Now I am not saying that Israel aims to completely destroy Gaza and fully take over WB. But if that is what they wanted (as most anti Israeli orgs seem to shout), then the time to do it , would be now.
As in, "they say we do X so might as well do it"?
Yeah there's certainly some of that sentiment felt as well. But we understand that's just baiting. We're not going to genocide a whole people just because we're asked to.
Why should I answer 3 questions that are not related to my Post ? Questions that's being asked just to side tracked the issues.
Btw, is those US Jews that's against Israel Palestinian policy also antisemitic? I also can play your game on reframing issues.
You shouldn't, that's the point. Statistically speaking, it would be nearly impossible for you to answer these. The purpose was to improve my understanding of your opinion by observing whether any answer was given.
On point 1; even as coherent and well organized a state-level actor that Israel is, we don't have a particularly clear end game for them. Expecting a consistent and clear end-game from anti-Hamas but pro-Palestinian public is unreasonable. They likely don't have one, at least not one they can all clearly agree on and have worked out with some level of consistency.
Agreed to an extent. I do not see a way for someone reasonable (i.e. someone not applying mental gymnastics) to be simultaneously anti-Hamas and pro-Palestine without being pro-Israel as well, or alternatively be pro-Hamas, pro-Palestine, and anti-Israel. Otherwise there are just too many opposing values which is bad for one's mental health.
On point 2; the reason pro-Palestinian members of public might be anti-Israeli is because of the way Israel has treated Palestinians over the past 70 years. I'm not particularly pro-Palestinian, but even I take issue with the situation where Gaza doesn't get to be an actual independent country, but also don't get to be treated like citizens of Israel. To me this position on Israel's part is indefensible. People who are actually pro-Palestinian might take issue with many more things that Israel has done. I'm really wondering, do you genuinely not understand this? Or are you intentionally ignoring these very obvious reasons? Or is that "it's all Palestinian's own fault, Hamas is at fault for any dead civilians even if an Israeli bomb did the killing"? Because that's not a position this group of people is likely to share.
I understand this position, but I cannot hold it simply because to me it does not stand to scrutiny. I was once a socialist, but eventually I was disillusioned. Why? Because the moment I applied scrutiny to this worldview it crumbled.
On point 3; nice framing of the issue there. Let me try. Why are most pro-Israeli people so anti-Palestinian? See? I can ask unpleasant questions that presuppose facts not in evidence too. You want to claim that most/all pro-Palestine protesters or activists are anti-Semitic, do you have any statistics to back that up? For the record, most is over 50%. You would have to show actual engagement from a statistically significant sample group to be able to back up that claim. Mere statements or opinions wouldn't suffice to support the point you're claiming. I fairly certain you can't do so, making this another maximalist claim you've made with no real support. But I stand ready to be proven wrong.
It is impossible to truly quantify pro-Palestine sentiment this way. There is no up to date poll that truly encompasses all necessary parameters. For example, do pro-Hamas count as pro-Palestinians because Hamas best expresses traditional Palestinian nationalism? Or are the two inherently opposed because ultimately works against the best interests of the Palestinians?
On social media it is already more tangible but I cannot bring my personal experiences as evidence here. So, instead, the most tangible thing I can think of is the actual pro-Palestine protesters themselves.
In every "pro-Palestine" protest you will hear at least one of the following slogans:
1. "From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free".
2. "Ceasefire now!".
Both are blatantly anti-semitic. Now, as an atheist, I have no more issue with antisemitism at its core than with any other form of racism. But it just so happens that it's an especially counter-productive form of racism so I particularly oppose it.
"From the river..." is antisemitic because it calls for the annihilation of Israel and the creation of a full Palestinian state in its ashes. Some may try to reinvent it, but that's just newspeak. You wouldn't try to reinvent the "heil something" as a pseudo-liberal slogan, would you? German police in particular would not be convinced.
"Ceasefire now" is also antisemitic because it calls on Israel to unilaterally end the war without annihilating Hamas. A ceasefire existed until 6/10, then Hamas broke it. A non-racist version of this would be "Free the hostages, ceasefire now", but that's not what they're saying.
Prominent leaders of the movement have also engaged in denial, in part or whole, of 7/10.
As for actual statistics. Every city in which such protests occurred, has reported massive increases in antisemitic hate crimes. If they only want some ceasefire, why are non-involved Jews attacked much more often? Many reported hundreds of % increases. The article on the UK cites a report that suggests the spike in antisemitic hate crimes occurred as celebration of Hamas's brutal massacre of 1,200 civilians and kidnapping of over 200, not in response to any Israeli reaction (which doesn't justify antisemitism in the first place either).
A group tracking antisemitism in Germany says that it has documented a drastic increase of antisemitic incidents in the country in the month after Hamas attacked Israel on Oct. 7.
apnews.com
Several high-profile incidents are being investigated as hate crimes in New York, where anti-Jewish incidents more than tripled in October compared with last year.
www.nytimes.com