Raze

Israel / Palestine News Thread

5,610 posts in this topic

12 minutes ago, Twentyfirst said:

Okay fine you are right, you European Jew

You totally belong in the Middle East where your skin gets sunburned for some odd reason

Then they should leave. What are you going to get with that ideas? Millions of deaths?

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The reality is simple: Israel has confronted radical Islam and destroyed Gaza. What have Muslim countries done? Nothing, and this in part because most agree with Israel.

Only the mentally ill Iranians and the profoundly retarded Erdogan, who finance terrorists, in addition to Qatar, have timidly barked.

Result: The odds are 10 to 1 that the Iranian regime will fall quickly and Erdogan will be crushed in the next elections. And let's see if they stop sending millions to the Muslim Brotherhood to annoy the Europeans. Most Muslim countries will applaud the fall of those clowns.

Edited by Breakingthewall

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@Breakingthewall In the very words of a prominent Zionist, who understands something so basic that you don’t - which is that any native people resist colonisation instead of bending the knees, or in your case getting on your knees lool

I boldened the end bit: “Rebalancing the country demographically, strategically and economically is the highest and most central aim today.'' Meaning - they are not neutral about the demographics of Arabs existing within their Jewish state but wish to re-balance and socially engineer the state to be majority Jewish and economically and strategically ruled in favour of them.

On 18/10/2024 at 2:57 PM, zazen said:

Quotes from Jabotinsky (ideological forefather of the Likud party):

https://en.jabotinsky.org/media/9747/the-iron-wall.pdf

''My readers have a general idea of the history of colonisation in other countries. I suggest that they consider all the precedents with which they are acquainted, and see whether there is one solitary instance of any colonisation being carried on with the consent of the native population. There is no such precedent. The native populations, civilised or uncivilised, have always stubbornly resisted the colonists, irrespective of whether they were civilised or savage''

''Every native population in the world resists colonists as long as it has the slightest hope of being able to rid itself of the danger of being colonised'

''Colonisation can have only one aim, and Palestine Arabs cannot accept this aim. It lies in the very nature of things, and in this particular regard nature cannot be changed.''

''Zionist colonisation must either stop, or else proceed regardless of the native population. Which means that it can proceed and develop only under the protection of a power that is independent of the native population – behind an iron wall, which the native population cannot breach. That is our Arab policy; not what we should be, but what it actually is, whether we admit it or not. What need, otherwise, of the Balfour Declaration? Or of the Mandate? Their value to us is that outside Power has undertaken to create in the country such conditions of administration and security that if the native population should desire to hinder our work, they will find it impossible.''

 

Quote from the Oded Yinon plan which seem to be how history has unfolded till today

https://www.voltairenet.org/IMG/pdf/A_strategy_for_Israel_in_the_Nineteen_Eighties.pdf

''Every kind of inter-Arab confrontation will assist us in the short run and will shorten the way to the more important aim of breaking up Iraq into denominations as in Syria and in Lebanon.''

''Lebanon’s total dissolution into five provinces serves as a precedent for the entire Arab world including Egypt, Syria, Iraq and the Arabian peninsula and is already following that track. The subsequent dissolution of Syria and Iraq into ethnically or religiously unique areas, as in Lebanon, is Israel’s primary target on the Eastern front in the long run. The dissolution of the military power of these states serves as the primary short-term target''

''Dispersal of the population is therefore a domestic strategic aim of the highest order; otherwise, we shall cease to exist within any borders. Judea, Samaria and the Galilee are our sole guarantee for national existence, and if we do not become the majority in the mountain areas, we shall not rule in the country and we shall be like the Crusaders, who lost this country which was not theirs anyhow, and in which they were foreigners to begin with. Rebalancing the country demographically, strategically and economically is the highest and most central aim today.''

Great video:

 

And you say Zionism has been the best thing to happen to the Middle East. Wisen up your bigoted self for your own sake.

@Twentyfirst He seems to be advocating for colonialism with liberal-progressive characteristics. Quite profound and paradigm shifting. He’s a progressive colonialist.

Edited by zazen

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1 hour ago, zazen said:

And you say Zionism has been the best thing to happen to the Middle East. Wisen up your bigoted self for your own sake

Could be a false statement, or a true one, the game is not over.

The Middle East is a very complicated place. Israel has one goal, and that is to survive as a nation. Do you think it should disappear? It seems they've made a great effort; they're earning the respect of surrounding countries.

And in doing so, perhaps they'll generate stability. If Israel didn't exist, do you think there would be peace in the Middle East? There's always war there; it's easy to blame everyone but yourself. How important are the Palestinians? Much more so than the Kurds? Or the Syrians? Or all those who are in war zones now? Why? 

Palestinians have built their identity on hatred. It's their core. You see that as absolutely justified; I see it as absolute stupidity. Different opinions. And seems that west now support the hate of the Palestinian. 

