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by ignoramous
109 days ago
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> This is about the idea that a falsity is "not up for debate". Your assertion that there's "no comparison whatsoever" is of course not, when there's ample. > who isn't here to try to explain himself Lets just say that social norms & experiences drive much of what people believe in. One of Leibowitz's student goes: "I hated the notion of occupation since the very beginning. My first memories from after the 67 war are traveling with my children in the occupied territories. There were awnings over groceries stores with Hebrew lettering advertising Osem noodles. I couldn't bear it. I thought that was dreadful because I remembered German lettering in France. I have very strong feelings about Israel as an occupier."
We can guess what their "very strong feelings" might have been having experienced Nazi occupation of France during WW2.https://www.theguardian.com/books/2015/jul/18/daniel-kahnema... |
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I think you really need to learn more about the eastern front, if you're going to keep making or supporting comparisons based on incomplete knowledge. There is no comparison between the experiences in France and the experiences in Ukraine during WW2. There is a reason why historian Timothy Snyder titled one of his books "Bloodlands".
Gaza is no Leningrad or Stalingrad.