• blazera
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    1011 year ago

    The big thing is the Hamas attack wasnt the start of all this. It wasnt Israel minding their own business and Hamas invading for the glory of Islam. The warning cries of a humanitarian crisis were going off long before this recent war, from international humanitarian agencies like Unicef. Gaza was being militarily oppressed by Israel, blocking humanitarian aid, international trade, even denying access to their own waters for fishing.

    Civilians were dying off already as a result of Israel, and Israel ignored the warnings, the international community ignored the warnings, and then its shocked pikachus all around as a dying people fight back for survival.

    • @leetnewb@beehaw.org
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      561 year ago

      You can point out back and forth violence going into the 1800s. Nobody has clean hands in this conflict.

      • FIash Mob #5678
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        701 year ago

        Yeah, but siding with Israel here is the logical equivalent of siding with Andrew Jackson and supporting the Indian Removal Act as he committed genocide against the native people.

        The power imbalance and how Israel has used it is what makes it imperative that Israel be held accountable by the international community.

        • @knokelmaat@beehaw.org
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          411 year ago

          I’m glad you bring up the power imbalance. The “both sides have been doing horrible stuff” only works if both sides have equal footing, which they clearly do not. This does not negate the crimes commited by Hamas, but extremism doesn’t come from nowhere and Israël has a responsibility in that.

          • @library_napper
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            121 year ago

            Also disproportionate use of force is a war crime. We see Israel doing this in every war with Palestine since the Nakba.

      • @onkyo@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        241 year ago

        Except jews, christians and muslims lived pretty much peacefully together during ottoman rule. The violence worsened when britian controlled palestine and then became a lot worse during the nakba and israeli occupation. It’s not about ‘having clean hands’. It’s about stopping genocide and understanding that occupation and colonialism leads to violent pushback. It always has and always will.

        • @sqgl@beehaw.org
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          1 year ago

          Wasn’t the Ottoman period occupation/colonialism too? Not that I am in favour of imperialism but you do raise a fascinating point I wasn’t aware of.

          • @onkyo@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            51 year ago

            The Ottomans took control of palestine after a war with the Mamluk empire. Palestine hasn’t been and independent country for much of it’s history. It’s still a form of occupation but if you were muslim, christian or jewish you still had access to certain rights (unless you were a slave). Mostly if you were muslim.

        • @lefaucet@slrpnk.net
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          31 year ago

          I dont know anything about this. We’re they all living in the same neighborhoods or we’re they in different neighborhoods in the same city or like different towns in the same Provence?

          Just curious how closely bound their networks were. In my home town folks of different faiths are neighbors and mostly go to the same schools and share a government. There’s not much segregation at all. Sure, there’s racism among all groups, but it gets much weaker and much less frequent with each generation.

          Oh yeah and fuck the ole British state. Bunch of tossers meddling all about so they can exploit everyone’s resources. Their emancipated colony, all-grown-up now, isn’t much better.

      • blazera
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        111 year ago

        Mostly it goes back to the 1940’s. There was more history of Zionism beforehand, Jewish settlers gradually coming in to live in the holy land. But after WW2 was the large influx and big push for a Jewish ethnostate. Aaand the people living there already opposed it from the start. And since then it’s been very apparent why, because Israel pushes beyond the borders they were already given from Palestinian land, and militarily occupy the Palestinian land they dont yet claim.

        • @sqgl@beehaw.org
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          101 year ago

          It was Arabs who did not accept those borders. They lost and Israel expanded.

          What I have more of a problem with is the settlers in the WB and that seems to be Bibi’s doing without much pushback from USA. Fascists gonna fasche.

          • @library_napper
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            111 year ago

            They were never given a vote. The UN voted to take away the Palestinians’ land, and the actual people living there weren’t given a single fucking vote in the issue.

            • @sqgl@beehaw.org
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              1 year ago

              What vote? I wasn’t talking about any election and neither was blazera (who correctly said Jews were given the land).

              I was talking about the 6 day war. Great animation showing the history here https://youtu.be/m19F4IHTVGc/

              • @jarfil@beehaw.org
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                51 year ago

                What vote?

