Bitcoin: A Weapon for Peace in the Israel-Palestine Conflict
Activist Fadi Elsalameen says U.S. aid doesn’t help Palestinians because of corruption. They need monetary freedom.
HD DownloadThere have been several violent confrontations between Palestinians and Israeli police over the past several months. According to Amnesty International, 18 Israelis and 34 Palestinians were killed in March and April, including six children. In May, footage of the funeral of an Al Jazeera reporter, allegedly shot by Israeli police, led the United Nations to call for an international investigation.
Though overshadowed by other wars and crises around the world, the Israel-Palestine conflict, stretching three-quarters of a century, is intensifying.
A growing number of Palestinians are in favor of living within Israel, having given up on the idea of breaking off to form a separate state. But their lives are constrained by both the Palestinian Authority's corruption and the omnipresence of the Israeli military. The Palestinians comprise a community roughly the same size as the Jewish population within Israel, but they don't enjoy the same freedoms and they face major restrictions on their movement.
What policies could help the Palestinians achieve more political and economic freedom?
Fadi El-Salameen is a political commentator on Arab-Israeli affairs and an adjunct senior fellow at the American Security Project. A vocal critic of Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, El-Salameen has survived two assassination attempts.
He believes that an important step in liberating the Palestinian people is monetary freedom—specifically through the use of bitcoin, as a way to help bypass the Palestinian Authority's control over their finances. Reason caught up with El-Salameen at the 2022 Bitcoin conference in Miami.
Photos: Ahmad Salem/ZUMA Press/Newscom; Wajed Nobani/APAImages/Polaris/Newscom; Shadi Jarar''ah/APAImages/Polaris/Newscom; Ilia Yefimovich/dpa/picture-alliance/Newscom; Ilia Yefimovich/dpa/picture-alliance/Newscom; Wajed Nobani/APAImages/Polaris/Newscom; Mamoun Wazwaz/APAImages/Polaris/Newscom; Ilia Yefimovich/dpa/picture-alliance/Newscom; APAImages/Polaris/Newscom; Jeries Bssier/ZUMA Press/Newscom; Ilia Yefimovich/dpa/picture-alliance/Newscom; Ilia Yefimovich/dpa/picture-alliance/Newscom; Thaer Ganaim/apaimages/SIPA/Newscom
Music: "Odd Numbers," by Curtis Cole, Artlist
Credit: Interview by Noor Greene, intro edited by John Osterhoudt, interview edited by Adam Czarnecki, shot by Jim Epstein and Zach Weissmueller, audio by Ian Keyser
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not really but keep dreaming, people want to kill people no matter what the method of value transaction is. Lots of examples from history such as spices from the middle east, silk from China and silver and gold from the americas etc. Even beads were used still people died and there is no peace
It's kind of a universally unstated (or perpetually concealed) law that bullets are the fallback currency.
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Is bitcoin going to stop Israeli terrorism and apartheid? Will it make Jews give the land they are still stealing back and rebuild the homes they are still bulldozing to the Palestinian owners?
If all of those commodities you mentioned were NFTs, it would have been pure, peaceful libertarian capitalism based on the NAP.
Paying foreigners to not kill you or your friends used to be called "tribute".
The Huns were big fans of that business model.
FACT: "Palestine" is a made up word used by anti-Semites to justify their hatred of the Jewish people. Arab Muslims and Christians should just go back to Jordan, Syria, or Lebanon. Better yet, go to America where diversity is a strength.
"Palestine" is a made up word used by anti-Semites to justify their hatred of the Jewish people.
No, it isn't. "Palestinian" = "Philistine."
The Israelis and the Palestinians have been fighting over which part is Israel and which part is Palestine since the Old Testament.
The Romans renamed the land Palestine when they took the Jews out as slaves. There wasn't a movement for an independent Palestine when it was occupied by the Romans, the Byzantines, the Umayyad Dynasty, the Abassid Dynasty, the Ayyubid, the Mamluk, or the Ottomans. The Palestinians didn't argue that they were a separate people needing a state until the Jews moved back under the British Mandate. They are mostly Muslim Arabs that lived as citizens of various Muslim empires ever since the Byzantines lost the land.
Does claiming that Palestinians don’t exist make your terrorism and apartheid of them acceptable, Jew?
The declaration of that stolen state clearly refers to Palestine.
The fifth paragraph “ This right was recognized in the Balfour declaration of the 2nd November, 1917,”
The Balfour declaration, “ His Majesty's Government view with favour the establishment in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish people, ”
Fuck off you lying waste of skin.
Ironic coming from someone who denies the holocaust.
Ironic? How so?
What does a declaration of Israel referring to Palestine have to do with the holocaust narrative?
I mean besides the sympathy from the false narrative making Jews perpetual victims untouchable for their repeated crimes against humanity.
Maybe they should get the terrorists under control first then.
Imagine if we'd have pushed Luna on the Palestinian authority.
"but they don't enjoy the same freedoms and they face major restrictions on their movement."
Wait, what does this mean in practice for Palestinians in Israel? What freedoms are they denied, and how is their movement "majorly" restricted?
Genuinely curious here.
>>What policies could help the Palestinians achieve more political and economic freedom?
they could be nicer.
Do you not see their peaceful protests? How much more peaceful can they be without an open declaration of war?
JPost listed the percentage of people ready to give up on destroying Israel at 33%.
No chance of peace unless that 33 is going to turn violent against the rest of them.
A little digging into that funeral fracas would show Palestinian terrorists were trying to hijack the coffin for their own rally, against the wishes of the deceased's family, and the Israeli police were trying to stop the coffin hijack. The UN's take was typically anti-Israel.
There are a lot of things I don't like about Israeli governments and their policies, but how many Muslim governments would do anything similar for a Jewish family? For the more basic matter, why do Palestinians continue lobbing random rockets at civilians, hoping to kill civilians, instead of actually trying to make their shitholes better places to live?
Elections for the Palestinian Authority would help. The last election they held was in 2006, and Abbas cancelled a scheduled 2021 election. Trump got demonized for questioning the results of our 2020 election, but Abbas escapes criticism for going without elections altogether for a decade and a half.
Thank you for sharing this informative post with us.
Activist Fadi Elsalameen says U.S. aid doesn’t help Palestinians because of corruption.
He believes that an important step in liberating the Palestinian people is monetary freedom—specifically through the use of bitcoin, as a way to help bypass the Palestinian Authority's control over their finances.
The problem should be obvious here, and it's not the greenback.
Jeez, Bitcoin is going to solve the mid-east crisis. Really?
This is a stretch, even for Reason's tortured defense of Bitcoin.
I assume that someone at Reason stands to make lots of money, or stands to avoid losing lots of money, by dumping bitcoin.
When trump handed the keys to obiden there was peace in the middle east.
Just saying.
Not since 1947 when muslims Christians and Jews were getting along quite well.
Except the Jews had been planning since before WW1 and with the Balfour declaration in hand created the Middle East conflict in 1948.
Only with unprecedented western military aid for the last 74 years, shame on US taxpayers, Israel has maintained occupation, terrorism and apartheid of the Palestinian people.