Hamas-Israeli War 2023

Ananda

The Bunker Group
Amazing. Are you going to address my 3 questions?
Why should I answer 3 questions that are not related to my Post ? Questions that's being asked just to side tracked the issues.

Btw, is those US Jews that's against Israel Palestinian policy also antisemitic? I also can play your game on reframing issues.
 

T.C.P

Well-Known Member
If this post breaks the rules, then please let me know I will promptly delete it.

I am by all means against Israeli actions towards Gaza and their settler actions towards WB. However I think that the rising support for Palestine among left and left leaning Americans, especially younger Americans will drive Israel more extreme in the short term. If anything, Nentanyahu should see this as the writing on the wall for absolute US backing and increase operational tempo. If Israel aims to elminate Gaza and West bank once and for all, then its now or never.

Right now most of Western Europe and the US pretty much wholly support Israel and thanks to Russia and Immigration, Europe is as right leaning on foreign policy as it has been in the last 30 years. However the demographics dont point to Israel's favour. Already in the US and the Uk, the younger population who are more left are very pro Palestine. In France and Germany the muslim population keeps on increasing use to immigration and higher birthrates.

Now I am not saying that Israel aims to completely destroy Gaza and fully take over WB. But if that is what they wanted (as most anti Israeli orgs seem to shout), then the time to do it , would be now.
 

Big_Zucchini

Well-Known Member
Now I am not saying that Israel aims to completely destroy Gaza and fully take over WB. But if that is what they wanted (as most anti Israeli orgs seem to shout), then the time to do it , would be now.
As in, "they say we do X so might as well do it"?
Yeah there's certainly some of that sentiment felt as well. But we understand that's just baiting. We're not going to genocide a whole people just because we're asked to.

Why should I answer 3 questions that are not related to my Post ? Questions that's being asked just to side tracked the issues.

Btw, is those US Jews that's against Israel Palestinian policy also antisemitic? I also can play your game on reframing issues.
You shouldn't, that's the point. Statistically speaking, it would be nearly impossible for you to answer these. The purpose was to improve my understanding of your opinion by observing whether any answer was given.
On point 1; even as coherent and well organized a state-level actor that Israel is, we don't have a particularly clear end game for them. Expecting a consistent and clear end-game from anti-Hamas but pro-Palestinian public is unreasonable. They likely don't have one, at least not one they can all clearly agree on and have worked out with some level of consistency.
Agreed to an extent. I do not see a way for someone reasonable (i.e. someone not applying mental gymnastics) to be simultaneously anti-Hamas and pro-Palestine without being pro-Israel as well, or alternatively be pro-Hamas, pro-Palestine, and anti-Israel. Otherwise there are just too many opposing values which is bad for one's mental health.


On point 2; the reason pro-Palestinian members of public might be anti-Israeli is because of the way Israel has treated Palestinians over the past 70 years. I'm not particularly pro-Palestinian, but even I take issue with the situation where Gaza doesn't get to be an actual independent country, but also don't get to be treated like citizens of Israel. To me this position on Israel's part is indefensible. People who are actually pro-Palestinian might take issue with many more things that Israel has done. I'm really wondering, do you genuinely not understand this? Or are you intentionally ignoring these very obvious reasons? Or is that "it's all Palestinian's own fault, Hamas is at fault for any dead civilians even if an Israeli bomb did the killing"? Because that's not a position this group of people is likely to share.
I understand this position, but I cannot hold it simply because to me it does not stand to scrutiny. I was once a socialist, but eventually I was disillusioned. Why? Because the moment I applied scrutiny to this worldview it crumbled.


On point 3; nice framing of the issue there. Let me try. Why are most pro-Israeli people so anti-Palestinian? See? I can ask unpleasant questions that presuppose facts not in evidence too. You want to claim that most/all pro-Palestine protesters or activists are anti-Semitic, do you have any statistics to back that up? For the record, most is over 50%. You would have to show actual engagement from a statistically significant sample group to be able to back up that claim. Mere statements or opinions wouldn't suffice to support the point you're claiming. I fairly certain you can't do so, making this another maximalist claim you've made with no real support. But I stand ready to be proven wrong.
It is impossible to truly quantify pro-Palestine sentiment this way. There is no up to date poll that truly encompasses all necessary parameters. For example, do pro-Hamas count as pro-Palestinians because Hamas best expresses traditional Palestinian nationalism? Or are the two inherently opposed because ultimately works against the best interests of the Palestinians?
On social media it is already more tangible but I cannot bring my personal experiences as evidence here. So, instead, the most tangible thing I can think of is the actual pro-Palestine protesters themselves.
In every "pro-Palestine" protest you will hear at least one of the following slogans:
1. "From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free".
2. "Ceasefire now!".

Both are blatantly anti-semitic. Now, as an atheist, I have no more issue with antisemitism at its core than with any other form of racism. But it just so happens that it's an especially counter-productive form of racism so I particularly oppose it.

