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  1. #1
    onmyknees Platinum Poster onmyknees's Avatar
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    Default Of God, Guns, and Isreal..Modern Progressives

    Man....what the fuck is up with the modern day Democrat (Liberal) Party? There's threads that proceed this trying to draw some hazy like between Ryan and Marx, and you all can't even determine if Jerusalem should be the capitol of Israel, and god forbid the word god should appear in your party platform as it realties to one's "god given ability". And watching Villaraigosa attempting to take a voice tally, it was clear those who wanted the language to remain out of the platform carried the day. A mortified mayor simply declared victory and pounded the gavel saving you all further embarrassment. You spent months entertaining each other on here with how radical and "extreme" the Tea Party was, and this is the chaos you counter with at your big show ? 70 % of Americans in poll after poll identify some sort of belief in a higher authority, and here you are booing when a simple reference that has been there for years is being reinstated. Who's extreme now and just who is out of the mainstream? If your intent was to lure in some Independents, my guess is that just went up in smoke. Nicely Done



  2. #2
    Silver Poster hippifried's Avatar
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    Default Re: Of God, Guns, and Isreal..Modern Progressives

    You're really reaching now. If any of that shit was that important to you, you would have capitalized God. In your context, that's a proper noun ya know. Flunked out of 4th grade English grammar, huh?

    Besides, I don't know what you're whining about anyway. Those of us that you're trying so ineffectively to insult aren't Republican dittoheads. We aren't brainwashed to think alike.


    "You can pick your friends & you can pick your nose, but you can't wipe your friends off on your saddle."
    ~ Kinky Friedman ~

  3. #3
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    Default Re: Of God, Guns, and Isreal..Modern Progressives

    Perhaps you could confirm that you want to re-write the Constitution of the USA and put the word 'God' in it, as it does not appear anywhere in the document. It is not important if 70% believe in God, but that the Constitutional right of all Americans must guarantee that the 30% who do not believe in God have the same rights of belief as the rest. If this is what you want to change, then start a campaign and best of luck.

    Calling Jerusalem the capital of Israel is a provocative political act -the status of Jerusalem is as yet undefined in international law beyond being an illegally occupied city, most states refuse to recognise it as the capital of Israel precisely because this would legitimise theft. The Democrats have been deceptive and hypocritical on this issue for years, Hillary Clinton having once refused to endorse Jerusalem as the capital performed a complete volte face when she decided to run for election in New York, thereby showing how completely lacking in principles she is. If you want a serious debate on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, then attention to the key unresolved issues: the right of return of refugees, and the status of Jerusalem deserves serious thought, it is a pity that it has become a balloon in the Democratic convention, but we don't expect rational thought on Israel or the Palestinians on this side of the pond anyway, and I don't think anyone on this forum has pretended the Democrats are perfect. One final point, if that made a mess of it in the convention, doesn't that mean these affairs are not as tightly scripted and predictable -and boring- as some think? Makes a change to see people disagreeing with each other! Might even be healthy for democracy.



  4. #4
    Senior Member Platinum Poster Prospero's Avatar
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    Default Re: Of God, Guns, and Isreal..Modern Progressives

    Good post Stavros - covering some key issues.

    With regards to the US constitution and God you are correct and though the founding fathers may well have been believers there was a quite conscious and deliberate decision to separate church and state. Those who went to America to find freedom from Europe had certainly had enough of the persecution that follows when State and religion are in unity. (And which we see clearly at play in Iran today.) Yes the 30 per cent who are non believers are defended by this but so too are the Mormons, the Jews, the Muslims, the Sikhs, Hindus and other various group of believers who'd become minorities in a nation that decided to conjoin Christianity and the State.

    I will not add anything more to Stavros's remarks re the status of Israel except to endorse what he says abouts disputed status. I am not sure that most states refuse to recognise it because this would legitimise the idea of theft - but simply because it IS in dispute? I think there is a fine distinction there.

