T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
944.1 | P.S. | TAVIS::JUAN | | Mon May 21 1990 20:44 | 11 |
| I want to add a P.S. to my previous note. I hessitated for some
time before entering the base note. I hope this will not the
base for an endless discussion of right vs. left, of who killed
more of the other side and who is a terrorist. I have no doubt
that this way will not conduce us anywhere. I believe that it is
requested from both sides of this arab-israeli conflict a lot of
strength and wisdom, to introduce new ideas, new concepts, to
renounce perhaps to some of what each side believes is rightfully
theirs, to renounce perhaps to some ideals, in the sake of life.
Juan-Carlos Kiel
|
944.2 | what can you say, but... | SUBWAY::RAYMAN | one of the usual suspects... | Tue May 22 1990 01:45 | 5 |
| re .0 & 1
hear hear!!
Lou
|
944.3 | peace is the solution | WFOVX5::AWKAL | ALI AWKAL | Tue May 22 1990 06:06 | 12 |
| Hi, every body
I am new to this note file , I agree with juan , but I think
the problem is because of the arab_israeli conflict,the only
solution is a real peace in the middle east , other wise these
incidents, is going to happen more often, from either side.
I feel that the only person to achieve a real peace is MR.
Shimon peres, I wish he will persue his peace effort with
the arabs so every body will live in peace in that holly
place.
ali
|
944.4 | This is not political! | ERICG::ERICG | Eric Goldstein | Tue May 22 1990 11:01 | 14 |
| First of all, welcome to the conference, Ali.
Secondly, I disagree with you on the causes of such incidents. If and when
peace is achieved, by Peres or anyone else (personally, I would bet on "anyone
else"), that won't be enough to stop incidents like this. Peace will not
prevent mentally disturbed individuals from carrying out acts like this, though
it may (we hope) reduce their frequency.
What we can and should do is to stop treating incidents like these as political
in nature, rather than as the acts of sick individuals. We should try to help
such people, and we should do our best to see that they don't get their hands
on dangerous weapons. We should *not* turn them into representatives of their
societies! And we don't have to wait for a peace treaty to change our
attitudes in this way.
|
944.5 | Have both eye open | WMOIS::SAADEH | Will there ever be peace over there | Tue May 22 1990 15:35 | 12 |
|
ERIC, who knows what drove him to the state he's in. But, one thing
for sure if there was a infrastructure where he could of been under
much less pressure, his chances of going wackooo would of been much
less. One thing for sure, in order for peace of mind on both sides
people must start TALKING.
-Sultan
P.S.
WAKE UP, politics drives the world, and you know it.
|
944.6 | Both eyes open, but I don't believe everything I read. | ERICG::ERICG | Eric Goldstein | Tue May 22 1990 16:30 | 19 |
| .5> ERIC, who knows what drove him to the state he's in.
Well, the courts have referred him for psychiatric evaluation. Maybe the
shrinks will get an idea.
.5> ... if there was a infrastructure where he could of been under
.5> much less pressure, his chances of going wackooo would of been much
.5> less.
That sounds like more of an excuse than a reason. On the other hand, maybe I
should point out during my next review that tripling my salary would put *me*
under a lot less pressure ...
.5> WAKE UP, politics drives the world, and you know it.
Not my world, it doesn't. Oh, politics is an important factor, but not the
overriding one.
|
944.7 | Prespective | SMVDV1::JGILON | | Tue May 22 1990 19:34 | 14 |
| Just to bring some perspective to the Palestinians and and Americans reactions
about the recent events (not that I disagree with whatever has been said
on this note before).
The Palestinians: I wish the same concern would have been expressed after the
murderous attack on the Israeli Tourist bus on Egypt three months ago (on
which I had immediate relatives).
The Americans: I wonder if Ted Koppel will dedicate "Nightline" show to discuss
the 27 Moslems who were shot to death in India yesterday while demonstrating
for their independence ( Yesterday night he discussed the last events
in Israel).
And these are only two examples.
|
944.8 | that how I feel about it | WFOVX5::AWKAL | ALI AWKAL | Wed May 23 1990 05:54 | 29 |
|
HI,Eric
Our environment has the biggest influence on our behavior. And could
be that soldier is mentally sick, or what ever the reason is these
killing should be stopped on both side,as you mentioned controlling
the availability of weapons and helping people with mental problems
these are great solution.
Any way, peace is very easy to say , but very hard to achieve
I think all the people in the middle east Israelis or Arabs wants
peace,and they are looking at there leader for peace, but how, when,
and who, there could be other than Mr.Peres could be Mr Shamir,and
his likud party. or it could be (rakah) the israeli communist party
could be some other leader in israel.
We as people,should encourage any leader to achieve a peace that
guarantee Israel a safe and friendly boarder with its arab neighbour
and to guarantee a home land for the palestinian people, Mr Arafat
on different occasion mentioned that he is for a fair peace and
he is ready to talk to any israeli leader, let us all israeli.
and arab encourage leaders like him to come forward for peace
let us encourage them to sit and talk peace,and stop this
bloodshed,because no body is going to win at the end except
the arm dealer, and the sole looser is the people of isreal and
the people of the arab world.
that how I feel about it.
ali
|
944.9 | ummm... | TAV02::FEINBERG | Don Feinberg | Wed May 23 1990 11:00 | 40 |
| re: <<< Note 944.8 by WFOVX5::AWKAL "ALI AWKAL" >>>
-< that how I feel about it >-
> Any way, peace is very easy to say , but very hard to achieve
> I think all the people in the middle east Israelis or Arabs wants
> peace,and they are looking at there leader for peace, but how, when,
> ... Mr Arafat
> on different occasion mentioned that he is for a fair peace and
> he is ready to talk to any israeli leader, let us all israeli.
> and arab encourage leaders like him to come forward for peace
> let us encourage them to sit and talk peace,and stop this
> bloodshed,because no body is going to win at the end except
> the arm dealer, and the sole looser is the people of isreal and
> the people of the arab world.
Uh-huh. Yep. Public statement last evening by close adviser of
Mr. Arafat on the radio (on _Israel radio!). I quote:
"...we are never going to give up our dream and plan for
a Palestinian State in ALL [emphasis mine] of Palestine..."
For the information of those who don't know: "All of Palestine"
is a code-phrase from the PLO Charter, q. v. ...
All_of_Palestine :== "Israel" + "Judea" + "Samaria" +
"Gaza" + "Jordan"
And they tell me that the "strategy of stages" is dead...
I would like you to do something for this conference, please:
would you please define for us what the phrase (literally
translated from Arabic) "the peace of Saladin" means? Thanks
very much.
don feinberg
|
944.10 | A "minor" correction | TAV02::SID | | Wed May 23 1990 13:10 | 20 |
| >944.8
> ... And could be that soldier is mentally sick...
He WASN'T a soldier. It's a very tiny inaccuracy, which annoys the
hell out of me. It's almost not worth correcting, and yet it certainly
presents a slightly different picture of what happenned.
I'm sure you are not the only one to present this inaccuracy, and I
wonder if there isn't an ulterior motive.
And as long as I'm in this note, let me say that:
1. I, too, express my sympathies to the families and wish the wounded a
speedy full recovery.
2. I am disgusted at the cynical way political use which was made out
of a tragedy. It's not like the attack on the bus in Egypt, either (you
are playing into their hands, JGILON). It is more like the countless
times in the U.S. a sicko has shot up a Burger King or a schoolyard.
Sid
|
944.11 | | FLYBY::GOLDMAN | Usually known as TAVENG::GOLDMAN | Thu May 24 1990 00:05 | 6 |
| >He WASN'T a soldier. It's a very tiny inaccuracy, which annoys the
>hell out of me.
What always bugs me is when they describe someone as an
EX-soldier. This description fits just about every citizen
over the age of 22.
|
944.12 | peace | WFOVX5::AWKAL | ALI AWKAL | Thu May 24 1990 05:25 | 23 |
| Hi,Don
1_ Iam not going into details about that person condition
what the news media described him an ex_soldier, that
where I got my information, what I really means that these
incident should be stopped from the arab and the israeli
2_ about Mr arafat adviser and the equation, I am not up to
date on their peace plan,or what they asking for peace, I
could not talk for him he is entitled to his opinion, what I
want every body to understand that peace is the only solution
in the middle east.
I appreciate if a noter could explain for both of us the arab
and the israeli peace plan if there is any
I read before in this note file a lengthy argument between arab
and israeli noters about the middle east , I really don't think
it get us any where , and I don't want to start that again,
3_ I don't know any thing about the peace of saladen, some other
noter could explain.
thanks Don and have a nice day
|
944.13 | They're all ex-soldiers over there | DECSIM::GROSS | The bug stops here | Thu May 24 1990 18:20 | 5 |
| From a country where there is virtually 100% conscription for both sexes, it
would appear that describing any adult individual as an ex-soldier is an
instance of media bias.
Dave
|
944.14 | bias... | TAV02::FEINBERG | Don Feinberg | Thu May 24 1990 18:57 | 11 |
| FWIW:
I think that it's a fine gesture by President Bush to
extend his condolences to the families of the victims.
What about, for example, the families of the victims
in the recent bus attack(s), for example?
Just a thought.
don feinberg
|
944.15 | Anybody know of a planned demonstration? What can one do?!
| TALLIS::GOYKHMAN | Nostalgia ain't what it used to be | Thu May 24 1990 20:46 | 12 |
| I think the USA is rapidly withdrawing its hand of friendship
from Israel, and we are seeing the beginning of a deep plunge. I would
expect a cut in aid to come as soon as this year, perhaps fuzzied up by
impossible conditions - sort of "withdraw from all of Jerusalem, or we'll
give you 10% less". Whatever, the Bush Administration will come up with
excuses - and is doing so today, as we speak. The bargain with Arafat to
support UN observers in the OT (not exactly your objective group) in return
for Arafat's non-applying for a visa - it's just another step. I strongly
suspect that this Administration is privately commited to dropping Israel
as an ally - wholly or in part...
DG
|
944.16 | I sadly have to agree | KYOA::SCHORR | | Fri May 25 1990 18:46 | 19 |
|
RE:-1
A few months ago I would have strongly disagreed with you, now I don't
know. The settlement in the Christian (or was it another quarter) has
far greater impact then meets the eye. Especially, when it was
announced that the Israeli government had financed the settlement.
Bush has had string support from the religious right in the US and has
gone out of his way to keep their support even when it wasn't
politically the best move. Just look at the abortion issue. The
settlement has shifted the religious right feelings toward Israel and
Bush will be able to lower the level of the US-Israel relationship
without antagonizing the right.
I don't think that the US will abandon Israel but I don't believe that
the support is there and it will take a lot to redevelop the strong
bonds as before.
WS
|
944.17 | faulty logic | MURFY::CHERSON | Dean Moriarty was here | Fri May 25 1990 22:58 | 8 |
| I wasn't going to enter this discussion, but I just want to say that
making the comparison of "your atrocity was as bad or worse than our
atrocity" is faulty logic to begin with. I've seen this used time and
time again. If your neighbour's house is dirtier than yours does that
excuse you from doing housework?
