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Have philosophical discussions about politics, law, and government.
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#458576
Mo_reese wrote: March 23rd, 2024, 10:32 am
Sy Borg wrote: March 17th, 2024, 7:10 pm Wrong again. It's just logic, observing the situation.
There is nothing special about this conflict. There are others that are worse, but this one takes priority due to the influence of the still-powerful anti-Semitic movements.
A unfortunate side effect of the Israeli war on humanity in Gaza and the understandable resulting reaction by many around the world, is that it gives cover for actual antisemitic crazies to wreak havoc on Jews not associated directly with the Israeli conflict. This allows the Zionists to claim that all attacks on them are attacks on all Jews.

I don't want to hijack this thread with a discussion of social media so I will start another. I think there is something special about this Genocide in Gaza. It is very different from other crimes against humanity.
It is different, because it's being done by Jews. That's all.
UN aid chief says 730,000 Sudanese children are thought to suffer from 'severe' malnutrition. Nearly five million people in Sudan are at risk of “catastrophic” hunger in the coming months, the United Nations has warned, calling for the country's warring parties to allow aid deliveries.
By contrast, the five million expected to die of starvation in Sudan are not so special. Based on media attention, Palestinian lives matter thousands of times more than Sudanese lives.

Who'd want to be be a Sudanese? Are they the most undervalued humans on Earth? Two children die in Gaza and it's international news, twenty of them die in Sudan and there's only silence. It's hard to be special when no one cares.
#458581
Sy Borg wrote: March 17th, 2024, 7:10 pm
It is different, because it's being done by Jews. That's all.
It's different because we see Zionist (they call themselves Zionists) bragging about their crimes against humanity like using snipers to shoot children. The list of crimes against humanity is very long and I shouldn't need to list them. The fact that there are other atrocities in the world doesn't lessen the horrors in Gaza.
It's not a fair conclusion that the only reason people don't know about atrocities in other parts of the world is because they are antisemitic. Most likely the people in Gaza have better access to social media and can broadcast videos of the atrocities.
In any event, neither the US nor Israel have justification to continue the horrors in Gaza.
Signature Addition: "Ad hominem attacks will destroy a good forum."
#458584
Sy Borg wrote: March 23rd, 2024, 4:13 pm
Sculptor1 wrote: March 23rd, 2024, 11:13 am
Sy Borg wrote: March 22nd, 2024, 3:52 pm
I note that London is now the most anti-Semitic place in the western world.
What utter nonsense.
Wrong again. I don't expect you to admit it. You never have in all these years of making mistakes on this forum.
Can you name a more anti-Semitic place in the western world?
Yes Israel
#458587
Mo_reese wrote: March 23rd, 2024, 5:02 pm
Sy Borg wrote: March 17th, 2024, 7:10 pm
It is different, because it's being done by Jews. That's all.
It's different because we see Zionist (they call themselves Zionists) bragging about their crimes against humanity like using snipers to shoot children. The list of crimes against humanity is very long and I shouldn't need to list them. The fact that there are other atrocities in the world doesn't lessen the horrors in Gaza.
It's not a fair conclusion that the only reason people don't know about atrocities in other parts of the world is because they are antisemitic. Most likely the people in Gaza have better access to social media and can broadcast videos of the atrocities.
In any event, neither the US nor Israel have justification to continue the horrors in Gaza.
Given that you are clearly very interested in human rights and are eager to know of terrible things that need stopping, this will help you catch up on Africa and French, Russian and Arabic colonisation. France and Islam are doing far more colonising than Jews, with far more intense results.

