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Category Archives: FTAC – From The Awesome Conversation

If — in my own head — I hit a universal note just about right in Facebook or other conversation, I may simply wrench it from context and publish it here in this category as a mix of observation and, I hope, a writer’s wisdom.

FTAC – “We’ll Wind Up Helping One Another.”

20 Thursday Feb 2014

Posted by commart in A Little Wisdom, Conflict - Culture - Language - Psychology, FTAC - From The Awesome Conversation, Islamic Small Wars, Political Psychology, Politics

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political, political psychology, politics

While we figure out how language sustains conflict in the head (and perhaps catch up or re-read — in my case — Benny Morris or Efraim Karsh), perhaps it’s time to transform the Hamas and Fatah sense of civilizational mission in a way that serves rather than ravages their respective communities. 1948, 1967, 1973, the First Intifada, the Second Intifada — these were not about justice but the elimination of Jewry.

The middle east conflict is not the only conflict in the world; X vs Muslim (Burma, Congo) is not the only cultivated paradigm for conflict — nor is ambitious monotheist succession such a great cause for humanity overall, although I like this “one God” thing.

Let’s stop this fighting here.

Five virtues might help with our nurturing our developing global society: compassion, empathy, humility, inclusion, integrity. Dictators and wealthy narcissists use the image of identification with those values to manipulate their followers (track Assad on that, or Robert Mugabe), but they don’t really embrace them. We, however, might and we’ll wind up helping one another.

The wisdom is probably old, but the act of writing includes the writer’s rediscovery of old standbys and themes.

The same words may be incanted by way of the top of the column to the left of this article.

They’re their to help create a world in which a common soul may know what is going on around him with some reliability born of the dignity of being spoken to honestly.

The inspiration for the note was a thread sidetracked toward the middle east conflict, and on Facebook there are plenty of hate-peace peace groups, and some collegial peace groups, and some anti-Semitic peace groups: a place for everyone at the git-go!  One hopes, however, for fewer of the hateful — and of the hateful to anyone — over time.

As suggested by this blog, what we call bigotry or prejudice may be a function of earliest language uptake and, for each language culture, the manner of listening (programming) conveyed from one generation to another — some ears obey all; some question all — and then norms and ambitions supplied (scripting) to those ears.

One does not “win” in the world by leaving himself exclusive and isolated in it.

There is in that the tragedy of the “malignant narcissist”.

Some cultures having derived cultural self-concept along similar patterns may lead themselves to similar suffering.  By person, place, state, and region, may we turn that inclination away from ourselves, collectively, worldwide.

# # #

FTAC – A Note on Russia’s Resurgent Security State

20 Thursday Feb 2014

Posted by commart in Conflict - Culture - Language - Psychology, FTAC - From The Awesome Conversation, Political Psychology, Political Spychology, Politics

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FSB, gay, Norway, Putin, Russia, security state, Sochi, XXL

Putin is so good, he has got the world focused on Snowden and the NSA rather than his revived “mafia state” and the immense redevelopment and redirection of the KGB beneath the banner FSB: “There are more SVR/FSB personnel per capita in today’s Russia than during the period of the Soviet Empire, and there are at least as many SVR officers in the US today as there were KGB officers during the Cold War.” http://www.cicentre.com/?page=191

For the bookish: http://www.theguardian.com/books/2010/sep/25/new-nobility-restoration-russia-security

The inspiration: Sochi Winter Olympics – freedom of information left out in the cold – Reporters Without Borders – 2/6/2014: “A Norwegian TV crew detained six times in three days and questioned about its sources . . . .” –>

A Norwegian firm appears to have bagged gold for the sexiest Olympic advert ever with this stirring video.

Sportswear sellers XXL All Sports United launched a thinly veiled attack on Russia’s anti-gay laws with their sexy ‘Airport Love’ ad.

Norwegian Sochi advert video: Hilarious winter olympics advert shows athletes try to tempt sexy seductress – who turns out to be a lesbian – Mirror Online – 2/13/2014.

Olympic Commercial From Norway Is The Greatest Ever | Sexy ad – YouTube – 2/11/2014.

Cute.

Related: More Gay Olympic Ads from Norway | LAKE EFFECT | LOS ANGELES – 2/8/2014.  Also:

During the last weeks, three big companies in Norway has released lgbt-related campaigns

First was the national lottery with their “out of the closet”-video, and then Stormberg gave two days of income from their website (aprox. 18 000 Euro) to the Russian project for the national lgbt organisation. And now the sport company XXL released this one

During the last weeks, three big companies in… – EuroPride Oslo 2014 – 2/10/2014.