    Of course the ultra-religious right in America, once prime persecuters of Jews and other minorities, now support israel for their own peculiar religious reasons (an apocalyptic vision that has some common ground with the beliefs of Iran's President Ahmadinejad) as well as the more obvious and clear electoral benefit of appealing to the Jewish constituency.



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    Default Re: Of God, Guns, and Isreal..Modern Progressives

    Quote Originally Posted by Prospero View Post
    Good post Stavros - covering some key issues.

    With regards to the US constitution and God you are correct and though the founding fathers may well have been believers there was a quite conscious and deliberate decision to separate church and state. Those who went to America to find freedom from Europe had certainly had enough of the persecution that follows when State and religion are in unity. (And which we see clearly at play in Iran today.) Yes the 30 per cent who are non believers are defended by this but so too are the Mormons, the Jews, the Muslims, the Sikhs, Hindus and other various group of believers who'd become minorities in a nation that decided to conjoin Christianity and the State.

    I will not add anything more to Stavros's remarks re the status of Israel except to endorse what he says abouts disputed status. I am not sure that most states refuse to recognise it because this would legitimise the idea of theft - but simply because it IS in dispute? I think there is a fine distinction there.

    Of course the ultra-religious right in America, once prime persecuters of Jews and other minorities, now support israel for their own peculiar religious reasons (an apocalyptic vision that has some common ground with the beliefs of Iran's President Ahmadinejad) as well as the more obvious and clear electoral benefit of appealing to the Jewish constituency.
    I used the word theft because land owned by Palestinians has been stolen by settlers on the West Bank and in Jerusalem. If you want a comparison I think it would be Northern Cyprus -nobody except Turkey recognises the government of the 'Republic of Northern Cyprus' even though Turkey is a NATO ally of the US and the UK, and nothing of significance happens in 'Northern Cyprus' without the approval of the Turkish government. The so-called 'government' in Northern Nicosia would like nothing morre than recognition so that it can dodge any negotiations ona just settlement to the division of Cyprus. Similarly, Israel wants international confirmation that Jerusalem is its capital in order to legitimise its occupation of the whole of the West Bank. For the extremists this is merely one stage in the expulsion of Arabs; for others the sticking point remains the borders of any new 'state' in a two-state solution, as the division of the West Bank into 'Zones' under the last treaty has been shown to work against the interests of the Palestinians who need Israel's permission to travel from one zone to another (for security reasons of course!).

    As for the religious issue in the US, you are absolutely right.



  6. #6
    Senior Member Platinum Poster Prospero's Avatar
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    Default Re: Of God, Guns, and Isreal..Modern Progressives

    Still beg to disagree (though I'm not objecting the idea that it was theft). I don't think the refusal to recognise Jerusalem (al Quds) as the capital is recognition that it is stolen but rather a refusal to take a side in this issue. If states refuse to agree they are remaining neutral surely?

    It's long been contended by many who are non-partisan in this that the only way out of this deadlock is for there to be international governance of Jerusalem - recognising both claims to it. For both Israel and the Palestinians it's status seems to be non negotiable. For it has the holiest shrine of Judaism, the second (or is ti third?) holiest shrine for islam and the holiest sites for Christianity as well. It is finally a bloody mess.



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    Default Re: Of God, Guns, and Isreal..Modern Progressives

    Calling Jerusalem the capital of Israel is settling an issue that is clearly unsettled and allowing Israel the right to claim land as their capital that is not recognized by the international community as theirs.

    I agree with Stavros on the main points but I wouldn't be so certain that the conversation about Israel is more balanced in the U.K than the U.S. At universities and campuses here, you do hear quite a bit of advocacy for both the Palestinian and Israeli positions. In the U.K. I think that you hear a one-sided chorus for the Palestinian position including even justification of support of sabotage of property owned by Israelis abroad etc. You hear journalists say that they don't read emails when they recognize based on the subject matter that the content is pro-Israel. I'm not saying that the position taken by most in the U.K is wrong but I don't think that diversity of opinion on the issue is so impressively broad just because what many believe is the more reasonable side gets primacy.

