You say Israel isn’t punishing civilians, just Hamas, but when over 2 million people suffer every day under policies deliberately maintained for years, intent starts to matter less than outcome.
Now, if the argument is that
Hamas is at fault for forcing Israel into these actions, let’s be clear: Hamas bears responsibility for its atrocities and for putting civilians at risk. No one is denying that. But that doesn’t absolve Israel from accountability for its own choices.
When a state with overwhelming military power and full control over a population’s borders, food, water, and electricity chooses policies that systematically destroy infrastructure, block aid, and make daily life unlivable, that's not “being forced.” That’s a strategy.
Why would Israel do this? Because it serves multiple goals:
- It acts as deterrence through suffering, designed to turn the population against Hamas by crushing their quality of life.
- It plays well in Israeli domestic politics, where being “tough on Gaza” wins elections.
- It undermines any realistic two-state solution by keeping Gaza destabilized and separate from the West Bank.
- It sends a regional warning: cross us, and we’ll make your people pay.
- And finally, it's enabled by decades of dehumanization, where Gazans are treated as extensions of Hamas, not civilians with rights.
So yes, Hamas commits war crimes. But, If your justification is “Israel
had to do this,” then you’re saying there’s no line, no amount of civilian suffering that would ever make you say “this is too far.” And that’s a dangerous place to be.
Accountability isn’t a zero-sum game. Hamas being evil doesn’t make every Israeli action righteous. Two wrongs don’t make one democracy.
Of course, some will take this as me accusing Israel of war crimes. I get it, it's hard for the intellectually challenged to tell the difference between sharing an opinion and stating a fact.