eyl wrote:
I'll admit to underoging some drift in the issue of whos criticism we were discussing; I conflated some issues (both the university's actions with the more general ones of internationa organs, as to a degree this specific boycott with pervious proposedones in particular the AUT's in the UK a few years ago).
As you said, no harm; it's quite understandable.
The problem that the UN isn't just another community; its resolutions and determinations often serve as "ammunition" for criticisms at lower levels (in debates on the conflict, I've seen the ICJ verdict on the barrier cited numerous times, for instance, despite what seem - to me, at least - to be a numebr of fundamental flaws in its determination. The Goldstone report seems to be heading down a similiar path).
I see what you're getting at, and I wish I could disagree without feeling intellectually dishonest. But I can't, so I won't.
The UN's official stance on Israel has, despite all pretensions of neutrality and concern for ethics, essentially become a political tool for its most powerful members. For many of them, Israel is not seen in ethnic terms so much as in terms of alliances, military concentration, and power projection, and, perhaps most important of all, prestige. Yes, anti-Semitism is not a non-issue by any means, but I'd argue the real reasons for the conflict being fanned by outside elements is a lot more cold-blooded and calculated.
(If I'm expressing myself poorly here, I apologise; my blood sugar levels are erratic at the moment.)
The Kernel wrote:
Hell, the US managed to integrated blacks despite the fact that they were literally property of whites for centuries. Reconstruction was a tough period in our history and we still have challenges related to racial integration 150 years later, but we are infinitely better off because of it.
Arguably there's a difference here in that Palestinians are seen as a separate people, in addition to being second-class citizens; more to the point, the conflict between Israelis and Palestinians is now effectively military in nature, which was not the case in the USA.