    I do get the sense when reading comments sections on U.K forums discussing Israel that anything exculpatory is suppressed, anything damning emphasized, and superlatives are used liberally. People write stuff like "inherently evil state" and then shrug their shoulders and emphasize for affect that "anti-semitism and anti-zionism are not the same thing." In fact this latter phrase almost seems like the defense for any degree of exaggeration or intentional misstatement. Wasn't there a U.K politician who during the Lebanon war got off his treadmill at a public exercise facility and started with the "f'ing Jews" routine when he saw a report of what the Israelis were doing. Had this politician said, "f'ing bloodsucking Zionists" I guarantee you there would have been a thousand people who would have repeated as a mantra the distinction between anti-zionism and the like.

    Again, not saying that the general view is wrong in the U.K, but it does at the very least not seem like the model for diversity of opinion on the issue.



  8. #8
    Senior Member Platinum Poster Prospero's Avatar
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    Default Re: Of God, Guns, and Isreal..Modern Progressives

    Bronco - I think you overstate the case, but there is certainly a pro-Palestinian bias in the UK.



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    Default Re: Of God, Guns, and Isreal..Modern Progressives

    Quote Originally Posted by Prospero View Post
    Bronco - I think you overstate the case, but there is certainly a pro-Palestinian bias in the UK.
    I admit I was taking the most unenlightened voices in the mix and magnifying them. For instance, if you go to a pro-Israel forum, you will occasionally hear neanderthals call the Palestinians a nation of terrorists. My point is not that this is representative of opinion in the U.K. I think much more highly of the average person there than that. I am only saying that if you take the message being spewed by the thickest member of the public, this will often give you an idea of what the overall slant is.

    They are taking nuanced pro-Palestinian views and distilling them to something simple and crude. The purpose of pointing out the existence of these individuals is not to imply that pro-Palestinian views are themselves crude (or that those holding such views are responsible for those who misunderstand what they say); just that you can best glean an overall bias by looking at the comments of individuals without the guile to disguise it.



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    Default Re: Of God, Guns, and Isreal..Modern Progressives

    There is bias on both sides of the Atantic on both sides of the conflict. I think the perception in the UK is that there is a stronger pro-Israeli emphasis in the US not just because of the strength of the Jewish lobby and the pro-Israeli position of some Christian fundamentalists, but because the US has had an alliance with Israel since 1967 which claims to guarantee Israel's security, although I believe in practical terms this only came into operation once, in the 1973 War. One assumes that if Israel were attacked and appeared to be struggling to deal with an invasion, the US would go to its assistance.

    In the UK, Broncofan, you may be referring to various nasty remarks about Jews made by former London Mayor Ken Livingstone, the latest of which was the rather daft claim that Jews wouldn't vote for him in the mayoral election because they are rich. His inflexible belief that he is the right man for London isn't shared by everyone in the capital, and most of them are not Jews!
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2...wish-chronicle

    Livingstone comes from a position on the so-called 'left' (hard to know what that means these days) which for years has viewed Israel as an aggressive state that has victimised Palestinians, a position that lacks the subtlety that comes with a considered analysis of the Conflict. Some on the left have also regarded Palestinian guerilla groups as 'revolutionaries', even though it is now clear they were, and are, quite simply crooks. The PFLP for example was at one time in the 1970s making a million dollars a month from the bribes it got from those airlines it agreed not to hijack. Where did the money go, to the struggling masses?

    I think the balance of opinon on the Palestinians in the UK changed with the first Intifada in 1988; up until then, as indicated above, the Palestinians had succeeded in alienating most of the political constituents outside the Middle East they actually needed for their cause, by hi-jacking aeroplanes, and murdering Olympic athletes, political figures, and civilians in airports. People did not forget that, and still do not. However, Israel's inept handing of what began as peaceful protests on the West Bank and in Gaza cost it dear, people who had associated Palestinians with outrageous crimes against humanity, saw ordinary people being beaten and treated badly even though it was their land that had been occupied. An elementary sense of justice suggested that what Israel was doing was wrong.