 

Edited by Breakingthewall

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1 hour ago, zazen said:

Lebanon’s total dissolution into five provinces serves as a precedent for the entire Arab world including Egypt, Syria, Iraq and the Arabian peninsula and is already following that track. The subsequent dissolution of Syria and Iraq into ethnically or religiously unique areas, as in Lebanon, is Israel’s primary target on the Eastern front in the long run. The dissolution of the military power of these states serves as the primary short-term target''

These countries didn't exist until after the fall of the Ottoman Empire. This doesn't mean they should be fragmented, but we should understand what the Middle East was like before the English and French drew artificial borders in XX century 

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9 hours ago, Breakingthewall said:

I simply think the Palestinians should have adapted to the changing times and evolved instead of glorifying martyrdom and doing nothing constructive. Living with people like that is impossible; it's a sure war.

Your opinion is that Israel should bow to these mentally ill people; mine is that they shouldn't.

The claim that Palestinians have “done nothing constructive” and failed to adapt to modern realities is historically false. Since the 1980s, there has been a clear and consistent shift in Palestinian political strategy, particularly through the PLO’s formal acceptance of a two-state solution in 1988 — effectively recognizing Israel within its 1948 borders and accepting the principle of partition. This was a major ideological and political adaptation, one that directly reversed earlier positions and acknowledged the irreversible realities created by Israel’s existence.

The 2002 Arab Peace Initiative, endorsed by all 22 members of the Arab League, offered Israel full normalization in exchange for a return to the 1967 borders and a just resolution for Palestinian refugees. This was a massive concession and an unprecedented regional consensus — yet Israel did not accept it. Nor did it use it as a basis for negotiations. Instead, successive Israeli governments have expanded settlements in the West Bank — which are illegal under international law — and entrenched an occupation that undermines the viability of a future Palestinian state. This is the opposite of good-faith engagement.

Therefore, to argue that Palestinians have refused to adapt or seek peace while ignoring these peace overtures is dishonest. Worse, it flips the moral script by blaming the weaker party for the impasse while exonerating the stronger one, even as that stronger party continues to expand its control over the land in defiance of the very principle of partition.

Using the Palestinian rejection of the 1947 UN Partition Plan to justify the current occupation or Israel’s control over the entire territory is historically and logically incoherent. If rejection of partition is the problem, then Palestinians should be praised — not punished — for later accepting partition in the form of the two-state solution. Instead, what we observe is a reversal of standards: when Palestinians rejected partition in 1947, they were blamed; when they later accepted it, they were ignored or undermined.

Meanwhile, Israel itself has repeatedly undermined partition in practice. Current Israeli leadership — including Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and ministers in his government — have explicitly rejected the establishment of a Palestinian state, even in principle. Several have said openly that they support full Israeli sovereignty over the West Bank, and laws have been passed to support settlement expansion. So if partition is supposed to be the moral and political litmus test, then Israel’s rejection of it today should discredit its current actions even more strongly than Palestinian rejection nearly 80 years ago. That it doesn’t — in the speaker's framework — reveals blatant hypocrisy.

Israel’s ongoing settlement construction in the West Bank is the clearest material evidence of its rejection of a viable Palestinian state. The settlements fragment Palestinian territory into disconnected enclaves, making statehood physically impossible. These policies are not passive or reactive; they are deliberate and long-term strategies to alter the facts on the ground.

In this light, it’s absurd to say “Palestinians should just adapt” — they have tried adaptation through diplomacy, recognition of Israel, nonviolent resistance, participation in international legal institutions — all of which have either been dismissed or punished. Adaptation is not unilateral; it requires a counterpart willing to engage. If Israel responds to Palestinian concessions with land theft, siege, and rejectionism, then it's clear who is sabotaging coexistence.

Furthermore, the person shows no real intellectual humility. They are confronted with specific, well-reasoned criticisms, including corrected historical claims and ethical concerns, but they ignore or sidestep them. This is a hallmark of poor intellectual integrity. Instead of adjusting their view in light of new information, they double down on previous beliefs, reinforcing them with insults, stereotypes, and unsubstantiated claims. Their thinking lacks nuance, complexity, and curiosity—traits that define higher-level critical thinking.

The person’s responses suggest a limited capacity for critical thinking, especially in relation to historical context, ethical reasoning, and political analysis. They rely heavily on emotional appeals, ad hominem attacks, and binary reasoning ("evolved vs. backward," "mentally ill vs. rational"). This indicates a low tolerance for ambiguity and an inability to process complex, multifaceted realities.

Instead of analyzing the power dynamics of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, they default to broad generalizations about religious identity, cultural value, and racial superiority. These are not the signs of a well-informed, thoughtful individual engaging in genuine discussion. They are markers of someone more interested in moral posturing and identity-based antagonism than in understanding or resolving real-world problems.

No, they should not be proud of their performance in this conversation. They have failed to demonstrate factual understanding, moral seriousness, or intellectual honesty. Their worldview is built on resentment, prejudice, and historical distortion. Pride in such a position reflects not confidence in truth, but comfort in ignorance. If anything, this conversation should serve as a wake-up call—a mirror reflecting their need for growth, not validation.

