ntbananas
ntbananas t1_j6otrly wrote
D'oh! Why didn't every other country think of that
ntbananas t1_j6oj5t1 wrote
Reply to comment by michal_hanu_la in Russian missile hits Ukrainian synagogue, Chief Rabbi condemns attack by nahalkishon
Have you ever seen a Jew and a Nazi in the same room????? Really makes you think /s
ntbananas t1_j6ohqld wrote
Reply to comment by ktaphfy in Russian missile hits Ukrainian synagogue, Chief Rabbi condemns attack by nahalkishon
What do you mean by that?
ntbananas t1_j6ofhxx wrote
Reply to comment by bhuddistchipmonk in U.S. Secretary of State in Jerusalem: Urgent steps needed for calm, Calls for Two-State Solution by TheFrederalGovt
True. But that was the case as of a couple months ago
ntbananas t1_j6odyog wrote
I'm surprised there were any exports to Iranian firms left
ntbananas t1_j6noait wrote
Reply to comment by Musa_Ali in Human Rights Watch calls on Ukraine to investigate landmine accusations by nikola28
I was envisioning something closer to the zone rouge in France, but point taken yeah
ntbananas t1_j6nmnf2 wrote
Reply to comment by Musa_Ali in Human Rights Watch calls on Ukraine to investigate landmine accusations by nikola28
The simplistic tradeoff would be civilian deaths caused by landmines vs. civilian deaths prevented by use of landmines against Russian troops. It is clear that Russian troops have no qualms about intentionally massacring civilians. If landmines stop a group of tanks from overrunning a Ukrainian village or whatever, is that worth it? Hard to say without looking at a ton of very specific scenarios.
If Ukraine is doing a good job documenting where landmines are being laid and keeping civilians away from those areas (which, based on what you said, maybe not) then that could be ok.
ntbananas t1_j6nfjly wrote
Reply to comment by trekie88 in Human Rights Watch calls on Ukraine to investigate landmine accusations by nikola28
I hope so, and I imagine that's true from a top-down perspective. But I suspect that the lower level troops, many of whom are not professionals, are probably a little more focused on rapid deployment rather than perfect documentation. Which is understandable, if not ideal
ntbananas t1_j6nafii wrote
I understand why they’re using them and think it might be justified. But it’s important to remember that the most frequent victims of land mines are civilians, long long after the actual war has ended.
I wish Ukraine luck but also I hope they’re keeping track of where they lay mines
ntbananas t1_j6l5wcd wrote
That's what happens when you make peace and stop trying to destroy your neighbors. Who knew peace improved quality of life!
ntbananas t1_j6k5gj6 wrote
Reply to comment by is_this_the_place in ELI5: How do we know that light is the fastest thing in existence? by Grump-Dog
The effects of gravity propagate at the same speed
ntbananas t1_j6k09pk wrote
Reply to comment by DarkWangster in Ukraine Says Its Air Defenses Can't Protect Against Iranian Ballistic Missiles by BeautyInTheNegitive
Israel most likely. Maybe Saudi Arabia with the support of some other Gulf states
ntbananas t1_j6jy5ee wrote
Okie dokie, then. I'm very curious about where they were going to get a Torah scroll from though. Those things are hella expensive - there are rules about it needing to be handwritten on specific materials etc. - it's not like printing a mass-produced book
ntbananas t1_j6jwqnl wrote
Reply to comment by grapehelium in U.S. Secretary of State in Jerusalem: Urgent steps needed for calm, Calls for Two-State Solution by TheFrederalGovt
I don't really disagree with what you wrote. To clarify, I was referring to the PLO from the time around the Oslo Accords. While far, far from perfect, that showed they were at least willing to make some sort of compromise. Better and more rational than Hamas et al.
That said, the modern PA has made some compromises with Israel. Not in terms of a lasting peace plan or anything major, but they do generally (outside of particularly large flare-ups like this month) cooperate with Israel on day-to-day matters like minor civil things, taxation, and even limited security cooperation
ntbananas t1_j6juqus wrote
Reply to comment by needypondy in U.S. Secretary of State in Jerusalem: Urgent steps needed for calm, Calls for Two-State Solution by TheFrederalGovt
The only counterpoints I can think of in terms of old world (i.e., excluding the Americas since those are predominantly multi-ethnic, immigrant-based societies) successful truly multiethnic states are Switzerland and Belgium. Maybe India as well, though they seem to be sliding into chaos as well these days. There are probably some in Africa as well, though I have to admit I'm not particularly well versed in demographic trends there.
Nonetheless, none of the successful versions are anything close to a theoretical one state solution
ntbananas t1_j6jt7u6 wrote
Reply to comment by needypondy in U.S. Secretary of State in Jerusalem: Urgent steps needed for calm, Calls for Two-State Solution by TheFrederalGovt
Yep. Look no further than Lebanon to see what that dysfunction would look like. Not an inspiring track record
ntbananas t1_j6jt0rm wrote
Reply to comment by needypondy in U.S. Secretary of State in Jerusalem: Urgent steps needed for calm, Calls for Two-State Solution by TheFrederalGovt
Yep. Unfortunately it seems like a demographic issue as well. Current Israeli adults have predominantly lost trust in Palestinian leadership due to the intifadas plus the growing share of Haredim as a % of population. Will require some buffer time until (hopefully) the voter base has replenished with people who have not experienced intifadas. Similarly, Palestinian youth are increasingly affiliating themselves with Islamist groups (Hamas, PIJ, etc.) rather than secular groups. While I have plenty of criticism for the PLO/PA, at the very least they are ideologically able to make compromises and less tied up in religious absolutism.
ntbananas t1_j6jrh08 wrote
Reply to U.S. Secretary of State in Jerusalem: Urgent steps needed for calm, Calls for Two-State Solution by TheFrederalGovt
We're about as far as we've been from a two state solution any time in at least the past 50 years.
Bibi accepting extremists into his coalition to avoid corruption charges, Abbas likely dying of old age soon without any successor, and Hamas increasingly having a presence in the West Bank. Good fucking luck, Blinken
ntbananas t1_ja83opo wrote
Reply to comment by DifficultyNext7666 in Midtown Owners Hedge on Costly Office-to-Home Conversions by psychothumbs
I agree that midtown wouldn't be my first choice at this stage in life (though I was in the 50s for my first apartment out of college). I think the long-term goal is to make midtown less shitty by having it become more residential, somewhat similar to the financial district.
It will never be trendy (at least not for the next few decades) but it can certainly offer more housing stock for people looking to get more bang for their buck and potentially reduce demand elsewhere.
In summary: not for me, but good luck I guess