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Merged Gaza just launched an unprovoked attack on Israel

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Well, duh!

Either they stop it or next time it's full of weapons.
I think the bigger issue is that Greta Thunberg doesn't belong there. Naïve people can lose their lives in places like Gaza. Is there anyone aboard that is remotely experienced with refugee issues and hostile areas?
article said:
Defense Minister Israel Katz said that Israel wouldn’t allow anyone to break its naval blockade of the Palestinian territory, which he said was aimed at preventing Hamas from importing arms.

“To the antisemitic Greta and her fellow Hamas propagandists — I will say this clearly: You should turn back, because you will not make it to Gaza,” he said in a statement.
Has Thunberg said statements indicating she is anti-Semitic?
 
Loren Pechtel said:
Whether or not the problems predate anything or there are politics involved do mot excuse ethnic cleansing via expansion of the settlements nor allowing settlers to engage in ethnic cleansing with violence.
I was explaining why your opposition to the settlements isn't practical.
You are shifting the goalposts - practicality is not the issue

Loren Pechtel said:
And they are not ethnic cleansing.
Moving people out of their homes and area based on ethnicity or religion is a form of ethnic cleansing.

Loren Pechtel said:
And pay more attention to the alleged violence--when we get any details it's usually fairly clear that the Palestinians were the attackers.
Bullshit. There are myriads of reports of settler initiated violence. Would like a stack of links?
 
And once again you derail.

I said nothing about whether they were coerced. The issue was whether they knew.
You jumped into a tangential discussion that started with post 7816 with "The problem with your analogy, is that most of Gazan victims did nothing aggressive. "

So, it is not a derail, notwithstanding your taking the post meaning out of context.
 
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Well, duh!

Either they stop it or next time it's full of weapons.
I think the bigger issue is that Greta Thunberg doesn't belong there. Naïve people can lose their lives in places like Gaza. Is there anyone aboard that is remotely experienced with refugee issues and hostile areas?
article said:
Defense Minister Israel Katz said that Israel wouldn’t allow anyone to break its naval blockade of the Palestinian territory, which he said was aimed at preventing Hamas from importing arms.

“To the antisemitic Greta and her fellow Hamas propagandists — I will say this clearly: You should turn back, because you will not make it to Gaza,” he said in a statement.
Has Thunberg said statements indicating she is anti-Semitic?

She's part of the greater Swedish left. The Swedish left have always been incredibly antisemitic. That's why Sweden didn't join the allies during WW2. The Swedish primeminister at the time was pro allies. But the Swedish people... super pro German. This antisemitic undercurrent to our culture never went away.

To put it simply... Greta Thunberg is part of the Swedish left and is acting and behaving like the Swedish left always have.

Israel is trying to starve out Hamas by controlling who gets aid in Gaza. That's a perfectly fine military tactic. But Hamas of course is trying to prevent it. Because Hamas would rather that all Gazans die than that Hamas would lose power. Greta Thunberg was just playing into the hands of Hamas. As so many clueless morons are doing right now.

I think eventually Hamas will lose the ability to prevent Israeli aid deliveries to the Palestinian civilians.
 
Well, duh!

Either they stop it or next time it's full of weapons.
I think the bigger issue is that Greta Thunberg doesn't belong there. Naïve people can lose their lives in places like Gaza. Is there anyone aboard that is remotely experienced with refugee issues and hostile areas?
article said:
Defense Minister Israel Katz said that Israel wouldn’t allow anyone to break its naval blockade of the Palestinian territory, which he said was aimed at preventing Hamas from importing arms.

“To the antisemitic Greta and her fellow Hamas propagandists — I will say this clearly: You should turn back, because you will not make it to Gaza,” he said in a statement.
Has Thunberg said statements indicating she is anti-Semitic?

She's part of the greater Swedish left. The Swedish left have always been incredibly antisemitic. That's why Sweden didn't join the allies during WW2. The Swedish primeminister at the time was pro allies. But the Swedish people... super pro German. This antisemitic undercurrent to our culture never went away.

That is historically inaccurate. Sweden didn't join the allies in WW2 for several reasons, some of which were economic, but the so-called left wasn't who aligned with the Nazis. There's quite a bit more nuance, there, as well.

First, about half of Swedes were always neutral for ideological or pragmatic reasons, wanting to stay out of it.

The rest of the population varied over time:

(1939–1941): There was a strong pro-German sentiment, especially among the upper classes, conservatives, and elements of the military. This was due in part to: anti-communism (fear of the Soviet Union, especially after the Winter War with Finland); a perception of Germany as militarily dominant and a potential victor; and economic ties to Germany. We're talking about the RIGHT-WING, not the so-called left.

(1942–1945): As Germany began to lose ground and reports of Nazi atrocities became more widely known, public opinion shifted significantly in favor of the Allies. Support for Germany declined dramatically.

To put it simply... Greta Thunberg is part of the Swedish left and is acting and behaving like the Swedish left always have.

Just because people don't share your views, it doesn't make them anti-semitic. Sheesh, you've called Jews and people of Jewish descent anti-semitic or even self-hating Jews (a Jewish trope) because they don't agree with you. We could invent a new word for that, "gentile-splaining," but we could also call it anti-semitic to try to always throw Jews into one bucket and say they have to believe you in order to be "good" Jews.

Israel is trying to starve out Hamas by controlling who gets aid in Gaza. That's a perfectly fine military tactic. But Hamas of course is trying to prevent it. Because Hamas would rather that all Gazans die than that Hamas would lose power. Greta Thunberg was just playing into the hands of Hamas. As so many clueless morons are doing right now.

I think eventually Hamas will lose the ability to prevent Israeli aid deliveries to the Palestinian civilians.

I think it's fine if you believe that Greta Thunberg is a useful idiot, but I don't think it's fine if you run around calling her an anti-semite or spout historical inaccuracies. I also don't like the ugliness being expressed in this thread and elsewhere on the Internet about drowning Greta Thunberg, imprisoning her, or whatever.

It still comes down to this for me: Gaza needs humanitarian aid, so just let them deliver it. If it's really the distribution like Loren claims, then so what, no harm.

In the meantime, extremists online in both Israel and supporters of the right-wing and extremist wing in Israel calling her Hamas, a combatant, and saying to drown her ....

in the long run supports Hamas because it makes people not want to support Israel.
 
She's part of the greater Swedish left. The Swedish left have always been incredibly antisemitic. That's why Sweden didn't join the allies during WW2. The Swedish primeminister at the time was pro allies. But the Swedish people... super pro German. This antisemitic undercurrent to our culture never went away.

To put it simply... Greta Thunberg is part of the Swedish left and is acting and behaving like the Swedish left always have.
So the answer to my question is "no, you don't have any statements from Thunberg indicating she is anti-Semitic".
Israel is trying to starve out Hamas by controlling who gets aid in Gaza. That's a perfectly fine military tactic.
...back in the 16th century.
But Hamas of course is trying to prevent it. Because Hamas would rather that all Gazans die than that Hamas would lose power. Greta Thunberg was just playing into the hands of Hamas. As so many clueless morons are doing right now.
Your problem, and the problem of a lot of older people is that they lack any capacity to understand how younger people can see the Israel - Palestine dichotomy differently because they've only observed the period of the generally the siege of Gaza.

You are incapable of understanding how that can have a thumb of the scale impact for their impressions. And instead of trying to communicate with those people, you just call them clueless. Which is so typical of people that have such a high pedestal impression of their own genius and understanding.

Then when you openly support military tactics that are illegal, you are surprised they think you are unethical.

I think eventually Hamas will lose the ability to prevent Israeli aid deliveries to the Palestinian civilians.
As long as Hamas gets money, Hamas will be an issue... which is why money should be the target of Israel and the West, not Gaza.
 
No. That's the difference between the pragmatic and the fantisist. Unless you accept reality as it is, you will fail.

Then let’s talk about reality—not the fantasy you’re selling dressed up as pragmatism.

The “reality” you’ve embraced is one where mass civilian death is collateral, occupation is peacekeeping, and anyone who demands basic human rights is labeled a fantasist. But there’s nothing pragmatic about policies that breed generational rage, fuel endless insurgency, and leave children buried under rubble. That’s not stability. That’s a slow-motion catastrophe.

What you call pragmatism is just moral surrender—resignation to the idea that violence is the only language worth speaking. That’s not realism. That’s intellectual laziness propped up by political cynicism. And history proves it false. Occupation didn’t pacify Iraq. Bombing didn’t bring peace to Afghanistan. Crushing Gaza won’t bring safety to Israel. It just sets the stage for the next round of vengeance.

