Darth Wong wrote:
Why not just check the Google
listings of news reports and articles pertaining to this subject?
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&ie=I ... a+AND+Bias
http://news.google.com/news?q=Israeli+A ... a=N&tab=wn
Here's one example:
http://world.std.com/~camera/docs/alert/abcbaby.html
That source in particular is biased, but I confess that I'm being lazy, I recall the particular incident and the retraction, and the ABC archives would not be impossible to dig through. If you want me to I will. The mainstream media was wrong there and can be wrong elsewhere.
You act as though Israel's sins are so small, and Palestine's so large, that for me to disagree is somehow a quasi-Biblical argument. That is sidestepping your responsibility to show that this is, in fact, the case rather than casting rhetoric under the assumption that you don't need to. BTW, do you believe that enslaving millions for decades is no big deal?
I don't think that the Palestinians are enslaved. What happens is that they live their lives normally, some suffer, some make money off the situation - Until the violence heats up again. And then there's a lock down, combat, bloodshed. Eventually it's dissapated, at least before, and they go back to living on the fringe between Israel and the Arab World, and making clever ways to profit off of it.
A lot of black market stuff, some legitimate businessmen - Notice that before the Intifada started the Palestinians were actually doing decently, at least by the standards of the muslim world there were worse places, some by far. Actually, there still are - I'm talking economically, even, not in terms of repressive government, but there's that, too. If anything, the government is probably less repressive now, as it is contested and thus ineffectual - One can argue that anarchy is the ultimate form of freedom. The downside, of course, is that the real facts of anarchy are unpleasant.
But philosophically, the Palestinians don't have it that bad, and not even in a qualitative sense did they before the intifada started.
As for the comparative evils of Israel and Palestine - I have thought it obvious the entire time that the actions of Israel which have been morally questionable (Short of challenging the founding of the State its self) have been slight in comparison to those of the PLO, when one considers both its operations against Israel and in Lebanon.
But then, we likely rely on entirely different sources, and judge those sources from different perspectives. When you want to prove that Israel has committed "sins" to a lesser extent than Palestine, to be honest, I thought the demand was completely ridiculous - That any rational person would know that through a simple examination of the available evidence. I suppose that illustrates a critical divide, and I'm going to have to think about that more.
You did exactly as I predicted; you tried to justify the massacre.
No, I said it never happened. There's a difference.
It's just a "few hundred murders". And the Israelis didn't commit it; they just send in their henchmen, trapped the victims in the compound, and listened to them dying all night. I knew you would try to justify it.
Again, I'm not trying to justify it. There's no reason to try and justify something that never happened. Sabra and Shatila are suburbs of Beirut, not refugee camps, though Palestinians had been living there since '49. The area was heavily built-up, complete with multistory buildings and etc, a real trap for street-to-street, door-to-door urban warfare, and the PLO had further fortified it with underground tunnels, ammunition and weapons dumps, etc.
After Arafat left with most of his followers, some of the holdouts who remained behind illegally were concentrated in Sabra and Shatila. The Israelis launched an operation to get rid of them, and since their Phalangist "allies" hadn't been pulling their weight for the entire conflict, they pushed them into carrying out the principle part of the operation.
They did, but it was also immediately after the death of the popular Phalangist president, and when they went in they did it indescriminately; not like that's hard to do anyway in heavy urban combat. How many German civilians died in the Battle of Berlin in '45, for example? Even so, the casualty figure was in the hundreds, and at one point Israeli troops even fired on the Phalangists to get them to halt their actions.
The Israeli Labour Party, however, used it in an internal political dispute, which exagerrated it, and then the world media got ahold of it and exagerrated it even further; the left has taken hold of it and turned it into the Popular Evil of Israel.
Split into chunks, subject to all of the restrictions I mentioned before. You regard that as sovereignty? It would merely place part of Jordan under effective Israeli rule.
And Jordan has a military, which the Palestinians will never be able to have. So the Jordanians have a certain amount of bargaining power with the State of Israel.
You know, this situation is much more obvious when you look at the Allon plan on a map. Bite-size pieces of land rather than a contiguous piece, with full Israeli control of movement between those pieces.
http://www.us-israel.org/jsource/History/allonplan.html (For the record of those who haven't seen it.)
Well, actually, Jordan would have control of Israeli movement between the north and south sectors, short of a long detour. And, yes, two other sectors would be detached. But again, Jordan has an army to counter any abrupt Israeli shutdown. Israel desires security, but in this case its security is gained by the annexations - And now further operations must take into account the sensitivities of the Jordanian State.
Going to war with Jordan in a situation like this might easily bring in the other Arab States, so there is no guarantee of easy Israeli victory. And even an outmatched military force, like Jordan's, is still one that can exert pressure, by the demand of the resources to defeat it, and the problem of what to do after it has been crushed - For the Palestinians would then be there, unresolvable, once more.
If Israel can come to such an agreement with a state that can support the interests of the Palestinian people, they will gain their security, and the Palestinian people will gain their's. And at least at that point in time Israel was willing to do this - Take the land they wanted for their security, and give up the rest to another State, even though it would mean the counterbalance of involving another genuine Nation State in the process.
Since they have never been offered a viable plan (the Allon plan does not give them anything remotely resembling a livable arrangement), who are you to categorically state that they would refuse it? Yes, they would like to see Israel gone. And Israel would like to see them gone. The point is that if a workable arrangement were laid on the table and they still refused, you might have a point. But I've seen the Allon plan on a map, and it is not a workable plan. The Israelis have never presented a workable plan that doesn't involve the effective perpetuation of the status quo in which Palestinians live under effective Israeli overlordship.
I think the Allon Plan is a basically workable concept - Again, it's the counterbalance of a Nation State's army, which otherwise wouldn't exist.
Hrmm..
A purely hypothetical:
If there was a territorial corridor from the lower West Bank (Hebron/Bethlehem) to the upper West Bank, the two sections to be under Jordanian control - So that it was a single section, linked by a corridor of territory of decent scope, and of course the Jericho corridor linking the Palestinian West Bank to Jordan - And then, the entirety of Gaza, instead of just the northern portion, being ceded to Egypt.. Do you think this would be equitable?
It
would satisfy the requirement of the Palestinians being able to move within their respective national territories freely, and without Israeli blockage or intervention. The Israelis would have their defendable borders - For all the talk of Gaza being an invasion route, it can easily be covered by modern artillery from other points within Israel - And the Nation States of Jordan and Egypt would be responsible for defending Palestinian rights, with Jordan in particular having a population almost entirely Palestinian.