Beautiful.š¦[Absolutely LOVE this. Suella Braverman gets the silent treatment she deserves šNot even worthy of a response. Bloody brilliant.pic.twitter.com/pobNu2Xxw2šøā Bushra Shaikh (@Bushra1Shaikh) May 16, 2024šø]š¦
"Can I ask what your view is of the events of October 7th?"Former British Home Secretary Suella Braverman is crushed on GB News. pic.twitter.com/u6PGo9jatI— MintPress News (@MintPressNews) May 17, 2024
― katy perry (prison service) (bizarro gazzara), Saturday, 18 May 2024 15:28 (six months ago) link
that is genuinely the best thing I've seen all year
― glumdalclitch, Saturday, 18 May 2024 15:31 (six months ago) link
Very good tick
― xyzzzz__, Saturday, 18 May 2024 15:34 (six months ago) link
ICC prosecutor Karim Khan during CNN interview today:āI had some elected leader speak to me and be very blunt, this court [ICC] was built for Africa and thugs like Putinā pic.twitter.com/bsGi5s7ayX— Suppressed News. (@SuppressedNws) May 21, 2024
― xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 21 May 2024 08:37 (five months ago) link
The ironic thing is that, apparently, he is the ICC prosecutor due to nomination by the UK and strong support form Israel and the US.
― glumdalclitch, Tuesday, 21 May 2024 11:07 (five months ago) link
https://www.theguardian.com/world/article/2024/may/22/palestinian-state-recognition-ireland-spain-recognise-palestine
― I've left the box of soup near your shoes (Tom D.), Wednesday, 22 May 2024 06:32 (five months ago) link
Pretty big deal for Spain to recognize anyone or anything
― anvil, Wednesday, 22 May 2024 07:28 (five months ago) link
Maybe Trump supporters will vote for Joe now.
Biden administration signals it will support bipartisan push to sanction ICC https://t.co/RkHGbYKw1P— Financial Times (@FT) May 21, 2024
― xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 22 May 2024 07:31 (five months ago) link
Shameful.
― I've left the box of soup near your shoes (Tom D.), Wednesday, 22 May 2024 08:07 (five months ago) link
This is probably a dumb question, but for countries that don't recognize Palestine do they say its part of Israel?
But if it were part of Israel then "occupied territories" makes no sense. Israel itself doesn't say the occupied territories are actually part of Israel. So who are they occupied from if there is no such thing as a Palestine to occupy?
― anvil, Wednesday, 22 May 2024 08:23 (five months ago) link
The eternal logical conundrum. āIsrael has a right to defend itself?ā āFrom Palestine?ā āThere is no Palestine!ā āSo the people who live there are Israelis?ā āNo, theyāre Palestinians!ā āThey live in Palestine?ā āThere is no Palestine.ā
Etc
― a man often referred to in the news media as the Duke of Saxony (tipsy mothra), Wednesday, 22 May 2024 12:35 (five months ago) link
Not quite there's also "there's no such thing as Palestinians".
― I've left the box of soup near your shoes (Tom D.), Wednesday, 22 May 2024 12:38 (five months ago) link
Right. But! Israel has a right to defend itself against them.
― a man often referred to in the news media as the Duke of Saxony (tipsy mothra), Wednesday, 22 May 2024 12:43 (five months ago) link
Ok, but whats the steel man position of it? Occupied Egypt and occupied Jordan, respectively? Do the countries that don't recognize Palestine categorize Gaza as occupied Egypt? They can't categorize it as part of Israel, as even Israel doesn't categorize it as part of Israel. Where is Gaza considered to be, legally, in the UK or US?
― anvil, Wednesday, 22 May 2024 13:10 (five months ago) link
Well that's the thing, right? We just don't talk about it. I mean, as more or less official policy. Israel doesn't talk about it so we don't talk about it. You'd think you couldn't sustain that kind of obvious illogic for decades and decades, yet here we are. There's no solid position Israel's allies can commit to about the Palestinian territories that won't create problems for Israel, so we don't. The U.S. is officially against the expansion of West Bank settlements, but obviously all that ever amounts to is some tut-tutting, no one has ever suggested any kind of real consequences for it.
