• Welcome to the Internet Infidels Discussion Board.

Merged Gaza just launched an unprovoked attack on Israel

To denote when two or more threads have been merged
Chomsky’s statement on the war in Gaza: It is not a war, it is murder.

I think it is okay to copy as it appears with no copyright, and I don't think Chomsky would want it to be privately owned:

(WASHINGTON DC) - The following statement by Noam Chomsky indicates a different stand toward Israeli aggression than Prof. Chomsky has revealed in the past:

"The incursion and bombardment of Gaza is not about destroying Hamas. It is not about stopping rocket fire into Israel, it is not about achieving peace.

The Israeli decision to rain death and destruction on Gaza, to use lethal weapons of the modern battlefield on a largely defenseless civilian population, is the final phase in a decades-long campaign to ethnically-cleanse Palestinians.

Israel uses sophisticated attack jets and naval vessels to bomb denselycrowded refugee camps, schools, apartment blocks, mosques, and slums to attack a population that has no air force, no air defense, no navy, no heavy weapons, no artillery units, no mechanized armor, no command in control, no army… and calls it a war. It is not a war, it is murder.

“When Israelis in the occupied territories now claim that they have to defend themselves, they are defending themselves in the sense that any military occupier has to defend itself against the population they are crushing. You can't defend yourself when you're militarily occupying someone else's land. That's not defense. Call it what you like, it's not defense.”
 
You "assign" guilt but say nothing should be done.

No—I say something must be done, but not anything. Justice without restraint is just vengeance in uniform. If your solution to guilt is mass death, then you’re not pursuing accountability. You’re pursuing annihilation dressed up as moral clarity.

The difference between us isn’t whether Hamas should be stopped. It’s whether stopping them means abandoning every principle we claim to stand for. You’ve chosen to make atrocity negotiable. I haven’t.
We await your detailing what Israel should have done (IYHO) after 7th Oct to get justice for those Jews killed and the hostages taken.
Oh and also prevent Hamas from doing it again.
It's the prevent it from happening again bit that I think is most important.

I have asked that question a few times about Israel could/should have done after 7th Oct. No responses so far. Perhaps you will be the first?
It's the job of the side with the power to find the magical answer.
 

Since Hamas fighters are dressed as civilians, I'd say that gives the IDF a moral free pass to shoot any male and adult civilians. They're not. They're being extremely cautious. But I don’t think they have any moral obligation to.

The moment Hamas fighters dressed as civilians they get 100% of the blame for Palestinian civilians accidentally getting killed by IDF

You really are grasping at straws in this discussion
That would only apply in ground combat.
 
If what you have learned is the above twaddle, I think you've done the wrong research.

Then let’s test that. Every major human rights organization—Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, B’Tselem, UN OCHA—has documented widespread civilian casualties, destruction of infrastructure, denial of humanitarian aid, and violations of international law in Gaza. These aren’t fringe groups or Hamas mouthpieces. They’ve criticized both sides, and their findings are backed by satellite imagery, field investigations, eyewitness accounts, and data from international agencies.
B'Tselem is not remotely credible. They bend over backwards to disguise what happened. None of the rest are worth much.

You don’t get to dismiss all of that because it doesn’t fit your narrative. That’s not skepticism—it’s selective blindness. When your standard of “real research” is whatever absolves one side and demonizes the other, you’re not looking for truth. You’re looking for justification. And if you still think every fact that challenges your belief system is “twaddle,” then maybe the only ideology-shaped box here is yours.
The thing is everything you present fundamentally traces back to Hamas. There is no independent data collection going on.

Being well-read isn’t about reading what confirms your worldview. It’s about engaging with uncomfortable facts, checking your biases, and adjusting your conclusions when the evidence demands it. If you’re unwilling to do that, it’s not that you’re under-informed. It’s that you’ve chosen certainty over understanding.
You are the one who refuses to engage with uncomfortable facts.

Yes, Gaza is horrible. That doesn't mean it can be fixed.

Here you go again with your straw men.

I think you are the one incapable of nuance. I think you are the intellectual coward.

