Asking to ban this group because of its political ideology is dangerous waters IMO. Obviously campuses should ban outright racist organizations, but Hillel does not strike me as that. I suppose it’s curious though that they will not extend membership to Jews who describe themselves as anti Zionist.
― I? not I! He! He! HIM! (akm), Sunday, 5 May 2024 23:38 (two years ago)
Things get dicier if the university is public.
― the talented mr pimply (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 5 May 2024 23:52 (two years ago)
Xp is that a national Hillel policy or a localOne? Wasn’t aware of that.
― longtime caller, first time listener (man alive), Sunday, 5 May 2024 23:57 (two years ago)
Thanks for those posts man alive. I won’t speak for them, but a few good friends have gotten at some of these tensions in talking about how they turned away from Zionism not as a means of rejecting Israel— some are dual citizens, even— but as becoming more in touch with how their faith cannot be defined or encompassed within what is essentially an ideological apparatus that was, at one time not too long ago, “on the fringes,” so to speak.
― butt dumb tight my boners got boners (the table is the table), Monday, 6 May 2024 01:07 (two years ago)
Xp is that a national Hillel policy or a local
I do not know. I only know what I've seen other jewish people saying on Bluesky (Helen Rosner from the New Yorker, for instance, who posted the following):
http://cdn.bsky.app/img/feed_fullsize/plain/did%3Aplc%3Afkpg2nmdux5jxsykgsicpjkq/bafkreic6ba4wd4osjrxmhofr2ebvj3on7fdid46iz7fyqz5y6lccaxbgde@jpeg
― I? not I! He! He! HIM! (akm), Monday, 6 May 2024 13:02 (two years ago)
which I realize looking at this does not support her contention, and she got a bunch of pushback on it then didn't answer when asked if she was ever in Hillel.
― I? not I! He! He! HIM! (akm), Monday, 6 May 2024 13:04 (two years ago)
Not understanding how the first point isn’t just incorrect but also an incitement
― butt dumb tight my boners got boners (the table is the table), Monday, 6 May 2024 13:51 (two years ago)
Being a Jewish AND Democratic state is not possible without continual ethnic cleansing
― Never fight uphill 'o me, boys! (President Keyes), Monday, 6 May 2024 14:03 (two years ago)
^ ^ ^
― butt dumb tight my boners got boners (the table is the table), Monday, 6 May 2024 14:04 (two years ago)
I didn't get a chance to watch this, but the superintendent of our school district was involved in this today; from what I read she handled herself well, though maybe not as well as the NYC superintendent. These people seem better able to handle this horseshit than the presidents of Ivy League colleges.
https://www.cnn.com/2024/05/08/us/antisemitism-hearing-schools/index.html
― I? not I! He! He! HIM! (akm), Wednesday, 8 May 2024 22:44 (two years ago)
― sarahell, Thursday, 9 May 2024 16:01 (two years ago)
yes
― butt dumb tight my boners got boners (the table is the table), Thursday, 9 May 2024 16:06 (two years ago)
Show your work.
― sarahell, Thursday, 9 May 2024 16:20 (two years ago)
Where I am coming from here is that there was a history of ethnic cleansing in Christian countries of Europe… and for the most part, they are not doing anything like this anymore…
― sarahell, Thursday, 9 May 2024 16:24 (two years ago)
I'm persuadable either way here as its not an opinion I hold with strong conviction but what is it that makes Israel not a democracy? I realize this things are on something of a sliding scale with a lot of hybrid regimes out there too but don't know what it is that would push it out of the category entirely
― anvil, Thursday, 9 May 2024 16:25 (two years ago)
inclined to agree with table here tbh. Any country where there's a state religion and/or explicitly priveleged ethnic class... the track record is not good. With Israel being created with this *specific* goal, is it really any surprise things turned out the way they did.
― famous instagram dog (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 9 May 2024 16:27 (two years ago)
Basically if Germany got to remain a country after what they did….