― a man often referred to in the news media as the Duke of Saxony (tipsy mothra), Wednesday, 22 May 2024 13:17 (five months ago) link
I need to deep dive on this more, I hadn't actually realized that when Egypt had it, they themselves did same thing as Israel in occupying but not annexing
― anvil, Wednesday, 22 May 2024 13:27 (five months ago) link
Official U.S. policy (per the State Dept website) is that the U.S. still recognizes the Palestinian Authority as an official voice for people in the "Palestinian territories" and is committed to an eventual-someday-somehow two-state solution. But that language probably hasn't changed in 20 years and it implicitly just leaves the status of both the land and its residents in total legal limbo for the interim.
― a man often referred to in the news media as the Duke of Saxony (tipsy mothra), Wednesday, 22 May 2024 14:49 (five months ago) link
surprised the US and UK donāt call it āThe Palestineā
― Humanitarian Pause (Tracer Hand), Wednesday, 22 May 2024 14:58 (five months ago) link
The Pale of Stine
― glumdalclitch, Wednesday, 22 May 2024 15:03 (five months ago) link
Gaza was not part of modern Egypt nor of any modern nation state. The West Bank was, relatively briefly, part of Jordan, but Jordan renounced its claims to the WB in 1988. So for practical purposes, both are stuck in limbo. Israel won't formally annex them presumably because of fears that legal status as part of Israel would strengthen the Palestinians' claims to full rights and the possibility of a demographic majority that could end Israel as a "Jewish state." Israel also won't recognize a Palestinian state, and on this I go back and forth about whether there's a single "real" reason - i.e. whether it's *really* about religious claims or *really* about military advantage or *really* about land/resources. Maybe it's really a combination of all of them.
Israel withdrew from Gaza in large part because it did not want its armed forces spread too thin in two non-contiguous occupations. I don't think there was any grand strategy prior to this war to reoccupy Gaza, but I do think it has strengthened the once fringe movement to do so. A lot of top military brass still seem to be against it, but I think it may be what Bibi now wants, esp since he rejects any other feasible option.
I heard it pointed out recently that "the Gaza strip" as opposed to the city of Gaza is kind of an artificial/historically accidental territory. It was part of a larger swath of land that was supposed to be the Arab state in the UN Partition Plan that Arabs rejected and that Zionists nominally accepted but didn't actually want and hoped to eventually push beyond. The borders of the states in the partition plan were of course ridiculous and it's not hard to see why no one actually wanted them. The "strip" doesn't really make sense as a territory and can't really sustain itself economically.
― longtime caller, first time listener (man alive), Wednesday, 22 May 2024 15:14 (five months ago) link
I was humming "On Jordan's Stormy Banks" to myself the other day (as you do) and the lyrics suddenly struck me with a completely new meaning. The language around "possessions". And even the fact that this land is "promised". The feeling of being separated from your home.
On Jordanās stormy banks I stand,And cast a wishful eyeTo Canaanās fair and happy land,Where my possessions lie.I am bound for the promised land,I am bound for the promised land;Oh, who will come and go with me?I am bound for the promised land.
I am bound for the promised land,I am bound for the promised land;Oh, who will come and go with me?I am bound for the promised land.
― Humanitarian Pause (Tracer Hand), Wednesday, 22 May 2024 15:26 (five months ago) link
what an absolute freaking weirdo the person running this account is pic.twitter.com/E7laXasdio— Matt Binder (@MattBinder) May 22, 2024
― A So-Called Pulitzer price winner (President Keyes), Wednesday, 22 May 2024 15:35 (five months ago) link
def a smart rhetorical gambit to appear to be spreading vile & bizarre misinformation
there are some very weird political dynamics going on. e.g., I found this story very depressing and also confusing in terms of the politics of the protesters: https://www.wbur.org/news/2024/05/21/newton-free-library-photography-exhibit
― rob, Wednesday, 22 May 2024 15:55 (five months ago) link
The U.S. is officially against the expansion of West Bank settlements, but obviously all that ever amounts to is some tut-tutting, no one has ever suggested any kind of real consequences for it.
