bilby
Fair dinkum thinkum
- Joined
- Mar 6, 2007
- Messages
- 40,599
- Gender
- He/Him
- Basic Beliefs
- Strong Atheist
It seems to me that the fundamental difference is that we assume that the violence in Sudan and Nigeria is intractible - that the perpetrators cannot be reasoned with with any expectation of success because they are irrational religionists who would never listen to reason, and over whom we have little or no leverage.If I were to venture a guess, I would say that TSwizzle's overarching point is that while a whole lot of people put forth a whole lot of effort to protest the 'genocide' of palestinians in gaza at the hands of jewish military during a military conflict... nobody seems to give much of a fuck at all about the actual genocide of christians at the hands of muslims in an almost entirely civilian context.
But I could be wrong.
In contrast, we do Bibi Netanyahu the great compliment of assuming that he could, in principle, be persuaded to stop killing civillians and start complying with the rules of war.
That is, we protest about what the IDF are doing more than we protest about what Boko Haram or RSF are doing, not because what the IDF does is just as bad, but because we assess the chances of our protests being in any way useful as much higher in the case of the IDF.
That assessment is partly a compliment to the Israeli leaders (or if you prefer, an islamophobic insult to the leaders of the forces engaging in genocidal attacks in Sudan and Nigeria) in assuming that the Israelis are less irrationally fanatical; and partly a recognition that as a major funder and supplier, the US has more leverage over the IDF than it does over the RSF or Boko Haram.
In short, we care more about those things we feel we might have at least some chance of influencing.