Shabbat Shalom,
David
|
944.18 | Extending the analogy just a teeny bit :-) | TALLIS::GOYKHMAN | Nostalgia ain't what it used to be | Fri May 25 1990 23:22 | 13 |
| If your neighbors house were dirtier than yours, you'd be less
receptive towards his harangues and public complaints about your house's
cleanliness. You'd expect an objective passerby to take your side in any
such argument between you and your "dirty house" neighbor, or at least to
stay neutral.
Should you grimy neighbor's cries attract a crowd of (sympathetic
to him) cleanliness zealots decrying your unsanitary child-rearing environment,
you'd wonder about their biases, general fairness of life, and whether such
cleanliness standards are worth bothering about. Should the crowd then bang
on your doors, demanding immediate inspection (all the while comforting your
slob the neighbor), you'd call the police - or reach for a shotgun...
DG
|
944.19 | Double Standard - Part II | TAV02::FEINBERG | Don Feinberg | Sun May 27 1990 10:43 | 124 |
| Only a souble standard dictates collective Jewish guilt for the
Rishon murders
I'm not shedding crocodile tears
Sarah Honig
Reproduced without permission: Jerusalem Post, 25 May 1990
LISTENING TO the mournful tones and tunes on Kol Yisrael in the wake
of the Rishon Lezion murder of Arab workers on Sunday, I have a very
heretical confession to make: I am not guilty! I feel no shame
whatever! I've never taken the life of anything larger than insect.
Sorry, but the crocodile tears refuse to flow down my cheeks. I
am not unlike millions of American who did not beat their personal
breats when a gunman recently mowed down diners in a hamburger joint
or when another fired his weapon in a schoolyard. If my memory does
not fail me, those incidents made no waves in the UN Security
Council. Neither did the Ras Burka massacre in Sinai and the
slaughter only a few months ago of Israeli tourists in Egypt.
They are all gone with the wind. Dead and forgotten - as with
the bus passengers overturned in a ravine between Tel Aviv and
Jerusalem, Ofra Moses, her unborn baby and her five-year-old son Tal,
Rahel Weiss and her three tots, or the two oldsters stabbed on a
Jerusalem bus-stop bench by a hero of the glorious intifada.
The stabbing of Ein Kerem restaurant owner Ya'acov Shalom, only
a few hours after the Rishon bloodshed, failed to so much as flick
our public eyelash. We were too busy mourning the Arab victims of a
madman to devote much time to the Jewish victim of a cold, calculated
execution, an act of deliberate hate.
The double standard is undeniable. Jewish blood is cheap, and
even we Jews have a far cooler reaction to our dead than the Arabs
have to theirs. It is almost natural for Jews to be slain; it does
not disturb the order of things. And so, our own leftist
self-appointed guardians of Jewish morality don't get overly outraged
when Jewish blood is spilled. At most, there is the obligatory
lip-service for public consumption about "regrettable violence in the
absence of political compromise."
IT'S ALL really our fault, anyway. If Jewish deaths spark any
passion in the Left it is because "the incident plays into the hands
of the extremist Right."
I do not blame the Arabs in the territories for rioting. The
don't love us. Their parents' generation rioted and murdered before
we had a state or occupied any territories. We are enemies. Any
pretext will do to fuel hate. Remember the mass hysteria of
pre-intifada tales of Arab schoolgirls poisoned by a mysterious
Jewish gas?
But our own left wing ought to know better. They know full well
that the Rishon killer was not sent by anyone, that, legally insane
or not, he acted as an individual and not as the agent of a group,
much less of the government or the nation. The talk about "an
atmosphere" conducive to the murder of Arabs is reckless demagogy
which in some eyes could justify the murder of Jews.
The fact is that we are the tamest people on earth. After two
and a half years of stone-throwing and murder, other nations,
including the one led by President George Bush, would have gone on a
vengeful rampage.
Besides, can anyone guarantee that, after the achievement of
idyllic, blissful peace (which the Left envisions after we rid
ourselves of all our territorial possessions) no individual gunmen
woul ever run wild? Perhaps the assumption is that, after peace
comes, only Jews will be mowed down by a hail of bullets.
Like the Left's reaction, that of Israeli Arabs within the Green
Line has given hypocrisy and cynicism a bad name. After the
discovery of the body of Ashdod's Avi Sasportas, now also
conveniently forgotten, some of his neighbors had the notion of going
out to the highway and stoning some Gazan cars. But unlike Arab
rage, their rage was understood by no one, and condemned roundly by
everyone.
Israel's Arabs railed agains collectively blaming all Arabs for
the acts of a few. Innocent citizens must not be punished for the
blood they did not spill. Very true.
SO WHY ARE all of us Jews now being blamed for what Ami Popper
did? If it is indecent to blame all Arabs collectively even for all
the dastardly crimes committed by the organization they admire and
claim speaks for them, why should I be blamed for a Mr. Popper who I
don't admire, who doesn't speak for me, and whom I didn't even know
existed until Sunday?
Why is it dangerous for me to drive through the Triangle,
Galilee, the Negev, or even certain sections of Lod, Haifa, and
Jaffa? These are all located in what the PLO lately purports to
recognize as part of the State of Israel, and not asterritories it
claims.
Imagine how Israel's Arabs and the Israeli Left would have
reacted had Jews rioted after a terrorist outrage, as the Arabs of
Nazareth did. If the Arabs are so sensitive to the loss of innocent
lives, why were they not mearly outraged when Israeli mothers and
infants were burned alive? Any why are fire bombs being hurled in
Haifa and Nazareth, within the Green Line? Why were two busses, full
of innocent passengers, attacked in Nazareth on Monday?
But the brutal truth we must face is that Israeli Arabs are
rioting not because they value human lives so highly, but because
they hate so intensely. We can be trendy, and turn a blind eye to
hate, but that won't make it go away.
As to our own moralists, let them not subscribe to the age-old
anti-Semitic axiom that Jews may not have deviants among them, as it
is natural to all other groups. Genteel anti-Semitism will tell us
that they put us on a pedestal and expect us to abide by higher moral
standards. Les sophisticated bigots simply say that way is okay for
others is forbidden for us. And so any transgression committed by
one Jew automatically stigmatizes all Jews and makes them liable for
the severest punishment.
By these double standards, I am culpable for the shooting in
Rishon. I feel as heavy a burden of blame and shame for it as I do
for the crucifixion of Jesus or the baking of matzot with the pure
blood of innocent Christian children.
|
944.20 | | ZILPHA::CHERSON | Dean Moriarty was here | Sun May 27 1990 20:49 | 18 |
| re: .19
You may be surprised that after reading my previous reply that I agree 100%
with Sarah Honig's arguments. Jewish life is valued cheaply, particularly
when taken in the context of the current political climate. I had always
argued that constant finger-pointing at Israeli policies in the territories
ignores decades of history of organized hate, hatred toward Israel and the
Jewish people. The world seems to have collective amnesia, as if pre-1967
history never existed. Innocent victims? Does anyone remember or know about
the Maale Akrabim Egged bus massacre in 1953? I could go one and on listing
atrocities, but it would seem futile, and that was my point in .17
Arafat has his usual gaul to talk about climates of hate, when for years
millions of Arab schoolchildren were taught the Protocols of Zion, and other
maliscious anti-Jewish "educational articles" as part and parcel of their
daily education.
--David
|
944.21 | | TOOK::ALEX | Alex @LKG 226-5350 | Tue May 29 1990 06:54 | 15 |
| I've long ago resigned to the fact that the double standard is and
will always be applied to Israel and Jews in general.
We've even had well meaning Jewish noters participate here in that
"righteous" pratice (but we want Israel to be "perfect", but our tax
dollars...). Some are ill informed, others are mis-informed, others
lack the guts to stand for unpopular views, others prefer to maintain a
Jewish uncle Tom profile.
And so double standard reigns. One can expect that the amount of
attention a country gets is in proportion to its "imperfection" --
after all, I would understand if nobody wanted to hear that "no one was
robbed in Lichtenstein today". But "Jews are news"...
Alex
|
944.22 | More and more terror | TAVIS::JUAN | | Thu May 31 1990 11:27 | 49 |
| Yesterday I took my new neighbours, a pair of russian-born Jews, and their
kids to the beach. My neighbours came to Israel some 3 months ago. We live
all together in Herzliya, a beautifull small town by the sea.
It was a beautiful day. By noon, we saw flying over our
heads some military helicopters. We saw a patrol boat in front of us.
We didn't know what was happening. I just told my guests "You see, the
I.D.F. is watching over us".
I didn't know then how true were my words. At the same time, two boats
of terrorists were being caught in front of the seashores of Israel. We
were sunbathing and, without knowing, we were in the battle-front. Neither
my neighbours nor I did anything to anybody in order to explain an attack
against us. Unless just being and sunbathing constitutes a provocation.
We were inocent, and even so, we were targets. That only because IDF was
alert, I am able today to type these lines.
This is terror. My provocation, my guilt, is just being. As was the guilt
of other victims of terror. Just before Pentecostes (Shavuoth in Hebrew),
another hit was done. At the Machne-Yehuda market in Jerusalem. "Only"
one Jew was killed. "Only" 9 were hurt. The whole world shook their heads,
said "what a shame" and kept on going.
No huge demonstrations. No international conferences. The U.N. was not
convened in Geneva. Yes, there are double standards. And yes, we, the Jews
in Israel we do look forward to peace. And we do condemn acts like the
crazy shooting in Rishon LeZion, as was my base note.
But then comes reality and slaps our faces. It is acceptable to attack
the inocent citizens of this country, and nobody really cares.
I expect to hear a strong condemnation of all terror _against_Jews_ from
all peoples and all countries that condemned the Rishon attack. I expect
the Arabs condemn it to show there are partners in our search for peace.
I cannot believe the P.L.O., that shelters both the Abu-El-Abass organiza-
tion, that was responsible for the boat attack, as well as the other
organizations that planted the bomb in Machane-Yehuda, can be considered
a partner for peace talks.
Perhaps it is the time that the Arabs that truly want peace, constitute
an alternative to the P.L.O., an alternative not soiled with innocent
blood, so peace can finally reach our shores. And perhaps we should
also build an alternative, and build a pragmatic peace. For the sake of
all men that live in this area.
Ken Yehy Ratson. Inshallah.
Juan-Carlos Kiel
|
944.23 | Remember that they think they are justified | MINAR::BISHOP | | Thu May 31 1990 18:04 | 20 |
| Juan, you're missing an important point: from the perspective of the
"terrorists" you are not innocent: you are a thief. You are not "just
being", you are active in the use of the stolen property. The
terrorists don't believe the same things you do, and they think that
what they are doing is both important and right--they are not people
who decided to go out and do a bad deed every day.
If someone moved into your house and started acting like it was his,
would you not think this person was an enemy? If that person then
sat in a chair, so they were "just being", would that suddenly make
them not an enemy?
Understanding your opponent is not the same thing as agreeing with him;
it is, however, useful in both defense and offense. While I agree with
you that killing sunbathers is bad, and empathize with your displeasure
at being threatened while relaxing, I think I sense a certain blindness
on your part to why this is happening, and an unwillingness to accept
that your opponents don't think they are criminals.
