I never said "might is right," or even anything close. I know it's easy to misquote people in political arguments because everyone is out to shove their biases around before being civil, but that's still not what I said. What I was saying was that even though it may or may not be right that Israel is in the tract of land it is, there is nothing anyone can do about it. The most powerful country in the world (the U.S) supports Israel. Tough fargin' luck.
The only reason the borders are what they are today is because someone fought for them. Some people defended their existing borders, while others expanded theirs. Like I said before, the only thing that has ever decided the borders of the holy land is who was the most powerful. It's not any different today. I'm not arguing what's right, I'm arguing what's true.







