How can you possibly insinuate that!? Hamas's charter clearly outlines that they want the extermination of isreal AND all jews and i quote "The Day of Judgement will not come about until Muslims fight the Jews (killing the Jews)"i like the way you try (and fail) to paint the IDF - the most brutal, inhuman, terrorist-like army in the world - as being an army of peace.
Pointing out the evils of Hamas does nothing to vindicate the evils of the IDF and Israeli Government. Hamas is not a government army - it is a fighting force born out of desperate people who struggle to live with their brutal occupation every day. Gaza is not a nation, rather, it is a piece of land occupied by Israel. Comparisons between Hamas and the IDF are therefore pointless. There are no parallels between the two.How can you possibly insinuate that!? Hamas's charter clearly outlines that they want the extermination of isreal AND all jews and i quote "The Day of Judgement will not come about until Muslims fight the Jews (killing the Jews)"
How is israel a terrorist when Hamas specifically implies it's always been about destroying Israel, nothing less.
what other country is Israel trying to conquer from within? where in any of Israel's objectives does it talk about spreading Judaism throughout the world, as does the Muslim Brotherhood about Islam? where and when have Israelis organized civilian bombings and murders in train stations, airplanes, buses and restaurants in almost every country in the world, killing multi-thousands of innocent human beings?
Please explain, im open to ideas
Ha'aretz is actually not bad by comparison to other Israeli media. It's often very critical of the government and the IDF. In addition, it's fed information from the IDF and shows far less restraint than do Western media sources - it's therefore an excellent window into the Israeli government and IDF. It's well worth watching.Haaretz, a reliable source? Please tell me you're joking
lolHaaretz, a reliable source? Please tell me you're joking
Ok, so by your logic I can propose a law for my own advantage at the expense of everyone else in the region that completely goes against international regulations and basic human morality and then use this as justification as the right thing to do?When Israel is singled out for criticism over actions, such as boarding a vessel in international waters (legal by Israeli, US and UK maritime law, as well as such operations being accepted by the Palestinian Authority in prior agreements), whereas such actions from other nations would be deemed as allowed or inevitable.
And to all of you who feign horror at the loss of lives and cite how every life is important - the fact that you have the low statistics of those killed by Israel in your signatures and not those killed by NATO, the members of the Arab League, China, Burma and by the Sudanese government is just blatant hypocrisy which leads me to only two conclusions - get your eyes checked out or your brain replaced.
Israel is not dissuaded by this response from the world, it's just a continuation of the anti-Semitism (the double standards, delegitimisation and demonisation) which the Jews have survived and will continue to survive for over 2000 years.
That's the problem.JonathanM said:Israel is not dissuaded by this response from the world
It's a build up of little things like this.The Israelite there does himself absolutely no favours by drawing the anti-Semite card. Nobody believes such charges and all he does is discredits the Israelis.
The people of Israel could be Christian, Muslim, Buddhist or Taoist and the result would still be the same: Outrage. Similar to the outrage displayed by us when (like Mirakon said) we heard about Darfur, China's execution of a retarded man, Russia's brutal quashing of the Chechnyan's or indeed, in the pointless slaughter of civillians by NATO. Is it a greater outrage with Israel? Possibly - almost certainly. But it doesn't make the case against Israel any less strong, rather, it only makes the case that identical levels of outrage should be directed against NATO, Russia, China, etc.
The incident is not evaluated by us in isolation, as you want it to be, but it is framed against a long history of discrimination, brutality and unrestrained violent repraisal by Israel against its enemies. The reason why we're so outraged by this incident is because a) it was a horrible and violent, pointless loss of life; b) it's one in a series of many horrible, violent and pointless incidents directly caused by the actions of the IDF. Think Gaza, Lebanon, and the "defense" against the various Intifada's. Think the building of that apartheid wall within Palestinian territory, think about "Jew-only" roads in the West Bank, think about the illegal settlements, think about the pumping of water from the Jordan River. Israel's history and human rights record is abhorrent, and this flotilla incident was one in a series of incidents. It was perhaps the last straw as far as Western governments and media were concerned, and it has nothing to do with anti-Semitism.
That's the problem.
Lastly, stop making up statistics. I know it doesn't make NATO's case any more attractive but it's doubtful that 140 is an accurate number.
