If you're against ethno-states on principle, don't you have to be against a Kurdish one too? Could be missing something here but feels like people are inconsistent. If the Kurds, who have suffered horribly, finally won their state it's not like it would have wide open borders.
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Replying to @jessesingal
Would non-Kurdish minorities within this state’s borders have equal rights? is the question them
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Replying to @ChaseMadar
Think it's only part of the question -- migration is the other. If you don't restrict migrants on basis of whether or not they're Kurdish, then the only way to ensure it remains a *Kurdish* state is whether you get "lucky" w/regards to the vicissitudes of war, migration etc.
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Replying to @jessesingal
Equal rights v much entails an equal right of return. I’m baffled as to why a universal Jewish right of return to Israel is broadly seen as good and fine whereas a Palestinian right of return, usually more rooted in actual legal title, is “not realistic.”
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I don’t know anything about Kurdish dreams of migration policy but if they’re imitating the chauvinist exclusivity of Israel, I’m agin’ it
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