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Re: Friday Five October 25


 

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I stand corrected.

Marvin

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Marvin: "Arabs are not semitic - they are tribesmen from the Arabian Peninsula.
Semites are traditionally from the Fertile Crescent and areas to the west, not the desert."
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Semites are descendants of Shem, son of Noah. That's where the term comes from.?
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Noah is a descendant of Abraham. Abraham is the common ancestor of Jews and Arabs, and he is worshiped by both Jews and Muslims. ?
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"The Harvard Museum of the Ancient Near East" used to be called the "Harvard Semitic Museum," which?has received funding?from both?Saudi Arabia and Israel. ?"Semitic Museum" is still carved above the entrance. The museum was re-named four years ago for 'no particular reason.' ??
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Arabs live in areas beyond the "Arabian Peninsula," which is a modern term for the region.
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In the Bible, "Arabia" includes Petra?in Jordan, the Syrian Desert and the Sinai.
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Ed
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On Thu, Oct 31, 2024 at 3:07?PM mrvnchpmn via <chapman=[email protected]> wrote:

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Arabs are not semitic - they are tribesmen from the Arabian Peninsula.

Semites are traditionally from the Fertile Crescent and areas to the west, not the desert.

Marvin
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Arabs, including Palestinians of all religions and Jews indigenous to the Levant, are all semitic.? Russian Jews aren't. ?

On Wednesday, October 30, 2024, mrvnchpmn via <chapman=[email protected]> wrote:
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Actually with regard to Hamas in Gaza, the Isreailis have been in that part of the world melleniia longer than the Arabs.

And I have met people both Jewish and Muslim from that part of the world and the consensus is that the part of the area developed by the Jews after 1900 is massively better of than it was before.

If you want to know what that area was like in the 19th century - read The Innocents Abroad by Mark Twain.

Marvin



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?"Indigenous people were entitled to do anything they saw fit to do with invaders."
Celeste
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So the Indians who took over 100 white people from Deerfield, MA in the early 1700s had the right to do so, since the settlers had been in the region less than 100 years?? How is that different from the Palestinians who took about 100 Jewish hostages from Israel last year?? May they also "do anything they saw fit to do with those invaders," too, since the non-Arabic European settlers in the Levant have been there for about 100 years as well??
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Ed
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On Wed, Oct 30, 2024 at 8:35?AM a1thighmaster via <thighmaster=[email protected]> wrote:
Ed,

Then cite a reputable source for that. Still, it has nothing to do with the topic. Indigenous people were entitled to do anything they saw fit to do with invaders.

Aloha,
Celeste


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On 10/30/2024 4:59 AM, Ed Lomas wrote:
Celeste- There were white slaves taken by Indians.? Perhaps uou should brush up on American history.
Ed

On Tuesday, October 29, 2024, Celeste wrote:
Marvin,

There were no white slaves in the U.S. Why do you think there were?


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On 10/29/2024 6:08 AM, Marvin wrote:
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You don't know what you are talking about.? There were white slaves, and even black slave owners.

As well as slaves held by indigenous people.


Celeste wrote:

David,

They were the only group of people enslaved in the U.S. Why do you want to quote something irrelevant to that fact?


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On 10/27/2024 12:55 PM, David Smith wrote:
// ??The only people who were ever enslaved and actively segregated were African-Americans.?//
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ChatGPT:
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Human slavery has been a widespread and tragic part of human history, practiced in different forms across civilizations for thousands of years. Here¡¯s a brief sketch of key periods and regions where slavery was prominent:

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On Oct 27, 2024, at 18:09, Ed Lomas <relomas2@...> wrote:
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?The former slaves are all long gone.? Why should their descendants deserve compensation for the suffering of their great grandparents?? If it could be proven that your ancestor had owned a slave, would how large a check would you personally be willing to write to that slave's descendants?
Ed

On Sunday, October 27, 2024, Celeste wrote:
Ed,

No, I don't think it's a bell that can't be unrung. The only people who were ever enslaved and actively segregated were African-Americans. If they have African-American ancestry then that's the group that would be eligible to get the subsidy. There is no blame needed for this to happen.


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On 10/27/2024 9:15 AM, Ed Lomas wrote:
How can unfairness be quantified, who is to blame, and how far back do we have to go?? Slavery in the USA ended five generations ago.? Second, how do you handle mixed-race people, especially those who are unaware that they are of mixed race?? How about the Irish, Jews, Italians, and those who suffered discrimination due to their religious or political beliefs, like Mormons, Huguenots, and Communists.
What about handicapped people, including stutters, those with autism, and aspergers, and what about those with multiple sources of impairment?
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Doesn't it seem to you that this is just a bell that can't be unrung?

Celeste wrote:
Darrell,

It really doesn't matter if their ancestors are alive or not. When you've been discriminated against (as I have, for example) it is fair to try to make up for that unfairness. Nobody (except perhaps you) is condemning those who are alive now as being responsible for that unfairness. That doesn't mean it didn't happen and shouldn't be rectified, though.