-John Bishop
|
944.24 | | TAV02::SID | | Sun Jun 03 1990 00:31 | 25 |
| Very even-handed, John. Very clinical and very liberal.
Spoken as someone who will not be personally affected no matter
what the outcome of the conflict is.
But tell me, if the "terrorists" had succeeded in killing hundreds
or thousands of people (and from the firepower they brought with
them as well as the maps of their destinations, those numbers were
certainly possible) would they still be "terrorists" in quotation
marks? How many civillians have to be killed before you will remove
the damn quotation marks?
The problem is that there are conflicts and contentions over real
estate all over the world. If you are American, then I don't have to
tell you what some Indians think of your claim to your land. If you
are British, you certainly are part of a long history of colonialism.
Just because someone views you as squatting illegally on their land,
does not give them license to engage in terror. More than that, as
a civilized human being you are obligated to pass judgment, to say
when the bounds of humanity have been crossed. And not to say, well
they think of you as a thief, so you have to "understand" them. No,
I don't have to understand the terrorists who are trying to kill me. I
just have to kill them first.
Sid
|
944.25 | The PLO Plan for Peace | TAV02::FEINBERG | Don Feinberg | Sun Jun 03 1990 10:23 | 29 |
| Two announcements on the radio this morning (Sunday, 2 June)
1) Abu el-Abass announced that the operation last week was only the first
of a series of violent, terrorist (_his_ words, not mine) operations he
has planned for Israel in the coming weeks.
2) Arafat refused again to condemn the action as a terrorist action
because, he says, that it was "a military action, without civilian
impact, and not a PLO action in the first place."
However, two things:
- I have an updated list which I received Friday, of the Executive
Committee members of the PLO, with their positions and "committee
assignments". I will try to publish this this week, even though
I'll be travelling to Europe day after tomorrow.
I assure you that Abu el-Abass is on that list. (The list
includes, by the way, all these folks' names and noms-de-guerre,
just so you can keep your players straight...)
- Investigations are showing that the assignment of the people in
one of the intercepted boats was specifically civilian: mass
murder in downtown Tel-Aviv.
Now we are reminded what Mr. Arafat means by "military targets".
don feinberg
|
944.26 | But what do *you* think? | ERICG::ERICG | Eric Goldstein | Mon Jun 04 1990 15:01 | 10 |
| re .23:
John, your "important point" is silly. It's obvious to anyone that the
terrorists believe that they have good reason to carry out such actions;
they would hardly go to the trouble of doing so, otherwise. Murderers,
rapists, and heroin dealers probably also do what they do for some reason.
What bothers some of us is that the "friends of Israel" in the "civilized
world" don't seem terribly bothered by terror attacks on civilians. This tends
to make us question whether those people are either our friends or civilized.
|
944.27 | You don't appear to be an objectivist, am I right? | TOOK::ALEX | Alex @LKG 226-5350 | Mon Jun 04 1990 16:43 | 6 |
| re .23
John, what is the objectivist view? Are you suggesting that in
this case we dismiss the issue as being inherently "gray"?
Alex
|
944.28 | You're mixing realms of discourse | MINAR::BISHOP | | Mon Jun 04 1990 23:11 | 29 |
| Look, if you want to talk pragmatic issues like control of territory
and military power, leave out the whines about "terrorism" and
"criminals"; if you want to talk about morality and justice, then
face up to the fact that there is no consensus about what the Good
is, and there seems to be no way to prove your opinion Right and your
opponent Wrong (or at least, no way acceptable to the whole world).
I'd respect Israel if it just said "Right, we can't afford this
police effort; every non-Jew must leave the West Bank and Gaza;
no compensation, no legality, just go: our right to do this is our
ability to do it". That would make sense militarily, and doesn't
require any justification of Israel's acts.
I'd respect Israel if it said "We believe our right to the land is
based on such-and-such legal principles, and we are willing to fight
a court case on those grounds before the UN and abide by it, so long
as we can also take certain other groups to court and have them abide
by decisions". I'd think they were crazy, but it's consistent, and
allows Israel to say that any attackers were criminals.
But what I see is reducible to "We hold this land by force, and we
are angry that anyone would attack us, and they are morally wrong".
This is inconsistent, unless you assume that Jews have a special moral
right to take the territory now called Israel by force (as I'm sure
some people believe).
Does this make sense to you, now?
-John Bishop
|
944.29 | You're mixing reality with fantasy. | ERICG::ERICG | Eric Goldstein | Tue Jun 05 1990 12:46 | 17 |
| .28> I'd respect Israel if it said "We believe our right to the land is
.28> based on such-and-such legal principles ...
The Israeli government has been saying exactly that for many years.
.28> ... we are willing to fight
.28> a court case on those grounds before the UN and abide by it ...
In 1975, the UN declared that Zionism (a.k.a. "our right to the land") is
racism. Are you seriously suggesting that they now are capable of impartially
judging this question? Get serious.
.28> Does this make sense to you, now?
No, but I'm sure that it would make plenty of sense to Israel's enemies.
|
944.30 | Go re-read note .28 | MINAR::BISHOP | | Tue Jun 05 1990 19:02 | 31 |
| re .29:
Go back and read the parts of my note you didn't quote. I fully
agree with you that the UN is not a source of justice. I already
am serious.
But (I say it again, maybe it'll sink in) There Is No Universal
Legal Standard Between Nations. At the bottom, the claim of the
US to a large chunk of North America is based on possession (i.e.
conquest), and so on for all nations. Right and Wrong don't enter
into it, except as legal fictions. At the level of governments,
Might makes Right.
So a "legal claim" is worthless, get it? There's no world court system
to fight it in, and no world policeman to enforce that court's decisions.
So acting the injured innocent about people trying to kill you while
you sun-bathe is dishonest: your innocence is not a fact, it's just
your opinion.
Israel is at war. Civilians die in wars, and no-one is surprised,
or rather, no-one should be surprised. It's naive (if you really
are surprised), or manipulative (if you aren't but are pretending
to be). Neither attitude deserves respect.
Now, I consider myself pro-Israel. I only mildly resent the billions
the US sends Israel (hey, it's only a few bucks per American, right?).
But I resent funding people who can't figure out what their real
situation is, and so won't deal with it successfully.
-John Bishop
|
944.31 | A dandelion break | TALLIS::GOYKHMAN | Nostalgia ain't what it used to be | Tue Jun 05 1990 19:34 | 56 |
| ISRAEL: MORE THAN A BATTLEGROUND
Albert Schlossberg
(Boston Globe, Jun 5th)
"Why go to Israel now," they asked, "Why risk the danger?"
"So out grandchildren will witness and be enriched by the brilliant
tapestry of Israel's people, reflecting off an ever-changing, panoramic
landscape. The nuances of three major religions, cast in time-machine-like
settings. People, places and history juxtaposed against the reality of a nation
and its people rushing into the 21st century".
It was early morning on the rampart atop the Mount of Olives,
overlooking the ancient Jewish cemetery. The glistening Old Dome of the Rock.
The somber, gray Al Aqsa Mosque. The meandering walls of the Old City of
Jerusalem, spread out in a knot in front of us. Below, in the cemetery, a small
knot of Jews prayed at a grave.
I turned at the sound of crunching gravel. Two men came toward us. One
Arab, the other a Hassidic Jew. They stopped close to us. I heard their quiet
conversation. Friends out for a stroll on the Mount of Olives, once a battleline
between their two peoples. Now they were sharing the beauty of the ancient city
of Jerusalem.
* * *
Later, an Israeli asked us an interesting question: "would you like
authentic Vietnamese food for lunch?" In Israel? He had to be joking! But he
wasn't!
We went in. The food was excellent. The restaurant owner's tale was
fascinating. In fluent English and Hebrew, interrupted by instructions to his
Vietnamese staff in their native language, we learned how he was in Jerusalem.
He had been a captain in the Vietnamese Air Force, attached to an
American helicopter squadron. He'd piloted a Huey gunship. He'd been through and
suffered the trauma of that conflict.
When the Americans decided to pull out of Vietnam, he chose to stay
behind to protect his family. Because of his American connection, he was a sure
target for prison at best, execution at worst. Somehow he managed to spirit his
family out of Saigon and ultimately sailed away with them as "boat people".
Refused refuge at every turn, he and his family were among the several
hundred Vietnamese to whom Israel offered a safe harbor.
He'd struggled, worked at menial tasks, saved his money and opened a
restaurant in Tiberias. Though successful, he chose to sell his interest to his
Israeli partner. He moved his family to Jerusalem, and began again. Again he
succeeded. Now a proud Israeli citizen, he told us that inancient Jerusalem he
had found the peace which he'd lost in Vietnam.
* * *
David Tzur sat in a small cubicle workshop, surrounded by walls
overflowing with prolific examples of his art. He was creating more art with
swift strokes of pen and ink.
As he moved his arm, I saw the tattooed numbers, an ever-present
reminder of his hell in a Nazi concentration camp. How, I wondered, could a
sensitive artist have survived the horror of the Holocaust? From what depth had
he drawn enough courage to retain his sanity and regain his jovial sense of
humour and quick wit?
He told us what he continually told himself in the horror of the
concentration camp: "Survive! Survive! Then pick up the pieces!" He did. And now
in Israel, he'd found peace. He'd regained his ability to see and reproduce the
beauty of life. His dream had come true. He'd vanquished his evil captors.
This is Israel today, much more than a battleground.
|
944.32 | war? | SUBWAY::RAYMAN | one of the usual suspects... | Wed Jun 06 1990 18:22 | 0 |
944.33 | war? | SUBWAY::RAYMAN | one of the usual suspects... | Wed Jun 06 1990 18:34 | 13 |
| (sorry about prev empty note - moderator kill it if u wish...)
re .30:
>> Israel is at war. Civilians die in wars, and no-one is surprised,
>> or rather, no-one should be surprised. It's naive (if you really
>> are surprised), or manipulative (if you aren't but are pretending
>> to be). Neither attitude deserves respect.
Civilians might die in wars, but civilized armies dont attack civilians relaxing
on a beach. If the PLO wants to fight a real war, why dont they stand up
and fight like men, instead of attacking defenseless people on beaches and
buses?
|
944.34 | You mean "Why don't they commit suicide?" | MINAR::BISHOP | | Wed Jun 06 1990 19:52 | 19 |
| The tatics you propose for the PLO have lead to defeat--why do
you expect them to contine a losing strategy? They don't want
to fight a "real" war, they want to win. Compare with the Viet
Nam war: every time the Viet Cong/NVA massed, the French or the
Americans could clobber them. So they fought in a different
manner, and won. Once the Americans had left, a conventional
invasion was possible, and succeeded quickly.
"Civilized" armies have attacked cilivians relaxing before, or
do you imagine that high-altitute bombing is precise enough to
hit a factory or rail line and miss the restaurant, beer hall,
swimming pool or dance hall near by?
If beaches are a new target, it's only because most recent bombing
has been done at night, to protect the aircraft. I suspect that the
long-distance shelling during daytime of Paris in WWI or of Lebanon
recently by US warships might well have hit some beaches and bathers
thereon.
