bathsheba666 said:
Oh, I don't think so. In reading the rest of your comments, you're clearly taking my 'unsustainable' as pragmatic rather than moral.
Morality dictates we shouldn't fire back and turn the other cheek. Most christians who held that belief were fed to the lions - not a viable option, you agree I'm sure.
I'm taking the pragmatic route because it's pretty hard to act moral when you're dead.
Even if my comment wasn't sarcastic, it will not be clear to an observer why you think this 'clarification' helps your cause.
Because I happen to hate being on the recieving end of a wrong accusation. The gunner may have fired the shell, but the orders came from the Divisional command and this is hardly a case of bloodlust - this is of course a very unfortunate and saddening incident. I'm not going to stand here and tell you they had it coming because they didn't - there's no defending this kind of thing. The principle behind it however does hold some water.
Tens of thousands of 'accidental' Palestinian deaths, and army personnel stand more chance of getting fired for being rude to Israelis.
Given your last two contributions, can I ask if you're really an Israeli, or a cunning Palestinian impostor trying to make the Israelis look bad??
Tens of thousands? There's a flat out lie if I ever saw one... There haven't been any more than 7,000 deaths in the entire conflict over the span of the last decade!
I wish to see your sources for this number. The present figures I know of speak of a 66% combatant to
non combatant ratio for Palestinians killed and a 70%
non-combatant to combatant ratio for Israelis killed...
Our sympathy goes out to the wives and children of the 'stuff'.
That is, where the 'stuff' isn't a wife or child already.
You really are a Palestinian troll, aren't you??
We're soldiers. The only orders we don't do are those which call for us to kill the obivously innocent or the inhuman - and being damn fine soldiers too we don't question the orders when they're legitimate. If my commanding officer asks me to mark a house and tells me there's a terrorist cell in the basement, I'll flag it and pass down the intel to the guys in the field who either lift a chopper to the air to Hellfire it into the afterworld, or break into the house and capture him if he's worth the bust. If a ship captain has reason to believe he's seeing a launch site and intel from battalion confirms, the gunner has no reason not to fire a shell at the target.
As stated previously - we're the military. We're there to blow things up, and as politically incorrect as it may sound, our job is to end lives. It's up to command to decide how we get the job done and up to the political branch to decide which jobs they pass on to command. The guy in the line just does as he's told.
I think your claim to being civilized is hard to sustain in the light of your earlier comments.
Why not discuss it with some 'stuff'.
Inanimate objects do not respond properly to negotations. I'd rather negotiate with the Palestinians.
Sidhe said:
Yes I see, you do want to dance around the issue, semantics pure and simple: you stole the land and now refuse to give it up on a technicality, trouble is as I pointed out the right and wrong of the issue still rests in the letter of the treaty, whether you want to argue semantics or not, you broke it, so you can't in all fairness justify keeping it. In a court of law I'm sure political semantics would receive short shrift when your nations signature is at the bottom of the page, bottom line is if you can't keep your word then don't sign treaties. This whole mess isn't black and white admittedly and I don't think either side can justify it's actions, and frankly I've heard it from both sides and neither side makes a case for justification. That's why I like to bandy about the word compromise, it means both sides have to give something up to maintain peace, it's the only sensible solution IMO.
Let's try this again, only with
links and evidence this time.
In your home country of Britain there is a law called "Adverse Possession for Squatters", which falls under the jurisdiction of property law.
Everybody, whether lawyer or layperson, knows about squatters' rights. Twelve years adverse possession and you acquire possessory title - but, if title to the land is registered, no longer. One of the foundations of English and Welsh land law has been cast into the melting pot of statutory reform and emerged looking very different. Part 9 of the Land Registration Act 2002, which was brought into force on 13 October 2003, contains an entirely new scheme.
The "new scheme" talked about means you no longer get to own land immediately after 12 years - you have to prove one of three conditions:
(a) it would be unconscionable because of an equity of estoppel for the registered proprietor to seek to dispossess the applicant; or
(b) the applicant is for some reason entitled to be registered as a proprietor; or
(c) in some circumstances, the land is adjacent to land belonging to the applicant).
Via sections (a) and (b), Israel is more than legally entitled to hold the land it has had in its possession for over 58 years, even if your were to consider the Palestinians to be the rightful owners.
Legally speaking,
even in your own country, kicking someone out from your property after you've neglected it for over a decade because suddenly the squatters made it heaven is illegal and the squatter generally has the law on his side.
Even assuming you're right (which I firmly belive you're not) and we're here illegaly (and we're not), we've been here for more than long enough to fulfill the conditions of the squatter's law. We own the place by possessions.