#458590
Sy Borg wrote: March 23rd, 2024, 6:12 pm
Given that you are clearly very interested in human rights and are eager to know of terrible things that need stopping, this will help you catch up on Africa and French, Russian and Arabic colonisation. France and Islam are doing far more colonising than Jews, with far more intense results.
I am particularly upset about the Israel situation because my country gives Israel billions upon billions of dollars while we have millions of people with zero healthcare coverage, a major homelessness problem, over half of Americans are living paycheck to paycheck, etc. And now we are funding the genocide of the Palestinians in Gaza. This is unacceptable. There is no justification for the US to be backing genocide anywhere.
Signature Addition: "Ad hominem attacks will destroy a good forum."
#458623
Mo_reese wrote: March 23rd, 2024, 7:55 pm
Sy Borg wrote: March 23rd, 2024, 6:12 pm
Given that you are clearly very interested in human rights and are eager to know of terrible things that need stopping, this will help you catch up on Africa and French, Russian and Arabic colonisation. France and Islam are doing far more colonising than Jews, with far more intense results.
I am particularly upset about the Israel situation because my country gives Israel billions upon billions of dollars while we have millions of people with zero healthcare coverage, a major homelessness problem, over half of Americans are living paycheck to paycheck, etc. And now we are funding the genocide of the Palestinians in Gaza. This is unacceptable. There is no justification for the US to be backing genocide anywhere.
They are helping an ally surrounded by hostile nations avoid annihilation. Do you think the world will run out of Arabs if Palestine goes? It's not really genocide. Being interested in animals, and equivalently looking at the human situation, I would say Jews are vastly closer to being endangered than Arabs. It's not even close.

Meanwhile in Sudan ...

I do appreciate the irritation of governments spending billions overseas while locals go homeless. It doesn't help that governments allow huge numbers of migrants into the country to artificially boost growth while not adequately preparing to house and provide infrastructure for the extra numbers. Still, governments often find that the cost of defending overseas supply chains is less than the cost of losing those connections.

It's like the old argument as to why money is spent on machines of war when healthcare is inadequately funded. If a nation doesn't spend money on machines of war, chances are they will end up becoming a victim, complaining about being colonised or exploited by whatever "big brother" is providing your protection.
#458631
Mo_reese wrote: March 23rd, 2024, 5:02 pm ...
The fact that there are other atrocities in the world doesn't lessen the horrors in Gaza.
...
Sy Borg wrote: March 23rd, 2024, 6:12 pm Given that you are clearly very interested in human rights and are eager to know of terrible things that need stopping, this will help you catch up on Africa and French, Russian and Arabic colonisation. France and Islam are doing far more colonising than Jews, with far more intense results.
In fairness, you are not responding to the point made, but only repeating your accusations.


Mo_reese wrote: March 23rd, 2024, 7:55 pm .... There is no justification for the US to be backing genocide anywhere.
Sy Borg wrote: March 24th, 2024, 7:52 am They are helping an ally surrounded by hostile nations avoid annihilation.
Yes, an "ally" that they placed there by military, economic and political force, in the midst of an Arab nation, surrounded by Arab nations, despite the refusal and resistance of all of those Arab nations. Isn't that why Israel's neighbours are "hostile"?
Favorite Philosopher: Cratylus Location: England
#458639
Sy Borg wrote: March 24th, 2024, 7:52 am They are helping an ally surrounded by hostile nations avoid annihilation.
What we are seeing goes way beyond self defense. I believe our allies should be held to the same principles and values we have. We should not be backing dictators and/or genocide.
Sy Borg wrote: March 24th, 2024, 7:52 am Do you think the world will run out of Arabs if Palestine goes?
I hope this isn't an attempt at justifying genocide of the Palestinian people.
Sy Borg wrote: March 24th, 2024, 7:52 am It's not really genocide.
It does meet 6 of the 7 criteria our government uses to define genocide but it shouldn't matter what we call it, it's unacceptable. After being 1000% behind Bibi's genocide the Dems are looking to back off and blame Bibi, much like they blamed Saddam Hussein in Iraq after backing him.
Sy Borg wrote: March 24th, 2024, 7:52 am
If a nation doesn't spend money on machines of war, chances are they will end up becoming a victim, complaining about being colonised or exploited by whatever "big brother" is providing your protection.
On the other hand who are being protected, not the 99% Class. There has to be a balance and we are way over balanced toward defense.
Signature Addition: "Ad hominem attacks will destroy a good forum."
#458645
I would like to see how you would respond if a neighbour shot missiles that killed thousands of civilians and ran in the kidnap and rape hundreds more?

What Israel is doing is self-defence. They are trying to neutralise a constant threat. They have gone extreme, but it's understandable after six decades of attacks to want to finx the problem once and for all. The Palestinians were much better off before Hamas lead them into greater extremism rather than de-escalation.