Your theories obviously doesn't match reality. Instead of taking a step back to try to see where you fucked up, you are doubling down

Then let’s test it. You claim my theories don’t match reality—but every major intelligence agency, counterterrorism think tank, and international human rights body backs what I’ve said: that dehumanizing language fuels radicalization, that overgeneralizing from the actions of a few creates blowback, and that civilian protections are the legal and moral backbone of any legitimate military campaign.
Which has no bearing on this situation as the radicalization is driven by money.

You’ve justified bombing civilian areas because Hamas embeds there. You’ve said male civilians can be presumed combatants. You’ve dismissed death tolls because they came from Palestinian sources. You’ve claimed that dressing like a civilian forfeits your protection under the law. You’ve repeatedly called skepticism of Israel’s conduct “propaganda” while demanding no equivalent scrutiny of their actions.
You have it backwards.

What he said is that since combatants dress like civilians that he's not going to blame the IDF for shooting civilians. That's not saying they are combatants, but that in the reality of combat you can't tell them apart and that's the fault of Hamas. Hamas does everything it can to cause combatant/civilian confusion, sometimes they succeed. Blame them, not the people they confused.

If that’s not reducing 2.3 million people to guilt-by-association and calling it justice, what is it?
Where does it even address guilt? We are not saying that what's happening isn't bad. We are saying that Hamas is deliberately engineering it and we are placing the blame with those who deliberately set up the situation to cause civilian casualties.

Calling this a straw man isn’t a defense. It’s a dodge. And until you can answer for the principles your rhetoric implies, the only person arguing with imaginary opponents here is you.
Lol. You’re clearly not paying attention to what I am writing. Nor, I think, any of us who support Israel in this thread.

The world isn't as black and white as you seem to think it is

Then stop painting it that way.
We aren't.
Because every time you excuse mass civilian death as “Hamas’s fault,” every time you reduce complex political violence to “Muslim terrorism,” every time you dismiss documented atrocities as propaganda, you’re not making a nuanced argument. You’re making a binary one—good guys versus bad guys, our bombs versus their knives, justified force versus barbarism.
For the most part it is binary. One side deliberately engineered the situation to cause civilian casualties, the other sometimes can't avoid them.
You claim to reject black-and-white thinking, yet everything you defend rests on exactly that: that one side’s lives matter more, that one side’s suffering counts less, and that one side’s guilt can justify anything.
So Hamas is automatically the good guys by killing so many of their people? Because that's where your argument ends up.

So no—don’t lecture me on nuance while you erase it every time it challenges your comfort. If you truly believed in complexity, you’d stop treating atrocity as a strategy and moral scrutiny as betrayal.
You are the one avoiding nuance.
 
I don't think that is true.

You're not giving Israel any possible option to get their hostages back.

So what's your brilliant solution to the problem?

The solution isn’t simple—but that’s not an excuse for making it barbaric.
Notably absent from your reply is any solution.
Hamas' is on purpose making it as difficult as possible for the IDF
Your fantasy scenario falls apart against an enemy as evil as Hamas

Then you’ve admitted it—your argument isn’t that justice no longer applies, it’s that Hamas is so evil, you believe the rules should be suspended.
No. We are saying that your fantasy answers don't work against evil.

You don't realize how Hamas deliberately engineers civilian casualties. It's a quite standard play: ensure people die in a fashion where you can pretend the misdeeds of a western power caused it, go crying to the press. If you don't understand psychological manipulation tactics you'll fall for them.

You said Hamas disguising itself gives the IDF a moral free pass to shoot any adult male civilian. That’s not a distortion—it’s your words. And if you believe that, then yes, you are arguing for a framework where civilian protections vanish the moment combatants break the rules.
No. He's saying that Hamas' actions mean that the IDF doesn't look at uniforms, but behavior. And that's sometimes going to get civilians shot.

Lol. Stop being an apologist for Hamas. Its distasteful

Calling out the mass killing of civilians isn’t apologizing for Hamas. It’s refusing to excuse war crimes just because the victims are on the wrong side of your politics.

If your defense of Israel requires turning every civilian into a suspect, every child into a shield, and every hospital into a target, then you’re not fighting terror—you’re echoing its logic. And that’s what’s truly distasteful.

NHC
It's Hamas doing all these things.
 