They may believe they are participating in a serious political debate, but their approach lacks the discipline, humility, and rigor required for meaningful dialogue. Instead of developing informed, empathetic views grounded in reality and reason, they rely on inflammatory rhetoric and shallow narratives of strength and superiority. That is not critical thinking—it is reactionary bias masquerading as insight.

Edited by Raze

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1 hour ago, Raze said:

The 2002 Arab Peace Initiative, endorsed by all 22 members of the Arab League, offered Israel full normalization in exchange for a return to the 1967 borders and a just resolution for Palestinian refugees

Your posts are too long and angry. We all have attention deficit disorder here, keep that in mind.

Regarding the peace proposal, it included the right of return. 700,000 people left during the Nakba, and around 6 million want to return. Do you think that's realistic? It's just impossible. Besides, Hamas and other groups rejected it completely.

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1 hour ago, Raze said:

They may believe they are participating in a serious political debate, but their approach lacks the discipline, humility, and rigor required for meaningful dialogue. Instead of developing informed, empathetic views grounded in reality and reason, they rely on inflammatory rhetoric and shallow narratives of strength and superiority. That is not critical thinking—it is reactionary bias masquerading as insight

Sure. Your whiny, blaming view may strike you as morally superior, on the side of the victims abused by the abusive rich.

But the world functions through adaptation, not resentment and crying. Let the Palestinians demonstrate their humaneness, let them produce high-quality leaders, not hate-filled, swindling sons of bitches living in hotels in Qatar, and then they will achieve things. 

This is a real Palestinian leader 

https://www.instagram.com/reel/DLHXhVuBhn3/?igsh=MXFwMDhtYTZzZ3dpNw==

Edited by Breakingthewall

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17 minutes ago, Breakingthewall said:

Sure. Your whiny, blaming view may strike you as morally superior, on the side of the victims abused by the abusive rich.

But the world functions through adaptation, not resentment and crying. Let the Palestinians demonstrate their humaneness, let them produce high-quality leaders, not hate-filled, swindling sons of bitches living in hotels in Qatar, and then they will achieve things. 

The reply fails to meaningfully counter the detailed, historically grounded points presented. Instead of addressing specific examples of Palestinian adaptation — such as the PLO's 1988 acceptance of a two-state solution or the 2002 Arab Peace Initiative — the speaker deflects with ad hominem remarks, emotional dismissal, and generalizations. Calling the argument "too long and angry" is a rhetorical dodge, not a rebuttal.

Their claim that the peace initiative is “impossible” due to the right of return misrepresents it. The proposal called for a “just solution” — deliberately open to negotiation. Past talks explored limited return, compensation, and resettlement. Claiming Hamas's rejection negates the initiative ignores that the PLO and Palestinian Authority accepted it, and paints all Palestinians with a broad, inaccurate brush. Hamas’s 2017 charter (or political document) marked a significant shift in its stance and did indirectly accept the idea of a Palestinian state within the 1967 borders, but without explicitly recognizing Israel. So, saying “Hamas rejected the peace initiative completely” is misleading, especially when presented as the sole reason to dismiss Palestinian political evolution. All while hypocritically ignoring the Israeli dismissals of partition that were pointed out to them — in order to continue to pin the entirety of blame on one side. 

Intellectually, the speaker avoids complexity and context, showing little critical thinking. Dismissing long arguments and relying on surface-level points suggests a concrete, adolescent level of reasoning — unwilling to engage with moral or historical nuance.

In summary, their reply is factually weak, morally shallow, and intellectually simplistic. It avoids serious engagement and relies on emotional rhetoric over evidence or ethical reasoning.

Edited by Raze

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10 minutes ago, Raze said:

I saw the first one, and the guy says what's happening is that people are being exterminated because they're considered subhuman. Why do you make me listen to this nonsense? Are you really that dumb? Don't you realize they're fighting radical Islamism,. something extremely serious? Seriously, those people are retarded. Like you with your ChatGPT judgements. Posting that is mentally retarded, don't you see? Well, of course not.

Edited by Breakingthewall

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1 hour ago, Breakingthewall said:

Your posts are too long and angry. We all have attention deficit disorder here, keep that in mind.

Regarding the peace proposal, it included the right of return. 700,000 people left during the Nakba, and around 6 million want to return. Do you think that's realistic? It's just impossible. Besides, Hamas and other groups rejected it completely.

It's the right of return which is international law

But Jews can "return" after 3,000 years?
 

Your brain is completely cooked off Zionist drugs dude. You keep doubling down instead of admitting you got played

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@zazen He is part of the people running a colony for the US and can't admit it

Colonial and white supremacist. He isn't even white but Jewish. Very confused

He doesn't know that the West never changes and it's only a matter of time until they scapegoat the Jews just like they have for thousands of years

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3 minutes ago, Twentyfirst said:

It's the right of return which is international law

But Jews can "return" after 3,000 years?
 

Your brain is completely cooked off Zionist drugs dude. You keep doubling down instead of admitting you got played

Because the Jews came to a depopulated area to bring prosperity and development, not to an overpopulated area with the idea of exterminating those living there.