* * *

As an instrument for narcissistic control and manipulation, Putin’s 400,000-strong post-KGB security apparatus (191: Russia’s SVR/FSB/GRU Intelligence Services – CI CENTRE) may have played some games of its own beside the Sochi games.

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FTAC Guest Post – Aboud Dandachi – “Appeasing Assad; Why Jeffrey Sachs is so Very Wrong”

18 Tuesday Feb 2014

Posted by commart in Conflict - Culture - Language - Psychology, FTAC - From The Awesome Conversation, Islamic Small Wars, Middle East, Political Psychology, Politics, Regions, Syria

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Aboud Dandachi, bashar al assad, dictators, dictatorship, diplomacy, Jeffrey Sachs, political, political science, politics, Syria

Assad is a man who has proven himself utterly incapable of formulating any sort of vision to move the country beyond its current troubles. His approach to every problem has been to resort to increasingly horrendous levels of violence.

______

I may one day write an article titled, “The Six Hundred Very Cool People You Meet on Facebook”, but not today.  

You have been spared, possibly less so, however, than the author of the following opinion piece: Aboud Dandachi, who writes from Istanbul, escaped Homs, Syria just this past September. 

______

The Huffington Post recently published an article by Jeffrey Sachs, Director of the Earth Institute at Columbia University calling for the United States and the international community to drop its demand that Assad relinquish power, viewing it as the main reason the conflict has dragged on for so long. On Twitter, Sachs has elaborated on his viewpoint, claiming that all Bashar Assad wants is to preserve his rule, and that if the Syrian people just surrendered and acquiesced to living under thirty more years of his family’s tyranny, then the terrible bloodshed in Syria would stop overnight.

On a practical level, there are two main problems with Sachs’s suggestion that the Syrian people surrender to Assad so as to spare themselves anymore of his bloody repression. First, Sachs commits the cardinal sin that so many other “anti-establishment” Lefists have committed when talking about Syria; ridiculously exaggerating and inflating the USA’s role and influence on events in Syria.

Second, Sachs seems to be oblivious to the fact that some towns and villages in the country did indeed try exactly what he is suggesting, the foremost being my own hometown of Telkelakh. Today, ninety percent of its inhabitants have been made refugees, scattered all over the region, the fallout from a truce the regime blatantly broke in the summer of 2013.

In his article, Sachs makes the astonishing assumption that if only the United States publicly and clearly dropped its demand that Assad step down, that policy change would somehow have any sort of effect on the ground inside Syria. Sachs seems to believe that the opposition, made up of numerous disparate groups, is somehow waiting upon Washington for guidance on when to start and stop their rebellion against the Assad tyranny.

In reality, the United States has not contributed a single bullet to the rebels’ war effort. Indeed, Barack Obama has even gone so far as to prevent America’s regional allies from providing the rebels with the kind of anti-aircraft and anti-tank weaponry that would have neutralized Assad’s air superiority and advantage in armor. Today, the United States could cut off what trickle of monetary aid it does provide to a limited selection of rebel brigades, and it would have absolutely no effect whatsoever on the fighting capabilities of the opposition groups in general, the vast majority of whom receive nothing from the USA.

Contrary to the Left’s frenzied assertions of an American policy hell bent on regime change at any cost, America’s approach has been very inconsistent and haphazard when it came to Syria. Far from being at the forefront of the efforts to depose Assad, Barack Obama has been exactly the kind of weak, timid, indecisive American president that Assad could not possibly have hoped for in his wildest dreams.

Assuming that lives in a conflict will be spared if one party just surrendered to the other, is to depend on the good intentions and humanity of the conflict’s victor. Germany and Japan could surrender to the Allies in World War Two safe in the knowledge that there would be no mass reprisals in the aftermath of their defeat. What happened, however, to the communities of the countries that surrendered to Germany and Japan? Two words; concentration camps.

Sachs’ second major mistake was to assume that in three years of brutal war, some city or town in opposition to the regime did not at some point try exactly what he is suggesting. We have adequate precedents that illustrate exactly how the regime treats the areas it has reconquered, and they amply demonstrate the sheer absurdity of Sachs’ view that acquiescence to the Assad regime’s tyranny would stop the killing.