― sarahell, Thursday, 9 May 2024 16:28 (two years ago)
― sarahell, Thursday, 9 May 2024 16:29 (two years ago)
Most countries were founded with an explicitly privileged ethnic class! That is historically the rationale for creating a state (country)… I feel like the recency of Israel’s creation is a key factor
― sarahell, Thursday, 9 May 2024 16:34 (two years ago)
In my reading the demand for Israel to remain "a Jewish nation" means that Jews will always be in control of the government. If Israel has a Democracy and the non-Jewish population continues to grow at current rate they will eventually be able to command political power. Which is why Israel has to remove non-Jews from the voting population by one means or another.
― Never fight uphill 'o me, boys! (President Keyes), Thursday, 9 May 2024 16:38 (two years ago)
How many of European states in question are still de jure "Christian" in the laws being written and enforced?
Is reactionary hostility to refugees and immigration (or the mainstreamed Islamophobia of a state like France) not a modern version of the ideology that lead to ethnic cleansing in the past?
― papal hotwife (milo z), Thursday, 9 May 2024 16:38 (two years ago)
many of the
How many of European states in question are still de jure "Christian" in the laws being written and enforced? Is reactionary hostility to refugees and immigration (or the mainstreamed Islamophobia of a state like France) not a modern version of the ideology that lead to ethnic cleansing in the past?
― sarahell, Thursday, 9 May 2024 16:42 (two years ago)
Which is why Israel has to remove non-Jews from the voting population by one means or another.
In what ways are they doing this? I'm not overtly familiar with what happens within Israel so I'm not arguing against necessarily
― anvil, Thursday, 9 May 2024 16:44 (two years ago)
occupying gaza and the west bank without integrating them fully into israeli government and society, leaving a huge percentage of the muslim population without voting rights or self-determination
― the defenestration of prog (voodoo chili), Thursday, 9 May 2024 16:46 (two years ago)
because the Palestinian residents of Gaza, the West Bank, and East Jerusalem cannot attain Israeli citizenship and thus can't vote in Israeli elections
― symsymsym, Thursday, 9 May 2024 16:47 (two years ago)
I guess my hope is that a two state solution is possible with everyone having rights and dignity and this will be like the 21st century equivalent of Alsace-Lorraine. I totally accept that this could be magical thinking
― sarahell, Thursday, 9 May 2024 16:53 (two years ago)
But isn't that the case when any country occupies somewhere else? That seems a function of invasion/occupation rather than democracy within the country itself. The US invaded Afghanistan and Iraq but we didn't say it made the US less of a democracy. Any democracy in a country is surely always confined to its own borders and not to places it invades and occupies
― anvil, Thursday, 9 May 2024 16:54 (two years ago)
They didn't though, they were split in two for 41 years.
― I've left the box of soup near your shoes (Tom D.), Thursday, 9 May 2024 16:55 (two years ago)
so there's these people called settlers
― symsymsym, Thursday, 9 May 2024 16:59 (two years ago)
anvil: all the Israelis who live in the Occupied Territories have voting rights, just the Palestinians do not. This is part of why Israel is described as an apartheid state
― rob, Thursday, 9 May 2024 16:59 (two years ago)
(xp)
― rob, Thursday, 9 May 2024 17:00 (two years ago)
you might find this useful: https://www.972mag.com/gets-vote-israels-democracy-2019/
Pretty sure the Iraqis were not kicked out of their on what is now American territory
― Never fight uphill 'o me, boys! (President Keyes), Thursday, 9 May 2024 17:00 (two years ago)
of their homes
this is probably not the right thread for this discussion but this is a good piece on the inaccess to democratic representation among Palestinians of East Jerusalem: https://www.jerusalemstory.com/en/article/who-represents-palestinians-jerusalem
― symsymsym, Thursday, 9 May 2024 17:01 (two years ago)
Israel is a democracy, but so were apartheid South Africa and the US during Jim Crow. Also, the occupation is coming up on 60 years now. Military invasions don't usually last that long these days, but I'm sure once Israel accomplishes the objectives of the Six-Day War they'll be ending the occupation any minute now
― symsymsym, Thursday, 9 May 2024 17:05 (two years ago)
The US invaded Afghanistan and Iraq but we didn't say it made the US less of a democracy. Any democracy in a country is surely always confined to its own borders and not to places it invades and occupies
That is a horrible example given that the US actually has colonies (and a mainland district!) without complete representation in the federal government and limited self-government. DC and Puerto Rico (among others) do make the US 'less of a democracy' than it could and should be.