    The PLO/Fatah were taken by surprise by events in 1988 and rapidly moved to get their people on the ground involved to 'lead the revolution', fearing that the core Palestinian constituency on the West Bank and in Gaza was developing a political voice independent of its so-called 'Official Representatives' -an anxiety that was deepened with the emergence of Hanan Ashrawi and Haidar Abdul-Shafi as eloquent Christian and Muslim voices of Palestinians who actually lived under occupation, where Fatah was living in splendid isolation in Tunis. In Gaza the creation of Hamas was quietly encouraged by the Israelis precisely because they saw it as an anti-Arafat vehicle, which it was, not expecting it to last.

    Arafat's success in sidelining the moderates and in 'reinserting' PLO/Fatah dominance over Palestinian politics has not been a success- for them anyway. The conference in Madrid in 1991, and the Oslo Peace Accords to many people represented an authentic turn away from the hopeless cycle of violence and political deadlock that had characterised the conflict since 1948, yet it was also clear that Oslo could only be the beginning, not the end of a process -which is how some Israelis saw it. Ariel Sharon and Bejamin Netanyahu however, were opposed to the Oslo Accords, and have done everything since 1993 to make them irrelevant. At the time Arafat too was an obstacle, because his obsession with his image and, above all other things, the cash flow was always more important to him than the fate of 'his people'; the men he promoted -Nabil Sha'ath, Mahmoud Abbas and Said Erekat in particular are weak and indecisive and, crucially, unable to represent all Palestinians.

    If an anti-Israel bias is still discernible in the UK it is not helped by the spokesmen and women who speak officially on behalf of Israel, as well as Netanyahu himself -they come across as arrogant, aggressive, and completely indifferent to the rights that Palestinians have. It is a greater pity that other voices in Israel are not heard, because the Coalition govt has been under attack across Israel and the Occupied Territories on a whole range of social and economic issues, and it cannot undermine Israel's security to give airtime to issues which concern the Israeli public the most -the lack of affordable housing in Israel (not everyone wants to live in a subsidised settlement on the West Bank), forcing Orthodox Jews to serve in the military, etc.

    Israel is a phenomenally successful country, against so many odds or even because of them -technology developed in Israel is in widespread use around the world, including mine and your mobile phone.
    http://israel21c.org/technology/inno...ped-in-israel/

    The mere idea of Jerusalem as an international city is conceptually stupid and in practical terms unworkable, the idea is put out to deflect attention from the most radical option, but one which I think ought to be discussed -a one state solution for all. This must mean the end of a 'Jewish state', but a 'Jewish state' is in any case a phoney description of Israel where a substantial portion of the population is not, and is never going to be Jewish -and even if all the Muslims and Christians were expelled, are Israelis going to give up their domestic servants, their nurses and their farm labourers from China, the Philippines, Thailand and Sri Lanka?

    The challenge is one that makes sense in the context of a Middle East where the old, corroosive hatreds are laid to the rest, and the signs are in the Arab Spring that the prospects for positive change exist, even if they are also being challenged from within by a declining but obstructive Islamic radicalism that offers nothing practical other than the jaded mantra Islam is the Solution, something most Muslims no longer believe.

    The challenge is to come up with some new ideas, for example to solve what could become a protracted conflict over the oil and gas resources of the Eastern Mediterranean where reservoirs cross international boundaries from Egypt in the south to Syria, possibly Turkey in the north. As with the conflict over the Falkland Islands Basin, the conflicted parties should step aside, and allow capitalism to create consortia drawn from investors on all sides whose priority is to develop the resources for all. It is a case of Follow the Money, for as with the mineral contracts being signed in Afghanistan with India, China, Russia and Japan, isn't making money what excites people more than making war?

    It isn't going to happen while Netanyahu is in power, and I can't see the current Palestinian leadership promoting it, which makes me an idealist on this issue -but otherwise what do we have? More of the same -but the same doesn't work, or it gives Israel time to build more settlements creating facts on the ground, something it cannot do without taking land and resources away from the Palestinians, who may yet launch a third Intifada.

    Israelis and Palestinians are stuck in a box; it is time to think outside the box.



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