A for Anarchy
FULL MEMBER
- Joined
- Jan 10, 2011
- Messages
- 102
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I reiterate - the so called "Promised land" means that Jews who have no connection with the land, are brainwashed into believing that Israel is their God given gift and was made for them. That is not good. Many ideas in the Bibles are universal, however, many are not. As I have already pointed out the book of Deuteronomy is very violent in its outlook and started the entire "Promised land" idea. It also entitles the Jews to think they are better in their land, and the Arabs dont belong there. You seem to believe that you are being benevolent by entertaining them in your Promised Land.
Again, and again you are impervious to my point of why Aliyah is a wrong state policy (The MAJORITY can be wrong! in a democracy - please do look at Germany). Jews may find a safe haven in Israel but the active promotion of Aliyah and systematic change in demography is terribly wrong - it is equivalent to cultural genocide for whatever minorities in Israel. You clearly do not think a drop of 10% is big, I on the other hand would shocked if this did happen with in whatever time frame.
As I have said earlier I am not questioning whether Aliya in the past was right or wrong. I am talking about the present.
Why are constantly projecting Israel as a "Jews only" party where you give goodies if they come over? I am asking you why can you not have a party where Jews are the major contributors with everyone else in your colony chipping in too? Clearly, the state thinks the more Jews, the more fun we will have, in our Jew party!
No, Jewish immigration does not lead to short term kick backs - it is a long term demographic change in the land which bothers me.
You constantly try to divert the topic by focusing on parity comparison with say other Arab nations and claiming that your Arabs. Now, I am not stooping to comparison.
Which part of the above - should I believe? Do you think Israel would ever change the law because a small minority says so?
Is their population ratio decreasing? Yes. Does this have direct impact in a democracy where seats are usually proportional to demography? Yes.
Again, and again you are impervious to my point of why Aliyah is a wrong state policy (The MAJORITY can be wrong! in a democracy - please do look at Germany). Jews may find a safe haven in Israel but the active promotion of Aliyah and systematic change in demography is terribly wrong - it is equivalent to cultural genocide for whatever minorities in Israel. You clearly do not think a drop of 10% is big, I on the other hand would shocked if this did happen with in whatever time frame.
As I have said earlier I am not questioning whether Aliya in the past was right or wrong. I am talking about the present.
Why are constantly projecting Israel as a "Jews only" party where you give goodies if they come over? I am asking you why can you not have a party where Jews are the major contributors with everyone else in your colony chipping in too? Clearly, the state thinks the more Jews, the more fun we will have, in our Jew party!
No, Jewish immigration does not lead to short term kick backs - it is a long term demographic change in the land which bothers me.
You constantly try to divert the topic by focusing on parity comparison with say other Arab nations and claiming that your Arabs. Now, I am not stooping to comparison.
For what purpose is it matter if the Arabs are 10% or 20% of the population? Regarding their power in parliament it derives mainly from their political agenda and less from their number of sits. There are smaller parties than the Arab parties that has more power because they are needed for a government coalition and there are bigger parties which has similar influence as the Arab parties because they are in opposition.
As for the Israeli Palestinian option to change this policy, well Aliya is defined in the immigration laws and like any law it can be modified in Parliament. The Palestinians have their representatives in the Knesset, so like in any democracy if they recruit the appropriate majority they could change the law.
Which part of the above - should I believe? Do you think Israel would ever change the law because a small minority says so?
Is their population ratio decreasing? Yes. Does this have direct impact in a democracy where seats are usually proportional to demography? Yes.