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Remi -
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Written by Remi Kanazi
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1. The killing of 10 in cold blood in Afghanistan
2. Zionism/Israel/murder
3. Harry Reid
4. The UAE Sheikh found not guilty of brutal torture
5. The Egyptian government
6. The killing of 6 Copts in Egypt
7. Ke$ha
8. Blackwater
9. The new new "war on terror"
10. Our Yemen/Somalia/Honduras policy
11. Barack Obama
12. The treatment of Iranian protesters
13. My sleep cycle
14. The attack on US civil liberties
15. The war in Iraq |
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Remi -
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Written by Remi Kanazi
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The actual Haaretz article reads: Prosecution drops indictment against settler filmed shooting Palestinians. Here’s a little blurb:
The prosecution has announced that it is dropping the indictment against Ze'ev Braude, the West Bank settler who was alleged to have shot two Palestinians at close range during the evacuation of a disputed house in Hebron in December 2008, and was caught on film doing so.
Let’s be honest with ourselves, you are never going to see the headline, “Suicide bomber cleared: Judge says ‘Man had bad day.’” Yet, throwing away the rule of law is part of Israel's assumed means of "survival."
In the US, we are so enamored by the trappings of “conflict resolution,” that we imagine a “conflict” that at best sees two sides with equal grievances. Under Israel/Palestine's current status, it is not a governmental structure setting laws that applies equally to both peoples, but one people that rule over another, inside and outside of Israel's (undefined) borders. Yes, Israelis have a narrative, but it doesn't legitimize it--every dictator or apartheid state had its motivations and swan song, but it doesn't validate its actions.
In reality, you have occupier and occupied; those that implement a system of apartheid and those that suffer its policies. Israel assassinated four people in Gaza today, continues to expand settlements, and shoots non-violent protesters (Palestinian and internationals) too frequently to count. While Israeli liberals will profess their humanistic nature and deliver us introspective cinema 26 years later in the form of Waltz With Bashir, there isn't a present push by these so-called liberals to see justice for the millions of Palestinians who continue to suffer after 42 years of occupation and 61 years of dispossession.
Yet Israel's "progressive" counterparts in America go crazy for an awesomely fantastic speech in Cairo? Not only do we need action and not rhetoric, but we need the right type of action (i.e. a fundamental change in policy, not just blustering about settlements Netanyahu has no plans in tearing down). With Obama at the helm, I am not holding my breath. |
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Remi -
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Written by Remi Kanazi
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*This is my first post. I was going to write a welcoming message introducing everyone to the Poetic Injustice Blog, but I combined it with a post instead. So welcome! Also, we are still tweaking the blog, so I only got functions from 1998 right now, hence the super-advanced formatting below.
A gunman in Central Jerusalem went on a shooting spree, killing one person and wounding another. I read about the incident on Haarertz, which is about as left as you can get in the Israeli mainstream. What jumped out at me while reading the piece was the so-called motives of the gunman. The article states:
////Police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said investigators were considering all motives, including nationalistic, as one of the victims apparently was an Arab.
Nationalistic? Really? If there was an explosion in Tel Aviv tomorrow where a Palestinian man had strapped a bomb to his chest, would it be characterized as a nationalistic bombing? I guess it's one of those funny terms like "natural growth," which is better known as right wing zealots from Brooklyn flying over to illegally squat on Palestinian land. Obscene quote of the day discussing "natural growth" (found on Mondoweiss' blog, which found it on Promised Land's blog--who the hell to I cite?):
/////“The American demand to prevent natural growth is unreasonable, and brings to mind Pharaoh who said: Every son that is born ye shall cast into the river,” Science Minister and Habayit Hayehudi head Daniel Herschkowitz said Sunday. |
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