"From the river..." is antisemitic because it calls for the annihilation of Israel and the creation of a full Palestinian state in its ashes. Some may try to reinvent it, but that's just newspeak. You wouldn't try to reinvent the "heil something" as a pseudo-liberal slogan, would you? German police in particular would not be convinced.
"Ceasefire now" is also antisemitic because it calls on Israel to unilaterally end the war without annihilating Hamas. A ceasefire existed until 6/10, then Hamas broke it. A non-racist version of this would be "Free the hostages, ceasefire now", but that's not what they're saying.
Prominent leaders of the movement have also engaged in denial, in part or whole, of 7/10.

As for actual statistics. Every city in which such protests occurred, has reported massive increases in antisemitic hate crimes. If they only want some ceasefire, why are non-involved Jews attacked much more often? Many reported hundreds of % increases. The article on the UK cites a report that suggests the spike in antisemitic hate crimes occurred as celebration of Hamas's brutal massacre of 1,200 civilians and kidnapping of over 200, not in response to any Israeli reaction (which doesn't justify antisemitism in the first place either).

 

Big_Zucchini

Well-Known Member
Operations in Shifa resume after what is reportedly a Hamas reorganization in the hospital.
We know that many Gazans have returned north, and we also know that Hamas seeks to exploit such events to regain control over lost areas.
But beyond that, it's also important to understand that the tunnel complex under Shifa is probably vast, and subterrannean operations are still extremely dangerous and complex. I said previously that a true operation in Shifa to clear the entire complex may take months and it seems the IDF was working this whole time, preparing for a kinetic action across the complex.

IDF releases footage of Hamas firing on IDF troops and detonating a roadside bomb.
There were reports of intense bombing during the night, so I assume this is greater than just a few terrorists taking shelter. I suspect this may be a combined arms operation involving some demolition work and advancement deeper. According to some report, hostages may still be inside areas yet to be explored there.

This is what aid from sea currently looks like. It is inspected in Cyprus, as previously explained, and transferred to a jetty located near a central IDF corridor. As time goes by this will become more organized and streamlined, and the US announced approximately 2 months to finish construction.
It is notable that the UAE sponsored this shipment. It is currently the single largest contributor (of aid) to Gaza. I believe this may be intentional, with the aim of securing political capital in Gaza and among Palestinians in general. It is possible that Israel will seek an Arab partner to rule Gaza and the UAE is perhaps the best option in many aspects.
 
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Ananda

The Bunker Group
shouldn't, that's the point. Statistically speaking, it would be nearly impossible for you to answer these. The purpose was to improve my understanding of your opinion by observing whether any answer was given.
Ahh yes, it is also the point on your game of reframing and reflecting other people issue. Clearly shown how your game on debating issues. Everything that against Israel will be classified as Anti Semitism, thus playing to anti Judaism and clearly racism. Convenient way to sidetracked Israel apartheid policies toward Palestinian this past 70 years.

every "pro-Palestine" protest you will hear at least one of the following slogans:
1. "From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free".
2. "Ceasefire now!".
Yes from river to sea is cry to destroy Israel, not cry of Palestinian to be free and treated as equal human being. No, treating Palestinian as human being clearly antisemitic.

Btw you also keep side tracking original issues of how Democrat base increasingly shown Pro or Sympathy to Palestinian, including some of US Jews. Are they now antisemitic? Or you simply want to avoid that because calling Jews that chanting Free for Palestinian and Cease Fire now, can't meet your frame of antisemitism. Perhaps you can call them blasphemy or traitors to race and religion. Nahh it is still not suitable for your anti semitism frame.

After all just try continue selling mantra of October 7, everyone else is antisemitic and denial if they still call Free Palestine and Cease Fire. No matter how many thousands Palestinian has been kill in West Bank and Gaza before that, doesn't matter is not an issue. Point is those sub human dare to kill more than thousands Israeli. They need to pay 20-30 or hundreds times more. Destroying HAMAS is just side effects. Those Palestinians has to be thought their lesson not to dare rise up against the Master.
 
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Big_Zucchini

Well-Known Member
Ahh yes, it is also the point on your game of reframing and reflecting other people issue. Clearly shown how your game on debating issues. Everything that against Israel will be classified as Anti Semitism, thus playing to anti Judaism and clearly racism. Convenient way to sidetracked Israel apartheid policies toward Palestinian this past 70 years.



Yes from river to sea is cry to destroy Israel, not cry of Palestinian to be free and treated as equal human being. No, treating Palestinian as human being clearly antisemitic.

Btw you also keep side tracking original issues of how Democrat base increasingly shown Pro or Sympathy to Palestinian, including some of US Jews. Are they now antisemitic? Or you simply want to avoid that because calling Jews that chanting Free for Palestinian and Cease Fire now, can't meet your frame of antisemitism. Perhaps you can call them blasphemy or traitors to race and religion. Nahh it is still not suitable for your anti semitism frame.

