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MikeB4:
This needless bloodshed yet again has its roots in post imperial Europe when lines were drawn on maps without regard or consultation with those affected.
Nah. This one goes back hundreds of years. The Sunni - Shia conflict is just as bad and inextribly intertwined in this.
Gurezaemon:
It's a perfect storm — when their religious fervour gives an absolute belief in going to paradise explicitly if they kill Israeli citizens is combined with legitimate or perceived grievances about territory and human rights abuses.
The vast majority of Arabs and Muslims don't believe this or preach this.
The history of Palestine is hundreds of years of conflict with Israel only being around in the last 70 years. It's not a simple situation and there have been attrocities for a long time. The whole thing is incredibly sad and almost impossible to solve.
kingdragonfly: The Hill: Mary Trump asks why ‘f‑‑‑ing maniac’ uncle is allowed to ‘roam free’
“If you agree my uncle is unfit to be in the White House or anywhere but prison, please support my mission to get this f‑‑‑ing maniac off our TVs – and our streets,” she said.
She specifically criticized Trump, who is her uncle, for his relationship with Russian President Vladimir Putin and its possible relation to the war in Israel.
...
In her post, Mary Trump shared a screenshot of her uncle’s comments on Truth Social that compared the ongoing situation in Israel to the U.S.-Mexico border, suggesting President Biden and former President Obama could be responsible for a Hamas attack on the U.S.
“The same people that raided Israel are pouring into our once beautiful USA, through our TOTALLY OPEN SOUTHERN BORDER, at Record Numbers,” Trump posted. “Are they planning an attack within our Country? Crooked Joe Biden and his BOSS, Barack Hussein Obama, did this to us!”
...
There's a thread for Trump. Can we keep this garbage, and your imported US politics, there please?
freitasm:
Not for the faint-hearted. Images of death, violence and chaos.
‘Everyone Died’: How Gunmen Killed Dozens In Sderot - The New York Times (nytimes.com)
The sad thing is the amount of coverage this has gotten compared to Yemen. Yemen makes this, and the civilian losses in Ukraine, look like they are playing tiddly winks.
Handle9:freitasm:Not for the faint-hearted. Images of death, violence and chaos.
‘Everyone Died’: How Gunmen Killed Dozens In Sderot - The New York Times (nytimes.com)
The sad thing is the amount of coverage this has gotten compared to Yemen. Yemen makes this, and the civilian losses in Ukraine, look like they are playing tiddly winks.
Here is a crazy notion, lets give peace a chance.
Handle9:MikeB4:This needless bloodshed yet again has its roots in post imperial Europe when lines were drawn on maps without regard or consultation with those affected.
Nah. This one goes back hundreds of years. The Sunni - Shia conflict is just as bad and inextribly intertwined in this.
Here is a crazy notion, lets give peace a chance.
MikeB4:Handle9:
Nah. This one goes back hundreds of years. The Sunni - Shia conflict is just as bad and inextribly intertwined in this.
Conflicts and famines throughout the Middle East, Africa, Asia and the Americas have seeds sown from European empires drawing lines on maps, relocations, farming changes and ignoring ethnic differences based on the empires domestic requirements. They then walked away leaving their mess behind them but of course taking with them wealth and antiquities.
The conflicts in the Levant, not just Israel, are far more complex than what you are are claiming. The madate for Palestinian was a transition from ~500 years of semi-autonomous Ottoman rule to independent countries. There's plenty of blame to go around but the region isn't a European colony that was pillaged.
The Balfour declaration was a massive turning point for the levant but even outside that the region has been a mess of religious and semi-religous conflicts for a long time.
Handle9:
Gurezaemon:
It's a perfect storm — when their religious fervour gives an absolute belief in going to paradise explicitly if they kill Israeli citizens is combined with legitimate or perceived grievances about territory and human rights abuses.
The vast majority of Arabs and Muslims don't believe this or preach this.
The history of Palestine is hundreds of years of conflict with Israel only being around in the last 70 years. It's not a simple situation and there have been attrocities for a long time. The whole thing is incredibly sad and almost impossible to solve.
Of course it's not the vast majority.
It's a small number on each side that has this bloody-minded mindset — Hamas fighters who believe it is their holy duty to wipe out Israel, and ultra-nationalistic Jewish Israelis who refuse to brook any compromise because they feel God gave the land to them, not anyone else.
As always in this part of the world, it comes down to ethnic conflict turbocharged by religion.
Get your business seen overseas - Nexus Translations
Handle9:
The conflicts in the Levant, not just Israel, are far more complex than what you are are claiming. The madate for Palestinian was a transition from ~500 years of semi-autonomous Ottoman rule to independent countries. There's plenty of blame to go around but the region isn't a European colony that was pillaged.
The Balfour declaration was a massive turning point for the levant but even outside that the region has been a mess of religious and semi-religous conflicts for a long time.
Read your post, those making decisions and declarations in this region were European in origin. The sickman of Europe the Ottoman Empire, the so called British "protectorate" etc etc. The arrogance and meddling is obvious. Then when it fails they lay the blame on others, and leave their mess behind.
Ask Egypt, Palestine, Syria, Jordan etc what museums display and store in basements their antiquities.
Here is a crazy notion, lets give peace a chance.
Gurezaemon:Of course it's not the vast majority.
It's a small number on each side that has this bloody-minded mindset — Hamas fighters who believe it is their holy duty to wipe out Israel, and ultra-nationalistic Jewish Israelis who refuse to brook any compromise because they feel God gave the land to them, not anyone else.
As always in this part of the world, it comes down to ethnic conflict turbocharged by religion.
MikeB4:Handle9:
The conflicts in the Levant, not just Israel, are far more complex than what you are are claiming. The madate for Palestinian was a transition from ~500 years of semi-autonomous Ottoman rule to independent countries. There's plenty of blame to go around but the region isn't a European colony that was pillaged.
The Balfour declaration was a massive turning point for the levant but even outside that the region has been a mess of religious and semi-religous conflicts for a long time.
Read your post, those making decisions and declarations in this region were European in origin. The sickman of Europe the Ottoman Empire, the so called British "protectorate" etc etc. The arrogance and meddling is obvious. Then when it fails they lay the blame on others, and leave their mess behind.
Ask Egypt, Palestine, Syria, Jordan etc what museums display and store in basements their antiquities.
Gurezaemon:
Of course it's not the vast majority.
It's a small number on each side that has this bloody-minded mindset
There are some decent parallels with the Northern Ireland situation, both in terms of the actors, and what might work as a possible solution. In both cases you have a coloniser (from the point of view of one population) who believes they have every right to be there (from the point of view of the other). In both cases, the vast majority of the population might not love the situation but are more than happy to just live their lives without all the political BS. You even have the religious element to add into the mix.
But you also have the hardcore fanatics who are willing and able to kill innocent people and sacrifice themselves to achieve their aims, never understanding that that simply strengthens the resolve of the other side to never give in. And in the meantime, the peaceful people are the ones who are hurt.
How did they solve it? Because there were some people on both sides who had the courage to put aside the wrongs and actually make real compromises. Know that you won't, can't, get exactly what you want, but agree to it anyway. The Good Friday Agreement has been massively successful. Sure, there are occasional incidents, but the bad old days of the 70s and 80s where the most dangerous game in the world was 'what's in the box?' at a Belfast pub are long gone.
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Handle9:
It’d be worth you learning about the organisation of the Ottoman Empire.
Okay
Here is a crazy notion, lets give peace a chance.
Curious as to why NZ has not labeled Hamas as a terrorist organization yet?
Handle9: There's a thread for Trump. Can we keep this garbage, and your imported US politics, there please?
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