Ahh, yes. Victim blaming.
I wonder at what point you will acknowledge that the Palestinians have it worse than black South Africans.
Her spokespeople have already said shell likely be in the hospital for a few days recuperating.
So why is Cheetoh so concerned with saving jobs in China now? I thought he was all AMERICA FIRST. It couldn't be because his organization has a licensing deal with a Chinese theme park resort that just got a huge loan from the Chinese government could it? Nah....
It's always curious that Israel's most ardent hate doesn't come from the Middle East, it comes from the comfortable countries that have no enemies at their gates. Always the comfortable citizens in the USA, France, Sweden, Norway, or England who don't have to worry about their safety that condemn Israel for defending its citizens.
This concept of self-defense as aggression is an odd one. When a violent threat arrives we'll see who holds on to the view that a government shouldn't defend its citizens.
Pretty much. Cue the Simpsons episode with Baron Cohen's character ranting about "Americans and their arch-enemy Canada" and such.
Look, the Palestinians have a right to be furious over the embassy. That's fine. They have a right to be out protesting in the streets, expressing themselves. Hell, burning Israeli & American flags if they want to, go for it.
You're taking your life into your hands if you're moving on that border though, let alone sending **** over it. They know this. The Hamas higher-ups want it to happen, because it paints Israel in a ****ty light when their inevitable rational response makes the news. Everyone'll conveniently ignore whatever counter-evidence Israel is going to put out there, it's just the way it'll go.
The Hamas brass aren't idiots. Ruthless as **** with their own people's welfare, but not idiots.
Pretty funny how they're now saying they "might discourage" protests tomorrow, too, after the IDF flat-out said if it happens again they'll be targeting the Hamas leaders/representatives personally with air ordnance. Yeah, not so expendable yourselves, are you guys? The people that voted for you though, nah, send them out as cannon-fodder. Cool. *Eyeroll*
You guys are better informed on this topic than I, but whenever I think about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.. it brings to mind a quote I like from Game of Thrones:
"We make peace with our enemies, not our friends."
In order for this thing to work, Israel has to be more willing to make concessions. If they aren't willing to give up anything, then the peace process can't go forward.
You guys are better informed on this topic than I, but whenever I think about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.. it brings to mind a quote I like from Game of Thrones:
"We make peace with our enemies, not our friends."
In order for this thing to work, Israel has to be more willing to make concessions. If they aren't willing to give up anything, then the peace process can't go forward.
The concessions don't end though, that's the thing. There's a reasonable amount that Israel can and should give on this (territory-wise), but you don't do that without some reasonable guarantees from the other side's officials.
Why is it Israel is the only nation that can get away with shooting unarmed protesters? Any other nation that killed 50+ unarmed protesters would get international condemnation. Listening to most of you, we shouldn't have sanctioned South Africa for apartheid.
If they want to act in good faith towards Peace, I think the only reasonable thing would be for Israel to call for peace negotiations with Palestine and the UN as a broker.
Craft a deal that is internationally binding that:
- creates an independent UN council that can inspect and verify the deal
- give that independent council the authority to inflict economic punishments if the deal isn't adhered to by either side.
- create a written out series of consequences, voted on by the UN itself, in order to avoid one side backing out unilaterally.
I see what your saying that this is all based on trust. How do you work with a bad actor, who you know won't be satisfied? IMO, The answer is to have an independent referee. Unite the world in a solution, and hold Israel and Palestine accountable. How likely is that? Probably not very likely. But if Israel were somehow magically open to that kinda thinking... it could happen. Israel is the key to the peace process. It's up to them to offer the olive branch.
Still, the most bizarre thing in his strange rant on Fox and Friends was him admitting just how bad of a husband he was. A card for her birthday, especially with all the affair talk in the news...
So why is Cheetoh so concerned with saving jobs in China now? I thought he was all AMERICA FIRST. It couldn't be because his organization has a licensing deal with a Chinese theme park resort that just got a huge loan from the Chinese government could it? Nah....
Uhh, Mace? The UN? Seriously? :P C'mon now. The UN can mediate talks, but what the hell are they going to do practically? You divide Jerusalem down the middle, without a big-ass concrete wall separating them, and Israel still having the Dome & temple, violence is going to be even more frequent than it is now. Surely you see that. And the UN's hardly going to suddenly do more than write an angry letter to Abbas telling him his people are being naughty, Team America style.
I'm not saying it's very likely no, but it is what is needed. The UN nations would need to unite together to essentially make an economic threat: either abide by this deal (whatever that deal might be) or the world will collectively sanction you both to economic ruin. The world would have to be unified and clear in the deal. In order for peace to work, it'd need a third party like the UN to enforce it. If it were just a one-on-one deal with Israel/US and Palestine... nope, there won't be any enforcement mechanisms and we know what happens then.
And since Israel has the upper hand right now, it's basically up to them to make it happen. They have to be the ones to initiate peace, because they are the ones with the most to lose.
They tried this for almost five decades, and each time whether it was due to a zero-compromise policy from Palestinians or a combination of Israelis and Palestinians it all fell apart, and because we've had almost a collective thirty years of hard line military violence from Israel the modern generation only remembers a time of 'bloodthirsty, evil Israel'. Israel tried initiating peace, their agreement in 2000 would've seen a large swathe of land given back to Palestine with a number of other religious and practical concessions like handing over the Temple Mount, and it was thrown in their faces.
Most nations in the surrounding area and the Palestinians want Israel to pay in blood, they don't want peace, they want the Jews out.