"Israel's existence is illegal, therefore it should vanish?" (focusing on one argument only)

There are areas like the West Bank that are not currently part of Israel and people living there have no Israeli citizenship. You can be a Palestinian or Arab or Muslim and also Israeli, but that is difficult if you live in Jericho or Ramallah, let alone Gaza.

My impression is that the number of Palestinians who are trying to gain citizenship in Israel as it now exists is pretty small- does the option exist for them, and if so, for real and not as some sort of bureaucratic hell? A lot resort to working in and travelling to Israel illegally, or via some restrictive work permit that does not confer political and social rights. Also, I imagine that many Palestinians are not too fond of the government of Israel as it now exists and that they may not jump at the idea.

Heck, I’m not too fond of the government of my nation as it now exists, either. So I vote to change it.

Palestinian residents of East Jerusalem legally can apply to become citizens of Israel, but it appears from, e.g., this Ha’aretz article that “bureaucratic hell” is a fair description:

Palestinians in the occupied territories as opposed to East Jerusalem, AFAICT, are not eligible for either Israeli residency or citizenship.

Is that 5% an accurate depiction of the situation? My understanding was that before the creation of Israel, there were large regions of unpopulated desert. So it seems to me that a better measure would be the percentage of populated, economically valuable land that the Palestinians sold to the Jewish people.

After all, if someone bought every town and city and farm in Canada, They probably wouldn’t own a significant percentage of the total area of Canada. But they would own a very high percentage of all the land that mattered.

Not that it justifies whatever Israeli policy may be, but “bureaucratic hell” is a pretty good description of qualifying for citizenship in numerous countries, including the EU (including such requirements as prolonged residency (which can be for up to 15 years), getting a societal “integration diploma”, meeting fairly stringent language and national history knowledge standards, giving “loyalty” declarations etc.).

Hard to tell what the average waiting times are once you begin the application process in various countries.

Who knows… It seems like “The West” will use the UN, etc., only when it helps, and ignore them when they disagree. What happened to the Oslo Accord?

Congratulations, you agree with Trump.

Here’s another viewpoint, implying that people who say criticism of Israel is anti-Semitic are themselves anti-Semitic. How does it feel?

Very late in responding to this, and I don’t disagree with your statement of fact, but just pointing out that burdensome requirements for obtaining citizenship in a foreign country are qualitatively somewhat different from burdensome requirements for Palestinian natives of East Jerusalem to obtain citizenship in the national entity that controls East Jerusalem.

Comparing requirements for immigrants to become naturalized in a foreign country to requirements for natives and lifelong residents of a region to obtain citizenship rights in the nation that controls their native region is a bit apples-and-oranges.