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Israel Moves Toward a National Biometric Database

An anonymous reader writes "Israeli's government has approved the creation of a biometric database which would contain fingerprints and facial photos of all Israeli citizens. If the bill becomes law — and it is at an early stage — the biometric information of each citizen would be embedded in their passport and national ID card. Israeli citizens would be required by law to submit to biometric testing upon request by government employees, soldiers, and policemen, so that their biometric info can be compared to the info embedded in their ID card / passport. The declared purpose of the bill is to combat forgery of passports and ID cards, and also to aid identification 'in cases of a mass disaster.' The bill was approved over objections from civil rights groups and the Israeli Bar. The article notes that no other democratic country has a comprehensive biometric database of all citizens."

476 comments

  1. You would think that they would learn from history by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    The creatures outside looked from nazi to jew,
    and from jew to nazi, and from nazi to jew again;
    but already it was impossible to say which was which.

  2. And if you listen closely... by clang_jangle · · Score: 1, Insightful

    ...you can just hear the maniacal cackling of the engineers of the Third Reich. Weird how the more time passes, the more it appears they didn't lose the war, after all.

    --
    Caveat Utilitor
    1. Re:And if you listen closely... by TubeSteak · · Score: 4, Insightful

      ...you can just hear the maniacal cackling of the engineers of the Third Reich.

      Israel is reacting to the threats of regular terrorist bombings.
      The Nazis were trying to breed the ubermensch and wipe out the undermensch.
      If you want to draw a tie between Nazis and the Israeli State, you're going to have to work harder.

      As for the engineers* of the Third Reich, they were ahead of their time. One of the reasons the USA grew so strongly after the war is that we took all the highlights of German industry by way of war reparations.

      *engineers as in guys with slide rulers, not the politicians

      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
    2. Re:And if you listen closely... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Israel is reacting to the threats of regular terrorist bombings.

      So, if I choose to come and steal your land and you fight back that would make you a "terrorist"? Not buying it.

    3. Re:And if you listen closely... by Leading+Stoker · · Score: 1

      A society that doesn't, or refuses to learn from history, is doomed to repeat it. In this case, Israel is doing exactly what the Nazis did prior to WWII: documenting "real" Germans from Jews, and State threats (e.g., communists; socialists; and about any other 'ist). Today, Israel -- the State -- is watching it's own in the pretense of security. Security won't come from the State in that situation, it'll come when both sides realize they're humans, and humans need peace and understanding to go anywhere.

    4. Re:And if you listen closely... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It has nothing to do with terrorism and everything to do with crime. We have Jewish criminals, y'know.

    5. Re:And if you listen closely... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      okay - keep in mind that the Jewish state originated out of the war with the very people to which you claim the connection is specious. The line of thinking back then - propaganda as a weapon, elitism by race, manipulation of the masses - spread to all parties.

      The Israeli's are not an exception.

    6. Re:And if you listen closely... by Curtman · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      If you want to draw a tie between Nazis and the Israeli State, you're going to have to work harder.

      Yeah.. The Nazis were already in Germany. The Israelies stole the land of their undermensch and forced them out.

    7. Re:And if you listen closely... by Leading+Stoker · · Score: 1

      That is what the State always says. Hitler said the same to Germans, "it's for the Fatherland's security and yours". The USSR did the same with it's citizens, letting them live under the boot of the KGB. Now will Israel repeat history, and pick the M.O. of either? I hope not, because citizens don't need the State spying on them, as that tells the citizens they're not trusted. A very ominous sign, and one best avoided from any government -- once the government loses trust in it's citizens, that when they'll abuse their power for themselves.

    8. Re:And if you listen closely... by tmosley · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      I see the Mossad has mod points today.

      In any event, the Nazis could be said by apologists to be reacting to the systematic destruction of their economy by bankers, a profession largely dominated by Jews at the time. Of course, that is a bogus reason, and is no excuse for their actions. At most, they should have put those responsible on trial, but that obviously didn't happen, instead choosing to slaughter a whole people.

      If they had left the Jews in the ghettos for much longer, you probably would have started to see Jewish suicide bombers. Israel has kept the Palestinians largely in "ghettos" for more than half a century, and are continually clamping down, and whenever anyone resists, they roll in with tanks and bulldozers and wind up killing a bunch of civilians, especially women and children, which only triggers increased enrollment in terrorist organizations, and increased hatred towards Israel.

      If ever a group of people deserved reparations, the Palestinians are them. They have been enormously oppressed, and continue to be oppressed. The United State's support for the continued apartheid of Israel honestly dumbfounds me.

      Modded flamebait in 3...2...1...

    9. Re:And if you listen closely... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's a fallacy. "The Nazis did this, you're doing it, therefore your Nazis!" Bullshit. I've yet to read a single coherent argument against this database

    10. Re:And if you listen closely... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There was never a state of Palestine. There was never a government of Palestine. The Arabs themselves said there's no such thing as Palestine - that it was "a Jewish myth." By the way, it was Jewish land for some 1600 years (at least) before any ethnically Arab people had the idea to claim it. The land was sparsely populated until Jews started to return en masse in the 20th Century. And if, as you assert, so many people had "their land" stolen, a poorly equipped, poorly manned, disorganized Jewish fighting force emerging from the ashes of the Holocaust would not have been able to overwhelm them. Go to hell, Arab-terrorist lover.

    11. Re:And if you listen closely... by Leading+Stoker · · Score: 1

      Nope, it's called history. Repeating the same follies of history, is a tragedy.

    12. Re:And if you listen closely... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      TubeSteak sez: "Israel is reacting to the threats of regular terrorist bombings."

      No, Israel is not reacting to the threats of regular terrorist bombings.

      If Israel seriously wants to stop terrorism against itself, it should stop being a terrorist state, stop making the life of Palestinians miserable, stop stealing the Palestinian land (the International court of justice, btw, has declared the wall Israel is building on Palestinian land illegal), it should stop building settlements for jews and jews only on Palestinian land, return the Golan Height to its rightful owner Syria, etc. plenty of easy things to do...

      That will do infinitely more to improve the security of every Israelis than any biometric database.

    13. Re:And if you listen closely... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How much tinfoil do you have on your head if you honestly believe that Mosad thinks its worthwhile to manipulate slashdot modding read by DOZENS of nerds with no influence.

    14. Re:And if you listen closely... by nidarus · · Score: 1

      If you want to draw a tie between Nazis and the Israeli State, you're going to have to work harder.

      Yeah.. The Nazis were already in Germany. The Israelies stole the land of their undermensch and forced them out.

      Wow, you're right, the Israelis are actually worse than the Nazis. And to think that I actually cried while watching Schindler's List...

      Asshole.

    15. Re:And if you listen closely... by vga_init · · Score: 1

      Well, that's just like saying that "Germany was reacting to threats of regular military attacks" after they occupied neighboring countries. Germany invades Poland, France, etc. Poland, France, etc and their allies fight back. Germany loses.

      Fast forward, Israel invades Palestine. Palestine and its allies fight back. Israel wins.

      As for ubermensch and undermensh, I'm pretty sure the idea behind the occupation of Palestine is to completely remove the Arab population and substitute them with a Jewish population. Not much of a difference there, eh buddy?

      When you invade a neighboring country, a couple things happen: a) people start violently resisting the occupation and b) your other neighbors suddenly hate you and make a military move against you.

    16. Re:And if you listen closely... by Curtman · · Score: 1

      the Israelis are actually worse than the Nazis

      I didn't say it. You did.

    17. Re:And if you listen closely... by dwave · · Score: 1

      What's with all these moronic comments? Has this turned into slashdouchebag.com? I didn't know that quite of the bit anti-social scumm on slashdot also consists of rabid anti-semites. Man, you're lucky that you are writing from your mother's basement. You are in great danger that someone will rip your fscking lungs out.

    18. Re:And if you listen closely... by Curtman · · Score: 1

      I love it when people are reduced to personal insults. It means they realize they are wrong.

    19. Re:And if you listen closely... by Leading+Stoker · · Score: 1

      When you invade a neighboring country, a couple things happen: a) people start violently resisting the occupation and b) your other neighbors suddenly hate you and make a military move against you.

      One country's terrorist, is another country's patriot.

    20. Re:And if you listen closely... by nidarus · · Score: 1

      I didn't say it. You did.

      Oh really? Let me see...

      If you want to draw a tie between Nazis and the Israeli State, you're going to have to work harder.

      Yeah.. The Nazis were already in Germany. The Israelies stole the land of their undermensch and forced them out.

      That is, the only difference between the Israelis and the Nazis is that Israelis were colonists as well.

      I know that you might've just said it because you thought it's a cool rhetorical device, and that you don't really believe that. But guess what, when making outrageous quips, you are making outrageous claims. The only difference is that you're also being a dick about it.

    21. Re:And if you listen closely... by nidarus · · Score: 1

      I love it when people are reduced to personal insults. It means they realize they are wrong.

      Of course it does. Like, if I say that your mom is a crack whore, and you'll tell me to fuck off, that would be obvious proof that your mother does, in fact, suck dick for crack.

      The moment you start implying that Israelis are worse than the Nazis, the rational debate is over. I have nothing to add to the discussion (I'm not going to prove to you that the Nazis were much much worse than the Israelis - read a history book), aside from pointing out that you're being an asshole.

    22. Re:And if you listen closely... by nidarus · · Score: 1

      Well, that's just like saying that "Germany was reacting to threats of regular military attacks" after they occupied neighboring countries.

      No. Hitler was bent on world (or at least, European) domination. He never tried to hide that fact.

      Israel just tries to keep its own, tiny territory (try to find it on a world map, I dare you - it's a tiny speck of color). Comparing it with the Nazi world domination scheme is ludicrous to the point of being offensive.

      Fast forward, Israel invades Palestine. Palestine and its allies fight back. Israel wins

      Wrong. Israel can't invade Palestine, if only because there was no "Israel" outside of mandatorial Palestine. The second reason is that Arab countries didn't consider Palestine to be a distinct entity - for the "Palestinian Allies", Israel was occupying Western Jordan (before that, Southern Syria). And the third, most important reason was that the Arab countries started the war! No one, including the Arabs, claims otherwise. Israel was created as part of a UN resolution, but the Arab countries wouldn't let Jews to have even the tiniest bit of land for themselves, so they tried to eradicate Israel, but failed miserably.

      How you managed to turn that into "Israel invaded Palestine" is a mystery.

      As for ubermensch and undermensh, I'm pretty sure the idea behind the occupation of Palestine is to completely remove the Arab population and substitute them with a Jewish population. Not much of a difference there, eh buddy?

      No. The original idea was for a Palestine to be divided between an Arab and a Jewish state, coexisting peacefully. The Jews accepted the idea, but the Arabs wouldn't accept anything but a 100% Arab Arabia, so they tried to destroy Israel by force. After that, the relationship between the Jews and the Arabs became pretty hostile. But even then, over a million Arabs remained in Israel (~20% of Israeli population is Arab), receiving full rights as citizens. How's that "completely removing the Arab population"?

      When you invade a neighboring country

      Dude, what the fuck are you talking about. Ah, wait, you mean the six-day war? You do realize that the "neighboring country" (or rather, countries) was Jordan and Egypt, who later relinquished their claims to that land?

      a couple things happen: a) people start violently resisting the occupation and b) your other neighbors suddenly hate you and make a military move against you.

      I'm sorry, but at this point I have nothing to tell you but "read a history book". The hostilities between the Arabs and the Jews started way before 1967. Even the PLO was formed in 1964, back when what you seem to call "Palestine" was still a part of Jordan and Egypt.

    23. Re:And if you listen closely... by Curtman · · Score: 1

      I never said one was better or worse than the other. Just that they were different.

      You made the judgement, not me.

    24. Re:And if you listen closely... by Curtman · · Score: 1

      I have nothing to add to the discussion

      See, this is part of the realization again. You never did.

      I did not imply the Israelis are worse than the Nazis. I said the situation is different. One group sought to expel and irradicate a perceived enemy within. The other group travelled to a foreign land and did the same to its occupants.

      I'm not sure which is worse, killing someone in your family, or killing someone down the block who you hardly know. I would say they are both terrible, and neither is "better" or "worse".

    25. Re:And if you listen closely... by nidarus · · Score: 1

      It's impossible to argue about what you really meant, but your post clearly implies that the difference between Israel and the Nazis is that at least the Nazis weren't colonists in their own land. That is, you're painting the Israelis in a bad light, and the Nazis look good in comparison.

      You have to be pretty naive to think otherwise. If I say "Curtman and Hitler are not the same... Hitler actually had charisma, Curtman was just a slashdot troll", then I'm implying (jokingly perhaps, but while being a bit of a dick), that you're just like Hitler, but without the charisma.

      But you know what, if you insist, let's chalk it up to poor writing skills and not (as I suspect) to backpedaling from an obviously stupid assertion.

    26. Re:And if you listen closely... by nidarus · · Score: 1

      One group sought to expel and irradicate a perceived enemy within. The other group travelled to a foreign land and did the same to its occupants.

      Who are those groups? Germany eradicated Jews both in Germany and in the lands it conquered. Israel certainly didn't "travel to a foreign land" to eradicate the untermensch or anything like that, and it never tried to expel or eradicate a "perceived enemy within". It was, and still is, trying to defend itself from people who are openly (and might I add, proudly) trying to destroy it.

      I would say they are both terrible, and neither is "better" or "worse".

      Are you really comparing the Nazi genocide to the tiny regional conflict that is Israel/Palestine?

      The very idea is so outlandishly stupid that I have nothing to tell you but... read a history book. Get a little perspective. By demonizing small (alleged) crimes, you're condoning colossal atrocities.

    27. Re:And if you listen closely... by Curtman · · Score: 1

      I did not force anyone from their home and build a settlement on their land. Israel does that.

      If you want to get stuck in a debate about who's worse the Nazis or the Jews, I'm not interested. There are similarities beyond what you are willing to admit to though.

    28. Re:And if you listen closely... by Curtman · · Score: 1

      It was, and still is, trying to defend itself from people who are openly (and might I add, proudly) trying to destroy it.

      Defending itself by expanding its borders and building settlements? Come on now.

    29. Re:And if you listen closely... by nidarus · · Score: 1

      Defending itself by expanding its borders and building settlements? Come on now.

      No, by fighting people who want to destroy it. Or are you claiming that Israel has no real enemies?

      Also, "expanding its borders"? Are you serious? You mean the land taken in 1967? Even if we ignore the fact that it was taken from countries that were trying to destroy it at the time, and the fact that both Egypt and Jordan relinquished their claims to that land, you do realize that it's a tiny piece of land? The way you make it sound like some imperialist campaign is preposterous.

    30. Re:And if you listen closely... by vga_init · · Score: 1

      No, it's really simple; Israel is occupying territory that officially belongs to Palestine (at least according to the United Nations). Israel has invaded Palestine, and that is why other nations tried to intervene.

      Not only is it true that Israel is occupying Palestinian territory, but they are systematically destroying what's left of Palestine in order to expand their borders, which is explicitly illegal according to international law.

    31. Re:And if you listen closely... by nidarus · · Score: 1

      No, it's really simple

      Everything is simple, when you're ignorant.

      Israel is occupying territory that officially belongs to Palestine (at least according to the United Nations)

      You seem to think that there is, or ever was, a country called "Palestine". That just shows how little you know about the subject.

      Israel took the West Bank from Jordan, and the Gaza strip from Egypt. Shortly after the war, both countries relinquished their claims to the land. At no point did it "officially" belonged to "Palestine" (unless you mean the pre-1948 British colony by the same name).

      Now, there is a concept called "Palestine", but it means something much more complicated and nuanced than you seem to think.

      Israel has invaded Palestine, and that is why other nations tried to intervene.

      Now you're just making shit up. Did you think I wouldn't notice or something?

      Well, guess what, the six-day war (the one you're probably referring to), was not about Israel invading Palestine, if only because there was no such country. It has to do with the Suez canal, and with Israel's neighbors' objection to Israel's existence.

      You know what, I won't even try to understand what you meant by "systematically destroying what's left of Palestine". It's just too obvious that you don't know shit about Israel/Palestine.

      I really don't see how you have the nerve to argue about something you know so little about, and while using condescending little quips like "it's very simple". Did you think your self-confidence could hide your basic ignorance?

      I'm sorry if that sounded a little harsh, but the topic is pretty important to me, and I find your attitude to be, frankly, insulting.

    32. Re:And if you listen closely... by nidarus · · Score: 1

      You know, I really wonder what made you think that this was a logical reply to my comment.

      What do the settlements have to do with anything I said!? Does your religion forbid you from staying on topic or something?

    33. Re:And if you listen closely... by Curtman · · Score: 1

      You compared me to Hitler. I have done nothing to put myself in the same league as Hitler. Israel does.

    34. Re:And if you listen closely... by vga_init · · Score: 1

      Well yes, it is really simple, and you can just obfuscate the issue by playing semantic games like "technically there was no such country as Palestine" and "technically this land belonged to Egypt and Jordan" and "Palestine is just a concept."

      Guess what? My ancestors are Polish, and for quite some time there was supposedly "no such country" as Poland, and you may think that somehow lessens the crimes of Poland's invaders and oppressors, but that argument isn't going to work with me about any country, including Palestine. You can draw the map the way Israel wants you to draw the map, but maps are something imaginary and it means nothing to the Palestinians who are more confronted by their suffering. The point is that Israel is occupying Palestinian territory.

      When you step back and and look at it without the lens of political deception (which is all you're doing), is that Israel is fucking up Palestine, and that has always been the case. Because of this clear and present danger, Israel's neighbors want to fight it.

      All of the hostilities didn't just magically come out of nowhere. It's not about "Israels neighbors hate Israel just because they're not Arab" or something ridiculous like that.

    35. Re:And if you listen closely... by nidarus · · Score: 1

      Well yes, it is really simple, and you can just obfuscate the issue by playing semantic games like "technically there was no such country as Palestine" and "technically this land belonged to Egypt and Jordan" and "Palestine is just a concept."

      No, not just "technically". There never was an independent country called "Palestine". What's more important, before 1948 there was no distinct "Palestinian people" either. If the 1948 attack on Israel succeeded, there wouldn't be a "Palestinian people" now either. There would be only "Western Jordanians".

      Btw, nobody actually argues about this point. Not the Arabs, not the Palestinians themselves, and certainly not the Israelis. This is really basic stuff, you know?

      My ancestors are Polish, and for quite some time there was supposedly "no such country" as Poland

      But at some point there was a Polish country, and, more importantly, a Polish people, who spoke the Polish language, and had unique customs and traditions. This cannot be said about Palestinians, who simply belonged to the larger Arab ethnicity before the 1948 war.

      The point is that Israel is occupying Palestinian territory.

      Uhm, you do realize that according to the Arabs (and Iranians), Israel is Palestinian territory, right? Dividing the land between Israel and a yet-to-be-formed Palestinian state is a compromise. Note how the little map in the HAMAS's logo includes both Israel and PA territory.

      All of the hostilities didn't just magically come out of nowhere. It's not about "Israels neighbors hate Israel just because they're not Arab" or something ridiculous like that.

      Really, then what was the deal with the 1948 war? You know, the one when several Arab countries (all of Israel's neighbors+Iraq) tried to eradicate Israel and annex the territory to Jordan? How about the hostilities before 1948?

      Anyway, as I said in my previous post, go read a book about Israel/Palestine. Hell, you can read the Wikipedia article and know a lot more about the conflict than you do now. Arguing with someone who knows so little about the subject is very annoying.

    36. Re:And if you listen closely... by nidarus · · Score: 1

      You compared me to Hitler. I have done nothing to put myself in the same league as Hitler. Israel does.

      First of all, Israel never did anything to put itself in the same league as Hitler either.

      Second, I compared you to Hitler to make a point, while you actually believe the stuff you say.

      I did, however, say that you're closer to an antisemite than Israel is to the Nazis, and I stand by my words.

    37. Re:And if you listen closely... by Curtman · · Score: 1

      If you want to call me an antisemite for saying Israel kills people needlessly and displaces others with force thats fine. You can't call me a liar, but you can call me some other non-applicable term. That's comforting that you agree.

    38. Re:And if you listen closely... by vga_init · · Score: 1

      You make good points, but we are just taking on two fundamental viewpoints that don't necessarily contradict each other but interpret the situation differently.

      Regardless of our differences, we should focus our energies on something productive like figuring out a way to eliminate hostilities between these people and search for a solution--possibly a nice compromise?

    39. Re:And if you listen closely... by nidarus · · Score: 1

      You make good points, but we are just taking on two fundamental viewpoints that don't necessarily contradict each other but interpret the situation differently.

      No idea what you mean, but whatever.

      Regardless of our differences, we should focus our energies on something productive like figuring out a way to eliminate hostilities between these people and search for a solution--possibly a nice compromise?

      I agree.

  3. Freedom! by FatSean · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Sounds more insidious than some of the neighboring countries we decry as anti-freedom.

    I wonder how many of my tax dollars are being used by their government to subjugate their people? I don't like this at all, not for any nation.

    --
    Blar.
    1. Re:Freedom! by foobsr · · Score: 1

      I wonder how many of my tax dollars are being used by their government to subjugate their people?

      I have heard that the "Near East" is used as a test bed for a variety of contraptions. Thus, be sure that you will have the pleasure to experience all the benefits of each dollar spent.

      CC.

      --
      TaijiQuan (Huang, 5 loosenings)
    2. Re:Freedom! by Dr_Barnowl · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I wonder how many of my tax dollars are being used

      Many. The Israeli security industry benefits enormously from Western spending ; they are respected and renowned as the people with the most experience of dealing with terrorism.

      Someone with thicker tinfoil on their hat might suspect that this was a prototype project, pushed through by rich Israeli security industry lobbyists keen to prove their ability for the contracts for Western nations. Someone with double-layered tinfoil might even believe that they already have a contract and this is just the testing phase...

    3. Re:Freedom! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      "they are respected and renowned as the people with the most experience of dealing with terrorism."

      Am I alone in feeling that 60 years of warfare is not a successful strategy that one should try to emulate?

    4. Re:Freedom! by tukang · · Score: 5, Informative

      Sounds more insidious than some of the neighboring countries we decry as anti-freedom.

      I wonder how many of my tax dollars are being used by their government to subjugate their people? I don't like this at all, not for any nation.

      According to "The Israel Lobby and U.S. Foreign Policy"

      Israel is "the largest total recipient since World War II" of U.S. aid. "Total direct U.S. aid to Israel for this period amounts to well over $140 billion since World War II. Israel receives about $3 billion in direct foreign assistance each year, which is about one-fifth of America's foreign aid budget." The authors claim that "This largesse is especially striking when one realizes that Israel is now a wealthy industrial state with a per capita income roughly equal to South Korea or Spain."

      "Israel is the only recipient of U.S. aid that does not have to account for how the aid is spent." According to the authors, this makes it "virtually impossible to prevent the money from being used for purposes the United States opposes."

    5. Re:Freedom! by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 1

      Actually in reality you're going to find that Arab countries get a LOT more of your tax dollars than Israel does.

      Did you know that Saudi Arabia actually demands that the U.S. pays them food aid ?

      So do a host of other oil-producing muslim countries. Including, but not limited to : Lybia, Tunisia, Sudan, Algeria, ...

      Tax dollars that are, in more than one case, being used to eradicate whole cultures. Currently Sudan is in the news, but you should ask yourself this question : as recently as 100 years ago, people reported seeing entirely black cities on the south of the mediterranean.

      What ... what happened to those blacks ? Because there isn't a single black city within 1000 km of the mediterranean coast left.

      "jihad" you say, Omar al Bashir ? Now what's that ? Oh right ... "inner spiritual struggle" ... So that's what massacring black people is called these days.

    6. Re:Freedom! by cheroke · · Score: 1

      Not successful, but they have no choice - Jewish country amidst Muslim region...

    7. Re:Freedom! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wonder how many of my tax dollars are being used by their government to subjugate their people? I don't like this at all, not for any nation.

      Every fucking Israeli is on U.S welfare, buddy.
      I say we cut them off.

    8. Re:Freedom! by XchristX · · Score: 1

      You're forgetting Pakistan. Pakistan gets massive US aid, and , during the regime of Yahya Khan the Islamic dictator, even carried out genocide of Bengali Hindus and moderate Muslims in Bangladesh with the full blessings of Richard Nixon (as the infamous "Blood Telegram" attests)

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1971_Bangladesh_atrocities

      If you extend the rubric to include all Islamic countries, not just the Arabs, then, with Pakistan, the total US foreign aid given to Israel's enemies (Pakistan led the air force charge against Israel during the 47 war) is far greater than the aid given to Israel. Of course, Mearsheimer and Walt don't tell you THAT little tidbit.

      --
      l'Homme n'est Rien l'Oeuvre Tout: Gustave Flaubert to George Sand
    9. Re:Freedom! by Dr_Barnowl · · Score: 1

      I wasn't entirely referring to the tax dollars donated as aid. I was mostly referring to the tax dollars spent by Western governments with Israeli security companies, which no doubt get poured into R&D.

      Things like

      • The Mexico-Canada US border "fence" systems
      • DHS border operations training
      • Rentacops for the affluent areas of New Orleans after Katrina
      • The firewalls in "89% of fortune 500 companies"
      • Call-monitoring for the NYPD
      • CCTV recording in the London tube, Dulles airport, Capital Hill, Montreal Metro

      All the above spend money with Israeli firms.

    10. Re:Freedom! by Leading+Stoker · · Score: 1

      Yet it's not for US taxpayers to pay for Israel's existence. Israel isn't the USA, it's it's own country and needs to pay for it's own upkeep -- not keep asking US citizens to pay it for them, either with politics, let alone arms.

      If Israel ever wants to be regarded as a sovereign nation, it has to operate under it's own auspices and the rules every nation has to abeit too, not rely on a parent to do everything for them (and the same with any country, thinking the US taxpayer can literally pay for their way).

      The US has to do what's in the best interest for the US, afterall.

    11. Re:Freedom! by mux2000 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I, as an Israeli, for one, would like to welcome our finger-printing, photo-taking, data-basing overlords. Really, I would have liked to, but it's two late to welcome them now, they've been in power since I was born.

    12. Re:Freedom! by CobaltBlueDW · · Score: 1

      Why do people find this a tax on their freedom? OMG, the government knows what my finger and my face look like! This in no way infringes upon a persons utilitarian freedoms. At best you could say that it gives the government the ability to know who has touched a specific object with their bare hand. Freedom is ones ability to choose. Others' knowledge of what a person has touched does not impede that person's ability to choose. Also, it is not any more righteous to only keep biometric records of previous law offenders. Speaking oh biometric records; Has anyone here owned a driver's license? Sex, Age, Hair Color, Eye Color, Height, Weight, Name, Location, Disabilities, and Photo ID. Any hypocrites in the room?

    13. Re:Freedom! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      While I do think that Israel is an abomination of a country - dirty back room deals that screwed the Arab nations over post WWII - they do need to stand on their own two feet. Why do you think the US is such a HUGE target for "terrorist activty"?

      It's certainly not because of being more "advanced" than the middle east, nor is it because of the US being "infidels" or anything like that. It's the constant meddling in Arabic affairs. To aid Israel and target Muslim nations essentially says "we're here to support the people who screwed you out of Palestine, and if you don't like it we'll bomb the shit out of you".

      What could have been settled by countries like the US creating sanctions against Israel until they move toward peace. It's something that's always confused me about the US - claims of wanting a free world, while supporting opressive governments, and creating sanctions against nations who have rejected this neo-conservative capitalism that serves to exploit the poor.

    14. Re:Freedom! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can you tell them "no" when they ask for your fingerprint?

      You say freedom is the ability to choose, then why can't I choose to not have my fingerprints taken. A driver's licence isn't a biometric record, if I don't have my license you have no way of finding out who I am, however if you have my fingerprint on database...

    15. Re:Freedom! by SailorBob · · Score: 1

      If you don't count all the money we spend protecting Saudi Arabia, or all the money spent rebuilding Iraq, which totals hundreds of billions of dollars.

      --

      Woopty Doo Basil, what does it all mean?!

  4. Once Again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Once again, Jerusalem does what Washington can't do yet.

  5. Excuse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Now other countries can use the excuse that Isreal did it, so "we're not alone"

    1. Re:Excuse by pjt33 · · Score: 1

      The article may be right to state that no other "democratic" country has a comprehensive biometric database of all citizens, but the UK is working towards it. It already has the Act of Parliament.

  6. What about dual citizenship Jews? by peektwice · · Score: 1

    A friend of mine has dual citizenship in the US and Israel. How would this affect someone like him visiting Israel, even though the U.S. is his home?

    --
    Other than this text, there is no discernible information contained in this sig.
    1. Re:What about dual citizenship Jews? by foobsr · · Score: 0

      A friend of mine has dual citizenship in the US and Israel.

      How comes it that your handle is "peektwice" ??

      CC.

      --
      TaijiQuan (Huang, 5 loosenings)
    2. Re:What about dual citizenship Jews? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      How should I know, why don't you ask him?

    3. Re:What about dual citizenship Jews? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      US is part of Israel with different color.

    4. Re:What about dual citizenship Jews? by mishehu · · Score: 1

      The law would apply to him upon his re-entry I suspect, or upon the renewal of his Israeli passport. As long as you are residing outside of Israel, you can use your Israeli passport as a form of ID within the state of Israel. But if you are there for longer than (possibly) a year, you would need to get an ID card or renew it.

      I am just sad that I am not back at my other home to fight this law myself. This law will directly affect me as well.

    5. Re:What about dual citizenship Jews? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Courtesy of Afroyim v. Rusk 387 U.S. 253 (1967)[1] . If this be overturned, a whole lotta people will havr to make a decision to the delight of the judeopathic humanoids that populate this institution.

    6. Re:What about dual citizenship Jews? by peektwice · · Score: 1

      simply because I wanted to be called peek, but it was taken, and peek2 or peek9187235 was unacceptable, so I made it peektwice.