                Timeline:

                • 1947 - The resolution was voted on by the UN
                • Arab countries didn’t accept it
                • Civil war between Zionists and non-Zionists
                • 1948 - A day before Britain’s retreat, Israel claims all the land
                • A day later, Arab countries attack Israel in order to “push the Jews into the sea”
                • Israel wins most of the land, except Gaza and Cisjordania

                Jews were given the land

                Well… kind of, but not really, not exactly that land, and the result wasn’t truly agreed upon by anyone.

                the 6 day war

                That’s in 1967. Israel wasn’t “given” any land there, it used a provocation by Egypt in order to claim all of it (and have Egypt give thanks for not claiming all of Sinai too… for now).

                • @sqgl@beehaw.org
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                  11 year ago

                  Jews were given the land

                  Well… kind of, but not really, not exactly that land, and the result wasn’t truly agreed upon by anyone.

                  They were given the land by UN at the start of the partition. I want discussing whether it was just.

                  the 6 day war

                  That’s in 1967.

                  Yep, just as I said.

                  Israel wasn’t “given” any land there

                  Didn’t say it was dune in 1967. It was given by UN straight after WW2. I was being as brief as possible.

                  It seems we agree on everything except the following. Hopefully you can clarify for me please…

                  1948 - A day before Britain’s retreat, Israel claims all the land

                  Not explicitly AFAIK. This is my understanding…

                  Arabs were not OK with the UN partition but Jews were. Jews therefore understood that would mean Arabs would annul the partition as soon as the Brits exited so they declared independence from the day of the exit but I cannot find any borders mentioned. Then the Arabs really did attack.

                  Do you know of any borders mentioned by Jews then? Did they state “we want to be observed of the Arab partitions?” Certainly that is how it ended up but was that the plan on Independence Day? Wikipedia is vague.

                  • @jarfil@beehaw.org
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                    11 year ago

                    There is a funny tidbit on the Wikipedia page:

                    Although Ben-Gurion had told the audience that he was reading from the scroll of independence, he was actually reading from handwritten notes because only the bottom part of the scroll had been finished by artist and calligrapher Otte Wallish by the time of the declaration (he did not complete the entire document until June)

                    https://catalog.archives.gov.il/en/chapter/the-declaration-of-independence/

                    Because there was no time to spare, the Declaration was read from a mimeographed sheet, and the 37 signatories – members of the Provisional Council of State – signed their names to a blank parchment sheet. The official copy of the Declaration was later inscribed by an artist.


                    As for borders, by following the Declaration of Independence itself:

                    THE STATE OF ISRAEL is prepared to cooperate with the agencies and representatives of the United Nations in implementing the resolution of the General Assembly of the 29th November, 1947, and will take steps to bring about the economic union of the whole of Eretz-Israel.

                    The UN resolution called for an economic union of “Israel and Palestine”, which would imply that “Eretz-Israel” was supposed to mean the whole land of the “Mandatory Palestine”.

                    Prior to that:

                    ACCORDINGLY WE, MEMBERS OF THE PEOPLE’S COUNCIL, REPRESENTATIVES OF THE JEWISH COMMUNITY OF ERETZ-ISRAEL AND OF THE ZIONIST MOVEMENT, ARE HERE ASSEMBLED ON THE DAY OF THE TERMINATION OF THE BRITISH MANDATE OVER ERETZ-ISRAEL AND, BY VIRTUE OF OUR NATURAL AND HISTORIC RIGHT AND ON THE STRENGTH OF THE RESOLUTION OF THE UNITED NATIONS GENERAL ASSEMBLY, HEREBY DECLARE THE ESTABLISHMENT OF A JEWISH STATE IN ERETZ-ISRAEL, TO BE KNOWN AS THE STATE OF ISRAEL.

                    The British mandate was over the whole “Mandatory Palestine”… but the declaration talks about the State of Israel being “in Eretz-Israel”, without specifying any explicit borders.

                    The “spirit” of the text can be interpreted as intended to follow the borders of the UN resolution… maybe.

