NoHolyCows
Senior Member
- Joined
- Mar 16, 2025
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- Basic Beliefs
- Skeptic
The problem is you continue to believe Hamas propaganda.
Then show me the lie. The bombed hospitals? The malnourished kids? The blocked aid? Those aren’t Hamas press releases—they’re documented by international observers. Dismissing it all as “propaganda” isn’t a rebuttal. It’s a refusal to look.
No, I'm not excusing atrocity. I'm recognizing that Hamas claiming atrocity doesn't make it so.
Then stop dodging: it’s not just Hamas making the claims. It’s UN agencies, doctors, journalists, and aid workers—many with no ties to Hamas. When every source but your own side is dismissed, you’re not seeking truth. You’re shielding power from scrutiny.
Most documented" because so much effort is directed at Jew-bashing.
Gaza is small potatoes compared to the real collapses going on now.
If Gaza is “small potatoes,” then you’ve already conceded the argument—because you’re not measuring morality, you’re minimizing it. Civilian suffering doesn’t shrink because you change the subject. It only disappears when you choose not to see it.
Almost all of these wouldn't know a war crime if it jumped up and bit them. It's always referring to a supposed pattern of behavior--because there's nothing they can point to that's a war crime. A war crime is a specific act, not a general pattern.
That’s simply false. War crimes can be individual acts, but they are also defined by patterns—especially when those acts are systematic or widespread. That’s exactly how the Rome Statute and Geneva Conventions define crimes against humanity and grave breaches. You don’t get to bomb hospitals over and over and claim each strike is isolated. When the pattern is the policy, it is the crime.
I accept that I have no power to stop Tehran from engineering the devastation in Gaza.
You're falling into a standard psychological manipulation trap:
1) Present horrible situation that has no easy answers.
2) Propose "solution". Every objection to the solution is "rebutted" by pointing to how horrible the situation is.
Just look at what has happened with MAGA and The Felon. He offered a false solution, people flocked to it. The same thing is happening with Israel, people are flocking to the "answer" of blaming Israel and demanding they don't defend themselves.
What you’ve described isn’t a rebuttal—it’s deflection. Blaming Tehran may be politically convenient, but it doesn’t erase Israel’s responsibility for how it wages war. Saying “I have no power to stop Iran” doesn’t justify what’s being done to civilians in Gaza, just like blaming “MAGA” doesn’t excuse trampling rights in response.
If your only defense is “someone else made this unavoidable,” then you’ve surrendered moral agency. And when entire neighborhoods are turned to rubble, when starvation spreads, when humanitarian aid is blocked—that’s not a trap. That’s a choice.
You fail to understand. You claim razed neighborhoods. I see collapsed tunnels--when a tunnel collapses it generally takes out the foundation of anything above it, collapsing the building. Especially since most of the construction seems to be concrete and masonry--very strong against most forces from above, very vulnerable to most forces from below.
Collapsed tunnels don’t explain everything. When entire residential blocks are reduced to rubble by repeated airstrikes—well beyond the scope of a single structural failure—that’s not just secondary damage. That’s deliberate, wide-area bombardment. You can’t blame the soil for what precision-guided munitions decide to hit.
And if a tunnel runs under a school, a clinic, or a crowded apartment building, that raises the burden of caution—not lowers it. The law doesn’t say “bomb deeper.” It says “protect civilians.” Collateral collapse is still collapse. Civilian death doesn’t become acceptable just because the blast came from underneath.
The first two don't ring a bell, I do recall the last one. Israel dropped on a meeting of some commanders. Turns out there was a lot of boom in the building. Everyone's pretending they hit the camp, the reality is they hit a completely valid target nearby and got unexpected secondaries. (And when you watch the Israeli bombs it's often quite clear they were fused to explode underground--most of the blast goes up, little damage around.)
That’s the problem—what’s framed as a “valid target” ends up being a known shelter zone, packed with families, aid tents, or evacuees. Even if the bomb was aimed at a meeting, if it was surrounded by civilians—and if intelligence knew that—then it still fails the legal standard of precaution and proportionality.
You don’t get to say, “We meant to kill the commanders” and then shrug when the fireball kills women and children sleeping nearby. That’s not a tragic accident. That’s foreseeable harm, and when it keeps happening, the excuse wears thin.
Yeah, Hamas has blocked, looted and shot at aid trucks. Yet you assume it's Israel doing it.
If Hamas interferes with aid, that’s absolutely a violation—and should be condemned. But here’s the difference: when Israel controls the borders, coordinates the crossings, and bombs the routes, it’s not an assumption—it’s documented responsibility.
Humanitarian agencies, the UN, and even U.S. officials have confirmed Israeli restrictions on aid delivery. You don’t get to deflect by pointing at Hamas while ignoring who holds the keys. Both can be guilty—but only one controls the siege.
The list of every major international body monitoring the Gaza casualties is <None>. There is no independent confirmation whatsoever. There have been some things which have pretended to be independent. Off the top of my head I'm thinking of a study in The Lancet that used a capture/recapture approach to validating data--but capture/recapture absolutely requires that the recapture be independent and they based it on an attempt to count deaths not in the main database. Either they were as stupid as The Felon or they knew they were coming up with fake data.
Then let’s walk it back to basics.
You don’t need to accept every figure from Hamas. But if you reject all external verification—from OCHA, WHO, UNRWA, HRW, Amnesty, Doctors Without Borders, and independent media—then what’s left? You’ve built an echo chamber where only the party executing the strikes gets to define reality. That’s not critical thinking. That’s epistemic collapse.
If no civilian death toll is credible unless confirmed by the IDF, then you haven’t just questioned the data—you’ve made truth conditional on power.
And here you get it completely wrong. You do get to endlessly kill combatants that have not surrendered. (And individual surrender is typically recognized by discarding all weapons and complying with all instructions. And, yes, in Gaza those instructions will normally involve a requirement to strip--necessary to ensure they aren't wearing a bomb.)
Then we agree—combatants who pose an ongoing threat can be lawfully targeted. But that’s not what’s at issue here. What’s being challenged is not Israel targeting armed fighters—it’s the massive, repeated civilian death toll, including women, children, and people who never held a weapon or had a chance to surrender.
You keep shifting the conversation to what’s lawful against combatants. But the law you’re ignoring is the one that governs what happens when civilians are present. That’s not semantics—it’s the very core of the Geneva Conventions. And no, you don’t get to kill “endlessly” if civilians are dying in the process. That’s where legality ends and atrocity begins.
Technical jargon?? I was using the minimum of math to make my point.
Then let’s drop the math for a moment and speak plainly: if your strategy predictably kills civilians by the thousands, destroys shelters, flattens neighborhoods, and leaves children starving, the problem isn’t the math—it’s the method.
No formula justifies that outcome. If the inputs are “target militants,” but the result is mass civilian death, then something is fundamentally wrong. And whether you call it a miscalculation or a tactic, international law still calls it what it is: unlawful.
NHC