I have not seen a single ant-Semite on this board make the slightest criticism of Hamas. As far as the (surprisingly plentiful) anti-Semites on this board are concerned, Hamas is entirely blameless, jut bombing The Oppressor a la Marx.

As for whether the US is overbalanced towards defence, it's hard to say. As far as I can tell, Russia an China are serious competitors. The US is not so dominant that Russia and China fear them, hence the nonstop provocations. So perhaps the US is not too militarily powerful but as powerful as it needs to be to maintain its position? Having not developed defence budgets personally, I don't know for sure what the right amount would be during times of geopolitical instability.
#458649
Sy Borg wrote: March 24th, 2024, 3:06 pm I would like to see how you would respond if a neighbour shot missiles that killed thousands of civilians and ran in the kidnap and rape hundreds more?

What Israel is doing is self-defence. They are trying to neutralise a constant threat. They have gone extreme, but it's understandable after six decades of attacks to want to finx the problem once and for all. The Palestinians were much better off before Hamas lead them into greater extremism rather than de-escalation.

I have not seen a single ant-Semite on this board make the slightest criticism of Hamas. As far as the (surprisingly plentiful) anti-Semites on this board are concerned, Hamas is entirely blameless, jut bombing The Oppressor a la Marx.

As for whether the US is overbalanced towards defence, it's hard to say. As far as I can tell, Russia an China are serious competitors. The US is not so dominant that Russia and China fear them, hence the nonstop provocations. So perhaps the US is not too militarily powerful but as powerful as it needs to be to maintain its position? Having not developed defence budgets personally, I don't know for sure what the right amount would be during times of geopolitical instability.
But they won't "fix the problem", they will exterminate the Palestinians.
Location: UK
#458651
Belinda wrote: March 22nd, 2024, 6:49 am
Gertie wrote: March 21st, 2024, 5:11 pm
Belinda wrote: March 21st, 2024, 10:32 am
Gertie wrote: March 19th, 2024, 12:49 pm Belindi



We have a pretty good history (at least partly mythologised)  of the Jewish people as an ethno-religious tribal group.  I don't know how common it was in the times of the ancient Hebrews, but they had a sad record of being invaded and occupied, or exiled and enslaved by their invaders.   They did a  bit of that themselves too.  Their ''Promised Land'' was Canaan, it was promised by Yahweh to Abraham and his descendents, and it's where Moses led the Jews to after exile in Egypt.  

Jerusalem was made the site for Solomon's original  Temple, which contained the Holy of Holies,  a sort of holiday home for Yahweh's visits to his Chosen People. Babylonian invaders destroyed Solomon's Temple, but it was re-built, and the Second Temple was at the centre of the great Jewish religious festivals - like how Jesus came to Jerusalem for the Passover and turned over the outer Temple money-lenders' tables causing a  ruckus- the rest as they say, is Christianity.  The Romans destroyed the Second Temple during a rebellion a bit after Jesus' time (around the time of the first Gospel, Mark's, in AD 70), causing yet more dispersion, but the ruins are still venerated. Anyway, one way or another the Jewish diaspora made them an ethno-religion of immigrants dispersed all over the place.  And they were often treated with suspicion and animosity as immigrants still are, with the extra burden of being the 'Christ killers'.  

Lots of  myths grew up about Jews as the immigrant 'other', like the medieval  'Blood Libel' that they sacrificed Christian babies in rituals,  and the cursed Wandering Jew.  And there are more trendy ones like the  Jewish conspiracy to rule the world, going back at least to The Protocols of Zion.  And today when you see neo-fascists and anti-immigrant marchers chanting 'They will not replace us' and 'Blood and Soil'  they're directly mimicking Nazi nationalists.

Zionism is understandable given that history, and finally the genocidal displacement of WWII led to Britain deciding to give a chunk of modern day Palestine to the Jews.   Like you do.   Jerusalem is still the holiest place on earth for Christians and Jews, and Mohammed has some important connection too, and the sacred Dome of the Rock Islamic temple was built on the old Hebrew Temple Mount (rude!). 