No one believes the Palestinians' peace plans; it's obvious they're maneuvers to get closer to their goal, which is to expel the Jews. It bothers you greatly that the Jews don't allow themselves to be sodomized. According to you, they should allow it.

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24 minutes ago, Breakingthewall said:

I saw the first one, and the guy says what's happening is that people are being exterminated because they're considered subhuman. Why do you make me listen to this nonsense? Are you really that dumb? Don't you realize they're fighting radical Islamism,. something extremely serious? Seriously, those people are retarded. Like you with your ChatGPT judgements. Posting that is mentally retarded, don't you see? Well, of course not.

The claim that Israel is simply “fighting radical Islamism” in Gaza, and that accusations of systemic harm to civilians or exterminatory intent are “nonsense,” is not only reductive but contradicted by a broader set of historical facts and official policies. Israel’s long-term strategy in relation to Palestinian political factions complicates the idea that its current actions are solely or even primarily about fighting radical Islamism. There is substantial evidence that Israel has, at various points, contributed to the strengthening of Islamist groups like Hamas while simultaneously undermining more secular, diplomatic Palestinian entities like the Palestinian Authority (PA). This historical pattern calls into question the sincerity or singularity of the “war on Islamism” narrative.

For example, during the First Intifada in the late 1980s, Israeli authorities permitted and, in some views, encouraged the growth of Hamas as a counterweight to the PLO, which they regarded as a more threatening nationalist and secular movement. Hamas was allowed to register as a charitable organization, while PLO-affiliated groups faced more suppression. Later, even after Hamas had become an overtly militant and hostile organization, Israeli officials allowed Qatari funds to flow into Gaza, propping up Hamas's rule. In 2019, Israeli finance minister Bezalel Smotrich reportedly called Hamas “an asset,” arguing that a weakened PA and a contained Hamas would prevent the emergence of a unified Palestinian political front—thereby maintaining Israel’s strategic upper hand. These choices are clearly inconsistent with a narrative that frames Hamas solely as an existential threat Israel has always sought to eliminate.

Moreover, the idea that Israel’s conduct in Gaza targets only Hamas or other radical Islamists is not supported by the outcomes of military operations or public statements by some Israeli officials. In multiple military campaigns—especially during the 2023–2024 war—Israel has been accused of using disproportionate force in densely populated areas, resulting in high civilian casualties, the destruction of residential infrastructure, and a humanitarian crisis. Independent investigations and reports from organizations like Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International, and the United Nations have documented potential war crimes, including attacks that appear indiscriminate or punitive in nature. There are also statements by senior Israeli politicians and military leaders that suggest a view of the population of Gaza not merely as passive victims of Hamas but as complicit or less than fully human—language that echoes dehumanization and collective punishment.

Taken together, these facts strongly contradict the oversimplified claim that Israel’s conduct in Gaza is strictly a fight against radical Islamism. The reality is more complex: a mixture of security concerns, political strategy, and ideological objectives has shaped Israeli policy. That includes undermining Palestinian political unity, tolerating or indirectly supporting Hamas when convenient, and carrying out military actions that have devastated the civilian population.

If someone claims to have studied the Israel-Palestine conflict deeply and to be committed to intellectual and moral development, but dismisses humanitarian concerns, uses dehumanizing language, and presents a one-sided, factually inconsistent narrative, it suggests serious deficiencies in both critical thinking and moral maturity. Their approach indicates that their study may have been biased and superficial, focused more on reinforcing beliefs than seeking truth. Lashing out with insults and offensive language strongly suggests an inability or unwillingness to effectively counter the detailed, evidence-based claims made against them. This defensive reaction often indicates frustration rooted in intellectual insecurity or a lack of confidence in one’s own arguments. It reveals a tendency to prioritize emotional outbursts over reasoned discourse, which undermines their credibility and signals limited critical thinking skills. Such behavior also points to a difficulty in managing cognitive dissonance and engaging constructively with opposing viewpoints, reflecting a barrier to intellectual growth and meaningful dialogue.

Edited by Raze

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4 minutes ago, Breakingthewall said:

Because the Jews came to a depopulated area to bring prosperity and development, not to an overpopulated area with the idea of exterminating those living there.

No one believes the Palestinians' peace plans; it's obvious they're maneuvers to get closer to their goal, which is to expel the Jews. It bothers you greatly that the Jews don't allow themselves to be sodomized. According to you, they should allow it.

I can't reply to most of what you say since it's so out of touch with reality

How is the Jews leaving and going to Europe getting sodomized? 

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@Raze

49 minutes ago, Twentyfirst said:

 

In Gaza, a radical Islamist group has been in power for 20 years, brainwashing its inhabitants from childhood with ideas of hatred and slaughter as essential human values.

This philosophy has become widespread and makes coexistence between Israel and Gaza completely impossible.

Gaza has an enormous population growth, a pressure pot of hatred and resentment that grows every day.

They gave Israel the excuse with 7Oct, which was surely allowed by the IDF, and now Israel is cleaning up that infection, causing the fewest possible deaths, which is a large number of deaths.