      --
      Other than this text, there is no discernible information contained in this sig.
    7. Re:What about dual citizenship Jews? by foobsr · · Score: 1

      Thank you for replying. Actually, I was trying to make a pun (see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PEEK_and_POKE), but failed epically ;)

      CC.

      --
      TaijiQuan (Huang, 5 loosenings)
    8. Re:What about dual citizenship Jews? by peektwice · · Score: 1

      That's actually where I was deriving peek from was the original peek and poke keywords in BASIC. Your pun was not lost on me.

      --
      Other than this text, there is no discernible information contained in this sig.
  7. Good for them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Interesting

    This will improve their security. And before all of you Ben Franklin quoters start yammering, the key word Ben Franklin used was "essential." Biometric databases don't infringe on essential liberties. If you doubt this, then look it up in the UN Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

    1. Re:Good for them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      ...because we all know that the UN Universal Declaration of Human Rights is the indisputable authority on what is an essential liberty.

      Bullshit.

    2. Re:Good for them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      This was obviously modded troll because the moderator didn't like the opinion, not because it wasn't a valid point of debate. It is a valid point of debate. While it may be a minority opinion here at Slashdot, there is no denying that it isn't a majority opinion in many countries around the world (for example, the security obsessed UK).

      Moderators: don't moderate down posts just because you disagree with them. That is not the point of moderation.

      (Posted as AC to prevent the karma hit from mods who will disagree with this post.)

    3. Re:Good for them by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      And before all of you Ben Franklin quoters start yammering, the key word Ben Franklin used was "essential."

      Actually, the way that reads, it doesn't sound like he's implying that liberty is essential, not that there are a select number of essential liberties, and all the rest are forfeit. Here's the quote:

      Those who would give up Essential Liberty to purchase a little Temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety.

      And if there's really any doubt in your mind of what Franklin's intent was, here's a quote from Poor Richard's Almanac:

      Sell not virtue to purchase wealth, nor Liberty to purchase power.

      Look, if you really have no problem giving up your liberty, go for it. I'm not stopping you. If you have no problem with the Israelis giving up their liberty, I'd love to hear your argument.

      But picking apart the semantics of a historical quote, and then using that to imply that the man agrees with you -- that just makes you look stupid. Honestly, do you think any of the Founding Fathers would've consented to biometrics, when they literally got up in arms over a tea tax?

      --
      Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
    4. Re:Good for them by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

      And I should use Preview more often:

      it does sound like he's implying that liberty is essential, not that there are a select number of essential liberties...

      --
      Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
    5. Re:Good for them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Essential means basic in this context. To talk of 'essential as in necessary' liberty is repetition.

    6. Re:Good for them by pjt33 · · Score: 1

      While it may be a minority opinion here at Slashdot, there is no denying that it isn't a majority opinion in many countries around the world (for example, the security obsessed UK).

      I think you may have miscounted your negatives. On the presumption that you meant to say that in the security-obsessed UK the majority opinion is that a national biometric database doesn't infringe on essential liberties, permit me to observe that the government sold the ID database to a significant (but not exclusive - terrorism was mentioned) extent on matters such as job security: i.e. it will cut down on working by illegal immigrants. Why they believe that employers who don't currently check National Insurance number cards will check biometric ID cards, I have no idea.

      In short, a series of Home Secretaries claim to believe that a biometric database of the entire country is so far from infringing on essential liberties that it can be justified without recourse to security.

    7. Re:Good for them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "do you think any of the Founding Fathers would've consented to biometrics, when they literally got up in arms over a tea tax?"

      They literally got up in arms over a *reduction* in the tea tax, which cut the price of tea and so undercut the organised criminals who made money by smuggling it in to the country.

      The Boston Tea Party was a protest by organised criminals against lower taxes.

    8. Re:Good for them by sortius_nod · · Score: 1

      Actually, it does infringe on Human Rights as defined by the United Nations.

      My family has had a LOT to do with the UN and policies and frankly, this is a misrepresentation of the UN charters.

      It's funny how people in one breath damn the UN for inaction, then in the next breath try to defile their charters by bending the definitions inside.

      This is a VIOLATION OF BASIC HUMAN RIGHTS. It's an afront to these very "freedoms" that the US has claims they are fighting for.

      If you want to not be a tosspot and understand that ALL liberties are ESSENTIAL, read the actal charter - I don't think you will, as you are a /. neo-conservative.

      http://www.un.org/Overview/rights.html

    9. Re:Good for them by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

      According to Wikipedia: [citation needed]

      But, taking that at face value:

      In response to this the British government passed the Tea Act, which allowed the East India Company to sell tea to the colonies directly and without "payment of any customs or duties whatsoever" in Britain, instead paying the much lower American duty.

      In other words, smuggling aside, you couldn't be a legitimate tea merchant in America at the time, unless you were the East India Company. Favoritism, pure and simple.

      --
      Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
    10. Re:Good for them by spuzzzzzzz · · Score: 1

      Actually, it does infringe on Human Rights as defined by the United Nations.

      Ok, so I read the charter you linked to, and I don't see how a national biometric database would infringe on any of the rights it mentions. The closest I found was the first phrase of article 12, but I think it is quite a stretch to say that a biometric database contradicts it somehow. Do you have any stronger or more specific evidence to support your claim?

      --

      Don't you hate meta-sigs?
    11. Re:Good for them by sortius_nod · · Score: 1

      Read article 12 again. It's quite plain to see that this is an infringement on this basic human right.

      Then read article 30.

      This will stop you from being confused.

    12. Re:Good for them by spuzzzzzzz · · Score: 1
      It's not plain at all. Article 12:

      No one shall be subjected to arbitrary interference with his privacy, family, home or correspondence, nor to attacks upon his honour and reputation. Everyone has the right to the protection of the law against such interference or attacks.

      It's quite clear that this only forbids arbitrary interference with privacy. It does not forbid justified, reasonable interference with privacy. Not that the law in question is necessarily justified or reasonable, but that is a matter for debate (note that 'debate' need not include sweeping statements and insulting remarks).

      Oh, and article 30 doesn't seem remotely relevant, but I'll paste it here anyway so that others can judge for themselves:

      Nothing in this Declaration may be interpreted as implying for any State, group or person any right to engage in any activity or to perform any act aimed at the destruction of any of the rights and freedoms set forth herein.

      --

      Don't you hate meta-sigs?
    13. Re:Good for them by sortius_nod · · Score: 1

      Good old neo-conservatives... mandatory cataloging of people's biometrics is not an interference with privacy at all.

      Excuse me while I laugh my arse off.

      Any mandatory gathering of information on citizens is a interference with one's privacy. Don't even bother responding with the "if you haven't done anything wrong then why worry".

      As for article 30, you are doing exactly what article 30 states you are NOT to do with the human rights charter. Your understanding of human rights leaves a lot to be desired, in fact, I'd go so far as to say you're lack of knowledge on the subject is leading you to portray yourself as a fool. I hope you enjoy your neo-conservatism for all it's worth - nothing.

    14. Re:Good for them by spuzzzzzzz · · Score: 1

      Well, I've done my best to remain civil, but I see there's not much point. I have attempted to set out my position dispassionately and logically. Rather than respond in like fashion, you chose to make broad, sweeping pronouncements and to insult me personally.

      Good day to you. I have no desire to carry on this conversation.

      --

      Don't you hate meta-sigs?
    15. Re:Good for them by kabocox · · Score: 1

      But picking apart the semantics of a historical quote, and then using that to imply that the man agrees with you -- that just makes you look stupid. Honestly, do you think any of the Founding Fathers would've consented to biometrics, when they literally got up in arms over a tea tax?

      You'd better believe it. They'd have been all for biometrics as long it was something in there control. The entire tax revolt thing was against non-domestic taxes being imposed on the US. Which made sense. Would you want to be paying taxes imposed by the government of China or India? Not likely if you could avoid/prevent it. Now if it was our idea to impose taxes on cargo, then you'd better believe that they'd have mostly been for a tea tax. It was the difference of the tax being imposed rather than voted on.

  8. MARK OF THE BEAST by Wonderkid · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    Once again, the Jews set the terms for their own destruction by failing to believe just how evil the outside world is and making it much easier for people who gain access to this information to target specific individuals. Very worrying for one reason: It is not optional! What can you do? Refuse to have your details obtained or leave the country.

    --

    O'WONDERWe're working on it.

    1. Re:MARK OF THE BEAST by dvice_null · · Score: 2, Interesting

      It is not just them. I just run a gallup on a forum where "normal" people in my country like to hang out (mostly female parents). 7/8 of them think that collecting fingerprints from everyone is not just acceptable, but actually a good idea (to catch criminals). They also fail to believe how things could get worse if we accept that. I'm fairly certain that we are doomed.

    2. Re:MARK OF THE BEAST by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 1

      I must not LOL.
      LOL is the troll-feeder.
      LOL is the little response that leads to flamey debate.
      I will face the LOL.
      I will permit it to pass over me and through me.
      When it has gone, I will turn the inner eye to its path.
      Only I will remain.

    3. Re:MARK OF THE BEAST by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow I never thought of it like that... you might be onto something!

    4. Re:MARK OF THE BEAST by aronschatz · · Score: 1

      You're an idiot.

      Israel does not equal Jewish people. I'm Jewish and I'm not Israeli...

      I'm American.

  9. A history forgotten by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Israel seems not to have learned the lessons of the holocaust.

  10. Part of a middle east solution by linzeal · · Score: 0, Troll

    Why don't they just build more land off the coast of Israel like they do in Dubai instead of occupying other peoples land?

    1. Re:Part of a middle east solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Religious fanatics fighting religious fanatics because of a worthless desert, logic doesn't enter the equation.

    2. Re:Part of a middle east solution by 4D6963 · · Score: 1

      We should have just officially given them Florida instead... Problem solved.

      --
      You just got troll'd!
    3. Re:Part of a middle east solution by ciphersort · · Score: 1

      That would never have worked because the residents of Florida are one of the best armed populations on Earth.

    4. Re:Part of a middle east solution by 4D6963 · · Score: 1

      That would never have worked because the residents of Florida are one of the best armed populations on Earth.

      But they're all Jews already ;)

      --
      You just got troll'd!
    5. Re:Part of a middle east solution by gaijin99 · · Score: 1

      I'm not an expert, but as a rule of thumb the answer to any question that begins "why don't they just..." is money.

      Israel is not a particularly wealthy nation, it has no oil, and very little in the way of natural resources of any sort. All of the security theatre they indulge in takes an incredible amount of money, and of course, there's the cost of rebuilding all the damage done by the Israeli/Palestinian conflict has done (and continues to do) to Israel. Quite frankly, I'm surprised they have enough money in the treasury to pay Haredi men not to work, and to build special bus lines so that the Haredi can commit criminal assault on women who won't kowtow to their loony beliefs.

      Like most nations falling into the trap of the police state, Israel spends all of its money on "defense" rather than on beneficial programs that could actually end the problems it faces.

      --
      "Mission Accomplished" -- George W. Bush May 1, 2003
    6. Re:Part of a middle east solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't understand why they didn't get Germany instead. If not, the USA should have kept it. Germany is worth a lot, our economy would be a lot better off right now if we had kept it. Ditto with Japan. After all, if you don't start the war but go on to win it then you get to keep the losers territory, right?

    7. Re:Part of a middle east solution by oldhack · · Score: 1

      Both ours and Israelis. :-)

      --
      Fuck systemd. Fuck Redhat. Fuck Soylent, too. Wait, scratch the last one.
    8. Re:Part of a middle east solution by 4D6963 · · Score: 1

      Both ours and Israelis. :-)

      Exactly ;-) although from a national point of view that could be seen as a geographical penectomy.

      --
      You just got troll'd!
    9. Re:Part of a middle east solution by 4D6963 · · Score: 1

      Well you surely get to occupy them some (which is what the US did in Germany and Japan, actually the US still arguably occupy Germany) and tell them what they can do or can't do (i.e. rebuild an army or not). I guess there's no way you would actually want to make Germany or Japan become part of the USA? I mean, that's not like German-owned Alsace or Mexican-owned California, American-owned Japan is quite a stretch, you can't turn the Japanese into Americans.

      --
      You just got troll'd!
    10. Re:Part of a middle east solution by ciphersort · · Score: 1

      Florida's population is about 4% Jewish if memory serves. Just because most dollars in Florida are Jewish... ;)

    11. Re:Part of a middle east solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "But they're all Jews already ;)"

      They will be all Latino soon ;)

  11. They're almost twenty-five years too late. by pagewalker · · Score: 1

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nineteen_Eighty-Four

    The implications for privacy and surveillance, are not insignificant.

    (Plus there's the implied assumption that citizens are doing something wrong until they can prove otherwise.)

    --
    Thousands are enslaved every day. A River of In
  12. little green crescents by Gothmolly · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    Will they make the Palestinians all wear little green crescent badges on their clothes ?

    --
    I want to delete my account but Slashdot doesn't allow it.
    1. Re:little green crescents by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, any religious or national identifier on the ID card was illegalized in 2000, there is now a line of stars for nationality. Palestinians per the PA leadership do not want Israeli citizenship so they retain their PA ID cards making them different.

    2. Re:little green crescents by x1n933k · · Score: 1
      Why would they need to, without an Israeli passport they won't be able to stay in their own country.

      [J]

  13. Argh! Comma! by pagewalker · · Score: 2, Funny

    > The implications for privacy and surveillance, are not insignificant.

    Tarnation! I relocated a parenthetical and left a comma in!

    Ah, well. Maybe I can captain a starship now.

    --
    Thousands are enslaved every day. A River of In
  14. UK National ID Card by nickovs · · Score: 5, Informative

    The article notes that no other democratic country has a comprehensive biometric database of all citizens.

    But the UK is working on it.

    --
    If intelligent life is too complex to evolve on its own, who designed God?
    1. Re:UK National ID Card by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And South Africa stores photographs and fingerprints for all citizens. All South African citizens and permanent residents have ID documents that are required for everything from opening a bank account to collecting a parcel.

    2. Re:UK National ID Card by Yer+Mum · · Score: 1

      Spain has a national photo and fingerprint database too and has done for a long time. They're moving across from plastic to chipped ID cards now.

    3. Re:UK National ID Card by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So is Germany. It appears to be an international campaign, so why is Israel singled out?

    4. Re:UK National ID Card by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Israel adopting Urine Biometric Technology (ID-P)

      New Biometric technology to protect Privacy Exposure

      P-border - The Interior Minister of Israel Mr. Meir Shitrit has decided that Fingerprints, and Face recantation are not too invasive for privacy and are anyway stimulating protests and come under attack by civil libertarians argue that biometrics will lead to an even deeper erosion of personal privacy in both the real world and cyber-space. The Interior Minister has decided to adopt a new authentication method that he believes might not arouse too much antagonism, a new biometrics authentication technique has been adopted for this purpose, identifying or verifying the identity of a person, based on his Urine (also known as âoeID-Pâ).

      http://www.scribd.com/doc/4512754/Israel-adopting-Urine-Biometric-Technology-for-ID

  15. Vrooom, Vrooooooom! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Start your Jew-Hating engines up!

    (don't forget to post how you're only "anti-israel" and not "anti-jew" - some people might actually believe you!)

    1. Re:Vrooom, Vrooooooom! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's a big difference between the millions of Jewish Americans and Europeans living their simple and/or modern lives as westerners, and Israeli Zionists. Unlike the Israelis, most groups of Jews don't kill thousands every year.

    2. Re:Vrooom, Vrooooooom! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And don't forget to post your zionist crap anonymously.

  16. Begin the jokes about by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anthropometry and jewish noses.

  17. Only 5,499,000 Jews in Israel, 14 mil in the world by Futurepower(R) · · Score: 1

    It would be good if Slashdot stories provided some perspective.

    When stories about small countries are posted, it is useful to know the population. The entire country of Israel has a population like a big city. There are only 7,282,000 people in Israel. There are only 5,499,000 Jews in Israel. There are only about 14,000,000 Jews in the entire world.

    Slashdot often runs stories about New Zealand. There are only 4,270,605 people in all of New Zealand, both north and south islands.

    There are only 21,382,480 people in Australia.

  18. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by The+Clockwork+Troll · · Score: 1, Funny

    What do you mean impossible?

    If you read the article, the Nazi's RFID tags are clearly shaped like swastikas, duh.

    --

    There are no karma whores, only moderation johns
  19. The ultimate identity theft by DigitAl56K · · Score: 1

    * Forge ID card
    * Find some way to have "your" details "corrected" in the national database
    * Who would possibly believe the real identity owner?
    * .. without DNA
    * .. which I'm sure will be the justification for taking that next.

  20. A light unto the nations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    The French philosopher, Gilles Deleuze wrote the following prophetic words 30 years ago:

    The Israeli-Palestinian conflict is a model that will determine how problems of terrorism will be dealt with elsewhere, even in Europe. The worldwide cooperation of states, and the worldwide organization of police and criminal proceedings, will necessarily lead to a classification extending to more and more people who will be considered virtual "terrorists." This situation is analogous to the Spanish Civil War, when Spain served as an experimental laboratory for a far more terrible future.

    Today Israel is conducting an experiment. It has invented a model of repression that, once adapted, will profit other countries...This conflict is a curious kind of blackmail, from which the whole world will never escape unless we lobby for the Palestinians to be recognized for what they are: "genuine partners" in peace talks. They are indeed at war, in a war they did not choose.

  21. National Registration Act, Singapore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Singapore's had their National Registration Act since 1966.

    Every Singapore Citizen is registered, with their facial photograph and fingerprints (and more).

    1. Re:National Registration Act, Singapore by Hideyoshi · · Score: 1

      But Singapore is not a democratic country. Sure, they hold elections, but the results are as predictable as those of any election held in the Soviet Union ...

    2. Re:National Registration Act, Singapore by Tunfisch · · Score: 1

      In Spain, every citizen must provide a picture and fingerprints for the national ID card, which is compulsory from 14 years of age.

      Spain is a democratic country.

      --
      -- Der Tunfisch.
    3. Re:National Registration Act, Singapore by oldhack · · Score: 1

      "Hideyoshi"... would you be hailing from the democratic island state of LDP*?

      *That's the party holding power more/less continuously since post-WW II Japan.

      --
      Fuck systemd. Fuck Redhat. Fuck Soylent, too. Wait, scratch the last one.
  22. It's just one worrying trend by Kupfernigk · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Orthodox rabbis get to choose who is Jewish. This may not seem odd or eccentric to non-Jews. But the State of Israel is special. Many Jews - especially the most highly educated - are not Orthodox; they are Conservative or Reform. For those who have been following (if anyone) the goings on in the Anglican Church, with the progressive Episcopalians being attacked by the fundies who are attempting to marginalise them, similar things happen in Judaism. In the UK, possibly the three best well known rabbis in recent years are Lionel Blue, Jonathan Magonet and Julia Neuburger. All Reform. Who does the Government regard as being the "leader" of British Jewry? The Orthodox Chief Rabbi, head of a shrinking population of Orthodox who are actually observant. Some people, myself included, would describe him as a not very nice person who exaggerates his own importance. Others might use stronger language.

    Many Reform jews are pro-Zionist (think the State of Israel is a good thing) but strongly disapprove of the way it treats Palestinians, the Lebanese and their other neighbours, and object to the hypocrisy of Israel having 200 nuclear warheads and then complaining about regional destabilisation (e.g. the letter from Gerald Kaufman MP in the Guardian this weekend). The result is often quite vicious attacks by Orthodox Jews.

    Now look at this in the context of this biometric database. It is a wonderful opportunity for the Orthodox in Israel to identify Jews who they may regard as troublemakers. (They already routinely do things like refuse to recognise marriages of non-Orthodox Jews, or refuse to recognise conversions ratified by Reform rabbis). This database will give the police and the army more power to identify and harass, not only the Palestinians, but people who disagree with the settlers and the ultra-Zionists.

    Many of the founders of Israel were secular; a lot of them were socialists. I think they would be horrified by this proposal and would even quote the Torah against it.

    --
    From scarped cliff or quarried stone she cries "A thousand types are gone, I care for nothing, no not one."
    1. Re:It's just one worrying trend by mux2000 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      This database will give the police and the army more power to identify and harass, not only the Palestinians, but people who disagree with the settlers and the ultra-Zionists.

      Since this database is used for collecting data on Israeli citizens it is useless against Palestinians, since they are not citizens of Israel, nor of any other country.

      This is useful only against criminals, Israeli Arabs (who seldom serve in the army, and therfore didn't get their photo and finger-prints taken already), and as you mentioned, most useful against political resistance. Keeping the Israeli populace ignorant of the atrocities Israel performs takes huge amounts of propaganda, censureship and such tactics. It wouldn't surprise me one bit if this is designed to track political ("extreme-left", "bleeding hearts", "arab-lovers") dissidents as well as other threats.

      Full disclosure - I am Israeli.

      Oh fuck. I just shot myself in the foot, didn't I?

    2. Re:It's just one worrying trend by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    3. Re:It's just one worrying trend by tinkerton · · Score: 1

      Israeli Arabs (who seldom serve in the army...
        Israeli arabs can serve in the army? I didn't know that. Are you sure? Note, I don't mean druze.

    4. Re:It's just one worrying trend by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 1

      Oh fuck. I just shot myself in the foot, didn't I?

      Not really, just pick the tinfoil hat back up off the ground and put it on again. Naw, I agree with you. The religious courts, AFAIK, will have no power over this database, so its only real use will be political harassment and tracking of released/paroled criminals.

      Actually, this sounds to me like a UK-style security theater -- a failing government thrashing about, grasping at straws trying to sound useful while the populace waits for elections to chuck the bastards out. B'ezrat ha'Shem it won't pass or the Supreme Court will strike it down.

    5. Re:It's just one worrying trend by story645 · · Score: 1

      It is a wonderful opportunity for the Orthodox in Israel to identify Jews who they may regard as troublemakers.

      'cause it's the orthodox pushing this through the gov't? Read the article, and guess what, nothing suggests it, and neither does the current makeup of the Knesset. Right wing hawqs are just as enamored of this nonsense as anyone, and as much political power as they may wield, the majority of the country is secular (and pretty much the entire armed forces) so the gov't can't pass something this intrusive unless somebody besides the Orthodox are pushing for it.

      They already routinely do things like refuse to recognise marriages of non-Orthodox Jews, or refuse to recognise conversions ratified by Reform rabbis

      And doing weird things with non-Jews like making them do semi-conversions or go to Cyprus (which is what my relatives had to do.) That's a flaw of the country not being able to figure out what the hell it wants to be, and an attitude towards Judaism that's highlighted by this:

      Who does the Government regard as being the "leader" of British Jewry? The Orthodox Chief Rabbi, head of a shrinking population of Orthodox who are actually observant.

      That's cause for a very large segment of Jews (pretty much everyone not from Western Europe, and plenty from there), Orthdoxy's got the most legitimacy. I see it with my relatives and acquaintances, and hell with people I know who are conservative/reform/non-observant/traditional/everything in between. Picking Orthodoxy is often the least likely to offend, and honestly for anyone ignorant of the insanity that is Jewish denominational politics it's the easiest. Though I'm in New York, where our politicians pander to every sect.

      Basically, dude, I think you're batting at a straw man here. It's not orthodox Judaism's fault that the law's messed up, it's the state of Israel's.

      --
      open source modern art: laser taggi
    6. Re:It's just one worrying trend by mux2000 · · Score: 1

      The Bedouin sometimes join the army as expert trackers.

    7. Re:It's just one worrying trend by abstract+daddy · · Score: 0

      What holocaust is taking place now? Please share.

    8. Re:It's just one worrying trend by nidarus · · Score: 1

      Israeli arabs can serve in the army? I didn't know that. Are you sure? Note, I don't mean druze.

      They can volunteer. AFAIK all Arabs can join, but only the Bedouins actually do it.

    9. Re:It's just one worrying trend by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "What holocaust is taking place now? Please share."

      That's in the next phase. Holocausts happen because of deniers and apologists such as yourself.

    10. Re:It's just one worrying trend by Das+Modell · · Score: 1

      (alt. account)

      Please tell me all about the "next phase."

    11. Re:It's just one worrying trend by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This sounds like a response to the Steckbeck ruling where Jesus-believing Jews are now allowed to make aliyah if the father of the applicant is Jewish. Only these would be made most uncomfortable by biometric ID's because it seems to jive with their interpretations of John's Apocalypse vis-avis the 'Mark of the Beast' (apocalyptic literature exists within Judaism as well and even shares its antihero figure, Armilus as identified as 'the Antichrist of the Christians'). It smacks of another attempt to secure the effects of the Birkat-HaMinim where the messianics are concerned.

    12. Re:It's just one worrying trend by tinkerton · · Score: 1

      No, as far as I know muslims are forbidden by law to join the army, so most israeli arabs. For druze there is some kind of draft, a special case. I forgot about the Bedouins. Everybody forgets about the Bedouins. The orthodox christians can volunteer too.

      One way in which the Israeli Arabs are discriminated against is, there are a lot of benefits you can't have if you haven't served in the army. It sounds so fair when they cut costs by taking away some benefit for those who didn't serve. After all, they earned it less...

    13. Re:It's just one worrying trend by SourGrapes · · Score: 1

      Absolutely untrue. Anyone is free to join the IDF. Muslims included. Few choose to, but they are by no means forbidden. Even homosexuals are welcome, which puts Israel a step ahead of America.

    14. Re:It's just one worrying trend by tinkerton · · Score: 1

      Aah, so not by law. I should be able to track that down. In that case it will be a diffuse system of requirements that in effect makes it near impossible for israeli arabs to join. With a few exceptions to put on display for all to see. Israeli Arabs need the income awfully bad you know. But there are enough middleclass israeli arabs to help you ignore that.

      Tell you a secret, as soon as they say "even homosexuals are welcome", check the case of the israeli arabs. Look at this beach! There is even an area for homosexuals!

    15. Re:It's just one worrying trend by SourGrapes · · Score: 1

      Israel Arabs are, by and large, pretty reluctant to join the army of a country that many of them consider to be at best unfriendly to them and at worst an enemy that they hope to see destroyed. Is it really surprising that so few of them choose to volunteer? Is the only possible reason for the low Arab enlistment rate because of discrimination against them? Is it really the most likely possibility? Come on now. As for homosexuals -- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LGBT_rights_in_Israel#Military_service Of course there is still discrimination and harassment -- find one place where there's none -- but Israel tends to be way ahead of the curve on these things. Don't be so fast to assume the worst.

    16. Re:It's just one worrying trend by tinkerton · · Score: 1

      I didn't mean the israeli arabs were excluded because of general discrimination, I meant they were excluded from the army - in ways that are typically difficult to pin down - and later not serving in the army was used against them to discriminate.
      I found this link meanwhile Is excluded the right word?.

      I agree that concerning homosexuals Israel is a step ahead of the US. That is why the argument is misleading. It suggests extrapolation. Concerning the treatment of Israeli Arabs Israel is way way behind. And they're much better off than those who live in the westbank, who are again much better off than people in Gaza.

      I think I know what I'm saying when I emphasize the Israeli need to keep up appearances and to cover up every discrimination. The first person that needs to be fooled there is the Israeli Jew. After all, they want to be nice. Well, they are. But that is a very weak safeguard. It also makes it very difficult to tell them their country is doing things that are very wrong.

      Maybe you should read that book of Susan Nathan's.

    17. Re:It's just one worrying trend by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Orthodox rabbis get to choose who is Jewish.

      Not true. Orthodox rabbis do not choose who is Jewish. Orthodox rabbis set the standard for what they regard as Jewish, and anyone who meets the standard they regard as Jewish. Their standard is very simple:

      - Anyone born of a Jewish mother is Jewish OR
      - Anyone going through an orthodox conversion is Jewish

      Judaism does not have the concept of excommunication.

      This may not seem odd or eccentric to non-Jews.

      Doubtful. I'm pretty sure the Vatican sets the standard of who is Roman Catholic, and the Archbishop of Canterbury sets the standard of who is Anglican.

      In the UK, possibly the three best well known rabbis in recent years are Lionel Blue, Jonathan Magonet and Julia Neuburger. All Reform. Who does the Government regard as being the "leader" of British Jewry? The Orthodox Chief Rabbi, head of a shrinking population of Orthodox who are actually observant.

      Judaism is a religion without a formal hierarchy - there are no official leaders of Judaism. Many branches of Islam don't have an official leader either.

      By comparison, Roman Catholics & Anglicans have a strict hierarchy, and the leaders are clearly defined.

    18. Re:It's just one worrying trend by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Keeping the Israeli populace ignorant of the atrocities Israel performs takes huge amounts of propaganda, censorship and such tactics.

      That's funny, because the people who would be actually doing these "atrocities" are, surprise surprise, Israelis! Israeli soldiers who go home every week and are completely free to tell their family, friends and the press about any atrocities they have witnessed. And yet this, somehow, doesn't happen. I wonder why?

      Full disclosure - I am Israeli.

      So am I. Have you served in the army? Do you have friends in the army? Are you (or anyone else) witnessing atrocities that are not reporting to the press? You do realize this is a free country. Go ahead, tell the world about it.

    19. Re:It's just one worrying trend by nidarus · · Score: 1

      Aah, so not by law. I should be able to track that down. In that case it will be a diffuse system of requirements that in effect makes it near impossible for israeli arabs to join.

      Not true. I personally know a Muslim (of mixed Bedouin-Falakh ancestry) that was in the army. There are whole Bedouin clans that regularly join the army, and they don't seem to have much of a problem.

      The main reason that there aren't many non-Bedouin Arabs in the IDF is because (pretty understandably) Israeli Arabs don't want to fight their Palestinian brothers. There was a huge uproar in the Arab-Israeli community when the government proposed civilian service as an non-military alternative for Arabs. The reasoning was that it was a slippery slope, a gateway to recruiting Arabs to the army (even though there wasn't a shred of evidence for this).

