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Notes -
This reads like a fever dream.
As a foreword, I don't like reading quoted lines being rebutted one by one as it can drag on and become incoherent, but in this case there is sometimes so little argumentative weight within the paragraphs I think we can get away without it. But not everywhere.
It is obviously absurd to think peace and prosperity for all will come if Israel were to vanish. Is this absurd belief popular? Not really, right? So who are we arguing against?
There's no evidence presented for this claim or rational given for why this would be the case. The opposite can just as easily be presented as equally plausible.
Again, who is this directed towards? Is geociding every Palestinian a more practical solution? Probably not, so why not hash out what an actual practical solution might be?
Rabin was assassinated by another Israeli. In what Wikipedia found remarkable enough to note to probably be the most successful political assassination in history. So what is the point here? What's the argument? Israel wanted peace, demonstrated by Rabin signing the Oslo accords. OK. But other factions in Israel were so against that signing that they killed Rabin. This assassination and the fact that the political landscape of the country moved away from the Oslo accords demonstrates what? That they still want peace?
I'm not stating this as a 'gotcha' proof of anything. A relevant portion might still have wanted peace. Just that your line of reasoning here is clearly going nowhere.
This is not true. Who else signed the Oslo accords? Is that signing not an equal demonstration of wanting peace? The Palestinians didn't even assassinate their guy(written half jokingly). I hope this justifies my likening your post to a fever dream.
What is the relevance of the US also having outsized influence in Israeli politics? Much of the criticism laid against Israel is by Americans who feel Israel has too much influence in their politics. Why would they have a problem with America having influence over Israel? There's no contradiction there. Again, where this is going? It just reads like a complete non-sequitur. Beyond that, surely we could reason why the US would have more influence in Israeli politics, given the power disparity, right? But that's a tangential argument.
So the US made a covert effort to subvert the naturally leftist state of Israel towards capitalism? The way I remember my history Israel came naturally towards the US as it became clear the Soviet Union wasn't completely ready to play ball with Zionist demands. Demonstrated in USSR support for Egypt and Syria. With increased tensions during the Suez Crisis, and with the USSR dropping all formal diplomatic contact after the Six Day War.
Am I completely off base here?
Seems more like Israel had goals that could not align with the greater USSR vision of a somewhat united front against the west in the ME. Netanyahu is just as much a further expression of that impulse, rather than a consequence of some US ploy to win over Israel.
I feel point 5 has been adequately discussed in different comments.
In closing:
If this were a formal debate, I'd call what you are doing a Spread. Not so much with regards to the speed, but in that you are directing the debate towards a certain direction. My problem with your spread is that it's not going anywhere relevant. It's just a bunch of off ramps towards easy joo apologia that circumvent the meat and potatoes of a lot of criticism regarding Israel.
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