Civilian casualties of the War in Afghanistan (2001–present) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ha'aretz said:M., a Haaretz reader from Zichron Yaakov, was disturbed by reports about the manner in which Palestinian children are arrested in the West Bank and East Jerusalem. They are being detained held in the middle of the night, held in conditions of fear and pain before their interrogations, and then finally interrogated without the presence of their parents or a lawyer.
On March 14, M. wrote the following to attorney Yuri Gai-Ron, the head of the Israel Bar Association: "I am appealing to you to use all of your authority to intervene and put an end to the abusive behavior and violation of the law with regard to children and youths... Any decent citizen silent - and even more so the body you have headed over the past few years - cannot remain silent in the face of the frivolity with which children are kept in detention, interrogated and even condemned."
On April 22, attorney Linda Shafir, the director general of the bar association, sent a letter to Attorney General Yehuda Weinstein and State Prosecutor Moshe Lador. Copies were also sent to Defense Minister Ehud Barak, the commander of the Israel Defense Forces in the West Bank (whose name she did not mention ), and the Military Advocate General Avichai Mendelblit, as well as to M.
Among other things, Shafir wrote: "In her appeal, Ms. M. mentions that Palestinian children and youngsters from areas of the West Bank are detained under inappropriate circumstances and are held in inappropriate conditions.
It goes without saying that the Israel Bar Association considers the holding of detainees in appropriate conditions to be of supreme importance, from both the legal point of view and on the level of human rights. I should be grateful if the appeal is transferred to all concerned parties, so that possible means of dealing with the situation are examined with a view to eradicating the phenomenon."
Broken camera
Another Palestinian detainee, though not a child, is Imad Bornat of Bil'in, a photographer and film director. He was arrested in October 2006 by Border Policemen while photographing the weekly demonstration against the separation fence in his village. After being detained for 21 days, he was then kept under house arrest outside his village for a month and a half. Bornat's trial, during which he was accused of throwing stones and attacking Border Policemen, dragged on for some three years.
This became a routine method of deterring demonstrators in the villages fighting against the separation fence - beatings and arrests, nighttime raids, and indictments based on dubious testimonies.
In April 2009, Bornat was acquitted of all the charges; no trace of anything. He never hit anyone, he never threw any stones. But despite his acquittal, from the police perspective the criminal file remains open, alongside a police order forbidding him to enter Israel (which is five kilometers from his village ). When he required medical treatment, he received some limited exit permits only thanks to the intervention of his lawyer, Gabi Lasky.
Last month Bornat was invited to participate in an event in Tel Aviv organized by CoPro, an Israeli foundation for marketing documentary films. They planned to screen part of the movie he and his partner, Israeli cinematographer Guy Davidi, are busy editing - "Five Broken Cameras." Haaretz published a short item reporting that Bornat had been prevented from participating in the event.
On the same day, May 26, the Civil Administration issued him a permit in a particularly accelerated move, despite the police's position. His file remains open, however, in the police computers. Lasky was told last week that she must send the court verdict, evincing Bornat's acquittal, to the Binyamin police station, which she has already done at least four times.
'A different aspect of Israel'
On May 27, yours truly received a letter from Amir Merom, the spokesman for the Sheba Medical Center at Tel Hashomer, in which he wrote: "Your efforts on behalf of upholding human rights, which have been a guiding principle of your work as a journalist over the years, are not supposed to hold back from your readers at Haaretz journalistic facts which are not in line with one organized doctrine or another.
"We read your May 26 article about the photographer from Bil'in, and were left with the impression that your attempt to present the saga vis-a-vis the military authorities and the police was paramount, from your point of view, to the need to add objective factual parameters that would widen the scope of the story for the reader's benefit and offer a broader spectrum of reference on an already loaded subject.
"Besides the lengthy paragraphs describing, in minute detail, the conduct between the various bodies - which attempt to present Israel in an unflattering light - you mentioned in one general sentence that 'in November 2008, Bornat was seriously injured in a car accident and required medical treatment in Israel.'
It is most surprising to me that you chose so strange a way to mention the fact that the patient arrived on the threshold of death at Sheba Medical Center, the leading government hospital in the State of Israel, and that his life was saved thanks to the dedicated treatment he received there...
"In addition, I am certain that your readers, who possess varied points of view, will be glad to be exposed to a different aspect of Israel from that described in your article - an aspect of love for human beings, of humanity and compassion.
"As the spokesman for a hospital where Arabs, Jews and members of all faiths are treated alongside one another with the same degree of professionalism and love, I would expect that you would be wise enough to use the abovementioned facts in your upcoming articles on the subject."
