this post was submitted on 13 Oct 2023
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History

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Fatah (Arabic: فتح, Fatḥ), formerly the Palestinian National Liberation Movement, is a Palestinian nationalist and social democratic political party. It is the largest faction of the confederated multi-party Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) and the second-largest party in the Palestinian Legislative Council (PLC). Mahmoud Abbas, the President of the Palestinian Authority, is the chairman of Fatah.

Fatah is generally considered to have had a strong involvement in revolutionary struggle in the past and has maintained a number of militant groups. Fatah had been closely identified with the leadership of its founder and chairman, Yasser Arafat, until his death in 2004, when Farouk Kaddoumi constitutionally succeeded him to the position of Fatah Chairman and continued in the position until 2009, when Abbas was elected chairman. Since Arafat's death, factionalism within the ideologically diverse movement has become more apparent.

In the 2006 election for the PLC, the party lost its majority in the PLC to Hamas. The Hamas legislative victory led to a conflict between Fatah and Hamas, with Fatah retaining control of the Palestinian National Authority in the West Bank through its president. Fatah is also active in the control of Palestinian refugee camps.

Founding

The core group of Fatah was most likely founded in Kuwait in autumn 1957 by five or six Palestinians, among them Yasir Arafat and Khalil al-Wazir. This core group agreed on the movement's name, drafted its manifesto, and planned its “Revolutionary Organizational Structure.”

The name Fatah, the Arabic acronym in reverse for Harakat al-tahrir al-watani al-Filastini (The Palestinian National Liberation Movement), came to attention in the first issue of the magazine Filastinuna–nida' al-hayat (Our Palestine–The Call of Life), in Beirut in October 1959, and cells of the group began to be formed in the Gaza Strip, Jordan, Egypt, Syria, Lebanon, Kuwait, Qatar, and Saudi Arabia.

As a movement of refugees, Fatah needed support from the Arab world, which it initially found in Algeria starting in 1962, then in Syria starting from 1963. Relying on this support, the movement leadership began preparations to set up a clandestine military wing named al-ʿAsifa (storm).

In July 1968, during its second conference held in the Syrian town of Zabadani (the first conference took place in Damascus in Summer 1964), Fatah finalized its organizational structure. Its composition was based on two decision-making committees that constituted its leadership: the Central Committee, which included ten members who represented the movement's senior leadership, and the broader Revolutionary Council, considered an intermediary body between the Central Committee and the party's general membership.

Guiding Principles

Fatah was the first national liberation movement since 1948 to be started by Palestinians themselves and that brought together Palestinian activists from different ideological and intellectual backgrounds. It called on all politically active Palestinians to abandon their party affiliations and to be united under its banner as a movement to “organize a vanguard that would rise above factionalism, whims and leanings to include the entire people.”

The movement's leadership saw armed struggle as its primary means of liberating Palestine. It modeled itself after the revolutionary struggles in Algeria, Cuba, and Vietnam.

PLO: History of a Revolution

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[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

When I answer the questions one way, I get one result. When I answer the questions another way, I get another result. So, yes, my behaviour has some causal interaction with the result in a way that it doesn't with my star sign.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago (2 children)

All results are nothing but comforting generalities, like a cold reading.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

Actually, I want to go back to this comment. It's been my experience that there are a lot of people who dismiss MBTI for the wrong reasons, usually out of incuriosity.

The reason I'm not a fan of MBTI isn't because of a vague sense of it being pseudoscientific or because I'm dismissive of the idea of people using personality tests to understand themselves. The reason I'm not a fan of MBTI is because it gets taken seriously by schools and businesses even though I'm not convinced the results have any predictive power, which is kind of important if people want to consider it a scientific test. For example, the reason Mendeleev's period table was important wasn't because he put the elements in an arbitrary order -- anyone could have done that. The periodic table was important because it revealed something meaningful about chemistry and could be used to predict the properties of elements that hadn't been discovered yet. In contrast the MBTI doesn't really predict anything, it just divides results up in an arbitrary way.

But at least in the case of MBTI, the act of answering questions about one's behaviour might be a useful exercise in introspection, even if the result is meaningless. It may be useful in the way that I described tarot cards as being useful. I don't see anything in astrology that even manages to be THAT engaging.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

The use in schools and businesses is what I was primarily referring to by calling it destructive.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I can understand the appeal of cold readings better than I can understand the appeal of astrology.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)
[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

a newspaper horoscope isn't a cold read.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

A newspaper horoscope is a stochastic cold read