I believe the gist of his argument was the original foundation of Israel not this exact moment (weak argument for this exact moment). In that original moment everything he said was true. it basically was a highly aggressive colonization effort that the locals failed to resist and they were promptly ethnically cleansed out of their lands.
Exactly... it's strange that he couldn't grasp it.
And I discuss it because without understanding the origin of the conflict one can not understand it, not to mention solve it.
I'm pretty sure Israelis outnumber Palestinians.
It was about the initial point...
And actually, even today Palestinians altogether are more numerable than Israelis.
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Recent? Most Israelis were born in Israel. What difference does it make for how long their ancestors have lived in the land? Are you some sort of racial lunatic who believes there is a magic bond between a people and their ethnic homeland?
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No, but actually Zionists and Israelis were and are such "racial lunatics"...
And neither the Israelis nor the Palestinians can be considered either fully
indigenous or of fully immigrant background.
Oh stop it.
Of course Palestinians have much better right to call themselve indigenous. They are result of accumulation of cultures in this place since thousands of years. Jews are results of a single culture that guested in this land for a couple centuries, then moved elsewhere, and returned several decades ago. Almost all of Israelis' forefathers didn't live in Israel/Palestine a century ago! While practically all of Palestinians' forefathers did...
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So urban dwellers should have less rights than country folk?
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Not quite. I just means that they were scattered in several places in the country, being a majority / large minority in several small places. They couldn't claim any territory, because they weren't a majority in any large territory.
The notion that Israel is a colonial society is Nazi nonsense. Most people there are natives, with no ties to any other country. How's that a colonial society?
There's nothing "nazi" in claiming Israel was created as a colonial society. It is an outremer country created by immigrants on a foreign soil thousands of kms from their place of origin, in a place where their culture, language etc was virtually non-existant against the wishes of the autochtonous population. And it still is colonial, sadly. It forcily and brutally occupies a foreign territory for many decades, ignores rights of its citizens, establishes its own settlements on land owned by someone else. Israel is creation of colonialism and reproduces XIX-century uebernationalistic politics against the indigenous population while describing any criticism of its outrageous policies as "antisemitic" and "nazi", as in your case.
Both sides conducted massacres in the war and the turbulent events that preceded it. Both sides engaged in terrorism. Only one does now.
You're a person that would say "well, both Jews and Arabs lived in Palestine prior to Zionism", while it would be 95% Arabs and 3% Jews... Nominally true, but completely distorted.
Palestinians didn't engage in terrorism priore to the end of the end of the 60's (after Arabs lost the Six-day war and it was obvious Israelis would not be defeated in direct combat). Or perhaps at minimal level.
While the Jewish terrorism against UK in the ww2 days is much reknown.
There are instances of Jewish terrorism even today, too, even though they don't really "need" it, unlike Palestinians.
The massacre(s) you mention, and I remember one big one, the massacre of the bus heading for Hebrew University, was in responce to Dayr Yasin massacre...
And it's disgusting that you put Arabs and Israelis in 1948 on the same level. Arabs didn't have interest in war crimes. Jews did, because they needed territory to settle with Jews, so they had to get rid of the original inhabitants and that's what they did, and what they thought about since the 30's...
Now of course, Arab countries started, in responce to Zionism and even as early as in the 30's, to mistreat their own Jews, but it's not Palestinian fault. Palestinians didn't profit from Iraqi Jewish property - Iraqis did. Nor can Palestinians be held responsible for it.
Any possible Arab crimes during this war pale in comparison with the expulsion of half of the Palestinians from their homeland, and that's nearly all in the places Jews conquered.
So? Is the weaker side always right?
The Confederates were much weaker and less armed than the Union, and the Axis were much weaker than the Allies. So what?
Not always right, but one should at least have pity when it's being mistreated. And the irony is that Israelis like to portrait itself as a David in this conflict, while they were the stronger one.
Confederates were evil in the sense that they supported slavery, but were right in defending their independance.
Axis were not quite weaker, and I would say they were stronger until USA joined the war. They almost succeeded you know.
Ethnic right? OK, mein fuhrer, I think you should stop right there... I'll ask you one thing, though. Who has the "ethnic right" to Turkey? Or to Egypt?
Whoever is the majority there, although I have another idea how to solve these matters, which is to accumulate the percentage of population in disctricts of the disputed region and to give to one side as many districts as 100%s it would get.
