I'm very aware of that. It goes for Canada, Australia, obviously England and France too.
That's why it's "funny" when Zionists try to say "well, the US genocided their indigenous!" And I just respond with "yeah, true. And that was bad and anyone alive at the time had a responsibility to end that genocide."
I guess they think one country doing a "successful" and basically complete genocide justifies their continued efforts towards completion of their "final solution for the Palestinian question." The Nazis decided to round up all the Jews, Roma, Slavs, etc. and mass execute them. The Americans drove them further west on death marches along with mass executions and pushed them into inhospitable lands which they were unaccustomed to. Among other ways of killing. The British carried out mass purposeful starvations, bombardment from their naval ships on cities, etc. The difference in all of these is the moment we live in and what we can do to stop it. It doesn't excuse the past or make it "ok," but we can't stop those genocides now. We can stop this one. Maybe.
The U.S. was successful in performing genocide and getting international respect doing it as well.
I'm very aware of that. It goes for Canada, Australia, obviously England and France too.
That's why it's "funny" when Zionists try to say "well, the US genocided their indigenous!" And I just respond with "yeah, true. And that was bad and anyone alive at the time had a responsibility to end that genocide."
I guess they think one country doing a "successful" and basically complete genocide justifies their continued efforts towards completion of their "final solution for the Palestinian question." The Nazis decided to round up all the Jews, Roma, Slavs, etc. and mass execute them. The Americans drove them further west on death marches along with mass executions and pushed them into inhospitable lands which they were unaccustomed to. Among other ways of killing. The British carried out mass purposeful starvations, bombardment from their naval ships on cities, etc. The difference in all of these is the moment we live in and what we can do to stop it. It doesn't excuse the past or make it "ok," but we can't stop those genocides now. We can stop this one. Maybe.