After all just try continue selling mantra of October 7, everyone else is antisemitic and denial if they still call Free Palestine and Cease Fire. No matter how many thousands Palestinian has been kill in West Bank and Gaza before that, doesn't matter is not an issue. Point is those sub human dare to kill more than thousands Israeli. They need to pay 20-30 or hundreds times more. Destroying HAMAS is just side effects. Those Palestinians has to be thought their lesson not to dare rise up against the Master.
Yeah pretty much.
 

Big_Zucchini

Well-Known Member
This is next level of surgical warfare. Drone footage from Gaza shows excellent connectivity (no disruption seen in video feed, high frame rate) and a methodology for urban warfare. This is likely the 98th division which consists primarily of light infantry.
The video shows what appears to be 2 terrorists in plain civilian clothes, one of which is reportedly flabbergasted.

According to the IDF, the operation in Shifa is conducted by the 162nd division which includes the 401st armored brigade. It is one of the first to enter Gaza, meaning the IDF finished its first cycle of R&R and ready to reinsert heavy formations. This has implications regarding the timing of the Rafah operation:
 
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Big_Zucchini

Well-Known Member
Reminder that hostages are subject to the same mass rapes of 7/10. Those that are pregnant are already in advanced stages and it will be an impossible dilemma for them what to do with the babies and how to handle them medically after birth.
It is also highly likely that babies and children kidnapped by Hamas are also routinely raped. Teenagers that can already be impregnated are unlikely to survive birth in captivity.
It is imperative to return them as soon as possible. Any action that results in bringing them alive is justified and morally necessary.
 

Feanor

Super Moderator
Staff member
Agreed to an extent. I do not see a way for someone reasonable (i.e. someone not applying mental gymnastics) to be simultaneously anti-Hamas and pro-Palestine without being pro-Israel as well, or alternatively be pro-Hamas, pro-Palestine, and anti-Israel. Otherwise there are just too many opposing values which is bad for one's mental health.
Human beings are rarely completely logically consistent. I also suspect your definition of reasonable and theirs isn't the same.

I understand this position, but I cannot hold it simply because to me it does not stand to scrutiny. I was once a socialist, but eventually I was disillusioned. Why? Because the moment I applied scrutiny to this worldview it crumbled.
Not sure what you mean by this. Israel has done things that aren't exactly great, and Israeli territorial expansionism is a historic fact. If one has a problem with this, one might be anti-Israeli.

It is impossible to truly quantify pro-Palestine sentiment this way. There is no up to date poll that truly encompasses all necessary parameters. For example, do pro-Hamas count as pro-Palestinians because Hamas best expresses traditional Palestinian nationalism? Or are the two inherently opposed because ultimately works against the best interests of the Palestinians?
This is my entire point. Your question assumes something that is debatable at best, and that you don't have good support for.

On social media it is already more tangible but I cannot bring my personal experiences as evidence here. So, instead, the most tangible thing I can think of is the actual pro-Palestine protesters themselves.
In every "pro-Palestine" protest you will hear at least one of the following slogans:
1. "From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free".
2. "Ceasefire now!".

Both are blatantly anti-semitic. Now, as an atheist, I have no more issue with antisemitism at its core than with any other form of racism. But it just so happens that it's an especially counter-productive form of racism so I particularly oppose it.

"From the river..." is antisemitic because it calls for the annihilation of Israel and the creation of a full Palestinian state in its ashes. Some may try to reinvent it, but that's just newspeak. You wouldn't try to reinvent the "heil something" as a pseudo-liberal slogan, would you? German police in particular would not be convinced.
I've come across this logic before but I reject the idea that Jewish (or any semitic identity) and Israeli statehood are inseparable. I understand that this is probably an unusual position but there is no inherent logical contradiction in thinking that Israel as a state shouldn't exist, yet having no issue with Israelis or Jews. I understand the slogan has problematic associations, so from a practical standpoint I'm not surprised if most using it are anti-Israeli (anti-semitic would just be weird, Arabs are also semites).

"Ceasefire now" is also antisemitic because it calls on Israel to unilaterally end the war without annihilating Hamas. A ceasefire existed until 6/10, then Hamas broke it. A non-racist version of this would be "Free the hostages, ceasefire now", but that's not what they're saying.
Prominent leaders of the movement have also engaged in denial, in part or whole, of 7/10.
There is a pacifist position that exists in principle. Do you believe this position is anti-semitic? Let's not forget the, well... let's call it "collateral damage" from Israel's war effort dwarfs the number of hostages taken.

As for actual statistics. Every city in which such protests occurred, has reported massive increases in antisemitic hate crimes. If they only want some ceasefire, why are non-involved Jews attacked much more often? Many reported hundreds of % increases. The article on the UK cites a report that suggests the spike in antisemitic hate crimes occurred as celebration of Hamas's brutal massacre of 1,200 civilians and kidnapping of over 200, not in response to any Israeli reaction (which doesn't justify antisemitism in the first place either).