ā a man often referred to in the news media as the Duke of Saxony (tipsy mothra), Wednesday, May 22, 2024 6:17 AM bookmarkflaglink
We discussed the US executive order targeting the settlers previously.
Not as many consequences as one might wish, but there is some reporting of implementations.
https://www.pbs.org/newshour/world/u-s-sanctions-3-israeli-west-bank-settlers-and-their-outposts-for-violence-against-palestinians
― felicity, Wednesday, 22 May 2024 16:51 (five months ago) link
Gaza was not part of modern Egypt nor of any modern nation state
I should have realised that, I knew Egypt had it but I hadn't fully appreciated it was never actually part of Egypt.
So for countries that don't recognize Palestine, the official position(s) are basically is that Gaza isn't part of any country, not even as a territory. That US State Department thing upthread seems to say a lot of nothing very much
― anvil, Wednesday, 22 May 2024 16:57 (five months ago) link
Yeah, tho in extremely limited circumstances having to do with specific violent acts. There hasn't been any real consequences for just the ongoing expansion of settlements for the last few decades.
― a man often referred to in the news media as the Duke of Saxony (tipsy mothra), Wednesday, 22 May 2024 17:41 (five months ago) link
this human puke: https://newrepublic.com/post/182003/nikki-haley-signs-israel-bombs-gaza
― rob, Tuesday, 28 May 2024 20:00 (five months ago) link
elsewhere in American greatness: https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c033m529ry0o
A temporary pier built by the US military to deliver aid to Gaza has been damaged by heavy seas and will take at least a week to be repaired, according to US officials.US forces began building the floating pier - which is attached to Gaza's shoreline by a temporary causeway - several weeks ago.The causeway portion of the project has now reportedly broken off and will have to be repaired before being returned to its position.Humanitarian organisations have warned that the amount of aid reaching Palestinians in Gaza is only a fraction of what is required to meet the needs of its population.
US forces began building the floating pier - which is attached to Gaza's shoreline by a temporary causeway - several weeks ago.
The causeway portion of the project has now reportedly broken off and will have to be repaired before being returned to its position.
Humanitarian organisations have warned that the amount of aid reaching Palestinians in Gaza is only a fraction of what is required to meet the needs of its population.
― rob, Tuesday, 28 May 2024 20:04 (five months ago) link
Not exactly "as it relates to other countries," but because it doesn't directly pertain to current events, I'm a little over halfway through reading Tom Segev's biography of David Ben Gurion, "A State At Any Cost," which I think is very good overall and very helpful in understanding the version of zionism that came to dominate by the time of the founding of Israel, including the role of explusion/population transfer. I wouldn't say it's exactly a favorable portrayal of the man, although it also complicates some of the worst things that are said about him.
I'm hoping to next do some reading on the early proponents of a binational state.
― longtime caller, first time listener (man alive), Tuesday, 28 May 2024 20:34 (five months ago) link
complicates some of the worst things that are said about him.
I should clarify that I mean stuff like "he didn't care about saving Jews."