So Jerusalem in particular is a religious as well as territorial hot potato.  You also have a bunch of  evangelical Christians who've convinced themselves that it's prophesied Jesus's second coming can only happen when the Jews re-occupy the Promised Land.  These are Christian Zionists.  I don't know how much sway they have in American politics, but it doesn't help. Biden is a disgrace in his own right. And Trump moved the American Embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem as an FU to Palestine, as was his Jewish son-in-law's proposed 'peace plan'. The same bloke now in the midst of a genocide -

''Jared Kushner has praised the “very valuable” potential of Gaza’s “waterfront property” and suggested Israel should remove civilians while it “cleans up” the strip.

The former property dealer, married to Donald Trump’s daughter Ivanka, made the comments in an interview at Harvard University on 8 March.''

- Guardian. 
Thanks Gertie. I read the article several times.
Hi Belindi, just to clarify that's my own attempt at a relevant potted history - not to be taken as 'gospel' ;) . I studied the Old Testament and have retained an interest in theology. Only the last two lines about the ghoul Kushner are quoted from The Guardian. (Ironically The Guardian site often deletes my comments on the current genocide!).
I understand from the article how the Promised Land myth pertains to Judaism and that the myth is justifiable for Jews by Jahweh's propensity for helping Jews to settle and prosper. I also understand that not every Christian nation is bent on colonising foreign lands.

Right. I'd say by and large trade has superceded invasion as an obviously better way of getting your hands on other peeps' resources, and that if you have trade dominance you can 'peacefully' exploit. The Middle East sits on a ton of oil, which keeps dominant interests greedy eyes' fixed on it. Giant multinationals are the new colonisers. When 'we' invaded Iraq, the idea was it would be ''settled'' by our corporations.
However I still think that established sects of Judeo-Christianity such as the Church of England, and RC , are proponents of colonialism whenever colonialism would be to the advantage of the establishment.

How do you mean?
Moreover I think that we could fit statistics of established religious affiliation , political afilliation, and preferred moral system into a single mind set which pertains to conservative political establishments.

I think you're broadly right.
Thanks for your elucidation. I cannot imagine why The Guardian would delete your comments.
For a while at least,any comment using the words ''ethnic cleansing'', ''anti-semitism'' or ''genocide'' seemed to be auto-deleted. The Guardian is sensitive to racism, and especially anti-semitism since it went gung-ho after Corbyn for that like the rest of the media. Of course now with what's going on in Gaza becoming more obscene by the day, it's getting increasingly harder to disappear such terms and opinions about Israel. But the attitude that it's a worse crime to say something which could be interpreted as anti-semitic than to silently watch the mass slaughter of civilians, including thousands of children, is out there. Which suits Israel of course.

What I mean by my second last paragraph is unclear because my thinking on the topic is a little muddled, and that is why I read others' posts, to try to find ideas that make sense to me.

The connection between my last paragraph and the penultimate one is that Judeo-Christianity is strongly doctrinal especially its moral code.['quote]
I'd say Judaism (and Islam from the little I know) more-so in principle than Christianity. Paul's version of Christianity, which largely won the day, moves away from endless Judaic laws and prescription, to a relationship with Jesus as saviour. Salvation by Faith in the resurrection, rather than through 'moral' Works/Law. But when it comes to Church history, that's a different matter. With Jesus's prophesied imminent transformational institution of Yahweh's Final Judgement and the institution of Yahweh's Kingdom on Earth ruled from Jerusalem never showing up, they've fallen back on interpretation and doctrine. In the end it's always down to the people who run and constitute the religions, and doctrine becomes the religion.

Doctrines can be and are interpreted liberally or conservatively , and the several interpretations are reflected in the various religious dogmas of the different sects. Insofar as I'm a follower of Jesus of Nazareth I interpret the Gospels liberally , bearing in mind that Jesus of Nazareth was a human being not a supernatural god. So people today fall into one of two broad categories: The followers of old and often outworn traditions, or dissenters to old traditions i.e. liberals and pragmatists.