Anti-Jewish and anti-semitic attitudes exist. Of course protests against Israel would be accompanied by a rise in hate crimes. But correlation is not causation and it certainly doesn't prove that most pro-Palestine activists are actively engaged. Your specific claim is the issue, not the idea that many of those who support Palestine don't like Israel, or even are bigoted.
 

Big_Zucchini

Well-Known Member
Human beings are rarely completely logically consistent. I also suspect your definition of reasonable and theirs isn't the same.
Identifying as socially progressive and being anti-abortions is logically inconsistent to a minor degree but it can be a reasonable deviation, one that can stand to scrutiny.
But LGBT activists being openly pro Hamas (behead homosexuals for fun) is not a minor inconsistency.


Not sure what you mean by this. Israel has done things that aren't exactly great, and Israeli territorial expansionism is a historic fact. If one has a problem with this, one might be anti-Israeli.
I mean by this that I understand why people argue that they're anti-Israel when they claim Israel is evil and has wronged the Palestinians, but no more than I understand why a child bumps his head on the wall. It happens, yes, but you probably won't find any bit of logic behind it other than a need to waste some excess energy.

You raised Israel's alleged territorial expansionism. That's a great example. Many people actually believe it, but when you apply scrutiny? It easily breaks apart.

This is my entire point. Your question assumes something that is debatable at best, and that you don't have good support for.
That is just a matter of semantics. To the people living there, these "protests" are extremely dangerous. They are widespread, they are massive, and they bring with them anti-Jewish indoctrination and physical assaults. It already ended in murder. There is no denying that the average pro-Palestinian activist/protester holds antisemitic ideologies. Yes, calling for the destruction of Israel is in fact antisemitic.


I've come across this logic before but I reject the idea that Jewish (or any semitic identity) and Israeli statehood are inseparable. I understand that this is probably an unusual position but there is no inherent logical contradiction in thinking that Israel as a state shouldn't exist, yet having no issue with Israelis or Jews. I understand the slogan has problematic associations, so from a practical standpoint I'm not surprised if most using it are anti-Israeli (anti-semitic would just be weird, Arabs are also semites).
So you're saying that destroying Israel, ultimately annihilating 9 million Israelis of which 7 million are Jewish, an event greater than the holocaust - is in fact not antisemitic.
Or is there some peaceful way to eradicate Israel without harming its people, letting them just live as they are, possess human rights and the right to self determination and ... oh, Israel was just recreated out of thin air because statehood and nationality are arbitrary social constructs.

Oh and antisemitism means hatred of Jews, not of Arabs. You wanted to argue about semantics? Here it is. Dictionary definition.

There is a pacifist position that exists in principle. Do you believe this position is anti-semitic?
So a pacifist position asks that Hamas not ceasefire and only Israel does, ultimately leading to new rounds of violence in which the total amount of violence is exponentially greater than the current course? I disagree. I also disagree with the notion that "ceasefire" activists are inherently pacifist. Their rhetoric is generally very militant.


Let's not forget the, well... let's call it "collateral damage" from Israel's war effort dwarfs the number of hostages taken.
Can you define how many hostages were taken and how many non-combatant deaths occurred in Gaza?
Your assertion assumes something that is debatable at best, and that you don't have good support for.

Anti-Jewish and anti-semitic attitudes exist. Of course protests against Israel would be accompanied by a rise in hate crimes. But correlation is not causation and it certainly doesn't prove that most pro-Palestine activists are actively engaged. Your specific claim is the issue, not the idea that many of those who support Palestine don't like Israel, or even are bigoted.
If we always bind ourselves to concrete numbers and variably interpretable statistics, we will react too slowly and preventable trends will inevitably have concrete consequences.

When a movement creates consequences, one must carefully examine whether those consequences derive from some core value of that movement.
If it was one protest in NYC that gave rise to hate crime but in all other cities there was no change or even a decline because they're allegedly pro-peace, then the spike in NYC could be largely ignored. But it is a recurring theme wherever these protests exist. It is perhaps the sole common denominator.
 

Feanor

Super Moderator
Staff member
That is just a matter of semantics. To the people living there, these "protests" are extremely dangerous. They are widespread, they are massive, and they bring with them anti-Jewish indoctrination and physical assaults. It already ended in murder. There is no denying that the average pro-Palestinian activist/protester holds antisemitic ideologies. Yes, calling for the destruction of Israel is in fact antisemitic.

So you're saying that destroying Israel, ultimately annihilating 9 million Israelis of which 7 million are Jewish, an event greater than the holocaust - is in fact not antisemitic.
Or is there some peaceful way to eradicate Israel without harming its people, letting them just live as they are, possess human rights and the right to self determination and ... oh, Israel was just recreated out of thin air because statehood and nationality are arbitrary social constructs.
Nation-states are not arbitrary. And I can't speak to a practical means to eliminate Israel as a state, without eradicating the Jews. However, in principle it is completely possible to argue that instead of an Israeli state there should be a liberal democratic Palestinian state where Jews are citizens and are welcome to live there. We're discussing positions and beliefs one can have not specific action plans.