― papal hotwife (milo z), Thursday, 9 May 2024 17:05 (two years ago)
the problem is considering democracy a binary state
― rob, Thursday, 9 May 2024 17:09 (two years ago)
I should clarify as it may not have come across properly but I'm opposed to both invasions and occupations, this isn't to defend Israel.
I understand about the settlers, we see a similar dynamic in Crimea too, but I think democratic rights are usually categorised about what is within a countries actual borders not when they're invading someone else's. The problem is the invading and the occupying, which is bad.
Lots of countries allow citizens living outside their borders to vote, but plenty don't allow that. We don't factor that into whether we consider a country democratic or not though
― anvil, Thursday, 9 May 2024 17:12 (two years ago)
is this true? I think its fairly well established there are lots of what might be classified as hybrid regimes, Turkey, Hungary, possibly the US
― anvil, Thursday, 9 May 2024 17:13 (two years ago)
Maybe the difference you’re not seeing is that Gaza is not just a country that Israel is occupying but the result of an ethnic cleansing
― Never fight uphill 'o me, boys! (President Keyes), Thursday, 9 May 2024 17:17 (two years ago)
Like the Palestinians should be where Israel is
― Never fight uphill 'o me, boys! (President Keyes), Thursday, 9 May 2024 17:18 (two years ago)
democracy feels like a red herring here since there are no real democracies at the level of the state at best there are more and less democratic tendencies. it's not binary but if we want to consider bourgeois democracies with partial voting rights for bourgeois parties democratic it doesn't mean very much
re: ethnic cleansing in christian europe it's still happening constantly both directly and as outsourced to africa, the middle east, the ocean...
also germany has no right to exist and should have been abolished long ago
― Left, Thursday, 9 May 2024 17:25 (two years ago)
I think democratic rights are usually categorised about what is within a countries actual borders not when they're invading someone else's
Israel's invasion of the West Bank took place in 1967, it's not an active proposition. And the question of what Israel's "actual borders" are is really what this all boils down to.
― symsymsym, Thursday, 9 May 2024 17:28 (two years ago)
RIght, but lets say Israel called it quits tomorrow and decided no longer to occupy either the West Bank or Gaza, would you then consider Israel to be a democracy?
― anvil, Thursday, 9 May 2024 17:29 (two years ago)
does it matter
― Left, Thursday, 9 May 2024 17:30 (two years ago)
Israel's invasion of the West Bank took place in 1967, it's not an active proposition.
This is a stronger point, but I'd still say ending the occupation should be a major goal here, but yes indefinite occupations without formal annexation complicates answer
― anvil, Thursday, 9 May 2024 17:31 (two years ago)
Lots of countries allow citizens living outside their borders to vote, but plenty don't allow that.
Israel allows all its citizens living in the West Bank to vote, but not any citizens living abroad, or even visiting another country. There is no absentee voting (with an exception for active duty military).
Practically speaking the West Bank is considered part of Israel for its Jewish residents, but not for its Arab residents.
― symsymsym, Thursday, 9 May 2024 17:33 (two years ago)
I'm not sure. I think to an extent yes, I think ending the occupations are less ambiguous goals and more manageable goals and should be disentangled from the question of whether Israel should exist at all (which has lower levels of support)
― anvil, Thursday, 9 May 2024 17:33 (two years ago)