These two categories of moral mind sets are reflected by political parties and their respective home and foreign policies.
Ah I'm with you now. Yes I'd agree that there tend to be certain broad dispositions where-by you can make a pretty good guess that if someone is dispositionally religiously conservative they'll tend to be socially conservative too, and drawn to Right leaning politics. And vice-versa. My view of Jesus largely fits my own dispositions too ;) and it boggles my mind how people get some interpretations. That room for interpretation is part of what makes for a successful, lasting religion I suppose.

By the way, is it true that in the USA there is no proper Labour party , and US Democrats are equivalent to UK Conservatives?
Historically I think so. But I'd say the same for the UK at the mo. Since Clinton and Blair came up with their pragmatic centrist Third Way doctrine the voting choice in both countries has pretty much become a failing neo-con status quo or an ever-more radical right. There looked to be a moment when Corbyn and Sanders could have offered a real Leftist alternative, but both were effectively stomped out by their own parties, as much as the other vested interests which they threatened. Now we're left with defending the status quo again, which won't hold long term imo, while the Far Right continues its rise across the wealthy west. The nationalist UK Reform party, which is becoming mainstream, isn't much different to the ''The Jews will not Replace us!'' neo-fascists.

What do you think?


Referring to your reply to me regarding trade. Can we accept that trade brings peace as much as it brings exploitation? What is it exactly about multi -national corporations that is 'unchristianly' ?
Yep. Trade can be ethical or exploitative, but it beats invasion.

I didn't say multinationals are unChristianly, I said they've largely replaced colonisation as a way of aquiring the Others' resources. I'm on dodgy ground here but my view is multinationals tend to get to be multinationals often through under-cutting competitors and using their financial power to exploit weaker workforces and influence governments. Like powerful trading blocs use deals and tariffs to exploit weaker nations. It's better than armed colonisation of course, but 'free-marketism' is essentially Might makes Right. Now globalisation and emerging blocs are threatening the hegemony the rich 'west' had. We're in ''interesting times'', and we're seeing how wealthy 'western' nations are responding in real time.

Is there a modern interpretation of the story of Jesus and the money changers in the Temple and their misuse of traditional Jewish temple behaviour ? I admire Jesus for his initiative to clean up traditional Judaism when some Jews profiteered from the Roman occupation.
There are always interpretations! From did it happen at all, to it being an accurate account which was a significant step towards execution, resurrection and all that entails. But you always have to bear in mind the people writing the gospels had a very different world view to ours, had their own proseletysing mission, and a way of telling stories which fit into (and was 'credentialled' by) allusions to historical and theological context. The money-changer story is in all four gospels, so there's a good chance something like that happened imo. But what the gospel writers hoped people will get from the story will be part of their overall message about who Jesus was and his life and death meant theologically, rather than social commentary.

Having said that Liberation Theology takes this approach seriously as relevant to the here-and-now.
The connection between the political situation in Palestine at the time of Jesus, and the exploitation of peoples in modern times is not that Jews are all guilty but that some people of all ethnicities are not attached to the Golden Rule.
Absolutely.

A version of the Golden Rule is found in Leviticus btw, along with all the shellfish eating, sacrifice making, menstruating Sabbath resting, etc stuff. And Jesus is reported as saying “'You must love the Lord your God with all your heart, all your soul, and all your mind. This is the first and greatest commandment. A second is equally important: 'Love your neighbor as yourself. ' The entire law and all the demands of the prophets are based on these two commandments.” (Tho 'Love your neighbour/friend' would likely have meant fellow Jew to them then).
#458655
Belinda wrote: March 24th, 2024, 5:10 pm
Sy Borg wrote: March 24th, 2024, 3:06 pm I would like to see how you would respond if a neighbour shot missiles that killed thousands of civilians and ran in the kidnap and rape hundreds more?

What Israel is doing is self-defence. They are trying to neutralise a constant threat. They have gone extreme, but it's understandable after six decades of attacks to want to finx the problem once and for all. The Palestinians were much better off before Hamas lead them into greater extremism rather than de-escalation.

I have not seen a single ant-Semite on this board make the slightest criticism of Hamas. As far as the (surprisingly plentiful) anti-Semites on this board are concerned, Hamas is entirely blameless, jut bombing The Oppressor a la Marx.

