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Politics : Right Wing Extremist Thread -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: calgal who wrote (15806)9/6/2001 11:36:16 AM
From: calgal  Respond to of 59480
 
Political rule of thumb: If Jesse and the Canadians disapprove, it's the right thing to do

Michael Kelly

jewishworldreview.com -- DELEGATIONS from around the world have been meeting in Durban, South Africa, under the auspices of the United Nations for something called the World Conference Against Racism. From such a grand title, one might expect the conference to address all racism in all nations. One might think this, that is, if one was ignorant of the track record of these U.N. conferences, which have a long new-left history of serving as forums for the ritual whacking of the United States and its allies -- above all for whacking one ally in particular: Israel.

Going into this year's conference it was clear that Israel once again would enjoy most favored nation whacking status. President Bush warned against this, and his administration underscored this warning by declining to send Secretary of State Colin Powell, opting instead for a delegation of second-tier diplomats.

The conference lived down to expectations, producing a draft resolution filled with what Powell properly called "hateful language" that singled out "only one country in the world, Israel, for censure and abuse." Specifically, the resolution expressed the conference's "deep concern" over the "racist practices of Zionism . . . as well as the emergence of racial and violent movements based on racism and discriminatory ideas, in particular the Zionist movement, which is based on racial superiority."

So Israel walked out, and so did the United States. And then, of course, came the usual chorus of carping, tut-tutting and deep regretting. Pakistan's foreign minister said he was disappointed in the U.S. action. Sweden's deputy industry minister said the United States "left the conference far too early, before the negotiations were concluded." Italy's La Stampa newspaper warned that the U.S. walkout "marks the beginning of a new Cold War." A spokesman for the Pan-Malaysian Islamic Party called the Bush decision "a gross mistake." Canada's chief delegate said the pullout "undoubtedly makes the work being undertaken in Durban that much more difficult." U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan said the U.S. decision was "unfortunate." Jesse Jackson, the chief delegate of the delegation from Jesse Jackson, said that the United States "should negotiate a change, not withdraw and run."

This could go on forever. Actually, it has gone on forever, and it will go on forever. Which is precisely why walking out was such a good and necessary idea. This may sound like mere jingoism -- if Jesse Jackson and the Canadians disapprove, it's the right thing to do. But the case for walking is actually one on the merits. It works.

It works, first of all, in the short term. In Durban, all efforts by the polite European friends of Yasser Arafat failed dismally. Arafat himself delivered a speech -- after Jackson had boasted of his influence in moderating Arafat's views -- accusing Israel of "a supremacist mentality." The draft resolution that prompted the American and Israeli walkout represented a complete rejection of all efforts to persuade the Israel-haters to tone down the rhetoric.

Then George Bush, the impolite president (you know, my dear, he is a unilateralist) yanked the U.S. delegation home. What has been the result? For starters, the European Union nations, seeing a splendid opportunity to score off Bush and the United States, have led a drive to "salvage" the conference by forcing a return to the negotiating table and a rewriting of the resolution. If this succeeds, the Europeans will get the satisfaction of reprising the Kyoto morality play ("Noble Europeans Rescue Grateful World from Mud-Stupid U.S. President") and the conference will pass a resolution that is acceptable in basic terms of fairness and honesty. That's an okay outcome.

If the new effort fails, the conference will fall apart, the Europeans will get the satisfaction of once more denouncing the mud-stupidity of Bush, and no resolution will be passed. That's an okay outcome too. Either way, thanks to Bush's rude resolve, the immensely counterproductive resolution that had been on the table will have been killed and its supporters will have suffered a major poke in the eye.

In the long term, walking out is likewise to the good. It is not healthy for the forces of anti-Westernism and anti-Americanism to be allowed to persist in the idea that it is their proper role to whack the West, and that the West's proper role is to sit there and take the whacking. It is healthy for the United States, as the leader of the West, to occasionally remind everyone that taking a hike is an option too. An occasional reminder of reality helps against the delusions of power that cause most wars. As George Bush might put it, guns don't kill people, delusions do.

One particularly dangerous delusion held by a surprising number of people in the Middle East is that Israel will one day be forced to its knees -- and that America will let that happen. This week, in Durban, that delusion confronted reality.
jewishworldreview.com



To: calgal who wrote (15806)9/6/2001 11:58:15 AM
From: haqihana  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 59480
 
Westi,

I have a, what may be considered stupid, question. The Arabs, and a lot of other people, are claiming that Israel is practicing racial discrimination against the Palestinians, who are of the Arab society. Since both the Jews, and the Arabs, are Semites, how can there be "racial" discrimination? They can call it theological, ideological, or political but, in truth, they can not call it racial.