Oh and antisemitism means hatred of Jews, not of Arabs. You wanted to argue about semantics? Here it is. Dictionary definition.
A semite is a member of any of the semitic tribes. The fact that a dictionary took the common parlance usage of the term and made it the definition doesn't make it correct. It makes the dictionary wrong.

So a pacifist position asks that Hamas not ceasefire and only Israel does, ultimately leading to new rounds of violence in which the total amount of violence is exponentially greater than the current course? I disagree. I also disagree with the notion that "ceasefire" activists are inherently pacifist. Their rhetoric is generally very militant.
I don't agree with the pacifist position nor condone it but I have family members who are pacifists and their position is that Israel and Hamas should stop fighting immediately. The position exists. If your point is that it is ridiculous, I agree. But anti-Israeli?

I'm not familiar with the ceasefire activists as a group, so I can't speak to them specifically. But merely calling for a ceasefire can indicate other things.

Can you define how many hostages were taken and how many non-combatant deaths occurred in Gaza?
Your assertion assumes something that is debatable at best, and that you don't have good support for.
Sure. Approximately 250 hostages were taken and approximately 1200 total Israeli civilians were killed. At this point over 28 000 Palestinians are dead. You yourself provided the number of Hamas killed according to IDF sources. The delta is substantially larger then the number of hostages. Now let me ask you this? Do you contend the opposite is true? Or do you contend that the data we have is insufficient to draw the conclusion that substantially more Gaza civilians are dead then Israeli hostages were taken?

If we always bind ourselves to concrete numbers and variably interpretable statistics, we will react too slowly and preventable trends will inevitably have concrete consequences.
Sure. Let's not wait for evidence, or make an effort to find it. Israel is a state level actor. If this data isn't readily available, couldn't they fund the research to be done by a university or a research organization within the US?

When a movement creates consequences, one must carefully examine whether those consequences derive from some core value of that movement.
If it was one protest in NYC that gave rise to hate crime but in all other cities there was no change or even a decline because they're allegedly pro-peace, then the spike in NYC could be largely ignored. But it is a recurring theme wherever these protests exist. It is perhaps the sole common denominator.
You've once again retreated from a very definitive maximalist claim to a more reasonable position without ever admitting that you've shifted your stance. If there is a trend in rising violence against Jews it ought to be reacted to. If antisemitic or anti-Jewish sentiment is being expressed, the people doing so are bigots and any right-thinking person should condemn them. It doesn't mean that anyone who is unhappy with Israel or supports Palestine is probably (over 50% likelihood) "engaged in blatantly anti-semitic activities such as attacking Jews". Again, your claim was;

most pro Palestine "activists"/protesters engaged in blatantly anti-semitic activities such as attacking Jews
 

Big_Zucchini

Well-Known Member
Sure. Approximately 250 hostages were taken and approximately 1200 total Israeli civilians were killed. At this point over 28 000 Palestinians are dead. You yourself provided the number of Hamas killed according to IDF sources. The delta is substantially larger then the number of hostages. Now let me ask you this? Do you contend the opposite is true? Or do you contend that the data we have is insufficient to draw the conclusion that substantially more Gaza civilians are dead then Israeli hostages were taken?
Hamas casualties are not to be counted because they are not "collateral damage", but rather a very intentional damage, and civilian casualties are simply not counted.


The author of the article compiled data provided by Hamas's ministry of health, which shows that provided figures are entirely independent of circumstances.
Meaning it doesn't matter if fighting intensifies or slows down - the next figure is already determined.
So in the complete absence of civilian casualty figures, we simply cannot assume that there were more Palestinian civilian casualties than there were Israeli casualties or are Israeli hostages. It is non quantifiable. Best we can do is conjecture.
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A semite is a member of any of the semitic tribes. The fact that a dictionary took the common parlance usage of the term and made it the definition doesn't make it correct. It makes the dictionary wrong.
Language is its usage, not a strict ruleset. The word "antisemitic" was used at the time to describe hatred of Jews, which hasn't changed since then.
The closest thing to a rule in linguistics is that whatever word is most commonly used to describe something - technically becomes the most correct word, even if it is otherwise nonsensical.

I don't agree with the pacifist position nor condone it but I have family members who are pacifists and their position is that Israel and Hamas should stop fighting immediately. The position exists. If your point is that it is ridiculous, I agree. But anti-Israeli?
If I tell a Taiwanese that I believe China and Taiwan should just negotiate and Taiwan must meet China's demands at least halfway, then I may not know why, but he will rightfully call me anti-Taiwanese.

Nation-states are not arbitrary. And I can't speak to a practical means to eliminate Israel as a state, without eradicating the Jews. However, in principle it is completely possible to argue that instead of an Israeli state there should be a liberal democratic Palestinian state where Jews are citizens and are welcome to live there. We're discussing positions and beliefs one can have not specific action plans.
People have a right to hold opinions. Opinions later manifest as votes. Votes later manifest as policy. Policy affects people's lives, sometimes constructively, sometimes destructively.
If people don't understand that a "democratic liberal Palestine where Jews are citizens" is practically a second larger and more barbaric holocaust - that doesn't absolve them from responsibility.
Holding an ideology is a responsibility.

