Domer, you seem to wish to tie me down with historical burdens and a sociological hypothesis before I even enter the debate. I think my points can stand on their own merit.
Professor, I was widening the scope of your analysis, which was rather narrow and aimed personally at Henny, which seemed unfair.
Sirs, you've got to get over this "Israel is evil" hyperbole. I don't think anyone here has suggested that. The point is that Israel does have apartheid policies in place. You scoff at it because of the name "apartheid" and the connotations that brings, but you've yet to provide any proof to the contrary.
Look at it this way. An citizen of Israel is being denied the right to live in a city based only on the fact that he's an Arab. He isn't too poor to purchase the land in the city. He's a physician and bizarrely enough he treats many of the people from the very city he wishes to move to. He has never been considered a threat by the Israeli Government. He isn't a practicing Muslim, though he comes from a Muslim family.
Now, how do you defend that? That's just one example, but tell me how you defend that as "security." That's not how the mayor or the townspeople defended it.
And you can call it by another name, but it is apartheid, though not the worst example that Israel has.
Does that make the entire nation of Israel evil? No. And you and Domer seem to believe you are crusaders for the Jewish people, but you don't understand that not all Jews are Zionists, and even amongst those who are, not all of them are supportive of such policies as these.
So, while I am being saddled with 2000 years of anti-Semitic behavior and current "evil Israel" sentiments, please no that none of that is true.
It is telling that because I point out a serious injustice in the Israeli Government's treatment of Palestinians and her own citizens that I receive such a backlash.