be hard-pressed to find even one Palestinian anywhere in the world who supports Israel’s position. Why do you think Jews would oppose their own government’s policies if the perspective of Israel and the US corporate media on the conflict were accurate?

That Palestinians support a policy which is so obviously screwed as the Hamas policy is totally beyond reason.
Oh, wait, Palestinians have not had a chance to vote after Hamas assumed power in Gaza.
Also Hamas is summarily executing opposition after at the most poor excuses for trials

And no, it’s not because they’re “self-hating Jews” (a meaningless term). Am I a “self-hating American” because I oppose my government’s fraudulent wars and consistent support of terrorists and brutal dictators? Rich Forer’s book has a chapter specifically addressing the “self-hating Jew” issue.

From the Goldstone report:

The mission is of the view that actions of the Israeli government during and following the military operations in the Gaza Strip, including interrogation of political activists, repression of criticism and sources of potential criticism of Israeli military actions, in particular NGOs, have contributed significantly to a political climate in which dissent with the government and its actions in the occupied Palestinian territory is not tolerated.

Question 9
Why is the United States one of very few countries in the world that supports Israel in the UN (aside from Canada and three minor Pacific Island countries)?

Does the entire rest of the world (dictatorships and democracies, Muslim and Christian alike) know something that the US refuses to acknowledge? And no, it’s not “universal anti-Semitism”. That’s unwarranted paranoia left over from World War II. Israel is a pariah precisely because of its treatment of the Palestinians. In addition, Israel has violated by far the most UN resolutions of any country in the world. The US is only number two in that regard. Remember that UN resolution violations was one of the excuses the US used to invade Iraq in 2003.

Arabs choose the wrong side in the US cold war vs the Soviet Union.
Arabs continuously express their hatred for the US.
Why should Arabs get any preferential treatment by the US?

Question 10
Why does Israel have discriminatory (against Palestinians) laws (50 by some counts), many passed in the 1950s and 1960s?

Many of Israel’s laws are based on (and thus favour) Judaism, not unlike Shari’ah law is based on Islam. Both result in theocracies to some degree, and bad governance and human rights violations. One absurd example is that Israel built some good roads in the West Bank on which Palestinians are specifically prohibited from driving. What connection does that have to terrorism (if that is the excuse given for the differential treatment)? Note that even if you were black in the southern US during the 1950s, you could (legally anyway) drive on all roads in the country. How is that not apartheid, like South Africa’s apartheid used to be?

Are Arab citizens of Israel prohibited of driving on those roads?
If Israeli citizens regardless of race is allowed to drive, but not West Bank Arabs, then there is no apartheid.
Just security measures, due to Arab violations of International Law through terrorist attacks.

Question 11
What’s wrong with talking to so-called terrorists?

Not only is one man’s terrorist another man’s freedom fighter, but history shows many examples where genuine dialogue with terrorists produces peace (the IRA in Ireland, and South Africa come to mind), whereas continuing to do what hasn’t worked for over 60 years and expecting different results is often defined as insanity. In addition, the first leaders of Israel were terrorists against the original British occupation of Palestine.

Of course, the dialogue must be genuine, and both sides must desire peace rather than use the dialogue for posturing and propaganda purposes. One side wanting peace while the other side constantly sabotages peace guarantees failure of the peace process and continued conflict…

Arabs has tried to attack Israel for the last 60 years, without result, and can therefore be defined as insane.
It is quite meaningless to talk to the insane.

You do not talk to terrorists until they decide to abandon the terrorist agenda.
The US, EU and Soviet refuses to talk to Hamas, and has given Hamas three conditions.
Hamas has so far not fulfilled these conditions, so Hamas is as much to blame.

Hamas has over and over again said that they are only looking for a truce (to give them time to gain military strength)
 
:omghaha::omghaha::omghaha: That isn't my logic but that yours. My logic is that a state be created according to 1948 UN proposal but thousands of Palestinians whose lands have been taken and killed should be compensated. That's win-win situation for everyone except haters like you :P

Yes, and the instigators of the 1948 war (Egypt, Syria and Jordan) are the obvious party to pay compensation
for starting the war. Israelis who had to flee from Arabs and Jews living in Israel in 1948
as well as their ancestors also should get compensation.
 
That map and any claims based on it are meaningless in the present context.



That is a fair point, but history tells us that the aftermath of the fall of any major empire is messy. The same thing applies to the British Empire, just like it does to many others prior to it.
why not?
 

Historical claims based on ancient maps are pointless in modern contexts. After all, if they wanted to, anyone could trace their lineage back to Adam himself and then lay claim to the entire world. Israel came into being in 1948 by the acceptance of the British partition plan by the UN, and Palestine may soon come into being too.
 
YHWH, the God of Israel, the one & true God of mankind, has given this Land to his people.
They have only reclaimed what is rightfully theirs.
Nothing more.
That is written in all the three monotheistic sacred books, but they have (his people) strayed from him and his commandments, so he gave it to others more worthy of it in his eyes.
This time around, they have comploted by malice to retake it whether with YHWH approval or not, and believe it or not, most of their population today is atheist or barely religious.
 
Yes, and the instigators of the 1948 war (Egypt, Syria and Jordan) are the obvious party to pay compensation
for starting the war. Israelis who had to flee from Arabs and Jews living in Israel in 1948
as well as their ancestors also should get compensation.
You should recreate the Roman empire and Egyptian Pharaohs as well. You just seem and sound insane, and ignorant of facts of history either by choice or by some malice in you.
You come up with conventions, the UN resolutions, the British and the UN solutions, the UNSC, and forget the true premise, that of Usrael was founded by violence and aggression against the Palestinians, "because" the Jews were expelled from Europe, which was mostly part of the Disraeli and British plan to take by force, commit massacres, kill most able men (by the Brits first), force the women, children and the elderly to flee their homes and loot their properties to force establish a Jewish state in Palestine. This sums it up a bit, and it is what most people either covertly or overtly think of it..So no matter what conventions or other international laws & regulations you might come up with, it won't change these facts, the other proof is Usrael's "own behavior" concerning these international conventions, laws & regulations.
 
Historical claims based on ancient maps are pointless in modern contexts. After all, if they wanted to, anyone could trace their lineage back to Adam himself and then lay claim to the entire world. Israel came into being in 1948 by the acceptance of the British partition plan by the UN, and Palestine may soon come into being too.
The ancient nation of Israel is a historical fact and not a figment of any myth.
If history is of in-consequence, then Arabs too don't have any claim on the holy lands.
 
The ancient nation of Israel is a historical fact and not a figment of any myth.
If history is of in-consequence, then Arabs too don't have any claim on the holy lands.
The Arabs are the descendants of the fertile crescent civilization, the Egyptian civilization and you can find other clues of their civilizations in the deserts of Arabia too.
It is during the time of the Sumerian that a group came from the northern steps and was integrated into the civilization those were the first Hebrews or Jews if you prefer. They were not natives to those lands, and problems started with them as soon as they established themselves; read about them in Babylon and afterwards. I have nothing against any human beings, but the Hebrew deeds throughout the ages that have brought the wrath of so many civilizations and nations against them should be known as well as their causes and aims.
 
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