| > Israel came to Palestine, not the other way around. Palestine wasn't ever an independent state. Israel was formed by the division of a British Mandate. > If someone took over your home, and offered even 90% of it to you, and invader keeps 10%, you would reject it. Jews immigrated often by purchasing land in the region from landowners(often absentee) and then sometimes evicting the tenants, so it's a bit more complex. Characterizing it as a foreign invasion is somewhat misleading, Palestinians also rejected the UN partition plan and started a war to try and remove all the Jews as well, with many Jews subsequently being driven from their homes throughout the middle east, so it's not like they have any other homes to go back to either. Being on the losing side of a war also tends to result in people losing land/homes in any case, I have grandparents that lost their home due to living in country that was on the losing side of a war as well and they made no attempts to get their homes/land back at all, sometimes you just have to move on. > Hopefully we can get rid of the evil parts of both governments, and make a new single state for everyone. This is basically unworkable from both sides for various reasons. Israel will essentially never give up their Jewish majority by giving citizenship to all Palestinians, especially given the security threats to Jews historically. That's one reason a two state solution is widely considered the only viable option. > All peace interested parties can be a part of the new government, ridding Netanyahu/Hamas types from the process. This seems pretty unlikely to ever work in practice, at least not without massive changes in opinions amongst both Palestinians and Israelis. > Also by any chance if you have a response to the Netanyahu quote I gave. What about it? I'm not much of a fan of Netanyahu in general for various reasons, but Israel is a democracy so he can be replaced. |
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Irgun_attacks