As a global community, we would probably like to believe that our ongoing human experiment has been driven by the enlightened advancement of collective human thought. Because as Mahatma Gandhi said, "I have nothing new to teach the world. … Truth and nonviolence are as old as the hills."
Yet the current mix of perpetual war and poverty, extremist terrorism and global racism raises the question of whether the human race has completely lost its collective mind.
This sobering condition is no more apparent than in the ironically named "Holy Land" — Israel and Palestine — where civilized humanity has seemingly gone to die a very painful death.
Jerusalem holds a place of sanctity in the Abrahamic heart of every Muslim, Jew and Christian around the world. In the city where David ruled, Jesus taught and Mohammed ascended to heaven, for centuries, Christians, Jews and Muslims have lived in relative harmony, able to peacefully practice their faiths and adhere to their cultural traditions side by side.
Sadly, although we claim to live in an enlightened millennial age, we seem to be acting more savagely and unenlightened toward our fellow human beings than ever before.
The Middle East continues to elicit extreme feelings. The Gazaflotilla debacle with the Turkish-flagged Mavi Marmara was simply the most recent example, as the spinmeisters from both the Israeli and Palestinian camps try to frantically justify or condemn the killing of nine civilian activists within international waters.
Two outlandish statements emerged in the media in the wake of the flotilla tragedy from polar opposite sides of the global political divide. They show how each side tends to demonize the other without regard for basic human decency.
On one hand, neoconservative extraordinaire Charles Krauthammer made this ridiculous assertion on Fox News: "What exactly is the humanitarian crisis that the flotilla was actually addressing? … There is none. … There is no one starving in Gaza," as he conveniently overlooked that Gaza ranks 187th out of nearly 200 countries on Earth with the highest unemployment.
In an equally stupid, tone-deaf statement, the "grande dame" of the White House press corps — the almost 90-year-old Helen Thomas of Hearst Newspapers — was caught on video stating Israelis should "get the hell out of Palestine" and "go home … to Poland, Germany and America and everywhere else." She has retired from her job in the wake of the outcry.
During his historic June 2009 speech at Cairo University in Egypt, President Obama preemptively contradicted both of those ridiculous statements and perpetual Middle Eastern finger-pointing when he stated: "America’s strong bonds with Israel are well-known. Threatening Israel with destruction — or repeating vile stereotypes about Jews — is deeply wrong. …
"On the other hand, it is also undeniable that the Palestinian people — [both] Muslims and Christians — have suffered in pursuit of a homeland. … So let there [also] be no doubt: The situation for the Palestinian people is intolerable."
Obama continued, "But if we see this conflict only from one side or the other, then we will be blind to the truth: The only resolution is for the aspirations of both sides to be met through two states, where Israelis and Palestinians each live in peace and security. That is in Israel’s interest, Palestine’s interest, America’s interest and the world’s interest."
Although the president was ambitiously noble in his Cairo speech, unfortunately the Obama administration has done virtually nothing in offering a peaceful and tangible ending to this violent stalemate.



The Arab world controls the majority of the world's oil richs and spend a great deal of money quite extravagantly. The most extreme being I believe an indoor snow laden ski resort. The only Arabs who get to vote in the middle east live as citizens in Israel. If the Arabs used only a fraction of their wealth to help the Palestinians instead of keeping them as penniless permanent refugees, there would be no problem and a two state solution would have been enacted long ago. When Clinton was president and Barak was president in Israel , Palestinian leader Arafat refused a two state solution. All that is necessary for peace is for Arabs to want peace and not the destruction of Israel. love and light,
Stuart http://stuartmarkberlin.com