Who is to blame? I don't know. I know that a pressure pot of hatred that feeds on and incites children to immolate themselves is not viable and must be restarted, and the radical islamist erased. 

In my opinion the IDF should have continued the war until Hamas was eliminated, because what they've done is surrender and release 2,000 Hamas militants It's a victory for Hamas, which says yes to everything and will return to its own thing, which is death.

Edited by Breakingthewall

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2 hours ago, Breakingthewall said:

@Raze

In Gaza, a radical Islamist group has been in power for 20 years, brainwashing its inhabitants from childhood with ideas of hatred and slaughter as essential human values.

This philosophy has become widespread and makes coexistence between Israel and Gaza completely impossible.

Gaza has an enormous population growth, a pressure pot of hatred and resentment that grows every day.

They gave Israel the excuse with 7Oct, which was surely allowed by the IDF, and now Israel is cleaning up that infection, causing the fewest possible deaths, which is a large number of deaths.

Who is to blame? I don't know. I know that a pressure pot of hatred that feeds on and incites children to immolate themselves is not viable and must be restarted, and the radical islamist erased. 

In my opinion the IDF should have continued the war until Hamas was eliminated, because what they've done is surrender and release 2,000 Hamas militants It's a victory for Hamas, which says yes to everything and will return to its own thing, which is death.

The claim that Gaza's population has been "brainwashed from childhood with ideas of hatred and slaughter as essential human values" is not just misleading — it's a textbook case of projection masquerading as moral clarity. The 2004 JWeekly article debunks sensationalist Western and Israeli media narratives that falsely portray Palestinian children as being raised en masse to become suicide bombers. The article points out that claims of "incitement" were often grossly exaggerated, manipulated, or based on isolated anecdotes presented without context. But of course, for someone clinging to an image of Gaza as a hive of pure hatred, nuance is not only inconvenient — it’s incompatible with the worldview.

Moreover, the 2013 NPR report on the U.S.-funded study analyzing Israeli and Palestinian textbooks shatters the premise of a uniquely hateful Palestinian curriculum. The study found that both Israeli and Palestinian educational systems fail to present each other's narratives accurately. There’s little empathy on either side, but the idea that Palestinian children are uniquely radicalized while Israeli youth are raised on pacifism and rainbows is fantasy-level delusion. In fact, The Guardian’s 2011 report documents rising levels of racism in Israeli schools, including explicit anti-Arab sentiment among both students and educators. But, predictably, critics like the one quoted turn a blind eye to this, reserving moral outrage exclusively for the "Other."

If "brainwashing" is truly your concern, it's worth asking why you're silent about one side's erasure of Palestinian history and growing ethno-nationalism. But then again, that would require intellectual consistency — a resource seemingly in short supply.

One of the more perversely surreal claims is that Israel is "cleaning up that infection" while "causing the fewest possible deaths." Aside from the nauseating biological metaphor — describing over 2 million people as a disease — this is a spectacular feat of self-deception. According to the December 2024 Human Rights Watch report, Israel’s actions in Gaza involve systematic deprivation of food, water, electricity, and medicine to civilians — in direct violation of international humanitarian law. The report explicitly states that these are not collateral consequences but deliberate policies: the use of starvation as a weapon of war. If this is someone's idea of restraint, one shudders to imagine what excess would look like.

Similarly, the 2024 Amnesty International report documents numerous instances of indiscriminate bombing, targeting of civilian infrastructure, and mass displacement. One detailed case involves the bombing of a refugee shelter, killing dozens of civilians without any identified military target. When entire neighborhoods are flattened, medical convoys are bombed, and humanitarian aid is blocked, only the most ideologically blinkered would describe it as “minimizing casualties.”

But this is the problem with people who reduce ethics to loyalty tests: if Israel does it, it must be “necessary,” no matter how brutal. If Palestinians die, it must be their own fault for being born in the wrong zip code. It’s not analysis — it’s apologia dressed up as moral clarity.

The belief that the IDF should have "continued the war until Hamas was eliminated" is a military fantasy — the kind that could only be held by someone whose understanding of counterinsurgency is based on action movies and Twitter threads. According to the RAND Corporation's study "How Terrorist Groups End", only 7% of terrorist organizations are defeated through military force. The most successful strategies involve political integration or robust intelligence and law enforcement operations, not carpet bombing or siege warfare.

Hamas is more than just a militia — it is also a governing body, a provider of social services, and, for many Gazans, a symbol of resistance to a brutal occupation. Even if the IDF were to dismantle Hamas’s military wing (at great human cost), the ideology — and more dangerously, the grievances that fuel it — would persist. Waging total war to “eliminate” Hamas without addressing the underlying occupation, economic blockade, and daily humiliations endured by Palestinians is like trying to kill a plant by clipping the leaves.

The blind faith in total war as a path to peace is not only strategically illiterate but also morally bankrupt. It elevates military annihilation as a substitute for diplomacy, while treating civilians as acceptable collateral damage. That is not counterterrorism — it's state-sanctioned vengeance.

