There is inconsistency if their principles are applied inconsistently...why even problematise ownership if this problematisation is to have no practical use or relevance?
I don't think most people on the left spend much time doing that. certainly not those who are supporting palestinians. not really an important question either way. if they want to talk about their views on the fundamental principles of land ownership, that's fine. but has no real bearing here.
Even within a conventional frame the most wronged people whose land was originally arrogated are all dead now.
No, some are still alive. Plus, the descendants of refugees are counted as refugees too.
https://www.unrwa.org/transfer-refugee-status-descendants-unique-unrwa-0
They're the people who would be living there now if it wasn't for the expulsion. 70% of gazans are refugees or descdendants of refugees
https://www.ochaopt.org/sites/default/files/gaza_thematic_6_0.pdf
but the point is it's not about private land ownership. it's about the fact that the population has no citizenship within Israel and has also been repeatedly prevented by Israel from forming a state of their own, which they are entitled to under international law. it's not that complicated
And if they took the land from some Palestinian farmers, I dare say those farmers had taken it from someone else before then. Maybe other Palestinian farmers most recently - same difference.
that's not true and you're stuck on this private land ownership thing. that's not the issue. we're talking about state power and military occupation and annexation here- what's that got to do with farmers lol
Where could they have put the Jews where there would have been no territorial claim: Antarctica? Bracknell? Even the Mariana's Trench some country would complain about them knocking into their Bathyscaphe.
that's why it's a difficult thing to just set up an ethnic state somewhere and probably shouldn't have happened to begin with. but once it was established, it's part of the international system and has rights like any other state. the problem is then Israel started illegally acquiring land in 1967 that was allocated to the indigenous population. so you're conflating legitimacy of Israel itself, which has international support, with its occupation of Gaza/West Bank, which has no legal justification and plenty of international opposition. two separate issues
In any case, there would be no natural justice to Palestine drawing any political advantage from the hostilities given that it was their/Hamas wrongdoing that has unleashed them. The fine-tooth comb analysis of countless treaties is for the time before Hamas attack.
don't understand this part
P.S. are Palestinians really at all liberal? A quarter of the population supported Hamas last year and the other parties are about as likely to be headed by Caroline Lucas as OPEC is.
whether or not they're liberal has no relevance. people don't deserve to be killed or denied human or civil rights for having the wrong political opinion, I'm sure you'd agree. just like americans who supported their goverment when it engaged in massive state terror in Iraq far beyond anything hamas could dream of, also don't deserve to have their rights limited. plus, 50% of the population are children so political views don't even come into the picture there.
besides, supporting hamas doesn't mean supporting the Oct 7 attacks. even parts of hamas were unaware it was going to happen, supposedly. hamas has many different factions
P.P.S. Have Arabs grown to hate Jews over time since Israel's inception or were they anti-immigration right from the start? Were they ever like 'let's cut these guys some slack. They've been through a lot'?
prior to the establishment of Israel there were already 600,000 jews in Israel. as the yishuvs (jewish settlments) grew in the preceding decades, it was fair enough for the indigenous population to have concerns, particularly if the stated aim of much of the zionist movement was to set up a state for jews and claim the whole country. there was some cooperation between arabs and jews during that time, but there was also conflict, including acts of jewish terrorism
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irgun
as it happens, some zionists were anti-state and wanted arab and jewish working class cooperation in a non-state entity (e.g. chomsky, a zionist youth leader - and that's where the principles of his that I mentioned actually do come into it). He said that, as a zionist, the establishment of the state in 1948 was a day of mourning. those zionists were a smaller part of the movement though and disappeared after 48.
but palestinians were right to have concerns weren't they, cos then hundreds of thousands were forcibly expelled, many killed, those who stayed were denied equal rights, and the refugees have languished in terrible conditions without basic rights for decades. and in gaza they're essentially imprisoned with major deprivation as a direct result of an unambiguously illegal blockade, while being bombed every few years. and shot if they protest peacefully, as happened in 2018-19
https://www.btselem.org/gaza_strip/2018_unlawful_gunfire_against_protesters_in_return_marches
if me, my family and everyone I knew were treated like that by a gov that claims to represent an entire group, I might have an irrational hatred of that group too. If you ask holocaust survivors how they felt about poles or germans they often wouldn't have kind words to say. I think it's holding people to an extremely high standard to expect otherwise. (that's even allowing for your suggestion that they hate jews generally, which isn't clear to me anyway and certainly not the whole picture. im sure there is widespread animosity towards israelis, but that's different)