Very well written. I was quite nervous reading this, but you did not disappoint.
However, I think people are missing an important point. For me it not about Palestinians or the Israeli state. It is about, in my opinion, a concentration camp, and a machine of death, as described in J. B. Peterson's magnum opus, the Maps of Meaning. It is t…
Very well written. I was quite nervous reading this, but you did not disappoint.
However, I think people are missing an important point. For me it not about Palestinians or the Israeli state. It is about, in my opinion, a concentration camp, and a machine of death, as described in J. B. Peterson's magnum opus, the Maps of Meaning. It is this feature that has stood out to me the most. I do not look at it as a conflict, but something else. Something I worry, we do not quite understand yet. Norman Finkelstein, I believe will agree with this assessment.
Monstrosities known as concentration camps, arise again and again in modern times. I fear they are not a product of mere hatred, but some kind of undetected sadism. Like something made by the Joker in the Batman series.
I am not blaming Israeli people here. What I am referring to is something like a subtle socio-psychological process unfolding. What I want to say is, that maybe it is worth focusing on this specific aspect of the situation, how, why and under what circumstances do concentration camps come into existence?
Thank you for reading my essay. I am glad you found it useful.
On your point about "masters of the world" and destruction of life, I will quote here a passage from Maps of Meaning you may find interesting: "The need for order (control, power, symmetry or homogeneity) ultimately attempts to stifle life itself.
Very well written. I was quite nervous reading this, but you did not disappoint.
However, I think people are missing an important point. For me it not about Palestinians or the Israeli state. It is about, in my opinion, a concentration camp, and a machine of death, as described in J. B. Peterson's magnum opus, the Maps of Meaning. It is this feature that has stood out to me the most. I do not look at it as a conflict, but something else. Something I worry, we do not quite understand yet. Norman Finkelstein, I believe will agree with this assessment.
Monstrosities known as concentration camps, arise again and again in modern times. I fear they are not a product of mere hatred, but some kind of undetected sadism. Like something made by the Joker in the Batman series.
I am not blaming Israeli people here. What I am referring to is something like a subtle socio-psychological process unfolding. What I want to say is, that maybe it is worth focusing on this specific aspect of the situation, how, why and under what circumstances do concentration camps come into existence?
Thank you for reading my essay. I am glad you found it useful.
On your point about "masters of the world" and destruction of life, I will quote here a passage from Maps of Meaning you may find interesting: "The need for order (control, power, symmetry or homogeneity) ultimately attempts to stifle life itself.