The real pragmatist looks at what actually works—de-escalation, diplomacy, accountability, and justice. Those aren’t fantasies. They’re the only tools that have ever broken cycles of violence in places from Northern Ireland to South Africa. The fantasy is thinking you can bomb your way to coexistence.

You think I’m the one ignoring reality? Reality is watching children die in shelters and still claiming the war is being conducted responsibly. Reality is refusing aid, flattening neighborhoods, and calling it a strategy. Reality is the world turning away as famine spreads and pretending it’s all unavoidable. I see that clearly. You just excuse it.

So no—I’m not the one failing to accept reality. I’m the one refusing to normalize atrocity and slap the word “pragmatic” on it. You say peace is impossible unless Israel rules Gaza. That’s not peace. That’s imperialism. And history has never been kind to empires that mistake submission for order.

The world you’re defending isn’t stable. It’s a powder keg. And clinging to it because the alternative requires imagination and courage doesn’t make you pragmatic. It makes you complicit.
It's funny how you say that WW2 ended in reconstruction. As if there were alternative scenarios. WTF are you smoking? How about you're grateful we're not having this conversation in German?

Iraq was a success. We removed Saddam. Is Iraq a mess now? Yes. But at least Saddam is not in power. Iraq is no longer a tool of evil. I'd say that's a huge success.

With people like you in charge the good guys will be perpetually hamstrung giving evil a free reign. Evil needs people like you in order to flourish.

If removing one dictator while plunging a country into chaos is your definition of success, then you’re not measuring outcomes—you’re measuring theatrics. Saddam is gone, yes. But so are hundreds of thousands of lives, a stable infrastructure, and any pretense of regional balance. In his place came civil war, sectarian militias, ISIS, and Iranian entrenchment. That’s not a success story. That’s the cautionary tale you refuse to learn from.

As for WWII: reconstruction wasn’t automatic—it was a choice. The Allies didn’t just defeat fascism; they followed through with the Marshall Plan, de-Nazification, and a commitment to rebuilding Europe. If that war had ended with collective punishment, carpet bombing into oblivion, and military occupation without transition, it wouldn’t have brought peace. It would have spawned the very extremism we fought to end. So yes, we’re lucky this conversation isn’t in German—but that’s not because of brutality. It’s because we chose to rebuild, not just destroy.

What you’re advocating now isn’t that kind of justice. It’s collective punishment wrapped in the flag of “tough choices.” You want Gaza turned into post-invasion Iraq, but somehow expect a better result. That’s not courage—it’s willful amnesia.

And let’s be clear: opposing indiscriminate violence doesn’t mean giving evil a free reign. It means refusing to become it. If you need to trample laws, starve children, and bomb hospitals to defeat your enemy, then you haven’t won—you’ve just lowered yourself to the terms they wanted all along.

Evil flourishes not because people call for restraint, but because others, like you, convince themselves that morality is a liability. You call people like me a problem for “the good guys.” But if the only way to be one of the good guys is to look away while civilians are killed en masse, then maybe that label doesn’t mean what you think it does.
Yes, I'm defending it. Because it's the less destructive, long term. Yes, I think you are cold hearted and you don't seem to care about people's suffering. Instead you get caught up on slogans. Just my impression.

Then let’s speak clearly, without slogans.

You claim I’m cold-hearted for opposing a policy that kills thousands of civilians, flattens neighborhoods, starves children, and targets places of refuge—because you believe, in the long term, it’s less destructive. But that’s not pragmatism. That’s cruelty dressed up as strategy. “Less destructive” for whom? Certainly not for the families buried under rubble. Not for the children with amputated limbs. Not for the communities that will grow up under siege, trauma, and rage—conditions that breed the very extremism you claim to oppose.

What you call “less destructive” is a calculation that erases the suffering in front of us because you think it serves a hypothetical future. But history shows again and again: mass civilian suffering doesn’t lead to peace. It leads to radicalization, blowback, and decades of instability. Iraq proved that. Afghanistan proved that. You’re not preventing the next war—you’re planting its seeds.

And no, I’m not caught up in slogans. I’m insisting on a moral red line: you don’t kill innocent people to get to your version of peace. Not if you want that peace to last. Not if you want to live in a world where might doesn’t make right. The idea that restraint is weakness—that you have to break a people to save them—isn’t just cynical. It’s the logic of every failed occupation in history.

So yes, I reject your justification. Not because I ignore suffering, but because I refuse to pretend that bombing civilians is how you end it.
What chances does any of those have to work unless Hamas is first gone, and their network of power is gone?

I'm not sure you are aware of it, but the moment ISIS fell apart, Muslims, generally, stopped talking about global Jihad. We can kill fascism with force. We have done so repeatedly, with success. I think it's the way to go in the case of Hamas as well.

Then let’s confront the heart of your argument: that force alone can end extremism.

If defeating fascism were only a matter of killing its leaders, the world would be at peace by now. But every time that logic is applied without a plan for what comes next—without justice, representation, and a stake in the future—it doesn’t kill the ideology. It fuels it. You point to ISIS, but that’s exactly the case study you don’t want: after its collapse, the region remained unstable, with new militant factions emerging from the ashes. Force removed a symptom. It didn’t cure the disease.

And Hamas? You want it “gone.” Fine. But gone how? By leveling the territory it controls? By starving its population into submission? That’s not strategy—that’s collective punishment. And even if Hamas disappears tomorrow, what replaces it in a flattened Gaza governed by foreign soldiers and scarred by mass civilian death? You haven’t answered that, because your answer is force—and force alone.

That’s the real problem. You claim to want peace, but your framework is military domination. You reject elections, international oversight, and diplomacy not because they’re unrealistic—but because they require restraint, patience, and compromise. You don’t trust those tools. But history has never shown a single case where durable peace came from humiliation and siege.

What I’m proposing isn’t fantasy—it’s the only model that’s ever worked: demilitarization with political resolution, reconstruction with international guarantees, and a population given reason to invest in something other than vengeance. It’s not easy. But unlike endless war, it has a future.

And no, I’m not unaware of Hamas’s power structure. I’m aware that bombing families and destroying civilian infrastructure does not dismantle it. It entrenches it. Because people don’t turn to extremism when they’re empowered—they turn to it when they’ve been shown that law, diplomacy, and humanity are myths.

So if you truly want Hamas gone, then give people something stronger to believe in than hate. That’s not weakness. That’s the only winning strategy history has ever endorsed.
I'm fine with dominance. As long as the dominance comes with respect for human rights and democracy

Yes, of course, the free and democratic western powers were just as bad as Hitlers Germany or communism under the thumb of USSR. <- sarcasm

Then let’s test your claim.

You say you’re “fine with dominance”—so long as it includes respect for human rights and democracy. But that’s the contradiction at the core of your argument. You can’t impose democracy at gunpoint while denying rights to the very population you’re ruling over. That’s not democratic dominance. That’s colonialism rebranded.

You invoke the West as if its historical record proves your point. But what actually separates liberal democracies from authoritarian regimes isn’t that they win wars—it’s that they constrain themselves. That they recognize, at least in principle, that power must answer to law. When we abandon that, when we say human rights are optional if the target is unpopular enough, we’re not defending freedom—we’re eroding it.

Flattening Gaza isn’t a defense of democracy. There are no elections in the rubble. Starving civilians doesn’t protect human rights. There is no liberty in a siege. What you’re defending is domination in spite of democracy and rights—not in service to them.

And let’s be clear: Israel is not installing a functioning democratic system in Gaza. It is not offering equal rights, representation, or self-determination. It’s offering rule by force over a population that overwhelmingly has no say in the matter. That’s not some enlightened form of governance—it’s precisely the model you claim to oppose when it’s carried out by others.

You want to call that pragmatic? Fine. But then stop cloaking it in the language of freedom. Because freedom without rights, without law, without accountability—is just power. And power without restraint is what built every regime you claim to stand against.
Dude. You're the one normalizing civilian suffereing. Not me. You're the Hamas apologist. You've come up with no solution in getting rid of Hamas. Which makes me think you don't want to get rid of them.


Hamas ideology is on par with Nazi Germany. Arguably it's the same ideology. Via Italy, Turkey and first Napoleon the thirds France. The fascist way of thinking is very seductive. Which is why it's so damn hard to combat.

