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> > Denying the Jewish people their right to self-determination, e.g., by claiming that the existence of a State of Israel is a racist endeavor. > One does not entail the other. You can support our right to self-determination while not supporting...policies, but this sentence conflates them. Uh...exactly? You're criticizing the state. Per the definition you can do that, but you can't generalize to the people. And certainly, calling the state a "racist endeavor" should cross the line? Basically, all three of your examples boil down to the
same thing: you want to accuse a nation of something bad, and think it’s somehow unfair that, under this definition, you can’t then accuse a people of the act. That isn’t ambiguous. If you did the same thing for, say, Chinese people and the CCP, you’d be equally wrong. Jewish people are not of one mind about current events, and that seems like a fairly obvious point. As far as the third item, specifically, any comparison to the Nazi party is so hyperbolic as to be in obvious bad faith. |