Israeli-Palestinian conflict (82 Viewers)

Is Hamas a Terrorist Organization?

  • Yes

  • No

  • Should there be a Jewish nation SOMEWHERE in the world?

  • Yes

  • No

  • Should Israel be a country located in the region it is right now?

  • Yes

  • No


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IrishZebra

Western Imperialist
Jun 18, 2006
23,327
Not since reading "A Short History of the World" by Roberts have I seen the historical method raped harder and more brutally. You just can't put forth an argument like this.

Turks today should apologise for the 'crimes' of the Ottoman Empire, and empire void of any nationalistic sentiments? And just because Turkey as a state today doesn't recognise the Armenian holocaust, why would that even be mentioned in a conversation about Israel and Palestine?

If you want to make coherent arguments you should turn off the history channel and read some god damn books.

The ideal of historical legacy of crimes is something people should subscribe too, which is why I'm sorry my people discovered America.


Edit: Denial of the Armenian Genocide is an utter disgrace I don't care who you are.
 
Jul 1, 2010
26,352
The ideal of historical legacy of crimes is something people should subscribe too, which is why I'm sorry my people discovered America.


Edit: Denial of the Armenian Genocide is an utter disgrace I don't care who you are.
They should not deny that they killed about 1 million Armenians but I would not call it a genocide to be honest. It is a matter of definitions but the word genocide is being overused for almost anything these days.

The Armenians were in an armed rebellion against the Ottoman Empire and cooperating with the Russians in what we can call a war of liberation. The Turks who carried out the killings were mostly irregulars and it seems that the central government attempted to restrict the amount of killings by deporting Armenians from the sensitive areas to the historical Armenian homeland. One has to understand that Armenians were living throughout Anatolia in the early 20th century due to centuries of wars and events.

The term genocide was coined after the holocaust and thus, when one wants to use the term, he evidently has to compare the event in question to the holocaust. For the Armenian "genocide" to be a genocide, you would have to assume that when Adolf Hitler started killing the Jews and issued the Final Solution, the Ashkenazi Jews of Germany had been in an armed revolt for years, trying to assist the English, Americans, and Russians against Germany. Then, you would need the crimes to be committed by irregulars rather than by regular troops and the government. Also, you would need the Nazi government to deport Jews from the sensitive areas to a safe harbor (Palestine, let's say for the sake of argument) rather than to concentration and death camps.

Ultimately, the massacres of the Armenians during WW1 was a terrible event and the Turks should certainly apologize for it. However, it was definitely not a genocide if definitions matter.
 

Maddy

Oracle of Copenhagen
Jul 10, 2009
16,545
They should not deny that they killed about 1 million Armenians but I would not call it a genocide to be honest. It is a matter of definitions but the word genocide is being overused for almost anything these days.

The Armenians were in an armed rebellion against the Ottoman Empire and cooperating with the Russians in what we can call a war of liberation. The Turks who carried out the killings were mostly irregulars and it seems that the central government attempted to restrict the amount of killings by deporting Armenians from the sensitive areas to the historical Armenian homeland. One has to understand that Armenians were living throughout Anatolia in the early 20th century due to centuries of wars and events.

The term genocide was coined after the holocaust and thus, when one wants to use the term, he evidently has to compare the event in question to the holocaust. For the Armenian "genocide" to be a genocide, you would have to assume that when Adolf Hitler started killing the Jews and issued the Final Solution, the Ashkenazi Jews of Germany had been in an armed revolt for years, trying to assist the English, Americans, and Russians against Germany. Then, you would need the crimes to be committed by irregulars rather than by regular troops and the government. Also, you would need the Nazi government to deport Jews from the sensitive areas to a safe harbor (Palestine, let's say for the sake of argument) rather than to concentration and death camps.

Ultimately, the massacres of the Armenians during WW1 was a terrible event and the Turks should certainly apologize for it. However, it was definitely not a genocide if definitions matter.
are you aware that the inventor of 'genocide' coined his idea from the armenian genocide?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raphael_Lemkin

and yes its defininetly a genocide if definitions matter.
 
Jul 1, 2010
26,352
Holy fuck, I forgot about that :D

I do disagree with his methodology though, the Armenian "genocide" has almost nothing in common with the holocaust. If you want to call any type of disorganized massacres a genocide then the word becomes irrelevant.

The way I see it, a genocide is a deliberate attempt by a central government to completely eradicate a people in a systematic way. The massacre of the Armenians does not fall in that category.

Why then did the Turkish government bother to deport the Armenians from sensitive areas to the Armenian homeland to prevent killings?
 

Nzoric

Grazie Mirko
Jan 16, 2011
37,877
The ideal of historical legacy of crimes is something people should subscribe too, which is why I'm sorry my people discovered America.