-John Bishop
|
944.35 | | CLT::CLTMAX::dick | Schoeller - Failed Xperiment | Thu Jun 07 1990 00:52 | 7 |
| .34
There is a big difference between inadvertantly hitting civilians while
attacking military targets and seeking out civilian targets. The PLO
hits civilian targets because they are easy.
Gavriel
|
944.36 | Rewriting history now, are we? | ERICG::ERICG | Eric Goldstein | Thu Jun 07 1990 15:01 | 17 |
| .34> ... every time the Viet Cong/NVA massed, the French or the
.34> Americans could clobber them. So they fought in a different
.34> manner, and won.
The "different manner" consisted of unconventional tactics directed against
U.S. and South Vietnamese military forces. *All* sides carried out attacks on
civilians (Remember My Lai?), but that didn't have any noticeable effect on the
outcome of the war.
.34> I suspect that the long-distance shelling ... of Lebanon
.34> recently by US warships might well have hit some beaches and bathers
.34> thereon.
You may suspect all you like, but do you have any facts to back up your
suspicions? The news reports that I saw indicated that the only damage was
a few holes blown in hillsides.
|
944.37 | | TOOK::ALEX | Alex @LKG 226-5350 | Thu Jun 07 1990 18:03 | 33 |
| re: <<< Note 944.23 by MINAR::BISHOP >>>
> -< Remember that they think they are justified >-
> Juan, you're missing an important point: from the perspective of the
> "terrorists" you are not innocent: you are a thief.
Are you, John, suggesting that Juan modifies his definitions of ethics and
morality to compromise with those of the terrorists? And why do you quote
the term "terrorists"? I know _they_ think they are "freedom fighters"
What do _you_ think?
> . . . they think that what they are doing is both important and right--
> they are not people who decided to go out and do a bad deed every day.
Clearly their sense of morality does not agree with mine. Does this make it OK?
re .28
> if you want to talk about morality and justice, then
> face up to the fact that there is no consensus about what the Good
> is, and there seems to be no way to prove your opinion Right and your
> opponent Wrong (or at least, no way acceptable to the whole world).
World has consensus on just about nothing. You made a decision to address
this subject. Clearly you thought about it. What is YOUR view of what is
Right/Wrong in this case, based on YOUR definition/view of morality?
Are you _unwilling_ to make a moral judgement? Do you prefer to say that
in this case your morality provides you with no way of determining what
constitutes Good/Evil?
Here is a real case for you.
Alex
|
944.38 | | MINAR::BISHOP | | Thu Jun 07 1990 19:18 | 58 |
| I have my own judgements, Alex, don't worry.
First, I am suggesting that Juan modify his ethics to the point
that he either ceases to assume he is utterly innocent, or that he
clearly states the universal principles which make him innocent,
and then abide by them with respect to ownership of land and the
existence of Israel at all. The cause of this whole string of notes
is the irritation I felt at the "injured innocent" tone of Juan's
initial note about the attack on the beach. I quoted "terrorist"
because I did not want to implicitly assert that they were terrorists
at the start, since I was going to go on to point out that that
judgement is itself a matter of opinion.
Second, I'm suggesting that Israel isn't facing up to an existing
choice, but is postponing a choice in a situation which is not
getting any better (the choice is either integration/compromise, with
its attendant risks or expulsion/fortification, with its attendant
risks. Staying a society with a growing Arab lower class isn't
stable in the long run, despite its economic attractions at the
moment. I suggest Israel should decide to be poor and free, with
good defenses).
Third, I have yet to come across a convincing and consistent theory
of land tenure, so the ultimate ownership of Israel is somewhat in
doubt, but from an entertainment point of view, I prefer having a
different state there, rather than just another Jordan. I'm also
willing to accept right of conquest in the past as a fait accompli,
but would rather not have any more conquests in the future. That's
a pragmatic judgement, not a moral one, as it clearly means that some
past crimes will go un-punished.
Fourth, though I would love to live in a world in which war follows
rules, I don't see that being the case. If it were clear who the
aggressor was, then I would happily assign blame. I would defend my
tenure of my house against an attempt by Abenaki to recover the land,
I would also resist an attempt by Martians to take it--on which side
lies justice?
Killing largely un-involved people (like babies and tourists and
sunbathers) is the trademark of war: war is impersonal and unfair,
it marks the failure of methods which pay attention to individuals.
But if you think you have been injured, and nice methods of recovery
have failed, what do you do? At some point, a wise man gives up,
but failure to be wise is not a crime.
Fifth, I don't think that all moralities are equal. But so what?
I'm not asking you to promote the PLO to moral equality, only to
be realistic about your claim to innocence, and not to be blind about
your enemies.
I'm afraid this will unstatisfying to you, as I'm not calling either
Israel or the PLO a gang of criminals. I can only say that if I were
Israeli I'd think about emigration, but I might stay; if I were
Palestinian, I'd do my best to leave the area, and would try to avoid
fighting--too little potential gain for the effort. This is _not_ a
moral decision, but a pragmatic one.
-John Bishop
|
944.39 | With friends like these... :-) | TAV02::SID | | Sun Jun 10 1990 12:32 | 16 |
| > Note 944.30 MINAR::BISHOP
> Now, I consider myself pro-Israel...
Can you explain what you mean by this? That is, why are you pro-Israel (not
how does this manifest itself, though that is also an interesting question)?
It seems to me that it must be based somehow on the moral or logical
superiority of the Israeli argument in the conflict over the land. Or is
it because you prefer democracy to dictatorship? Or do you just like Jews?
> ... from an entertainment point of view, I prefer having a
> different state there, rather than just another Jordan.
Or is it simply because we are entertaining (I realize it was probably
written with tongue in cheek, but it is a little callous, don't you think?)
Sid
|
944.40 | Forked tongue | GAON::jem | Anacronym: an outdated acronym | Sun Jun 10 1990 18:37 | 13 |
|
Re: Bishop
> I quoted "terrorist"
> because I did not want to implicitly assert that they were terrorists
> at the start, since I was going to go on to point out that that
> judgement is itself a matter of opinion.
I'm you'd be just as even-handed and unbiased if your wife and kids
were dismembered by the descendants of the Nashua tribe - THIEF!!
Jem
|
944.41 | | MINAR::BISHOP | | Mon Jun 11 1990 01:10 | 12 |
| Why am I more pro-Israel than anti-Israel? Well, I have some
Jewish ancestry; I share some cultural background with Israel
I don't share with Islam; I admire any group who can re-establish
a dead language and maintain a state with so many enemies; I like
the connection with the past; and, truely, I do like variety.
As for .40: people who are hurt are forgivable if they are not
evenhanded and dispassionate about that hurt--but that does not
mean that they are morally right in their passion and anger.
Emotion is not thought.
-John Bishop
|
944.42 | question to ponder | PCOJCT::MILBERG | I was a DCC - 3 jobs ago! | Tue Jun 12 1990 16:47 | 11 |
| There was a line from a comic monologue about language by George Carlin
(American comedian) on HBO (cable television) last night that applies
well, IMHO, to the PLO-
If crime-fighters fight crime, and
fire-fighters fight fire
what do freedom-fighters fight?
-Barry-
|
944.43 | | TOOK::ALEX | Alex @LKG 226-5350 | Wed Jun 13 1990 07:16 | 26 |
| John:
You have indicated on several occasions that you do not know the answers
pertaining to the situation (e.g. definitions of innocence, land tenure,
terrorism, aggression, etc.). Are you suggesting that the 4M Israelis and the
2M Palestinian Arabs float on rafts until you research the answers? Or maybe
until the world reaches a consensus on what is "right"? Then perhaps all 5B of
us should do the same and float in an ocean for a while? For same uncertainties
easily apply to most countries.
You say that you do not know the answers, yet you are telling those who
think they know the answers that they need to modify their ethics. Since
you are not directly involved, you are not under the pressure to make
conclusions and make decisions. But those who are directly involved do have
to decide -- and live with the consequences. You are asking these people to
compromise their ethics despite your indecision. I consider this immoral,
even those I realize that you are searching for what is good and right.
Note that I am not specifying "sides" -- if you do not know whether the
now proverbial sunbathers or the freedom-fighters are guilty or innocent,
then you have no business telling them to question their own innocence.
At the same time, you've indicated that you do have your "own judgments".
What prevents you from pronouncing them in this case?
Alex
|
944.44 | Brass tacks | GAON::jem | Anacronym: an outdated acronym | Wed Jun 13 1990 16:54 | 19 |
|
Re: .41
> As for .40: people who are hurt are forgivable if they are not
> evenhanded and dispassionate about that hurt
Can I take this as an admission that you be be less than "evenhanded and
dispassionate" in the circumstance I mentioned?
>--but that does not
> mean that they are morally right in their passion and anger.
> Emotion is not thought.
Since you are so concerned about the "morally right" thing, perhaps you
should practice what you preach - you don't even have to wait for the
warriors to come after you - just voluntarily donate your house to the
Nashua tribe. Or do you dispute their moral right to it?
Jem
|
944.45 | Read my notes | MINAR::BISHOP | | Wed Jun 13 1990 18:41 | 54 |
| Somehow I get the impression that people aren't reading my notes,
save to understand that I'm not rabidly on their side, and then
go flaming away against some imaginary opponent. Read the notes
first, ok?
re .43:
No, I don't know the answers, but I have never suggested that people
go float on rafts. If you read what I wrote, you would have noticed
that I don't believe we can apply the concept "right" to nations.
So I believe that the Israeli claim to have the "right" to control the
land is a fiction no more respectable than the PLO's equally fictional
claim. The fact is Israli control, but the fact is all you get.
Should some genius manage to explain land tenure and rights between
nations, then I would be happy to see wars replaced by moral argument.
But I'm not holding my breath.
I suspect what angers you is not what I say, but that I don't attach any
moral quality to this: it's all in the realm of pragmatics. I say
"Israel might benefit by X", and you want "Israel is Right". I say
"the PLO finds killing civilians its most effective method to its
goal", and you want "The PLO is Wrong".
What I keep keep saying is not "modify your ethics because I have
the answers". It is "stop being so blind as to think everyone agrees
with you". Further, considering the likelihood that WW III could start
with a war in the Middle East, I think I am in a position to have to
live with some of the consequences of Israel's decisions. And as an
American tax-payer, I _know_ I'm funding Israel, and in a geopolitical
sense, Israel is an American proxy. So why shouldn't I have an
opinion?
re .44:
Yes, if I came home from work to find my house burnt down and
my wife and child dead, I would be angry and revengeful. It's true,
I'm human.
Now, as I have said before, the lack of true international law
means that nations interact in a world of force, where Might may well
not make Right, but Right does not exist. The right to my house is
a concept within the US and predecessor or successor States. It's
part of a game we call "the legal system". It's not a fact of reality,
it's a social convention, like the speed limit.
So I don't believe the Nashua Indians have a right to my house.
Worse yet, from your point of view, I don't believe that _I_ have
a right to my house. What I do believe is that I can win a lawsuit
in the US about ownership due to my in-the-game "right" to the house.