                    Since the resolution clearly was not accepted by the Arab states, it would require some further analysis whether that means Israel is supposed to prioritize establishing an economic union of the whole land, or strictly follow the resolution.

          • blazera
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            71 year ago

            Why do i keep hearing it described like losing a game? Zionists invaded, murdered, and exiled palestinians from their land, that should “win” them nothing but opposition from the international community, same as happening with Russias invasion of Ukraine.

            • @sqgl@beehaw.org
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              1 year ago

              Why do i keep hearing it described like losing a game?

              What do you mean by “it”?

              I thought we were talking specifically about changes to the borders of what was given to them (irresponsibly?) by the Allies after WW2.

              The 6 day war in 1967 was initiated by surrounding Arab countries. Israel won that war and expanded into the Sinai and Gaza (Egypt), Golan Heights (Syria), West Bank and East Jerusalem (Jordan). They didn’t initiate the expansion. They then returned the Sinai to Egypt.

              Admittedly after that they did take more without provocation. The chipping away with settlements is happening to this very day.

              I just rewatched the above video in order to spell out the details. It is all new to me. Have a look yourself if you are genuinely interested in discussing the conflict. It really is well made and easy to follow (I dunno if there are errors though).

              • blazera
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                51 year ago

                Nothing was ever given to them, only taken. They were living there already. They did not consent to being murdered and evicted from where they lived, and predictably they fought against it. That they lost against a much larger, internationally backed army invading their land doesnt exactly persuade me that they should lose their right to living there.

                • @sqgl@beehaw.org
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                  1 year ago

                  Nothing was ever given to them, only taken

                  Who is “them”? I was talking about the land given to Jews by the colonisers: England and France.

                  The 6 day war had a larger army on the Arab side. I dunno how much financial backing Israel had from USA or how it compared with the backing (if any) by the Arab oil states and I doubt you know or care either.

                  I am trying to learn here, but you just insist on lazy mud slinging. Blocking you.

                  • blazera
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                    11 year ago

                    You and the rest of the world are blocking out the truth, not able to defend the indefensible actions of Israel.

          • @library_napper
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            121 year ago

            This issue has nothing to do with Jews. It has to do with Zionism.

            Jews have lived there peacefully, yes. They did so without stealing their neighbors land. Its the Zionists that formed Israel and stole ~40% of Palesines land that caused the war.

            There have always been Jews opposed to Zionism since the idea was first thought up.

            • @sqgl@beehaw.org
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              1 year ago

              After the Nazi shit and the reluctance of the West to accept refugees I can understand why.

              And look at the rise of cookers who think we live on a flat earth run by a cabal of Jewish shape-shifting lizards from the planet Nibiru. I do not think social progress by humanity is inevitable anymore.

              Nazi Germany could really happen again. Just last week in Australia a judge revealed himself to be a Nazi sympathiser… https://old.reddit.com/r/auslaw/comments/17hecdx/comment/k6nuov1/

              • @jarfil@beehaw.org
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                21 year ago

                After the Nazi shit and the reluctance of the West to accept refugees

                Zionism starts in the 1800s, well before the Nazi shit. The 1940’s One Million Plan actually got amended after the Holocaust by stirring up a civil war so more Jews from Arab countries would flee in fear of prosecution in order to meet the Zionist numbers, precisely because “too many” Western countries were accepting (or got forced to accept) Holocaust refugees, who were nowhere as many as previously expected (by the Zionists).

                Nazi Germany could really happen again

                Not exactly. Genocides have been going on all the time, just the countries and ethnicities have been changing. So you could say it’s been happening all along… while the chance of the same exact combination repeating, is quite low.

                • @sqgl@beehaw.org
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                  1 year ago

                  Thanks for the background info.

                  I used to resent that Jews had a special word just for them: “antisemitism”. But now I see it might be warranted because although every migrant group gets racist pushback, it is Jews who are the target of crazy conspiracy theorists. It is Jews who are said to secretly run the world.

                  I am not joking about the shape-shifting lizards from the planet Nibiru. That is from David Icke who says our world leaders are those lizards.