Sure. Let's not wait for evidence, or make an effort to find it. Israel is a state level actor. If this data isn't readily available, couldn't they fund the research to be done by a university or a research organization within the US?
Why Israel? It does not represent all world Jewry. It is important to separate Israel from Jews in certain cases. There are Jewish organizations that compile such data.
 

Big_Zucchini

Well-Known Member
Another batch of Hamassies reportedly captured near Shifa.
IDF reports ~300 suspects were apprehended in the 162nd division's operation in Shifa.

IDF creates new regional brigade for the Syria-Lebanon border to better handle day to day activities. The new brigade, called 'The Mountains' and without a number yet, will replace the 810th mount Hermon brigade and will be subordinated to the 210th regional division.
The IDF has many outposts on the Hermon, all of which are heavily fortified. Some of them contain critical intelligence capabilities due to their elevation and line of sight into Lebanon and Syria.
 
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koxinga

Well-Known Member
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If I tell a Taiwanese that I believe China and Taiwan should just negotiate and Taiwan must meet China's demands at least halfway, then I may not know why, but he will rightfully call me anti-Taiwanese.
Re your example, any reasonable person would call you out for your opinion, rather than using a label as "anti-Taiwanese", which implies that opinon would deny the entire identity of Taiwanese people. Hence it is a weird take to me.

The Israeli government has heard views from traditional allies such as the US, EU or Singapore that expresses a difference of opinion on whether to invade Rafah and I don't see them using such a label. Strategic relationships has multiple levels/issues/historical and it difficult to outright put one country in a bucket/label because they disagree on just one topic.
 

Redshift

Active Member
Or is that "it's all Palestinian's own fault, Hamas is at fault for any dead civilians even if an Israeli bomb did the killing"?
Just as a point of interest, a recent pro Palestinian (would be) politician (in the UK standing for election in a constituency with a large Muslim population did state to his supporters that the October the 7th attack on Israel was indeed the (deliberate) fault of Israel, as Israel knew all about the forthcoming attack and actually allowed it to go ahead unopposed so as to give them the justification to attack Gaza.


So such rhetoric, sadly, is used quite frequently and it is often very effective as it generally plays to good old confirmation bias.
 

Redshift

Active Member
Yes from river to sea is cry to destroy Israel, not cry of Palestinian to be free and treated as equal human being. No, treating Palestinian as human being clearly antisemitic.
Because the slogan says "Palestine" not "Palestinians".

It clearly refers to the geographical location and not the people living in it (for me because that is what it actually says).

What that means is not always clear from the few words in the slogan, but there are plenty of interpretations of it available.



I think that for a number of people this use in 2012 cemented it.

“Palestine is ours from the river to the sea and from the south to the north,” Khaled Mashaal, the group’s former leader, said in a 2012 speech in Gaza celebrating the 25th anniversary of the founding of Hamas, the Associated Press reported.


Taken from

https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2023/11/14/river-sea-free-palestine-meaning/

And for others this fid the trick

"In 2014 Ariel said, "Between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea there will be only one state, which is Israel." The phrase has been used by the Israeli Prime Minister, Likud's Benjamin Netanyahu, in speeches. Similar wording has also been used more recently by other Israeli politicians."

Maybe if it had said

"From the river to the sea, the people will be free"

it would be a lot easier for all to interpret that as the equality based freedom for all that some believe it to be.

You can decide what each group or individual means, but the phrase is so charged that using it will alwsys be controversial, and when used , some, will indeed mean the most extreme version of it.
 

Big_Zucchini

Well-Known Member
Re your example, any reasonable person would call you out for your opinion, rather than using a label as "anti-Taiwanese", which implies that opinon would deny the entire identity of Taiwanese people. Hence it is a weird take to me.

The Israeli government has heard views from traditional allies such as the US, EU or Singapore that expresses a difference of opinion on whether to invade Rafah and I don't see them using such a label. Strategic relationships has multiple levels/issues/historical and it difficult to outright put one country in a bucket/label because they disagree on just one topic.
Consider for a second how many people refer to themselves as anti-Israeli (newspeak), and you'll see just how absurd it is. People disagreeing with a policy item are not necessarily anti-X-country. Yet there are many who self-describe as anti-Israeli, but seemingly no anti-French, anti-Germans etc.
 

Feanor

Super Moderator
Staff member
Consider for a second how many people refer to themselves as anti-Israeli (newspeak), and you'll see just how absurd it is. People disagreeing with a policy item are not necessarily anti-X-country. Yet there are many who self-describe as anti-Israeli, but seemingly no anti-French, anti-Germans etc.
What would the term be for someone who has a bigoted/prejudicial dislike of the French? Francophobic? I.e. is it an issue of vocabulary at all? Or is the issue that people have been prejudiced towards Jews for a very long time?

