• Let us not ignore the truth among ourselves … politically we are the aggressors and they defend themselves… The country is theirs, because they inhabit it, whereas we want to come here and settle down, and in their view we want to take away from them their country.

    If I were an Arab leader, I would never sign an agreement with Israel. It is normal; we have taken their country. It is true God promised it to us, but how could that interest them? Our God is not theirs. There has been Anti-Semitism, the Nazis, Hitler, Auschwitz, but was that their fault? They see but one thing: we have come and we have stolen their country. Why would they accept that?

    -David Ben-Gurion

      • Heh. Your strategy of simply announcing that you’re offended and you refuse to continue to talk along a couple of the lines of discussion, has worked. Now with no transition away from “Hamas is definitely using human shields” “Here’s a UN report saying they’re not” and similar lines that weren’t going how you wanted them to, we’re into a whole new line of argument.

        But sure.

        1. The Jews were engaged in a life or death struggle

        Absolutely true.

        with the Arabs of Palestine

        Er… not entirely true, at the outset, but it became true over time, yes.

        mostly because of the choice of the latter

        ?

        Can you explain a little more what was their choice here that caused the struggle to take place?

        1. Selected quotes of one leader are not representative of an entire spectrum of parties and factions that equally saw themselves as “Zionist.”

        Absolutely true. Do you mind if I go back through things you sent me and find some times when something a Hamas leader (and not even necessarily the founder of Hamas), was picked out as representative of the motives of Hamas as a whole?

        It’s starting to feel like this is just nitpicking over individual details and getting lost in the details… somewhere far far away from thousands upon thousands of dead children, and safely in semantics, where we can go back and forth, safe in our climate controlled homes.

        But sure, I’m happy to continue for a little while at least.

        1. When is the bigotry, intolerance, ignorance and violence of the Arab world going to become PC for the left to examine honestly and completely?

        I had a pretty extensive argument not long ago with someone who was trying to downplay Hamas’s atrocities on October 7th, and sent them some documents demonstrating otherwise.

        The IDF’s atrocities and Hamas’s atrocities do not exist in some weird zero-sum universe where only one can be true, and to affirm one means to deny the other. Anyone who’s paying attention to the reality will see some bigotry, intolerance, and violence in the Arab world.

        1. How many countries in the world were not born of historical “sin” of some sort or other?

        Every family has some murderers in its history. Does that mean we shouldn’t prosecute murder when it happens in the present?

        1. When are we going to stop talking ancient history?

        I started out talking about dead civilians in the last 6 months, and going forward this month and next. I only brought up Ben-Gurion’s thoughts on the intent behind Israel’s foundation and the assignation of “blame” if you want to call it that, because you wanted to stop talking about the present day atrocities and start talking about intent, instead, and I thought his viewpoint was relevant (for example how an innocent Arab family who lost their home last month or this month might reasonably react.)

        1. Jews and Arabs, Israelis and Palestinians have to see each other as fellow human beings entitled to equal respect, rights and protections.

        Absolutely. This I 100% agree with. This is, pretty much, the core of what I think would need to happen to stop the continued bloodshed and suffering by innocent people in both countries.

        Related question.

        “The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights endorsed the report and supported the call for Israel and Hamas to investigate and prosecute those who committed war crimes. … The resolution called on the bloc’s member states to ‘publicly demand the implementation of [the report’s] recommendations and accountability for all violations of international law, including alleged war crimes.’ These declarations, as well as others, demonstrate Hamas’ triumph in controlling the narrative. Hamas’ ability to control the narrative limits Israel’s strategic choices.”

        Would it be fair to say you agree with that? You sent it to me.