Pants-of-dog wrote:And in practice, the protesters are arrested in flimsy charges and the police act with total impunity.
So do you agree that the system does not hold people accountable as you wish?
Do you also agree that the lack of accountability is disproportionately awarded to cops and those who support the status quo?
I've watched many, many videos of police misconduct captured on video (including lots of bodycams footage, which is public record and victims can request to see) and uploaded to sites like Youtube and followed the stories. There's many, many examples on Youtube of police being recorded on video abusing their authority and acting against policy or law and then being fired for it or charged and jailed and being successfully sued by the victim or their families for damages. The most famous example of that might be the cop who killed George Floyd, but there's many examples almost nobody has ever heard of.
Are there examples of police getting away with misconduct, even when caught on video? Absolutely. I don't know what the ratio is for cops getting away with their misconduct vs not when it is caught on video (proper evidence of the misconduct or crime by the cops). Your arguments don't cite any statistics regarding this.
The system, or at least how its enforced by the courts and cities, is obviously imperfect and flawed on police accountability and needs to be improved.
We already have the example of the Nazis showing that following the law can and often does lead to violence and oppression.
This is a strawman, I'm not talking about WWII. Obviously international law was inadequate then. My argument specifically stated international law post-WWII after the creation of the UN, the UN charter etc.
The UN created and ratified a UN partition plan for a 2-state solution in 1947 with territory for the Arabs far larger than even pre-1967 borders that the Jewish leaders accepted and the Arab leaders rejected and then they attacked Israel. Had the Arab leaders accepted the deal then the Palestinians would be far, far, far, better off than at any point since the Arab countries attacked Israel in 1948. The Arab leaders played their hand and lost and the Palestinians have suffered ever since for it.
If you don't think following international law would work then you obviously don't believe in a 2-state solution and you support the continued suffering of Palestinians. If you want Israel to cease to exist like Hamas and Hezbollah and most Muslims do then good luck with that fantasy, it will just continue the death and misery in the region.
While I understand why you think this is a legitimate question, it is a loaded question. It assumes, without evidence, that Hamas is using the population as human shields.
Google is your friend.
Now, please answer the question:
What is the difference between sending a bomb to destroy a home where kids are sleeping and sending a bomb to destroy a home where kids are sleeping and there may be someone who might be linked to a terrorist organization?
You have argued that the latter is legitimate while the former is not.
Please explain how.
If you won't answer my questions in good faith then i'm not going to answer yours. If you were a peace negotiator for the Palestinians there would never be any peace deal because the Israelis could never trust you based on your constant bad faith arguments put forward. All you want is gains and will never give an inch when you debate. This is exactly how the Palestinians/Arabs have negotiated and behaved for 70+ years. That's not the way peace deals and ceasefires are made. Now I understand why you support the Palestinians.
So we can make these sort of divestments even when there is a diverse population of students.
All it takes is moral clarity.
Maybe that's true. Unfortunately campuses across the West have been exploding with debate and anger over who has the moral clarity: pro-Palestinian or pro-Israeli advocates.
And this has been going on for decades. This will never get solved, just like the conflict itself. Therefore, the only way forward on this is for colleges to remain apolitical.
I have already provided that information. The rate of arrests (i.e. percent of protesters arrested) for BLM is half of the rate as for the current protests.
No you made that claim and didn't provide any link or cite supporting it in any of your replies to me. But i don't even care because I don't know why this is even relevant to our discussion.
Why are the cops arresting anti-genocide protestors at twice the rate as BLM protesters?
Assuming this is true, I already provided my explanation in my previous reply. And if all people who break the law were immediately forced to stop by the authorities and then were all held accountable for their crimes the world would be a much more wonderful and peaceful place. This includes both people breaking the law while protesting and cops breaking the law, and all people in Israel/Gaza.