I think you are talking shit. I don't believe your opinions are based on research. If they are you either haven’t understood them or taken them out of context

Then prove it. Show me the research I’ve misunderstood. Show me the context I’ve supposedly twisted. Because so far, all you’ve done is repeat “I don’t believe you” as if skepticism alone is an argument. It isn’t. It’s a substitute for one.
The problem here is that you think there's research to base your position on. We don't believe you because you are making a ridiculously improbable claim: that there is independent verification of the deaths and the status of the dead.

You keep accusing me of talking shit—but you haven’t once engaged with the actual evidence I’ve cited. FBI reports. RAND studies. UN assessments. Decades of peer-reviewed data on radicalization, terrorism, and conflict. You haven’t refuted a word of it. You’ve just declared it invalid because it doesn’t match your assumptions.
Relevant to terrorists in the US, not relevant to what's going on over there.
 
Just pay attention to what happens over there. Beware the bias caused by the fact that most Palestinian attacks are routine and thus not news. Peck, peck, peck, SLAM. Then the pecks die down for a while.

Then you’ve just described a cycle—but only condemned one half of it.
No, because the pecks grow because of terror money, not because of what Israel did.

You say Palestinian attacks are routine and underreported, but you ignore why that “routine” exists: occupation, blockade, displacement, and decades of unresolved injustice. You frame the Israeli response as a justified “slam,” but forget that every slam involves real people—flattened homes, starving children, entire families erased. That’s not pecking back. That’s devastation—and it doesn’t disappear because the headlines fade.
Which ignores the fact that this predates any of your supposed causes.

Once again, taking Hamas propaganda as true. The why is because they are paid vast sums to do so.

Then prove it.

Show the “vast sums.” Show a financial paper trail that explains why a population under siege, living in rubble, drinking contaminated water, and burying thousands of dead would need to be paid to resist. You’re not offering analysis—you’re offering cartoon logic: that people with nothing somehow need a cash incentive to be angry, desperate, or violent.
You are demanding an impossible degree of proof.

Where is the money coming from, a money fairy?? Arafat was a billionaire. The current crop of leaders are billionaires. There's no on-the-books source of anywhere near that kind of money. Nor is there any on-the-books source of their weapons. You can't just go buy that sort of stuff without and end user certificate--and only a country can get those.

The reality is far more uncomfortable than your fantasy of mercenaries. This isn’t about payouts—it’s about powerlessness. When you reduce generational trauma and systemic oppression to a payroll, you’re not exposing propaganda. You’re swallowing your own.
If oppression is the cause why isn't there a horrible mess in Western Sahara or whatever it's called these days? There's very little relationship between terror and oppression. But there's a huge relationship between terror and money.

You ignore that Palestinian attacks on Israel are just the norm.

No—I’m pointing out that if both sides are locked in a cycle of violence, the moral responsibility lies most with the side that holds overwhelming power, control, and capacity to de-escalate. Saying “it’s just the norm” doesn’t excuse it. It condemns the conditions that made it normal. And if your answer to a decades-long pattern of occupation, blockade, and despair is to shrug and say “they started it,” then you’re not describing a war. You’re excusing its permanence.
Except it's not a cycle. It's a pattern that is repeated as the terrorists wish. If it were a pattern the downtime would not be so variable.

No. Just because they shook hands doesn't mean a deal was reached.

And while the PLO "renounced" terrorism they didn't actually do it. Their policies didn't change. Pay-for-slay remains their top priority.

Note that Olso was an interim agreement, it kicked the can on everything important.

Then you’ve just proved the point: when Palestinians make formal diplomatic moves—like recognizing Israel, signing Oslo, renouncing terrorism—they’re dismissed as meaningless gestures. But when Israel demands recognition, it’s treated as nonnegotiable.
They are dismissed as meaningless because they were shams.

They made formal moves--but didn't follow through. And walked when presented an agreement close enough to their demands they couldn't risk having a counteroffer accepted.

Oslo resolved nothing, purely can-kicking.

They said they renounced terrorism but didn't actually stop doing it.
Yes, Oslo was interim. But that’s exactly the problem. Every time Palestinians conceded, the process stalled. Settlement expansion accelerated. Final status issues were postponed indefinitely. And now, decades later, people like you pretend it was all just a handshake.
Except you are pretending they conceded. No real concessions were made.