But my moral claim to the land is as fictional as that of the Nashua
Indians.
-John Bishop
|
944.46 | rights | ERICG::ERICG | Eric Goldstein | Wed Jun 13 1990 19:02 | 19 |
| .45> Somehow I get the impression that people aren't reading my notes ...
Possibly, but it may also be true that you are failing to explain your position
with sufficient clarity. I, for one, definitely have read your notes, but I am
not at all certain that I understand what you are trying to say.
.45> ... I don't believe we can apply the concept "right" to nations.
It's not clear to me that you believe that the concept is applicable to human
beings. Do you? If so, why can't we apply it to the human beings who are
members of the PLO?
.45> So I believe that the Israeli claim to have the "right" to control the
.45> land is a fiction no more respectable than the PLO's equally fictional
.45> claim.
Do those of us who live in Israel have any rights in this area?
|
944.47 | Is this clearer? | MINAR::BISHOP | | Wed Jun 13 1990 19:17 | 16 |
| re .46
"Rights" are as applicable as any social convention. Within the society
having the convention, they exist (like highway speed limits--they are
enforced). Outside, they have no power. If "Rights" were real, as the
the speed-of-light limit is real, reality would do the enforcing.
If you catch a member of the PLO, he or she is within your society, so
go ahead and apply your laws. If you don't catch them, what do your laws
or conventions matter?
You in Israel have just as much right to be there as I do to be in
Nashua. But if you lose to the PLO, then they will have just as much
right to be there as you did. Zero equals zero.
-John Bishop
|
944.48 | circular arguments | SUBWAY::RAYMAN | one of the usual suspects... | Wed Jun 13 1990 19:50 | 32 |
| re .47
> "Rights" are as applicable as any social convention. Within the society
> having the convention, they exist (like highway speed limits--they are
> enforced). Outside, they have no power. If "Rights" were real, as the
> the speed-of-light limit is real, reality would do the enforcing.
>
> If you catch a member of the PLO, he or she is within your society, so
> go ahead and apply your laws. If you don't catch them, what do your laws
> or conventions matter?
The PLO pretends to be a member 'state' of the world community. The community
of civilized nations has rules which govern conduct between them, even during
wartime.
I am not contending that nations abide by these rules out of some sense of moral
goodness; rather, the nations agree that these rules are to the mutual benefit
of all concerned. When nations, or would be nations like the PLO, pay lip
service to these rules, but them openly flout them, it is in the interest of
other nations to punish the offenders.
If the nations of the world dont stand up to condemn AND PUNISH terrorists and
the nations that support them, the terrorists will become bolder and eventually
will cross the line the will start a real war, perhaps even you're dreaded World
War III.
This, by the way, could just as easily apply to coutries like Iraq, which uses
mustard gas against not only its enemies during war (prohibited by the Geneva
Conventions after WWI) but even its own civilians, and Lybia, which arranged
the Shavuot Beach attack. But, alas, our political 'leaders' dont have the guts
to risk thier standing in popularity polls to confront these serious problems
(easy problems like Panama are another story).
|
944.49 | What circularity? | MINAR::BISHOP | | Wed Jun 13 1990 21:23 | 9 |
| re .48
As far as I can tell you agree with me. Your pragmatic point that
it is in most nations' interest to weaken Iraq and the PLO is also
one I agree with.
So where's the circularity?
-John Bishop
|
944.50 | The Bishop of objectivity | GAON::jem | Anacronym: an outdated acronym | Wed Jun 13 1990 22:43 | 83 |
|
Re: .45
> I say
> "the PLO finds killing civilians its most effective method to its
> goal", and you want "The PLO is Wrong".
Hmmm. Is this the same guy who was accusing others of not having read
his eloquent prose? Perhaps you can set an example for the rest of us
by reading the work of your own keyboard in .23:
>> from the perspective of the
>> "terrorists" you are not innocent: you are a thief. You are not "just
>> being", you are active in the use of the stolen property. The
>> terrorists don't believe the same things you do, and they think that
>> what they are doing is both important and right
One who questions whether those who butcher civilians should or should
not be branded "terrorists", or worse still, seeks to rationalize those
actions is no longer objective. Whether he likes it or not, he has taken
a stand.
Is there another side to the story. Certainly - just as there was a rational
perspective to the Nazi position in WWII, or its latter day incarnation, NOI
(discussed in detail in PEAR::SOAPBOX note 772). This may come as a shock to
you, but I am fairly uninterested in the "rationale" of the terrorists. I know
that if they had their way, they would do away with everything I hold dear -
I need know no more than that I must take every measure in my power to thwart
their goals.
> Further, considering the likelihood that WW III could start
> with a war in the Middle East,
While we're considering, perhaps *you* could consider that WWII was in large
measure a war against the Jews, and it was "objective observers", who would
take no moral stand who effectively allowed the Holocaust to proceed. Can
we count on a few tears from you when (C"V) the PLO acheives its ultimate
goal and the land is finally Judenrein?
> So why shouldn't I have an
> opinion?
So then drop this veneer of objectivity.
> Yes, if I came home from work to find my house burnt down and
> my wife and child dead, I would be angry and revengeful.
Ah, but this would of course be mitigated by your realization that the
burning and killing was fully justified in the burners' and killers'
eyes. If you were to complain to the police of the attack, you would
fully understand their rationale in explaining that the Indians have
not been proven philosophically to be terrorists, and the police can
take no stand on such action until this theory is proven.
> Worse yet, from your point of view, I don't believe that _I_ have
> a right to my house.
Put your money where your mouth is.
> What I do believe is that I can win a lawsuit
> in the US about ownership due to my in-the-game "right" to the house.
Just as a resident of the State of Israel can win his case.
> But my moral claim to the land is as fictional as that of the Nashua
> Indians.
Fictional? You seem to have suddenly incorporated judgmental terms into
your vocabulary.
Re: .47
> You in Israel have just as much right to be there as I do to be in
> Nashua.
Guess what? I'm not very interested in explaining the Jewish claim to
Israel to you, any more than I would waste my breath explaining the
"Law of Return" to one who has never heard of the St. Louis.
BTW, are you related to that other Bishop, the lighthouse of objectivity
(as long as it's only Jewish blood being spilled) --- Tutu?
Jem
|
944.51 | I think you guys are overreacting now... | TALLIS::GOYKHMAN | Nostalgia ain't what it used to be | Wed Jun 13 1990 23:22 | 6 |
| C'mon, John is arguing a fairly reaasonable point of view - and not as
an "unfriendly" either. I happen to disagree with this moral relativism coupled
with extreme realpolitic of his stance, but it more of an irrelevant point of
view than one deserving such blasts.
DG
|
944.52 | What is he *really* after? | GAON::jem | Anacronym: an outdated acronym | Thu Jun 14 1990 00:10 | 15 |
|
Re: .51
> C'mon, John is arguing a fairly reaasonable point of view
When he can react "reasonably" to his wife and kids being blown to bits,
he can expect to receive fewer verbal "blasts" from others of whom he
demands equal dispassion.
>- and not as
>an "unfriendly" either.
As someone else commented, with such friends...
Jem
|
944.53 | I still say you are overreacting. | TALLIS::GOYKHMAN | Nostalgia ain't what it used to be | Thu Jun 14 1990 00:38 | 3 |
| Jem, one takes what friends are there, life is too hard as it is...
DG
|
944.54 | Understanding is not agreement | MINAR::BISHOP | | Thu Jun 14 1990 01:31 | 69 |
| re .50, many detailed rebuttals.
I don't see the contradiction in what I say. In the first quote,
I'm explaining my opinion; in the second, I'm explaining what I
think the PLO's opinion is.
As for objectivity, I _have_ taken a stand: I think that "morality"
is a social convention. I have desires: I desire peace and quiet,
but I don't fool myself that I have any "right" to peace other than
the one I create by being willing to fight for it. Further, I have
said several times that I prefer a world with Israel to one without.
How many more times must I say that before you'll hear me? I don't
claim to be "objective", as though I were from Mars; I claim only to be
far less involved emotionally, and to see objectivity as a tool for
better thinking. If I think better, I can better achieve my goals.
The same is true for you.
Jem, you say, "I need know no more than that I must take every measure
in my power to thwart their [PLO's] goals". That's not entirely
true: don't you also have to know what measures to take, and something
about the physical layout of the battlefields, and the likely actions
of the PLO's leadership, and thus their beliefs about what is possible
and what is not, and their knowledge of their supporters' beliefs,
and on and on? "Know your enemy" does _not_ mean "Love your enemy",
nor "Trust your enemy", nor "Accept your enemy's axioms". But if you
know your enemy, you will do a better job fighting him.
As for the house: what would I do to "put my money where my mouth is"?
I've already said that I don't believe _anyone_ has a "right", in your
terms, to the house. I want it, I have it, I (at the moment) can keep
it, so I will keep it. _Real_politik_, not ethics.
Now, in the matter of coming home to a pile of ashes and getting
an argument about ethics from the police: if I complained to the
local police and got that reaction, I'd be very surprised--they are,
after all, fellow players of the "US" game, and on my team. They
help me keep my house, and I help them keep theirs.
If, on the other hand, the PLO or the Israelis were to react as you
have outlined, I wouldn't feel cheated or threatened, as I sense you
feel cheated or threatened by my opinion (do you?). They aren't in my
game, they are part of the non-legal world, the real world outside
the game. Internationally, there are no police to complain to
(see earlier notes), so you only get the outsiders' response.
I say fictional because I mean just that: a fiction. Of course it's
my judgement, my opinion. Prove to me that a claim to land is based
on physics or chemistry or biology and I'll change my mind. Point
to a book or to historical records, and I'll say "so what?"--there's
no force to that kind of claim than that exercised by Israeli military.
I've heard of the St. Louis, and the Law of Return, and the claim based
on the covenant, etc, etc. The first is a tragedy but not a proof of
any land claim, the latter two are at their base only widely shared
opinions. But I do know the history and the claim.
Now, it's true that Israel will be stronger militarily in the short run
if its people all believe that they are Right-with-a-capital-"R", and
that that belief is thus a useful asset and worth defending from people
who argue the way I do. It's not only motivating, it's comforting,
and I understand why you are reacting with such heat. But
understanding is not agreement.
Further, if you'd rather have a comforting belief than the truth,
don't expect other people to respect your thinking. If you think that
making the obvious pun on my name does anything other than make you look
silly, you are hopeless.
-John Bishop
|
944.55 | | PACKER::JULIUS | | Thu Jun 14 1990 17:00 | 12 |
| Re. .53 by TALLIS::GOYKHMAN
Yes DG so few friends, so many enemies and they love to rear
their hateful heads for what ...congratulations, you deserve
praise for your hurtful, malicious, destructive actions.
L'chaim l'Eretz Ysroel v'Jehudim who deserve praise for
intelligence and strength to endure against such overpowering
adversity.
Boker tov chaverim v'Shalom,
Bernice
|
944.56 | | GAON::jem | Anacronym: an outdated acronym | Thu Jun 14 1990 21:03 | 78 |
|
Re: .54
> I claim only to be
> far less involved emotionally, and to see objectivity as a tool for
> better thinking.