At no point has fascism ever been defeated by nice words. In every case it was was ultimately defeated with violence. That's the only language (Islamo-)fascists understand. These fascist ideologies were all removed at great cost of civilian human lives. Because fascists tend to view any life as expendible. They're complete bullshit to defeat. But worth it. I think.

I get the impression you would label any action against Hamas as war crimes. That's just my impression of you. Yes, I think you are a Hamas apologist. You seem to oppose any method with which to disempower Hamas.

Then let’s get serious—because accusing someone of being a Hamas apologist for opposing the mass killing of civilians isn’t just wrong, it’s the exact moral failure that gets us here in the first place.

You claim I’ve offered no solution. False. I’ve explicitly said Hamas must go. But there is a difference between removing Hamas and destroying Gaza. One is a goal; the other is a crime. You collapse that distinction because you’ve made violence the only admissible answer—any restraint becomes appeasement, and any civilian suffering becomes a regrettable necessity. That’s not strategy. That’s surrender to the logic of extremism.

You invoke fascism, comparing Hamas to the Nazis. Fine—then let’s finish the analogy. The Allies didn’t flatten every German city indiscriminately. They didn’t bomb refugee camps or blockade food into children’s mouths. And after the war, they didn’t occupy Germany indefinitely with no plan for rebuilding—they rebuilt it. You want to copy WWII? Then copy all of it. That includes post-conflict governance, international oversight, accountability, and investment in peace—not just brute force.

Your argument treats civilian life as collateral to an ideology. You say Hamas treats people as expendable—and then adopt a strategy that proves them right. That’s not defeating fascism. That’s mirroring it.

You say I “seem to oppose any method” to disempower Hamas. What I actually oppose is indiscriminate methods that entrench the very cycles Hamas thrives on: humiliation, dispossession, and grief. You don’t disempower extremism by proving its propaganda. You do it by creating an alternative.

You want Hamas gone? Great. So do I. But if your only method is to kill until no one’s left standing, then don’t pretend you’re defending civilians. You’ve just decided some lives matter less. And history never remembers that as victory. Only as shame.

NHC
 
As for WWII: reconstruction wasn’t automatic—it was a choice. The Allies didn’t just defeat fascism; they followed through with the Marshall Plan, de-Nazification, and a commitment to rebuilding Europe. If that war had ended with collective punishment, carpet bombing into oblivion, and military occupation without transition, it wouldn’t have brought peace. It would have spawned the very extremism we fought to end.
...and that's not hypothetical; Germany was split into two parts, one of which was denazified and (expensively) rebuilt, and the other subjected to collective punishment.

One path led to the EEC and EU, and a democratic West Germany that became wealthy, free, and benign; The other to a poverty stricken hellhole that had to build a wall to keep its citizens from fleeing, and whose secret police utterly dominated and terrorised every aspect of daily life.

The collapse of the Berlin Wall was a clear demonstration that fifty years of taking the violently oppressive and vengeful approach was a total disaster.

One of the victorious allies kept their boot on the German neck for five decades; This led to the resounding success story that was (note the past tense) the DDR.
 
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It's just Geneva was written as guidelines for avoiding inadvertent harm to civilians, it didn't envision the deliberate harm to civilians that Hamas engages in.
Do you have any actual independent evidence (not some sort of narrative from your imagination) to support that observation?
Under the assumption your observation is valid, then the civilized manner is to follow the conventions while working to get them changed. If that makes waging war more difficult, so be it.

Otherwise, observers have every legitimate reason to object to the violation of the Geneva convention.
 
Well, duh!

Either they stop it or next time it's full of weapons.
Another one of your favorite fallacies of the excluded middle,. The IDF can check the vessel and let it through if there are no weapons.

The IDF is its own worst PR nightmare.
 
No. That's the difference between the pragmatic and the fantisist. Unless you accept reality as it is, you will fail.

Then let’s talk about reality—not the fantasy you’re selling dressed up as pragmatism.

The “reality” you’ve embraced is one where mass civilian death is collateral, occupation is peacekeeping, and anyone who demands basic human rights is labeled a fantasist. But there’s nothing pragmatic about policies that breed generational rage, fuel endless insurgency, and leave children buried under rubble. That’s not stability. That’s a slow-motion catastrophe.

What you call pragmatism is just moral surrender—resignation to the idea that violence is the only language worth speaking. That’s not realism. That’s intellectual laziness propped up by political cynicism. And history proves it false. Occupation didn’t pacify Iraq. Bombing didn’t bring peace to Afghanistan. Crushing Gaza won’t bring safety to Israel. It just sets the stage for the next round of vengeance.

The real pragmatist looks at what actually works—de-escalation, diplomacy, accountability, and justice. Those aren’t fantasies. They’re the only tools that have ever broken cycles of violence in places from Northern Ireland to South Africa. The fantasy is thinking you can bomb your way to coexistence.

You think I’m the one ignoring reality? Reality is watching children die in shelters and still claiming the war is being conducted responsibly. Reality is refusing aid, flattening neighborhoods, and calling it a strategy. Reality is the world turning away as famine spreads and pretending it’s all unavoidable. I see that clearly. You just excuse it.

So no—I’m not the one failing to accept reality. I’m the one refusing to normalize atrocity and slap the word “pragmatic” on it. You say peace is impossible unless Israel rules Gaza. That’s not peace. That’s imperialism. And history has never been kind to empires that mistake submission for order.

The world you’re defending isn’t stable. It’s a powder keg. And clinging to it because the alternative requires imagination and courage doesn’t make you pragmatic. It makes you complicit.
It's funny how you say that WW2 ended in reconstruction. As if there were alternative scenarios. WTF are you smoking? How about you're grateful we're not having this conversation in German?

Iraq was a success. We removed Saddam. Is Iraq a mess now? Yes. But at least Saddam is not in power. Iraq is no longer a tool of evil. I'd say that's a huge success.

With people like you in charge the good guys will be perpetually hamstrung giving evil a free reign. Evil needs people like you in order to flourish.

If removing one dictator while plunging a country into chaos is your definition of success, then you’re not measuring outcomes—you’re measuring theatrics. Saddam is gone, yes. But so are hundreds of thousands of lives, a stable infrastructure, and any pretense of regional balance. In his place came civil war, sectarian militias, ISIS, and Iranian entrenchment. That’s not a success story. That’s the cautionary tale you refuse to learn from.

As for WWII: reconstruction wasn’t automatic—it was a choice. The Allies didn’t just defeat fascism; they followed through with the Marshall Plan, de-Nazification, and a commitment to rebuilding Europe. If that war had ended with collective punishment, carpet bombing into oblivion, and military occupation without transition, it wouldn’t have brought peace. It would have spawned the very extremism we fought to end. So yes, we’re lucky this conversation isn’t in German—but that’s not because of brutality. It’s because we chose to rebuild, not just destroy.

What you’re advocating now isn’t that kind of justice. It’s collective punishment wrapped in the flag of “tough choices.” You want Gaza turned into post-invasion Iraq, but somehow expect a better result. That’s not courage—it’s willful amnesia.

And let’s be clear: opposing indiscriminate violence doesn’t mean giving evil a free reign. It means refusing to become it. If you need to trample laws, starve children, and bomb hospitals to defeat your enemy, then you haven’t won—you’ve just lowered yourself to the terms they wanted all along.

Evil flourishes not because people call for restraint, but because others, like you, convince themselves that morality is a liability. You call people like me a problem for “the good guys.” But if the only way to be one of the good guys is to look away while civilians are killed en masse, then maybe that label doesn’t mean what you think it does.
Yes, I'm defending it. Because it's the less destructive, long term. Yes, I think you are cold hearted and you don't seem to care about people's suffering. Instead you get caught up on slogans. Just my impression.

Then let’s speak clearly, without slogans.

You claim I’m cold-hearted for opposing a policy that kills thousands of civilians, flattens neighborhoods, starves children, and targets places of refuge—because you believe, in the long term, it’s less destructive. But that’s not pragmatism. That’s cruelty dressed up as strategy. “Less destructive” for whom? Certainly not for the families buried under rubble. Not for the children with amputated limbs. Not for the communities that will grow up under siege, trauma, and rage—conditions that breed the very extremism you claim to oppose.

What you call “less destructive” is a calculation that erases the suffering in front of us because you think it serves a hypothetical future. But history shows again and again: mass civilian suffering doesn’t lead to peace. It leads to radicalization, blowback, and decades of instability. Iraq proved that. Afghanistan proved that. You’re not preventing the next war—you’re planting its seeds.