You can’t say Palestinians never tried diplomacy while rejecting every example of it as insincere. That’s not a critique of Oslo. That’s a refusal to ever allow peace to begin.
I say they never tried it because what they did was a sham. If they actually wanted a diplomatic solution why did Arafat walk? That was an absolutely golden opportunity for them to make peace--but they didn't even counteroffer, just walked away. That speaks volumes.

No. I'm refusing to accept any "initiative" where they say yes, but not really. When it came down to the details Arafat walked away. That's what matters.

And yet when Israel walked away from Camp David, continued building settlements during negotiations, and imposed facts on the ground while “talks” stalled—none of that, in your view, invalidated their sincerity.
You're expecting concessions for talks. Israel was pressured into that, but wasn't going to play fool me twice.

You’re not applying a standard. You’re applying a veto. When Palestinians say yes, you say “not really.” When they compromise, you call it deception. When they resist, you call it terrorism. And when they’re silent, you call it complicity.
I look at actions. "We renounce terrorism" vs continuing pay-for-slay. I consider the latter to mean an awful lot more than the former. If they truly had renounced terrorism they wouldn't continue to reward it.

This isn’t about what Arafat did. It’s about making sure no Palestinian answer is ever the right one—because the goal isn’t peace. It’s permanent blame.
It is about what Arafat didn't do.

No. The Palestinian Authority provides financial support for those in Israeli jails because of attacks on Jews. They do not provide support for common criminals.

Then you’ve just proved the point.

You’re not objecting to the act of providing support—you’re objecting to who receives it. And the category you’ve defined includes anyone imprisoned by Israel for acts deemed “against Jews,” regardless of whether those acts were part of organized resistance, armed conflict, or political dissent. In other words, you’ve taken the occupying power’s definition of guilt as absolute, and condemned even the families of those detained—many without trial—for simply existing on the wrong side of that definition.
No. I'm saying that if it were about caring for the families it would apply to all criminals. But since it's only for terrorists it's about supporting terror.

This isn’t a moral position. It’s a colonial logic: resistance is criminal, prisoners are terrorists, and supporting them is a crime. By that standard, every liberation movement in history—from Algeria to South Africa—would be painted as illegitimate.
There's a simple test of legitimacy: What are they shooting at? Whoever plots the attack point, what do they believe is there? Civilians = terrorist. Government/military = freedom fighter. There's usually little overlap, groups either target legitimate targets or civilians, rarely both.

So let’s be clear: calling it “pay-for-slay” isn’t about justice. It’s about erasing the context of occupation and framing all resistance as barbarism. That’s not clarity. That’s propaganda.
We call it pay for slay because that's what it is. You kill Jews, the government provides for your family.
 
The thing is there are a lot of forces out there radicalizing Muslims. "Muslim terror attack" does provide the relevant information. We don't know the exact identity of the radicalizers, we don't know exactly how the radicalizers manipulated them, but unless that information permitted effective action to be taken against the radicalizers it adds nothing. (And if the government has actionable information they'll be keeping it a secret as it would be of little value if the bad guys knew we knew.)

If your point is that radicalization is real and dangerous, I agree. But that’s exactly why we shouldn’t reduce the label to “Muslim terror attack.” Because radicalization isn’t an inevitable consequence of being Muslim—it’s a distortion fueled by politics, ideology, war, poverty, and sometimes foreign interference. Labeling it by religion blurs those causes and narrows the public imagination to a single, lazy conclusion: Islam equals violence.
I never said it was inevitable. Any more than while you know the abortion clinic bomber is Christian it doesn't mean all Christians bomb abortion clinics.

That doesn’t help fight terrorism. It helps fuel it. It turns potential allies into suspects, communities into surveillance zones, and foreign policy into a self-fulfilling cycle of fear and reprisal. If your goal is to stop radicalization, you don’t do it by reinforcing the frame that terrorists themselves want: that they speak for all Muslims. They don’t. And the more we buy into that framing, the more power we hand them.
While the threat is the radicalizers that information is implicit in saying "Muslim terror attack". Some combination of money + manipulation got them to do it.