Hamas casualties are not to be counted because they are not "collateral damage", but rather a very intentional damage, and civilian casualties are simply not counted.


The author of the article compiled data provided by Hamas's ministry of health, which shows that provided figures are entirely independent of circumstances.
Meaning it doesn't matter if fighting intensifies or slows down - the next figure is already determined.
So in the complete absence of civilian casualty figures, we simply cannot assume that there were more Palestinian civilian casualties than there were Israeli casualties or are Israeli hostages. It is non quantifiable. Best we can do is conjecture.
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Fair enough, and in a way this supports my earlier argument about us not really knowing the real numbers of dead. However based on the scale of destruction, and the quantity of ordinance involved I'm reasonably confident the civilian death toll is in at least the thousands, whereas the hostages taken are in the hundreds so my point stands. I don't think you can reasonably argue that no more then a couple hundred Palestinian civilians have been killed.

Language is its usage, not a strict ruleset. The word "antisemitic" was used at the time to describe hatred of Jews, which hasn't changed since then.
The closest thing to a rule in linguistics is that whatever word is most commonly used to describe something - technically becomes the most correct word, even if it is otherwise nonsensical.
We can agree to disagree. Logic like that led to words like "yolo" being included in the dictionary. Not a positive thing in my opinion. I'm going to continue to adhere to language based on inherent meanings and the linguistic context for the term, while disregarding actual usage even if common, when it is formally improper.

If I tell a Taiwanese that I believe China and Taiwan should just negotiate and Taiwan must meet China's demands at least halfway, then I may not know why, but he will rightfully call me anti-Taiwanese.
Maybe. But what if China had launched a war against Taiwan and after much loss of life, with China occupying some territory, and Taiwan not winning the war, and a ceasefire gets called for, is it anti-Chinese? Anti-Taiwanese? You've once again shifted the logical basis by introducing a new factory, namely that of forced negotiations and forced compromise.

People have a right to hold opinions. Opinions later manifest as votes. Votes later manifest as policy. Policy affects people's lives, sometimes constructively, sometimes destructively.
If people don't understand that a "democratic liberal Palestine where Jews are citizens" is practically a second larger and more barbaric holocaust - that doesn't absolve them from responsibility.
Holding an ideology is a responsibility.
A democratic liberal Palestine would not lead to "practically a second larger and more barbaric holocaust" because a Palestine that manages to be liberal and democratic would have to have a population that doesn't want to commit such acts, and a government that would not allow it.

Why Israel? It does not represent all world Jewry. It is important to separate Israel from Jews in certain cases. There are Jewish organizations that compile such data.
Your initial argument was that data to quantify your claims about the active engagement of most pro-Palestine activists in anti-Israeli or anti-Jewish activities is not available. I then suggested the Israeli government make an effort to obtain said data. You are now claiming that there are organization who in fact already do so? It appears to me you have lost the thread of this discussion, at least on this point.
 

Big_Zucchini

Well-Known Member
What would the term be for someone who has a bigoted/prejudicial dislike of the French? Francophobic? I.e. is it an issue of vocabulary at all? Or is the issue that people have been prejudiced towards Jews for a very long time?
That I would leave to linguists to decide. But there is a fundamental difference here in that those who dislike the Fr*nch simply dislike them, while a very significant portion of the "criticism toward Israel" comes in the form of calls to dismantle it.

Fair enough, and in a way this supports my earlier argument about us not really knowing the real numbers of dead. However based on the scale of destruction, and the quantity of ordinance involved I'm reasonably confident the civilian death toll is in at least the thousands, whereas the hostages taken are in the hundreds so my point stands. I don't think you can reasonably argue that no more then a couple hundred Palestinian civilians have been killed.
Turning toward reasonable assumptions over quantifiable data is exactly how this turned into a debate. It should be beyond all reasonable doubt at this point that the pro-Palestinian narrative involves significant amounts of anti-semitic/anti-Jewish ideologies. One can simply interact with such people and listen to their ideas. A rare few would believe in a necessity in a 2 state solution, but even those would rarely admit that Israel has a right to self defense.

Maybe. But what if China had launched a war against Taiwan and after much loss of life, with China occupying some territory, and Taiwan not winning the war, and a ceasefire gets called for, is it anti-Chinese? Anti-Taiwanese? You've once again shifted the logical basis by introducing a new factory, namely that of forced negotiations and forced compromise.
I'm not Taiwanese. I don't get to decide what the Taiwanese people want or feel.
I am ethnically Russian though and have a family in Kyiv, so if people call for ceasefire between Ukraine and Russia, at least up to 6 months earlier, I'd think of them as anti-Ukrainians. Now it is more understandable due to what many might believe is a stalemate (I believe otherwise).

Calls for a ceasefire, as opposed to humanitarian pauses, do not pass the test of reason. They are entirely unreasonable, so it is expected of people heavily invested in the topic to at least find the reasonable conclusion. Otherwise, simply divest from the topic.
For example I have no opinion whatsoever on gun control. I see many pros and cons and cannot decide. But I have no moral right to try and influence Americans on what is their own decision, especially when their circumstances are so much different than in my country and from my experience.

