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by kfprt
1699 days ago
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While I'm sure your religious politics are fascinating they are completely irrelevant to US policy as it relates to the USS Liberty incident. The US has nothing to gain by involving ourselves in that quagmire. As a politically exercise I am completely uninterested in such issues. US foreign policy should be blind to them. If Jews want to advocate for the existence of Israel that is fine by me, but they must not do it under an American flag. It is not patriotic to support another country over ones one. I am also disappointed that you do not share the presumption of good faith. |
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I think I clearly stated a non-religious rationale for Israel that I also said I am not convinced of.
How can I interpret the above phrase as if in good faith? Whose politics? What religion? I am not baptized, nor have I taken communion or had a bar mitzvah or anything else similar.
You sound like someone who doesn't understand American politics, and I was trying to help.
Treating this sort of comment as a threat is counterproductive. It's highly relevant to your stated goal of changing US policy to understand the biases and outlook of Americans.
Tactically, you must understand that everything is framed in terms of the right to exist, for a secular audience, not a religious or ethnic appeal. That applies to the Liberty, too.
I guess there's the pro-Israel Christian right, but you can't expect to find them on HN listening to you.
If you don't want to know the truth about your obstacles, you don't believe in your own goal.