                  It is thought that he is using it as a dog-whistle for Nazis (to mean Jews). Certainly there is a disproportionate crossover between Nazis and Icke supporters.

                  Icke also championed the 5G conspiracies, is an anti-vaxxer and thinks the moon is a hollow spaceship used by aliens to spy on us from. I can’t even…

                  • @jarfil@beehaw.org
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                    11 year ago

                    I used to resent that Jews had a special word just for them: “antisemitism”

                    “Antisemitism” is technically a BS word, just like the “Semitism” word it comes from. It was invented in the 1800s by some proto-Nazis, adopted in the 1900s by Nazis after the concept was already debunked, and continued in the 2000s by neo-Nazis. Nothing to be either jealous or proud of.

                    Jews who are said to secretly run the world

                    Somewhat ironically, not so secretly, and not a conspiracy.

                    Since 70CE, all Jews have been required to both read and understand the Torah, while other religions relied on priests “interpreting” the sacred texts for uneducated peasants, leading to Jewish literacy levels of 70% or more in countries with otherwise a 3% or less during the Middle Ages. At the same time, both Christians and Muslims were forbidden from “usury”, or charging interest on loans (Muslim banking still is), but guess who wasn’t: Jews. And who’d guess it, the Diaspora meant there was one or a dozen Jews pretty much in every city. As commerce grew all over the world, merchants used to go to literate Jews, like the ones sitting on the bench (“banca”) in Florence, asking for loans and generally to do what nobody else was either capable or allowed to do, like letting them carry bank notes instead of coffers full of gold, redeemable at other “branches”. Big surprise, some centuries later, you can trace most of the financial world back to Jews, both the concepts and ownership.

                    Also not a coincidence there have been so many famous Jewish artists, scientists or inventors. Anyone who’s got a problem with that, can thank their own religious ancestry for the cultural suicide.

                    dog-whistle for Nazis (to mean Jews)

                    …but of course it’s easier to blame the guys who got it right, while spreading further conspiranoic BS to dig an even deeper hole for one’s own culture. 🤦

          • blazera
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            41 year ago

            I dont care that they were ottoman or british ruled, it was palestinians living there, and they opposed zionism from the beginning

        • @library_napper
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          111 year ago

          There have always been Jews opposed to Zionism since the idea was created. Its almost like stealing someone elsea land is immoral.

          • @jarfil@beehaw.org
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            11 year ago

            Lower Paleolithic is as far as some will go when dating first clashes over that same patch of land, or about 200,000 years ago.

    • @Akasazh@feddit.nl
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      91 year ago

      I do agree the Hamas attack wasn’t the start of this. However tactically it was incredibly silly, honestly what did they think would happen?

      They gave Netanyahu, who was finally fumbling at the reigns after almost thirty years aan excuse to execute his wet dreams and all of Israel uniting behind him.

      I see no way how they could have thought the attack would benefit their cause.

      • blazera
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        221 year ago

        I dont think people are appreciating the context of Gazans dying off. It wasnt a stable situation that was fine to continue as it was going, imagine youre locked in a room with a lunatic with a knife trying to kill you. Youre not likely to beat the lunatic, but youre gonna try, you dont have any other options.

        Waiting didnt work, protests didnt work, pleading with the international community didnt work, they cant leave. Everyone keeps saying they shouldnt have fought back, but what should they have done? Nothing is not available as an option.

        • @Akasazh@feddit.nl
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          41 year ago

          I appreciate that and I have equated the current war to the Warsaw ghetto uprising. I’m not an apologist.

          However, as Sun Zu said, you must not interrupt your enemy when he’s making a mistake. Netanyahu’s might was failing. Israeli youth was rising up against him.

          It’s not like they absolutely needed to do this right now, and they could’ve quite easily understood what the response would be (maybe not the entire extent).

          Tactically it was stupid.

          • blazera
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            81 year ago

            What authority was netanyahu losing? Or are you just referring to there being some chance of him losing an election? Because Gaza did wait and see for several elections. He was just reelected in 2022. So apparently he’s not being voted out.