~;=;o --haqi



To: calgal who wrote (15806)9/6/2001 12:06:12 PM
From: TimF  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 59480
 
Mare's nest in Durban
William F. Buckley, Jr.

townhall.com

The tangle in Durban, South Africa,
reflects the centripetalization of
problems and sorrows and
dilemmas in faraway places when the
United Nations comes to town.

The problem of U.S. involvement:

In 1973, I was a delegate to the United
Nations and wrote a book about my
experiences there, remarking that the
General Assembly had developed into the
most concentrated font of anti-Semitism in
the world.

In 1975, the U.S. ambassador to the U.N.
defied the vote equating Zionism with
racism by large histrionic gestures, but the
vote carried and wasn't diluted until years
later; now it's up for reissuance.

In 1977, philosopher/strategist James
Burnham, writing in National Review,
proposed that President Carter instruct his
delegate to the United Nations to suspend
voting on any motion by the General
Assembly. The American representative,
Burnham counseled, should continue to
argue in the Assembly, to cajole, to wage
diplomacy, to exhort. Just don't vote.
Why? Because if you do vote, you become
a constituent part of the plebiscitary
mechanism. If the vote, Zionism equals
racism, is passed 99-to-1, the lone
dissenter has vested a greater authority in
the vote than if it passed 99-to-0, the
dissenter declining to participate in the
vote.

The administration's decision not to send
Secretary of State Colin Powell to Durban
was an attempt precisely to diminish the parliamentary
leverage of the impending negative vote. The ensuing
decision, to withdraw even our second-level representatives,
reaffirmed that withdrawal from the scene, but only after
clumsy footwork.

The Israelis may not be vulnerable to the charge of racism,
but are certainly vulnerable to the charge of apartheid. The
aggressive maintenance of their settlements in the West
Bank, which are the cause of suppurating collisions with the
Palestinian world, such as it is, day after day, cannot be
defended. They are arrant ventures in a kind of Israeli
irredentism that fractures arrangements and
accommodations, after wars and diplomacy dating back to
1948. The United States is better off not voting on the
apartheid issue, reserving its strength and prestige for
renewed efforts aimed at settlement.

The introduction into the Durban scene of demands by
blacks, including American blacks, for reparations heightens
the noncredibility of a conference ostensibly designed to
mitigate racial problems:

In an ideal world, differences in race or ethnic background
would nowhere be remarked. Such differences are less now
than when the United Nations was founded, but progress is
slowed when surrealistic claims are asserted. The idea that
the United States, 2001, should affirm its attachment to racial
equality by "compensating" blacks for slavery that ended 150
years ago is will-o'-the-wisp stuff: ideological candy, it could
be dismissed as, but this candy is spiked.

Any American who has one toe in the door of reality knows
that the $10 trillion (that is one figure that has been
suggested as appropriate) is not going to be appropriated by
Congress to make up for the sins of "Uncle Tom's Cabin."
Ten trillion is a nice round figure, equal, incidentally, to the
value of everything produced in America in one year. The
point here is less that reparations, so called, are not going to
be made, as that to admit oratory calling for such reparations
has the effect of consigning the work of the United Nations at
its Durban meeting into utter irrelevance.

Now there is a sense in which this suits the purposes of an
administration that signified its attitude toward what
impended at Durban by announcing that Colin Powell would
not go there. If this was to be a conference of nations
committed to declaring that there was no difference between
Zionism and racism, let their irresponsibility be dramatized
even further by providing hospitality to people declaring that
the United States has to compensate for
great-great-grandparents who bought slaves, leaving moot
who is supposed to compensate for the sins of those who
sold the slaves.

The Cold War is over, and for that reason the United Nations
poses less of a threat than it once did. But we are a member
of a Security Council in which the People's Republic of China
exercises veto power over major enterprises. The fiasco in
Durban reminds us, or should remind us, that the
administration should give something more than merely ad
hoc thought to the matter of our dealings with the United
Nations. A major contribution to this would be to adopt the
Burnham reform: I.e, we will do everything to help the U.N.,
participating fully in its parliamentary life, but will decline to
cast votes. Or be bound by them.