The observations and arguments in the following are those of DPC; the polished presentation that of an LLM.
Response to Yuval Noah Harari
In his remarks, Harari argues that there is no logical or physical contradiction in holding simultaneously that both Palestinians and Israeli Jews possess a right to live in dignity and security between the river and the sea. He further maintains that peace is obstructed not by objective conditions but by psychological narrowness — an inability to hold both claims at once.
This framing, however, omits a crucial dimension: moral asymmetry.
There may indeed be no logical contradiction and no material scarcity. Yet a moral obstacle remains, grounded in the origin of the competing claims.
If “natural right” has any foundational form, it may be the right arising from continuous, organic presence in a land — nativity in the non-metaphorical sense. A population that developed in situ over generations possesses a claim that does not depend on external grant, force, or the displacement of others.
The Palestinian Arab population — Muslim, Christian, and Jewish— constituted such a population. Their presence was not the result of an organised political transfer premised on replacing another people. Their claim to the land did not require the prior dispossession of a different collective.
By contrast, the modern Jewish Israeli claim to sovereignty in the land emerged through a political project — Zionism — that required demographic transformation and displacement. Jewish Israelis born in the land today are not personally responsible for that history; nevertheless, their political nativity is downstream from a process that curtailed the prior political rights of another people.
This distinction is morally relevant.
It does not follow that Jews born in the land lack human rights there. But it does suggest that the moral basis of their collective political claim is historically derivative rather than organically continuous. One claim arises from uninterrupted habitation; the other from a successful national project that entailed dispossession.
When the issue is framed as one of two symmetrical native rights, this asymmetry of origin is effectively bracketed.
That bracketing helps explain why many Palestinians experience language of “equivalence” as morally incomplete. From their perspective, the Israeli right to self-determination in the land exists only because Palestinian self-determination was denied. The two claims are not independent; one emerged through the limitation of the other.
This does not produce a logical contradiction. It produces a moral tension.
A Palestinian asked to hold both claims simultaneously is therefore not merely being asked to expand empathy. They are being asked to treat as coequal a political right whose emergence curtailed their own. The difficulty lies not only in psychological narrowness but in unresolved historical injustice.
Two broad paths present themselves.
The first is nationalist adjudication: determining which collective claim has priority. That path risks entrenching permanent conflict.
The second is to abandon nativity as the decisive principle and adopt a humanist model in which every human being has an equal right to live wherever material conditions permit, provided equal rights are guaranteed to all. If, as Harari argues, there is sufficient land and resources for everyone between the river and the sea, then political arrangements need not be grounded in exclusive national entitlement.
Within such a humanist framework, historical asymmetry would still require acknowledgment, but future rights would derive from equal personhood rather than ancestral priority.
Absent either explicit acknowledgment of asymmetry or a clear rejection of nationalist priority, statements of symmetrical native right remain conceptually incomplete.
A further complication concerns approximately 700,000 Israeli settlers in the West Bank. If all Jews currently living between the river and the sea are treated as equally entitled residents, the method and legality of their presence become irrelevant. Yet international law and many moral frameworks distinguish between residence arising from long-term birth and residence resulting from organised territorial expansion under military protection. Any claim of full equivalence must clarify whether settler presence carries the same moral status as long-standing habitation.
Finally, in discussing religious motivations for violence, Harari refers to beliefs in heavenly reward. An impartial analysis would also acknowledge land-based doctrines of divine entitlement — including religious claims to exclusive Jewish sovereignty — which are likewise unfalsifiable and politically mobilised. Selective treatment of religious irrationality risks reinforcing the very asymmetry his broader argument seeks to transcend.
In summary, the obstacle to peace may not be physical or logical. But neither is it purely psychological. It is moral and historical. Any durable equivalence must either confront that asymmetry directly or transcend it through a consistently applied humanist framework.