As for whether the US is overbalanced towards defence, it's hard to say. As far as I can tell, Russia an China are serious competitors. The US is not so dominant that Russia and China fear them, hence the nonstop provocations. So perhaps the US is not too militarily powerful but as powerful as it needs to be to maintain its position? Having not developed defence budgets personally, I don't know for sure what the right amount would be during times of geopolitical instability.
But they won't "fix the problem", they will exterminate the Palestinians.
Palestine has rejected the two-state solution multiple times. Hamas's aim is not to share land with Israel but to exterminate or scatter all Israelis, as did all other Arab lands (no one made a fuss about that).

If Hamas was not so determined to exterminate Jews then maybe Jews would be less inclined to exterminate Hamas? Are Palestinians better off for their (wealthy and comfortable) leaders' decision to settle on a two-state solution? When does Hamas they take ANY responsibility for what has happened. The way you and other speak, you'd think they hadn't just perpetrated the most deadly attack on a nation since 9/11.
#458690
Pattern-chaser wrote: March 23rd, 2024, 9:11 am Just as one can murder "by accident". In the UK we have a separate word for it: "manslaughter" instead of (intentional) "murder".

So, in the same way that we can or could do almost anything by accident, it would seem silly to claim that discrimination cannot occur by accident.

What is it about this that you disagree with?
Criminal justice distinguishes intent, the act itself, and the consequences of the act.

You can commit by accident any wrong that is defined in terms of the act itself or its consequences. You cannot commit by accident a wrong that is defined by intent. Because of you don't intend it then you fail to meet the definition of the offence.

You can exceed the speed limit by accident (and most of us have done so at some point). Because it is defined as a wrong regardless of intent and regardless of consequences.

You can kill someone by accident. (Which may comprise the offence of manslaughter if you have been culpable negligent).

What you cannot do by accident is commit murder, because the definition of the crime of murder requires murderous intent.

So when it comes to discrimination, the question I'm asking is whether you personally consider discriminatory intent to be part of the definition of the wrong of discrimination, or not.

Is it or is it not discrimination if the act disadvantages black people or women or Jews without being driven by prejudice against those groups ? Yes or no ?

Because you seem to be saying on the one hand that other people can be accidentally racist or sexist, and should take care not to be, and apologise if it turns out (as a judgment of consequences) that they have been.

But on the other hand you seem to be saying that criticism of Israel could be antisemitic, if picking on Jews is the underlying motivation (as a judgment of intent). Which in your case it isn't and so you are innocent of antisemitism.

Can you see that this looks like a big fat double standard ?
#458694
Sy Borg wrote: March 24th, 2024, 6:53 pm
Belinda wrote: March 24th, 2024, 5:10 pm
Sy Borg wrote: March 24th, 2024, 3:06 pm I would like to see how you would respond if a neighbour shot missiles that killed thousands of civilians and ran in the kidnap and rape hundreds more?

What Israel is doing is self-defence. They are trying to neutralise a constant threat. They have gone extreme, but it's understandable after six decades of attacks to want to finx the problem once and for all. The Palestinians were much better off before Hamas lead them into greater extremism rather than de-escalation.

I have not seen a single ant-Semite on this board make the slightest criticism of Hamas. As far as the (surprisingly plentiful) anti-Semites on this board are concerned, Hamas is entirely blameless, jut bombing The Oppressor a la Marx.

As for whether the US is overbalanced towards defence, it's hard to say. As far as I can tell, Russia an China are serious competitors. The US is not so dominant that Russia and China fear them, hence the nonstop provocations. So perhaps the US is not too militarily powerful but as powerful as it needs to be to maintain its position? Having not developed defence budgets personally, I don't know for sure what the right amount would be during times of geopolitical instability.
But they won't "fix the problem", they will exterminate the Palestinians.
Palestine has rejected the two-state solution multiple times. Hamas's aim is not to share land with Israel but to exterminate or scatter all Israelis, as did all other Arab lands (no one made a fuss about that).