I have written before at length on what happened when my home town of Telkelakh attempted a truce with the regime in early 2013. It was a truce that was set up exactly along the lines that Sachs suggests. CNN even visited the town and loudly trumpeted it as a possible template for similar truces throughout the country.

And yet as a means to save lives, it failed miserably. From February to June, dozens of people in the town died from regime sniping and shelling. Relatives of fighters were arrested at the checkpoints surrounding the town. Finally, when the regime felt strong enough to retake Telkelakh in the wake of its conquest of Qusair, the army and Hizbollah invaded the town. Thirty rebel fighters who had surrendered on promises from regime representatives that their lives would be spared were never heard from again.

The regime’s behavior in other areas it has reconquered has been no less atrocious. Human Rights Watch has extensively documented the regime’s demolition of entire neighborhoods in Hama and Damascus that were in opposition to it. Thousands of homes were razed by the regime in areas it reconquered, in a horrendous display of mass punishment. Such punitive actions on the part of the regime on areas it had reconquered, and where all opposition to it had been extinguished, pretty much makes a complete mockery of Sachs’ assertions that the Syrian people have nothing to worry about if they only just surrendered themselves to Assad’s rule.

Sachs goes on to make another outlandish assertion, that political change from within Syria will more likely to lead to regime change than an armed conflict would. Sachs cites two examples; Myanmar, and Poland in 1989.

Oh dear, where do I begin. Sachs seems to deem the ongoing genocide in Myanmar against the minority Muslim Rohingya community to be irrelevant to the point he is trying to make. Poland in 1989 benefited from the reformist tendencies of Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, who by that time wasn’t prepared to keep propping Eastern European client dictatorships with the USSR’s military might. If the Poles had tried in 1979 what they did in 1989, their political awakening would have been crushed under the tracks of Soviet tanks. In three years of the worst conflict in the country’s history, the regime of Bashar Assad has not once displayed the slightest capacity or capability for reforming itself.

There is no Gorbachev to be found within Assad. The post-war occupations of Japan and Germany transformed those societies because there was a vision in place for their reformation. Assad is a man who has proven himself utterly incapable of formulating any sort of vision to move the country beyond its current troubles. His approach to every problem has been to resort to increasingly horrendous levels of violence. Sachs actually thinks Assad is capable of allowing the sort of political awakening that happened in Poland? This is a man who today flings barrel bombs on Syrian cities like a monkey would throw feces around its cage. No, for the foreseeable future, in Syria, the only way to remove a bloody dictator is to kill him or have him die of old age.

In proposing ways of ending the conflict, Sachs puts the onus on the USA to change its policy towards the Assad regime, making only passing reference to Iran and Hizbollah’s massive aid to the Assad tyranny. Sachs, like so many Lefists, has got it so very backwards. If America cut off what little aid it sends to rebel groups, it would have no affect whatsoever on the conflict. And yet if Iran and Hizbollah withdrew their support for Assad, the regime would collapse within a matter of months.

What Jeffrey Sachs is calling for is appeasement, and it is the habit of appeasers to sanitize and whitewash the true intentions of those they hope to appease. Why fight Assad, the argument goes, all he wants is to preserve his rule.

Yes, why fight Hitler? All he wants is the Sudetenland. If Jeffrey Sachs had been around in 1938, Munich would have been exactly the kind of deal he would have written in favor of.

# # #

FTAC – The Not-So-New World of War

17 Monday Feb 2014

Posted by commart in Conflict - Culture - Language - Psychology, FTAC - From The Awesome Conversation, Politics

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conflict, political, politics, war, warfare

Israel wishes noncombatants no harm. As Hezbollah has used the same to shield weapons and war materiel, the provocation for preemptive action would have to be imminent.

Note: we may be also in a new age of warfare, one in which the tonnage of weapons owned may be modified by a host of systems, arrangements of humans and machines, in the path of their deployment. As we may no longer live in a world in which we may wait on open hostilities, we are a world constantly at war and engaged with one another in contests off the surface record.

The inspiration had to do with an IDF depiction of threat posed by Hezbollah.  The correspondent on the thread had suggested a preemptive strike, but, as noted above, not so fast: fighting on the surface may be inappropriate when many other methods, tactics, and strategies have developed — or have been invited to develop — by way of the changing character of conflicted societies as well as changes in war fighting made possible by changes brought to the character of the content of armories.

