Most people seem to have very strong feelings about who’s right in the conflict between Israel and the Palestinians, despite knowing remarkably little about the history surrounding it. Do the details of the Middle East conflicts make your eyes glaze over, because you’ve heard the same stories over and over again? The Onion had a classic article five years ago making the point that these news articles are basically interchangeable as far as Americans are concerned.
As the fighting between Israel and the Palestinians flares up yet again, so are tensions between supporters of the two sides. On Facebook, it’s been pretty heated. When I read the comments from partisans on both sides, you’d think that each side was reading only half of the news and facts from the Middle East — and the other side was reading only the other half of the news and facts.
You can almost take much of their rhetoric (from both sides) and switch it to the other side by changing the names. The cheerleaders for the two sides don’t seem to understand that it’s a complex dispute with fault on both sides, not something that can easily be reduced to a tale of heroes and villains.
I’ve been surprised in the last few days to get questions from people who really don’t know that much about the dispute, people who hear both sides screaming at each other and don’t know what to believe. As a result, I’d like to take a quick look at some of the basic facts of the conflict and show you why I don’t see either side as “good.”

No matter how admired you are, your work won’t make you special
Petty politics as usual just might be Chris Christie’s bridge to obscurity
Like an alien, I move through a world I can see but never touch
What if ‘fixing’ a mental condition changes the person you are?
Should a rational person question orthodox assumptions on climate?
When I die, what will I remember? Who won an election or who I loved?
Briefly: Comic perfectly captured what I wrote about this weekend
How can I share what’s obvious when nobody will listen or see?
Man’s unconscious night after stroke leaves me uneasy about living alone