It's not merely when they kill in <insert group>'s name, but when they are radicalized by the group. As for Christian terrorism--I'm not coming up with any examples of "Christian" that are not better described by a subset. White nationalist terrorists. Abortion clinic terrorists. The thing is the Christians are in the majority, what you see is oppression, not terrorism.

What you’re describing is exactly the problem. When the attacker is Muslim, the religion gets top billing. But when the attacker is Christian, it’s qualified—“white nationalist,” “anti-abortion,” “lone wolf”—anything but “Christian terrorism.” That’s not objectivity. That’s selective framing.
I don't recall anything referred to as "lone wolf terrorist attack", although I have heard of lone wolves attacking. The others have well defined subsets, human nature is to use the narrowest grouping that defines a situation. The ones that are doing it for Islam might actually have a narrower focus but rarely is that apparent or communicated.

You say Christian terrorists are better described by a subset. But so are Islamist ones—Salafist, jihadist, Wahhabi. Yet we don’t hear those labels dominate. Instead, we get “Muslim terror” as the headline, as if 1.9 billion people share a motive.
"Jihadist" is certainly not a relevant category. The others--might be relevant but we don't see it so we don't describe it that way.

And saying “Christians are the majority, so it’s oppression not terrorism” just reinforces the double standard. Terrorism is defined by method and motive, not by the perpetrator’s demographic. If a white Christian man shoots up a mosque for ideological reasons, that’s terrorism—no less than if a Muslim man attacks a synagogue.
I do agree--but how often do Christians shoot up mosques?

What I'm saying about oppression is that while the objective is the same (impose their will) the method differs. Terrorism is the tool of the minority, not the majority. Doesn't mean Christian oppression isn't a bad thing, just that it's a different thing.

"try their best" and "take all feasible precautions" are the same thing. And that's all that's expected of them.

No—they’re not the same, and that difference is the heart of the law.

“Try their best” is subjective. It lowers the bar to intention—what someone meant to do. “All feasible precautions” is objective. It asks what could have been done, given the means and knowledge at the time. It doesn’t let you off the hook just because you claim you cared. It demands you act accordingly, even if that means not striking at all.
Except you still haven't established that they didn't do so.
If a military knows civilians are likely to die in large numbers and proceeds anyway, that’s not taking feasible precautions. That’s weighing civilian lives against tactical gain and deciding they’re expendable. And under the Geneva Conventions, that’s not just tragic—it’s unlawful.
And you still can't seem to get it that it's the ratio that shows what's going on, not the raw numbers.

It's not sleight of hand. It's demonstrating a tremendous effort to get people off the X.

You continue to act as if the numbers somehow prove something. They don't.

But they do prove something—just not what you claim.

A low average kill-per-bomb stat only matters if it reflects lawful targeting and civilian protection. But when you drop thousands of bombs into one of the most densely populated areas on Earth, where civilians are trapped and infrastructure is collapsing, then even “low” ratios add up to mass civilian death. That’s not just numbers—it’s evidence of systemic harm.
"If it reflects"??? Of course it reflects! It would be utterly impossible if they weren't being very careful.

And if your justification rests on aggregate statistics while hospitals, shelters, and aid workers keep getting hit, then you’re not showing “tremendous effort.” You’re showing selective math to excuse unacceptable outcomes. The law doesn’t care how efficient your bombing is—it cares whether it respected civilian life.
And once again you fail to get it. The numbers unquestionably show that they are taking great care. If they weren't things would be much, much worse.

The fact that you don't like it doesn't make it wrong. You have a very idealized notion of how war goes. (Not surprising, most people don't realize how bad it is.)

No—this isn’t about liking or disliking. It’s about misrepresenting the law.

War crimes are not just isolated acts like “someone pulled a trigger they shouldn’t have.” They include broader patterns: starvation as a method of warfare, disproportionate attacks, targeting civilian infrastructure, and collective punishment. These aren’t vague ideals—they’re codified in the Geneva Conventions, the Rome Statute, and decades of legal precedent.
And you still are taking the wrongs as a given, never proving them.