The speaker's supposed concern about Hamas’s survival rings hollow in light of Haaretz’s 2025 report, which revealed that Israel replaced moderate Fatah prisoners with convicted Hamas operatives in a prisoner swap. Why? Because empowering Fatah — a more moderate, diplomatically engaged Palestinian faction — would undermine the “no partner for peace” narrative that justifies endless war. Supporting Israel under the pretense of opposing Hamas, while ignoring the fact that Israeli policy often strengthens Hamas for strategic convenience, is intellectual malpractice.

This hypocrisy lays bare what’s really going on: Hamas is useful. It justifies war. It absolves Israel from making peace. And for people like the speaker, it simplifies the moral equation down to something they can understand: one side good, one side evil. Facts be damned.

What does this worldview say about the person holding it? Frankly, not much that flatters their intellect or ethics. Their grasp of geopolitics appears to extend no further than whichever pundit last yelled the loudest on cable news. Their understanding of military affairs is laughably shallow — they repeat the phrase “eliminate Hamas” like it’s a cheat code, oblivious to how such strategies consistently fail across modern history.

More disturbingly, the language used — “infection,” “pressure pot,” “restart Gaza,” “immolate themselves” — is dehumanizing in the extreme. It reflects a moral outlook that is at best indifferent to civilian life and at worst comfortable with collective punishment as policy. This is not the rhetoric of a principled observer — it is the language of someone who has become morally anesthetized, so long as the suffering is happening on the other side of the wall.

Such views should be treated with deep skepticism. They are not expressions of moral clarity or strategic insight — they are symptoms of ideological capture. And while everyone is entitled to their opinion, not all opinions are entitled to respect — especially when they whitewash war crimes, demonize civilians, and promote endless war as a viable path to peace.

The quoted analysis reflects a profoundly unserious and ethically compromised perspective — one that fails on factual, legal, strategic, and moral grounds. It misrepresents the nature of education in Gaza, falsely portrays Israel's conduct as restrained, clings to unrealistic military goals, and ignores Israel's own role in sustaining Hamas for political gain. The person advancing these arguments demonstrates a stunning lack of critical thinking, intellectual humility, and human empathy. If this is their idea of geopolitical analysis, they would be better off reading history books than writing manifestos.

In summary, the speaker exhibits the moral absolutism and binary reasoning typical of a younger developmental stage, but without the openness to learning that youth often allows. Unlike a child, who might outgrow simplistic thinking, this person clings to it — not out of innocence, but out of fear, dogma, or a need to protect a brittle identity rooted in conflict. 

Edited by Raze

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23 minutes ago, Raze said:

he 2004 JWeekly article debunks sensationalist Western and Israeli media narratives that falsely portray Palestinian children as being raised en masse to become suicide bombers

Maybe you didn't know that Hamas got the power in 2005

23 minutes ago, Raze said:

The blind faith in total war as a path to peace is not only strategically illiterate but also morally bankrupt. It elevates military annihilation as a substitute for diplomacy, while treating civilians as acceptable collateral damage. That is not counterterrorism — it's state-sanctioned vengeance.

Ask the imperial Japanese to be diplomatic. Maybe they would insert a katana in your anus after burn alive your daughters in front you just for fun .

23 minutes ago, Raze said:

The claim that Gaza's population has been "brainwashed from childhood with ideas of hatred and slaughter as essential human values

 

The Story of Wafa al-Bass

Wafa Samir Ibrahim al-Bass was a young Palestinian woman from the Jabalia refugee camp in the Gaza Strip. In 2004, when she was about 20 years old, she suffered severe burns over much of her body after a gas cylinder exploded in her home. Her injuries were so grave that local doctors in Gaza could not adequately treat her.

Through a humanitarian coordination channel, Israel granted her permission to cross the Erez checkpoint and receive advanced medical care at Soroka Medical Center in Be’er Sheva — an Israeli hospital known for treating both Israelis and Palestinians. Doctors there saved her life after months of complex surgeries and skin grafts.

However, on June 20, 2005, something extraordinary and tragic happened. As she was returning to the same hospital for a follow-up appointment, Israeli security personnel at the Erez crossing noticed her behaving nervously during a routine check. When they examined her, they discovered approximately ten kilograms of explosives hidden in her underwear.

Her plan, as she later admitted during interrogation, was to detonate herself inside Soroka hospital, killing as many Israeli doctors and patients as possible — the very people who had previously saved her life.

The bomb failed to detonate because of a technical malfunction. Border guards surrounded her, and she began shouting, “I am not afraid to die. I came to become a martyr!”
She was arrested before she could activate the explosives.

During questioning, she explained that she had been recruited by members of the al-Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigades, a militant faction linked to Fatah. They allegedly convinced her that her suffering and disfigurement could be redeemed through martyrdom, turning her personal trauma into what they called a “holy mission.”

Her attempted attack shocked both Israelis and Palestinians. Israeli doctors from Soroka expressed disbelief and heartbreak that someone they had saved could try to murder them. Many Palestinian commentators, however, presented her as a “victim of despair and manipulation.”

