London-based writer. Often climbing.

  • 41 Posts
  • 98 Comments
Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: June 29th, 2023

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  • Okay, but, not to be excessively pedantic here, the question was not ‘Are they both kidnappers?’ (which, if a state can be said to kidnap people, then yes, I agree, they are), but ‘Are all the captives hostages?’ which, as I keep saying, is not at all clear.

    But this isn’t even a comparison which makes the Israelis look good! With hostages there’s an implied intent to eventually release them (in exchange for whatever you want to extort). One of the reasons the Palestinians held by the Israelis aren’t hostages is that Israel clearly has no intention of releasing them.



  • I mean, as I said elsewhere, there’s plenty to get annoyed about without also imagining new things. If an organisation kidnaps a bunch of civilians with a view to using them for extortion, those captives are hostages, and it is different to when even that very same organisation captures soldiers in a war, because those captives are POWs. Words do actually have a meaning! Not every usage of words is a matter of some overarching nefariousness!







  • Famously, Bob Vylan and Kneecap both got in trouble for chanting ‘Recognise the Palestinian statehood at a time and in a fashion that maximises the chances of a peaceful two-state solution’. It was a bit of a mouthful, granted.

    Seriously, though. AFAIK, neither the BBC nor the UK government had anything much to do with Kneecap’s statements, which for the record were (my italics):

    Israel is committing genocide against the Palestinian people,” followed by: “It is being enabled by the US government who arm and fund Israel despite their war crimes,” and a final screen added: “[Expletive] Israel. Free Palestine.” During the performance, band member Mo Chara said: “The Irish not so long ago were persecuted at the hands of the Brits, but we were never bombed from the… skies with nowhere to go. The Palestinians have nowhere to go.” The band also led the audience in chants of: “Free, free Palestine”.

    Only the ‘Free Palestine’ line seems to have much to do with a two-state solution, and then only tangentially. I don’t personally think any of what they said is untrue or problematic in any way - but it also has nothing to do with the BBC or the UK Government.

    As for Bob Vylan, the specific phrase that caused controversy was ‘Death to the IDF’ - again, nothing to do with a two-state solution. The main censoring force there was the BBC, which has nothing to do with whether the UK Government recognises Palestine. Again, for me, while a much more aggressive comment, I don’t think this crosses the line of either hate speech or incitement (and I’m right, because they haven’t been prosecuted for either - I don’t think a case has even been brought). But it’s got nothing to do with the government now moving (too slowly and tentatively, IMO) towards recognition of Palestine.










  • Describing my comments as ‘deranged’ and the type of views you claim I’m expressing as ‘disturbing’, and then going, ‘Well, technically, I didn’t say you were deranged or disturbing’ is school playground-level stuff, and you know it.

    The rest of your comment is just another series of mischaracterisations of my views. I don’t really mind whether I get - and certainly haven’t asked for - ‘warmer’ posts, I’d just prefer not to have my views described inaccurately or characterised as mad. Not an unreasonable request, I think you’ll agree!