Then why do you take it upon yourself to lecture to those who are not
only emotionally, but practically involved, through their own blood
and sweat? Get a pair of used Israeli shoes before you judge.
> "Know your enemy" does _not_ mean "Love your enemy",
> nor "Trust your enemy", nor "Accept your enemy's axioms". But if you
> know your enemy, you will do a better job fighting him.
"Knowing your enemy" stands in direct conflict with such musty smokescreens
as "one man's terrorist is another man's freedom-fighter." The prerequisite
to knowledge of one's enemy is the ability to call a spade a spade, and
not to tap-dance around reality.
> As for the house: what would I do to "put my money where my mouth is"?
> I've already said that I don't believe _anyone_ has a "right", in your
> terms, to the house. I want it, I have it, I (at the moment) can keep
> it, so I will keep it.
If you don't beieve you have a right to it, you'd be hard-pressed to explain
to your children why they should sacrifice their lives defending it. Lucky
for you, the threat on your house is purely hypothetical - others' are all
too real to waste time philosophizing about their enemies' relative rightness
or wrongness... from the comfort of their La-Z-boys.
> If, on the other hand, the PLO or the Israelis were to react as you
> have outlined, I wouldn't feel cheated or threatened, as I sense you
> feel cheated or threatened by my opinion (do you?).
World opinion is a very real part of your beloved realpolitik. Slanderous
lies that dilute the real issues in the eyes of the population are perhaps
a greater threat than the murderous acts themselves. To wit: the deniers
of the Holocaust do worse than add insult to injury; if successful they
will make it impossible for others to learn from history, thus setting the
stage for its repetition (which I believe is their ultimate goal). Is
revisionism of current history threatening? Damn straight.
> I've heard of the St. Louis, and the Law of Return, and the claim based
> on the covenant, etc, etc. The first is a tragedy but not a proof of
> any land claim
Hitler deliberately sent the St. Louis afloat to prove this point: noone
could care less about the Jews. And prove it he did... with flying colors.
This is not the basis for the land claim, it is an example of why there
exists a "Law of Return". There is one place from which no Jew will ever
be turned away again... as long as it is under Jewish control. Is this
based on paranoia? Perhaps. But noone who has not experienced millenia
of persecution has a right to make that judgement. As to the land claim
itself, you've indicated that historical and world legal pronouncements
themselves are irrelevant to your thinking, so as I've said, I see no
purpose or benefit in arguing the point with one who chooses ignorance.
> and
> that that belief is thus a useful asset and worth defending from people
> who argue the way I do. It's not only motivating, it's comforting,
> and I understand why you are reacting with such heat.
You're too kind. Actually, Dmitry may not be that far from the mark, and
I suspect that you may just be getting some jollies trying to generate
just such heat. But your arguments have been, and continue to be used
to dangerous ends, by those with less congenial goals than yourself, and
cannot go unchallenged.
> If you think that
> making the obvious pun on my name does anything other than make you look
> silly, you are hopeless.
Bad pun aside, you have parroted the same kind of drivel Tutu and others
of his ilk spew forth daily. Don't expect these things to be taken lightly by
those directly affected on a daily basis.
Jem
|
944.57 | | PACKER::JULIUS | | Thu Jun 14 1990 22:03 | 6 |
| Re. .56 by GAON::jem
brilliant, just like your name
with gratitude
Bernice
|
944.58 | Is my argument really a danger to your life? | MINAR::BISHOP | | Thu Jun 14 1990 22:29 | 120 |
| Re: .56
I'm getting tired of dealing politely with tirades, and will try
to deal with that at the end of this note (it's the title question,
so on-lookers may skip this).
Responses to questions (boring to most, I fear) first:
> Then why do you take it upon yourself to lecture to those who are not
> only emotionally, but practically involved, through their own blood
> and sweat? Get a pair of used Israeli shoes before you judge.
You may not believe this, but because I think I am involved,
and because I want Israel to survive. Further, if a friend who
is less invovlved emotionally can't comment, who can? When I am
emotionally involved, it's useful to have an outsider's opinion.
I think my comments are both pertinent and justified. You clearly
disagree. Shall we stop at that?
> "Knowing your enemy" stands in direct conflict with such musty
> smokescreens as "one man's terrorist is another man's freedom-fighter."
> The prerequisite to knowledge of one's enemy is the ability to call
> a spade a spade, and not to tap-dance around reality.
I am not "tap-dancing around reality". I do not say that killing
is not killing, and that bombs are not bombs. I do not say that
spades are not spades. Show me where I do, please.
I _am_ failing to agree with you that you are "Right" and your enemy
"Wrong". Please note, however, that I am also failing to say the
opposite!
> If you don't beieve you have a right to it, you'd be hard-pressed to
> explain to your children why they should sacrifice their lives defending
> it.
On the contrary--I think all I'd have to say is "This is your house,
too". What else would they need? As to defending any thing or place
to the death, well, that depends on how much other people's having that
thing or place matters to you. I would defend my child's life with my
own, but I would not defend his access to my TV or my house at the cost
of my life.
I understand that you believe that only with a Jewish Israel will the
Jews survive. I disagree, but that's a side issue; even if I agreed,
this would not mean that I believed the Jews had a right to Israel.
It would just means they wanted it very much.
> ...from the comfort of their La-Z-boys.
Don't have one. Sorry.
> World opinion is a very real part of your beloved realpolitik.
Yeah? Like the world opinion that the Chinese were wrong to crush
the students in Tienamin Square? Like the world opinion that Pol
Pot was a bad guy? Like the world opinion that the Soviets were
wrong to crush the Prague Spring in 1968? I believe world opinion
is worth what it inspires people to do, but nothing more. As far
as I can tell, the best world opinion has done is to inspire people
to boycott Nestle and save the whales, and nothing more. The cash
value of world opinion is close to zero.
Saving (or destroying) Israel is way beyond the capabilites of world
opinion, so why worry about it?
> To wit: the deniers of the Holocaust do worse than add insult to
> injury...
I have never denied the Holocaust. Please do not insult me.
> As to the land claim itself, you've indicated that historical and
> world legal pronouncements themselves are irrelevant to your thinking,
> so as I've said, I see no purpose or benefit in arguing the point
> with one who chooses ignorance.
I don't choose to be ignorant, I just say they don't matter. Quite
different things. Show me they matter, if you disagree.
> I suspect that you may just be getting some jollies trying to generate
> just such heat.
No, I'm not finding this all that fun. I try to educate someone who
was not thinking straight (and doing so partly on my tax money) and
I got yelled at. Now I'm defending myself against mis-statements of
my position from an angry man, in front of an audience which is probably
friendly to him. I knew this was possible, and made the initial comment
anyway, but I can't say it's fun. If this is how Israelis treat their
friends, it's no wonder they have so many enemies!
> But your arguments have been, and continue to be used
> to dangerous ends, by those with less congenial goals than yourself,
> and cannot go unchallenged.
So stop using _ad_hominem_ attacks on me and challange the argument!
Just prove any one of these points, please:
1. There is a real standard of Right and Wrong.
1a. It is Wrong to injure civilians of the enemy during a war.
2. The State of Israel has the right to the land.
3. There is a real standard of Justice.
> Bad pun aside, you have parroted the same kind of drivel Tutu and others
> of his ilk spew forth daily. Don't expect these things to be taken
> lightly by those directly affected on a daily basis.
I am not saying what Bishop Tutu says unless I very much misunderstand
what Bishop Tutu says. He believes in rights and wrongs, in good and
evil, in sin and redemption. I don't. He supports the PLO, I don't. He
is a socialist, I am not.
Now the bottom line here: I have been polite, and you have not.
I have been calm, and you have not. Do you really believe that
I and my arguments pose a real threat to your life? Is my failure
to say Israel is Good and Beautiful and Right really a danger to
Israel? Really?
-John Bishop
|
944.59 | Does knowing the enemy really help? | IOSG::LEVY | QA Bloodhound | Fri Jun 15 1990 01:07 | 38 |
| John,
> So stop using _ad_hominem_ attacks on me and challange the argument!
> Just prove any one of these points, please:
> 1. There is a real standard of Right and Wrong.
> 1a. It is Wrong to injure civilians of the enemy during a war.
As Jews we learn from the bible that it is Wrong to attack civilians
and the weak when fighting a war. We are told that were the tactics of
Amalek.
Jews cannot claim that this as universal value unless all other nations
choose to read the same story and draw the same lessons. Of course, other
nations have their own standards derived from their own folklore. If
these are not in contradiction with the standards that Jews hold
then it is possible that a 'real standard' exists.
To your question, "Prove that it is Wrong to injure civilians of the
enemy during a war." The proof is that my enemy would call it wrong
were it done to him! I am sure that he could find a very good
justification according to the Koran (or his relevant belief system)
were he put in this situation.
Regarding your point that it is good to know your enemy, I have the
following observation:
On many occasions, both in Israel and outside, terrorist acts have been
committed. These have been deliberate, and planned against civilians.
The only common connection between the civilians is that they are all
Jews.
From this I understand something that if very frightning about
my enemy.
What sort of relationship should I seek with him?
Malcolm
|
944.60 | | TOOK::ALEX | Alex A.-S. @LKG 226-5350 | Fri Jun 15 1990 09:33 | 33 |
| Re: Note 944.58 MINAR::BISHOP Condemnation of terror
> I _am_ failing to agree with you that you are "Right" and your enemy
> "Wrong". Please note, however, that I am also failing to say the
> opposite!
". . . *One must never fail to pronounce a moral judgement.*
Nothing can corrupt and disintegrate a culture or a man's character as
thoroughly as does the precept of *moral agnosticism*, the idea that one must
never pass moral judgement on others, that one must be morally tolerant of
anything, that the good consists of never distinguishing good from evil.
It is obvious who profits and who loses by such a precept. It is not justice or
equal treatment that you grant to men when you abstain equally from praising
men's virtues and from condemning men's vices. When your impartial attitude
declares, in effect, that neither the good nor the evil may expect anything
from you -- whom do you betray and whom do you encourage? "
[I will eventually post the name of the author. In the mean time, those
unfamiliar with the quote will not be burdened with a possibility of
pre-judging the above statement.]
Alex
[unrelated] PS: John, I disagree that this discussion contains ad hominem
attacks on you. Except for Jem's "Bishop" pun, everybody who replied to at
length (including Jem) did so by reasoning their case. I disagree that heat
prevailed over light in such replies. You chose to to characterize these as
"tirades", "flaming" and "impolite". Fine. You also complained that people
did not carefully read what you wrote. OK. On the other hand, you've
defended yourself from straw tigers of your own construction on a couple of
occasions (I can back it up), so you must have read some of the replies
without sufficient care as well.
|
944.61 | | VLNVAX::ALECLAIRE | | Fri Jun 15 1990 16:52 | 5 |
| I'm wondering anout the idea that you can't attack civilians and weak
members of an attacking society. How do you know who is civilian or
soldier among the Palestinians? Aren't civilians becoming involved in
rock throwing battles? If some civilian came around and threw a rock in
my house and killed someone in my family, I'd want him dead.
|
944.62 | | GAON::jem | Anacronym: an outdated acronym | Fri Jun 15 1990 18:47 | 123 |
|
Re: .57
Thank you, Bernice for the kind words, but "Gaon" is my node name,
not mine. So impressed was I with my DS3100 when I received it,
that I conferred this flattering name upon it. Alas, its owner
would probably better merit a name such as "Tembel".
