Goodfella
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There's nothing Afro-Nationalist about that article? It was a call to Liberians, not Africans.
The Lebanese are Liberians. But the article calls to African Liberians.
There's nothing Afro-Nationalist about that article? It was a call to Liberians, not Africans.
Sure, that's all true. But its irrelevant because we're talking about states and operating at that level. And it's basically incontrovertible that what Israel is doing is against international law and in direct opposition to the diplomatic positions of even some of its closest friends. Australia still supports an Israel with its borders at the Green Line. (Not all of Israel's's governments have been that bad, but we're certainly been getting more bad than good lately).
See, this is why I made that dumb xbox comment. A thread about Liberia got turned into an Israel thread. I figure xbox is just as relevant.
Could you possibly concede that this might just be a better thing to focus on than Israel?
wut?
other people are doing bad stuff therefore isreal should be allowed to do bad stuff. QED.
Liberia doesn't let its (most likely) upper-class people vote therefore Israel gets to bulldoze people?
This thread delivers! At least Mouthwash finally admitted why he created this thread.and shoot them, and torture them, and imprison them, and occupy their land in contravention of numerous UN resolutions &etc.
I'd hardly call Israel "more free of prejudice" than even countries in the region. Many of its citizens are just as in favor of toppling unfriendly governments as those governments are of removing the current Israeli administration from power. But the point you both seem to be completely missing is which countries it should actually be compared, such as Western Europe and similar developed countries.Israel is a good example: In one way, it is a democracy that grants legal equality to its citizens and has more freedom of religion and is more free of prejudice than any other Middle Eastern country, though another Israel can be a representative of all that is wrong with the Middle East in general (religious fanaticism, racism, etc.), and some ways, even worse. No country is really one thing, especially not democracies.
It "deserves" that "attention" for the very reasons you mentioned. It has nuclear weapons and continues to directly threaten the stability of the region by even assassinating civilian scientists, much less anybody else it sees fit. When it does so with standoff weapons fired from helicopters or 2000 lb bombs dropped from jets, it shows it doesn't care one bit how many innocent civilians are killed in the process.Of course, that all may change as international law becomes more powerful, and the power of nation-states becomes more restrained. But states have nuclear weapons and most importantly, several individuals in control over overlapping domains. But I still think Israel does not deserve the negative attention it currently gets, because it is still a democratic state with rule of law: Its legal system already acknowledges the severe problems that accompanied the occupation of West Bank and duly punished more than indicidentally individuals for human rights abuses. However, because West Bank isn't formally part of Israel, the Israeli legal system is powerless to do anything against the IDF, unless Israel makes some strong reforms of legal oversight over the military. Hence my comment that the IDF essentially constitutes a de-facto country.
Apartheid is now conterminous with any form of racial or ethnic discrimination these days.
It's really funny when Europeans think this.Canada isn't de-facto part of the US
If people are being refused citizenship in Liberia doesn't that qualify as excluding them from the operations of government and society? Don't you need to be a citizen to seek election as the President of Liberia then?Apartheid is more than that, it is rule by a minority composed of one race, which racially discriminates against and excludes the majority race of the country from the organs and operations of government and society. Hence the comparison between South Africa and Israel, and why this does not apply to Liberia.
If people are being refused citizenship in Liberia doesn't that qualify as excluding them from the operations of government and society? Don't you need to be a citizen to seek election as the President of Liberia then?
But in any case, denying someone citizenship is a pretty major step in itself, isn't it? (Though I can see it doesn't immediately qualify as apartheid.)
Especially if they had it before.
(Did they have it before? I don't know enough about this subject.)
Or, more importantly, who are not foreigners.Citizenship isn't some right foreigners have in any country they want to become a citizen in. Liberia has no obligation to offer citizenship to -any- foreigner. This is not in any way comparable to denying rights to those that are already citizens.
Ah right. You're saying that apartheid only applies to regimes which exclude the majority? Not a minority.
Seems an unnecessarily restrictive definition to my mind.
One has decided that despite calling itself secular that the state must retain its religious foundation above all else, despite the wishes of many of its residents and contrary to eventually bringing peace to the region.
Your statement about democracies "not being one thing" is what really confuses me. What could you possibly mean by that?
What modern legal system allows thousands of Palestinians to be held without trial, even countless children whose only heinous criminal act was to throw a rock at a tank? What makes this even worse is the blatant double standard where the police and the IDF allow Israeli children to stone defenseless Palestinian women and children, as well as US human rights workers, without any fear of even being arrested. How many forbid someone from an adjoining country from even marrying a resident of their country? How many have enclosed the legal residents of a region they directly control with walls and guard towers, while the courts absurdly claim these acts are somehow outside their purview?
Apartheid is more than that, it is rule by a minority composed of one race, which racially discriminates against and excludes the majority race of the country from the organs and operations of government and society. Hence the comparison between South Africa and Israel, and why this does not apply to Liberia.
It's really funny when Europeans think this.
But the real difference, as others have pointed out, is that very few whites likely wish to become citizens of Liberia. But many Palestinians who have lived in what is now Israel for centuries are forbidden from doing so again under the absurd guise that they ostensibly all are potential "terrorists".
Are you Liberia, South Africa, or Israel in this post?Can you muster up something coherent for me?
All this talk about Israeli courts being powerless to check the abuses of the IDF that happen in the Palestinian Territories is very curious to me.
1. Israel sees all that surface of the Earth as its own, or shouldn't the courts naturally extend their bailiwick beyond the 1967 borders? Is this not an implicit acknowledgement that those settlements are illegitimate?
2. Why do laws governing citizens stop at borders? If you can restrict my citizenship rights based on my actions in one place, why does that power cease when I take one step further? If I'm sudden need of a consulate my country will help me, but if I rape some kids (FYI illegal in the USA) I won be held accountable?? That makes no sense.
Except that if Israel, West Bank and Gaza Strip were to be one country, Jews would still form a majority. Only when you include Palestinian refugees as being part of "Israel", would Jews be a minority.