And no, I’m not caught up in slogans. I’m insisting on a moral red line: you don’t kill innocent people to get to your version of peace. Not if you want that peace to last. Not if you want to live in a world where might doesn’t make right. The idea that restraint is weakness—that you have to break a people to save them—isn’t just cynical. It’s the logic of every failed occupation in history.

So yes, I reject your justification. Not because I ignore suffering, but because I refuse to pretend that bombing civilians is how you end it.
What chances does any of those have to work unless Hamas is first gone, and their network of power is gone?

I'm not sure you are aware of it, but the moment ISIS fell apart, Muslims, generally, stopped talking about global Jihad. We can kill fascism with force. We have done so repeatedly, with success. I think it's the way to go in the case of Hamas as well.

Then let’s confront the heart of your argument: that force alone can end extremism.

If defeating fascism were only a matter of killing its leaders, the world would be at peace by now. But every time that logic is applied without a plan for what comes next—without justice, representation, and a stake in the future—it doesn’t kill the ideology. It fuels it. You point to ISIS, but that’s exactly the case study you don’t want: after its collapse, the region remained unstable, with new militant factions emerging from the ashes. Force removed a symptom. It didn’t cure the disease.

And Hamas? You want it “gone.” Fine. But gone how? By leveling the territory it controls? By starving its population into submission? That’s not strategy—that’s collective punishment. And even if Hamas disappears tomorrow, what replaces it in a flattened Gaza governed by foreign soldiers and scarred by mass civilian death? You haven’t answered that, because your answer is force—and force alone.

That’s the real problem. You claim to want peace, but your framework is military domination. You reject elections, international oversight, and diplomacy not because they’re unrealistic—but because they require restraint, patience, and compromise. You don’t trust those tools. But history has never shown a single case where durable peace came from humiliation and siege.

What I’m proposing isn’t fantasy—it’s the only model that’s ever worked: demilitarization with political resolution, reconstruction with international guarantees, and a population given reason to invest in something other than vengeance. It’s not easy. But unlike endless war, it has a future.

And no, I’m not unaware of Hamas’s power structure. I’m aware that bombing families and destroying civilian infrastructure does not dismantle it. It entrenches it. Because people don’t turn to extremism when they’re empowered—they turn to it when they’ve been shown that law, diplomacy, and humanity are myths.

So if you truly want Hamas gone, then give people something stronger to believe in than hate. That’s not weakness. That’s the only winning strategy history has ever endorsed.
I'm fine with dominance. As long as the dominance comes with respect for human rights and democracy

Yes, of course, the free and democratic western powers were just as bad as Hitlers Germany or communism under the thumb of USSR. <- sarcasm

Then let’s test your claim.

You say you’re “fine with dominance”—so long as it includes respect for human rights and democracy. But that’s the contradiction at the core of your argument. You can’t impose democracy at gunpoint while denying rights to the very population you’re ruling over. That’s not democratic dominance. That’s colonialism rebranded.

You invoke the West as if its historical record proves your point. But what actually separates liberal democracies from authoritarian regimes isn’t that they win wars—it’s that they constrain themselves. That they recognize, at least in principle, that power must answer to law. When we abandon that, when we say human rights are optional if the target is unpopular enough, we’re not defending freedom—we’re eroding it.

Flattening Gaza isn’t a defense of democracy. There are no elections in the rubble. Starving civilians doesn’t protect human rights. There is no liberty in a siege. What you’re defending is domination in spite of democracy and rights—not in service to them.

And let’s be clear: Israel is not installing a functioning democratic system in Gaza. It is not offering equal rights, representation, or self-determination. It’s offering rule by force over a population that overwhelmingly has no say in the matter. That’s not some enlightened form of governance—it’s precisely the model you claim to oppose when it’s carried out by others.

You want to call that pragmatic? Fine. But then stop cloaking it in the language of freedom. Because freedom without rights, without law, without accountability—is just power. And power without restraint is what built every regime you claim to stand against.
Dude. You're the one normalizing civilian suffereing. Not me. You're the Hamas apologist. You've come up with no solution in getting rid of Hamas. Which makes me think you don't want to get rid of them.


Hamas ideology is on par with Nazi Germany. Arguably it's the same ideology. Via Italy, Turkey and first Napoleon the thirds France. The fascist way of thinking is very seductive. Which is why it's so damn hard to combat.

At no point has fascism ever been defeated by nice words. In every case it was was ultimately defeated with violence. That's the only language (Islamo-)fascists understand. These fascist ideologies were all removed at great cost of civilian human lives. Because fascists tend to view any life as expendible. They're complete bullshit to defeat. But worth it. I think.

I get the impression you would label any action against Hamas as war crimes. That's just my impression of you. Yes, I think you are a Hamas apologist. You seem to oppose any method with which to disempower Hamas.

Then let’s get serious—because accusing someone of being a Hamas apologist for opposing the mass killing of civilians isn’t just wrong, it’s the exact moral failure that gets us here in the first place.

You claim I’ve offered no solution. False. I’ve explicitly said Hamas must go. But there is a difference between removing Hamas and destroying Gaza. One is a goal; the other is a crime. You collapse that distinction because you’ve made violence the only admissible answer—any restraint becomes appeasement, and any civilian suffering becomes a regrettable necessity. That’s not strategy. That’s surrender to the logic of extremism.

You invoke fascism, comparing Hamas to the Nazis. Fine—then let’s finish the analogy. The Allies didn’t flatten every German city indiscriminately. They didn’t bomb refugee camps or blockade food into children’s mouths. And after the war, they didn’t occupy Germany indefinitely with no plan for rebuilding—they rebuilt it. You want to copy WWII? Then copy all of it. That includes post-conflict governance, international oversight, accountability, and investment in peace—not just brute force.

Your argument treats civilian life as collateral to an ideology. You say Hamas treats people as expendable—and then adopt a strategy that proves them right. That’s not defeating fascism. That’s mirroring it.

You say I “seem to oppose any method” to disempower Hamas. What I actually oppose is indiscriminate methods that entrench the very cycles Hamas thrives on: humiliation, dispossession, and grief. You don’t disempower extremism by proving its propaganda. You do it by creating an alternative.

You want Hamas gone? Great. So do I. But if your only method is to kill until no one’s left standing, then don’t pretend you’re defending civilians. You’ve just decided some lives matter less. And history never remembers that as victory. Only as shame.

NHC

Good we agree. Gaza will need de-nazification and reconstruction. All you need to do now is back the only horse that can make it happen, Israel
 
It's just Geneva was written as guidelines for avoiding inadvertent harm to civilians, it didn't envision the deliberate harm to civilians that Hamas engages in.
Do you have any actual independent evidence (not some sort of narrative from your imagination) to support that observation?
Under the assumption your observation is valid, then the civilized manner is to follow the conventions while working to get them changed. If that makes waging war more difficult, so be it.

Otherwise, observers have every legitimate reason to object to the violation of the Geneva convention.

Yes, your absolutely right—and your point exposes just how dangerously uninformed Loren Pechtel’s reading of the Geneva Conventions truly is.

Loren claimed:

“It’s just Geneva was written as guidelines for avoiding inadvertent harm to civilians, it didn’t envision the deliberate harm to civilians that Hamas engages in.”

That’s not just incorrect. It shows a deep misunderstanding of both the purpose and the structure of international humanitarian law (IHL).

The Geneva Conventions—and their Additional Protocols—were not written as mere “guidelines” to help nations avoid accidents. They are binding legal obligations ratified by nearly every country in the world, including Israel. They exist precisely because warfare often involves parties who do deliberately harm civilians—whether state or non-state actors—and they are meant to limit that harm, even (and especially) when one side disregards those rules.

To say Geneva “didn’t envision” deliberate civilian targeting is a bit like saying the criminal code wasn’t written to handle murder. It’s nonsense. The conventions were born out of the horrors of World War II and deliberately crafted to anticipate the worst of human behavior. That’s why terms like grave breaches, collective punishment, and protection of civilian populations appear so explicitly in the legal texts.

So your correct to point out that if the Geneva Conventions somehow made war “too difficult” in modern contexts, the lawful response is amendment—not unilateral violation. International law does not function on a “just break it if it’s inconvenient” model. That’s the logic of warlords, not democracies. To abandon Geneva because your enemy violates it is to throw away the very distinction between lawful armed forces and terrorist groups.

