Re: Re: Rocks VS. Acid
Mycroft said:
When you see Jewish snipers targeting Israeli soldiers using unarmed Jewish settlers for cover, then you will see casualties. Until then, your comparisons are not valid.
Oh? And at what point would we admit that, HAD the Israeli soldiers gone in armed, that was a definite possibility? Who knows if it will yet occur? Tensions have understandably risen dramatically, in spite of the general attitude of, 'Jews do not attack/oust Jews,' there have been injuries. At the risk of stereotyping, to an unthinking soldier a Jew, looks like a Muslim, looks like a Mexican or a Gypsy through a rifle scope. The risk of expecting soldiers operating in the same area, against basically the same circumstances to react instinctively is noteworthy, hence the reason they were disarmed by the government.
Personally, I hope the comparisons don't become valid:
http://www.palestinemonitor.org/eyewitness/Gaza/Our_humanity_in_the_balance.html
http://www.counterpunch.org/weir04252005.html
http://archives.cnn.com/2002/WORLD/meast/08/29/mideast/
Mycroft said:
When My own opinions on the rightness of the Gaza pull out are mixed, I can understand both sides of the issue. My personal response is to simply cross my fingers and hope that whatever happens it helps advance the cause of peace.
I agree 100%. This is a step that I've been advocating Israel take for a very long time. In order to keep the peace some concessions must be made. It is the first few that are the most difficult since any concession is seen by extremists on either side as weak, but if the strongest party is the first to concede something valuable it puts the responsiblity of providing something equally valuable from originally displaced party. Since the Palestinians are relatively poor people the best they can offer is an end to the insurgency that has killed so many innocents in past decades. What is seen as a horrible mistake by apologists, is seen by the world as the first step toward peace by a country willing to admit mistakes. America should be so big!
Mycroft said:
When I do however feel deep sympathy for the people who are being evicted from their homes and for these communities that are being torn apart. I can only imagine what it is like to have a political decision resulting in having your home, your business, your place of worship, and your childrens school destroyed and to be forcably moved somewhere else. Financial compensation? That's something, but it doesn't change that one life is being brought to an end, forcing you to create a new one from scratch.
Again, I agree with you 100%. My Native-Americaness has helped me empathize with the Palestinian people, and now helps me understand the plight of the Jewish settlers. I have had friends tour Israel, put in time (a city boy's idea of summer camp) in a kibbutz and even move to Israel. I'd heard from them that the Palestinians primarily work in service-oriented jobs and are often treated with disdain or disrespect by many Israelis. Hopefully, the newly displaced Israelis won't meet with the same welcome the eastern Europeans got when the cheering from the dropping of the Iron Curtain died out.
Oh, for the record, a law was recently passed in the U.S. by the Supreme Court that would allow for local or state government to forcibily "relocate" you on a whim.
Mycroft said:
When I think the tendency to demonize or idolize these people according to the needs of our political beliefs should be resisted. They are human beings who live lives similar to our own, who have become accustomed to routines similar to our own, and who have needs and ambitions that are similar to our own. They are nothing more and nothing less.
I couldn't agree with you more, Mycroft. This is the very same thing that so many of us have been saying about the Palestinian people for so long. I'm interested in how the Israeli apologists (and not just the non-specific ones here) will react. It's a definite weakening from an apologist standpoint, yet the Israeli government thinks it's a smart move. I'm just wondering what the apologists, who have supported the Israeli government and military without question, will say now that the Israeli government has disarmed the Israeli military in charge of moving Israeli settlers?
Still, you are correct in saying that the most important viewpoint is that of a human. Being displaced from your home, friends, family and neighborhood would certainly rank high on the list of the worst things that could happen to you. Empathy can be a bitter pill, but hopefully one that will serve to blur the lines between religion and culture to order to better see the human before us.