In 2005, Wafa al-Bass was convicted of attempted murder and sentenced to 12 years in prison by an Israeli court.
She served part of her sentence and was released in 2011 as part of the Gilad Shalit prisoner exchange, in which over 1,000 Palestinian prisoners were freed in return for one Israeli soldier held by Hamas.

After her release, she gave several interviews in Gaza, at first expressing pride in her attempted mission. Later, she gave more ambiguous statements, sometimes describing her life as “a tragedy used by others.”

Analysis

The case of Wafa al-Bass became symbolic for both sides:

For Israelis, it illustrated the moral collapse of terrorism — turning even humanitarian aid into an opportunity for attack.

For Palestinians, it exposed how desperation, propaganda, and trauma can lead a young woman from victimhood to self-destruction.

 

 

Edited by Breakingthewall

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21 minutes ago, Breakingthewall said:

Maybe you didn't know that Hamas got the power in 2005

Ask the imperial Japanese to be diplomatic. Maybe they would insert a katana in your anus after burn alive your daughters in front you just for fun .

 

The Story of Wafa al-Bass

Wafa Samir Ibrahim al-Bass was a young Palestinian woman from the Jabalia refugee camp in the Gaza Strip. In 2004, when she was about 20 years old, she suffered severe burns over much of her body after a gas cylinder exploded in her home. Her injuries were so grave that local doctors in Gaza could not adequately treat her.

Through a humanitarian coordination channel, Israel granted her permission to cross the Erez checkpoint and receive advanced medical care at Soroka Medical Center in Be’er Sheva — an Israeli hospital known for treating both Israelis and Palestinians. Doctors there saved her life after months of complex surgeries and skin grafts.

However, on June 20, 2005, something extraordinary and tragic happened. As she was returning to the same hospital for a follow-up appointment, Israeli security personnel at the Erez crossing noticed her behaving nervously during a routine check. When they examined her, they discovered approximately ten kilograms of explosives hidden in her underwear.

Her plan, as she later admitted during interrogation, was to detonate herself inside Soroka hospital, killing as many Israeli doctors and patients as possible — the very people who had previously saved her life.

The bomb failed to detonate because of a technical malfunction. Border guards surrounded her, and she began shouting, “I am not afraid to die. I came to become a martyr!”
She was arrested before she could activate the explosives.

During questioning, she explained that she had been recruited by members of the al-Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigades, a militant faction linked to Fatah. They allegedly convinced her that her suffering and disfigurement could be redeemed through martyrdom, turning her personal trauma into what they called a “holy mission.”

Her attempted attack shocked both Israelis and Palestinians. Israeli doctors from Soroka expressed disbelief and heartbreak that someone they had saved could try to murder them. Many Palestinian commentators, however, presented her as a “victim of despair and manipulation.”

In 2005, Wafa al-Bass was convicted of attempted murder and sentenced to 12 years in prison by an Israeli court.
She served part of her sentence and was released in 2011 as part of the Gilad Shalit prisoner exchange, in which over 1,000 Palestinian prisoners were freed in return for one Israeli soldier held by Hamas.

After her release, she gave several interviews in Gaza, at first expressing pride in her attempted mission. Later, she gave more ambiguous statements, sometimes describing her life as “a tragedy used by others.”

Analysis

The case of Wafa al-Bass became symbolic for both sides:

For Israelis, it illustrated the moral collapse of terrorism — turning even humanitarian aid into an opportunity for attack.

For Palestinians, it exposed how desperation, propaganda, and trauma can lead a young woman from victimhood to self-destruction.

 

 

The original rebuttal made a series of systematic, well-sourced arguments: that the portrayal of Palestinians as uniquely brainwashed is unsupported by comparative studies of Israeli and Palestinian education; that Israel’s conduct in Gaza violates international law; that “eliminating Hamas” is both strategically ineffective and morally disastrous; and that Israeli policy has long benefitted from Hamas’s continued existence.

None of these arguments are addressed.

Instead, the speaker offers a single, emotionally charged anecdote about a failed suicide bomber who received medical care in Israel and later attempted to carry out an attack. While the story of Wafa al-Bass is undeniably tragic and complex, the attempt to use it as a blanket indictment of Palestinian society is an egregious misuse of anecdote as argument. It’s a transparent attempt to derail a conversation about war crimes and systemic injustice by pointing to an individual act of violence—while ignoring the far broader, state-sanctioned violence occurring in parallel.

This one-sided invocation of Palestinian extremism becomes even more hypocritical when set against Israel’s ongoing support for settler violence, which the speaker wholly ignores. If the goal is to discuss moral degradation, incitement, and the glorification of violence, then the conversation must include the 2015 Duma arson attack, in which Israeli settlers firebombed a Palestinian home, killing an 18-month-old baby, Ali Dawabsheh, and fatally wounding his parents.

