I hate when people can't see the other side of an argument. I hold certain positions, but I can see where someone else might not be taking their views "to their logical conclusion" in my estimation. I can see why someone else might think the same of me. To be specific, I generally support Israel, but I can see why, with all that's in the news, someone might be unhappy with Israel at present. I don't want to argue any of this. I think most everyone in here is well meaning. Have mercy.
@poemblaze The Israel-Palestine problem is centuries old and complicated. There are many old biases at play.
First, Hamas. It is a terrorist organization that wants nothing less than the death of all Jews. The people of Gaza elected them as their leaders.
Secondly, Israel. They have created a caste system in Israel that treats Palestinians as less than Jews.
Both sides have reasons to hate the other, but at least the Israelis can hold themselves back. Hamas doesn't stop.
@poemblaze At the risk of being misunderstood, I will simply say that the original two-state solution was Jordan and Israel. The Palestinians were supposed to relocate to Jordan meaning all of the remaining land was to become Israel. This would include all of Israel today plus the West Bank plus Gaza. The palestinians did not like this and wanted to subdivide the land a second time.
I don't know how to solve this but Hamas must be destroyed. I support an Israeli Marshall plan to rebuild Gaza.
@poemblaze to elaborate, I think Israel should pay to rebuild Gaza.
This will show the Palestinians that they don't hate them. The current Palestinians are a very young population. They only know the hatred that Hamas has taught them. Israel can change that but it will require public will and I'm not sure that exists yet.
Israel also needs to change. The judges that show favoritism to Jews over Palestinians must be reformed. Palestinians in Israel should be treated the same as Jews.
@poemblaze The Bible records in Ezekiel that eventually Israel will be a land without walls. This is in preparation for some future army to invade. I consider the chapters at the end of Ezekiel to still be future. Basically the chapters after the valley of dry bones are future. That chapter describes the nation of Israel being reborn which happened historically in 1948.
Currently in Israel there are lots of walls. But with Egypt and Jordan there is peace. Peace also will come to Palestine.
@poemblaze I think that's a very wise position.