    20. Re:It's just one worrying trend by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Somehow I doubt you are really Israeli, considering this ludicrous quote:
      "Keeping the Israeli populace ignorant of the atrocities Israel performs takes huge amounts of propaganda, censureship and such tactics."

      Israel does not "perform atrocities", and it has a very free press, which is almost always leftist. Take your mendacious propaganda somewhere else.

    21. Re:It's just one worrying trend by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just use Hitler's records...he seemed to be able to figure out who and where the jew/israelis were. They should all self sew a nice little patch on all their passports

    22. Re:It's just one worrying trend by SailorBob · · Score: 1

      Full disclosure - I'm Israeli too and give me an example of your bull-shit atrocities.

      This will end up being by used by the Israeli Left wing fascists to jail anyone who opposes the forced expulsion of Jews from their homes in areas the government wants to turn over to the Arabs.

      You seem to forget the thousands of teenagers who were jailed without trial for demonstrating against the expulsion of the Jews from Gaza.

      And don't give me any BS about them being violent. All they did was peacefully block roads.

      When the labor unions strike and block roads, or shut down essential services like the telephone system or electricity or block the ports and shut down the airports - no one is ever arrested - no one is ever prosecuted.

      And don't forget the hundreds of people who were hospitalized after being beaten by police at Amona - including members of Knesset.

      --

      Woopty Doo Basil, what does it all mean?!

    23. Re:It's just one worrying trend by mux2000 · · Score: 1

      Full disclosure - I'm Israeli too and give me an example of your bull-shit atrocities.

      I can give you hundreds.

      This will end up being by used by the Israeli Left wing fascists to jail anyone who opposes the forced expulsion of Jews from their homes in areas the government wants to turn over to the Arabs.

      What? Left-wing fascists? Sharon, while arguably fascist, was no left-wing bleeding heart. It was he who suggested that crazy idea about pulling settlements out of the ground. A better plan would have been just to stop funding for defense in the Gaza strip, leaving those settlers to defend for themselves.

      There is poetic justice to Sharon's plan though, since kicking people out of their homes is what got us into this mess in the first place.

      You seem to forget the thousands of teenagers who were jailed without trial for demonstrating against the expulsion of the Jews from Gaza.

      I didn't forget, it just didn't seem relevant to the post I was making. You are right. People (be they settlers, palestinians, right or left wing adherants, jews or arabs) have the right to assemble and speak their mind without being charged, prosecuted or harmed. But don't you see that by saying to people all this time "these people (palestinians) are sub-human and therefore have no rights.", by robbing them of their rights, our own rights are at risk of being obviated? Because now people think "if I can shoot into a crowd in one demonstration, why can't I in another?" - repression is a frame of mind, which the settlers may have seen, for once, the back side of.

    24. Re:It's just one worrying trend by mux2000 · · Score: 1

      Keeping the Israeli populace ignorant of the atrocities Israel performs takes huge amounts of propaganda, censorship and such tactics.

      That's funny, because the people who would be actually doing these "atrocities" are, surprise surprise, Israelis! Israeli soldiers who go home every week and areWhen have you last seen the photo of a dead palestinian boy on the main cover or Yediot, or a story about what life in the conquered territories on the channel 2 news? completely free to tell their family, friends and the press about any atrocities they have witnessed. And yet this, somehow, doesn't happen. I wonder why?

      This question has many answers. By far the worst attrocities are not performed by a single bad soldier. The worst ones are created by a large, irresponsive and irresponsible military beurocracy. Do you know what a palestinian man has to go through to meed his daughter in another part of the conquered terrirories? Or god forbid, in Israeli prison. What one has to do there to maintain a job, to go to school, to have the life we Israelis take for granted? Of the attrocities that are performed by single or few soldiers, they are indeed freely told (if the soldiers find it in their best interest to bring them up). Some end up in stories on such sites as B'tselem, but never reach the daily news. I also do hear, from time to time, people bragging about their prowess after doing some reserve time by mentioning what I would consider horrific abuses. Most Israelis are so brainwashed they think nothing of it.

      Have you served in the army?

      Yes, I have served in the army. That is not however something I like to admit. But as an 18 year-old boy, I had nothing but my parents' advice to guide me, and they said I should, so I did.

      Do you have friends in the army?

      Most of my friends serve in the military. I can't make them see my point of view, since this is such a powerful part of being Israeli, there is no chance they will change their mind. I also have a few friends who agree with me and do not serve anymore. To each his own, I won't turn anyones hand.

      Are you (or anyone else) witnessing attocities that are not reporting to the press? You do realize this is a free country. Go ahead, tell the world about it.

      Most of the stuff "they" don't want you to see isn't censured. Some of it is, but most of it is just marginalized and spun beyond recognition. Those who want to know what's going on have to turn to human rights organisations to tell them, because you can't trust the kind of materials they put in the mainstream channels. God, we're like a country that has only Fox News to watch. BTW, it all gets "reported to the press", the problem is, it's then the press that picks, chooses and distorts what it then reports to the public.

    25. Re:It's just one worrying trend by mux2000 · · Score: 1

      Hate to rain on your parade, but the script Yonit Levi reads to you every night is very carefully written. Mainstream news and media (even "Eretz Nehederet") is very careful not to discuss any of several painful subjects, or to approach them from a very careful, government-approved angle so not to bite the hand that feeds them, with the ultimate result of the public having very little knowledge of these subjects, and a lot of very skewed views.

      Here's a short list of some of these subjects:
      1. Where are all the arabs that lived here before Zionistic settlements began? Where did they go? Why did they go?
      2. What are human rights? Why do I have human rights but my friend Ahmed from Qalqilia does not?
      3. If the conquered territories are in Israel, why is Israeli law not applicable there?
      4. How come most Israelis want peace, but action towards continuous war has been ongoing since the establishment of this state?
      5. How can a state be both "Jewish" and "Democratic"? Isn't that a contradiction?

      Should I continue?

      You may still be able to publish what you want (thank god for that, right?) but what you hear is carefully controlled.

    26. Re:It's just one worrying trend by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Orthodox rabbis get to choose who is Jewish.

      Not true. Orthodox rabbis do not choose who is Jewish. Orthodox rabbis set the standard for what they regard as Jewish, and anyone who meets the standard they regard as Jewish. Their standard is very simple:

      - Anyone born of a Jewish mother is Jewish OR

      Rashi may have seized upon the asymmetry of the grammar by saying "note that it does not say 'and she will turn your son away from following Me'..." Dvarim 7:3 (this text will be in a soon coming reading). However, there is a question of handling that text by older sages. In T.B. Kiddushin 68b, the same text is quoted resulting in all Gentile women being branded as 'of the seven (Canaanite) nations'. The rejoinder was "It is true of all those who cause to turn away." The question that was never asked is "What if there is one who does not cause to turn away?" It was merely assumed a priori that any and all Gentile women will not raise their children as Jews (cf. Nehemia 10)

      - Anyone going through an orthodox conversion is Jewish

      There have been individuals who have been shunned despite the command in Torah to not shame a convert (Dvarim 10.19) among other reasons within the Torah proper (Shmot 22.20, Vayikra 25.17, et. al.). There are other admonitions arising from the process of determining other halachot; In the process of handling levirate marriage there are interesting rejoinders found in T.B. Yevamoth 10a and 63a: "for a convert is as a child newly born". ("Born again" was in the oral tradition recorded at least a century and a half before the Mishna was penned, one can only guess where it was committed to papyrus first~). One need only search for the cases where applications for Israeli citizenship had been rejected even though the petitioner presented a valid t'odat-gerut (conversion certificate).

      Judaism does not have the concept of excommunication.

      Baruch Spinoza, anyone? "Let all repent except for Acher (Elisha ben Abuya, suspected of holding Nazarene beliefs)". Want stories?

      http://www.mjaa.org/
      http://www.jewsforjesus.org/
      http://www.umjc.org/

      I don't necessarily agree with all of their views.

      This may not seem odd or eccentric to non-Jews.

      Doubtful. I'm pretty sure the Vatican sets the standard of who is Roman Catholic, and the Archbishop of Canterbury sets the standard of who is Anglican.

      In the UK, possibly the three best well known rabbis in recent years are Lionel Blue, Jonathan Magonet and Julia Neuburger. All Reform. Who does the Government regard as being the "leader" of British Jewry? The Orthodox Chief Rabbi, head of a shrinking population of Orthodox who are actually observant.

      Judaism is a religion without a formal hierarchy - there are no official leaders of Judaism. Many branches of Islam don't have an official leader either.

      By comparison, Roman Catholics & Anglicans have a strict hierarchy, and the leaders are clearly defined.

      The Christian world must be properly reminded that they are but franchisees and there comes a day when their franchise will be properly reviewed. What boils my potatoes more than all else is viewing people who they will not call Jews while alive, but will regard them as Jews in death only.

      May those who fast, may it be easy.

      Hashivenu !! vnashuvah
      Chadesh yamenu kqedem

    27. Re:It's just one worrying trend by SailorBob · · Score: 1

      Btselem has no credibility.

      Brother, I think you need to step back and take a second look at Israeli society. You seem to have a skewed view of the attitudes of Israeli Jews.

      Answer me one question: if Israeli Jews really see Arabs as "sub-human" then why does something like 80 - 85% of Israeli Jews reject as immoral the forced transfer of Arabs from the country? They don't reject it because they think it's not practical - they reject it because they believe it to be immoral. And even out of that 15 - 20% who don't reject it as immoral can you honestly tell me you think there is anything other than a tiny and insignificant minority that would support the random murder of Arabs?

      There may be a tiny minority of extremists among us, but don't project that on the entire society.

      --

      Woopty Doo Basil, what does it all mean?!

  23. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The creatures outside looked from nazi to jew,
    and from jew to nazi, and from nazi to jew again;
    but already it was impossible to say which was which.

    Indeed.

  24. So? by FatSean · · Score: 1

    The people living on that land had very little to do with the Empires which claimed to own the land.
    They were just living their lives and saw that some outside forces had made claims. It wasn't until the creation of Israel that those empires had real effects of the average resident. That's when they began to fight back.

    Imperialism and nation-building always fails.

    --
    Blar.
    1. Re:So? by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 0, Troll

      Great ! Because it's Jews that were living there, and it's Jews that ARE living there.

      So if you really believe in the argument that land belongs to the people living on it, there cannot be any possible argument about the land of Israel : it's Jewish.

      The first people in recorded history to live on that land were ... Jews ... and that's just about the only bit of data we have on them.

      And if you take the historical Israel : let's not forget that that was quite a bit bigger than the current little spec of land. In fact the original Israel included a few cities that you might have heard of : Damascus, Mecca, Medina, Kirkuk, Amman, ...

      These cities are, as historical books accurately described, stolen, by massacres, from Jews. And compared to the amount of Jews that the muslims killed and how long they kept killing them, Hitler looks like an annoying fly on the wall.

      Also let's not forget that muslims still execute (as in KILL) people for disagreeing with the statement "Non-muslims are the uglyest animals on the face of the earth", followed by advice on what to do if one irritates you : kill not just one, but enough, so that non-muslims "know their place".

      Of course, statements like this do not make islam racist. They would make anything else racist, obviously.

      And that would be a really cool definition of where land goes, since that would make over 99% of the muslim lands not really anyone's at all, since, in case you haven't noticed, with a few exceptions (which, almost without exceptions, were quite recently mainly Christian lands, e.g. Turkey before the Armenian Genocide, Sudan, ...) muslim lands are desolate empty wastelands. So someone really ought to go live there, and just claim it as an independant country, right ?

      Muslims merely want to conquer, to steal everything from others, like they have stolen so many things already, like the paedophilic massacring thief that was their "prophet". They even stole the temple, and the kaaba, both of which cannot be called muslim by any stretch of the imagination. If you remain unconvinced of the kaaba being non-muslim, google for allah's daughters, and read some history.

      "Muslims are the uglyest animals on the face of the earth. Remember, if they do anything bad, do not just kill the muslim that did it, but kill enough muslims, so that the rest knows their place" (Quran 8:22, with "infidels" replaced by "muslims")

    2. Re:So? by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 1

      And if you take the historical Israel : let's not forget that that was quite a bit bigger than the current little spec of land. In fact the original Israel included a few cities that you might have heard of : Damascus, Mecca, Medina, Kirkuk, Amman, ...

      OK, everyone knows the original Kingdom of Israel was bigger than today's State of Israel, but do you have any source on it stretching from Damascus to Mecca and the Mediterranean Sea to Amman?

    3. Re:So? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You got to be a wicked zionist. Ever heard of jews and israelis reverting back to Islam? So you mean any place a jew has lived in is jewish? I guess the whole world belongs to jews right? What about arabs that were before Islam, Abramities. Abraham (Oh, where did he live?) the father of Arabs and Muslims (Ismael) and Jews (Isaac). The first monotheistic religion before Torah! They lived in those places before jews even existed and lived there after jews started to exist and live among them. Or do we start counting after jews started to exist?

    4. Re:So? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Abraham was the first Jew and kept the Torah 2600+ years before the illiterate, illegitimate, false-prophet pedophile you adore came on the scene with his corrupted knock-off amalgamation of Judaism-Christianity and Arab polytheism. Go have a work accident, Abdul.

    5. Re:So? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm sorry, which side is accused of being incorrigibly hateful?

    6. Re:So? by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, which side is accused of being incorrigibly hateful?

      Well we all believe in Darwin, and evolution, don't we ? Because that "theory" (whatever your understanding of that word) states simply :

      "everyone is trying to kill everyone else"

      So to answer your question : which side is being incorrigibly hateful ? There are many answers :

      Darwin :
      --------

      Both, and we ourselves too. Either we're incorrigibly hateful (attempting to exterminate all the other sides) or we're dead.

      Islam :
      -------

      Jews, after all allah says they're apes and pigs and should be pursued in order to bring about the end of the world. (I kid you not, the paedophile prophet states that Jews are to be killed to bring about the "last day", which is the end of the world. Well whatever sounded good to the dumb arab masses was good enough for the paedophile prophet, after all he managed to talk his way out of getting caught in bed with a 9 year old girl at age 54. This is also what ahmadinejad is promising to Iranians who, as any sane person would, don't believe any of it)

      Judaism :
      ---------

      Jews are forced to defend themselves. Jews value all human life, and therefore Jews don't even kill those trying to kill them, except in direct defense of another human life.

      That brings the question : what do you think ?

    7. Re:So? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think either you're a rare idiot or this is a stupid joke

  25. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by h4rm0ny · · Score: 5, Insightful


    And the Israeli tags are shaped like a little star because the government decided that it was a shape that conveyed their aspirations for a better, more peaceful society. And they're bright yellow to make them harder to misplace.

    Of all the nations in the world you might hope would be wary of pervasive monitoring, you'd think one that bills itself as a "jewish state" would be it.

    --

    Aide-toi, le Ciel t'aidera - Jeanne D'Arc.
  26. Ah, the irony by hyades1 · · Score: 1

    A system Hitler would have had wet dreams about, and it's a right wing Jewish government that is bringing it into being. How long until some uniformed Israeli soldier struts up to a family and arrogantly demands, "Your papers. Immediately!"

    I would bet the majority of Jews around the world and in Israel are horrified by this measure, and disgusted by the people who want to implement it. What price security?

    --
    I've calculated my velocity with such exquisite precision that I have no idea where I am.
    1. Re:Ah, the irony by mux2000 · · Score: 1

      How long until some uniformed Israeli soldier struts up to a family and arrogantly demands, "Your papers. Immediately!"

      Try fourty years ago.

      I would bet the majority of Jews around the world and in Israel are horrified by this measure

      Don't know about Jews living outside of Israel, since this is of no concern to them, but the vast majority of Jews living in Israel wouldn't blink when they hear the news. This is old news, and they're used to being treated in this way for a long time. This reminds me of a story I heard about a frog and a tea-pot...

    2. Re:Ah, the irony by nidarus · · Score: 1

      How long until some uniformed Israeli soldier struts up to a family and arrogantly demands, "Your papers. Immediately!"

      You seem to be under the impression that Israel doesn't already has a national ID ("papers"). Actually, Israelis always had "papers". The biometric ID is meant to complement the already existing paper ID.

      I should also note that the fear of an official national ID is a strange Anglo-American phobia. Western European countries, such as Belgium or Germany have those, and they seem to be doing very well. In fact, they seem much more "free" than the paranoid War-on-Whatever-we-feel-like USA or the surveillance-happy UK to me.

      PS. The current Israeli government may suck, but calling the Kadima-Labor coalition "right-wing" just makes you looks ignorant.

  27. Fucking cowards. by FatSean · · Score: 1

    Pants-filling pussies disagree about what is an essential liberty. That's fine. They might not like what happens if they actually get their wish and crush the 'non-essential' liberties cherished by many of their countrymen.

    This liberal is a proud gun owner.

    --
    Blar.
  28. Endless cycle of violence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    The purpose of the biometric testing is to restrict the movements of non-Jews in Israel. Jewish businessmen want Arabs to do their less desirable work, but Arabs may not support Jewish policies, so all of their movements must be tracked.

    The U.S. government is already fighting a war with Iran. There is talk of "diplomacy", but that is only to limit awareness of what the corrupters are doing. There are three groups of people who want war with Iran: weapons investors, oil investors, and Jews. The situation is the same as before invading Iraq. There was talk of diplomacy, but the leaders in Iraq knew that the U.S. government would invade, no matter what was said, so they acted in a hysterical fashion.

    The purpose of invading Iran seems to be the same as the purpose of invading Iraq: to restrict the supply of oil even further, so that oil prices will rise even further.

    Jews want U.S. citizens to pay for a war with Iran because Jews supported a war with Iraq, and that made other people in the region feel even more threatened, and there is talk of war with Israel. Jews supported a war with Iraq because Saddam Hussein did not like the way they were treating Arabs.

    Israel is a country formed of immigrants. The Jews in Europe were not wanted there, because they were seen to be destructive of the common good, such as involvement in manipulating the currency. Jews were restricted in Russia. The idea of forming Israel was that Jews weren't welcome anywhere, so forming a new country would give them somewhere to go. But they have made themselves unwelcome in the region around Israel, also.

    1. Re:Endless cycle of violence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Jews try to take control of any discussion of Jews or Israel. It's probably a good idea to browse this story at -1, so you will see what they don't want you to see.

  29. As an Israeli, I see no problem here. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It seems as if the common American citizen has an unreasonable fear of it's government. It's a sentiment most of the world doesn't share.

    I don't think my government is "out to get me". For the most parts, it has my best interests in mind. After all, if the elected officials fail to meet my expectations, I won't vote for them comes the next election.

    Could it be used for evil purposes? Sure. So what? Almost everything could. I could run you over with my car, does this mean that all cars should be outlawed? Let them have their biometric database and keep a vigil watch to ensure they only use it appropriately.

    1. Re:As an Israeli, I see no problem here. by Tuoqui · · Score: 1

      The problem with these sorts of things is they tend to be secret databases that John Q Public cant just go and check if things are being used appropriately. When the watchers are the ones who get to select their own watchers then potentially extremely inappropriate uses can and most likely will occur.

      --
      09F911029D74E35BD84156C5635688C0
      +2 Troll is Slashdot's way of saying groupthink is confused
    2. Re:As an Israeli, I see no problem here. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But how could it be used? They'll have my name (which they already have), picture (already have), and fingerprints (ditto). The only difference is that now, the police could verify these on the field, without a court order.

      Think about it: Mr. Smith goes into a bank, produces a forged ID and open an account under the name Mr. Jones. The real Jones will discover his life savings just disappeared because there was no easy way to verify his identity! We have stories of honest citizens getting fines on offenses they had nothing to do with, because the true offender used a fake ID. With this system, such forgeries would be much harder and therefore much rarer.

      Embed and identifying code into the ID card and the only way to get this data is by producing the actual ID card; the evil policeman won't be able to pull the data by typing my ID number into his computer terminal. Sure, there's probably a way to abuse this system, but that's true to almost anything. the real question is not whether it can be abused but does the benefits outweigh the risks - and in this case, they are.

    3. Re:As an Israeli, I see no problem here. by mux2000 · · Score: 1

      You're right. If you're a right-wing Zionist tax-paying army-serving traditional Jewish Israeli citizen, you have nothing to be afraid of, and this systems benefits far out-weigh their risk to you.

    4. Re:As an Israeli, I see no problem here. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then he sees Yeshua of Nitzeret as the messiah, then he is SCREWED!

  30. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by DaedalusHKX · · Score: 1

    Wow... I just won a bet over a prediction I made 3 years ago. Thanks Slashdot.

    They finally made it public eh?

    --
    " What luck for rulers that men do not think" - Adolf Hitler
  31. DNA Forgery by Digestromath · · Score: 1

    I suppose the next step will be DNA forgery. Underage kids will need some Gattaca like setup to buy beer. It's just the end of freedom as we know it.

  32. Reality Check: They have had this data for years by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    Since most the country does compulsory army duty, they already have everyone's fingerprints, photos, dental records and blood tests etc. (things that army needs to identify you when you come home in multiple pieces)

    Since the US and UK have mandated biometric passport data, they would be collecting biometric data anyway.

    The only thing that this does is cover the remaining percentages and have dogged the army.

    A national ID card has been around for many many years. Luckily for Israelis they do not have a governments that seem to abuse this data nor a high court that bends over and looks the away when people try and abuse this power.

    The reality is that the data exists. The only new factor here is that it will be embedded on your ID card rather then click away on a terminal.

  33. Does it? by DaedalusHKX · · Score: 1

    USA USA USA... Canata... Canata Canada... oh wait... Mexic.... oh wait... Brazi... Braz... nvm... lets see... UK UK UK... nvm... wait... where exactly has it failed? I'm not sure the original denizens of any of those lands have descendants left alive to make any claims that empire has failed. Empire has alway succeeded beyond its wildest dreams.

    --
    " What luck for rulers that men do not think" - Adolf Hitler
  34. Oh, yes, terrorists of course; by AxeTheMax · · Score: 1

    Governments use terrorists. States use threats to its own people to get more control over them. 'Terrorism' has been very useful for this purpose; much better than burglars, 'communist' union activists, or even paedophiles. For a parallel, most Chinese will refer to Tibetan protesters of any kind as terrorists; just what the Chinese government needs.

  35. Re:Only 5,499,000 Jews in Israel, 14 mil in the wo by rubycodez · · Score: 3, Insightful

    but with the U.S. funding and supporting Israel those 7.2 million get carte blanche to do things for which the 305 million in the U.S.A. get blamed

  36. How long? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How about "long ago"?

    Israeli citizens already have to produce the mandatory ID when a policeman requires it. The only difference is that under the new law (if it passes), the policeman would be able to veryfy that the ID his been given really belongs to the individual holding it.

  37. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    I'll post this as AC, to avoid karma-whoring.

    The parent is referring to a book by George Orwell called Animal Farm. It's out of copyright in the UK, so can be read online (I did the other night, stayed up all night in fact. Yeah yeah, get out more, but if I did that I wouldn't be a Slashdot reader!).

    I also highly recommend that, when the reader has finished the book, they do a little mental excercise in matching the animals to the actual people involved in the rise of Stalinist Russia.

    Bear in mind that Orwell was writing before the events of the cold war, as far as I can tell the book ends here. Which brings us neatly back to what the parent is referring to:

    The creatures outside looked from pig to man,
    and from man to pig, and from pig to man again;
    but already it was impossible to say which was which.

    A little off-topic, but what's a threaded conversation system for?

  38. Not really surprising. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Speaking as an American, I can't say I'm very surprised. For all our talk of 'war on terror' and Israel's experience with terrorism, I find it amusing how a nation founded by terrorists, terrorist organizations, and terrorist acts receives such unflinching support from the US. I pray that someday somebody in Washington will have the guts to review our foreign policy and aid towards Israel and see that Israel is more of a liability than an asset to our relations with other Middle-Eastern countries. In short, Washington needs to tell AIPAC to fuck off.

    1. Re:Not really surprising. by xmedar · · Score: 1

      The US has supported terrorists in many countries, the IRA raised funds in the US for 30 years without being stopped, primarily through NORAID, and IRA terrorists used to be part of the New York St. Patricks Day parade until after 9/11, the US has even given political asylum to convicted IRA terrorists, in most of the world USA == terrorist, I think for the most part Americans have no idea how many billions of people all around the world thought that 9/11 was just a bit of payback for decades of US terrorism.

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced man is indistinguishable from God
    2. Re:Not really surprising. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The US has supported terrorists in many countries, the IRA raised funds in the US for 30 years without being stopped, primarily through NORAID, and IRA terrorists used to be part of the New York St. Patricks Day parade until after 9/11, the US has even given political asylum to convicted IRA terrorists, in most of the world USA == terrorist, I think for the most part Americans have no idea how many billions of people all around the world thought that 9/11 was just a bit of payback for decades of US terrorism.

      Blah blah blah.. so you have sand in your vagina.

      Well, they sure showed us. Now we've got Reaper drones patrolling the skies of many shitholes blowing the hell out of people at random. If something big happens again we'll just step it up to neutron weapons and get it over with.. starting with Europe.

  39. Almost completely irrelevant! by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

    So what? The article is about a democratic country (NOT a religion) passing draconian, Orwellian laws. The size of the population has little to do with it. A nation is a nation.

    1. Re:Almost completely irrelevant! by gaijin99 · · Score: 1

      What separation, exactly, exists between the state of Israel and the religion of Orthodox Judaism? You can't even get married there unless you qualify for an Orthodox marriage [1].

      [1] Reform Jews, it should be noted, basically get bupkis out of Israel. Orthodox loonies get government subsidies so they can beat their wives and stay home reading the Torah all day instead of working.

      --
      "Mission Accomplished" -- George W. Bush May 1, 2003
    2. Re:Almost completely irrelevant! by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 1

      What separation, exactly, exists between the state of Israel and the religion of Orthodox Judaism?

      Actually, ONLY the marriage/family matters go to the religious courts. And you can get married as a Muslim or Christian through the corresponding religious court.

      Point is, an assault in Israel gets tried by a criminal court. A lawsuit gets tried by a civil court. And these courts run on Common Law rather than Torah Law.

      Not that I'm inclined to defend this ridiculous biometric bullshit. Just saying.

    3. Re:Almost completely irrelevant! by story645 · · Score: 1

      (NOT a religion)

      Seriously? 'cause looking at all the posts, the two are used pretty damn interchangeably.

      Not that I disagree with you. You're right #'s really don't have anything to with the article at hand. It's a bad move whether it's a country of 7 million, 70 million, or 700 million.

      --
      open source modern art: laser taggi
    4. Re:Almost completely irrelevant! by gaijin99 · · Score: 1

      Assault goes to a civil court if the police chose to make arrests, etc which hasn't happened in several instances of Haredi violence towards women.

      The point is that crazy fundamentalist Jews are privileged over Reform or Conservative Jews, I'd imagine non-practicing Jews get an even crappier deal. Since Israel is explicitly formed without a separation of religion and government the descent into true theocracy is only a matter of time, and since Israel has nothing resembling a bill of rights the trip into police stateism has already begun.

      --
      "Mission Accomplished" -- George W. Bush May 1, 2003
    5. Re:Almost completely irrelevant! by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 4, Informative

      Brace yourself, I'm going to be giving you a bit of the history of Jewish movements.

      Reform and Conservative Jews barely even exist in Israel. In fact, if you talked to an average Israeli about the "Masorti" (Conservative) or "Reformi/Progressive" (Reform) movements, they probably would have to look them up on Google. This isn't because Israelis are crazy-religious; most Israeli Jews call themselves "Chiloni" (translates as "secular").

      Instead, it happened because the Reform movement in specific and the Conservative movement along with it have, historically, opposed Zionism up until the 1980s or 1990s, at which point they accepted that Israel will continue existing, and only began openly and strongly advocating Zionism to their own members in the 2000s. I was raised Reform, I know this stuff for a fact.

      "Why?" you ask. Well, the Reform movement formed because Jews wanted to walk, talk, eat, and act like the German and American Gentiles among whom they lived without having to actually convert to Christianity; they were extremist secular Jews who sought to call their secularism a form of religion. The Modern Orthodox movement then formed to oppose the Reform Jews, and the Conservative movement formed to find a middle ground between the Orthodox and Reform approaches. Since the Reform had given up on the whole idea of Jews as an ethnicity or nation, and the Conservative (like the Orthodox) wanted the Messiah to come before we got a Jewish state, both movements opposed the State of Israel's formation. Hell, so did the American Orthodox.

      In fact, the whole privileged position of the ultra-Orthodox in Israel came about as a political deal made by David Ben-Gurion's government to secure support for the emerging state from the old, respected Orthodox communities. Back then there were only a few hundred ultra-Orthodox yeshivah boys anyway, so not drafting them wasn't perceived as a big deal.

      So we've ended up with an Israel that has three degrees of religiosity officially acknowledged:

      1) Secular. The majority, who go to synagogue for the High Holidays at most and don't keep kosher laws or Shabat or anything.
      2) National Religious. The Israeli Modern-Orthodox Jews who consider Orthodox Judaism and modern life reconcilable. Their actual range of practice goes from what Americans would call a very religious Conservative Judaism to internationally-acknowledged Modern Orthodoxy. They keep kosher, keep Shabat (ie: no work on Saturday, for a really broad value of "work"), and keep the laws of "family purity" (don't even fucking ask). Those three categories, in fact, form the very definition of Orthodox Judaism as commonly acknowledged by rabbis the world over.
      3) Ultra-Orthodox. Crazy fundamentalists and black-hats. Since they "make the Torah their occupation" they get exemption from Army service as a part of that deal Ben-Gurion made. They live off the welfare that (AFAIK) all poor, unemployed families receive in Israel, because they don't respect secular professions and, indeed, don't respect any profession except for Rabbi. Their schools receive funding from both the religion ministry and the education ministry, which pisses off everyone else.