― longtime caller, first time listener (man alive), Tuesday, 28 May 2024 20:48 (five months ago) link
Who's the largest buyer of Israel Bonds do you think? Surely a wealthy American businessman?Wrong! It's the comptroller of Palm Beach County, who has apparently invested $700 million, 15% of the funds of a county of 1.5 million people, all public taxpayer dollars, into Israel. pic.twitter.com/tgSt7OlN2l— SĆ©amus Malekafzali (@Seamus_Malek) May 29, 2024
― xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 29 May 2024 07:59 (five months ago) link
šØPOLICE STATION SUPPORT (PSS) NEEDED ACROSS LONDON ALL DAYšØAt @PSCupdates Rafah Protest last night - 40 people were arrested and taken to 6 police stations.We need more PSS volunteers ASAPIf you can help call 07946541511The protest is not over until everyone is out šµšø pic.twitter.com/1REqjRau1O— #BlackLivesMatterUK (@ukblm) May 29, 2024
― xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 29 May 2024 08:48 (five months ago) link
I thought the 'argument' as to who the Palestinians were and why they didn't count was that they were just more of those amorphous nomadic arabs therefore didn't have a specific home or several thousand years of history there. Or well known food traditions in the area. Obviously one of the worst examples of racism trying to rewrite history. Sickening that that has been widely swallowed.
― Stevo, Wednesday, 29 May 2024 09:27 (five months ago) link
They're just Egyptians or Jordanians is a common narrative.
― Poets Win Prizes (Tom D.), Wednesday, 29 May 2024 09:40 (five months ago) link
relatable
― felicity, Wednesday, 29 May 2024 10:38 (five months ago) link
And manufactured by Boeing, which Blinken worked as a paid consultant for before becoming Secretary of State. Itās how he (and dozens of the other monsters now shaping U.S. foreign policy in the Biden White House) got rich. https://t.co/tu3gzotHVG— ettingermentumš„„š“ (@ettingermentum) May 29, 2024
― xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 29 May 2024 11:20 (five months ago) link
ā felicity, Wednesday, May 29, 2024 6:38 AM (forty-nine minutes ago) bookmarkflaglink
One would think this would bring some some moderation of Israeli policy, but no. This is the part of the tragedy of the situation the last 25 years that is especially disturbing to me.
― il lavoro mi rovina la giornata (PBKR), Wednesday, 29 May 2024 11:32 (five months ago) link
ā Stevo, Wednesday, 29 May 2024 09:27 (two hours ago) link
Well I think itās a little more complex than this, but you are right about the argument you are pushing against. I reject essentialist narratives about āthe Palestiniansā being āthe indigenous people of Palestineā who have been there for thousands of years. āPalestinianā is a relatively modern national identity. It includes many people whose families have long established roots in the area, and it also includes Egyptians and Bosnians and Kurds and Syrians and other migrants who came later. Before the 20th C, peopleās identities would have been more tied to their family, clan, and locale (eg Nablus) than āPalestine.ā But that doesnāt render their identity or ties to the place less real or valid.
― longtime caller, first time listener (man alive), Wednesday, 29 May 2024 12:36 (five months ago) link
One would think this would bring some some moderation of Israeli policy, but no. This is the part of the tragedy of the situation the last 25 years that is especially disturbing to me.ā il lavoro mi rovina la giornata (PBKR), Wednesday, May 29, 2024 4:32 AM bookmarkflaglink
ā il lavoro mi rovina la giornata (PBKR), Wednesday, May 29, 2024 4:32 AM bookmarkflaglink
Oh totally. Trying to understand how they arrived at that particular aspect of the tragedy, I read a pretty sobering tweet that kind of pushed back on the diaspora "Westsplaining" of the situation. I'll post it here, not because I agree with it (I don't have this person's lived experience, it's not for me to agree with them) but because it made me curious to understand why they thought that way.