But let’s be frank: Loren doesn’t actually appear to understand the Geneva framework at all. Throughout this exchange, she’s conflated:

  • Combatant status with clothing choice (e.g., “headband = target”),
  • Targeting protocols with suspicions and retroactive justifications,
  • Civilian protections with Hamas propaganda,
  • And lawful proportionality with “kills per bomb” math that ignores context, foreseeability, and evacuation viability.

Her legal illiteracy is masked by technical bluster and political loyalty, not by substance.

If you want to claim moral and legal legitimacy while engaging in war, you don’t get to discard the Geneva Conventions because your enemy is worse. You uphold them precisely to prove that your side respects the difference between rule of law and rule of force. Otherwise, you’re not fighting to preserve civilization. You’re eroding it.

NHC
 
Good we agree. Gaza will need de-nazification and reconstruction. All you need to do now is back the only horse that can make it happen, Israel

Then let’s be honest about what you’re actually proposing—not de-Nazification and reconstruction, but subjugation and selective grief.

You invoke “de-Nazification” as if this is postwar Germany. But Germany surrendered. Its leadership signed terms. Its military laid down arms. Gaza is not postwar. It’s an active warzone, where civilians are being starved, shelled, and displaced by the hundreds of thousands—not because they declared war, but because they live in the wrong geography.

And let’s be very clear: de-Nazification after WWII wasn’t achieved by flattening cities and then occupying indefinitely. It was achieved through multinational reconstruction, disarmament, cultural rehabilitation, and, yes, by removing genocidal ideologies—but not by branding every German child as a Nazi and reducing every hospital to rubble. What you’re calling for isn’t a post-fascist rebuild. It’s the continuation of a campaign that treats collective punishment as purification.

And “back the only horse”? That’s not democracy. That’s not peace. That’s a settler-colonial logic that says: we will rule you for your own good. You don’t end extremism by replacing it with occupation. You incubate it.

You want Hamas gone? Then stop creating the exact conditions that empower them. End the siege. Demand elections. Support international monitors. Champion reconstruction not run by the bombers, but by neutral actors. If you think only the side dropping the bombs can be trusted to rebuild, then you’re not after peace—you’re after control dressed up as rescue.

Backing the “only horse” when that horse tramples the very laws that bind civilization doesn’t make you pragmatic. It makes you complicit.

NHC
 
Ah, the “every accusation is a confession”. Maybe if you’re not sure what yo say, you should shut up.
Bullshit.

I'm absolutely certain that the Egyptian military had Intel and Clout. You are the one who doesn't know what you are talking about.
Really??? You don't seem to know that Egypt has been cracking down on tunnels between Egypt and Gaza for years?
Egypt has been pretending to crack down--but they were not actually doing much. Unquestionably the local officials were in on it, whether Cairo was or not remains unproven. But look at how Egypt has reacted to the Philadelphia Corridor. That actually stopped the smuggling (the tunnels come out in IDF-controlled territory) and Egypt hates it.
Prove it.
What are you asking for proof of?
That Egypt has been pretending to crack down.

As such, el-Sissi dealt a great blow to Hamas. Since his rise to power, approximately 1,900 tunnels have been destroyed.

Egypt did not hold back: the tunnels were shelled from the air, destroyed with controlled explosions on the ground, and flooded with sewage water or water pumped directly from the Mediterranean Sea. Some reports said even chemical substances were used, which, if true, turned the tunnels into death traps.

Such reports embarrassed Cairo, and an official was quick to accuse Hamas of transporting chemical weapons to terror groups in Sinai.

October 2014 saw another turn in the war on the tunnels. Thirty-three Egyptian soldiers were killed in an ISIS terror attack, and as far as the country's Supreme Council of the Armed Forces was concerned, the die was cast.

Over the next three years, Egypt destroyed 3,000 residential buildings in Rafah near the border. Satellite footage showed entire neighborhoods turned to rubble.

A mere year later its goal was achieved. According to Arab sources, the Egyptian military managed to destroy 97% of the smuggling tunnels. After that, Cairo turned its focus to the terror groups in Sinai.

Egypt is strongly Islamic. And as such they can't openly support Israel. But they do. What Egypt (ie the Al Sisi regime) wants is stability. They know that they only hope for peace and stability in Israel/Palestine is if Israel is in charge. So they support Israel. Any support for Hamas (or Palestinians at this point) will just lead to perpetual war
So you disagree with Loren?
 

"carrying pilgrims". Big yellow flag right there, I was already expecting deception when I played the video.

"I was already expecting deception when I played the video." Can't much get a stronger admission of prejudice. And the word pilgrim simply means a person who journeys to a sacred place for religious reasons. More prejudice.

Doing something like putting that bus there is a standard ambush technique, clipping the corner of the bus instead of allowing it to stop them and bunch them up is pretty standard in hostile territory. US forces would have done the same thing in Iraq.
There was another car parked directly in front of the bus. The bus was going nowhere.

Assuming every car on the road is a possible attack so that gives the IDF the right to destroy private property. Yup, that's hostile territory alright. Direct hostility to West Bank residents. And people wonder why the Israelis are hated so much.
 
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AI and HRW don't even try to assess the evidence. They consider it impossible to verify and don't even try. And while the intent behind them is good they've allowed themselves to be manipulated into lending their credentials to anyone who wants to frame someone.

And you fail to understand what I was saying about the ICJ. They have nothing at all, the ICJ "case" is simply South Africa alleging wrongdoing without presenting any evidence. And, yes, I don't like the ICJ--it's far too capable of being politically manipulated. That's why the US wouldn't sign on.

If your position is that every major human rights body, legal institution, and international court is too biased, too manipulated, or too incompetent to be trusted—then what exactly would you accept as valid evidence?

Amnesty and Human Rights Watch have documented abuses by Hamas, by Syria, by Russia, by the U.S., and by Israel. When they publish findings, they include detailed field investigations, photographic evidence, satellite imagery, and eyewitness accounts. Dismissing their reports without engaging the content is not skepticism—it’s ideological filtering.
The problem is that for the most part they have no means of obtaining the evidence you talk of. It's all presented by the supposed victims. They can organize and present it, they rarely are in a position to tell fact from fabrication. It's not ideological filtering--doesn't matter which side they are supporting. The first order of business should be to establish that their methods are sound--and that's not done.

As for the ICJ, you say South Africa presented “nothing”—yet the Court accepted the case, issued provisional measures, and explicitly acknowledged that the risk of genocide is plausible. That doesn’t happen without review of submitted material. You may not like that process, but you can’t pretend it didn’t happen.
No material was submitted.

If no international body is legitimate, no evidence is credible, and no criticism is allowed, then what remains isn’t analysis. It’s a blank check for impunity.
Yes and no. There is no international body in a position to be credible. Says nothing about what's proper, just about whether we see it happening.

How is any international body supposed to determine whether the deaths reported by Hamas are real or not, and whether they are from the war or not. (War doesn't magically make natural causes deaths disappear.) 4,000 entries were clearly bogus (back when the total was about 20k), yet none of those supposedly credible organizations said anything about that. Why in the world should I trust them?

Saying it's plausible doesn't mean they have any evidence.

But that’s exactly what it does mean in legal terms.

For the ICJ to issue provisional measures, it must be satisfied that the applicant (in this case, South Africa) has presented a prima facie case—meaning enough evidence to make the risk plausible. This is not a casual statement. It’s a formal threshold in international law, and it requires submissions, documentation, and factual grounds.
That's what you would like. The reality was South Africa asked for time to go dig up the evidence. Strangely, I've not heard anything about them actually doing so.

Then why did Ireland? file with the ICJ asking to redefine genocide?

Ireland did not ask to redefine genocide. That claim misrepresents what actually happened. Ireland, like several other countries, has expressed concern over how the existing legal definition of genocide is applied—particularly the difficulty of proving specific intent in international courts. But they did not propose changing the definition itself. The definition of genocide, as established in the 1948 Genocide Convention, already includes more than just mass killing. It encompasses acts intended to destroy a group in whole or in part, such as creating life conditions that lead to destruction, causing serious harm, or preventing births. What Ireland has criticized is not the definition, but how international bodies often fail to act even when these criteria are met. Their position is about enforcement and political will—not about rewriting the law. So if you’re pointing to Ireland as evidence that genocide is being redefined, you’re not engaging with what they actually said. You’re echoing a deflection.
The interpretation of the definition is part of the definition.

You're omitting the step where you prove mass atrocity.

