- 19 Oct 2022 18:41
#15251526
'Complicated' -- ?
All I have to ask is 'Why the *hedging*?'
Are you *okay* with the empirical history of how the present situation turned out to be the way it *is* today -- ?
What do *you* think?
Also:
Tainari88 wrote:
I do know that. I also know Jews were super traumatized after WWII and being rejected and turned over to the Nazis by many governments. I frankly have the view that they internalized the violence of the German Third Reich and instead of realizing what Palestineans were being subjected to? Became zealots in their need for an independent nation. Chris, Hebrew was DEAD as a language. Do you know what it takes to revive a dead language and to reconstruct some dead traditions from nothing?
That issue of Israel is super difficult. I am on the side of Palestine. Because the bottom line is you need equal human rights. Not Zionist nationalism. But go and tell a Jew that when everybody in their hour of need with the extermination camps was saying [NO] to them?
They hyper-militarized and became what they are now. Oppressive and intolerant.
One has to rise above such oppression not to become an oppressor, but to be a seeker of humane government and justice.
It is complicated as hell Chris.
I am not an expert on the Middle East or Israel. I hope you enlighten a bit Chris eh?
'Complicated' -- ?
All I have to ask is 'Why the *hedging*?'
Are you *okay* with the empirical history of how the present situation turned out to be the way it *is* today -- ?
What do *you* think?
Also:
However, this begs three crucial questions. Did the world really have to look like this in 1945? What efforts did the Allies make to open up secure routes to the West for Jewish refugees just before and during the war itself, especially as the news of the slaughter of the Jews became known? And what efforts did the Zionists make? After all, the standard pattern of Jewish emigration away from persecution had been steadily westwards for three generations. The vast majority had settled in the West. Only a tiny minority had gone to Palestine.
However despite this intense and powerfully emotional campaign, a later report to the American Jewish Congress by a Zionist organiser, Chaplain Klausner, stated that most of the refugees wanted to go to the United States. In fact Klausner’s own attitude revealed the inhuman face of Zionism. He concluded: “I am convinced that the people must be forced to go to Palestine.” [2]
This is not an isolated reaction. On point of principle the Zionists encouraged the Allies not to accept Jewish immigrants.
https://www.marxists.org/history/etol/d ... ocaust.htm