First of all, I think that it is both highly presumptive and arrogant for any group to discuss the proper solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict without expert opinions on every side of the issue.
I also think that there is no excuse for the ongoing Israeli bashing without requisite information which has taken over college campuses across the country. Many students, swept up in the cult of "equality at all costs", have followed the advice and preaching of their left-leaning instructors, many of whom have demonized Israel because of its "harsh and unjust treatment" of the Palestinians.
If interests groups really want to discuss the proper course of action for the conflicts threatening the identity and integrity of the Jewish State, a mind of open inquiry must pervade beyond the perverse attachment of youth and inexperience to fairness.
The Jewish state is the best national entity for Palestinians (a "race" that does not exist in the first place), the Arabs, and the world. A welcome respect for democratic government, free markets, and individual rights overshadows the national demands of terrorists and radical Muslim forces, all intent on pushing the Jews into the sea, imposing Sharia Law throughout the Middle East, and menacing the world with forced conversion to Islam.
Individuals, tribes, intra-national identities that refuse to coexist with other cannot demand a fair exchange from opposing camps, for they have refused to recognize the right or existence of other points of view. This skewed view, crammed into the assaulting propaganda of the West Bank and Gaza, has compromised the proper appreciation of the conflict in the Middle East and in the United States.
A two-state solution in the Middle East is impossible. A one-state cultural-neutral region is joke. The desire for rapprochement between the PLO and like-minded factions with Israel is a hoary hoax, one which has worn thin among partner states throughout the West. College campuses must recognize the lack of willingness among certain communities in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, an on-the-ground factor which has little changes since the inception of the state of Israel, a point of view which has not been aired frequently enough, or denounced enough, in the makeshift seminars discussing the future of the Jewish state.
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