The list I referenced isn’t a rhetorical invention—it comes directly from binding international law. The Geneva Conventions, their Additional Protocols, and the Rome Statute all define war crimes with specific language and legal thresholds. For example, targeting civilians is prohibited under Geneva Convention IV and Additional Protocol I, which clearly state that civilians cannot be the object of attack.
Yeah, and we see zero targeting of civilians. Note the word "targeting". Geneva does not say that it's automatically wrong if a civilian is in the area.

Collective punishment is explicitly outlawed in Article 33 of Geneva IV, making it illegal to penalize people for acts they did not commit.
And you still haven't established that there is any punishment involved.

Disproportionate attacks—where expected civilian harm outweighs the direct military gain—are banned under Additional Protocol I.
The world has basically defined proportionate based on what we see actually happening. And Israel raised the bar considerably.

The destruction of infrastructure essential to civilian survival, like food and water supplies, is forbidden unless absolutely required by military necessity.
And where's your evidence of any destruction of either by Israel? Note that supplies in the hands of Hamas are not civilian supplies.

And starvation as a method of warfare is not a vague accusation; it is codified as a war crime in both Additional Protocol I and the Rome Statute.
And, once again, you have failed to establish that it's an objective. Or that it's happening.

These aren’t emotional appeals or theoretical ideals. They are specific legal prohibitions agreed upon by the international community. If you believe they don’t apply in this context, then make that case. But don’t deny that the legal standards exist—or pretend that citing them is just moral posturing.
It's not a matter of not apply, but not happening.
Examples??

Examples? Sure. Let’s start with Nuremberg. The Nazis didn’t say, “We’re committing war crimes.” They said they were defending their nation, restoring order, and acting under law. They invoked national security, enemy sabotage, and collective threats. But the tribunal cut through those justifications and established that even in war, some acts—like targeting civilians or using starvation as policy—are criminal.
And that's relevant how?

Take My Lai in Vietnam. U.S. soldiers massacred over 500 civilians, many of them women and children. The initial reports were buried, sanitized as “a firefight,” and those involved claimed they were following orders or couldn’t tell civilians from enemies. None of that changed the facts on the ground—and when exposed, it was prosecuted as a war crime.
Is anybody saying that it wasn't a war crime?

(But note that the not being able to tell civilians from enemies can be a very real issue. That's why Geneva is strict about markings. Soldiers will shoot at those who look like those who are shooting at them. When those look like civilians that will tend to get actual civilians shot at. Look at the history of such massacres by forces that would generally be regarded as good guys--you'll always find they were taking a lot of fire from people in civilian attire. Unfortunately, sometimes people will not recognize that who they are looking at is clearly not a combatant even though they look like (civilian attire) those who have been shooting at them (in civilian attire.))

Or Srebrenica. Serbian forces claimed they were responding to enemy provocations and conducting evacuations. What they actually did was murder over 8,000 Bosniak men and boys. Again, layered in military rationale, but the legal system recognized it as genocide.
Again, what's the relevance? You're taking things everyone agrees are wrong.

These weren’t crimes because they were simple. They were crimes because, beneath the strategy and language, they violated the basic protections international law was built to preserve. That’s what the law is for—not to rubber-stamp the actions of the powerful, but to hold them to account even when they hide behind complexity.
They were simple: Killing those who were clearly not combatants.

The problem is that you are demanding the impossible. I've never been in the military, I can't evaluate all the details. But I can look at what happens: Israel has by far the best record. And I have a very hard time with the notion that the world's best is an abysmal failure. Especially since nobody is making any realistic proposals of how to do better. There are plenty of countries with skilled people who don't like Israel, if they can't see something why do you think there is something??

If the “world’s best” record still means tens of thousands of civilians dead, then maybe the world’s standard is broken. The point isn’t perfection—it’s responsibility. If a country claims moral and technological superiority, then it must be judged by that standard, not by the worst wars in history. Saying, “no one’s offered a better method” isn’t a defense. It’s an admission that we’ve normalized the mass death of civilians as acceptable collateral. And once that’s the bar, “best” stops meaning good—it just means least horrific.
You don't get to decree what reality is.

And I'm not judging based on the worst wars in history, but on the typical modern conflicts.