The response among segments of Israeli society was not universal condemnation. In fact, video footage later emerged of far-right Israelis at a wedding celebrating the attack—waving guns and stabbing a photo of the murdered toddler. This was not an isolated incident. Human rights organizations, including B’Tselem and Yesh Din, have extensively documented how the Israeli military routinely fails to prevent settler violence against Palestinians—and, in many cases, enables it.

In 2023 and 2024 alone, there was a surge in settler pogroms in the West Bank, with masked men attacking villages, torching homes, and shooting civilians while Israeli forces either stood by or actively participated. The U.S. State Department, the EU, and even former Israeli security officials have acknowledged the increase in settler terrorism, often perpetrated with impunity and ideological encouragement from members of Israel’s ruling coalition.

So when someone points to one horrific example of a Palestinian attempting to blow herself up and says, “this shows you what kind of people they are,” but simultaneously ignores decades of systematic Israeli settler violence, the double standard becomes indefensible. It is not moral clarity; it is selective outrage. It dehumanizes one side while sanitizing the other.

The speaker’s reply is laced with violent imagery: “inserting a katana,” “burn alive your daughters,” “restart Gaza,” “infection.” This language is not just morally grotesque—it mirrors the very rhetoric they claim to oppose. Describing a population as an “infection” that needs to be “cleaned” echoes genocidal frameworks used throughout history to justify ethnic cleansing. It is disturbingly close to the language used by extremists on both sides, who devalue human life in pursuit of ideological purity.

What the speaker fails to grasp—or intentionally ignores—is that violent extremism exists on both sides of the conflict, and both societies have elements that glorify it. If one is to condemn Wafa al-Bass (as one should), consistency demands equal condemnation of Israeli youth raised to sing genocidal songs at far-right marches, or settlers who believe it is divinely mandated to burn Palestinians alive.

The celebration of murder at the so-called “wedding of hate” is not a fringe moment—it is a symptom of a society with its own incitement problem. The Israeli government has repeatedly failed to prosecute such acts seriously. In fact, members of Israel’s current far-right coalition have publicly defended, funded, or incited settler violence. Bezalel Smotrich, Israel’s finance minister, once said the Palestinian village of Huwara “should be wiped out.”

When someone condemns Palestinian violence as evidence of a failed society, while refusing to acknowledge the mirror image within their own favored side, it reflects a failure of intellectual honesty. The speaker clearly lacks any commitment to principled consistency. They cherry-pick data, rely on emotional appeals, and ignore systemic patterns that complicate their binary worldview.

Moreover, the refusal to engage with well-documented critiques—like Israel’s role in perpetuating Hamas, or its deliberate use of starvation as a weapon—shows a mind more interested in vindication than in truth. That’s not serious geopolitical thinking. It’s reactionary posturing wrapped in a flag.

The speaker’s reply is a textbook case of moral hypocrisy and ideological capture. They ignore every serious critique raised in the rebuttal, replace data with a single anecdote, use dehumanizing language to justify mass violence, and remain silent on the mountain of evidence documenting Israeli extremism and settler terrorism.

If they believe that the story of Wafa al-Bass proves Palestinians are inherently violent, what do they think the Duma firebombing says about Israelis? Why do they ignore Israeli schools where Arabs are described as “snakes” or “demons”? Why do they not cite the countless acts of brutality committed by settlers, often with state backing?

The speaker’s refusal to engage with specific, well-documented criticisms — and their lunge toward anecdotal sensationalism and grotesque metaphor — is not an accident. It’s a defense mechanism. When confronted with evidence that threatens the brittle scaffolding of their worldview, they don’t reevaluate their assumptions; they retreat into moral absolutism, cherry-picked horror stories, and emotional spectacle. This isn’t moral clarity — it’s intellectual cowardice dressed up as conviction.

Let’s call it what it is: a desperate, almost pitiful, attempt to protect a dogma too fragile to survive scrutiny. They avoid addressing specific points — like Israel’s documented war crimes, the systemic violence of its settler population, or the cynical political calculus behind propping up Hamas — not because they haven’t seen the evidence, but because engaging with it would force them to confront the reality that their moral narrative is soaked in hypocrisy. So instead, they lash out. They spew graphic, violent hypotheticals, invoke one isolated case as though it speaks for an entire people, and ignore the fact that their own “side” harbors extremists who celebrate the burning of infants alive.

This is not just weak — it’s morally bankrupt. It's the rhetorical equivalent of plugging one's ears and screaming "But look at them!" while pretending the blood on your own hands is someone else’s problem. It is the logic of a frightened ideologue who senses, somewhere deep in the recesses of their conscience, that their position can’t hold under the weight of reality. So they don’t debate — they deflect. They don’t argue — they moralize. And they sure as hell don’t think — they perform.

Their version of righteousness is a hollow pantomime: outrage without empathy, analysis without evidence, and certainty without reflection. They want to believe in a world divided into saints and monsters because it lets them justify collective punishment, mass civilian deaths, and dehumanization — not as regrettable necessities, but as righteous purification. That’s not morality. That’s fanaticism hiding behind the fig leaf of patriotism.

Edited by Raze

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