I'll paste it here for those that don't have twitter:
This is not true, but it does hint at a deep truth.Yes, the American Jewish lesson from the Holocaust is to double down on tolerance and liberalism for all, because American Jews believe they were saved from the 20th century by these features of America.But Israeli Jews didnāt have that privilege. They couldnāt avoid the cataclysm by relying on the great kindnesses and strengths of America. No one saved the Jews who would become Israel. No one would even take them in after the genocide. So their lesson was the opposite of the American Jewish one. They became obsessed with self-reliance.In the Israeli Jewish experience, the world is uncaring and hypocritical at best, viciously evil at worst, and it can move from one to the other at the drop of a hat. The only real safety available to a small people is whatever power it can wield in its own defense by its own exertions. Any western elite that claims otherwise knows it will never itself face the consequences of being wrong.Before you moralize your way out of grappling with this point, dear westerners, hereās one way to show Israelis theyāre wrong: Stop the Assads of the world, in realtime, when it matters; meaningfully protect the Uyghurs, even when it means bucking a superpower. Until you can actually do what it takes to bring safety to small and vulnerable peoples, the Israelis will be right and your great moral vocabularies will be no more than undeserved self-adulation.The Israeli message to Palestinians, then, isnāt that āonly Jews get to be safeā - itās that Palestinians need their own Zionism because only self-reliance brings safety.The worldās love and concern for them is a mirage, a western eliteās self-validating moral cartoon about itself, not a willingness to actually protect and sacrifice for Palestinians. The very fact that the world is invested in Palestinians more than in any other conflict or suffering population combined is a sign that its concern isnāt the actual suffering but rather western elite narrative-making. True morality and real law would swing into action for others too.Or put another way, the whirlwind of moralism that is so often described as āanti-Israelā is actually, in the Israeli understanding of history, anti-Palestinian, a vast and cruel political trap Palestinians have not yet seen for what it is.Palestinians cannot claw back some imagined idyllic Palestine of yesteryear anymore than Jews can reverse the erasure of the ancient communities of Poland or Iraq. The only path available to any of us is to build a new future on the solid foundation of endogenous strength.The only salvation available to Palestinians will come by Palestinian hands, Palestinian strategy and wisdom, and internal Palestinian solidarity.Thatās the Israeli āclaim,ā such as it is, and not just for Palestinians. For all small peoples.
Yes, the American Jewish lesson from the Holocaust is to double down on tolerance and liberalism for all, because American Jews believe they were saved from the 20th century by these features of America.
But Israeli Jews didnāt have that privilege. They couldnāt avoid the cataclysm by relying on the great kindnesses and strengths of America. No one saved the Jews who would become Israel. No one would even take them in after the genocide. So their lesson was the opposite of the American Jewish one. They became obsessed with self-reliance.
In the Israeli Jewish experience, the world is uncaring and hypocritical at best, viciously evil at worst, and it can move from one to the other at the drop of a hat. The only real safety available to a small people is whatever power it can wield in its own defense by its own exertions. Any western elite that claims otherwise knows it will never itself face the consequences of being wrong.
Before you moralize your way out of grappling with this point, dear westerners, hereās one way to show Israelis theyāre wrong: Stop the Assads of the world, in realtime, when it matters; meaningfully protect the Uyghurs, even when it means bucking a superpower. Until you can actually do what it takes to bring safety to small and vulnerable peoples, the Israelis will be right and your great moral vocabularies will be no more than undeserved self-adulation.
The Israeli message to Palestinians, then, isnāt that āonly Jews get to be safeā - itās that Palestinians need their own Zionism because only self-reliance brings safety.
The worldās love and concern for them is a mirage, a western eliteās self-validating moral cartoon about itself, not a willingness to actually protect and sacrifice for Palestinians. The very fact that the world is invested in Palestinians more than in any other conflict or suffering population combined is a sign that its concern isnāt the actual suffering but rather western elite narrative-making. True morality and real law would swing into action for others too.
Or put another way, the whirlwind of moralism that is so often described as āanti-Israelā is actually, in the Israeli understanding of history, anti-Palestinian, a vast and cruel political trap Palestinians have not yet seen for what it is.
Palestinians cannot claw back some imagined idyllic Palestine of yesteryear anymore than Jews can reverse the erasure of the ancient communities of Poland or Iraq. The only path available to any of us is to build a new future on the solid foundation of endogenous strength.
The only salvation available to Palestinians will come by Palestinian hands, Palestinian strategy and wisdom, and internal Palestinian solidarity.