Then let’s be clear: over 35,000 killed, the majority women and children. Entire neighborhoods reduced to rubble. UN shelters, aid convoys, and hospitals repeatedly struck. Famine declared in the north. International humanitarian agencies, war crimes investigators, and legal experts across the globe have documented this—not based on hearsay, but on field reports, satellite imagery, casualty patterns, and intercepted communications.

You’re not waiting for proof. You’re refusing to accept it.
You continue to see this as proof when it is not.

They are a means of reducing the ability of Gaza to throw weapons at Israel. Without that the situation would be much, much worse. And it doesn't matter that the war has been going on for 80 years, that doesn't make it not a war.

Then call it what it is—a war without end, where one side controls the borders, the airspace, the economy, and the population registry of the other. That’s not two equal parties fighting. That’s a siege.
Yeah, it's a war that won't end so long as the money continues to flow for terror. Blame those who keep pouring money into it. These days that's mostly Iran.

Yes, Israel says the blockade is to reduce rocket attacks. But let’s not pretend the effect is limited to weapons. It punishes the entire population—children, the sick, the displaced—decade after decade. That’s not just war. It’s containment without resolution, and it’s why the cycle never ends. Because when you treat an entire people as a permanent threat, you guarantee permanent resistance.
Punish implies intent, you haven't established that.

It's still the same war. There have been those funding it since 1948 because the existence of Israel is a horrendous insult to Islam. They really hate that conquered land escaped.

Then ask yourself this: if it’s still the same war, why are half the people dying children who weren’t alive for any of it?

You say the war never ended—but that doesn’t give you license to wage it without distinction, without restraint, and without consequence. If your response to deep-rooted hatred is to mirror its logic—treating every Palestinian as if they’re part of a generational enemy—then you’ve abandoned defense and embraced vengeance. That’s not preserving peace. It’s ensuring permanent war.
Because war is between countries, not people. Doesn't matter that none of the original participants are still fighting, it's still the same war.

Same as Yemen has been a repeated battleground for decades. But it's Sunni/Shia so it hardly warrants a mention.

It's not that it's fine to kill civilians. It's that the death of human shields in war happens. You have a very unrealistic picture of the protections given by Geneva.

And that’s exactly the slippery slope international law exists to prevent.

The Geneva Conventions don’t guarantee zero civilian deaths. They require militaries to do everything feasible to avoid them—even when the enemy is breaking the rules. Saying “civilian deaths happen” isn’t a legal argument. It’s a moral shrug. And the moment you normalize it, you erase the very line that separates lawful warfare from atrocity.
And you continue to take the death toll as proof they aren't following the rules.

No. We have no victory to be after. And 50k is far less than 500k.

But that’s the trap—pretending there’s no “victory” yet, so no responsibility applies.

If your campaign has already killed over 35,000 people, displaced nearly the entire population, and created famine conditions, then the failure has already begun. You don’t get to dodge accountability by saying “we haven’t won yet.” That’s how atrocities get dragged out under the illusion that salvation is just one more strike away.

And comparing 50,000 to 500,000 as if lower numbers make it acceptable? That’s not moral calculus. That’s just moral numbness.
The point is your focus on problems does not remotely correspond with the size of the problem.

Fundamentally, this is the trolley problem.

Then own it—because in the trolley problem, the whole point is that you know what you’re sacrificing. You don’t get to pull the lever, crush civilians under the wheels, and then claim it was the only option.

Invoking the trolley problem isn’t a defense. It’s an admission that you’ve reduced moral judgment to arithmetic—lives as numbers, not people. But in real life, the choices aren’t so neat. The rail isn’t fixed. The lever isn’t the only tool. And pretending this war is some tragic but necessary calculation ignores every other way that justice, restraint, and diplomacy could have been tried—and weren’t.
In other words, you don't like reality so deny it. You want some magic wand that stops the trolley and you blame Israel for not finding it.

Once again, you have fallen for the propaganda. Extremism follows the money, not the actions.

Then explain why extremism thrives most in places bombed, blockaded, and broken—not just bribed. If it were only about money, Gaza would be quiet, and ISIS never would’ve risen from the ashes of Iraq. But we’ve seen this pattern before: destroy the infrastructure, kill the families, leave a power vacuum—and then act surprised when rage fills it.
Hey, we are talking about reality here. How can you say if it was about money Gaza would be quiet?!?! The war in Gaza is because Iran is providing an awful lot of money for the purpose of stirring up trouble. The top people of Hamas are billionaires. Where do you think that came from?!?!

You say I’ve fallen for propaganda, but what you’re ignoring is history. When you reduce people to rubble and leave them nothing to live for, you don’t kill extremism. You feed it.
That's what the terrorists would have you believe. Can you name one case? Remember how there used to be a lot of Marxist terrorist groups--that all disappeared after the Soviet Union collapsed and quit funding them.

Iraq was a failure because there was an even worse oppressor waiting in the wings.

Then what exactly is the plan in Gaza—besides destruction?
There isn't a plan. Israel knows it has no ability to fix the situation, they're just smacking Hamas as hard as they can to make it longer until they rebuild.

If Iraq failed because it empowered a worse force, what do you think happens when Gaza is left in ruins, leaderless, starving, and traumatized? Who steps in? Who rebuilds? What fills the vacuum—moderates or militants?

You can’t condemn Iraq for unleashing chaos and then cheer a strategy that repeats the same pattern. If your only vision for the future is “not Hamas,” without food, aid, governance, or hope, you’re not preventing the next oppressor. You’re building the conditions for them.
I know there won't be a solution in Gaza. The problem won't go away until the money for terror goes away.
 
You are making the opposite mistake--treating anything embedded in civilians as immune because no means of protecting the civilians is adequate.

That’s not what I said—and it’s not what the law says either.

Military targets don’t become immune because they’re surrounded by civilians. But civilian presence doesn’t make every strike permissible either. The law doesn’t demand perfection—it demands that all feasible precautions be taken to avoid or minimize civilian harm. If the only way to strike a target is to knowingly kill scores of civilians, the strike is not lawful.

You’re flipping the burden. The obligation isn’t on civilians to disappear. It’s on the attacker to choose methods that protect them. That’s not idealism. That’s codified law.
No. I'm saying they are doing better than anyone else, I feel they are meeting the burden.

And you have never established they didn't do those things. Your entire argument comes down to the outcome isn't nice and pretty therefore Israel is bad.

No—it comes down to legal standards, not “nice and pretty.” You don’t get to reverse-engineer legality from destruction.

When hospitals, schools, shelters, and aid convoys are repeatedly struck—and starvation conditions are well-documented by international agencies—the burden is on the actor causing that harm to show they complied with international law, not on civilians or observers to prove otherwise.
And we have no credible claims they didn't. We have loads of arguments that the numbers mean they must have been wrong--but that's not how it works.

And if proportionality, precaution, and distinction are consistently violated in practice, then the pattern itself becomes the evidence. This isn’t about being anti-Israel. It’s about refusing to accept war crimes from any state, no matter the flag.
I see a pattern of them doing far better than anyone else, including us. I'm comparing them to reality, not utopia.

That is what's happening even though you deny it.

No—it’s not.

Starving Texas would mean cutting off food, fuel, and medicine to everyone because some extremists seized control. That’s collective punishment. And that’s exactly what’s happening in Gaza: 2.2 million people, most of them civilians, are being deprived of aid not because they stole it—but because someone might.
Because someone did. They don't have it because Hamas stole it. Not "might have".

That’s not targeting. That’s siege warfare. And denying it by analogy doesn’t make it any less real.
Hamas was taking most of the aid. It's their primary source of revenue.

And if that were truly the concern, the solution would be to secure the aid—not to block it altogether.
And that's exactly what Israel is doing with it's distribution centers. Making it a package at a time rather than a truckload at a time, much harder for Hamas to steal. And much harder for the water-carriers to ignore.

Humanitarian organizations have repeatedly called for monitored delivery systems, third-party distribution, and protected corridors. Israel has rejected or obstructed many of those efforts. If the goal were really to keep aid from Hamas while protecting civilians, you’d see a plan to deliver more aid safely—not less.
Pay attention to what they are actually asking for and how that compares to the situation on the ground. Because an awful lot of it is actually about maintaining Hamas control.

The thing is in a case like this the broad brush is determined. Change does not come about by proclaiming utopian solutions. Situations such as Gaza always involve major outside funding. And it's generally sufficient to create such situations. There are a few cases where the funding is from the export of something valuable (prime example, FARC/cocaine) rather than an outright gift, but it's always there. Every such situation has ended either with the victory of the evil side or the end of the funding of the evil side.