Bornat paid for his hospital treatment.
Waiting for a letter
No reader wrote a letter about the fate of Adib Abu Rahma - a resident of the same village as Bornat, a regular participant in the demonstrations against the separation fence, a 40-year-old taxi driver and a father of nine. He was arrested on July 10, 2009 on the basis of a photograph showing him holding an onion, to be used against tear gas, which a prosecution witness somehow interpreted as a megaphone.
On the basis of incriminations conducted with minors from Bil'in, who had been arrested in the dark of night and held in frightening circumstances, Abu Rahma was charged with incitement, disturbing the public order and entering a military area. Many of the "facts" illicited through these interrogations later turned out to be false.
Abu Rahma has been in jail for 333 days already. on Sunday a military judge found him guilty, as was expected.
That's complete nonsense. First and foremost, those who are against Israel often cite the issue of "proportion" and how statistics attained from conflicts such as Cast Lead are often disproportionate in favor of the Israelis. And here you're trying to compare the death of 9 mercenaries with Russia's quashing of Checnya and the "pointless slaughter of civilians by NATO." How is that proportionate? Even if you compare the Palestinian deaths over the past decade that isn't proportionate.The people of Israel could be Christian, Muslim, Buddhist or Taoist and the result would still be the same: Outrage. Similar to the outrage displayed by us when (like Mirakon said) we heard about Darfur, China's execution of a retarded man, Russia's brutal quashing of the Chechnyan's or indeed, in the pointless slaughter of civillians by NATO. Is it a greater outrage with Israel? Possibly - almost certainly. But it doesn't make the case against Israel any less strong, rather, it only makes the case that identical levels of outrage should be directed against NATO, Russia, China, etc.
The fact that you think I'm making these statistics up shows how true the point I'm making is. These deaths happened in the same week as the flotilla and you didn't hear a thing about it, because the world was too focused on beating up the Jewish State. In the same year as Cast Lead, when over 1400 Palestinians (including militants) were killed by the Israelis, over twice that number of purely civilians were killed just in Afghanistan and yet most of the world did not blink an eye at this. You try to point out that Israel prides itself on being a moral nation, well I'm pretty sure America does as well. Civilians are being murdered, raped and tortured daily in Sudan and all the people in this thread can cite is some BBC coverage? Where's the front page coverage that Israel is receiving?Lastly, stop making up statistics. I know it doesn't make NATO's case any more attractive but it's doubtful that 140 is an accurate number.
Civilian casualties of the War in Afghanistan (2001–present) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
What about MK Hanin Zuabi?The Palestinians enjoy a great quality of life under the Israelis and before you dispute this - only today I heard a lecture from Khaled Abu Toameh, a Palestinian/Israeli-Arab who was once a journalist for the PLO and now writes for Israeli and Palestinian papers. He said that he and most Israeli-Arabs are greatful to live under Israeli rule and that as a journalist, it would be professional suicide to work under PA rule, that under the free Israeli media he is completely free to criticise whatever and whomever he wishes without fear of backlash. To paraphrase him, he said if he wrote a piece criticising Hamas in Gaza or the PA in the West Bank, it would not be safe to walk the street, but when he writes pieces criticising Israel, as he regularly does, he does not fear for his safety walking the streets of Jerusalem.
The fact that you think I'm making these statistics up shows how true the point I'm making is. These deaths happened in the same week as the flotilla and you didn't hear a thing about it, because the world was too focused on beating up the Jewish State. In the same year as Cast Lead, when over 1400 Palestinians (including militants) were killed by the Israelis, over twice that number of purely civilians were killed just in Afghanistan and yet most of the world did not blink an eye at this. You try to point out that Israel prides itself on being a moral nation, well I'm pretty sure America does as well. Civilians are being murdered, raped and tortured daily in Sudan and all the people in this thread can cite is some BBC coverage? Where's the front page coverage that Israel is receiving?
Zionism = scum of the earth so opposing them isn't exactly hypocritical.
Again with the anti-semitism card... How can Arabs be anti-Semites if they're Semites themselves you dud... Don't even get me started on double standards. israel refusing to sign the NPT is hypocritical. israel offering to sell nuclear weapons to South Africa is hypocritical. 'Peaceful and brave IDF' hijacking a humanitarian aid ship and shooting its members from the back is hypocritical... "Well everyone else is killing civilians all over the world! Why can't we do it!?!" Is the dumbest argument I've ever heard.