      Now you might just see the trap the ultra-Orthodox have set for themselves ideologically. They can't live without secular or National Religious Jews (they really, really hate Arabs) to support them, and a growing number of their far-too-many children leave the fold for Army service and a normal life. The ultra-Orthodox can't take over the government because they don't even like acknowledging the government's legitimacy; they still wait for the Messiah.

      So the actual chance of Israel toppling into theocracy in practice is quite low, since that would result in everyone starving to death and Big Business (Israel most certainly has Big Business) would never allow itself to be shut down by a bunch of insolent black-hats.

    6. Re:Almost completely irrelevant! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That was interesting Eli

    7. Re:Almost completely irrelevant! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fascinating. Jews are not very good at taking care of themselves, are they?

  40. Almost by tinkerton · · Score: 2, Interesting

    In fact all Israeli identity cards till recently had to mention the ethnic/religious group. I shouldn't say "since the beginning" but at least it has been like that for a long time.

    It is not possible to be "just an israeli".

  41. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by ScreamingCactus · · Score: 3, Funny

    Godwin's law on the first post!

    --
    The path to enlightenment is truly through homemade drugs!
  42. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Thank you for clearing that up. We were probably all as lost as you.

    BTW, your literature teacher called. He said get off of slashdot and finish the same report that everybody else had to do in high school.

  43. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The creatures outside looked from nazi to jew,
    and from jew to nazi, and from nazi to jew again;
    but already it was impossible to say which was which.

    It deeply saddens me that this kind of comment can get score 4 on this forum. Is some bad legislation enough to justify opinion that there is no difference between jews and nacis? Or is it just an excuse? Shame on you.

  44. MOD PARENT UP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For fucks sake, how about modding the truth up for a change? Instead of blindly modding things, that don't happen to coincide with your twisted world-view, down?

  45. Obviously not a history major. by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

    You have no problem with this? Read your history! You should have EVERY problem with this.

    --
    "Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it." - And variations on this theme, commonly attributed to George Santayana

    1. Re:Obviously not a history major. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why? Please enlighten me.

  46. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by abstract+daddy · · Score: 1, Troll

    I can't believe this shit got modded +5 insightful. Oh wait, this is Slashdot, the home of rabid antisemitism.

    This has fuckall to do with Nazis forcing Jews to wear yellow stars. Every citizen of Israel, which is a Jewish country, will be included in the database, which is being built by the aforementioned Jewish country. For the life of me I cannot understand how this is perfectly equal to Nazis forcing Jews in Germany to wear yellow stars right before genociding them. But hey, the complete absence of logic hasn't stopped leftists before from spouting stream-of-consciousness bullshit.

  47. Wow. fuck you Nazi trolls by gelfling · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Nothing like a technical article that includes "Jews" or "Israel" to bring out all the fuckheads.

    Fuck You Fuck You Fuck You Fuck You Fuck You Fuck You Fuck You Fuck You Fuck You Fuck You Fuck You Fuck You Fuck You Fuck You Fuck You Fuck You Fuck You Fuck You Fuck You Fuck You Fuck You Fuck You Fuck You Fuck You Fuck You Fuck You Fuck You Fuck You Fuck You Fuck You Fuck You Fuck You Fuck You Fuck You Fuck You Fuck You Fuck You Fuck You Fuck You Fuck You Fuck You Fuck You Fuck You Fuck You Fuck You Fuck You Fuck You Fuck You

    Die screaming all of you.

    1. Re:Wow. fuck you Nazi trolls by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      boohoo, another rabid racist pretending like his shit don't stink

      we know the shit Israel's up to, and not everyone buys the coolaid from the zionist media. when Israel is disbanded like the racist abonimation that it is...you'd better hope that other countries will let you in as refugees. The cult of judaism is dying...and good riddance. It is a filthy despicable religion that causes untold suffering. When's the last time you gave a shit about how palestinians are living...fucking hypocrites. You don't deserve the holy land, it belongs to the arabs. Get out. Or by all means, wait for when they overrun you and get their revenge at their mistreatment.

      Zionism is the moral equivalent of RAW SEWAGE, much like that which the settlers have been piping onto the streets of Gaza.

      What you gonna do, add me to a list? Throw a tantrum? You act like spoiled children, and call it unfair when people expect you to treat your fellow man with decency and respect, instead you prove every day more and more what a bunch of racists you are...zionists that is.

      I like feeding the trolls, because when Israel is no more, I will go around and rub it in all your faces. You reap what you sow. The only thing Israel has gotten you, aside from tons of welfare state money from the US, is the enmity of the entire human race. Stop it already, give it up. It's their land, throwing a temper tantrum does not change that fact. Ben Gurion said point blank that his aim was to steal the arab's land. So get out, or by all means, hold on to something you'll never own except in your own warped, deluded, self-serving philosophy.

      Judaism = racism.

    2. Re:Wow. fuck you Nazi trolls by gaijin99 · · Score: 1

      It is possible to criticize the nation of Israel without being a Nazi troll. Admittedly there is a large degree of overlap, but let's not get carried away here.

      Israel is a nation well on the way to becoming yet another theocratic police state just like Saudi Arabia. Recognizing that this is true does not require one to be an anti-Semite. As an atheist I hold Judaism in exactly the same degree of contempt that I hold all other religions, and I have nothing whatsoever against any Jews on the basis of their Jewishness.

      That said, the nation of Israel is looking worse every day, and I think its no surprise at all that the USA has about as large a population of Jews as Israel does. Jews who aren't crazy fundamentalists realize that Israel is getting ever closer to becoming a genuine hellhole and they want nothing to do with it. Out of the worldwide Jewish population fully 60% have chosen *NOT* to live in Israel, and I think that shows a commendable degree of intelligence on their part.

      --
      "Mission Accomplished" -- George W. Bush May 1, 2003
    3. Re:Wow. fuck you Nazi trolls by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 1

      Out of the worldwide Jewish population fully 60% have chosen *NOT* to live in Israel, and I think that shows a commendable degree of intelligence on their part.

      Actually, I was born outside Israel and have been planning to move there for a while. I never made any choice *not* to live in Israel, it just happened that way. It really isn't a hellhole or theocratic, trust me. The religious courts (which I don't like either, but hey...) have an extremely restricted jurisdiction and never rule on things that couldn't be passed along to religious courts in other countries via contract law. And they were doing so well at balancing freedom against security until this total fuckup...

      Oh well, it hasn't passed yet. Let's hope the Knesset sees sense and votes it down.

      But seriously, criticize the bill rather than flaming my homeland.

    4. Re:Wow. fuck you Nazi trolls by gaijin99 · · Score: 1

      Actually, I think Zionism is relevant to the subject at hand. The concepts of "a Jewish State" and "a state with a majority population of Jews" are quite different, and Zionism explicitly endorses the former. That's theocracy right out of the gate, and I don't think its at all surprising that an explicitly non-secular state is going down the path of totalitarianism. It goes part and parcel with being a non-secular state.

      When you take into account the fact that the founders of Israel didn't bother with any guarantees of rights, a constitution, or any of the other necessary components of a free nation, but did design a state that privileges one religion over others, again, I think a discussion of the basic goal is not completely tangential.

      Yes, there do appear to be a large number of people jumping out and saying "hur hur, Jews just like the Nazis", but this is Slashdot, did you really expect civility? Also, given Israel's terrible record WRT human rights, freedom, etc its hardly strange that many people here would not at all approve of Israel.

      I've always agreed with Isaac Asimov: Israel was a terrible idea, poorly executed, and all it can ever hope to be is the world's largest ghetto. That Israel is continuing its policy of completely disregarding the very concept of human rights is only to be expected from a proto-theocracy.

      I can, sort of, understand why some people would find the idea of a Jewish state so appealing, and it's always hard to let a dream die. But in the end the only two choices are giving up the idea of Israel as a Jewish state or letting Israel slide into the same hellhole status that awaits any theocracy. I wouldn't live there if you paid me a million Euros a year.

      --
      "Mission Accomplished" -- George W. Bush May 1, 2003
    5. Re:Wow. fuck you Nazi trolls by gaijin99 · · Score: 1

      If you don't live there and weren't born there I'm puzzled as to how you can describe it as your homeland.

      More to the point, Israel was actually doing a terrible job on freedom and security until this. Note, just to choose one example, that the Israeli police admit (and often seem fairly proud) that torture of suspects is a routine procedure. There's a *LOT* more to criticize about Israel than this one bill.

      If you genuinely think Israel has a good record on human rights, I'd recommend you do a bit more research.

      And let me bring up, yet again, the fact that Haredi men seem to be empowered to commit criminal assault on any woman who refuses to kowtow to their nutty fundamentalism. If you are female I'd stay as far from Israel as possible. The state pays Haredi men not to work. I think there's quite a bit to not like about a nation that explicitly privileges its most insane religious elements.

      --
      "Mission Accomplished" -- George W. Bush May 1, 2003
    6. Re:Wow. fuck you Nazi trolls by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Note, just to choose one example, that the Israeli police admit (and often seem fairly proud) that torture of suspects is a routine procedure.

      Just to clear this up, yes, Israel does torture Palestinian suspects. I don't like it, neither do you. However, that's irrelevant to the balancing of freedom versus security for actual citizens, which they were doing rather well on.

      Of course, they could do better on the human rights of Palestinians. No contest there.

      And let me bring up, yet again, the fact that Haredi men seem to be empowered to commit criminal assault on any woman who refuses to kowtow to their nutty fundamentalism.

      Just because a few Haredi men have gotten away with assault of women doesn't mean the entire country bends to aid Haredi men in assaulting women. Is the USA responsible for when a woman gets mugged and raped in the ghetto? Haredi neighborhoods are not nice places. I don't mean to excuse what these men did, but the entire society is not responsible for a few criminal assaults.

      The state pays Haredi men not to work. I think there's quite a bit to not like about a nation that explicitly privileges its most insane religious elements.

      The state exempts Haredim from army service, and gives them welfare just like it gives all other poor people welfare. Of course, the Haredim are poor because they refuse to take jobs, but apparently giving them welfare is still better than having a bunch of rioting Haredim.

    7. Re:Wow. fuck you Nazi trolls by gelfling · · Score: 1

      Nuke the Jews. Exterminate them all then there will be world peace. NOW can I have a free lifetime subscription to DailyKOS please?????

    8. Re:Wow. fuck you Nazi trolls by gaijin99 · · Score: 1

      Well, thanks to Bush I can no longer point to my own nation as a shining beacon of human rights. Worse I think it's extremely likely that as our soldiers trained in torture return from Iraq they will (as returning soldiers so often do) get jobs in the prison industry and we'll see an upswing of torture on American soil [1]. Still, I think the fact that its openly admitted policy in Israel is somehow worse. I also doubt rather seriously that torture in Israel isn't migrating to Jews, once you unloose that sort of thing it has a way of making a place for itself everywhere. You can't strip away human rights in one area and expect that somehow they'll stay intact elsewhere. Which is yet another reason why I fear for my own country.

      As far as the Haredim, and other examples of officially sanctioned Judaism, go I will freely admit that as a politically aware atheist I get very jumpy about church/state issues. Which is why I really don't like the idea of "a Jewish state" at all; not that I *particularly* oppose Jewish states, I simply oppose any religious state. All you have to do is look at Saudi Arabia or any other Muslim nation and you can see the sort of evil that religious states entail. I see no reason to believe that there is something special about Judaism that makes it immune to the problems of religious statehood. It failed in Europe, it failed in Asia, it is failing spectacularly in the modern middle east, it will fail in Israel.

      The problem is that fundamentalists are generally respected by their moderate religious counterparts. This is quite true in America, the nuts like Pat Robertson are regarded as nuts, but simultaneously looked up to because of the intensity of their belief. Their religious faith is seen as more pure, more intense, and therefore excuses any number of shortcomings. If a random gang of secular thugs had been attacking women on the Jerusalem buses they'd have been captured, tried, and imprisoned. Since it was Haredim many of the man on the street quotes from the various news articles I read about the incidents went out of their way to put the blame on the women, to excuse both the Haredim for their actions and the police for not making arrests, etc. In other words it was apparently perceived by Joe Israeli as a problem caused by the women, not by the Haredim who attacked them.

      To me that, the attitude of Joe Israeli, indicates a much deeper problem than a few thuggish Haredim. One has only to look at the history of Afghanistan and Iraq to see how theocracy has a way of creeping out of the woodwork and taking a nation by surprise. Afghanistan used to be a fairly modern nation, as recently as the 1960's women walked the streets of Kabul unveiled, even in miniskirts, they were educated, etc. Forty years later look at the place. Iraq, similarly, used to be semi-secular, women were treated almost like human beings, and in post-Bush Iraq we see that women are routinely assaulted, and sometimes killed, because (like the women on the Jerusalem buses) they weren't "modest" enough for the religious nuts.

      I'm not an Israel expert, but I am a historian, and history shows over and over that you can't mix religion and government "a little". Israel may not, now, be a theocracy but it is coming unless the religious nuts are squashed and a secular Israel is founded. You argue that they'd be crazy to take over, that they depend on the secular Jews for a working economy, and you are doubtless correct, I'm sure you know more about Israel than I do. But look to the other places infested with officially sanctioned religious nuts, they *DID* destroy the economies of their nations to indulge their religious nuttery. The standard of living in Afghanistan has plummeted since the 1960's, they're all but stone age in many places now, and all its done is make the religious nuts even more insanely strict and powerful.

      [1] Can't find the cite, but I remember one of the Abu Gharib guards saying something to the effect of "as a human I thought it was horrible, but as a prison guard I loved it!"

      --
      "Mission Accomplished" -- George W. Bush May 1, 2003
    9. Re:Wow. fuck you Nazi trolls by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 1

      OK, I'm just going to clear up one last issue for you. Zionism, the ideology behind Israel, does not consider "Jewish State" to mean "State of the Jewish religion". It means "State of the Jewish people". In Hebrew, these two concepts actually have separate terms to denote them: "Am Yisrael" means the Jewish people and "Yehudut" means the Jewish religion. The Jewish State is a state of the Jewish religion, and if the voters of Israel so desired it the religious courts would be eliminated utterly and completely.

    10. Re:Wow. fuck you Nazi trolls by gaijin99 · · Score: 1

      Well, yes, but as you may have noticed they *don't* desire it. Which has some rather unpleasant implications, no?

      More to the point, I'm aware of the argument that there is a Very Important distinction between the religion of Judaism, and the concept of Jewish people. It doesn't work, from my POV, because the immigration laws of Israel demonstrate that, for Israel, it is the religious component that is the more important one. The marriage laws simply drive the point home.

      Again, I'm simply arguing that you can't mix religion and government "just a little" and expect to get good results. Any mixing, whatsoever, even if it's done with the excuse that it isn't really religion, its tribal identity, will inevitably and inexorably result in theocracy.

      --
      "Mission Accomplished" -- George W. Bush May 1, 2003
    11. Re:Wow. fuck you Nazi trolls by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're not helping your cause. Quite the opposite actually.

  48. Re:Only 5,499,000 Jews in Israel, 14 mil in the wo by Dr.+Cody · · Score: 1

    Slashdot often runs stories about New Zealand. There are only 4,270,605 people in all of New Zealand, both north and south islands.

    However, there are 45 million sheep.

  49. Israel is not democratic, either by Conley+Index · · Score: 1

    > But Singapore is not a democratic country.

    Neither is Israel as argued by many political scientist. (I am not one, so look out for better sources if my arguments sound clumsy.)

    You know that elected Arabic Israeli representatives have to agree to Israel being a Jewish state? Otherwise they cannot go into parliament. Do you think the Arabic minority feels represented by them? And then, no one will work with them on principle -- many members of parliament will leave once the Arabic representatives are speaking.

    Moreover, Israel occupies a country. The Palestinians are not given citizenship. Is that democratic?

    If an Arabic Israeli citizen chooses to live in the West Bank for some time, he will lose his citizenship (and right to vote, return to Israel, etc.). Weird democratic country.

    The refugees are denied their right (human rights carta) to return home -- because Israel is afraid not to have a Jewish majority anymore. Is it democratic to select your citizens like that?

    Israel fails many aspects of a modern democracy.

    Probably not part of the theory, but if a minority of extremists in power does everything not to come to peace with the Palestinians, which the majority wants in some way or another, there is something wrong. The same applies for the Palestinian side, of course, but the West Bank and Gaza is not a modern democracy, either, aside from the fact that they are occupied and cannot rule themselves anyhow.

    1. Re:Israel is not democratic, either by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't forget that Israel also lacks a constitution that guarantees equal rights and protects minorities. Without an unalterable foundation to guide them, the justices in Israel's highest court are free to rationalize however they wish such things as the "Law of Return," denial of building permits to non-Jews, denial of citizenship to Palestinian spouses of Israeli citizens, the annexation of occupied territory, etc...

    2. Re:Israel is not democratic, either by mux2000 · · Score: 1

      Mod parent up. This is a point I argue hotly here in Israel, with all the indoctrinated people (the vast majority of them). They assume that since they can vote, they live in a democracy. Never mind our votes count for pip-squat. Never mind a third of the population is classed as third-class non-citizens with no rights that can be shot or mistreated in any other way without repercussions and can not vote (huh, I made myself laugh and cry a little at the same time), never mind that most of our politicians are former generals. Never mind the stronghold the orthodox Jews had over the government and over peoples lives until a few years ago (and still do in some areas of life like marriage, childbirth and death). Nevermind the mandatory service in an army that has long since forgot it's initials were Israel DEFENSE Force.
      People remain blissfully certain they live in one of the most enlightened democracies in Europe. Sometimes I'd like to shake them and yell at them "WAKE UP! We're not in Amsterdam, you're living in a military faschist war machine. The sooner you wake up to it, the sooner you can start fighting it.
      [/rant]

  50. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Curtman · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Oh wait, this is Slashdot, the home of rabid antisemitism.

    Do you have to be an antisemite to disagree with the politics of Israel?

    I mean really.. Do you really believe that saying that Israel behaves badly toward its neighbours and even its own citizens means you are prejudiced or hostile toward Jews?

    Give it up.

  51. I am an Israeli by Shohat · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This thing probably won't pass. I know that for Americans it's very hard to understand, but being a liberal and serving in an elite combat unit goes hand in hand here.
    If you don't believe me, just read the news stories, and the bios of the kidnapped soldiers. The front lines are CEOs, lawyers, scientists, mathematicians, accountants and what not. The middle+ class are the people that go to war. The most leftist and liberal leaders were always the best generals - Rabin (Oslo) , Barak (pulled out of Lebanon), and in his last years, Ariel Sharon who pulled out of Gaza. And most importantly, there is not a single religious general, and Israel never had a religious leader.
    I design complex real-time control systems (Mostly based on PIC/NEC/Toshiba ), and like any Israeli, for 28 days a year, I become a soldier. Despite what you may or may not understand about our society, chances are that there is plenty of holes in your understanding how this microscopic 5 million people country works.
    But point is, nobody here trusts the government, the current government is extremely weak, and on the verge of being replaced. This thing will not pass. Most people here read 1984 =).

    1. Re:I am an Israeli by mux2000 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      and like any Israeli, for 28 days a year, I become a soldier.

      This is a very delicate subject, and as one Israeli to another, as we both know, if it wasn't in an anonymous internet forum I wouldn't dare raise such a question, how can you explain giving a twelfth of your life away to an organisation obsessed with harassing, repressing, dividing, locking in, shutting out, abusing and killing people for the sole reason that they lived in your country before your parents/grand-parents arrived and drove them off their land?

      And don't give me this "the IDF is the most moral army in the world" line, we both know how wrong that is. I could give enough examples to make both of us blush, but I won't (it's my country too damn it!). Looking at the way the IDF operates, I see the sole purpose of its actions in the conquered territories as to make the inhabitants' lives as painful and difficult as possible. How can you collaborate to that?

      Full disclosure: yes I did my full three years back when I didn't know what was actually going on. I couldn't keep doing it once I found out. How do you find it possible? Is the boogie-man of terrorism that intimidating?

    2. Re:I am an Israeli by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shohat sez: "the kidnapped soldiers."

      You mean "CAPTURED" not "KIDNAPPED".

      KIDNAPPED would be a more appropriate term to use for what Israel does with Palestinians, including children.

      Shohat sez: "chances are that there is plenty of holes in your understanding how this microscopic 5 million people country works"

      Well, one can just look at the facts on the ground (occupation of Palestine, thousands of Palestinian political prisoners, the biggest problem Israelis had with the Lebanon war was not the thousand dead lebanese - it was that Israel didn't win the war, non-jews with Israeli citizen are 3rd class citizens at best, Israel isn't the state of its citizen, Israel doesn't have a constitution, etc, etc). I may not understand everything, but one thing is certain, it's not a country that is in good shape... there are however some small bright spots: B'Tselem and like minded groups... incidently, "Anarchists against the wall" http://www.awalls.org/ could use donations to cover their legal expenses, so I invite folks to support their non-violent struggle for peace alongside Palestinians. I hope you do too, Shohat.

    3. Re:I am an Israeli by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Umm, I'm not sure how they view these things in Israel, not being from there, but outside, nobody would have considered Rabin or Sharon's politics to be particularly liberal/leftist until they decided to try and broke peace deals. Maybe Barak.

      The thing that gave Rabin and Sharon credibility was that they weren't your traditional leftist, starry-eyed peaceniks. When they decided to pursue peace, you were pretty sure they were doing it for hard-headed reasons.

    4. Re:I am an Israeli by abstract+daddy · · Score: 1, Funny

      how can you explain giving a twelfth of your life away to an organisation obsessed with harassing, repressing, dividing, locking in, shutting out, abusing and killing people for the sole reason that they lived in your country before your parents/grand-parents arrived and drove them off their land?

      You left out the part where IDF soldiers open a portal to Hell and send them Palestinian babies in exchange for gold. Then they high five each other.

    5. Re:I am an Israeli by Das+Modell · · Score: 1

      Is there some particular reason why Israel shouldn't capture children? The Palestinians use children as suicide bombers and soldiers. Would you prefer it if they were just shot on sight instead, or where exactly are you going with this?

      I invite folks to support their non-violent struggle for peace alongside Palestinians.

      Yeah, because they're really interested in peace after electing an organization that will wage Jihad against Israel until it is destroyed.

    6. Re:I am an Israeli by nidarus · · Score: 1

      This thing will not pass. Most people here read 1984 =).

      You know, I wish that was true. But think about it, SHAS can pass all kinds of wonderful anti-porn laws, simply because there is no real liberal, civil-rights-oriented block in the Knesset. Kadima? Labor? You must be kidding me. Merets? Maybe Zehava Gal'on can vote against it, if she remembers to show up.

      I think only thing that can stop it (that is, aside from the Supreme Court, that allowed all kinds of crap in the past) is the simple fact that it takes time and money, and if there's anything Israeli officials hate is wasting money on anything but short-term political stunts (and padding their own pockets of course).

      I think the law will pass, but it will languish in implementation hell, just like the Tel Aviv subway.

    7. Re:I am an Israeli by Devar · · Score: 1

      If I could mod you +1 The God Damn Truth, I would.

      --
      It's a Bagel.
    8. Re:I am an Israeli by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thank you very much for posting this. It is good to hear.

    9. Re:I am an Israeli by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Das Modell sez: "The Palestinians use children as suicide bombers and soldiers."

      Nice sweeping generalisation. I've been in Palestine, and I didn't run into children soldiers.

      But if you want to understand how a decent kid grows up to be a fierce fighter or a suicide bomber, check out the film/documentary "Arna's Children" - it's made by Israeli jews, so that should prevent you from dismissing it based on racist predispositions against Palestinians.

      Also, if you look around, there are plenty of examples of militarism being cultivated in young Israelis, and plenty of examples of settlers - including kids - behaving pretty badly by any standards.

      http://ww4report.com/static/gun2.jpg

      http://attendingtheworld.files.wordpress.com/2007/04/israeli-children-attacking-arab-woman.jpg

      http://yalibnan.com/site/archives/2006/07/img/israeli%20children%20send%20their%20love%20to%20lebanon%2002.jpg

      See some jewish kids (settlers) throwing stones at civilians:
      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rBIcdoOKB9c

      Palestinians kids throw stones at soldiers riding in tanks and armored vehicles.

      It's left as an exercise which stone throwers are worst...

      Das Modell sez: "Yeah, because they're really interested in peace after electing an organization that will wage Jihad against Israel until it is destroyed."

      Hamas was elected because they offered an alternative to the corrupt Fatah. Also, Hamas has softened its stance over the recent years, and has offered a long term truce to Israel.

      But if you insist on not understanding why Hamas was elected instead of Fatah, you are welcome to stay ignorant. But may I suggest you take off your blindfold and do a little research beyond reading zionist literature. ... do you seriously think there wouldn't be violent resistance if the Chinese invaded the US to colonize it? Why are you surprised if there's violent resistance to Israeli colonization of Palestine?

      All that to say that addressing problems on the ground - i.e. ending the colonization of Palestine - is going to be way better than biometrics to improve security for everyone.

    10. Re:I am an Israeli by Das+Modell · · Score: 1

      Nice sweeping generalisation. I've been in Palestine, and I didn't run into children soldiers.

      Oh, well I guess that must mean they don't exist. You know, I've never been mugged while walking around town, so I guess that means my city's crime statistics are all bullshit.

      But if you want to understand how a decent kid grows up to be a fierce fighter or a suicide bomber...

      It's something that's commonly referred to as brainwashing.

      Hamas was elected because they offered an alternative to the corrupt Fatah. Also, Hamas has softened its stance over the recent years, and has offered a long term truce to Israel.

      Muslims don't make long term truces with infidels, only short term ones for their own benefit. Explanation here.

      But may I suggest you take off your blindfold and do a little research beyond reading zionist literature.

      When and where have I read zionist literature? First people try to convince me I'm a Jew, and now I have supposedly read zionist literature. Wow.

      colonization of Palestine

      You're assuming it's colonization.

    11. Re:I am an Israeli by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      how can you explain giving a twelfth of your life away to an organisation obsessed with harassing, repressing, dividing, locking in, shutting out, abusing and killing people for the sole reason that they lived in your country before your parents/grand-parents arrived and drove them off their land?

      Bullshit. The prime reason is that in the late 1940s the Arabs refused the UN partition plan which would have created two states, one arab and one israeli, with international status for jerusalem (hey, that sounds familiar, I heard it recently), and declared war. That war has not yet ended.

      Looking at the way the IDF operates, I see the sole purpose of its actions in the conquered territories as to make the inhabitants' lives as painful and difficult as possible.

      You gotta be kidding. The IDF operates to protect the citizens of Israel from large numbers of arabs who wake up every morning and say how can I kill jews today?

      When violent attacks by Palestinians are rare (like 1994-1999), the IDF are very relaxed and the West Bank/Gaza economy flourished. When attacks are common, things tighten up. It is entirely determined by the rate of violent attacks.

      I recall recently when Hamas sent 6000 rockets randomly into Israel, Israel was criticized for a disproportionate response when it responded with a few airstrikes.

      The proportionate response would have been to send 6000 rockets randomly into Gaza. But the IDF didn't do that, since that would cause the deaths of too many civilians.

      Is the boogie-man of terrorism that intimidating?

      Violent attacks by Arabs is not the bogeyman, they are all too real. That is what you call a fact.

    12. Re:I am an Israeli by sikandril · · Score: 1

      Mod parent up.

      As Israeli lawmaking goes, even if this passes all three votes necessary for it to become law, the Israeli Supreme Court can annull it retroactively if it is deemed to conflict with one of the "Foundation Laws" (Israel's substitute for a constitution). Given the aforementioned weakness of the current government, this isn't very likely to even pass the second vote('kriah').

      As for the rest of the complexities of life here, the brunt of the workforce/people in the army are indeed an educated middle class that strive for a better, more peaceful future. I myself work on SQL development in a financial BI/OLAP setting while donating my yearly due to the armed forces. We do have our fair share of fundies and religious cooks (Just as Americans and Europeans have their own right wing fanatics) and they certainly have not made it easy for us to come to a settlement with our friendly neighborhood Palestinians.

      Bear in mind that the aforementioned neighbors haven't exactly made it easy for us either - go and have a look at the complexities of the historic situation on Wikipedia. If on top of that you want to bring the National-Socialists, Antisemitism, Nietzsche and Judean/Christian history into the mix, go ahead, we won't hold it against you :).

    13. Re:I am an Israeli by Shohat · · Score: 1

      This is not the US. Terrorism is not a boogie-man, and as you are probably aware, we are educated to go on with our lives and not go into panic every time a rocket hits. Regardless of why, terrorism is not the imaginary American terrorism you are probably referring to.
      IDF is not IDF. IDF are the people that serve in it. And by removing yourself from the pool, you remove another person that could act in the way you consider fit for an IDF soldier to act.
      Either way, as they say , for every two Israelis, there are at least three opinions.

    14. Re:I am an Israeli by TheRagingTowel · · Score: 1

      How do you find it possible? Is the boogie-man of terrorism that intimidating?

      Yes, it is. I was here: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/1897940.stm and almost didn't make it to write this comment.

      --
      4Z5TX
    15. Re:I am an Israeli by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, well I guess that must mean they don't exist. You know, I've never been mugged while walking around town, so I guess that means my city's crime statistics are all bullshit.

      Wrong. It means you shouldn't judge the entire society based on the actions of a few.

      It's something that's commonly referred to as brainwashing.

      No. As I said, watch "Arna's children"... occupation/colonization breads violence.

      Muslims don't make long term truces with infidels, only short term ones for their own benefit. Explanation here.

      Nice sweeping generalisation again. And to support that, you provide a link to a website that thinks FrontPage mag(*) is worthy of being listed first at the top of their website. If that's the only stuff you read, I'd suggest you stop reading completely. You'll be wiser for it...

      (*) Michael Horrowitz is quite the islamophobe biggot.