Why should Gaza be any different??

Because what makes Gaza different is that the overwhelming majority of the people suffering are not the ones wielding the power—or the weapons.
Are the ones suffering ever the ones wielding the power?! You're not establishing a difference.

You’re not talking about cutting off a cartel or dismantling a militia. You’re talking about punishing an entire population of civilians—half of them children—on the assumption that the only path to defeating “evil” is to make life unlivable for everyone under its shadow.

If every conflict were resolved by starving and bombing people until outside funding dried up, then every innocent life becomes a pawn. That’s not strategy. That’s surrendering to the logic of brutality. And once that’s your compass, the war’s already lost—morally, if not militarily.
Iran has already made them a pawn. This whole mess is about killing people in Gaza so you can pretend Israel did wrong.

Your continued assertions about punishment do not make it so.

No, but facts do.

When civilians are denied food, water, fuel, medicine, and the ability to flee a war zone—when aid is systematically blocked and infrastructure is bombed—those aren’t accidents. That’s not a tragic coincidence. That’s a pattern.
It's a pattern. That doesn't make it punishment.

It's exactly as intended by Hamas.

No. It's just I don't let Tehran dictate my perception of the situation. You're swallowing their line completely and thus arriving at the conclusions they want.

Then let’s be clear: If your view is shaped only by opposition to Tehran, not by the evidence on the ground, then you’re not evaluating the facts—you’re filtering them through an enemy lens.

That’s not independent thinking. That’s reactionary logic. And it’s how entire populations get written off—not because of what they’ve done, but because of who they’re lumped in with. That’s not resisting propaganda. That’s becoming its mirror.
It's not shaped by opposition to Tehran. I'm simply recognizing that most of the trouble in the Middle East is dancing to Tehran's tune.

For a third world country Iran actually used to be pretty good. A very noticeable step up from Pakistan and Afghanistan. But that was before the Islamists turned all those countries into NOPEs. I can't say I exactly enjoyed any of them but current me would certainly tell young me to do it.

No. I judge them based on who they are aiming at. I see IDF videos of booms that cause secondaries. I see Hamas videos of brutality. That says loads.

Then what you’ve admitted is that intent overrides outcome for you. If the IDF aims at a militant and kills a dozen civilians, that’s fine. If Hamas aims at civilians and kills them, that’s barbaric. But the law doesn’t work that way—and neither does morality.
Intent is what Geneva looks at.
look at the results. They are doing far better than anyone else. Why should I question the world's best at anything? (Admittedly, Google once said I was walking supersonic. Edge case, I reported the bug, AFIAK it was never fixed (and probably couldn't be fixed) and has become moot by now.)

So by that logic, any atrocity becomes acceptable as long as it’s relatively smaller than someone else’s? That’s not a standard. That’s moral outsourcing. “Better than average” is not a defense when the average is already indefensible.
The problem is you are working from a position of assuming atrocity without considering the evidence.

If Gaza is an atrocity then every war is an atrocity. And the only answer is to bow down to evil because the only other choice is war.

If thousands of children dead, famine conditions, and entire neighborhoods leveled is what “the best” looks like, then your metric isn’t humanity—it’s efficiency in destruction. And the fact that you reach for a GPS bug as a comparison only underscores how casually you’re treating real-world suffering.
Yes, the best is horrible. War is horrible.

I blame Tehran because they are the ones that set out to create devastation in Gaza.

Then blame Tehran all you want—but it doesn’t erase what Israel chose to do in response.

Cause doesn’t equal justification. If Tehran wanted devastation and Israel delivered it, that’s not defeating the enemy—that’s playing their script. You don’t win a moral war by mimicking the enemy’s disregard for human life. You win it by refusing to become what they want you to be.

Justice means being accountable even when provoked. Otherwise, it’s not justice. It’s vengeance with a better press team.
Their script was to get smashed. Doesn't mean the other side can prevent it. As many as a third of police shootings are likely suicide by cop, but even if the cop knows that doesn't mean he has a choice. (And a good portion of the rest are hail mary escape attempts.)
 
And around and around we go.
When most here know this will never end until one side is completely exhausted.( extinguished)
It's matter of how long the rest of us(World) sits back and lets it continue.
 
AI and HRW don't even try to assess the evidence. They consider it impossible to verify and don't even try. And while the intent behind them is good they've allowed themselves to be manipulated into lending their credentials to anyone who wants to frame someone.

And you fail to understand what I was saying about the ICJ. They have nothing at all, the ICJ "case" is simply South Africa alleging wrongdoing without presenting any evidence. And, yes, I don't like the ICJ--it's far too capable of being politically manipulated. That's why the US wouldn't sign on.

If your position is that every major human rights body, legal institution, and international court is too biased, too manipulated, or too incompetent to be trusted—then what exactly would you accept as valid evidence?

Amnesty and Human Rights Watch have documented abuses by Hamas, by Syria, by Russia, by the U.S., and by Israel. When they publish findings, they include detailed field investigations, photographic evidence, satellite imagery, and eyewitness accounts. Dismissing their reports without engaging the content is not skepticism—it’s ideological filtering.
The problem is that for the most part they have no means of obtaining the evidence you talk of. It's all presented by the supposed victims. They can organize and present it, they rarely are in a position to tell fact from fabrication. It's not ideological filtering--doesn't matter which side they are supporting. The first order of business should be to establish that their methods are sound--and that's not done.

As for the ICJ, you say South Africa presented “nothing”—yet the Court accepted the case, issued provisional measures, and explicitly acknowledged that the risk of genocide is plausible. That doesn’t happen without review of submitted material. You may not like that process, but you can’t pretend it didn’t happen.
No material was submitted.

If no international body is legitimate, no evidence is credible, and no criticism is allowed, then what remains isn’t analysis. It’s a blank check for impunity.
Yes and no. There is no international body in a position to be credible. Says nothing about what's proper, just about whether we see it happening.

How is any international body supposed to determine whether the deaths reported by Hamas are real or not, and whether they are from the war or not. (War doesn't magically make natural causes deaths disappear.) 4,000 entries were clearly bogus (back when the total was about 20k), yet none of those supposedly credible organizations said anything about that. Why in the world should I trust them?

Saying it's plausible doesn't mean they have any evidence.

But that’s exactly what it does mean in legal terms.

For the ICJ to issue provisional measures, it must be satisfied that the applicant (in this case, South Africa) has presented a prima facie case—meaning enough evidence to make the risk plausible. This is not a casual statement. It’s a formal threshold in international law, and it requires submissions, documentation, and factual grounds.
That's what you would like. The reality was South Africa asked for time to go dig up the evidence. Strangely, I've not heard anything about them actually doing so.

Then why did Ireland? file with the ICJ asking to redefine genocide?

Ireland did not ask to redefine genocide. That claim misrepresents what actually happened. Ireland, like several other countries, has expressed concern over how the existing legal definition of genocide is applied—particularly the difficulty of proving specific intent in international courts. But they did not propose changing the definition itself. The definition of genocide, as established in the 1948 Genocide Convention, already includes more than just mass killing. It encompasses acts intended to destroy a group in whole or in part, such as creating life conditions that lead to destruction, causing serious harm, or preventing births. What Ireland has criticized is not the definition, but how international bodies often fail to act even when these criteria are met. Their position is about enforcement and political will—not about rewriting the law. So if you’re pointing to Ireland as evidence that genocide is being redefined, you’re not engaging with what they actually said. You’re echoing a deflection.
The interpretation of the definition is part of the definition.

You're omitting the step where you prove mass atrocity.

Then let’s be clear: over 35,000 killed, the majority women and children. Entire neighborhoods reduced to rubble. UN shelters, aid convoys, and hospitals repeatedly struck. Famine declared in the north. International humanitarian agencies, war crimes investigators, and legal experts across the globe have documented this—not based on hearsay, but on field reports, satellite imagery, casualty patterns, and intercepted communications.

You’re not waiting for proof. You’re refusing to accept it.
You continue to see this as proof when it is not.

They are a means of reducing the ability of Gaza to throw weapons at Israel. Without that the situation would be much, much worse. And it doesn't matter that the war has been going on for 80 years, that doesn't make it not a war.

Then call it what it is—a war without end, where one side controls the borders, the airspace, the economy, and the population registry of the other. That’s not two equal parties fighting. That’s a siege.
Yeah, it's a war that won't end so long as the money continues to flow for terror. Blame those who keep pouring money into it. These days that's mostly Iran.

