Name-calling is always the last resort of the weakling who has lost the online argument
Not always, sometimes it's the correct response to idiocy. Or perhaps you want to claim nothing posted is ever idiocy?
You obviously do not like Israel
Using the word obvious doesn't make your wrong statement correct. It just takes you from being wrong if you make the wrong claim to being more wrong by saying what's wrong is obvious.
Want to try for 'unquestionably' and be even more wrong?
, when you suggest we should treat them the same as we would Vietnam or Iran.
You really are having a difficulty in reaqding comprehension when you take an analogy about exposing US like about Vietnam, to an Israeli exposing lies about the nuclear arsenal, and say it's treati Israel like Vietnam.
You also need to have your rhetoric reigned in - since when is saying 'there shouldn't be a double standard, policy should have some morality and principle, not merely ruthless onesidedness' not liking a country?
Here's another analogy to illustrate who wrong your statement is:
Issue: Iran is torturing its political prisoners.
Craig: Iran is wrong.
Issue: Israel is torturing its political prisoners.
Craig: Israel is wrong.
Cubby: Craig you obviously do not like Israel because you treated them like Iran.
So where do we go from here? I reject the basis of your argument. We should treat Israel better than we treat Iran.
So, they should not be equal under the law, not have the same principles or rules applied - Israel should simply be completely be above any law or accountability whatsoever, and anything done to harm Iran is ok.
Is that right? You don't say a word about where you draw the line on this unequal treatment, if you draw a line.
It's one thing for us to 'treat Israel better' as an ally in legitimate ways - trade preferences, for example.
It's quite another to treat them better in INAPPROPRIATE ways - "Israel, it's ok for you to torture and kill babies, but we'll condemn Iran for the same thing."
When it comes to nuclear policy, one of the points I'm maqking is how problematic it is to have a double standard. WE sure wouldn't accept being told that others can have nukes and we can't - but we do that.
Now, maybe you want to argue that Iran having nukes is dangerous and a bad idea. OK, let's say we agree.
But that leaves a couple choices - how about not letting Israel have them either, instead of saying 'our side' can and 'you can't'? Why is Israel's right to have nukes so much higher than other nations'?
Is that a bias that gives Iran every justification for wanting revenge for being treated unfairly, in a way we would never acdcept being treated? THat's the point, to try to break through a bit of your blindness to injustice and understand that just maybe a different approach is needed. That blindness has so long existed in human history - looking at the US, whites and Native Americans, whites and blacks, men and women (you don't need the right to vote, for example) - on and on - and it's easy to fall into, but justice says not to dehumanize other groups, to consider their rights equally as people.
Even after all ths maybe you want to make a case why Israel can have nukes and Iran can't, but the point is to get you to do so with SOME fairness to Iran. not just blindly dehumanizing them, or any group.
You need to come up with a better reason than this story of yours, to convince me otherwise. And I'm willing to assume the same goes for most others here too.
No, I don't - it's not up to me to do more than give you a good reason, if you can't get it from that. And speak for yourself, not others.
The point here was simply to inform about the situation and culture with Israel on this issue, in contrast to how other nations are treated on nukes, to show our inconsistent policies are flawed.
The 'who cares, we can do it because of our might' argument is inherently immoral - and used by some as a shortcut to say "well that's not what I'm saying, our position really is moral but I won't explain it."
Ultimately, perhaps we need to recognize that our tolerance of 'our side' having nukes in Israel is an injustice and a danger and we need to use all our influence to get rid of Israel's nukes, and guarantee their security with other means - and thereby have a consistent 'no nukes in the Middle East' policy (India and Pakistan are another can of worms) that is better for peace and justice in the long term, not the lazy 'our side has more nukes, great that's all I care about' position.