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On 10/27/2024 5:27 AM, Darrell King wrote:
I can agree with that statement, Celeste, as it is formatted as verifiable and objectively present-moment. Your reference to "...discriminated against and haven't had the same advantages as others..." would, in my mind, address people alive now?who are being treated in a manner at odds with my values.?
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Not only people...this past week we rescued a small dog shivering in the mountain cold at a state park in New Mexico. I do not condemn all campers using the campground nor do I assess whether?society at large should be condemned?for animal abuse since I do not know if all members of society were involved in losing or abandoning the pup. I simply rescued?the critter?and did what I consider proper (he is safely with a protective advocate now.)
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I am a Caucasian?middle class male U.S. citizen. I use the male pronouns I was taught apply to me in grade school English classes. I feel protective of women and children (and lost puppies!), and I try to respect those around?me. Even other drivers!? Despite all this, I do not consider myself as advantaged. I grew up very poor in a backwoods rural?community with social anxiety, bullying?and the strike of being from "the wrong side of the tracks." For the most part, I have earned any positive changes I benefit from, although?I acknowledge having help from others (including social breaks) whenever such benefited me.?
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I did not get any free rides due to my disadvantages, nor do I expect to be lifted up or reimbursed by the descendants of any who abused my ancestors--those people currently breathing were not part of those historical stories. This is an accepted fact in a culture where time travel?or common extreme longevity are not likely truths. Basically, I deal with today and do not try to atone?for the sins of my ancestors.
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I agree that it is likely that many citizens, regardless of belonging to groups noted for historic mistreatment, have the potential to become successful entrepreneurs. Hell, I did it in software despite?not initially believing?I could succeed at such a lofty ambition. I am fine with supporting an entrepreneur if I can and approve of society stimulating such resources for the benefit of all. I simply think we need to be aware that there is (in my judgement) an ongoing effort to twist the story of historic treatment into a manipulative and demonstrably logically invalid behavioral lever of guilt.
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With all respect, I never mistreated anyone in the 1700's or 1800's and therefore, if the figurative and generic 'you' want my support for some modern-day effort, you had better use a more clearly and rationally expressed argument than that of emphasizing my nonexistent complicity with whatever trials your ancestors went through!
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Thank you for the sensible discussion, Celeste!
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Celeste wrote:
Darrell,

I don't feel guilty about their mistreatment either. I just don't understand why anyone would be against helping those who have been discriminated against and haven't had the same advantages as others. Africans who were brought to America suffered a lot of loss and then weren't allowed to even try to make up for it. I think there were plenty around who would have liked to become entrepreneurs.


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On 10/26/2024 12:59 PM, Darrell King wrote:
I believe you mean to say you are in favor of helping the descendants?of people who were mistreated in the U.S. before your parents arrived, Celeste. Therein lies my quibble: we have been conditioned to ignore this distinction as though I was port?of that mistreatment. I was not and I hope that even if I had been alive and adult back in that day, I would?not have contributed to mistreatment.
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I often help people on an individual basis. I share frequently when able. This?is not out of any sense of guilt or responsibility?related to the behaviors of my social?or biological ancestors, however, but rather?originates on my personal?values on the subject. I admit to feeling a little put out when somebody insists I owe?some person or group because some predecessor?acted a certain way. Even if I disapprove of some historical behavior, such as the treatment uf North American indigenous people by European immigrants, I am still not personally liable for those immigrants' behaviors.

Doesn't mean I am against helping them or anyone. Just means that?rationally I may deal with the fallout (karma?) from history but I do not feel guilty about someone else's actions!
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D
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On Sat, Oct 26, 2024 at 11:56?AM Celeste wrote:
Darrell,

Your response sounds incredibly bigoted. My ancestors weren't even in the U.S. until the 20th century and I'm still in favor of helping peoples who were mistreated in the U.S. before they arrived. And, of course, that includes the indigenous peoples. You, however, I am disappointed in.

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On 10/26/2024 7:27 AM, Darrell King wrote:
And Darrell wondered: I am curious how many eligible?black entrepreneurs were around during the "slavery and discrimination eras" to lose time thusly??
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Sorry, Celeste! It is a pet peeve of mine that the sins of the fathers?are carried to the sons! While I do believe in continuous improvement?on a social level, I consider myself as bearing absolutely no personal responsibility for any alleged sins my forefathers may have been involved?in! I certainly do not oppose?entrepreneurism in any group and so I am wary of this constant effort to make amends?for those sins to a generation that had no exposure to said sins.
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I suppose social assistance for deserving entrepreneurs no matter ethnicity or other social factors. Base such support?on the validity and value of the business plan, sure. I suppose I lean rightward on the idea that I should make up for the idea that a given population deserves to be lifted out of their woes simply because of historical mistreatment?of a population with similarities. I try to treat people decently as part of my personal morality, but I am not responsible for how others have treated people.
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Having vented all that, I would support forgivable loans for ideas assessed solely?on their business plans and ongoing monitoring of their use without consideration of ethnicity or similar?'disadvantaged' factoring..?
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Celeste Answered to?Is Harris's offer of forgivable $20,000 loans to black men the equivalent of shiny beads to Indians??with "No, not in any way. It's for black entrepreneurs. It gives them a chance to make up for lost time during the slavery and discrimination eras."

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