      When and where have I read zionist literature?

      See the link you provided...

      You're assuming it's colonization.

      It's not an assumption. It's a fact.

    16. Re:I am an Israeli by kabocox · · Score: 1

      This is a very delicate subject, and as one Israeli to another, as we both know, if it wasn't in an anonymous internet forum I wouldn't dare raise such a question, how can you explain giving a twelfth of your life away to an organisation obsessed with harassing, repressing, dividing, locking in, shutting out, abusing and killing people for the sole reason that they lived in your country before your parents/grand-parents arrived and drove them off their land?

      Um, didn't the US do the same exact thing to that native population that was already on this land mass?

      Maybe pot calling the kettle black?

      I can't really complain when some one does something with a military that I don't like. Heck, you could list many things that the US military does that I don't really like. I don't have much control over what any large organization of other people decide to do though.

      How can you collaborate to that?

      You'd find that most of us find it quite easily to do our thing. Generally, I don't make any decisions that concern Israeli or the middle east. The only resource that I buy that I know comes from that region is gas. I pretty much just ignore what my government does in that area of the world as long as I get cheap gas.

    17. Re:I am an Israeli by dunkelfalke · · Score: 1

      softened stance or not, it doesn't matter at all.
      the european union gives a lot of money to the palestinean autonomy to help the struggling economy. hamas buys weapons for that money.
      so, they don't want freedom at all.
      in my opinion EU should stop giving money. if palestine wants war, it might as well starve.

      --
      "It's such a fine line between stupid and clever" -- David St. Hubbins, Spinal Tap
    18. Re:I am an Israeli by Aapje · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The prime reason is that in the late 1940s the Arabs refused the UN partition plan which would have created two states, one arab and one israeli, with international status for jerusalem (hey, that sounds familiar, I heard it recently), and declared war. That war has not yet ended.

      The palestinians have accepted a two-state solution (Oslo Accords) and so have the arab nations (Arab Peace Initiative). What happened in the 40's is not that relevant, because we cannot change the past. We can choose to take steps towards peace today and in the future. Unfortunately, too many people are coming up with excuses why they cannot make peace, instead of taking the painful steps towards a solution.

      The IDF operates to protect the citizens of Israel...

      According to international law, the IDF is also responsible for protecting palestinian civilians and guaranteeing their human rights. Unfortunately, they do not and allow settlers to freely attack palestinians. They also harass palestinians and disallow travel. The harassment and lack of jobs are excellent breeding grounds for the resistance. The policy of settlement expansions/ethnic cleansing executed in part by the IDF has resulted in large settlements that have greatly jeopardized the viability of a two-country solution.

      I recall recently when Hamas sent 6000 rockets randomly into Israel

      According to Israel, it's acceptable to murder citizens that are in the vicinity of Hezbollah or Hamas members, when the rockets the IDF uses have limited accuracy. We know that Hamas' rockets are very crude and can only be aimed for a certain town. I think that pretty much every town in Israel will have (reserve) soldiers living there, so the attacks are on military targets (who 'hide' among civilians, to use the israeli jargon). I'm perfectly willing to condemn the rocket attacks, but don't pretend that Israel is not doing the same thing.

      The proportionate response would have been to send 6000 rockets randomly into Gaza.

      Look up the number of palestinian civilians that are killed every year vs the number of israeli civilians and then get back to me on 'proportionality.'

      Violent attacks by Arabs is not the bogeyman, they are all too real.

      One of the reasons why there is no peace agreement yet is that Israel has always 'rewarded' the attackers by stopping the peace process after an attack. The result is that a minority can hold 4 million people hostage. That weakens those who want peace, because they cannot show results. The election of Hamas is a good example of what happens next.

      --

      The Drowned and the Saved - Primo Levi
    19. Re:I am an Israeli by SailorBob · · Score: 1
      You seem to loose perspective my friend. Saying that the Israeli army is the most moral army in the world is a relative statement. It's also a statement I think is true. That doesn't mean individual soldiers don't make mistakes or even that the army doesn't make mistakes, just that in comparison to other armies in the world the Israeli army upholds high standards considering the day to day environment we operate and live in.

      Just look at the battle for Jenin a few years ago as proof.

      --

      Woopty Doo Basil, what does it all mean?!

    20. Re:I am an Israeli by Das+Modell · · Score: 1

      Wrong. It means you shouldn't judge the entire society based on the actions of a few.

      If these were isolated freak occurances that would make everyone go "this is fucked up, let's call the police and put these people in prison" then this would be true, but unfortunately it's endemic to their society and not "the actions of a few."

      No. As I said, watch "Arna's children"... occupation/colonization breads violence.

      No, I mean they're actually brainwashed from childhood to become martyrs.

      Nice sweeping generalisation again.

      I don't see how.

      And to support that, you provide a link to a website that thinks FrontPage mag(*) is worthy of being listed first at the top of their website.

      I don't recall ever seeing anyone attack Jihad Watch by pointing out inaccuracies in their writings. The fact is that an Islamic legal manual does say that Muslims should not do long-term truces, and that the Quran discourages calls for peace if Muslims have the upper hand.

      *) Michael Horrowitz is quite the islamophobe biggot.

      Anyone who uses the term "Islamophobe" without being sarcastic is mentally deficient. Islamophobia is an imaginary concept, it does not exist. It's only used to smear people when no real arguments are available, just like the word bigot.

      See the link you provided...

      What link? I don't see it.

      It's not an assumption. It's a fact.

      Maybe. Maybe not.

    21. Re:I am an Israeli by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The IDF doesn't repress the arabs living on the West Bank for the reason you state. In fact, just about a decade ago, Jews and Arabs could travel to and from the occupied territories freely, and the roadblocks were all but non-existent.

      The reason is the escalation of the conflict by the extremist fractions executing numerous terrorist attacks on the army and the civilians from one side, and by the army ordered to provide a response to the said attacks from the other side, with the mutual aggression bringing the situation to the low point of the present.

      I'm not making a claim that the IDF is the most moral army in the world; as an army engaged in a continious armed conflict, a low-key war, hard decisions have to be made often and you can always find a person who has done a mistake. Obviously, an army in a peaceful European nation, where the most pressing moral issue could be whether to leave the trash bin cover open so that the squirrels wouldn't starve, would be more moral. But I hope you won't make the claim that the Israeli army is less moral than the opposing paramilitary Palestinian organizations.

      As for the "sole purpose", you have begun repeating yourself. Please read the first paragraph of my answer.

      Finally, the "boogie-man of terrorism" is not intimidating to me at all. Thanks to the daily operations of the IDF, you are much more likely to die in a car crash than in a terror attack; it's mostly because of their continuous action that most of the Israelis can live ordinary and peaceful lives, and never experience the war that is waged daily on the country's borders.

      You state you didn't knew what was actually going on during your service but, regretfully, I think you still don't have a clue.

    22. Re:I am an Israeli by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      The palestinians have accepted a two-state solution (Oslo Accords) and so have the arab nations (Arab Peace Initiative). What happened in the 40's is not that relevant, because we cannot change the past. We can choose to take steps towards peace today and in the future.

      Somewhat correct. The Oslo accords have many milestones along the path to Palestinian statehood, such as the ending of violent attacks on Israeli civilians. This hasn't happened.

      According to Israel, it's acceptable to murder citizens that are in the vicinity of Hezbollah or Hamas members, when the rockets the IDF uses have limited accuracy.

      Civilian casualties are an unavoidable part of armed conflict. However, the IDF often stands down when too many civilian casualties would occur. On the other hand, the goal of Hamas is to cause as many civilian casualties as possible. See the difference?

      I think that pretty much every town in Israel will have (reserve) soldiers living there, so the attacks are on military targets (who 'hide' among civilians, to use the israeli jargon).

      Israeli soldiers do not hide among civilians. They are uniformed, clearly identifiable and subject to command & control by the government. Compare & contrast with Hamas.

      Incidentally, a reserve soldier who isn't on active duty is legally a civilian under international law.

      Look up the number of palestinian civilians that are killed every year vs the number of israeli civilians and then get back to me on 'proportionality.'

      I don't have to, that study has already been done.

      Palestinians are far, far more likely to kill women, noncombatants and people older than 45.

      That's proportionality for you. The IDF tries very hard to avoid killing civilians, but sometimes they occur. Hamas tries very hard to kill civilians.

    23. Re:I am an Israeli by Slashdot+Parent · · Score: 1

      Is the boogie-man of terrorism that intimidating?

      I take it you don't live in Sderot.

      --
      They don't grade fathers, but if your daughter's a stripper, you fucked up. --Chris Rock
    24. Re:I am an Israeli by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Was that supposed to be sarcastic? At first I thought so, but the more I think about it, the more I wonder...

    25. Re:I am an Israeli by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Oslo accords have many milestones along the path to Palestinian statehood, such as the ending of violent attacks on Israeli civilians. This hasn't happened.

      Israel's track record wrt to the Oslo accords is far worst by any measure. See this list put together by a group of Israelis:

      http://gush-shalom.org/archives/oslo.html

      The readers might also want to read up on Baruch Goldstein to see what "civilian Israelis" can do.

      Civilian casualties are an unavoidable part of armed conflict. However, the IDF often stands down when too many civilian casualties would occur. On the other hand, the goal of Hamas is to cause as many civilian casualties as possible. See the difference?

      Yes, dropping a one tone bomb in a densely populated neighborhood is proof of the IDF's good judgment... likewise for dropping millions of cluster bomblets in the south of Lebanon AFTER a cease fire was brokered.

      Israeli soldiers do not hide among civilians. They are uniformed, clearly identifiable and subject to command & control by the government. Compare & contrast with Hamas.

      I believe Gideon Levy(?) had written on that very topic. But I'll present you a quote from "Human Right Watch" with regards to Hizbollah which has been accused in the same way:

      "The Israeli government has blamed Hezbollah for the high civilian casualty toll in Lebanon, insisting that Hezbollah fighters have hidden themselves and their weapons among the civilian population. However, in none of the cases of civilian deaths documented in the report is there evidence to suggest that Hezbollah was operating in or around the area during or prior to the attack."

      The above is taken from http://www.hrw.org/english/docs/2006/08/02/lebano13902.htm

      Incidentally, a reserve soldier who isn't on active duty is legally a civilian under international law.

      And technically, violent settlers are also civilians by your definition, and so are border police. Not something you'd bring up when it comes to "showing" that the line between combatants and civilians is blurry for Palestinians but clear for Israelis. In fact, it's far for clear for Israelis.

      I don't have to, that study has already been done [eretzyisroel.org].

      A site that thinks "From Time Immemorial" by Joan Peters is an important read is a serious site... not!

      www.btselem.org is one of the best place to go to for statistics.

      The IDF tries very hard to avoid killing civilians, but sometimes they occur. Hamas tries very hard to kill civilians.

      Yes, and that's why children are killed with bullets in the head, and dropping a one tone bomb in a densely populated neighbor hood also shows how hard the IDF "tries". Plenty of examples of how hard the IDF "tries".

    26. Re:I am an Israeli by Aapje · · Score: 1

      Somewhat correct. The Oslo accords have many milestones along the path to Palestinian statehood, such as the ending of violent attacks on Israeli civilians. This hasn't happened.

      Wrong, both parties are responsible for preventing violence against the other side. That also includes violence by israeli's against palestinians (which has never ceased either). Common sense dictates that this is a best effort responsibility (the actual treaty doesn't specify this explicitly, but the text doesn't make sense if this isn't the case).

      Civilian casualties are an unavoidable part of armed conflict.

      The problem is that Israel and Hamas continue to see this as an armed conflict, when it should be a peace process. In the case of Israel, there is a pathological desire to control the palestinians, which makes peace impossible and gives legitimacy to the resistance (and thus keeps strengthening it). There is simply no way the peace process can work unless restrictions are lifted so the palestinians can have jobs, travel freely and improve their lives in general.

      The only way that peace can happen is when there is an agreement with the major palestinian factions (Fatah and Hamas). In the case of Hamas, only a temporary cease fire is needed (which they are willing to accept). Then major and quick improvements to the lives of ordinary palestinians need to be made:
      - Removing road blocks permanently
      - Sharing water fairly (allowing for more farming)
      - Allowing palestinians to use the roads in palestinian territories (even when they connect settlements)
      - Allowing palestinians to build houses
      - Allowing palestinians to work their lands, even when those are close to settlements
      - Allowing more palestinians to work in Israel
      - Opening the border with Egypt
      - Building a harbor in Gaza
      - Removing some settlements (especially those that divide palestinian territories the most)

      Funds from Europe and the US can pay for the harbor and for some of the housing costs. A huge number of jobs will be created and palestinians will finally see the advantages of peace that they were promised so often, but that never materialized. This will greatly reduce the support for the resistance, which will force Hamas to choose: shrink to 1/10 their current size or 'extend' the cease fire. I'm confident the large majority of Hamas will choose the latter (they profit from the economic growth as well and want their flat screen TV's). There will probably be a small offshoot (like the Real IRA in Ireland), which will be small and can be eradicated over time with hard police work.

      Most importantly though, Israel needs to accept that minor factions will use the freedoms to attack Israel/israeli's. Israel might face its most devastating terrorist attack it has ever seen, just like the Omagh bombing was the worst in Ireland's history. At that point, the international community should condemn that attack en masse and force Hamas to fully commit to the peace process by bringing all those involved to justice. It's unfortunate that this will (and probably has to) happen, but in the long run it will save more lives than simply carrying on like this with casualties every year.

      On the other hand, the goal of Hamas is to cause as many civilian casualties as possible.

      Actually, the violence used by Hamas is a means, not an end. For instance, one of their tactics is too kidnap israeli soldiers, which is a pretty poor tactic if you want to kill civilians, but a very good one if you want to trade the soldiers for prisoners. The goal of a peace process should be to make it in everyone's best interest not to use violence. That requires several skills which seem to be in short supply in the region right now, such as empathy and thinking ahead.

      Israeli soldiers do not hide among civilians. They are uniformed, clearly identifiable and subject to command & control by the government. Compare & contrast with Hamas.

      That is the difference between a resistance movement and a

      --

      The Drowned and the Saved - Primo Levi
    27. Re:I am an Israeli by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It does matter.

      Israel has been offered repeatedly peace on the basis of the '67 borders/un242. Hamas has said it would accept it if accepted by Palestinians in a referendum.

      Why hasn't Israel hasn't even CONSIDERED the propositions.

      Take the Geneva accord. There are only 2 countries who CATEGORICALLY rejected this without explaning what was wrong with the accord: Israel, the US.

      As for your comment about money and weapons, well, the Palestinian authorities (Arafat/Abbas' Fatah gang) are actually a quite different bunch than Hamas. So, when you go "PA receives money, and then Hamas buys guns" then you have a gap somewhere. If Hamas wants weapons, it will get weapons. It's not a matter of whether the EU gives money or not.

      But, in any event, Israel buys lots of weapons with money it receives from the US, while at the same time the poor get poorer in Israel, and even the holocaust survivors can't seem to get money from the Israeli government. So I gather you call on the US to stop giving money to Israel?

  52. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by h4rm0ny · · Score: 1


    Out of morbid curiosity, why is my post modded as troll and why is the GP modded troll and flamebait? The historical resonances are pretty overt.

    --

    Aide-toi, le Ciel t'aidera - Jeanne D'Arc.
  53. Isreli Laws require Some experience by shlompo · · Score: 5, Informative

    Before you all get excited: the law stands at "kriaa tromit", which means it's just now readt to be voted on. Each law has to be voted three times after this stage... I'm sure it won't pass, since other draconic laws were blocked. This particular stage, is very easy to pass, for any law, even crazy ones....

    But i don't think you appreciate the situation with Israeli documents: they are the most popular forged documents in the world right now: our passports are the easiest to mangle with, and because many countries trust Israeli passports, it's the most bought passport in the black market. Even the Israeli ministry of foreign affairs issued several rules to disencourage Israeli tourists from selling their passports... Our IDs are also quite popular, since we still have problems of women trafficking...

    And about terrorism... well, i doubt anybody actually thinks this system will have anything to do with that. There are a very few actual cases, compared with the total, where Israeli citizens Arabs were involved in terrorist activity...

    And the last comment i have on this issue, is that in the end, friends, it all comes down to money. Some CEO, with a security system, is related to some government official, and is going to rip off the treasury, when he accidentally of course, win the auction for creating the system. At least that was true for many other security related systems in Israel, the ones that did not go through the defense industry.

    Hope I shed some light.

    1. Re:Isreli Laws require Some experience by tinkerton · · Score: 1

      I think that's a nice briefing :)

    2. Re:Isreli Laws require Some experience by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And yet mossad tries to get fake New Zealand passports for themselves...

    3. Re:Isreli Laws require Some experience by dunkelfalke · · Score: 1

      rather than that, why won't israel - which is a quite high tech country - just reprint the passports according to higher security standards (like german passports)?

      anyway, the last comment is possibly the truth, the same happens in germany right now (biometric passport law was installed by a politician who became a supervisory board member of two companies for biometric technologies shortly after).

      --
      "It's such a fine line between stupid and clever" -- David St. Hubbins, Spinal Tap
    4. Re:Isreli Laws require Some experience by shlompo · · Score: 1

      I think you conterdict yourself.... it's pointless to invest in better papers, just use digital signatures, more security, less hastle, mathematically proven, with possibility to revoke stolen keys. Even German passports might be forged, just a matter of cost. Digital papers is the future of passports...

      Ok, so your picture should obviously be part of what is signed on. Oh wait, your face is a biometric data... same goes for the fingerprint and so on. So the only way to avoid a "database" is if the government won't save the data, which is baloney... I fear, my friend, that digital passports are the future, wether we like it or not. It just more reasonable then unreplicatable passport paper...

    5. Re:Isreli Laws require Some experience by dunkelfalke · · Score: 1

      sure, german passports also may be forged, but the cost is too high. in fact there are practically none forged german passports at all.

      --
      "It's such a fine line between stupid and clever" -- David St. Hubbins, Spinal Tap
  54. Democracy? by tinkerton · · Score: 1

    It is a bit contentious to call Israel a democracy. A few years back a poll from the Israeli Democracy Institute (IDI) concluded: In sum, from the relative ranking across all the indicators, Israel may be classified as a formal democracy that has not yet succeeded in incorporating the characteristics of substantive democracy. Not exactly a suspect source.

    1. Re:Democracy? by wwahammy · · Score: 1

      That's what I thought. A country where 50% of the adults can't vote is not a democracy.

    2. Re:Democracy? by SailorBob · · Score: 1

      What are you smoking? Israel has one of the highest voter turn-outs in the Western World. Typical voter turn out is around 80%.

      --

      Woopty Doo Basil, what does it all mean?!

    3. Re:Democracy? by wwahammy · · Score: 1

      An 80% voter turn out for those who are allowed to vote. The almost 50% of the population consisting of Palestinians refugees would probably disagree with the characterization of Israel as a democracy.

    4. Re:Democracy? by SailorBob · · Score: 1

      Excuse me? All the Palestinian Arabs living in Gaza, Judea & Samaria vote . They vote in the Palestinian Authority elections and just last year elected Hamas ( an international terrorist orginization with links to Iran, as opposed to the previous terrorist orginization which headed their government - the PLO ) to lead their government. So I don't know what you're talking about.

      --

      Woopty Doo Basil, what does it all mean?!

    5. Re:Democracy? by wwahammy · · Score: 1

      You could vote for your leader in a Bantustan too.

      The Palestinian Authority is not a state. Its state borders aren't even defined much less recognized. Until it is a state, the final responsibility for the safety of Palestinians lies with Israel who claimed the land as its own in 1967.

    6. Re:Democracy? by SailorBob · · Score: 1

      Cut the crap, the PA is a state in everything but name. The only reason the Arabs in Judea and Samaria don't have a state officially is because they've been more concerned with trying to destroy Israel than with getting on with their lives. It's public knowledge that Barak offered them full sovereignty on 97.5% of Gaza, Judea and Samaria with their capital in eastern Jerusalem and instead they chose to start war.

      This is publicly verified by Bill Clinton and every other senior diplomat involved in the Tabah negotiations. The fact is that the Palestinian Arabs never miss an opportunity to miss an opportunity.

      They have no one to blame for their current situation except themselves - and of course their fellow countrymen in the surrounding Arab countries.

      --

      Woopty Doo Basil, what does it all mean?!

  55. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by h4rm0ny · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Do you have to be an antisemite to disagree with the politics of Israel?

    The Israeli government and many of its citizens are always implying so. The Israeli governments continual pretense (or perhaps its a genuine delusion) that they represent the Jewish people is one of the most insidious pieces of political trickery in the modern era. Being Jewish does not imply a particular political viewpoint of national affiliation. But some people don't half push the idea that it does...

    --

    Aide-toi, le Ciel t'aidera - Jeanne D'Arc.
  56. Democracy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Democracy"? Really?

    I guess like any "good" democracy, they marginalize a significant portion of their "populace". (Of course, I can't use the word "citizens" since Palestinians aren't considered citizens.)

  57. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by dwave · · Score: 0, Troll

    Unbelievable what fucked up douchebags are creeping out of the woodwork if there is some news item about Israel. But it is also a constant reminder that Israel needs to be on guard to be able to defend itself.

  58. biometric cards in israel by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is law in the UK now - passed a while ago. Contracts are being signed as I write.

  59. Re:Only 5,499,000 Jews in Israel, 14 mil in the wo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    7,282,000 is a lot, I guess Israel is quite crowded.

  60. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by grahamd0 · · Score: 1

    That was a quick Godwin.

    Guess there's nothing to see in this thread, folks. Move along.

  61. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Naughty+Bob · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Dude, it's not the Israeli Jews who will suffer here. It's the indigenous population. The Palestinians.

    They are the ones who will suffer.

    I'll be kind of gutted if you think I'm being anti-semitic, because I kinda pride myself on being 'right on' about shit in general. No- this is nothing to do with Israel being a Jewish state, and everything to do with it being a colony. Every colony that ever existed bullied the aborigines to a greater or lesser extent.

    Not to get too pop-psychological, but there's also an element of 'the abused becoming the abuser' about Israel.

    --
    "Be light, stinging, insolent and melancholy"
  62. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by abstract+daddy · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Or, you know, maybe Israel isn't actually a "colony." Not that I really even care since the Palestinians get no sympathy from me anyway. They don't deserve it.

    Due to the constant threat of terrorism presented by the Palestinians, I don't find it suprising that Israel has come up with this idea. What else can they even do? Peace is not possible since Hamas will settle for nothing less than the eradication of Israel. There's no place for a Jewish nation in the Ummah.

  63. Don't Wonder... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "wonder how many of my tax dollars are being used by their government "

    Look it up! Yearly U.S. foreign aid to Israel.

    You'll be amazed...

  64. Nothing to see here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    That database already exist - every Israeli citizen who served in the army - the majority of population - already have his/her picture, fingerprints and other biometric data on file. So this will only affect people who did not serve in the army.
    Plus Israel is different from other democracies: It's very small and everybody know everybody - there is special relationship between people there. Do you know of any other country that would let a convicted murderer of a 4 year old girl for the remains of it's 2 soldiers?
    And to the people who would like to blame rabbis for this "conspiracy" - genetic information is inadmissible in the rabbinic court, last time I've checked.

    1. Re:Nothing to see here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As for the dismissal of secular science, there seems to be much of it that goes into kashruth. Someone has commentented on this not too long ago concerning people doing their own genetic testing for ancestry purposes. What may be of most concern about genetic information is the "Who is a Jew" question. It's a way of asking "Who belongs in Israel?" or "Who deserves to be protected from persecution by reason of ancestry?" without triggering lashon hara and/or tampering with the 'third rail of Judaism' - matrilineal descent.

      When one is raised in a judicial culture, everything tends to look like a proceeding.

  65. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Curtman · · Score: 3, Insightful

    People are falling over each other to denounce Israel for every real and imagined transgression while painting Hamas & friends as a bunch of valiant freedom fighters who would never ever, say, use human shields or blind fire rockets into Israel.

    Both sides behave badly. Neither excuses the other, and there is no room for forgiveness for or from each other.

    The situation is hopeless until at least one side stops the retaliation.

  66. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by story645 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Do you really believe that saying that Israel behaves badly toward its neighbours and even its own citizens means you are prejudiced or hostile toward Jews?

    I think it's the Israelis = NAZIs that's assumed to be anti-Semitic.

    Hell, I'm more on your page (don't like lots of Israeli policies, hate this new measure, think it's wrong in a lot of ways, setting a dangerous precedent, etc.) but I think the NAZI comparison is pushing it.

    I'm a weird brand of orthodox liberal Jew, so my pet peeve is Israel=Jewish state=representative of all Jews, but while that's the status quo (which it probably will be 'til the country implodes), yeah Isreali=NAZI=Jew and comparing people to the people who killed 'em is kind of tasteless.

    --
    open source modern art: laser taggi
  67. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by mux2000 · · Score: 2, Informative

    This has fuckall to do with Nazis forcing Jews to wear yellow stars.

    This has everything to do with the yellow patches. In Israel, we give Palestinians green or orange ID cards (regular citizen is blue). This is a "second class citizen" card aimed to distinguish a real citizen from a non-person, just as the yellow patches were meant to do. If this database contains info on a persons religion and race (like Israeli ID's used to) this database could (and eventually would) be used in the same manner.

    Every citizen of Israel, which is a Jewish country, will be included in the database, which is being built by the aforementioned Jewish country.

    Interesting info: not all the people living in Israel are citizens, and not all Israeli citizens are Jewish.

  68. maybe there is some racism involved indeed.. by tinkerton · · Score: 1

    since there is this background idea that Israel is "one our our guys", who should be able to understand if you talk about oppression and apartheid. Contrary to err - those others who aren't there yet.

  69. Re:ISRAEL WE BLESS THEE by mux2000 · · Score: 1

    Disregarding the veracity of all your claims, I feel compelled to point out you made one basic error. The people ruling Israel are the same people running America. Hint: they are neither the populations of Israel nor of America. As an Israeli citizen, and one who is in total opposition to Israeli (and American) state policies, I resent the implication that somehow Israel as a whole (which include the entire populace) is to blame for the murderous, criminal behaviour of the people leading it. Israel could be such a warm, peaceful place if all those power-grabbing fascist politicians had let it be...

  70. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  71. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by abstract+daddy · · Score: 1

    This has everything to do with the yellow patches. In Israel, we give Palestinians green or orange ID cards (regular citizen is blue). This is a "second class citizen" card aimed to distinguish a real citizen from a non-person, just as the yellow patches were meant to do. If this database contains info on a persons religion and race (like Israeli ID's used to) this database could (and eventually would) be used in the same manner.

    Good, maybe that will help them curb terrorist attacks. Wake me up with Israel plans to genocide the Palestinian population.

    Interesting info: not all the people living in Israel are citizens, and not all Israeli citizens are Jewish.

    I don't remember saying otherwise.

  72. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  73. Re:Tattooed Serial Numbers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Make a damn fine anti- campaign.

    [iris opens on single digit]

    [horizontal camera pan across the remaining digits]

    [while panning to last digit, camera pulls back to reveal entire number]

    [camera pulls back further to reveal old man's face and torso]

    "I already have a national biometric id, please don't give one to my grandson."

  74. Huh? by Larryish · · Score: 1

    Since when is Israel a democracy?

    1. Re:Huh? by SourGrapes · · Score: 1

      Since 1948.

    2. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    3. Re:Huh? by SourGrapes · · Score: 1

      Uh huh. That website also calls the US a Fascist state and says that Dick Cheney was behind 9/11. I think you need more tinfoil in your hat.

  75. Re:ISRAEL WE BLESS THEE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So you're saying all of Israel's enemies would give it peace but for its evil politicians? Stupid, just plain stupid. You may as well come to the United States - Israel doesn't need people like you.

  76. Litany Against LOL by daemonburrito · · Score: 1

    That is very very funny.

  77. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 4, Insightful

    comparing people to the people who killed 'em is kind of tasteless.

    But what does taste have to do with it? Shouldn't all that matters be the aptness of the comparison?

    After all, Nietzsche, that nazi-enabler, said: "He who fights with monsters might take care lest he thereby becomes a monster. For if you gaze too long into the abyss, the abyss gazes also into you." Which is a generic admonition of essentially the same thing and few if any people fault him for it.

    When I first learned of what was going on in palestine I really could not reconcile it with what I had been taught in history class (still can't actually) it seemed to me that the two countries most likely to have empathy for palestinians were the ones with the least - the USA (because of all the propaganda about freedom, self-determination, etc) and Israel because of their recent experience at the hands of an overwhelmingly powerful force. Not that I expected Israel to be happy about all the countries nearby ganging up on it, but I do expect them to handle the 'occupation' that followed in a much better way.

    To further mix metaphors its like palestine is the weimar republic after WWI - they lost the war and israel is determined to exact unrealistic penalties from them, thus making them an ideal breeding ground for continuation of the conflict. When they ought to be taking a cue from the way the Allied powers handled the situation with the Axis countries after WWII.

    --
    When information is power, privacy is freedom.
  78. Re:Only 5,499,000 Jews in Israel, 14 mil in the wo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    However, there are 45 million sheep.

    Why is this a factor? Do have a complete lack of empathy for the loneliness of the typical NZ herder?

  79. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    It deeply saddens me that this kind of comment can get score 4 on this forum. Is some bad legislation enough to justify opinion that there is no difference between jews and nacis? Or is it just an excuse? Shame on you.

    They get closer if you combine the police state stuff with the slaughter of the Palestinians.

  80. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Leading+Stoker · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Do you have to be an antisemite to disagree with the politics of Israel?

    Unfortunately, that's what it comes down to: as the excuse is it's some "hate crime" to disagree with Zionism, as Zionism "is the state of Israel" (or whatever excuse to keep this 1000 year war alive).