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FTAC – On Integrity in Language – Islamic Small Wars

04 Tuesday Feb 2014

Posted by commart in Conflict - Culture - Language - Psychology, FTAC - From The Awesome Conversation, Islamic Small Wars, Philology

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Islam, Islamic Small Wars, ISW, messianic, mission, political, politics, religion, tolerance

The de facto global state of affairs involves a conflict-ridden cultural polyphony — many peoples living in proximity — with disproportionate warfare experienced in and around Islam. Not the only conflict nexus (by far), it’s confusion well relates to how information and perception work when used wrongly, as with lying or deceit, or for wrong purposes.

Last month, more than 900 souls lost their lives in Iraq in direct relation to fighting over belief and governance.

That has to stop.

The only way to get it to stop is to get under the language drivers that excuse, motivate, or promote ideas that would seem not to be working very well or not at all (aside: some 34,000 Iraqi families have been displaced recently in relation to the ISIS presence in Fallujah).

The thread topic was about lying and featured a list detailing the many ways.  The comment came up when a participant praised the character of those who believed in God and in the Day of Judgment.

And everyone else?

Citing Daniel Everett’s experience, I asked “Who are we to judge?”

Beneath that, one might ask — and best that something of a narcissist familiar with narcissism as a dimension in psychology ask its — how special is anyone, really, or any collection of persons?  And on what basis?  Merit and “meritocracy” or “meritocratic” behavior and systems have some sway in the west, but with peace, even accomplishment need not be an end-all or cause (or excuse) for the impositions of “social Darwinism”.

Goodness counts too.

Or devoted atheists and secularists would not ask do often, “Do you need God to be good?”

In the United States, the “ethical unions” obtain the nonprofit status of other religious organizations: that is, even separate from faith in divine existence, the embrace of a way in living, of a philosophy of living, constitutes investment in religion.  The messianic urge to drive everyone to believe in God and Judgment Day has strength yet in Islam but not so much as it may have had once in Christianity and not much at all in Judaism even though Jews themselves very much believe in God, secular-appearing though they may seem.

Aside here: the Torah does not being with a statement about language, mankind, or power: it begins with a statement about God and the universe.

Add earth, some weather, life — a pretty good stage.

Then, finally, we get something earthly, like a garden, and talk, which is immediately true and not true, rather disingenuous in fact, as regards Eve’s dying after eating of the fruit of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil (she does die — and she doesn’t: she becomes human, aware, self-aware, and possessed of conscience).

The humans are human in Torah and if possessed momentarily of magical abilities, it’s with knowing full well that God is doing the miracle, not themselves.

Here on earth, humans are human too, and perhaps the more we appreciate that and deal with the exuberance of nature in human nature and its variety in the development and expression of culture and mind, the better for all and, gosh, the planet.

Additional Reference, Quite Scattered

Not in any particular order:

FTAC – Singing “Hatikva” On the Way to the “Showers” | BackChannels – 10/29/2012.

Felix Adler (professor) – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Abraham Maslow – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Thomas Berry

Pierre Teilhard de Chardin – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Varieties of Religious Experience – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Joseph Campbell – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Joseph Campbell Foundation

God Is Red: A Native View of Religion – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Vine Deloria, Jr. – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

American Transcendentalism Web

Comparative religion – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Add the scholarship of any language to the western complement and the universe of the global scholarly mind may expand exponentially.

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FTAC – Syria’s Displaced Middle Temperament

02 Sunday Feb 2014

Posted by commart in Conflict - Culture - Language - Psychology, FTAC - From The Awesome Conversation, Islamic Small Wars, Politics

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conflict, political, politics, Syria

The UN is an incredibly conservative organization: it wants things returned to the way they were three years ago or more than six decades ago.

Fortunately, Syria is done.

Assad will never get it back; Islamic Jihad will never get it.

Someone needs to wake up to the idea that Syria’s six to eight million internally displaced and refugee have an inherent right to regain their land, and should that include the development of a peaceful buffer with Israel . . . . 🙂 It’s not so easy, I know, but it would make more sense if the greater of the fighting ranks, state military and revolutionary forces, were to draw (had drawn, would now draw) from the middle of the society displaced or trapped between similarly malignant and anachronistic powers.

