The Default Position

April 11, 2022 By: Nick Carraway Category: Uncategorized

There are numerous moments where we take things that we instinctively know, but fail to put them together. I support a World Geography class and in that class we got on the subject of genocide. Genocide is one of those squeamish topics that has to be covered, but it is difficult to give its proper weight with young teenage minds.

For some reason my mind immediately went to South Park. In the first episode of their seventh season they ran an episode titled “Cancelled”. In that episode it turned out that Earth was a reality television show in another galaxy. Different species of animals were thrown together purposely to see what conflicts would arise. As you might imagine, this included the various races as well. Obviously, some of the humor was dark and sometimes crude, but the point was unmistakable.

We saw Hitler do this prior to and during World War II. He took over countries he felt had common affinity with his own. The idea was that all Germanic people should be together and a part of one country. As we saw, it also meant that whoever was deemed not Germanic was to be eliminated. We have seen so-called ethnic cleansing in Bosnia, Rwanda, and in other locations as well. The war in Ukraine has its seeds in this in reverse. Somehow, Putin believes they belong together because they are the same.

That’s what makes the desire not to teach our history of racism so mind boggling. If you put all of these things together you get the distinct impression that racism, ethnic conflict, and cultural conflict is actually natural. The battle for everyone “just to get along” is not a natural state. It takes constant effort and if one stops making the effort then they fall into the pit of what’s natural.

Of course, this kind of discovery presents its own problems. One of the hallmarks of the KGB and their tactics is the notion of cultural and moral nihilism. It reduces everyone to zero. You’ve done evil things and I’ve done evil things, so you have no right to call me on my evil things. It’s always funny that our collective mainstream media seems to play the same game in attempt to be “fair and balanced.”

The discovery that conflict is the norm ignores those that deliberately try to move beyond the conflict. All people are created equal with unalienable rights and that governments are instituted among people to protect these rights. Those truths are not self-evident. They have never been self-evident. Knowing this doesn’t make our nation’s founding a fraud. Knowing this makes our nation’s founding that much more remarkable.

Knowing this also means that to get to that state of being we have to constantly work at it. If we acknowledge that equality and peace are not natural then we acknowledge that having peace and equality requires constant effort. It means we have to call out those that are not working towards that goal. That means calling out people who aren’t doing it now and it means calling out people that didn’t do it in the past.

It also means that both propagandists and those in the mainstream media are wrong. There are people that fight their own natural instincts every day and just come up a bit short. We aren’t perfect no matter how hard we try. We make mistakes. There are also those that aren’t trying. There are those actively working against peace and equality. They know they are doing it and are relentless in their pursuits. We cannot treat a person with good intentions and a person with evil intentions the same. Both do the wrong thing, but treating those people the same ignores that they are not the same.

Let’s Talk about Israel

May 19, 2021 By: El Jefe Category: Genocide

Dangerous territory, but I’m going there…

NOTE: Let it be known that I’m pretty much a heathen.  My father and grandfather were pulpit pounding, Bible thumping hell fire and brimstone preachers, and I got more Jesus and God pounded into me before I was 6 than most people get in a lifetime.  In my early adulthood, I took a hard look at Christianity, even taking classes in theology for my own edification.  The conclusion I came to in my early 30s was that deity-based faiths are pretty much mythology wrapped in threats of fiery death if one didn’t comply with certain precepts in those faiths.  I rejected this mythology in favor of a more tolerant approach to all faiths (and no faith).  Since then, I’ve followed my own path, studying everyone from Thomas Merton to Shunryu Suzuki, who brought Japanese Soto Zen buddhism to the US in the 1950s.  This is the perspective I bring to this discussion of the decades long conflict in Palestine, now commonly known as Israel.

I bring this up as I have had a number of conversations this past week or so after violence erupted in Israel again, where Israel is using war planes and missiles to indiscriminately kill Palestinians in Gaza as Hamas retaliates by firing uncontrolled rockets back at Israel.  Depending on who you talk to, Israel is simply defending itself or committing genocide, and to say it out loud, those opinions are pretty much divided between Jewish and non-Jewish.  Also, social conservatives almost always land on the side of Israel, some because they’re Bible thumpers, too, or just taking everlasting Republican positions.