    So if you post something about how Zionists even treat fellow Jews - http://web.israelinsider.com/views/3998.htm -- that's a crime against their identity and State, and = anti-semite to them.

    Frankly, I don't care about the label, because it's crazier to justify wanton killing for killing sake.

  81. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The rest of the world called, they said to get off of Slashdot and realise not all high schools in the world are the same.

  82. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by story645 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Shouldn't all that matters be the aptness of the comparison?

    Sure, theoretically, but in the real world it just doesn't work. It's far too emotionally charged for people to keep a cool enough head to objectively evaluate the aptness of the comparison, and often is only used for the shock value.

    For the record, I don't think the comparison is apt. The Israeli's actions are more akin to other colonial powers, not the NAZI's systematic killing and torture on the basis of race/ethnicity. Israeli's treat Palestinian's badly because of the political situation (religion and race are secondary/fueling the whole situation) where as the NAZIs chose the races and then created the political situation, and that's the least of it. Segregation in Israel is nowhere near as bad as it was in NAZI Germany, nor are rights quite that suppressed, (and that's ignoring cattle cars, concentration camps and gas chambers, those other staples of the NAZI regime).

    Not that I expected Israel to be happy about all the countries nearby ganging up on it, but I do expect them to handle the 'occupation' that followed in a much better way.

    I think to a certain extent they're screwed regardless of what the try, and I think they've tried almost everything at this point. It's 60 odd years of mistakes, many of which can't be corrected. Israel was created pretty much as a dp camp for holocaust survivors, at which point yeah nobody was really thinking about who lived there (collective guilt and all.) It only became as major problem once everyone was too heavily invested in the land for their to be a solution that would satisfy everyone, and every attempt has failed. (Though lately it looks like they're going towards a three state solution that people can somewhat live with.)

    --
    open source modern art: laser taggi
  83. Re:Tattooed Serial Numbers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So what you are saying is because they waited so long the cost of implementation is going to be higher because they can't use the jewish natural serial numbers from auschwitz?

  84. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    slashdot called. they said stay indoors. read more slashdot.

  85. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Are you aware that not everyone here had English literature in high school?

  86. Re:HEY MOTHERFUCKER! by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 0, Troll

    Dear Mods,

    You fail at sarcasm.

    Lehitraot,
    Eli Gottlieb

  87. First comprehensive DB? not really.. by Matheus · · Score: 1

    I happen to be in the middle of deploying an Upgrade of a comprehensive biometric database in a western and democratic nation. They have had one for years.. we're just replacing the tech with better tech. ..and no this is not a black-ops project. It is the voter registration system in Panama and very public. They are not the only country we work with either. I wish the article would get their facts straight. (some leniency given for the definition of "comprehensive")

  88. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by mux2000 · · Score: 1

    Good, maybe that will help them curb terrorist attacks. Wake me up with Israel plans to genocide the Palestinian population.

    See, it's this kind of reasoning that gives people the incentive to go and do terrorist attacks.

    I fail to grasp how the idea of killing millions of people you never met can be so attractive to so many people.

    Sadly (and P.S-ly), I'm very very afraid I'll have to wake you up soon.

  89. Re:Reality Check: They have had this data for year by mrogers · · Score: 1

    Since the US and UK have mandated biometric passport data, they would be collecting biometric data anyway.

    Funny, that's the same excuse they gave us in the UK! Seems like every government is trying to blame other governments for requiring biometric passports. Where does the requirement actually come from? The International Civil Aviation Organization. Why is an opaque, unelected and unaccountable committee dictating the domestic policy of major powers? Interesting question.

  90. Re:Only 5,499,000 Jews in Israel, 14 mil in the wo by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 1

    You must be Australian.

  91. Re:Only 5,499,000 Jews in Israel, 14 mil in the wo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, you almost right, we use them to do some "dirty works" for us too. If they did more than we ask, we can only blame ourselves to let it happen. In certain areas, people in other countries think US = Israel.

  92. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by abstract+daddy · · Score: 0

    See, it's this kind of reasoning that gives people the incentive to go and do terrorist attacks.

    I've heard this a million times before. Whenever someone suggests a new counter-terrorism measure some Muslim spokesperson (self-appointed or otherwise) says "you shouldn't do this because it will "alienate" people and make them terrorists" which of course translates to "don't try to prevent us from blowing shit up or we'll blow some shit up." The only option, it seems, is to just submit.

    I fail to grasp how the idea of killing millions of people you never met can be so attractive to so many people.

    Huh?

  93. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by couchslug · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    The Israelis have an interesting problem:

    Their country is heavily iniltrated with genuine, committed cultural enemies who want it destroyed and to push the Jews into the Med.

    Slashdotian ideals of total freedom to do absolutely anything absolutely un-monitored by anyone (and by the way, fuck the Maaaan!!!) work fine when everyone are good buddies in a social monoculture, and less fine in a society in a permanent and inevitable state of war.

    It makes perfect sense for Israel to have the systems necessary to track and confirm the identities of all its citizens, so the enemy Arabs may be watched and dealt with. (That's no troll, merely a blunt observation of fact.)

    The moral rightness of this policy (especially now that Israel is the bad guy for resisting internal warfare instead of the pluck good guy for resisting external attack) is debatable, but the logic behind it is flawless.

    --
    "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
  94. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by lennier · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "But what does taste have to do with it? Shouldn't all that matters be the aptness of the comparison?"

    Yes, exactly.

    I'm sick and tired of political discourse being filled with bizarre weasel words like 'tasteless' and 'tired' and 'offensive' and 'disloyal' to describe claims the speaker doesn't like which are, objectively, either *true* or *false*.

    I'm sick of politics being about 'opinions'.

    Politics *isn't* about opinions. It's about reality. People have strong opinions *about* it, yes, just as they do about science, but those opinions do not *determine* the truth or falsity of political claims: results do. It's not a matter of fashion. Truth doesn't get 'tired' or 'stale' from multiple repetition and lies do not get proven consensus acceptance no matter how many years have passed.

    That's why history is an active research subject - we're too polite to admit it, but it's because HISTORY MAKERS LIE, and history is largely the science of sorting through the lies after the fact and determining from documentary evidence just how we were deceived and then guessing at why. If we could take public figures' words at face value at the time they say them, we wouldn't *need* either history or political science.

    Political claims, like every other claim, need to be verified against objective, trustworthy evidence, one political system is NOT identical to another, and torture and oppression remain torture and oppression regardless of whether it's the 'good guys' or the 'bad guys' doing it.

    And while Israel's policies toward Palestine are not identical to Nazi Germany's toward the Jews, there sure are depressing similarities.

    And it just goes to show that suffering atrocity and swearing 'never again shall this happen TO US' is not quite the same as swearing 'never again shall we allow this happen, full stop'.

    The other interesting thing is that America's 'torture lite' techniques are, from what I've read, not only nearly identical to the Cold War KGB's (sleep deprivation, sound, heat/cold, stress positions) -- but they actually migrated to the US military lexicon FROM the Soviets via the Cold War.

    What you hate, you really DO stand a strong chance of becoming. Literally and not figuratively. Rivals copy each other and adopt the methodologies which seem to work.

    --
    You are not a brain: http://books.google.com/books?id=2oV61CeDx-YC
  95. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by nidarus · · Score: 1

    Do you have to be an antisemite to disagree with the politics of Israel?

    To quote the GP:

    The creatures outside looked from nazi to jew, and from jew to nazi, and from nazi to jew again; but already it was impossible to say which was which.

    He didn't even mention Israel.

    And this silly knee-jerk reaction modded +5 Insightful... bleh.

  96. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by nidarus · · Score: 2

    But what does taste have to do with it? Shouldn't all that matters be the aptness of the comparison?

    Very simple. The comparison isn't apt. It's ludicrous.

    You have to be a hardcore holocaust denier to claim that the Nazis' genocidal campaign comes close to the tiny regional conflict between Israel and Palestine. You have to be incredibly ignorant (or incredibly biased) to claim that human rights in Israel are as bad as they were in Nazi Germany.

    And yet, this stupid meme lives on.

    Why? Maybe because it creates a nice narrative symmetry. Maybe because it makes some people feel better about their own, often deeply antisemitic history. Maybe because it's outrageous enough to make the evening news.

    Needless to say, these are not good reasons. The automatic comparison of Israel with the Nazis is primitive demagoguery and an outrageous lie.

  97. Those who don't learn from history are it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This will make it very easy to find all the jews and kill them once and for all.

  98. A minority of extremists? by tinkerton · · Score: 1

    I think it certainly is not just a matter of a minority of extremists. Rather the occupation and apartheid is deeply imprinted on the country(as is the need to obfuscate the reality). It is everywhere and it would be hard for any government to change direction.

    One of the best sources to help understand that this is not just a matter of aggressive repression or tit-for-tat escalation is Jeff Halper from the Israeli Committee against House Demolitions (ICAHD). He explicitly speaks about Apartheid. But Apartheid exists in the laws, the bureaucracy, the everyday discrimination and so on. Halper focuses on the occupied territories but the israeli arabs are in a similar(though less uncomfortable) predicament. Halper compares them with the "colored" status.

    So, if a new passport system is introduced I would ask is how will it discriminate against israeli arabs. Well, you could make the use of the new ID required for some services. Then, Israeli arabs would have problems (delays, extra permissions required,.. )getting their ID. Or they would have to go to another town to find an office with the new type of terminal. Or their ID wouldn't have some extra data that is required to get some permit. That's the kind of weird stuff I would expect and it emanates from the whole system.

  99. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by nidarus · · Score: 2, Insightful

    And while Israel's policies toward Palestine are not identical to Nazi Germany's toward the Jews, there sure are depressing similarities.

    No. Not really.

    You could find much better analogies in the USSR (or even modern-day Russia), Belarus, various Arab and Central Asian (Uzbekistan, Turkeminstan) countries, China, South Korea and so on.

    And yet, Israel is compared to the Nazis more than any of those.

    You want objectivity? The Israeli/Palestinian conflict is a tiny and relatively bloodless regional conflict. More people died in the current Iraq war than in the whole Israeli/Palestinian conflict since 1948. Hell, I think more people died in the first two months of the Iraq war than in the whole 2nd Intifada. And that's just one example. I'm sure that I could find dozens of others (Russia/Chechnya springs to mind...)

    Saying that the Israeli/Palestinian conflict is anything like Nazi Germany is the furthest thing from "facts" or "objectivity". It's a crazy hyperbole, a cheap (and indeed, offensive) rhetoric trick.

  100. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Hubbell · · Score: 2, Insightful

    What about the USS Liberty incident where unmarked israeli planes and warships attacked a US intelligence ship in the mediterranean? Imo, we should have wiped Tel Aviv or another major israeli city off the map for that.

  101. Re:HEY MOTHERFUCKER! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dear Mods,

    You fail at life.

    Fixed it for ya.

  102. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Hubbell · · Score: 2, Informative

    The palestinians and arabs are pissed because leading up to the creation of israel for DECADES jews had been moving there and buying worthless desert land from the native people for almost nothing because, well, it was fucking worthless desert. They then proceeded to turn it into, for lack of a better word, paradise, and then the state of israel was created and shittons of jews started flocking there, so then all the arabs/native people stopped and thought, "wait a fucking minute they bought that land for almost nothing and now they are flourishing, WE WANT IT BACK OMFG!"
    They most certainly are not a colony, they bought that land when it was worthless and built it up to be what it is today. But, I am 100% anti israel what with how much military aid we give them, the USS liberty incident, and that AIPAC pretty much determines who gets to be elected to public office in the US and who doesnt'.

  103. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by nidarus · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Dude, it's not the Israeli Jews who will suffer here. It's the indigenous population. The Palestinians.

    They are the ones who will suffer.

    Says who?

    From what I've heard, the biometric ID will supplement Israel's already-existing national ID. Its stated purpose is to combat forgery and identity theft (...), as well as convenience (you don't have to carry your ID/driver's license around all of the time). So, at the very least, The Jews are are going to suffer from this.

    As for the Palestinians... well they don't have Israeli IDs since they are not Israeli citizens (the PA issues its own IDs). However, most of them have to go to Israel to work, or to visit family members, so they need a special Israeli permit. Now, you'd say that biometric measures would be added to those permits as well, and I think you'd be right. But the question here is, how is that going to make them suffer?

    You see, one of the crappier parts of being a Palestinian is that a tiny piece of paper is basically your life. It can be stolen, it can get lost, it can be taken away by asshole soldiers. With biometry, you don't need that piece of paper.

    Of course, it might hurt the Palestinians' privacy a bit. But remember that we're talking about people who can have their houses searched, and themselves arrested for arbitrary periods of time, without any real warrant or justification. I don't see how biometric ID can make it worse.

  104. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I got the reference, so not everyone was as lost as him. I mean, it's hardly an obscure book! Then again, I'm British, so I guess more likely to have read it.

  105. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by dasmoo · · Score: 2

    Oh yeah, cause the only country that ever is talked badly about by anyone is Israel. Well, I guess the next time I give shit to America, I'll be thinking of the Jews that live there, so it makes it easier for me. Geez, sometimes I wish I were a Jew, so I could play the antisemitic win argument card.

  106. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by MrNaz · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "every other nation in the region has a free pass to do anything they want without anyone even looking in their direction"

    Free pass? Israel is quietly the most prolific violator of UN resolutions, violating more than all other Middle Eastern nations combined. There are many other UN resolutions which the US vetoed on Israel's behalf.

    Free pass indeed.

    Oh, and Iraq didn't get to do what it pleased. It tried trading oil in Euros and that got it a set of trumped up WMD accusations and an invasion. Iran doesn't seem to be free of criticism either.

    Cut it out with the Jewish victim complex, the rest of the world is tired of it. Criticism of Israel != antisemitism. I am a Muslim. I am a vehement critic of Israel's politics. I am also friends with many Jewish people, who I find to be very warm, friendly and pleasant people. In fact, many of my Jewish friends' biggest problem with Israel is that they carry out their politics in the name of Judaism.

    --
    I hate printers.
  107. Palestinians are the first people undergoing genoc by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If Israelis used the last 30 years to accomplish what the Nazis did in 4, there would be no Palestinians left.

    Show me any other "population under genocide" whose numbers increase faster than most countries in the world ?
     

  108. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by MrNaz · · Score: 1

    "The comparison isn't apt."

    Perhaps.

    "You have to be a hardcore holocaust denier to claim that the Nazis' genocidal campaign comes close to the tiny regional conflict between Israel and Palestine."

    You'd also have to be a geopolitical novice to not realize that, from a geopolitical point of view, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is perhaps the most important conflict currently occurring.

    "You have to be incredibly ignorant (or incredibly biased) to claim that human rights in Israel are as bad as they were in Nazi Germany."

    Well that depends on whose human rights you are talking about.

    --
    I hate printers.
  109. Re:Tattooed Serial Numbers by nidarus · · Score: 1

    But they have the same bureaucratic effect: reducing the person to a number.

    This is a non-issue. Every Israeli citizen already has a unique national ID number.

  110. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by MrNaz · · Score: 1

    There's no place for a Jewish nation in the Ummah.

    Oh really?

    --
    I hate printers.
  111. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by nidarus · · Score: 1

    You'd also have to be a geopolitical novice to not realize that, from a geopolitical point of view, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is perhaps the most important conflict currently occurring.

    It is disproportionally important, but so what?

    Well that depends on whose human rights you are talking about.

    No it doesn't. Even convicted terrorists get much better treatment in Israel than any given Jew in Nazi Germany.

  112. Hey old Jews, remember Denmark? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And the Jews do it to themselves, put brands on themselves in a central registry! How nice of them! Now when the Iranians and Syrians overrun them, all the conquerors have to do is to go to the local police stations or wherever to find the data on where all the Jews are, what they look like, and how to prove they are Jews. Then, having all the Jews dead to rights and loaded on trucks, trains, oxcarts, Somali technicals, whatever, the conquerors can cart them all off to Baluchistan to the Iranians newly constructed gas ovens to be deloused. Jews are smart people. My best friend as a child was a Jewish tailor's son. No, he was not some rich financier! To think that they would do something so stupid to themselves boggles the mind. And the horror that somebody like my boyhood friend would pay the price for this foolishness with his life and the life of his family is absolutely sickening.

  113. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by MrNaz · · Score: 1

    The rubble that was the city of Beirut disagrees with you.

    --
    I hate printers.
  114. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Do you have to be an antisemite to disagree with the politics of Israel?

    The Israeli government and many of its citizens are always implying so.

    While it is possible to criticize the policies of Israel without being antisemitic (and you might be one of these people), the vast majority of the critics of Israel criticize Israel because they hate jews.

    Here's an example. A black man is driving 10 mph over the speed limit, gets pulled over by a cop, and is given a ticket. Is this a racist act? The driver was speeding - doesn't sound racist to me. However, day after day, this cop only pulls over black drivers to give them speeding tickets. The cop even ignores white drivers who travel 50 or 100 mph over the speed limit.

    Any reasonable person would say the cop is not actually concerned about speeding or traffic safety, and is only using that as an excuse to cover up his hatred of black people.

    Much like many critics of Israel. Some people criticize Israel for its policies towards the Palestinians. But if these critics are genuinely concerned about human rights and the plight of the Palestinians, you would expect the critics would also criticize countries like Lebanon or Kuwait, who treat Palestinians far far worse, not to mention far worse abuses around the world. And yet (almost all) the critics of Israel are silent.

  115. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Das+Modell · · Score: 1

    (alt. account)

    Oh yeah, cause the only country that ever is talked badly about by anyone is Israel.

    This is an argument I never made, so I don't know what your point is supposed to be.

  116. Re:ISRAEL WE BLESS THEE by Ihmhi · · Score: 1

    This is just an anti-Israel/Jewish/America copypasta. It's best to ignore it. Remarkably, it's one of the few times I've ever seen copypasta actually relevant to the topic at hand in /.

  117. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Once upon a time "anti-semite" was a label for someone who hated Jews.
    It has become a label for someone a Jewish person hates.

  118. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by ThatFunkyMunki · · Score: 1

    I wish I had mod points, this is one of the most insightful comments I've seen on /. ever.

    --
    If patriotism is racist, is racism patriotic?
  119. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Das+Modell · · Score: 1

    (alt. account)

    Really.

  120. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by MrNaz · · Score: 3, Funny

    That's because they had an entire organization dedicated to enacting resolutions against Israel.

    The UN is dedicated to enacting resolutions against Israel?

    Huh?

    Victim complex, anyone?

    --
    I hate printers.
  121. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by rohan972 · · Score: 1

    I'm not at all anti-semitic, but I don't believe for one minute that powerful Jews won't oppress less powerful Jews. The Nazi state was overall an oppressive state, not only to the Jews. The methods they used ought to be well noted by all people who desire to live in political freedom, regardless of whether or not genocide is likely to be an aspect of the threatened oppression. The lessons we can learn from what happened are not only about Jews and not only about genocide. And no, I'm not a leftist.

  122. Flasback Flutterfull by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Even if I'm not as smart as most folks, I'd be a bit leery if such events had been aimed at me - since before my birth.

    And my, isn't nano-science and remote sensing so advanced, lately.

    My, my. Indeed.
    And I'm holdin on to my 2c, thanks.

  123. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by rohan972 · · Score: 1, Troll

    Dude, it's not the Israeli Jews who will suffer here. It's the indigenous population. The Palestinians.

    WTF? Go get a date on that wailing wall, then come back with who are the colonists and who are indigenous. You'd need to have no knowledge of history at all to claim that Israel is a colonist state of Jews invading someone else's homeland, unless you're going to claim that everyone in the world who is not living where there ancestors where 3000+ years ago is not in their homeland.

    Yes, I'm aware that Palestinians have been there for some time, it's a difficult situation.

  124. Good point. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Brilliant insight. MOD PARENT UP.

  125. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Free+the+Cowards · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Of all the nations in the world you might hope would be wary of pervasive monitoring, you'd think one that bills itself as a "jewish state" would be it.

    Unfortunately the Israeli philosophy seems to be that it's not a problem as long as the right people are doing it. Which is true, it just ignores the fact that the right people never stick around forever.

    --
    If you mod me Overrated, you are admitting that you have no penis.
  126. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    Dude, it's not the Israeli Jews who will suffer here. It's the indigenous population. The Palestinians.

    The Palestinians are not the indigenous population - the Jews were there long before them. The Arabs arrived after Mohamed united the Arab tribes (around 700 CE) in what is now called Saudi Arabia. The Arabs arrived by force. They conquered, raped, pillaged and looted. It is the Arabs who are the colonial power. The Arabs are not native to Israel (or Libya, Tunisia, Morocco, Algeria...).

  127. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    The Jews are indigenous. You don't think they chose Israel at random, do you?

  128. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Falconhell · · Score: 1

    You got moded flamebait cause you posted flamebait.
    I have repeatedly been modded down by right wingers here, but I dont whine about it, get over it and grow up.

  129. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Do a little digging, especially when parents and other relatives become very hostile. This is a prima facie sign of cover-up to fit in., unless it is visibly evident otherwise.

    Kahane was right. Had he been heeded, this apocalyptically significant act may not have been required. Oh, wait...

  130. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Curtman · · Score: 1

    To quote the GP:

    The creatures outside looked from nazi to jew, and from jew to nazi, and from nazi to jew again; but already it was impossible to say which was which.

    He didn't even mention Israel.

    To quote the P:

    Oh wait, this is Slashdot, the home of rabid antisemitism

    I don't see a lot of antisemitism here. I see a lot of outrage and disgust at the injustices that go on in that part of the world, and at the Western nations blindly supporting the aggressor.

  131. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Curtman · · Score: 2, Interesting

    And yet, Israel is compared to the Nazis more than any of those.

    I think the reason is because the people there went directly from being oppressed to doing the opressing. They should know better.

  132. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Curtman · · Score: 1

    More people died in the current Iraq war than in the whole Israeli/Palestinian conflict since 1948.

    You also have to conveniently forget their conflicts with Lebanon, Egypt, etc though. The Israeli/Palestine conflict involves much more than just Isarael -vs- the Palestinian people.

  133. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Free pass? Israel is quietly the most prolific violator of UN resolutions, violating more than all other Middle Eastern nations combined.

    That is because the large number of Arab/Muslim nations at the UN vote down any criticism of any Middle Eastern nation aside from Israel.

    You seem to not know that there are many kinds of UN resolutions. The resolutions that Israel violates are General Assembly resolutions (and other minor bodies). In international law, these resolutions are equivalent of library fines (ie meaningless). The large number of Arab/Muslim dictatorships would vote that the world was flat if there was some way they could blame Israel for it.

    The resolutions that matter are Security Council resolutions. These are the resolutions that can authorize the use of force (such as expelling Iraq from Kuwait).

    There are many other UN resolutions which the US vetoed on Israel's behalf.

    Vetoes only apply at the Security Council. You are also ignoring the many Security Council resolutions vetoed by the Russians & Chinese on behalf of their Arab/Muslim client states.

    Oh, and Iraq didn't get to do what it pleased. It tried trading oil in Euros and that got it a set of trumped up WMD accusations and an invasion.

    The UN Security Council passed a resolution authorizing the use of force (see above), which means not only the tacit approval of USA, UK, France, Russia & China, but a majority of the Security Council (which has 10 other rotating members).

    Iran doesn't seem to be free of criticism either.

    As a sovereign nation, Iran signed the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and agreed to its terms. Iran didn't have to do that. Having signed, Iran has deliberately, repeatedly violated the NPT. Why would a country do that? There is only one reason: to build a nuclear bomb. Violating the NPT can have very serious consequences (see Security Council resolutions, above).

    You might respond that Israel has a number of nuclear bombs. However, Israel (and many other nations) never signed the NPT and is not bound by it.

    Don't get me started on human rights in the Islamic Republic of Iran. The entire country is a shithole on so many levels.

    Criticism of Israel != antisemitism. I am a Muslim. I am a vehement critic of Israel's politics. I am also friends with many Jewish people, who I find to be very warm, friendly and pleasant people.

    While it is possible to criticize the policies of Israel without being antisemitic (and you might be one of these people), the vast majority of the critics of Israel criticize Israel because they hate jews.

    Here's an example. A black man is driving 10 mph over the speed limit, gets pulled over by a cop, and is given a ticket. Is this a racist act? The driver was speeding - doesn't sound racist to me. However, day after day, this cop only pulls over black drivers to give them speeding tickets. The cop ignores white drivers who travel 50 or 100 mph over the speed limit.

    Any reasonable person would say the cop is not actually concerned about speeding or traffic safety, and is only using that as an excuse to cover up his hatred of black people.

    Much like many critics of Israel. Some people criticize Israel for its policies towards the Palestinians. But if these critics are genuinely concerned about human rights and the plight of the Palestinians, you would expect the critics would also criticize countries like Lebanon or Kuwait, who treat Palestinians far far worse, not to mention far worse abuses around the world. And yet (almost all) the critics of Israel are silent.

    In fact, many of my Jewish friends' biggest problem with Israel is that they carry out their politics in the name of Judaism.

    So, how do you feel about those who carry out politics in the name of Islam? How do you feel about those who carry out violence in the name of Islam?

  134. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by mog007 · · Score: 1

    Who would've thought that a quote from a Batman movie would apply to something like this?

    "You either die a hero, or live long enough to see yourself become a villain."

    How many righteous people stay as such when they're given power for a long enough period of time?

  135. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by MrNaz · · Score: 1

    The resolutions that matter are Security Council resolutions. These are the resolutions that can authorize the use of force (such as expelling Iraq from Kuwait).

    Like these ones?

    Vetoes only apply at the Security Council. You are also ignoring the many Security Council resolutions vetoed by the Russians & Chinese on behalf of their Arab/Muslim client states.

    Research this, you'll find the number of security council resolutions vetoed by the US on behalf of Israel vastly outnumbers the number of vetos by other nations (and by vastly, we're talking something like 100 for the US, 2 for Russia).

    As a sovereign nation, Iran signed the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and agreed to its terms. Iran didn't have to do that. Having signed, Iran has deliberately, repeatedly violated the NPT.

    Sorry, no cheese for you. Saying that Iran is in violation of the NPT is like saying Iraq had WMDs. Sorry, the world doesn't believe the BS spewed by the US and Israeli intelligence fabrication services any more.

    While it is possible to criticize the policies of Israel without being antisemitic (and you might be one of these people), the vast majority of the critics of Israel criticize Israel because they hate jews.

    Totally untrue. Incidentally, if the entire world hates Jews, does that reflect a problem with the entire world, or with the way the Jews interact with the entire world?

    Here's an example. A black man is driving 10 mph over the speed limit, gets pulled over by a cop, and is given a ticket. Is this a racist act? The driver was speeding - doesn't sound racist to me. However, day after day, this cop only pulls over black drivers to give them speeding tickets. The cop ignores white drivers who travel 50 or 100 mph over the speed limit.

    Straw man, totally irrelevant and inapplicable analogy. Are you saying that the world is only critical of Israel? Please point me to some evidence that the mass media is critical of Israel and forgiving of everyone else. And I mean examples from Fox, CNN, BBC etc, not some niche market circular from your local mosque.

    So, how do you feel about those who carry out politics in the name of Islam? How do you feel about those who carry out violence in the name of Islam?

    I disagree with them, and I find it interesting that it was YOU that drew an analogy between terrorists and the state of Israel.

    --
    I hate printers.
  136. Mass disaster = Messianic Panic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I guess that one of the possibilities that would qualify as a mass disaster is a spiritual revival among the populace (AAAAAYYYEE! Everyone's turning to HaIsh HaZeh. One has to know against whom to discriminate, even if it be a significant percentage.

  137. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Das+Modell · · Score: 1

    The UN is dedicated to enacting resolutions against Israel? Huh?

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Nations_Human_Rights_Council#Council.27s_position_on_Israel

    I remind you that this is the same organization that has/had/will have members such as Egypt, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and China. The council's previous incarnation had equally shitty members. This so-called human rights council also proposed (and possibly passed, I forget) a resolution against freedom of speech... sorry, I mean against "defamation of religions," which of course means "defamation of Islam." Pakistan introduced the resolution, and they're of course members of the Organisation of the Islamic Conference, which shouldn't have any business going anywhere near anything related to human rights.

    Victim complex, anyone?

    Nobody told me I'm Jewish. I'd better ask my mother about this, she has a lot of explaining to do.

  138. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    First, your complaint regrading Israel's breaching UN resolutions. Do you not understand that there is a difference between the resolutions that Israel breached (nonbinding recommendations under Chapter 6) and those Iraq broke (enforcement actions under Chapter 7)?

    And a careful examination of the resolutions condemning Israel will quickly convince one that if Israel had been equally cry-baby about the attacks they had suffered from their "neighbors", you are to see a huge list of resolutions filed under Palestine, Lebanon, Syria etc etc.

    Who is the naughty party here?

  139. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Das+Modell · · Score: 1

    (alt. account)

    You got moded flamebait cause you posted flamebait.

    Really? Care to point out where I posted a flamebait? You can't, because I never posted one.

    I have repeatedly been modded down by right wingers here, but I dont whine about it, get over it and grow up.

    I'm not the one who abuses the moderating system for ideological purposes, so I'm hardly the one who needs to grow up.

  140. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Like these ones?

    Yes. These are mostly Chapter 6 resolutions.

    Now I really know you have no clue what you are talking about.

  141. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sorry, no cheese for you. Saying that Iran is in violation of the NPT is like saying Iraq had WMDs. Sorry, the world doesn't believe the BS spewed by the US and Israeli intelligence fabrication services any more.

    Iran did violate the NPT - that is a fact. It had large undeclared clandestine nuclear programs.

    Iraq most definitely did have WMDs in the past, and did have a large WMD program. That is a fact. Iraq used WMDs against their own people and against the Iranians. Incidentally, even the USA condemned Iraq for using WMDs against the Iranians, while the Arab League defended Iraq.

    While it is possible to criticize the policies of Israel without being antisemitic (and you might be one of these people), the vast majority of the critics of Israel criticize Israel because they hate jews.