Edit: Denial of the Armenian Genocide is an utter disgrace I don't care who you are.
The ideal of historical legacy of crimes is one of the most backward ways of thinking. This is totally unrelated to the Armenian genocide because that is still an unresolved issue today, but where should we draw the line? If Turks today should feel sorry about what happened in the 14th century and onwards, how should the German today feel only 70 years after WW2? Was the fall of the Berlin wall even a positive thing when thinking about it, since the generations after 1945 inherit the guilt of their predecessors - shouldn't we just have given Germany the post WW1 treatment again?

I don't know how you can justify historical legacy of crimes, especially since the notion of nations and 'people' is a fairly modern one.

- - - Updated - - -

The way I see it, a genocide is a deliberate attempt by a central government to completely eradicate a people in a systematic way. The massacre of the Armenians does not fall in that category.

Why then did the Turkish government bother to deport the Armenians from sensitive areas to the Armenian homeland to prevent killings?
Genocide doesn't have to be restricted just to killing. Every able bodies Armenian man (and other minorities mind you - the Greek got the same treatment ) was either killed outright or worn down by physical labour. Women and children were just deported and the weak and elderly were forced to go on death marches into the Syrian desert. If that ain't a genocide, then I have no fucking idea what is.
 
Jul 1, 2010
26,352
It was carried out by irregulars and the government tried to restrict the killings. Hence, it does not qualify as a genocide the way I see it.

We may very well have different views on the use of the term genocide. In my opinion, it is often misused.

I'm not a fan of the Turkish government in any shape or form (see their treatment of Kurds and other minorities) but I do insist on the proper use of words.
 

Maddy

Oracle of Copenhagen
Jul 10, 2009
16,545
It was carried out by irregulars and the government tried to restrict the killings. Hence, it does not qualify as a genocide the way I see it.

We may very well have different views on the use of the term genocide. In my opinion, it is often misused.

I'm not a fan of the Turkish government in any shape or form (see their treatment of Kurds and other minorities) but I do insist on the proper use of words.
if the armenian genocide isnt a genocide I assume you only recognise the holocaust as a genocide?
 
Jul 1, 2010
26,352
if the armenian genocide isnt a genocide I assume you only recognise the holocaust as a genocide?
No. Rwanda would qualify as a genocide (it was during a civil war but the Akazu who ordered and planned the killings did hold power, several of them were members of government) for instance. It was a deliberate attempt by the Hutu leadership to completely wipe out the Tutsis.

The Armenian case is much different.
 

Nzoric

Grazie Mirko
Jan 16, 2011
37,877
But the effect of it nonetheless stands. The jewish population was much less decimated by WW2 and the genocide you acknowledge than the Armenian population was by the 'terrible' happenings that do not quite live up to the standard of Genocide. The numbers as to 'how many died' ( @swag :kiss: ) vary, but what seems to be the most accurate places the total death toll at 850.000 ( Justin McCarthy ). The total number of Armenians before 1914 was 1,2 million.

This isn't an attempt to down talk the jewish holocaust of WW2, but I'm just trying to get you to grasp the facts of what you refuse to acknowledge as a genocide.
 

Eddy

The Maestro
Aug 20, 2005
12,645
Holy $#@!, I forgot about that :D

I do disagree with his methodology though, the Armenian "genocide" has almost nothing in common with the holocaust. If you want to call any type of disorganized massacres a genocide then the word becomes irrelevant.

The way I see it, a genocide is a deliberate attempt by a central government to completely eradicate a people in a systematic way. The massacre of the Armenians does not fall in that category.

Why then did the Turkish government bother to deport the Armenians from sensitive areas to the Armenian homeland to prevent killings?
Good question, as an Armenian whose great grandparents were survivors, they were not given any food or water during the trip to the "homeland". There was no "homeland" at the time, no centralized government and were just walking the Armenians so they can starve to death. A smart idea actually, why waste bullets when you're already in a World War when you can starve them on route ? One common route was to Syria, Deir Ez Zor, I hear bones could still be found once in a while in the area. Also, if systematically removing a people's culture out of the area in which they've lived in for more than 2,500 years for no reason other than "Nationalism" is not a genocide, then I really don't know what is.

Having said that, I'm not some right wing nutter who thinks the Turks should pay for what they did in the past. What happened happened and maybe some reperations will help honor the memory of the victims at the time. Communication will only help the two countries right now to move on after 90 years of status quo.
 

Nzoric

Grazie Mirko
Jan 16, 2011
37,877
Swag is right, a dick measuring contest about who killed the most is absolutely idiotic. The proper use of definition is not.
Way to miss the fucking point. 2/3's of the Armenian population died in those two years, and your relucatance to acknowledge it as a genocide comes from the facts that the armenian populace had nationalistic movements prior to WW1 (which somehow makes it less bad to be exterminated?), that Turkish irregulars worked in some of the 25 or so concentrations camps and that the Turkish government deported females after they had raped them?
 

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