              • @t3rmit3@beehaw.org
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                21 year ago

                Sure, but it wasn’t saving any Palestinians lives in the process OR the goal. Most Israelis weren’t opposing Netanyahu because they were against the Israeli genocide of Palestinians, they just didn’t like what he was doing to prevent punishment for his corruption. They wanted to replace him, but it would just be with another genocidal guy.

                • @Akasazh@feddit.nl
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                  21 year ago

                  I don’t know. I remember both Rabin and Sharon, who briefly gave some hope in the nineties. It never materialized but it’s hope I must cling to. Just like the Irish managed to put their para military ways aside.

                  The sad part of this attack is that that hoe is pushed back even further.

                  So call me naive or a fool, but I keep hoping for a new generation that distances itself from the spiral of violence. It’s a feint hope, that got even more so due to this new horrible episode.

          • @t3rmit3@beehaw.org
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            51 year ago

            Israeli youth was rising up against him.

            “Rising up” insomuch as they were protesting his proposed changes, not in that they were contemplating actually removing him from power, or even trying to oust/disband/etc Likud.

            • @Akasazh@feddit.nl
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              11 year ago

              Don’t you think that, however small, some action must take form?

              When I was small there were two conflicts that dividend public opinion and were sure to last centuries, those bring the Israel-Palestine conflict and the Irish one.

              I think that disengaging the murder spiral makes things better. Both the resentment of the Israeli youth against their more and more fascist government was an incredibly worthwhile step.

              Hamas and Likud alle don’t like any two state proposals, that’s why this is happening.

              • @t3rmit3@beehaw.org
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                21 year ago

                If I came into your house and drove you by force into the garage, I don’t think you’d want a “2-house solution” that allows you to live there, either.

                And no, I don’t think that essentially saying, “why don’t the Palestinians wait around being killed quietly, to see if the youths protesting today will massively change Israel’s trajectory when they get into politics in 20 years?” is a reasonable, measured, or humane stance.

    • @TheSanSabaSongbird@lemdro.id
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      81 year ago

      They did a little more than simply “fight back.” They also engaged in widespread and utterly gratuitous acts of violence and torture in ways that can only have been calculated to trigger an overreaction on the part of Israel. They knew exactly what they were doing and what would happen. They obviously don’t give a fuck about their own people.

      • @t3rmit3@beehaw.org
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        291 year ago

        Because Israel will never let them back in if they leave. That is not hypothetical; it happened to thousands of Palestinians during the 6-day war, and their families are still stuck in Egypt, Syria, and Lebanon today.

        • @TheSanSabaSongbird@lemdro.id
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          21 year ago

          It’s also because Hamas has its origins in the Muslim Brotherhood which for obvious reasons means that Egypt is very leery of accepting Palestinians from Gaza.

          I’m not defending their position, just explaining it; Egypt is basically a military dictatorship at this point and the Muslim Brotherhood is enemy number one for them.

      • Solar Bear
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        241 year ago

        Why doesn’t Israel stop doing things that require other countries to intervene

      • @Blackmist@feddit.uk
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        91 year ago

        They don’t want them either.

        All the Arab world may be united in it’s hatred of Israel, but that doesn’t mean they like each other…

        • livus
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          @Blackmist it’s not about “like” it’s about realpolitik.

          2 million refugees into Egypt would be like suddenly allowing 6 million refugees into the US. Political suicide for anyone that did it.

          Especially if it meant you were likely going to get a border war with a notoriously land-stealing nation as well.

      • @grte@lemmy.ca
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        41 year ago

        Why do you think a Levantine Trail of Tears is an acceptable solution rather than ethnic cleansing?

    • @Jamil@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      It all started when Israel showed up on the block and forcibly removed 700000 Palestinians from their homes. There’s no history before that worth discussing as it is archeological records, not history.

      Areas that were once 90% Palestinian, suddenly became 90% Jewish. Those people are still fighting to get their homes back, and Israel is continuing to evict Palestinians daily.

      The first step to a solution is to recognize that Israel’s goals are to ethnically cleanse the area and then work from there.