![](https://media.kbin.social/media/45/07/4507552df662fbded6f6a376b4982a12d2f9b6f54704b9367ae56f69abcbace4.png)
![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/1651ef0d-2392-4b7c-9f95-07935a5f202e.webp)
And even if…
The notion of “if” can very well be used in philosophy and many other disciplines.
In historical terms it is not a viable notion. If just one single event would occur differently, it would trigger a chain of events that would change. The number of speculations about those potentials is literally infinite.
Intersectionality is a great analytical tool. Jewish Voice for Peace found themselves to be in the intersection of being both Jewish and anti-zionists. German government policies and often German people (even from the left or antifa), fail take this intersection into consideration.
But do we really need this analytical tool for this topic? When a person knows the historical relation between zionism and fascism, why would they support zionists or zionist policies?