Re: .58
> I'm getting tired of dealing politely with tirades, and will try
> to deal with that at the end of this note (it's the title question,
> so on-lookers may skip this).
I'm sorry you feel so threatened when your thoughtless and baseless
arguments are challenged. It is not my intention to attack you personally.
> You may not believe this, but because I think I am involved,
> and because I want Israel to survive.
I cannot see how teaching someone to accept the death of his sun-bathing
friends and relatives as "justified" promotes the survival of Israel.
Please demonstrate said support.
> Shall we stop at that?
If you'd like to stop at that, please do. But understand that your comments
have been extremely offensive to those who know the facts, not to mention
those who have suffered first hand.
> I am not "tap-dancing around reality". I do not say that killing
> is not killing, and that bombs are not bombs. I do not say that
> spades are not spades. Show me where I do, please.
Again, I suggest you re-read your own replies. This exchange began when
you quoted "terrorists", implying that the term is questionably applied
to Palestinians.
>> ...from the comfort of their La-Z-boys.
> Don't have one. Sorry.
Please get one, forthwith, if you'd like to fit the stereotype. :)
> The cash
> value of world opinion is close to zero.
Those cases you mentioned are barbaric nations which have have effectively
removed themselves from the world community, thus not being subject to
world opinion. The players in this case, the PLO and Israel, go to great
lengths to convince people such as yourself of the justification of their
goals, because they are at the mercy of such opinion.
> I have never denied the Holocaust. Please do not insult me.
I never said you did. Merely that the opinions you do express consist
of the same logic, and lead to similar *kinds* of conclusions.
> I try to educate someone who
> was not thinking straight (and doing so partly on my tax money) and
> I got yelled at.
Until this point you've been somewhat conciliatory, but this type of statement,
and those that follow, belie (in my mind) your purported pro-Israel posture.
Please continue...
> If this is how Israelis treat their
> friends, it's no wonder they have so many enemies!
I wonder how strong that "friendship" must have been if it's suddenly
turned to enmity because of the rantings of an "angry man".
> Just prove any one of these points, please:
>
> 1. There is a real standard of Right and Wrong.
> 1a. It is Wrong to injure civilians of the enemy during a war.
>
> 2. The State of Israel has the right to the land.
>
> 3. There is a real standard of Justice.
This is a game. I say this because of your reponse to my statement:
>> I see no purpose or benefit in arguing the point
>> with one who chooses ignorance.
> I don't choose to be ignorant, I just say they don't matter.
So what exactly are you looking for? The 1937 Report of the Palestine
Royal Commission, on the almost non-existent Arab population of the
Maritime Plain in 1913? Or its documentation of the huge Arab immigration
between the two World Wars, drawn by Jewish economic development?
Would you be impressed by a memorandum sent by the Arab National
Committe in Haifa to the Arab League governments in 1948, detailing
how the local Arabs refused to sign a truce with the Jewish population,
and asking instead that their transfer (no, that word was not invented
by Kahane) be facilitated by the by the member nations? Perhaps you'd
be interested in the conference of the Mandate for Palestine upon
Great Britain, in 1922, which expressly stipulated that "The administration
of Palestine...shall encourage, in cooperation with the Jewish agency...
close settlement by Jews on the land, including State lands and waste lands
not acquired for public purposes." Would you be convinced by the _Survey_
of_Palestine_, commissioned by the British Mandate in 1946, detailing the
miniscule percentage of land owned by Arab farmers at that time? Would
perchance the JNF records of property sales from Arabs to Jews (*at premium
prices*, mind you) be of some help? Or are you primarily interested in
the U.N. proceedings of 1947?
I suspect that you could care less about any of this, which is why I've
avoided needlessly punishing my fingers and keyboard until now. Neither
does it interest too many Arabs, who espouse the same "terroristic
relativism" as you, without claiming to be pro-Israel.
> Now the bottom line here: I have been polite, and you have not.
> I have been calm, and you have not. Do you really believe that
> I and my arguments pose a real threat to your life? Is my failure
> to say Israel is Good and Beautiful and Right really a danger to
> Israel? Really?
Please re-read the story of the St. Louis. "Impartiality" didn't help
them much.
Jem
|
944.63 | a jem by any other name ... | PACKER::JULIUS | | Fri Jun 15 1990 21:44 | 6 |
| Re. .57
Taking poetic license, isn't a jem (gem) brilliant?
L'hitraot,
B
|
944.64 | More and more on less and less | MINAR::BISHOP | | Mon Jun 18 1990 22:36 | 197 |
| Overview:
I'd like to live in a world where moral argument makes sense, where
one could say that one nation had the right to independance, and
another to a certain territory; where one could say that murder and torture
were wrong; where "good" and "evil" were more than opinions, where
the implicit value-judgment in "terrorist" or "freedom-fighter" was
a meaningful reference to reality rather than a quick statement of
the speaker's emotional preference or political alliance.
I would like the world to share a consistent philosophy which lead to
judgments of Right and Wrong. I would like to be able to say "killing
civilians is Wrong", and have universal agreement. I would like to have
peace on Earth, etc. etc.
This desire has lead me to study philosophy and ethics, but I have so
far not found convincing reasons to believe that I live in such a world.
I just don't see a way from what I know is true to what I desire. Until
I do, I won't assume that what I want to be true must be true.
I have also studied history. I know that human action often is impelled
and shaped by human beliefs, whether or not those beliefs are true, and
thus a false belief can have real consequences. A good non-controversial
example is the old belief that tomatoes were poisonous: as a result of that
belief, people would not eat tomatoes. But note that if a person did eat
a tomato unawares, the belief that it was poisonous would not kill; while
if a person believed he or she had eaten a tomato, he or she might well
get sick (even if no tomato had been eaten,after all).
One of the things I find attractive about Judaism is the Law itself,
as a clear example of the careful working out of "how to live" from
a set of axioms. I don't accept the axioms, but I respect the effort.
I am, by now, somewhat tired of this back-and-forth. I'll answer the
last few notes, but I don't promise to continue to reply and re-reply.
I think I've made my postion clear to most readers, if not to those
who are most upset.
Responses:
re .59, "What sort of relationship should I seek with [ my enemy ]?"
A very good question, and purely pragmatic. I would answer, seek to
prevent the combination of your enemies, as separated they are weaker;
cultivate alliances with neutral nations; stomp'em when they are down;
make separate peaces, etc. I could be wrong here, and don't claim
to be a geo-political genius.
Israel has done a very good job of this so far, though I would have
advised the expulsion of Arabs from the new territories gathered by
each victorious war to prevent the long-term demographic problem.
re .60, quote.
I'm almost sure the quote is from Ayn Rand. I'm not sure what
you gain with this quote if that's the case (or if it's not):
First, I'm not an Objectivist, though I have read her works.
While I am happy to debate philosophical issues in the appropriate
forum (not here, please!), she is not an absolute moral authority
for me.
Second, I don't believe the statement "one must never fail to
pronouce a judgement" is true. Consider the matter of the shape
of clouds--why should I have to make a moral judgement on each
shape? This example could be multiplied.
Third, I don't believe the statement is proven by the argument given:
Moral agnosticism is always failing to judge; if one sometimes fails
and sometimes does not fail, then one is not a moral agnostic.
Alex, you keep asking for my judgements, and I keep giving them to
you, but you don't notice. Note .38 has a lot of judgments, for example.
Re "unrelated" topics of .60:
I have been called a thief in this set of notes, told that I "parrot
drivel" and write "slanderous lies", had it hinted that I deny the
existence of the Holocaust, and more. If these are not personal attacks,
what is? I think your restriction to "long" notes specious: a short
insult is still an insult.
I can understand why any one author may feel my response to be
overstated: more than one person is responding to me, so while I
receive the total of the anger, any one author is only delivering
a fraction.
I call some of the responses "tirades" because they read like
tirades: repetition of points which don't address the issue, emotional
language, and what (to me) is a clear desire to shut me up coupled
with an apparent lack of interest in having a calm discussion.
I'll agree that "flame" is overstating the case, as there are also
notes with some concentration on the arguments--it's not pure fury,
as a true flame would be.
As for "straw tiger/man" arguments: If I have mis-read anyone's line
of thought, please educate me. I am not perfect, and have made
mistakes. Since I suspect the other readers of Bagels would rather
not have notes from other conference re-posted and re-digested here,
why don't you either send me your list of my "straw man" attacks, or
or re-open any discussion you felt I used a "straw man" in?
re .62, various:
> I'm sorry you feel so threatened when your thoughtless and baseless
> arguments are challenged. It is not my intention to attack you personally.
Given the amount of discussion, I believe I am cleared of the
"thoughtless" charge. I don't believe my argument is baseless,
either.
> I cannot see how teaching someone to accept the death of his sun-bathing
> friends and relatives as "justified" promotes the survival of Israel.
> Please demonstrate said support.
I never asked anyone to consider the death justified (so don't quote me
as saying that!). I told someone that his enemies considered the deaths
justified. I have never recommended that Israel "accept" any attack.
It seems to me you hear "Israel is not RIGHT" and translate it immediately
into "Israel is WRONG". That translation is in your head, not in my
words. Since I'm not supporting what you thought, I don't have to
demonstrate anything.
What I've said about the usefulness of understanding the thought processes
of one's enemy is still true. That statement does not need support from
me--it is validated by the existence of departments of military
intelligence.
> If you'd like to stop at that, please do. But understand that your
> comments have been extremely offensive to those who know the facts,
> not to mention those who have suffered first hand.
I do not blindly wish to cause offense, and do feel for those who have
suffered.
I believe I know the facts. What we disagree about is whether
"killing civilians is bad" is a fact or not--I say "no", you say "yes".
The burden of proof is not on me.
> Again, I suggest you re-read your own replies. This exchange began when
> you quoted "terrorists", implying that the term is questionably applied
> to Palestinians.
I explained why I quoted it: "terrorist" has an implicit "Bad" in it,
and I went on to point out that that connotation was a matter of opinion.
I stand by that quotation. I did go back and re-read my notes, and
found them clear and un-heated, unlike the comments from others.
> Please get one[ a La-Z-Boy ], forthwith, if you'd like to fit the
> stereotype. :)
Thanks for this bit of humor!
> Those cases you mentioned are barbaric nations which have have effectively
> removed themselves from the world community, thus not being subject to
> world opinion. The players in this case, the PLO and Israel, go to great
> lengths to convince people such as yourself of the justification of their
> goals, because they are at the mercy of such opinion.
True--as long as some people who count geo-politically believe in morality,
then any player will create a moral argument in his favor. I ask it
again--do you truely believe that my notes here constitute a threat to
Israel, or its claim on world opinion?