    Totally untrue. Incidentally, if the entire world hates Jews, does that reflect a problem with the entire world, or with the way the Jews interact with the entire world?

    I never said the entire world hates jews, just that most critics of Israel do. That is why they hate Israel. It has nothing to do with Israeli policy or human rights.

    Are you saying that the world is only critical of Israel? Please point me to some evidence that the mass media is critical of Israel and forgiving of everyone else.

    The world routinely ignores/minimizes the most egregious violations of human rights, far far worse than Israel. How many resolutions of the UN Commission on Human Rights and UN Human Rights Council condemned Sudan, Rwanda, Syria, China, Russia, Chechnya, East Timor, Tibet, Iran, Zimbabwe? How many condemn Israel? Why?

    The conflict in Sudan/Darfur has killed more than a million people, much much more than the Arab/Israeli conflict, and yet the UN Human Rights Council passed more than 8 resolutions condemning Israel, and none condemning Sudan. Either the UN Human Rights Council (which has a majority of members from poor developing countries) doesn't care about the human rights of Africans, or hates Israel (or both). Which is it?

    I disagree with them, and I find it interesting that it was YOU that drew an analogy between terrorists and the state of Israel.

    Not once did I mention terrorists or terrorism. YOU seem to be drawing the analogy between Islam and terrorism.

  142. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by MrNaz · · Score: 1

    And of course, they are totally irrelevant to the topic at hand. Although I do see your point, Mr Strawman.

    --
    I hate printers.
  143. Re:Tattooed Serial Numbers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Now if the USA had one hundred million Al-Qaida, would similar action be taken? No. Why?

    1. Snivel Rights Revoltion - "We got the RIGHT...to commit the CRIME...because we're $PROTECTED_CLASS."
    2. Excessive debt to foreign nations that have a different worldview, especially $GOLDEN_SHEILD_LAND.
    3. Political correctness - "Don't make them angry now" (spoken with a $CREATIVE_ARTS_LISP ')

  144. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Curtman · · Score: 3, Insightful

    we should have wiped Tel Aviv or another major israeli city off the map for that.

    Murdering a bunch of civilians is your solution?

    Ever looked up the definition of terrorism?

  145. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Curtman · · Score: 1

    I remind you that this is the same organization that has/had/will have members such as Egypt, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and China.

    How the hell is anything supposed to get resolved if there is no forum for discussion with your enemy? A forum with fairness and equality where the only thing that matters is justice would be nice though. Not this thing we have now where certain members have unfair advantages, and aren't bound to adhere to any decisions.

  146. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Das+Modell · · Score: 1

    Why do you need a human rights council for simply talking? You don't, and that's now what the council is about.

  147. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Of all the nations in the world you might hope would be wary of pervasive monitoring, you'd think one that bills itself as a "jewish state" would be it.

    You're surprised Jews have one standard for themselves and another for everyone else?

    Haha! The yokes on you!

  148. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Curtman · · Score: 1

    Why do you need a human rights council for simply talking?

    Is that a serious question? Or did you just not think about it before you asked it?

  149. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And what does biometric ID has to do with Nazi, exactly?

    Someone who's grandfather was murdered by Nazis.

  150. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Das+Modell · · Score: 1

    Yes, it's a serious question. Why do you need a council, with specifically selected members, to discuss human rights? If you want to talk to China about its human rights situation, you do not need a fucking council for it.

    The UN "Human Rights" Council is meant to address human rights violations. Its members are supposed to combat human rights violations, which quickly turns into a joke when you look at the list of members. "Members elected to the Council shall uphold the highest standards in the promotion and protection of human rights" is what the establishing resolution of the council says.

  151. Ignorance by SourGrapes · · Score: 1

    The degree of ignorance in this thread is ridiculously, though unsurprisingly, high. The Big Bad Jews did not swoop into the Glorious and Peaceful Nation of Palestine en masse in 1948, slaughter the poor innocent indigenous Palestinian population, force the survivors to live in refugee camps and ruin their lives for three generations. Okay?

    I can't even be bothered to lay it all out here because anyone who wants to be against Israel will accuse me of bias, but suffice it to say that before 1967 nobody had ever heard of "Palestinians" -- the vast majority of Arabs living on that land were those (or descendants of those) who emigrated there from surrounding Arab countries starting in the late 19th Century when the influx of Jewish immigrants inspired by Zionism or fleeing persecution, and later spurred on by the Balfour Declaration, were making the place livable again for the first time in two thousand years and creating a growing economy. The Arabs living in "Palestine" were actually OPPOSED to the very idea of any sovereign Arab state there, they considered the whole thing part of Syria. The Jews didn't steal the land, either. They BOUGHT it. Mostly from absentee Arab landowners, and mostly at exorbitant prices. The Palestinians are not aborigines, okay? They're just better at propaganda.

    That's just the beginning. Mod me down if you want, but it's the truth. The Palestinians have suffered terribly over the last 60 years, no doubt about that, but not because of Israel -- because of the Arab governments who have always used the Palestinians as a political football to score points in the propaganda war against Israel by intentionally keeping them living in squalor (and check out how nicely the Arab countries treat the Palestinians living within their borders; every single one of them has been WAY worse in their treatment of Palestinians than Israel has -- even Jordan killed more Palestinians in ONE WEEK in 1970 than Israel has in 60 years), and because of their own incompetent and grossly corrupt leadership that has never failed to incite violence against Jews (not even against Israelis -- there were numerous massacres against Jews by Arabs even before the end of the British Mandate), when if they had EVER tried ANYTHING except violence at any point in the past century to get what they want (whatever the hell that is), they would have had it for a very long time by now.

    There is not and has never been any tit-for-tat "cycle of violence." There's a line that goes: if the Palestinians put down their weapons there would be no more violence. If the Israelis put down their weapons there would be no more Israel.

    Don't swallow the press.

    </frustrated rant>

    1. Re:Ignorance by SourGrapes · · Score: 1

      I'm not saying this database isn't a stupid idea -- it is, and almost certainly the law won't pass -- it just has nothing to do with what this thread has predictably degenerated into.

    2. Re:Ignorance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The degree of ignorance in this thread is ridiculously, though unsurprisingly, high.

      Don't be so hard on yourself...

      The Big Bad Jews did not swoop into the Glorious and Peaceful Nation of Palestine en masse in 1948, slaughter the poor innocent indigenous Palestinian population, force the survivors to live in refugee camps and ruin their lives for three generations. Okay?

      Read "The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine" by Ilan Pappe (an Israeli jew... mentionning it so that you can't dismiss him as a muslim, anti-semite, etc)

      I can't even be bothered to lay it all out here because anyone who wants to be against Israel will accuse me of bias

      I'll accuse you of providing false and/or innacurate information. And I'm not against Israel. I'm against criminal acts, and I'm for peace for all, whether Israelis or Palestinians.

      , but suffice it to say that before 1967 nobody had ever heard of "Palestinians" -- the vast majority of Arabs living on that land were those (or descendants of those) who emigrated there from surrounding Arab countries starting in the late 19th Century when the influx of Jewish immigrants inspired by Zionism or fleeing persecution, and later spurred on by the Balfour Declaration, were making the place livable again for the first time in two thousand years and creating a growing economy.

      I gather you've been reading "From Time Immemorial" from Joan Peters? This book has been dismissed by serious scholars.

      The Arabs living in "Palestine" were actually OPPOSED to the very idea of any sovereign Arab state there, they considered the whole thing part of Syria.

      Who cares if what you say is correct. People have the right to self determination.

      The Jews didn't steal the land, either. They BOUGHT it. Mostly from absentee Arab landowners, and mostly at exorbitant prices.

      Again wrong.

      in '48, jews owned no more than 7% of Palestine... and in case you are not aware, Israel covers more than 7% of Palestine.

      The Palestinians are not aborigines, okay? They're just better at propaganda.

      What are they then? As for propaganda, the fact that you come here telling us what you are telling us, and possibly believing it speaks volume about the effectiveness of the zionist propaganda.

      used the Palestinians as a political football to score points in the propaganda war against Israel by intentionally keeping them living in squalor

      Right. If I walk into a house, kick their owner out, and their neighbors don't really want them to move in, then it's their neighbors that are jerks, not me for kicking people out of their own house.

      There's a line that goes: if the Palestinians put down their weapons there would be no more violence. If the Israelis put down their weapons there would be no more Israel.

      I guess if you keep repeating this often enough, some people will start believing it is true.

      Don't swallow the press.

      I don't, and that's why I can say with certainty that you have contributed to the number of ignorant comments quite nicely with your this post of yours.

      </frustrated rant>

      Instead of being frustrated, why don't you spend time reading reports from B'Tselem (Israeli human rights group), and the ruling of the International Court of justice on the legality of the wall that Israel is building. Also read "The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine".

      Don't be frustrated. Be truthful.

    3. Re:Ignorance by SourGrapes · · Score: 1

      in '48, jews owned no more than 7% of Palestine... and in case you are not aware, Israel covers more than 7% of Palestine.

      And in 1948 Israel accepted the Partition Plan that gave them 12% of Palestine to become Israel -- with almost all the rest of it having gone to form Transjordan in 1922. Even today, if you exclude the West Bank and Gaza, Israel only covers 18% of Palestine. I'm sure you know what happened to change those lines since then.

      If I walk into a house, kick their owner out, and their neighbors don't really want them to move in, then it's their neighbors that are jerks, not me for kicking people out of their own house.

      Again, first of all, that's not what happened. And second -- what about the almost one million Jews who were forcibly expelled from Arab countries following the establishment of Israel? They had absolutely nothing to do with anything, and yet most of them went to Israel and became citizens and fully integrated into society. Unlike the Palestinians, who, even if you believe that they were expelled, have been treated like lepers in practically every Arab country, and rather than attempt to integrate them like every other refugee everywhere else in the world, they've been denied virtually all rights in Arab countries and forced to live in refugee camps for generations. Can you really justify this? What on Earth makes Israel the bad guy when the Arabs who remained after 1948 were given full citizenship and have more rights in Israel than they would in any Arab country?

  152. Why the Troll mod? by rohan972 · · Score: 1

    Troll? The parent poster claimed that Jews are colonists and the Palestinians are the indigenous population. This is a blatant lie, the Jews have been there also for thousands of years. Whatever you think of Israeli politics, characterizing the (re)establishment of the state of Israel as an foreign colonisation is such inflammatory bullshit that it has to be called out. If that's trolling, expect more of it from me.

    If I have to tolerate such blatant lying to keep my karma, then karma be damned.

    1. Re:Why the Troll mod? by gibbsjoh · · Score: 1

      Yes, but the original Jewish inhabitants were (IIRC) Semitic Jews, and the majority of settlers that came in with Zionism are European (Askhenazim) Jews - so it is sort of colonisation. The fact is that in Israel today, non-Ashkenazim Jews (Yemenite, Maghreb, Ethiopian) do face discrimination. Israel a chosen land of the Jews? Sure, only if you're a good old white Euro Jew.

      --
      -- "...I'm a bad guy because I, well, I sing some rock-and-roll songs." M. Manson
  153. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by sapphire+wyvern · · Score: 1

    I don't think the Middle East even *has* an indigenous population, to be honest. There's been so much back and forthing over the millenia...

    I mean, if the biblical account has historical truth at the core, it couldn't be more clear that the Jewish arrival in the "Promised Land" was nothing less than a military conquest.

    Personally I don't have a lot of respect for "native population" arguments, maybe because I'm a white Australian. To me they seem inherently racist, since they're saying that someone deserves special rights based on their ancestry that will never, and can never, be extended to anyone whose ancestry does not meet the requirement.

    I acknowledge that, for instance, the history of indigenous Australians goes back tens of thousands of years before the arrival of my ancestors; but the actual indigenous Australians who are alive *now* are no more or less Australian than any other inhabitant of the country. How many generations does a line of descent need to live in a place for them to be natives? Are people of Norman descent considered English, or is that reserved for descendants of Angles and Saxons only? Is a third-generation Latino-American person less American than a fifth-generation African-American or an umpteenth generation descendant of a Pilgrim?

  154. Stop trolling, biatch! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Can't you see the original post blames legit people to be nazis? You should be ashamed of yourself. You deserve to be spanked.

  155. hatul by Hemi+Rodner · · Score: 1

    I should also mention that I'm looking for a girlfriend.

    --
    hemi
  156. A question. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why is that every Israeli I ever meet tells me he is a member of the Israeli Special Forces? Why aren't they ever in, say, Logistics? Or maybe an army diesel mechanic? They're always "commandoes" or something like that. I guess it's as surprising as discovering that there were approximately 2 million men serving in the British SAS...

  157. a tragedy of short-sightedness by gregconquest · · Score: 1

    Can't you just imagine who would love have a biometric list of all Jews? The first step in exterminating a whole people would be to get a list of them all. (note: I am not trying to sound anti-Semitic; I didn't create this situation...) This is just weird. Are all national ID systems going to result in such absurdities? Britain has show absolute daftness in handling the overabundance of data they already have; and they pretend its reasonable to want more.

  158. Old news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I was afraid this discussion was going to degenerate in a pro/contra Israel fight. But I think the last line of the post is more interesting.

    "The article notes that no other democratic country has a comprehensive biometric database of all citizens."

    Some EU coutries already have this database and more will follow soon.

    http://www.libertysecurity.org/article1017.html
    http://www.edri.org/edrigram/number3.7/biometrics

  159. And what does biometric ID has to do with Nazis. by MRe_nl · · Score: 1

    Would a survivor of a Nazi concentration camp accept biometrics or ICT
    implants? I guess the answer is "no". All inmates of Nazi concentration
    camps were tattooed. Of course, compared with current sophisticated ICT
    technology that is a quite primitive way to identify persons - but,
    unfortunately, it worked perfectly sixty years ago. A tattoo hardly can be
    removed; ICT implants are quite difficult to remove; biometrics cannot be
    removed at all without causing severe harm - of course you can throw
    away your eyes as shown in the motion picture "Minority Report", but that
    is no real option. The possibility of identification anyone anytime
    everywhere may be no problem in a free society and a state ruled by the
    law. And of course, don't get me wrong here, those who currently
    promote ICT implants and biometrics for identification purposes are not
    Nazis. However, we all know that societies and states can change
    completely and rapidly. Therefore, we should try not to willingly provide
    means to the state and its agents that make omnipresent control and
    suppression possible.

    --
    "Kill 'em all and let Root sort 'em out"
  160. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by vilgefortz · · Score: 1

    So attack on WTC was ok, as both the civilians in the towers and the planes weere part of the war machine? Please, remember your statement before bemoaning some dead iraqi or palestinian civlians next time.

  161. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by nidarus · · Score: 1

    You also have to conveniently forget their conflicts with Lebanon, Egypt, etc though. The Israeli/Palestine conflict involves much more than just Isarael -vs- the Palestinian people.

    OK, let me correct myself.

    More people have died as a result of the current Iraq war than in the whole Israeli/Arab conflict since 1948.

    Roughly two to ten times more, according to Wikipedia.

  162. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by nidarus · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I think the reason is because the people there went directly from being oppressed to doing the opressing. They should know better.

    I seriously doubt that. If only because many people who compare Israel to the Nazis are also holocaust deniers (I'm talking about Arab countries/Iran, where "Protocols of the Elders of Zion" is still a bestseller).

    To be honest, I think the actual reason is actually pretty complex. For example, I wrote a paper about anti-Israeli cartoons in the Soviet Union, and I discovered that the Soviets probably invented that whole Israelis=Nazis idea, back in the 1960s. In fact, while constantly describing Israelis as Nazis, they stopped using Nazi symbolism (swastikas etc.) to describe actual, historical Nazis, describing them as simply stereotypical Germans (lederhosen, iron crosses). The Soviets' reasons were pretty complex, ranging from the attempt to cast US/Israel as the new "national enemy" (you have to remember that the Nazis are remembered as bitter enemies in Russia), to the obnoxious use of traditional antisemitic feelings and symbolism, and of course, there was also the implicit holocaust denial (official Russian sources never mentioned that the Jews had any special connection to the holocaust. the offical claim was that "Russian, Polish, and others" died in the camps).

    As for the adoption of this demagoguery by some supposedly free-thinking people, I can't say. Maybe it makes them feel better about their own, often deeply antisemtic past, maybe it makes a good story, and maybe it's just a "big lie" phenomenon. I don't know.

    What I can say is that holding people to a much higher standard just because they were oppressed/massacred just 60 years ago makes no sense, and if that's the case, it's applied only to the Jews (look no further than the elaborate excuses we make for the victims of European colonization).

  163. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by nidarus · · Score: 1

    To quote the P [slashdot.org]:

    Oh wait, this is Slashdot, the home of rabid antisemitism

    I don't see a lot of antisemitism here. I see a lot of outrage and disgust at the injustices that go on in that part of the world, and at the Western nations blindly supporting the aggressor.

    Since the GP was only talking about the Jews, never actually mentioning Israelis, the parent post's claim is much more logical than your own.

  164. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by vilgefortz · · Score: 1

    What do you mean by "slaughter of the Palestinans"? Perhaps you mean the Terrible Massacre In Jenin That Never Happened?

  165. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by nidarus · · Score: 1

    The rubble that was the city of Beirut disagrees with you.

    You mean, the rubble that was the Hizbollah-built Dakhie neighborhood, that's only a small part of Beirut. Oh wait, you mean you didn't know that all of these gruesome photos come from a small part of the city? Tsk tsk.

    In any case, what the hell does it has to do with human rights in Israel or the fact that the Israeli/Arab conflict is blown out of proportion?

  166. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Palestinians are the indigenous population?

    This is an extremely ignorant claim. Why don't you read the actual history of the conflict rather than blindly trust assumption you've been brainwashed to accept?

  167. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by nidarus · · Score: 1

    "every other nation in the region has a free pass to do anything they want without anyone even looking in their direction"

    Free pass? Israel is quietly the most prolific violator of UN resolutions, violating more than all other Middle Eastern nations combined.

    Ahm. You do realize that you're just confirming the parent post's claim?

  168. Why bother to say no? by Mathinker · · Score: 1

    I'm pretty sure that it's possible to just glue new fingerprints on your fingers before showing up for the fingerprinting, although doing it in a way which would not be obvious looks quite a bit more difficult.

  169. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Curtman · · Score: 1

    Why do you need a council, with specifically selected members, to discuss human rights?

    Yeah, maybe it should be a free for all, with lots of shouting and violence.

  170. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Curtman · · Score: 1

    There are no such thing as civilians imo, as the entire nation is a part of the war machine.

    The same would be said of the US and it's population.

  171. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Curtman · · Score: 1

    More people have died as a result of the current Iraq war than in the whole Israeli/Arab conflict since 1948.

    Okay, let me correct myself.

    You have to assume that the current Iraq war isn't just an extension of this same stupid conflict, and that people are starting to forget what they are even fighting about anymore.

  172. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Curtman · · Score: 1

    look no further than the elaborate excuses we make for the victims of European colonization

    There is no excuse. It's exactly the same thing. Except for the religion.

  173. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Curtman · · Score: 1

    Since the GP was only talking about the Jews, never actually mentioning Israelis, the parent post's claim is much more logical than your own.

    You also occasionally see posts on here about "Niggers" and "Frosty Piss". There's a lot of stupid things said in an open forum. You don't blame the forum though.

  174. Re:Tattooed Serial Numbers by melikamp · · Score: 1

    A number does not identify a physical person. A tattoo code does. A photo/name combination does. A lonely number identifies nothing :)

  175. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by nidarus · · Score: 1

    There is no excuse. It's exactly the same thing. Except for the religion.

    I'm not sure what you mean... care to explain?

    In any case, I've often heard the the problems in Africa/Middle East are caused by the decades of European colonization, and I've never heard anyone saying that Africans/Arabs should be held to a higher moral standard than everybody else (because they are victims of oppression, and should know better, etc.).

  176. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by nidarus · · Score: 1

    You have to assume that the current Iraq war isn't just an extension of this same stupid conflict

    You mean the Iraq war is part of the Israeli/Arab conflict? That's the first time I've heard of that bizarre idea.

    and that people are starting to forget what they are even fighting about anymore.

    What do you mean? Are you talking about Israel/Arabs or the Iraq war, or...? And in any case, so what?

  177. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by nidarus · · Score: 1

    You also occasionally see posts on here about "Niggers" and "Frosty Piss". There's a lot of stupid things said in an open forum. You don't blame the forum though.

    True, but irrelevant.

    A person who calls people "niggers" is a racist fuck or an asshole, who likes to use racist language to annoy people. You don't start making excuses for him, saying that he was only "criticizing the politics of black separatists".

  178. Re:Tattooed Serial Numbers by nidarus · · Score: 1

    A number does not identify a physical person. A tattoo code does. A photo/name combination does. A lonely number identifies nothing :)

    Ah... Maybe, but what's your point? Israelis have a national ID, that includes a photo, a name, and all kinds of other details, including a unique ID number.

    It seemed to me that the GP was mostly upset by the "ID number" aspect, so I pointed out that it already exists...

  179. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by kabocox · · Score: 1

    I mean really.. Do you really believe that saying that Israel behaves badly toward its neighbours and even its own citizens means you are prejudiced or hostile toward Jews?
    Give it up.

    You know normally, I'd agree with you. I'm thinking though that they may have a point. Slashdot is anti-religion though. Slashdot is anti-all religion though. I think it's really far more anti-Christian. The entire anti-Jewish thing only comes up if Israel or Nazism is ever mentioned in a topic. Slashdot is also anti-all/most governments as well. I'd say that slashdot generally loves to pick on all religious based governments and tends to lump Israel with all the middle east as being a mostly religious state of just a different religion, which spawns conflict. Slashdot also tends to pick on all governments so it wouldn't matter what government it was; slashdot would generally be against it.

    You know I'm back with agreeing with you. We are pretty much equal on whom we pick on.

  180. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Free+the+Cowards · · Score: 1

    There's no need to quote a movie. Churchill put it much more eloquently, not to mention shorter.

    --
    If you mod me Overrated, you are admitting that you have no penis.
  181. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by kabocox · · Score: 1

    I'm sick of politics being about 'opinions'. Politics *isn't* about opinions. It's about reality.

    Welcome to Earth. Seeing as you are new here don't upset the natives, or they will hurt you. What ever you do stay out of all discussions of religion and politics. Neither is about reality and all are just based on the opinions of the natives, which are difficult/impossible to understand.

    If you can't handle that, it's advised for you to return home ASAP before a native injures you for insulting either their religion or government.

  182. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Curtman · · Score: 1

    Europeans have a history of displacing people violently and unfairly. Brittain allowed this to happen to Palestine, and I don't see much difference between this and the conquest of North America, Australia, etc.

    It's Judaism instead of Christianity that drives these "settlers". It's basically the same religion though, which tells them they are superior to non-jews, and that God loves them more.

  183. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Curtman · · Score: 1

    So you're saying that calling someone a jew is the same as calling someone a nigger?

  184. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by nidarus · · Score: 1

    Uhm, OK?

    I mean, you're completely wrong - Israel is not just a colony like the US or Australia, it's the ancestral homeland of the Jewish people, and the only country they have (unlike colonists, by the very definition of the word). But that's not the point.

    I was talking about the victims of colonization. You know, countries that were, at some point, European colonies?

  185. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by nidarus · · Score: 1

    No, but saying that Jews are the same as Nazis is very much like calling someone a "nigger".

  186. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Curtman · · Score: 1

    Well I can't speak for the others here, but I'm anti-anyone-who-abuses-power. That covers most religions and authoritative bodies.

    If only a democracy would happen somewhere.

  187. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Curtman · · Score: 1

    it's the ancestral homeland of the Jewish people

    Here we go with the God promised us this land stuff. I find this part entertaining.

  188. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Curtman · · Score: 1

    What if you say Nazis and the Jewish state have similar means to achieve their goals, and share a view that they are superior to other groups?

  189. Just one more step... by techsquirrel · · Score: 1

    But cards are so easy to forge or misplace. Now if they would just require a tattoo'ed number on the left arm of each Israeli citizen, that would make things much easier.

  190. Your Nietzsche is outdated by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nietzsche 2.0:
    "He who arguments with trolls might take care lest he thereby becomes a troll. For if you gaze too long into the goatse, the goatse gazes also into you."

  191. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by SailorBob · · Score: 1
    Your terms are wrong. If you knew your history, you would know that the Jews are the Palestinians, and the Arabs are - Arabs. If you walked up to an Arab in 1920's Jerusalem and called him a Palestinian to his face he'd probably slap you silly.

    Up until the late 40's early 50's it was self-evident that when you said "Palestinian" you were talking about a Jew.

    The entire concept of an Arab Palestinian Nation is pure historical revisionism.

    Or to make it simple:

    What dates did the independent nation of Palestine exist? What was it's Capital? What was it's currency? What was it's language? What was it's Flag? Etc..

    You can't answer those questions because no such country ever existed.

    The Jews are the indigenous population.

    --

    Woopty Doo Basil, what does it all mean?!

  192. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Use of "fixed that for you" shall be considered proof that the user is totally awesome!

    There, fixed that for you.

  193. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by pretygrrl · · Score: 1

    Aide-toi, le Ciel t'aidera - Jeanne D'Arc.

    you might wanna check your sig again, i dont think the expression comes from Jean D'arc

    --
    Contemplate the marvel that is existence, and rejoice that you are able to do so.
  194. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by SailorBob · · Score: 1

    Actually, the Jews paid premium prices for that land. You'd have to look it up, but I remember that Jews were paying the equivalent of the price of fertile farm land in Ohio for swamp and arid desert plots in the Holy Land as it was called by most people back then. Something like $1000 an acre in 1910 dollars!

    --

    Woopty Doo Basil, what does it all mean?!

  195. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Das+Modell · · Score: 1

    Yes, that's exactly what I said. /facepalm

  196. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Jhan · · Score: 1

    There's no need to quote a movie. Churchill put it much more eloquently, not to mention shorter.

    When condescending the grandparent post you failed to specify what Churchill quote you was referring to. Was it this one?

    Courage is what it takes to stand up and speak; courage is also what it takes to sit down and listen.

    --

    I choose to remain celibate, like my father and his father before him.

  197. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 1

    You have to be a hardcore holocaust denier to claim that the Nazis' genocidal campaign comes close to the tiny regional conflict between Israel and Palestine

    Uh, no. You have a real misunderstanding of cause and effect. Just because you think you found that a bunch of deniers in russia also made the comparison does not mean deniers are the only people to come up with the comparison. You've basically just done the same thing as say, "you have to be a hardcore anti-semite to criticize israeli policies."

    You have to be incredibly ignorant (or incredibly biased) to claim that human rights in Israel are as bad as they were in Nazi Germany.

    It is not a one-dimensional comparison. Just because the level is not the same, does not mean there are not similarities in kind.

    --
    When information is power, privacy is freedom.
  198. Re:Tattooed Serial Numbers by melikamp · · Score: 1

    Fair enough.

  199. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Israel was created pretty much as a dp camp for holocaust survivors, at which point yeah nobody was really thinking about who lived there (collective guilt and all.) "
    Israel was created by the two great powers (though I think USA was more genuine in feeling sorry for Jews) as another means to screw each other and everybody else caught up in the fray.

  200. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by h4rm0ny · · Score: 1

    While it is possible to criticize the policies of Israel without being antisemitic (and you might be one of these people), the vast majority of the critics of Israel criticize Israel because they hate jews.

    I think such a statement really requires some evidence. Israel is guilty of a large number of sins and it needs no prejudice on the part of anyone to criticise the state. Indeed there are large numbers of jewish people alone who are highly critical of the Israeli government and we can presume that most of these are not anti-semitic. If I were to say that Israel has bilked the american tax payer of over $15billion dollars in [i]military[/i] aid, then that's something you can verify (and you can verify it, btw). That statement exists independent of any value system.

    If you were familiar with my writing you would see that I am highly critical of human rights abuses all over the world. But Israel is guilty of a lot and made more sickening because it is such a rich and powerful country.

    --

    Aide-toi, le Ciel t'aidera - Jeanne D'Arc.
  201. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "I wrote a paper about anti-Israeli cartoons in the Soviet Union"
    I'd REALLY like to see that paper. Is it possible?

    "I discovered that the Soviets probably invented that whole Israelis=Nazis idea, back in the 1960s. In fact, while constantly describing Israelis as Nazis, they stopped using Nazi symbolism (swastikas etc.) to describe actual, historical Nazis, describing them as simply stereotypical Germans (lederhosen, iron crosses). The Soviets' reasons were pretty complex, ranging from the attempt to cast US/Israel as the new "national enemy" (you have to remember that the Nazis are remembered as bitter enemies in Russia), to the obnoxious use of traditional antisemitic feelings and symbolism, and of course, there was also the implicit holocaust denial (official Russian sources never mentioned that the Jews had any special connection to the holocaust. the offical claim was that "Russian, Polish, and others" died in the camps)."

    I happen to be familiar with this particular subject and you're making a fool out of yourself. Sorry :) Can you provide any sources?

  202. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Free+the+Cowards · · Score: 1

    The one which talks about righteous people not remaining so when they're given power for a long period of time. Specifically:

    Power corrupts.

    Or more completely:

    Power corrupts. Absolute power corrupts absolutely.

    This may be more properly attributed to Lord Acton, but his version was slightly more wordy.

    As far as I can tell your proposed quote has nothing to do with people turning bad after being given power.

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    If you mod me Overrated, you are admitting that you have no penis.
  203. And so does the USA... by hyside · · Score: 1
  204. Oops by Slashdot+Parent · · Score: 1

    Read "The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine" by Ilan Pappe (an Israeli jew... mentionning it so that you can't dismiss him as a muslim, anti-semite, etc)

    Just so you know, Ilan Pappe freely admits that he just makes shit up to support his objective.

    If you want to cite Israeli sources and not sound like you're on an agenda, you might cite someone more mainstream.