Toward the end of last week, I suggested a re-think on the part of President Bashar al-Assad’s “coup proof” military: if there’s any humanity left in, it alone could negotiate a strategy with General Idris, whom it knows well, depose the dictator, fend off the al-Qaeda affiliates, reform or update (in a good way) Hezbollah, tell Putin and the Ayatollah both how the New Syria is going to be, make peace with Israel, now that Israel has provided more than 700 Syrians with emergency medical services (and returned them incognito to Syria), and forge a genuinely new path into the global future.

Wishful thinking.

The inspiration for it: Israel enmeshed in complex Syrian refugee crisis | JPost | Israel News – 2/2/2014.

If there world worked right, some kind of refugee region and buffer would form along Israel’s defense line under — this is the hard part — Israeli suzerainty while the Syrian Civil War continues.  The population would then become a de factor protectorate with extraordinary benefits.

The fact of the matter is that everything about the Syrian Civil War, from the collapse into chaos and sadism of the old Soviet political architecture, now post-Soviet, to the incursion by the al-Qaeda affiliates and seduced adolescent and early post-adolescent boys and girls, is indeed anachronistic and malignant.

Not one inch of either is working for good and legitimate ends, nor will they.

It seems like only yesterday that Syrians dared complain to the Assad regime about the state of their economy.

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FTAC – A Comment on Yarmouk Camp and Turkish Airstrike Against ISIS

30 Thursday Jan 2014

Posted by commart in Conflict - Culture - Language - Psychology, FTAC - From The Awesome Conversation, Islamic Small Wars, Middle East, Syria

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ethics, humanism, morality, obligation, political, politics, Syria, Yarmouk Camp

You have asked a difficult question. The sentimental guidance offered by Hillel the Elder seems insufficient in the face of immense suffering, not only in Syria, but in Burma (genocide targeting a tribal Muslim people), in Congo (the land of child slaves and child soldiers), and a thousand other places (probably fewer, but still, it’s pretty bad): “If I am not for myself, who will be for me? If I am not for others, what am I?”

What is our humanity? What is our obligation as regards the humanity of others?

Gaza officialdom may bleat, hate, and whine about Zionists, but Gaza business and labor and basic service providers work every day with Israel in the interests of commerce and development.

Jews go everywhere — even to the other side, lol — where need exists.

With everyone else, we / Jews / Israel are helping Syrians with emergency medicine and supplies — not leading the pack (I don’t know who is) but there even with a minimum of recognition.

The remaining residents of the Yarmouk Camp, kept separated from Syrian, used as tools for some future Arab war of annihilation to erase Jewry and Judaism (the better to claim originality for Islam, I guess), are starving — being made to starve — between armies. What did they — now women, children, and old men — do to deserve or bring on that fate?

No one has intervened militarily in Yarmouk Camp because no one outside of the Syrian conflict knows how to play a rescue operation, much less coordinate one with so many parties ringside.

In 2007, Lebanese Defense Forces managed to evacuate Nahr al-Bared, another refugee “camp”, by checking through residents at one gate and busing them away to another camp. By agreement with other Arab states, they were forbidden to enter Nahr al-Bared, so they got the residents out, left the foreign fighters in, and using tanks razed the entire city, once of 30,000 souls, to the ground — and then they bombed what was left of resistance in tunnels.

Yarmouk? It’s like watching people drown and no one can get through the sharks surrounding them to save them.

Since day one of live fire, Syrians on the receiving end — now millions either dead, maimed, displaced, or refugee — have begged the world for help, and the great politicians surrounding have played like gamblers at a felt table: one wants things to be as they were, primarily because the money was very good with the way things were — and it’s still very good with the way things are; another wants a moderate messianic miracle, i.e., an Arab democracy, capitalist, open, and in love with Israel.

Some 130,000 casualties later plus six million souls robbed of their former lives and their businesses, jobs, and homes, business seems to be booming around the care of the victims of war, not that it’s making money, but it seems easier delivering tents, clothing, food, and water, and some medicine to those bereft than it does producing sufficient international cooperation to remove Assad, shut down the al-Qaeda affiliates, and freeze Syria (no pun intended) into a state (of existence) approachable for constitutional and physical reconstruction.

* * *

In an unprecedented incident yesterday, Wednesday, Turkish jets attacked a Jihadist convoy on Syrian soil after 2 of their own military vehicles had been fired upon near the Turkish/Syrian border.