Thatās the Israeli āclaim,ā such as it is, and not just for Palestinians. For all small peoples.
https://x.com/havivrettiggur/status/1791309935910756629
He gave an interview in which he presents a version of history describing the path to that tragedy you mentioned. I thought his separation of the Palestinian nationalist movement (which he supports) from the Hamas/Muslim Brotherhood Islamist movement tracks with what some others have said.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WvBm4Ua1dmI
I understand the urge for pacifism (who doesn't want peace?) and at the same time realize the limitations of my experiences. My mother lived through a brutal Japanese-Nazi occupation and attempted genocide and also watched the Chinese Red Army round up elites and shoot them in town squares. So not a big fan of authoritarian movements, no matter how well intentioned. I live in a country that can't solve school shootings or provide basic health care that has fallen capture to religious fundamentalists itself.
― felicity, Wednesday, 29 May 2024 12:44 (five months ago) link
Yes, Western elites are renowned for being pro-Palestinian, wtf?
― Poets Win Prizes (Tom D.), Wednesday, 29 May 2024 13:03 (five months ago) link
I have been wondering why there isn't a rolling islamophobia thread on here.
― This is Dance Anthems, have some respect (Camaraderie at Arms Length), Wednesday, 29 May 2024 13:05 (five months ago) link
There is.
― Poets Win Prizes (Tom D.), Wednesday, 29 May 2024 13:06 (five months ago) link
ā Poets Win Prizes (Tom D.), Wednesday, May 29, 2024 6:03 AM bookmarkflaglink
You're saying this isn't true from your perspective?
― felicity, Wednesday, 29 May 2024 13:09 (five months ago) link
it isn't true period
― ivy., Wednesday, 29 May 2024 13:13 (five months ago) link
As a citizen of a small country which itself has long supported the Palestinian cause because of feelings of mutual experience - itās not a coincidence that loyalists in Belfast fly Israeli flags and identify with the Israeli government, even though some of them have literal swastika tattoos - I fully understand the argument towards self determination. Itās actually my strongest point of sympathy towards the existence of Israel, that Jewish people should have a country, because all the others failed them. But I donāt understand the argument, nor do I support it, that being strong means suppressing and treading on the rights of others. One of the many reasons I have that account blocked on Twitter.
― Roman Anthony gets on his horse (gyac), Wednesday, 29 May 2024 13:15 (five months ago) link
I'm not disagreeing.
― felicity, Wednesday, 29 May 2024 13:15 (five months ago) link
I suppose it depends on who you consider the "Western elites" to be. Right wing wankers tend to have a different idea of who constitutes an elite.
― Poets Win Prizes (Tom D.), Wednesday, 29 May 2024 13:17 (five months ago) link
There are a million of these in Belfast. Some of them are older than I am.
Free Palestine Mural, St James', Belfast #FreePalestine pic.twitter.com/JPkay9wWcT— Shamrock Superstore (@shamrocksupers1) May 18, 2021
― Roman Anthony gets on his horse (gyac), Wednesday, 29 May 2024 13:19 (five months ago) link
But Israeli Jews didnāt have that privilege. They couldnāt avoid the cataclysm by relying on the great kindnesses and strengths of America. No one saved the Jews who would become Israel. No one would even take them in after the genocide. So their lesson was the opposite of the American Jewish one.
Come on, man, some of the most psychotically right-wing settlers in the West Bank moved there from Brooklyn. I'm not gonna say they are "typical Israelis" but they support the worst aspects of Israeli society and it's not because they weren't saved by American tolerance and liberalism, it's because they experienced it and rejected it in favor of something they liked better.
On the whole, I did not find that excerpt any more accurate than "they love dead Palestians the more dead Palestinians the better" as a description of the Israeli mindset, to the extent there is one.
― Guayaquil (eephus!), Wednesday, 29 May 2024 13:20 (five months ago) link
Thatās ridiculous.
― longtime caller, first time listener (man alive), Wednesday, 29 May 2024 13:24 (five months ago) link