Yes, Israel says the blockade is to reduce rocket attacks. But let’s not pretend the effect is limited to weapons. It punishes the entire population—children, the sick, the displaced—decade after decade. That’s not just war. It’s containment without resolution, and it’s why the cycle never ends. Because when you treat an entire people as a permanent threat, you guarantee permanent resistance.
Punish implies intent, you haven't established that.

It's still the same war. There have been those funding it since 1948 because the existence of Israel is a horrendous insult to Islam. They really hate that conquered land escaped.

Then ask yourself this: if it’s still the same war, why are half the people dying children who weren’t alive for any of it?

You say the war never ended—but that doesn’t give you license to wage it without distinction, without restraint, and without consequence. If your response to deep-rooted hatred is to mirror its logic—treating every Palestinian as if they’re part of a generational enemy—then you’ve abandoned defense and embraced vengeance. That’s not preserving peace. It’s ensuring permanent war.
Because war is between countries, not people. Doesn't matter that none of the original participants are still fighting, it's still the same war.

Same as Yemen has been a repeated battleground for decades. But it's Sunni/Shia so it hardly warrants a mention.

It's not that it's fine to kill civilians. It's that the death of human shields in war happens. You have a very unrealistic picture of the protections given by Geneva.

And that’s exactly the slippery slope international law exists to prevent.

The Geneva Conventions don’t guarantee zero civilian deaths. They require militaries to do everything feasible to avoid them—even when the enemy is breaking the rules. Saying “civilian deaths happen” isn’t a legal argument. It’s a moral shrug. And the moment you normalize it, you erase the very line that separates lawful warfare from atrocity.
And you continue to take the death toll as proof they aren't following the rules.

No. We have no victory to be after. And 50k is far less than 500k.

But that’s the trap—pretending there’s no “victory” yet, so no responsibility applies.

If your campaign has already killed over 35,000 people, displaced nearly the entire population, and created famine conditions, then the failure has already begun. You don’t get to dodge accountability by saying “we haven’t won yet.” That’s how atrocities get dragged out under the illusion that salvation is just one more strike away.

And comparing 50,000 to 500,000 as if lower numbers make it acceptable? That’s not moral calculus. That’s just moral numbness.
The point is your focus on problems does not remotely correspond with the size of the problem.

Fundamentally, this is the trolley problem.

Then own it—because in the trolley problem, the whole point is that you know what you’re sacrificing. You don’t get to pull the lever, crush civilians under the wheels, and then claim it was the only option.

Invoking the trolley problem isn’t a defense. It’s an admission that you’ve reduced moral judgment to arithmetic—lives as numbers, not people. But in real life, the choices aren’t so neat. The rail isn’t fixed. The lever isn’t the only tool. And pretending this war is some tragic but necessary calculation ignores every other way that justice, restraint, and diplomacy could have been tried—and weren’t.
In other words, you don't like reality so deny it. You want some magic wand that stops the trolley and you blame Israel for not finding it.

Once again, you have fallen for the propaganda. Extremism follows the money, not the actions.

Then explain why extremism thrives most in places bombed, blockaded, and broken—not just bribed. If it were only about money, Gaza would be quiet, and ISIS never would’ve risen from the ashes of Iraq. But we’ve seen this pattern before: destroy the infrastructure, kill the families, leave a power vacuum—and then act surprised when rage fills it.
Hey, we are talking about reality here. How can you say if it was about money Gaza would be quiet?!?! The war in Gaza is because Iran is providing an awful lot of money for the purpose of stirring up trouble. The top people of Hamas are billionaires. Where do you think that came from?!?!

You say I’ve fallen for propaganda, but what you’re ignoring is history. When you reduce people to rubble and leave them nothing to live for, you don’t kill extremism. You feed it.
That's what the terrorists would have you believe. Can you name one case? Remember how there used to be a lot of Marxist terrorist groups--that all disappeared after the Soviet Union collapsed and quit funding them.

Iraq was a failure because there was an even worse oppressor waiting in the wings.

Then what exactly is the plan in Gaza—besides destruction?
There isn't a plan. Israel knows it has no ability to fix the situation, they're just smacking Hamas as hard as they can to make it longer until they rebuild.

If Iraq failed because it empowered a worse force, what do you think happens when Gaza is left in ruins, leaderless, starving, and traumatized? Who steps in? Who rebuilds? What fills the vacuum—moderates or militants?

You can’t condemn Iraq for unleashing chaos and then cheer a strategy that repeats the same pattern. If your only vision for the future is “not Hamas,” without food, aid, governance, or hope, you’re not preventing the next oppressor. You’re building the conditions for them.
I know there won't be a solution in Gaza. The problem won't go away until the money for terror goes away.

Lauren, your argument has now shed all pretense of legality, consistency, or moral clarity. Let’s walk through your new claims—because every one of them collapses under its own weight.

You claim that HRW, Amnesty, and the UN aren’t credible because they rely on local accounts. Yet these same organizations have documented crimes by Hamas, by Hezbollah, by Assad, by the U.S., and by Russia—often with the same methodologies: satellite imagery, geolocation, witness triangulation, and forensic evidence. When their work confirms what you already believe, you trust them. When it implicates your preferred side, suddenly it’s all unreliable hearsay. That’s not critical thinking. That’s ideological immunity.

You say the ICJ accepted South Africa’s genocide case without evidence. That is demonstrably false. The ICJ cannot issue provisional measures unless a prima facie case is established. South Africa submitted volumes of material—video, documentation, public statements by Israeli officials, and patterns of conduct. The court reviewed it and ruled the risk of genocide was plausible. You may disagree with the outcome, but pretending no evidence was submitted is either dishonest or willfully uninformed.

You assert there’s “no international body in a position to be credible.” That’s convenient, isn’t it? When every mechanism of accountability is dismissed as inherently compromised, what you’re really advocating for is impunity. If only the IDF is allowed to judge the IDF, then you’re not defending law—you’re defending authority without oversight. That’s the logic of authoritarianism, not justice.

You claim the 35,000+ death toll means nothing because 4,000 entries were “clearly bogus.” Yet neither Israel, the U.S., nor any credible analyst has claimed that the overall civilian toll is fabricated. The U.S. has publicly stated that thousands of children have been killed. But you cherry-pick anomalies to discard the entire dataset. It’s the same logic flat-earthers use: find one cloud shaped weirdly and declare NASA a fraud.

You say the war will never end because of Iran’s funding, and therefore Israel must “smack Hamas” without a plan for reconstruction or peace. That’s an admission that you’ve abandoned every meaningful political solution in favor of indefinite bombardment. And when you admit “there isn’t a plan,” you concede the most important point: this isn’t a strategy—it’s a tantrum with missiles.

You insist this is just “war,” as though invoking the word absolves everything. But even war has laws. The Geneva Conventions exist precisely because of wars like this. They prohibit collective punishment. They prohibit starvation of civilians. They prohibit indiscriminate targeting. You don’t get to invoke “war” to justify violations of the laws of war.

And when you say “civilian deaths happen” and claim the Geneva Conventions offer fewer protections than critics assert, you are simply wrong. The legal standard is not “did you kill fewer than the enemy would have?” It’s “did you do everything feasible to avoid civilian harm?” Israel is bombing refugee camps, aid convoys, and shelters. When the UN, U.S. officials, and humanitarian organizations all say Israel is obstructing aid and failing to protect civilians, waving that away isn’t realism—it’s denialism.

Finally, your answer to extremism is “violence works.” But Iraq disproves you. Libya disproves you. Gaza will disprove you again. The vacuum created by destruction is not filled with moderation. It’s filled with vengeance, trauma, and rage. You claim this isn’t about vengeance, but you’ve admitted there’s no endgame, no reconstruction, no political horizon. That’s not about defeating Hamas—that’s about breaking Gaza and walking away.

So let’s be blunt: if your plan starts and ends with dropping bombs and hoping extremists don’t rise from the ruins, you’re not solving the problem. You’re rebooting it—on a loop. And each time, it’s civilians who pay the price while people like you shrug and say, “That’s war.”

It’s not war. It’s a failure of imagination, of responsibility, and of conscience.

You’ve already surrendered to the idea that nothing better is possible. I haven’t.

And history won’t remember the people who justified impunity under the guise of realism. It will remember the civilians buried beneath their certainty.

NHC
 
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