The incident happened near the Cobanbey border crossing in the south of Turkey. The jets reportedly destroyed a pick-up, a truck and a bus all belonging to the extreme Jihadist group Islamic State of Iraq and Levant (ISIL or ISIS). There were no casualties on the Turkish side.

IN UNPRECEDENTED MOVE TURKISH JETS DESTROY ISIS CONVOY IN SYRIA AFTER ITS MILITARY COMES UNDER FIRE | altahrir, news of Islam, Muslims, Arab Spring and special Palestine; SYRIA NEWS | Peter Clifford Online – 1/30/2014.

I don’t know whose using money to sew so much chaos in the middle east, but now pressured by an immense refugee challenge, the want to get at its sources all around may be quite high.

It appears yesterday’s strike by Turkey involved a clear tit-for-tat exchange of fire, but the Turkish military, which has traded with Israel for its hardware, more a while ago, I’m sure less today, and has NATO cooperation in the region, is the more formidable power.

Perhaps the Turks have also had enough of “spillover” from Syria’s civil war.

Additional Reference

Israel ‘cuts arms sales to Turkey’ – UPI.com – 4/26/2010.

Israel supplies Turkey with military equipment for first time since Gaza flotilla – Diplomacy & Defense Israel News | Haaretz – 2/18/2013.

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FTAC – Syria’s Agony and Related Misperception

19 Sunday Jan 2014

Posted by commart in Conflict - Culture - Language - Psychology, FTAC - From The Awesome Conversation, Islamic Small Wars, Jordan, Lebanon, Middle East, Politics, Psychology, Syria

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commentary, Jordan, Lebanon, middle east, Palestinian refugees, political psychology, politics, relief, starvation, Syria, Yarmouk

No. It’s a mess. Back in 2007, by prior agreement with the Arab League, Lebanese Defense Forces were denied entry into the Nahr al-Bared camp to suppress the presence of an independent but al-Qaeda-minded force that had infiltrated the camp. Instead, it bombarded the camp with tank fire, corralled the entire residential population through the main gates, and the bused them to other camps. The LDF then razed Nahr al-Bared. Toward the very end, a handful of family members surrendered, and escaped, and the remnant fighters holed up in tunnels were, finally, bombed from the air.

My impression is the wealthy enjoy extraordinary wealth in the middle east and the equivalent of fellaheen live primarily at the mercy of the powerful. The common thread of “malignant narcissism” that binds both despot and mad revolutionaries into one recognizable category applies well to the tragedy unfolding in the Yarmouk camp. If anyone has ever been sickened by the historic photographs of starving Nazi concentration camp residents, the same outrage should apply in light of starvation in the Palestinian camp, even thought in their confined minds they may blame the Jews for what’s being done to them by Assad’s army and the infiltration and partial control of the opposed al-Qaeda affiliates. To the warring parties, the humanity trapped in the camp is but a useful poker chip. These kids may one day understand that it hasn’t been the Jews of the west that has been killing them but rather the divided powers most identified with them but equally callous toward them and careless of them.

The prompt for the comment had to do with the Yarmouk Palestinian Refugee Camp and its being made to starve between armies.

There has been some relief: Besieged Yarmouk camp in Syria finally gets some food – Middle East Israel News | Haaretz – 1/18/2014: “The delivery was made possible after an agreement was reached on Friday between representatives of Palestinian factions and Syrian rebels in the camp.”

One may imagine the leverage involved in those negotiations.

In the surface rhetoric, the rebels may claim having been merciful, but the public would do well to keep in mind that get to this point, they had had to have been unmerciful, and that neither better nor worse than Assad’s forces attempting to subdue the infiltration within the camp by starvation in the first place.

* * *

To another correspondent asking about the fate of Hamas in Gaza given the mixed ambitions and messages carried forward by its membership, some, I hear, who have joined the rebels against Assad, I suggested the perception of the axis needs to shift in the middle east, maintaining that the fighting-minded on several sides are more similar to one another in their ambitions and expectations — in their essential psychology — than those who have had the misfortune of being caught between armies or of having been trapped in time by regional powers who, indeed, manipulate and treat them primarily as servants unto themselves.

Related Reference

Iran cuts Hamas’ funding for backing Syrian opposition – Washington Times – 6/2/2013.

Egypt to Hamas: We’re Coming for You – Israel Today | Israel News – 1/19/2014.

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Epigram

Hillel the Elder

"That which is distasteful to thee do not do to another. That is the whole of Torah. The rest is commentary. Now go and study."