The Israeli government always talks about how complicated all this is and they’re simply trying to stop terrorists from attacking them.  They like it complicated, because what they are really doing is committing genocide, and they don’t want you to see that.  That’s right; the very people who suffered mightily in the European holocaust are doing exactly the same thing to the Palestinians and have been for decades.  Before you go hair on fire, here’s the definition of genocide as defined in 1944 by a Jewish Polish legal scholar, Raphael Lemkin:

“More often [genocide] refers to a coordinated plan aimed at destruction of the essential foundations of the life of national groups so that these groups wither and die like plants that have suffered a blight. The end may be accomplished by the forced disintegration of political and social institutions, of the culture of the people, of their language, their national feelings and their religion. It may be accomplished by wiping out all basis of personal security, liberty, health and dignity. When these means fail the machine gun can always be utilized as a last resort. Genocide is directed against a national group as an entity and the attack on individuals is only secondary to the annihilation of the national group to which they belong.”

This definition has been widely adopted and refined by legal and historical scholars and referenced in international law.  The court that has jurisdiction over Palestine/Israel is the International Criminal Court, and the definition of genocide in Article VI of their governing statute is:

“…includes various acts “committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group” as such, including:

(a) Killing members of the group;
(b) Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group;
(c) Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part; and
(d) Imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group.”

By this definition, the Israeli government is, and has been, committing genocide against the Palestinian people by taking their property and ghettoizing where they remain, restricting movement, limiting employment, viciously enforcing draconian laws, indiscriminate killing, and even restricting their access to water.  That’s right, since 1967 it is illegal for Palestinians to access any water from the Jordan or the West Bank or even to collect rain water. The Israeli courts twist the laws against the Palestinians and are tools for taking property from them.  The more I study this issue, the more outraged I become.

In this last week, I’ve had some pretty tense discussions on social media and other forums, and I’m shocked at how so many of the people I’ve engaged simply parrot Israeli talking points.  Let’s be clear here.  Israel, with the backing of the United States and Britain, have annexed 100% of Palestinian lands since 1948, killing untold thousands, and committed atrocities that rival those of World War II and other violent conflicts.  The US sends about $4.5 billion a year to Israel, over 90% of which is for war making.  In contrast, the US sends the Palestinian Authority $500 million, over 75% of which is for humanitarian purposes.  Oh, and Trump even cut that off for the 4 years he infested the Oval Office; that order was reversed in April of this year. Since they started taking land in 1948, over 700,000 Palestinians were forced from their homes into refugee camps in Jordan and elsewhere.  In 1948 alone, Israelis destroyed and depopulated 700 Palestinian villages.  Israel has never, despite the UN declaration they used to take Palestine, officially recognized a Palestinian state or the right of Palestinians to live within its borders.

The excuses I’ve heard?  “Oh, those people in East Jerusalem are being evicted over a real estate dispute,” and, “The Arab world is huge; they can just move to another country,” and, “Israel is simply defending itself,” and “Hamas are terrorists firing rockets supplied by Iran,” and “So and so broke into a Jewish family’s house and murdered all of them.”  Oh, and then there’s this nugget, “There’s no such thing as Palestine; Palestine is the invention of the British.”  That’s pretty rich, since the name Palestine is derived from the Greek Philistia, which was the term used to describe these lands by Greek writers 3,000 YEARS AGO. It goes on and on, with excuse after excuse, most word for word propaganda from the Israeli government and its mouthpieces.  Essentially, normally good people rationalize the genocide happening in Israel by cherry picking information or outright lying to support their predispositions.  It’s pretty amazing.

The late human rights lawyer and Center for Constitutional Rights Board President Michael Ratner also accused Israel of “incremental genocide” in this statement:

“There’s no doubt again here this is ‘incremental genocide,’ as Ilan Pappé says. It’s been going on for a long time, the killings, the incredibly awful conditions of life, the expulsions that have gone on from Lydda in 1947 and ‘48, when 700 or more villages in Palestine were destroyed, and in the expulsions that continued from that time until today. It’s correct and important to label it for what it is. I want to emphasize today [that] these killings are part of a broader set of inhuman acts by Israel constituting international crimes, carried out by Israel over many years, going back to at least 1947 and 1948. They include crimes that aren’t talked about that much in the media or the press, the crimes of genocide, crimes against humanity, and apartheid. These crimes can be prosecuted in the International Criminal Court and are defined there.”

The tragedy of this conflict is that the very people who suffered such mammoth atrocities and genocide at the hands of the Nazis are doing, and have been doing for decades, the same thing to the Palestinians.  AND, they’re doing that with American tax dollars.  That simply has to stop, and I’m going to keep talking about it.