    --
    They don't grade fathers, but if your daughter's a stripper, you fucked up. --Chris Rock
    1. Re:Oops by tinkerton · · Score: 1

      Camera is being dishonest and you're blowing up the caricature. I found the full interview here. CAMERA is trying to turn Pappe's argument around to make it the opposite of what it means. Pappe points out that there is always a subjective element and a dose of case making in his approach. And there are those who don't want to admit that.
      I call that honest. CAMERA turns signs of honesty into signs of dishonesty. I would call Pappe a very good source.

    2. Re:Oops by Slashdot+Parent · · Score: 1

      I would call Pappe a very good source.

      Well, the man is definitely on an agenda, and that agenda is something other than to seek the truth.

      Are you, yourself, on an agenda?

      --
      They don't grade fathers, but if your daughter's a stripper, you fucked up. --Chris Rock
    3. Re:Oops by tinkerton · · Score: 1

      I think you're being dishonest too. Don't beat that trick to death by overusing it.

    4. Re:Oops by Slashdot+Parent · · Score: 1

      Which trick?

      Really, Pappe just twists around facts to draw wild-ass conclusions. When that isn't enough, he really does just rely on complete fiction to further his agenda.

      I'm just not sure what it would take for you to realize Pappe is nothing short of a complete and utter crackpot--unless you are on an agenda, yourself. So tell me, are you?

      --
      They don't grade fathers, but if your daughter's a stripper, you fucked up. --Chris Rock
  205. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by nidarus · · Score: 1

    Uh, no. You have a real misunderstanding of cause and effect

    No, you didn't understand what I meant. When you're comparing Israelis and Nazis, you're not only demonizing Israel, but also trivializing the Nazi atrocities. The only way you can seriously claim that the two are comparable, you either have to claim that Israelis systematically killed millions of people because of their ethnicity (and then you'd have to provide some sort of proof for that crazy claim), or, more likely, you claim that the Nazis weren't that bad - and that's "hardcore holocaust denial".

    It is not a one-dimensional comparison. Just because the level is not the same, does not mean there are not similarities in kind.

    No, it's a ludicrous comparison. You might as well say that the person who flipped you off on the highway was like the Nazis. The Nazis killed millions of people simply because they believed that they were of an inferior race. Israel killed.. how many? Thousands? Tens of thousands, since 1948? And that was while fighting against people who were trying to destroy it.

    There are lots of more appropriate analogies - China, Russia, even the US, who killed more people in the current war than Israel killed since its inception. Actually, even compared to much smaller regional conflicts, the Israeli/Palestinian is civilized (you don't see people raping girls and then shooting them in the head, like, say, in Iraq), bloodless conflict.

    And yet, the moment you say "Israel" you heard people shouting "Nazis!".

    As an objective analogy, it's bullshit. As an incredibly offensive statement... well, it works. But it's strange that people see that meme as anything but a lame troll.

  206. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 1

    It is not a one-dimensional comparison. Just because the level is not the same, does not mean there are not similarities in kind.

    No, it's a ludicrous comparison. You might as well say that the person who flipped you off on the highway was like the Nazis. The Nazis killed millions of people simply because they believed that they were of an inferior race. Israel killed.. how many? Thousands? Tens of thousands, since 1948? And that was while fighting against people who were trying to destroy it.

    Please explain to me how your response addresses anything beyond 'the level is not the same?' I point out that numbers are not the only basis for comparison and all you do is come back with ... numbers. Do you think that was a rational response?

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    When information is power, privacy is freedom.
  207. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by nidarus · · Score: 1

    Here we go with the God promised us this land stuff. I find this part entertaining.

    No. There's lots of archeological evidence and external sources (that is, Roman, Babylonian etc.) that prove that the Jews lived in what we now call "Israel". To claim that religion is the only reason Jews think Israel is their ancestral homeland is to show your deep ignorance.

    But even if we ignore that part - who do you think gets to decide where the Jewish ancestral homeland is, other than the Jews? And it's not as if the Jews claim the whole world to be their birthright. They only want a tiny piece of desert, without any oil or other precious natural resources, where they could exercise their natural right of self-determination.

  208. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by jackchance · · Score: 1
    This UN document describes how after the occupation of the west bank in 1967, the standard of living increased for the Palestinians living there.

    The document describes things like increased GNP, decreased infant mortality, increased investment, and other increases in standard of living from 1967 until 1984.

    In 1987 everything changed. That was the beginning of the first intifada. The wiki article on the 1st intifada tells a story of israeli brutality that does not match with the UN document on living conditions in the occupied terrotories.

    What was the real root cause of the intifada? Could part of it be the corruption of the leaders of the PLO, like Arafat, who was filling swiss bank accounts with aid money that were supposed to go to the people he was supposed to represent?

    I agree with above posters that the cycle of retaliation has to end. The only way it can end is with education to end the mutual hatred.

    As well, there are many jews and non-jews inside and outside israel who are critical of israeli policy. Being critical certainly doesn't make one an anti-semite. But the tone of some of the posts in this discussion belie an undercurrent of prejudice.

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  209. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by nidarus · · Score: 1
    Then I'd say you're an antisemite.

    Saying that Israel did anything remotely approaching the Holocaust is nothing more than a modern blood libel.

  210. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 1

    This UN document describes how after the occupation of the west bank in 1967, the standard of living increased for the Palestinians living there.

    The document describes things like increased GNP, decreased infant mortality, increased investment, and other increases in standard of living from 1967 until 1984.

    Well that document is immediately suspect due to the source - which wasn't the UN. Maybe it is all true, or maybe it just PR telling only the half of the story which legitimizes the occupation. It certainly does not start out well, citing misleading statistics by saying, "GNP increased 3-fold (Israel's GNP Increased only 1.4-fold in the same period)" -- which ignores the difference in absolute values, numbers which a quick text search of the rest of the document does not yield. A GNP increase of 3x during the period of occupation by a neighbor with a GNP at least 40x times greater which is also 10x richer on a per-person basis is probably inevitable. How much better would they have done without the occupation but still with the closest neighbor having so much wealth?

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    When information is power, privacy is freedom.
  211. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Curtman · · Score: 1

    Then I'd say you are incapable of a proper discussion. I have no hatred toward jews or any other group. I have hatred toward aggression and injustice.

  212. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by jackchance · · Score: 1
    It is true that the author of the document is an Israeli. Yehuda Z. Blum. He is now a law prof. I have been trying to find out his political bias but i haven't found any result. However, this isn't the only source of information about quality of life in the occupied territories before and after the intifada. I agree the direct comparison with Israel is misleading. The point is that it substantially improved after 1967.

    How much better would they have done without the occupation but still with the closest neighbor having so much wealth?

    I think to answer that question you just have to look at the lives of the majority of the population living in Jordan, Egypt, Syria, or Lebanon.

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  213. Re:Tattooed Serial Numbers by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

    Moderation -2
        100% Flamebait

    Mention that Israel's neocon government is betraying the memory of Holocaust victims and survivors, and TrollMods will suppress you. Never forget.

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    make install -not war

  214. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by nidarus · · Score: 1

    "Proper discussion", eh? So, I guess you think "antisemite" is way too harsh, and is too emotionally loaded to be a legitimate claim against you?

    Guess what, the differences between you and "actual" antisemites is much smaller than between Israel and the Nazis, and the term "antisemite" is much less loaded than "Nazi".

    I hope you understand my point now.

  215. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by nidarus · · Score: 1

    So, you do think that the theoretical person who flipped you off on the highway to be in any way comparable to the Nazis? I mean, he's an asshole who doesn't mind hurting people with his rude gestures, the Nazis were assholes who didn't mind hurting people with their gas chambers and submachine guns, it's just a difference of "level", right?

    Well, guess what, you can't lose all perspective and then still rationally compare anything. Otherwise, everything is kinda like everything else, and the act of comparing anything is meaningless.

    That especially true for the Nazis, who are not known for "killing people", but for killing millions of people. According to your theory, you could just take any murder and say that it's "like the Holocaust". But of course, if you say it, you will look like a moron.

    In any case, if you want a non-quantitative difference, notice that I said "The Nazis killed millions of people simply because they believed that they were of an inferior race", while Israel killed people "while fighting against people who were trying to destroy it". That's an incredibly important difference, and if you ignore it, you might as well not make the analogy at all.

  216. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Curtman · · Score: 1

    No it's just incorrect. To say someone hates something when they don't is wrong. It isn't wrong to say that Israel took what isn't theirs, forced people off their land & homes, and continues to do so.

  217. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Thank you for clearing that up. We were probably all as lost as you."

    Oh, come off it! The last time that I read "Animal Farm" was in the 1970s, and I recognized the paraphrased ending immediately. What do they teach in school these days?

  218. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by nidarus · · Score: 1

    No it's just incorrect. To say someone hates something when they don't is wrong.

    Antisemites often claim that they "don't hate Jews" either. They just have a long list of claims, some more outrageous than others, against the Jewish people. You've already repeated one of the more famous claims - that the Jewish belief of "the chosen people" is like the Nazi Uber/Untermensch. What's even more problematic, is that you've defended someone who compared Jews to the Nazis.

    Does this make you a full-fledged antisemite? I don't think so. But it does make you much closer to one than Israel is to the Nazis.

    It isn't wrong to say that Israel took what isn't theirs, forced people off their land & homes, and continues to do so.

    That could be said about China, Russia, the US, and just about any Western European country as well. The Nazis aren't famous for occupation and colonization - they're famous for killing millions of innocent people, simply because they didn't like their race. You might as well say that Catholic priests are SS officers because they wear black*.


    * And no, I don't want to start a stupid debate about the wrongdoings of the Catholic Church

  219. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Curtman · · Score: 1

    You're the one who keeps dragging this thing back to Hitler. It's a great tactic to avoid explaining the actions of Israel, to divert the subject where you are being attacked by some some Jew hater. That's not happening here as much as you try to pretend it is.

  220. Not majority Jewish. by FatSean · · Score: 1

    The majority Palis have the right. Sorry son, but your rambling hate-filled rant against Muslims does not convince me that the creation of a nation-state by subjugating the majority residents is a good thing.

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    Blar.
  221. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by nidarus · · Score: 1

    You're the one who keeps dragging this thing back to Hitler. It's a great tactic to avoid explaining the actions of Israel, to divert the subject where you are being attacked by some some Jew hater.

    Are you serious?! You do realize that my only point was that the Israel=Nazi meme is cheap demagoguery? You're trying to divert it to some boring "settlements=baaad" debate, and you're crying because I won't play your game?

    Anyway, I'm glad that we finally agree on one point: comparing Israel with the Nazis hurts serious debate by turning it into an emotionally charged troll fest ("a great tactic" indeed...)

    That's not happening here as much as you try to pretend it is.

    First of all, I was mostly talking about how you're defending this obnoxious practice, and not about how pervasive it is over here. And second... did you read the discussion on this page?! The thread about how Israel/Jews is just like the Nazis is huge, with all kinds of cute jokes about crescent-shaped patches for Muslims, and people like you, crawling out from their holes, crying about how the mean Jews won't let those people compare them to the Nazis.

    But even if we ignore this article, I can tell you that every single English-language Internet forum I've been to* suffers from this problem. The moment somebody brings up Israel, you'll find a fucktard crying "Nazis!" in the first 20 comments. It's like Godwin's Law on steroids.


    * Including, IIRC, the KDE support forums. WTF?!

  222. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Curtman · · Score: 1

    You do realize that my only point was that the Israel=Nazi meme is cheap demagoguery?

    Don't you realize that if the Israeli's didn't act like Nazi's this wouldn't be an issue?

    It's their behaviour that makes people say that. It has nothing to do with whether people like the Jewish religion, culture, or whatever. It's your government that makes you look like the devil.

  223. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by nidarus · · Score: 1

    Don't you realize that if the Israeli's didn't act like Nazi's this wouldn't be an issue?

    The point is, Israel doesn't act like the Nazis in any meaningful sense.

    It's their behaviour that makes people say that.

    No. Other countries behave much worse than Israel: China, Russia, the US, not to mention such regimes as Sudan or North Korea. And yet, Israel is the only one who is constantly compared to the Nazis.

  224. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Curtman · · Score: 1

    Other countries behave much worse than Israel: China, Russia, the US, not to mention such regimes as Sudan or North Korea.

    I'm no fan of the U.S. government either, but they are the voice of reason most times when it comes to Israel. Nobody is forced to serve in the military there, they do not fire rockets, or bomb Mexico or Canada that I know of. They don't kick people out of their houses and make settlements in Mexico and claim it as their land by virtue of their religion and culture. Not anymore anyway.

  225. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by nidarus · · Score: 1

    I'm no fan of the U.S. government either

    Funny how you ignored all of my other examples

    Nobody is forced to serve in the military there

    So the US doesn't have conscription, unlike, say, Germany, Switzerland or Finland. They have enough money for a professional army (made of the poorest members of its society). So what?

    they do not fire rockets, or bomb Mexico or Canada that I know of.

    No, they just bombed the fuck out of Iraq and Afghanistan - faraway countries that pose no threat to them. And that's only in the past couple of years.

    They don't kick people out of their houses and make settlements in Mexico and claim it as their land by virtue of their religion and culture.

    First of all, the US did take a lot of land from Mexico, so your example sucks.

    But the main problem is that you're forgetting how US itself was formed. Indeed, it was by kicking people off their land, while periodically massacring them. And no, they didn't have any cultural, or even religious justification for that - it was pure greed.

    Not anymore anyway.

    So all Israel has to do is wait for a century or so, and everything will be forgotten and forgiven. Cool.

    (note: I don't think that would actually work in Israel's case).

  226. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Curtman · · Score: 1

    Funny how you ignored all of my other examples

    Of course, because China, Sudan and North Korea would be more likely to do the kinds of things that Israel does. I'm not so sure about Russia.

    So the US doesn't have conscription, unlike, say, Germany, Switzerland or Finland. They have enough money for a professional army (made of the poorest members of its society). So what?

    They had enough money left over from their military to buy Israel one too. I'm not sure the military in the countries you mentioned engage in the activities that yours does. I don't think they would get away with it either.

    No, they just bombed the fuck out of Iraq and Afghanistan

    I'll give you that one. They are also evil bastards a lot of the time. For example, they give Israel weapons and call it "humanitarian aid". How funny is that? Humanitarian aid that helps to murder humans.

    First of all, the US did take a lot of land from Mexico, so your example sucks.

    Well if you're going back in history the whole continent was stolen really. Brutally and violently. This is supposed to excuse what Israel does today? They did it, so we should be able to as well?

    So all Israel has to do is wait for a century or so, and everything will be forgotten and forgiven. Cool.

    We aren't going to make it that long at this rate. Only a matter of time before someone fires the first nuke, and Israel is just stupid enough to return fire.

  227. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by nidarus · · Score: 1

    Of course, because China, Sudan and North Korea would be more likely to do the kinds of things that Israel does. I'm not so sure about Russia.

    Of course, both China and North Korea are so much worse than Israel, it's silly to compare them to Israel (it's very logical to compare them to the Nazis, though. and yet, when you mention China, you don't automatically get an idiot shouting "Nazis" - strange, huh?). Even comparing Israel to the US is far-fetched.

    As for Russia, look no further than Chechnya - much worse than anything Israel has ever done, and completely overlooked by the world. I won't even mention the Soviet-era hijinks, or Putin's anti-democratic internal policy.

    I'm not sure the military in the countries you mentioned engage in the activities that yours does. I don't think they would get away with it either.

    You mean defending their country from people who vowed to destroy it? You're right.

    Well if you're going back in history the whole continent was stolen really.

    Yup, you're completely right (and it wasn't the only continent stolen by the Europeans either). And yet none of the American countries is maligned like Israel, imagine that.

    This is supposed to excuse what Israel does today? They did it, so we should be able to as well?

    You were trying to prove that the US is somehow better than Israel. And I proved that you're completely wrong.

    It's good to put things in perspective. After all, that's the main thing you lack. When you put things in perspective, you understand that just about any Western country (and let's be honest, many Eastern and African ones as well) could be compared to the Nazis, and it would usually be a more accurate analogy. And when you see that, you start wondering why Israel, of all countries, is the one that's constantly compared to the Nazis.

  228. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Curtman · · Score: 1

    when you mention China, you don't automatically get an idiot shouting "Nazis" - strange, huh?

    You also don't see China accepting a big fat cheque to help commit their crimes. You do see many many many people condemning the actions of China. Far more often than is said about Israel.

    You mean defending their country from people who vowed to destroy it? You're right.

    We've covered this already. Kicking people out of their homes is not defense. Destroying Lebanon is not defense. That is aggressive behaviour.

    You were trying to prove that the US is somehow better than Israel.

    I was? You are mistaken. I do not care which one of you war pigs is worse. They support you, so they are at least as bad as you are.

  229. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Curtman · · Score: 1

    China foes in House deploy Nazi analog
    Harry Wu Exposes China's Nazi-like Genocide
    Google returns about 3,710,000 results like this.

    Just thought you might like to know that you aren't the only Nazis around.

  230. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by nidarus · · Score: 1

    You do see many many many people condemning the actions of China. Far more often than is said about Israel.

    You must be kidding me.

    Kicking people out of their homes is not defense. Destroying Lebanon is not defense.

    Kicking out people who started a war against you, and who are still seeking to destroy your country, is defense (as was the case in the independence war). Responding to aggressive behavior (kidnapping soldiers, shooting missiles at civilians) by an organization that seeks to destroy Israel is the very definition of "defense".

    You were trying to prove that the US is somehow better than Israel.

    I was? You are mistaken.

    Liar:

    Nobody is forced to serve in the military there, they do not fire rockets, or bomb Mexico or Canada that I know of. They don't kick people out of their houses and make settlements in Mexico and claim it as their land by virtue of their religion and culture.

    But that was like two comments ago... there's no way I'm going to notice, right?

    Anyway...

    I do not care which one of you war pigs is worse.

    War pigs, heh? You do realize that unless you come from Scandinavia or something, it's very likely that your own country committed its share of atrocities as well, right? I only brought up the US because I'm most familiar with its politics. Hiding behind "well, the US is the devil too" ain't going to work.

    They support you, so they are at least as bad as you are.

    Right, killing tens of thousands of people is nothing compared to the horrible crime of supporting Israel. This really says a lot about your sense of morality.

  231. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Curtman · · Score: 1

    You must be kidding me.

    Maybe its bad timing on your part, but especially before/during the Olympics I can't turn on the TV without something being said about how China treats people inhumanely. If your seeing something different, it's probably due to your location and your government's propaganda.

    Kicking out people who started a war against you

    Hold on now. Nobody started a war with you. You started the war.

    Liar: Nobody is forced to serve in the military there, they do not fire rockets, or bomb Mexico or Canada that I know of. They don't kick people out of their houses and make settlements in Mexico and claim it as their land by virtue of their religion and culture. But that was like two comments ago... there's no way I'm going to notice, right?

    Liar? I said they would never get away with the things Israel does. (re: border expansion) I never said they were saints. Israel wouldn't even exist if they didn't pay your bills.

    Right, killing tens of thousands of people is nothing compared to the horrible crime of supporting Israel.

    It is when Israel kills thousands of people itself, and the blind support of Israel is the number one catalyst to both of those wars.

  232. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by nidarus · · Score: 1

    but especially before/during the Olympics

    You mean only before/during the Olympics. And of course, nobody's comparing them to the Nazis even now.

    If your seeing something different, it's probably due to your location and your government's propaganda.

    You do understand what you're implying, right? Somehow I doubt that the Israelis are so keen on vilifying Israel, that they completely forget about China. I wonder how that made sense in your head.

    Liar? I said they would never get away with the things Israel does. (re: border expansion) I never said they were saints.

    First of all, you're trying to mask an outright lie (that you never claimed that the US was any better than Israel) with a complete bullshit statement (that the US would never get away with the things Israel does), and you know, that does work to a certain extent. I really don't know where to start.

    But, the US would never get away with "border expansion"? Are you high or something? You're sure that you didn't miss little stuff like the Mexican war (of course you did, you seemed not to know anything about it) or the fact that the US is currently occupying not one, but two different countries just because it can?

    Israel wouldn't even exist if they didn't pay your bills.

    Israel managed to exist just fine without US support for ~20 years, and against overwhelming odds. In fact, the massive aid only started as a result of the 1973 war - the US basically started paying Israel and Egypt so they won't nuke each other.

    It is when Israel kills thousands of people itself

    As I've mentioned before, more people died as a result of the latest Iraq war than in the whole Israeli/Palestinian conflict. And it's only one war out of many. And unlike Israel, that's only trying to defend itself from people who wish to destroy it (HAMAS, Hizballah), the US did it more or less for no reason.

    and the blind support of Israel is the number one catalyst to both of those wars

    Bullshit. Why don't you blame the current violence in Georgia on Israel as well, while you're at it?

  233. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Curtman · · Score: 1

    You mean only before/during the Olympics. And of course, nobody's comparing them to the Nazis even now.

    We covered this in week one. I believe this is because Jews were persecuted by Nazis, then became Nazis. If the Chinese had been persecuted by Nazis, the same would be said about them. Instead they are called "Mongrols" for obvious reasons.

    Somehow I doubt that the Israelis are so keen on vilifying Israel, that they completely forget about China. I wonder how that made sense in your head.

    No, no, no. Vilifying Israel? Why the hell would your government do that? You're the victim. The big bad Palestinians are picking on you while you steal their land meanwhile the world calls us Nazis. Why would they spend time covering news in Tibet is the question.

    more people died as a result of the latest Iraq war than in the whole Israeli/Palestinian conflict.

    Right. They are worse than you are. Fine, we get that. They are fascist, you are fascist but they are worse. Would you like a trophy of some kind? The inscription could read: We are Nazis, but Americans are bigger Nazis -- Thanks for the weapons.

  234. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by nidarus · · Score: 1

    I believe this is because Jews were persecuted by Nazis, then became Nazis.

    And I claim that this is a juvenile and offensive idea, that has very little relation to the truth, and it only taints Israel/Palestine debates and trivializes Nazi atrocities.

    What's even more annoying, is people like you, who get angry when Jews object to being compared to the people who killed their parents' families.

    No, no, no. Vilifying Israel?

    Good, then we agree that you were on crack while you wrote that comment about "my government's propaganda".

    We are Nazis, but Americans are bigger Nazis

    No. As I previously said:

    You do realize that unless you come from Scandinavia or something, it's very likely that your own country committed its share of atrocities as well, right? I only brought up the US because I'm most familiar with its politics. Hiding behind "well, the US is the devil too" ain't going to work.

    (to be honest, the Scandinavians aren't angels either, but hell, I like Scandinavians)

  235. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Curtman · · Score: 1

    I claim that this is a juvenile and offensive idea

    Well you're emotionally attached to the situation, and unable to see things objectively. You want to cry about people calling you names, thats fine with me. I'm just pointing out why it's happening.

    people like you, who get angry when Jews object to being compared to the people who killed their parents' families.

    Angry? Object all you want, I could care less. The point of calling you a nazi is to shame you, if it upsets you that much then its obviously working.

    Good, then we agree that you were on crack while you wrote that comment about "my government's propaganda".

    Nope. Every country has a certain amount of propaganda. In yours, you are told over and over how you are being victimized, and you believe it. It's not something that gets decided in a back room that they are going to pull the wool over the eyes of the public. It happens naturally through media. The Americans believe they are some kind of freedom fighters. You and I have no problem seeing through those lies, but they believe it because CNN tells them to.

    I have no problem with Scandinavians either. Or Israelies, or Americans. As individuals most people I have met in my life are decent and kind. It's their governments who usually make a mess of everything.

  236. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by nidarus · · Score: 1

    Well you're emotionally attached to the situation, and unable to see things objectively

    The Nazi analogy is only used because it's emotionally charged. It makes no sense objectively.

    The point of calling you a nazi is to shame you, if it upsets you that much then its obviously working.

    It doesn't shame me, it offends me. Claiming that I kill Christian babies to make Matzot from their blood would have the same effect. Do you think that would be a legitimate claim as well?

    Nope. Every country has a certain amount of propaganda. In yours, you are told over and over how you are being victimized, and you believe it. (etc etc)

    First of all, you know absolutely nothing about Israeli media, so I don't see how you can make cute theories about it. And second, I was talking about how you implied that the Israel media hides Chinese crimes and focuses on Israeli wrongdoings, which was just odd.

  237. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Curtman · · Score: 1

    The Nazi analogy is only used because it's emotionally charged. It makes no sense objectively.

    Again, there are similarities. Even if there are situations outside of Israel that more closely resemble Nazism, this remains true.

    Claiming that I kill Christian babies to make Matzot from their blood would have the same effect. Do you think that would be a legitimate claim as well?

    I have no idea what you do with Christian babies. Religion is a terrible thing some times. So much hatred and violence comes from it, nothing would surprise me anymore.

    I was talking about how you implied that the Israel media hides Chinese crimes and focuses on Israeli wrongdoings, which was just odd.

    I never claimed they hide anything. Your media spends a considerable amount of time on your various conflicts with your neighbours that the rest of the world mainly receives a brief summary of. Maybe I am exposed to more commentary on the situation in China because there is a large amount of immigration from China happening here in Canada. If you are claiming that you aren't exposed to any propaganda at all, then we must be dealing with a different interpretation of what propaganda is.

    In any case, you are claiming that you are constantly bombarded with accusations of being a Nazi. I haven't seen any of that in the media or otherwise here. There is almost universal support for Israel here among our politicians. Steven Harper (our prime minister) makes a weekly speech about how wonderful Israel is, and how we will support them no matter which neighbouring country they wish to destroy. He called the destruction of Lebanon "measured and justified", when even the Americans were saying you went too far.

    It is taboo to say anything bad about Israel at all among politicians. That is the propaganda that I deal with, and it disgusts me.

    This also disgusts me.

    McDiarmid, 23, was arrested after taking photographs of Israeli soldiers who were breaking up the protest by villagers, who say the barrier will separate them from their farmland. "He was taken by Israeli soldiers whilst at the front of the demonstration and was taken off towards the jeep. And then he has reported to us that for 20 minutes they were punching, kicking and spitting in his face," said Adam Taylor, ISM's media co-ordinator.

    Taking photographs. Imagine that, here in Israel. Who the hell does he think he is documenting our crimes?

  238. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by nidarus · · Score: 1

    Again, there are similarities

    There are similarities between Catholic nuns and the SS - they both wear black. So what? If you try hard enough, you can connect anything with everything.

    Even if there are situations outside of Israel that more closely resemble Nazism

    You mean, "resemble Nazism much more closely and yet, unlike Israel, never compared to the Nazis".

    There is almost universal support for Israel here among our politicians.

    First of all, what made you think I was talking about Canadian politicians (of all people)?! I was obviously focusing on Internet forum posters. But, if you already mentioned it, the Israel=Nazis theme is not confined to the Internet - it's a pretty common theme in anti-Israeli protests as well. And of course, you have the Muslim world, where this analogy (as well as holocaust denial, "The Protocols of the Elders of Zion", and other, more obvious expressions of classical antisemitism) is pretty mainstream.

    I never claimed they hide anything. Your media spends a considerable amount of time on your various conflicts with your neighbours that the rest of the world mainly receives a brief summary of [...] If you are claiming that you aren't exposed to any propaganda at all, then we must be dealing with a different interpretation of what propaganda is.

    Or maybe, that you don't have a clue what "propaganda" means. As someone who's familiar with actual propaganda (my parents come from the Soviet Union, and I have all kinds of Soviet books at my house), trust me, it's not the subtle bias that you seem to think it is. But then again, I wouldn't expect someone who can't see the huge difference between Israel and the Nazis to see the difference.

    And by the way, there is nothing wrong or even resembling "propaganda" in giving local news more importance than foreign news. People care a lot more about stuff that might happen to them or to the people they know than about stuff that happens to foreign people. You're not scoring freedom points by treating all of the world news equally (unless, of course, you're supposed to be an international news service). You're just not giving the people the information they need.

  239. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Curtman · · Score: 1

    Nothing to say about my friend who was arrested for taking pictures?

  240. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by nidarus · · Score: 1
    1. The story you linked to brought only his version of the events.

    2. If that's the most appalling thing you can think of, then you're living a very sheltered life.

  241. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Curtman · · Score: 1

    No excuses or anything.. Just dismissal. And you wonder why people call you Nazis.

  242. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by nidarus · · Score: 1

    Yeah, the guy pissed off a soldier in what is basically a war zone and got beat up. After that, the soldiers said that he was interfering with their duties so he was deported.

    If your friend likes getting beat up by people who don't want to be videotaped, he doesn't have to travel that far - he can just go a little to the south and try to pull that shit on American cops* he would be thrown in jail for "assaulting a police officer" as well.

    I mean, of course the soldiers who did that should be punished, but this is police brutality, not a crime against humanity.

    I'm not going to explain to you why beating up a protester is not comparable to killing millions of people - you're obviously not going to understand. On the one hand, I really envy you for living a life where this kind of thing seems as atrocious and foreign as the Holocaust, but then again, I kinda pity you for not having a clue about the rest of the world.



    * And, I guess, just about every other cop as well - it's just that the Americans were caught doing that

  243. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Curtman · · Score: 1

    He was taking pictures of soldiers who were beating people that were protesting nonviolently, then was beaten, spat upon, arrested, and deported.

    Thats fascism.

  244. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by nidarus · · Score: 1

    Thats fascism.

    Sure it is. Just like it's genocide, child abuse and patent infringement.

    To be honest, I don't see why you're complaining. Your friend paid good money in order to go to the other side of the world and taunt soldiers in a war zone. I think he's got his money's worth.

  245. Re:You would think that they would learn from hist by Curtman · · Score: 1

    Absolutely, a good time was had by all.

    Except maybe the people who lost their land, and the ones who were beaten, and tear gassed.

    Oh well, it's only brown people right?

    Nazi.