You are very... well, how to put it... peculiar to think I deny Turkish ethnic rights to Turkey for example. I am partly Armenian and I spend some time here and elsewhere discussing the Turkish denial of 1915 etc. And nevertheless I believe Armenia today could at best get Ani ruins and Ararat slopes, just across the border, because Turks who live there are already born there and can not be held responsible for the sins of their grandparents. The same, while I think Czechs are evil for stabbing Poland in the back and taking Cieszyn away from us, today Poles became a minority there, so at best we could claim several villages in the south of the region now... because the situation's changed. The same, what happened to Germans after ww2 was a giant ethnic cleansing which had an excuse in the unheard and unspoken monstrosities Germans did during the war, but to change it would be unfair too... etc. And the same is for Israel. I believe Israel should exist in 1967 borders. It had no right to exist in 1948. It has now. Poles had the ethnic rights to Cieszyn in 1918-19, Czechs do now. Germans had the ethnic rights to Lower Silesia in 1939, Poles do now. Armenia (probably!) had the ethnic rights to the shores of Van lake in 1914, nowdays probably non-existand Kurdistan does, and as it does not exist, it's in Turkish hands.
Now Czechs, Poles, Israelis etc gained their ethnic rights by ethnic pressure (like in the case of Cieszyn) or cleansing. But such a long time has passed that it has to be accepted.
The difference in the case of Israel is that due to subsequent Israeli (and to lesser extent Arab) politics, the conflict that surrounded the ethnic cleansing is still alive. And Jews still pursue the same policy of land-grab. I believe we should even force Israel to accept 1967 borders. It's sad that Israel succeeded by its ruthless and heartless policy, but it can not really be undone. But we should at least stop it from futher landgrabs.
Here's what you in your deluded racial romanticism does not seem to grasp: much like the Turks are no longer a Central Asian invader, much like Americans are no longer British colonists living across the pond (in fact most Americans don't even have British ancestry), modern Israelis are likewise not European transplants living in the ME. Most were born there; there have always been a Jewish community in the region; they can trace their roots to all the world - including, for millions Israelis, the Middle East itself. One of the largest groups of Israelis descend from Jews who have inhabited Middle Eastern countries for millennia and were pretty much expelled. Where should they move, according to your theory of "ethnic right"? How are Israelis whose ancestors lived in Morocco or Egypt different from Palestinians, many of whom also trace their families to those countries, or were even born there (such as Arafat)?
Also, how is an Israeli whose grandparents came from several different countries, who has never lived anywhere except Israel, who has no ties to any country except Israel, any less of a native than a Palestinian? Where should he move to? How is he not entitled to stay and fight for his homeland?
You are deluded because you do not fight my opinions, because your opinion about what you think my opinions are... You didn't even read my post properly, just were verbally masturbating with your self-crowned rightousness...
I didn't claim Turks are some transplants... au contraire, my post were showing how RIDICULOUS would it be for them to return to Central Asia.
Jews had no right to "come back" after two millenia and claim Palestine for themselves... Just as Turks have no right now to claim Kazakhstan or whatever for themselves. You didn't even trouble to read my post properly or tu turn your brain on.
If anything, it was the Israeli military victory in the Six Day War that trashed Arab-Israeli coexistence rather than anything on the Arab side. As mentioned above, prior to the Six Day War Egyptian-Israeli relations had opened up through backdoor channels and were surprisingly amicable. Nasser had no desire to fight an expensive war when there were more pressing domestic needs at home. Two things changed in Israel following the Six Day War: First, their military dominance was fully established so they had less of a need to maintain peaceful, accommodating relations with their neighbors. Secondly, the more accommodating wing of the Labor party lost power and saw the more conservative and hawkish Likud party take over.
I don't think so. Nasser actually wanted to unite the Arab world, hence the union with Syria, for example, and attempts at union with other countries.
The propaganda was actively anti-Israeli. Enough to see "Saladin", an Egyptian super-production about the ruler who unites Egypt with Syria (as Nasser did) and to help Arab refugees (which didn't really exist much in original history, but it's an obvious bow to Palestinian refugees) wants to start a war against Kingdom of Jerusalem (a foreign colonial land established in Palestine = Israel)...
And just look... Israel divides Arab world in half.
Also, Nasser was not afraid of costly wars. He had a costly Yemeni civil war going on. In fact it is strange he acted Israeli card when he was already busy.
And the truth is that, as long as I know, Egypt was not militarily ready for this conflict, but its political moves, such as banning UN (perhaps Nasser didn't expect to succeed) made it look as if Israel was really in danger and allowed Israeli military to convince the goverment to seize the opportunity and to attack.