If Hamas was not so determined to exterminate Jews then maybe Jews would be less inclined to exterminate Hamas? Are Palestinians better off for their (wealthy and comfortable) leaders' decision to settle on a two-state solution? When does Hamas they take ANY responsibility for what has happened. The way you and other speak, you'd think they hadn't just perpetrated the most deadly attack on a nation since 9/11.
Since 1948 native Palestinians have been badly treated by Israel some of whose prime ministers have been kinder than others notably Ben Gurion and Menahem Begin. Netanyahu is unpopular including in Israel.

Hamas is caused by fear among those Palestinian voters who are warlike; fear of the Israeli oppressor and what he is still going to do in the few days left before Israel crushes Gaza. Have you never seen a cornered fox or badger?
Location: UK
#458695
Gertie wrote: March 24th, 2024, 5:26 pm
Belinda wrote: March 22nd, 2024, 6:49 am
Gertie wrote: March 21st, 2024, 5:11 pm
Belinda wrote: March 21st, 2024, 10:32 am

Thanks Gertie. I read the article several times.
Hi Belindi, just to clarify that's my own attempt at a relevant potted history - not to be taken as 'gospel' ;) . I studied the Old Testament and have retained an interest in theology. Only the last two lines about the ghoul Kushner are quoted from The Guardian. (Ironically The Guardian site often deletes my comments on the current genocide!).
I understand from the article how the Promised Land myth pertains to Judaism and that the myth is justifiable for Jews by Jahweh's propensity for helping Jews to settle and prosper. I also understand that not every Christian nation is bent on colonising foreign lands.

Right. I'd say by and large trade has superceded invasion as an obviously better way of getting your hands on other peeps' resources, and that if you have trade dominance you can 'peacefully' exploit. The Middle East sits on a ton of oil, which keeps dominant interests greedy eyes' fixed on it. Giant multinationals are the new colonisers. When 'we' invaded Iraq, the idea was it would be ''settled'' by our corporations.
However I still think that established sects of Judeo-Christianity such as the Church of England, and RC , are proponents of colonialism whenever colonialism would be to the advantage of the establishment.

How do you mean?
Moreover I think that we could fit statistics of established religious affiliation , political afilliation, and preferred moral system into a single mind set which pertains to conservative political establishments.

I think you're broadly right.
Thanks for your elucidation. I cannot imagine why The Guardian would delete your comments.
For a while at least,any comment using the words ''ethnic cleansing'', ''anti-semitism'' or ''genocide'' seemed to be auto-deleted. The Guardian is sensitive to racism, and especially anti-semitism since it went gung-ho after Corbyn for that like the rest of the media. Of course now with what's going on in Gaza becoming more obscene by the day, it's getting increasingly harder to disappear such terms and opinions about Israel. But the attitude that it's a worse crime to say something which could be interpreted as anti-semitic than to silently watch the mass slaughter of civilians, including thousands of children, is out there. Which suits Israel of course.

What I mean by my second last paragraph is unclear because my thinking on the topic is a little muddled, and that is why I read others' posts, to try to find ideas that make sense to me.

The connection between my last paragraph and the penultimate one is that Judeo-Christianity is strongly doctrinal especially its moral code.['quote]
I'd say Judaism (and Islam from the little I know) more-so in principle than Christianity. Paul's version of Christianity, which largely won the day, moves away from endless Judaic laws and prescription, to a relationship with Jesus as saviour. Salvation by Faith in the resurrection, rather than through 'moral' Works/Law. But when it comes to Church history, that's a different matter. With Jesus's prophesied imminent transformational institution of Yahweh's Final Judgement and the institution of Yahweh's Kingdom on Earth ruled from Jerusalem never showing up, they've fallen back on interpretation and doctrine. In the end it's always down to the people who run and constitute the religions, and doctrine becomes the religion.

Doctrines can be and are interpreted liberally or conservatively , and the several interpretations are reflected in the various religious dogmas of the different sects. Insofar as I'm a follower of Jesus of Nazareth I interpret the Gospels liberally , bearing in mind that Jesus of Nazareth was a human being not a supernatural god. So people today fall into one of two broad categories: The followers of old and often outworn traditions, or dissenters to old traditions i.e. liberals and pragmatists.

