narad
Progressive metal and politics
There's a couple guys in here I disagree with but they're consistent and own their positions. You can't act offended when people accuse you of being what you spent thousands of characters telling people you are.![]()
FFS Randy. No sympathies from me if you're going to willfully stick your head in the sand for the sake of an internet argument.
Relevance?Mel Gibson, famous antisemite who still gets a lot of work. Meanwhile Susan Sarandon criticises Israel and her agency drops her.
It's not endorsing killing Palestinians to observe that life in Palestine is not going to be good for Palestinians anytime soon. These are not the same thing. You would fail a test where you answered that one implies the other. Full stop. I mean, what do you think "endorse" means? If you were to stop trying to vilify my point, be sensationalist, or otherwise abuse the english language and said something like, "if you're saying that Palestinians would be better off if they left, and they did, then the more oppressive government has won through the use of unjust tactics", which is something I'm completely aware of, then I'd agree. But they were going to win anyway. It doesn't make it "right" - it just makes it what it is.People are literally asking Israel to give equal rights to Palestinians and they're saying no. That is what this conflict is about. Any Jewish person on the planet regardless of historical connection to that part of the world has right to return to Israel, but Palestinian refugees who still have the keys to their houses they were forced out of aren't allowed to return. This is a civil rights movement, and Israel doesn't care about non-Jewish rights.
But again, if your solution is Palestinians should give up and leave, that is an endorsement of genocide and a "might makes right" argument.
It's the same with "might makes right". You quote it like it is a mantra. Like some army should march into some foreign land chanting "might makes right" as some sort of manifest destiny. It's not a justification, it's an observation. If there was some larger government who stepped in and destroyed some swath of Israel in retaliation, and push them until they negotiated some freedom for Palestinians, maybe you'd celebrate. It doesn't make any of these actions "right", but the whole world is going to just accept it and move on. This is the essence of might makes right.
And because of the snide remark about me, Bloody Sunday happened at a peaceful civil rights protest, and that sparked the Troubles. If you think that's a false equivalence then you are being very ignorant.
That's not a snide remark -- you're absolutely crazy for thinking the situation can be wrapped up as literally "exactly the same" as Irish independence, and frankly it warrants being called out on it again and again. Every push for independence has its own factors that make over-generalized comparisons useless in that the circumstances, scale, economic factors, cultural factors, the time, the technology, the conflict itself, and outcomes are all different. So you choose to ignore almost everything about what makes conflict what it is, and where does this simplified way of thinking get you? Endorsing the mass murder of Israeli civilians as freedom fighting. And I guess a violent uprising is something you can get behind because it sort of worked (or was at least adopted) in Ireland? But now we're not talking about Ireland, we're talking about a different place, where the entirely different factors mean that that tactic caused an immediate retaliation that cost thousands of people their lives. So again, not a particularly useful comparison to make. "there were a people that were oppressed" / yes, and end of similarities.