A democratic liberal Palestine would not lead to "practically a second larger and more barbaric holocaust" because a Palestine that manages to be liberal and democratic would have to have a population that doesn't want to commit such acts, and a government that would not allow it.
Which in turn leads us to the question of what even a liberal Palestine be? If it's liberal, it's not a democracy. If it's a democracy, it's not liberal. The insinuation that a Palestine can be both at the same time, is to associate the Palestinian culture with traits it will take many decades to develop.

Your initial argument was that data to quantify your claims about the active engagement of most pro-Palestine activists in anti-Israeli or anti-Jewish activities is not available. I then suggested the Israeli government make an effort to obtain said data. You are now claiming that there are organization who in fact already do so? It appears to me you have lost the thread of this discussion, at least on this point.
There are Jewish organizations that conduct polls and studies that each create small pieces, but none really arranges the larger puzzle for us.
Shouting antisemitic slogans in protests, creating lists of Jews to harass, vandalize businesses, inciting on social media - all are dangerous activities that can lead to further radicalization and later even to lethal action.
 

Feanor

Super Moderator
Staff member
That I would leave to linguists to decide. But there is a fundamental difference here in that those who dislike the Fr*nch simply dislike them, while a very significant portion of the "criticism toward Israel" comes in the form of calls to dismantle it.
Your objection seems practical. We're discussing positions in principle stemming from your original claim that anyone who holds a certain position must believe certain things, and from the claim that most pro-Palestinian activists are in fact involved in anti-Jewish activities.

Turning toward reasonable assumptions over quantifiable data is exactly how this turned into a debate. It should be beyond all reasonable doubt at this point that the pro-Palestinian narrative involves significant amounts of anti-semitic/anti-Jewish ideologies. One can simply interact with such people and listen to their ideas. A rare few would believe in a necessity in a 2 state solution, but even those would rarely admit that Israel has a right to self defense.
Sure. However this doesn't address my point. There exists a position that calls for a ceasefire, without being anti-Israeli or anti-Jewish, or even necessarily pro-Palestinian. Your point is that few/none of the people you've interacted with hold said position. All well and good, so what? The position exists. You are incorrect in claiming that calling for a ceasefire is anti-Israeli in and of itself. You may be correct if you state that the majority of those in fact calling for a ceasefire are anti-Israeli. My issue is with your principal maximalist position that utilized deductive reasoning. You then attempt to support it with probability-based (inductive) arguments. You can not prove the claim you made with the arguments you are advancing. It's a basic philosophical issue.

I'm not Taiwanese. I don't get to decide what the Taiwanese people want or feel.
I am ethnically Russian though and have a family in Kyiv, so if people call for ceasefire between Ukraine and Russia, at least up to 6 months earlier, I'd think of them as anti-Ukrainians. Now it is more understandable due to what many might believe is a stalemate (I believe otherwise).
And you would have been wrong to assume that then.

Calls for a ceasefire, as opposed to humanitarian pauses, do not pass the test of reason. They are entirely unreasonable, so it is expected of people heavily invested in the topic to at least find the reasonable conclusion. Otherwise, simply divest from the topic.
Reasonable people can disagree. The fact that you have a set of beliefs about what constitutes a reasonable position is misaligned with someone else doesn't inherently make them unreasonable. Would the total death toll from the fighting been high or lower if Israel had stopped it's operation 3 months ago?

For example I have no opinion whatsoever on gun control. I see many pros and cons and cannot decide. But I have no moral right to try and influence Americans on what is their own decision, especially when their circumstances are so much different than in my country and from my experience.
I disagree completely. You have every moral right to express your opinion, and people can choose to listen or not listen to it. Having a stake in the outcome is not a prerequisite to participating in the conversation.

Which in turn leads us to the question of what even a liberal Palestine be? If it's liberal, it's not a democracy. If it's a democracy, it's not liberal. The insinuation that a Palestine can be both at the same time, is to associate the Palestinian culture with traits it will take many decades to develop.
Again a perfectly reasonable argument, possibly even sound, but so what? It might make the people calling for this wrong. It doesn't make them anti-Israeli.

There are Jewish organizations that conduct polls and studies that each create small pieces, but none really arranges the larger puzzle for us.
Shouting antisemitic slogans in protests, creating lists of Jews to harass, vandalize businesses, inciting on social media - all are dangerous activities that can lead to further radicalization and later even to lethal action.
You keep dancing around the issue. Does the information needed to back up your claim about involvement of pro-Palestinian activists in certain activities have data that allows for the conclusion you provided or does this data not exist? Sophistic tangents about who gathers what information are irrelevant. You made a claim. I pointed out that you likely don't have the data to back it up. You first implied the data didn't exist, then suggested that non-state actors may have collected the data, and are now claiming they don't have the data? What?
 
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