"If I am not for myself, who will be for me? If I am not for others, what am I? If not now, when?"

"Whosoever destroys a soul, it is considered as if he destroyed an entire world. And whosoever that saves a life, it is considered as if he saved an entire world."

Oriana Fallaci
"Whether it comes from a despotic sovereign or an elected president, from a murderous general or a beloved leader, I see power as an inhuman and hateful phenomenon...I have always looked on disobedience toward the oppressive as the only way to use the miracle of having been born."

Talmud 7:16 as Quoted by Rishon Rishon in 2004
Qohelet Raba, 7:16

אכזרי סוף שנעשה אכזרי במקום רחמן

Kol mi shena`asa rahaman bimqom akhzari Sof shena`asa akhzari bimqom rahaman

All who are made to be compassionate in the place of the cruel In the end are made to be cruel in the place of the compassionate.

More colloquially translated: "Those who are kind to the cruel, in the end will be cruel to the kind."

Online Source: http://www.rishon-rishon.com/archives/044412.php

Abraham Isaac Kook

"The purely righteous do not complain about evil, rather they add justice.They do not complain about heresy, rather they add faith.They do not complain about ignorance, rather they add wisdom." From the pages of Arpilei Tohar.

Heinrich Heine
"Where books are burned, in the end people will be burned." -- From Almansor: A Tragedy (1823).

Simon Wiesenthal
Remark Made in the Ballroom of the Imperial Hotel, Vienna, Austria on the occasion of His 90th Birthday: "The Nazis are no more, but we are still here, singing and dancing."

Maimonides
"Truth does not become more true if the whole world were to accept it; nor does it become less true if the whole world were to reject it."

"The risk of a wrong decision is preferable to the terror of indecision."

Douglas Adams
"Isn't it enough to see that a garden is beautiful without having to believe that there are fairies at the bottom of it too?" Epigram appearing in the dedication of Richard Dawkins' The GOD Delusion.

Thucydides
"The Nation that makes a great distinction between its scholars and its warriors will have its thinking done by cowards and its fighting done by fools."

Milan Kundera
"The struggle of man against power is the struggle of memory against forgetting."

Malala Yousafzai
“The terrorists thought that they would change our aims and stop our ambitions but nothing changed in my life except this: weakness, fear and hopelessness died. Strength, power and courage was born.”

Tanit Nima Tinat
"Who could die of love?"

What I Have Said About the Jews

My people, not that I speak for them, I nonetheless describe as a "global ethnic commune with its heart in Jerusalem and soul in the Land of Israel."

We have never given up on God, nor have we ever given up on one another.

Many things we have given up, but no one misses, say, animal sacrifice, and as many things we have kept, so we have still to welcome our Sabbath on Friday at sunset and to rest all of Saturday until three stars appear in the sky.

Most of all, through 5,773 years, wherever life has taken us, through the greatest triumphs and the most awful tragedies, we have preserved our tribal identity and soul, and so shall we continue eternally.

Anti-Semitism / Anti-Zionism = Signal of Fascism

I may suggest that anti-Zionism / anti-Semitism are signal (a little bit) of fascist urges, and the Left -- I'm an old liberal: I know my heart -- has been vulnerable to manipulation by what appears to me as a "Red Brown Green Alliance" driven by a handful of powerful autocrats intent on sustaining a medieval worldview in service to their own glorification. (And there I will stop).
One hopes for knowledge to allay fear; one hopes for love to overmatch hate.

Too often, the security found in the parroting of a loyal lie outweighs the integrity to be earned in confronting and voicing an uncomfortable truth.

Those who make their followers believe absurdities may also make them commit atrocities.

Positively Orwellian: Comment Responding to Claim that the Arab Assault on Israel in 1948 Had Not Intended Annihilation

“Revisionism” is the most contemptible path that power takes to abet theft and hide shame by attempting to alter public perception of past events.

On Press Freedom, Commentary, and Journalism

In the free world, talent -- editors, graphic artists, researchers, writers -- gravitate toward the organizations that suit their interests and values. The result: high integrity and highly reliable reportage and both responsible and thoughtful reasoning.

This is not to suggest that partisan presses don't exist or that propaganda doesn't exist in the west, but any reader possessed of critical thinking ability and genuine independence -- not bought, not programmed -- is certainly free to evaluate the works of earnest reporters and scholars.

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