> I wonder how strong that "friendship" must have been if it's suddenly
> turned to enmity because of the rantings of an "angry man".
How long would you remain positively disposed to people who were
angry at you? There has to be some benefit in the long run for
both sides of a friendship, you know. And I am still pro-Israel,
so nothing sudden has happened.
> So what exactly are you looking for? [ followed by a list of
> reports and memorandums, etc. constituting a base for a claim
> on the territory of Israel ]
What I'm looking for is a clear sequence of reasoning about what
constitutes a real claim to land, starting with self-evident axioms.
Once you have such a theory, then the historical facts become useful;
before, they are only facts, with no moral import.
> Neither does it interest too many Arabs, who espouse the same
> "terroristic relativism" as you, without claiming to be pro-Israel.
I suspect that what the Arabs espouse is not relativism at all.
What you mean by "terroristic relativism" is unclear to me, but
if it means supporting killing because every thing is relative,
I know I don't espouse it.
> Please re-read the story of the St. Louis. "Impartiality" didn't help
> them much.
So? What does that prove? I can support letting in refugees whether
or not I think Israel is Good and Right, and do. You didn't answer my
question.
-John Bishop
|
944.65 | | PACKER::JULIUS | | Thu Jun 21 1990 17:33 | 6 |
| Nelson Mandela, a freedom fighter to abolish apartheid, is championing
another cause in the process. Yesterday's Boston Herald quoted him ...
Ghadafi, Arafat, and Castro are his heroes.
G-d help us all
Bernice
|
944.66 | getting down to the nitty gritty... | SUBWAY::RAYMAN | one of the usual suspects... | Thu Jun 21 1990 21:56 | 50 |
| I might be stating the obvious, but I believe we have come to the basis of the
argument between Mr. Jem and Mr. Bishop:
from .68
> One of the things I find attractive about Judaism is the Law itself,
> as a clear example of the careful working out of "how to live" from
> a set of axioms. I don't accept the axioms, but I respect the effort.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
John is operating from his own moral and value system (I am NOT making any
judgements here). He has his own beliefs, but they do not include any
universal sense of right and wrong. Each man must decide for himself, and
must also respect (or at least understand) the decisions of others who
disagree. (sounds Kantian, doesn't it?)
John is not saying that you must love terrosists; he is saying that OUR saying
that they are wrong is meaningless. According to us, they ARE wrong; but
according to them, they are right.
John is not saying that we should surrender to terrorists; he is saying that
the one's own moral considerations of right and wrong should drive one's own
actions (including self-defense), but one should not expect others, with
different moral systems, to agree.
John's position leads him to his taste for geo-political hardball, which, when
boiled down, is just another form of national self-defense.
Jem, on the other hand, is coming from a different value system altogether;
there is a universal right and wrong, and therefore we should expect everybody
to behave accordingly. Those who don't should be punished. (this is a GROSS
oversimplification, i know).
Jem's values can be summed up from a verse in D'varim (Deuteronomy) (I dont
remember exactly where):
"Re-eh natati le'fanecha et ha-chaim v'et ha-tov, et ha-mavet v'et harah,
u-vacharta ba-chaim"
"Behold, I (Moses, speaking about the Torah) have given before you life and
goodness, and death and evil. You shall choose life..."
A person has the choice to do good or evil; the definition of good and evil,
however, is not up to him.
The funny thing is, even coming from these different views, I think that Jem
and John agree on about 90%, if not more, of whats been yelled back and forth
in this topic (they might not admit it though... :-)
Lihitraot and Shalom al Yisrael
Louuuuuuuuuuuuuuuu
|
944.67 | Thanks, .66! | MINAR::BISHOP | | Thu Jun 21 1990 23:51 | 3 |
| Yes, that's it. Thanks, Lou, for stating it so clearly.
-John Bishop
|
944.68 | Define Morality in Terrorism | FDCV30::ROSENZWEIG | | Fri Jun 22 1990 00:19 | 36 |
| In this long argument of relativism and morality, how about a real
definition of terrorism?
Civilians do get killed in wars but understanding the terrorists is
relativism. Judging their actions is morality. We have to have some
values to live and die by.
Attacking a killing unarmed civilians who are not immediately engaged
in any warlike actions *is* terrorism...like the Isreali athletes and
yes like the bathers on the beach. That's dirty warfare and doing
the dirty work of Amelak who attacked the defenseless. The Holocaust
was worse than terrorism. According to Jewish morality this is wrong.
Neither side has any moral basis.
Civilians getting killed in the crossfire is bad news and unfortunate.
A totally different category. Most wars are fought in civilians'
back yards. Not justified either except by the logistics of war which
shouldn't be used to discount the mourning and loss that accompanies
these casualities. This is can't be used either to justify terrorism.
This crossfire killings are the accidents of war and we can't be
mean-spirited about these incidents on either side.
The grey areas.....armed civilians attacking Isreali soldiers policing
such riots. What would you do if a dozen children came at you with
stones? What would any of us do if our lives were so imprisoned and
hopeless as these children? These are the frontiers of the real
guerilla war and these are the arenas that have enflamed the middle
east. That's where a referee is needed before things get even more
enflamed. With United States withdrawing its peace-keeping efforts,
the situation has become really dangerous.
Terrorism is wrong and both sides have to disown it. It only entrenches
both sides and guarantees a fight to the death.
RR
|
944.69 | A "short" reply | TOOK::ALEX | Alex A.-S. @LKG 226-5350 | Fri Jun 22 1990 18:13 | 37 |
| I thank John Bishop for persevering in this discussion with style (despite
my complete disagreement with his "axiom-less logic").
I may return and respond to John's long reply later (no time now). In
the mean time, here's my main point:
John, here is how your position appears to me. You are saying that on
the surface, killing sunbathers might look wrong. However we need to
look deeper into the freedom-fighters' motivation and goals, and not
dismiss them as the universally recognized terrorists.
It seems that you struggle to justify something that already is viewed
as "evil" by the overwhelming majority of Earth's inhabitants and question
the innocence of those that appear "good". You claim that you have your
own moral principles, yet you are reluctant to judge. This forces me to
question the validity and the very existence of your moral principles.
Now, I am not an objectivist either, and I do not view Rand as the
ultimate authority on morality, but another quote is applicable:
"Moral values are the motive power of a man's actions. By pronouncing
moral judgement, one protects the clarity of one's own perception and
the rationality of the course one chooses to pursue. It makes a
difference whether one thinks that one is dealing with human errors of
knowledge or with human evil.
Observe how many people evade, rationalize adn drive their minds into
a state of blind stupor, in dread of discovering that those they deal
with [. . .] are not merely mistaken, but *evil*. Observe that the
dread leads them to sanction, to help and to spread the very evil whose
exitence they fear to acknowledge."
No more quotes, I promiss! :-)
Alex
PS John, you know we are not discussing the morality of clouds here.
So please, no more cheap shots, OK? :-)
|
944.70 | update on .0 | ERICG::ERICG | Eric Goldstein | Sun Jun 24 1990 10:13 | 6 |
| You've probably all forgotten the base note, but ...
Last week I read a newspaper article about the man who killed the 7 Arab
workers in Rishon Lezion. The article stated that the man has been found fit
to stand trial, and has been indicted for 7 counts of murder and 10 of
attempted murder. He faces a maximum penalty of 7 life sentences in prison.
|
944.71 | Hair-splitting and head-splitting | GAON::jem | Anacronym: an outdated acronym | Tue Jun 26 1990 18:27 | 79 |
|
Sorry for the delay. I was away for a while.
Re: .64
> I have been called a thief in this set of notes, told that I "parrot
> drivel" and write "slanderous lies", had it hinted that I deny the
> existence of the Holocaust, and more. If these are not personal attacks,
> what is?
Rather strange. On the one hand, you have no compunctions about labeling
the victims of terrorism as "whiners". Those who would have, but for the grace
of G-d, been blown to pieces (not to mention those who *have* been, R"L),
are nothing but cry-babies (BTW, it's interesting that no
objection was raised when the base note condemned the "terrorism" against
the Arabs). Yet you take umbrage at criticisms of your positions and define
*them* as personal attacks. Perhaps you should stop whining about "ad hominem",
when clearly there is a large body of readers who would disagree with your
subjective classification of honest disagreement as personal attack. (BTW,
your credibility would be enhanced if you would refrain from quoting out-
of-context and inferring non-existent intentions.)
> I never asked anyone to consider the death justified (so don't quote me
> as saying that!).
...
> What we disagree about is whether
> "killing civilians is bad" is a fact or not--I say "no", you say "yes".
> The burden of proof is not on me.
Forgive me, but I see precious little practical difference between refusing
to say, "killing civilians is bad", and actually saying, "killing civilians
is OK." While we're splitting hairs, the butchers are out devising ways of
splitting skulls.
> How long would you remain positively disposed to people who were
> angry at you?
A rather loaded question. To paraphrase a recent pronouncement of Rabbi Avi
Weiss of N.Y., "we will continue to support the anti-Apartheid struggle
*despite* the obnoxiousness of Mandela." One who believes in a cause certainly
does not allow a perceived personal "insult" to threaten his commitment to that
cause.
> What I'm looking for is a clear sequence of reasoning about what
> constitutes a real claim to land, starting with self-evident axioms.
Moot, useless and irrelevant. This discussion is about TERROR against
civlians. You claim that it needn't be condemned - an affront to every
civilized human being, irrespective of his political views.
> So? What does that prove? I can support letting in refugees whether
> or not I think Israel is Good and Right, and do. You didn't answer my
> question.
Again, the question about Israel's "rightness" is not the subject of this note.
The vociferous objection you sense is in response to the acceptance of civilian
murder as a moral alternative. It makes little difference whether the inaction
on behalf of the doomed Jews of Europe was due to an *acceptance* of the Nazis'
conception of "morality", or simply an *inability* or refusal to pass judgment
on the relative merits of the Nazi arguments. The Jews' fate was sealed just
the same.
Re: .66
>John is not saying that you must love terrosists; he is saying that OUR saying
>that they are wrong is meaningless. According to us, they ARE wrong; but
>according to them, they are right.
We have heard his arguments, and remain duly unimpressed by their amorality.
Those who refuse to condemn deliberate violence against unarmed civilians,
no matter the alleged "cause", in effect condone it. Those who seek to
rewrite the definition of "terrorism", bear perhaps a greater guilt than
the predators themselves, as discussed previously. Equivocation on the
relative morality of blowing babies' heads to bits is hardly better than
the pulling of the trigger itself. No quotes from the Bible are necessary
here, neither does one need to be "religious" to recognize moral depravity
when it stares one in the face.
Jem
|
944.72 | Not worth continuing | MINAR::BISHOP | | Tue Jun 26 1990 19:16 | 7 |
| re .71:
I disagree on just about every point (no surprise). I also believe
nothing more is to be gained in this conversation: I'm clearly not
going to convince you, and you aren't going to convince me.
-John Bishop
|
944.73 | | TOOK::ALEX | Alex A.-S. @LKG 226-5350 | Wed Jun 27 1990 00:59 | 7 |
| re .71
Well said.
Alex
NB And you thought we disagree on just about everything! :-)
|