These two categories of moral mind sets are reflected by political parties and their respective home and foreign policies.
Ah I'm with you now. Yes I'd agree that there tend to be certain broad dispositions where-by you can make a pretty good guess that if someone is dispositionally religiously conservative they'll tend to be socially conservative too, and drawn to Right leaning politics. And vice-versa. My view of Jesus largely fits my own dispositions too ;) and it boggles my mind how people get some interpretations. That room for interpretation is part of what makes for a successful, lasting religion I suppose.

By the way, is it true that in the USA there is no proper Labour party , and US Democrats are equivalent to UK Conservatives?
Historically I think so. But I'd say the same for the UK at the mo. Since Clinton and Blair came up with their pragmatic centrist Third Way doctrine the voting choice in both countries has pretty much become a failing neo-con status quo or an ever-more radical right. There looked to be a moment when Corbyn and Sanders could have offered a real Leftist alternative, but both were effectively stomped out by their own parties, as much as the other vested interests which they threatened. Now we're left with defending the status quo again, which won't hold long term imo, while the Far Right continues its rise across the wealthy west. The nationalist UK Reform party, which is becoming mainstream, isn't much different to the ''The Jews will not Replace us!'' neo-fascists.

What do you think?


Referring to your reply to me regarding trade. Can we accept that trade brings peace as much as it brings exploitation? What is it exactly about multi -national corporations that is 'unchristianly' ?
Yep. Trade can be ethical or exploitative, but it beats invasion.

I didn't say multinationals are unChristianly, I said they've largely replaced colonisation as a way of aquiring the Others' resources. I'm on dodgy ground here but my view is multinationals tend to get to be multinationals often through under-cutting competitors and using their financial power to exploit weaker workforces and influence governments. Like powerful trading blocs use deals and tariffs to exploit weaker nations. It's better than armed colonisation of course, but 'free-marketism' is essentially Might makes Right. Now globalisation and emerging blocs are threatening the hegemony the rich 'west' had. We're in ''interesting times'', and we're seeing how wealthy 'western' nations are responding in real time.

Is there a modern interpretation of the story of Jesus and the money changers in the Temple and their misuse of traditional Jewish temple behaviour ? I admire Jesus for his initiative to clean up traditional Judaism when some Jews profiteered from the Roman occupation.
There are always interpretations! From did it happen at all, to it being an accurate account which was a significant step towards execution, resurrection and all that entails. But you always have to bear in mind the people writing the gospels had a very different world view to ours, had their own proseletysing mission, and a way of telling stories which fit into (and was 'credentialled' by) allusions to historical and theological context. The money-changer story is in all four gospels, so there's a good chance something like that happened imo. But what the gospel writers hoped people will get from the story will be part of their overall message about who Jesus was and his life and death meant theologically, rather than social commentary.

Having said that Liberation Theology takes this approach seriously as relevant to the here-and-now.
The connection between the political situation in Palestine at the time of Jesus, and the exploitation of peoples in modern times is not that Jews are all guilty but that some people of all ethnicities are not attached to the Golden Rule.
Absolutely.

A version of the Golden Rule is found in Leviticus btw, along with all the shellfish eating, sacrifice making, menstruating Sabbath resting, etc stuff. And Jesus is reported as saying “'You must love the Lord your God with all your heart, all your soul, and all your mind. This is the first and greatest commandment. A second is equally important: 'Love your neighbor as yourself. ' The entire law and all the demands of the prophets are based on these two commandments.” (Tho 'Love your neighbour/friend' would likely have meant fellow Jew to them then).
Pauline Christianity is certainly something else!. One of the benefits of Judeo Christianity is its capability to evolve, the whole thing held together by a human life lived in real time. I went to a public discussion by three theologians holding responsible jobs. One of them described Judeo Christianity as a filthy rusty old ship which in all its voyages throughout the storms of change had carried its cargo of The Golden Rule. I believe the speaker was C of E.
Another meeting I attended answered my scepticism about Jesus, who was tortured to death two thousand yours ago by the Romans, knowing anything about me. The speaker, a Methodist , replied "It's a moving icon". It seems to me both images make sense.

Regarding the whole political mind sets of both UK and US, thanks for your elucidation. My late friend who had dual US and UK citizenship some years ago alerted me to how well Obama and Cameron got on together.
Location: UK
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