And saying that no one has offered better is not a reason is saying you believe there is better. Why in the world do you believe you know more about it than the world's military experts?

The point is the data is sufficiently flawed as to probably mean combatants exceed civilians.

That’s not how the burden of proof works. You don’t get to assume a civilian is a combatant just because the data might be flawed. If you claim more fighters than civilians were killed, prove it with independent, verifiable evidence—not speculation from the party doing the bombing. Civilian protections exist because war zones are chaotic and truth is contested. You can’t erase those protections by guessing at a ratio. That’s not law. That’s convenient math wrapped in moral evasion.
There is no independent, verified evidence in either direction and thus no way to know. However:

1) We have two data points that Hamas inadvertently leaked. Both showing that casualties are quite disproportionately male.

2) We have at one point at least a 20% fraud rate in the Hamas data. That's just the low hanging fruit, reality is certainly worse. If it's still 20% we are at civilians = combatants. But we also have a large number of Hamas rockets that fell in Gaza. Thus some of the dead (which will almost all be civilians) aren't due to Israel. Note that that leaves combatants > civilians. In past conflicts this tends to run around 20%, this time around we have no data so far.

Two completely different methods of estimating, both coming up with the same conclusion. In the absence of certainty I'm going to go with what looks most probable.

None of what you discuss proves your point. You have a flawed idea of what war entails.

That’s not how the burden of proof works. You don’t get to assume a civilian is a combatant just because the data might be flawed. If you claim more fighters than civilians were killed, prove it with independent, verifiable evidence—not speculation from the party doing the bombing. Civilian protections exist because war zones are chaotic and truth is contested. You can’t erase those protections by guessing at a ratio. That’s not law. That’s convenient math wrapped in moral evasion.

NHC
You keep demanding independent, verified evidence--yet have none supporting your position. Everything that "supports" your position fundamentally traces back to what Hamas says with no verification whatsoever.

You keep asking “what’s the relevance?” as if history and legal precedent are distractions. But that’s exactly what they are meant to prevent—a world where those in power rewrite the rules as they go.

You said: “Srebrenica, My Lai, Nuremberg—what’s the point of those examples?”

The point is this: every one of those crimes was justified at the time by their perpetrators with the same kind of language you’re using now. They cited provocation. They denied intent. They claimed military necessity. They questioned the data. They said the critics didn’t understand war. And every time, the international legal system cut through those excuses and held them to account. That’s the relevance.

You say “there’s no targeting of civilians.” But the law doesn’t require someone to say “I’m aiming at a child” to violate it. It requires militaries to avoid civilian harm wherever feasible—and to avoid actions where civilian death is expected to outweigh the military gain. When entire families die in shelters, when convoys are bombed, when starvation is used as pressure—those are not technical mishaps. They are violations of duty.

You ask for “evidence of punishment.” Look around. The blockade isn’t about just blocking weapons—it’s about controlling electricity, water, fuel, and food. People aren’t being punished because they’re armed; they’re being punished because they’re there. That’s collective punishment. It’s written into the text of Geneva IV, Article 33. It’s not emotional rhetoric—it’s black-letter law.

And yes, we don’t have perfect data. That’s always the case in war. But the absence of certainty doesn’t reverse the burden of proof. You can’t say “maybe the numbers are wrong” and then treat every dead civilian as a probable combatant. That’s not how any legal standard works. If that logic were accepted, then no war crime would ever be provable. Ever. Because the accused could always say “the numbers are flawed.”

You keep saying “Israel is doing better than anyone else.” But “better” is not a defense when the baseline is already horrific. If an action would be illegal for Syria, for Russia, or for any other state, it’s not suddenly legal because Israel does it more precisely. That’s not a legal standard—it’s moral relativism.

And this idea that critics are just idealists “who don’t understand how war works”—that’s not an argument. It’s an evasion. Geneva was written precisely because we know how war works. It was written after the world saw what unregulated, total war does to civilians. It wasn’t meant to be a nice suggestion. It was meant to be a restraint on exactly this kind of logic.

So no—it’s not about emotions. It’s about law, pattern, and accountability. If we throw all that out because we think this war is too complicated for rules, then we’re not defending civilization. We’re undoing it.

NHC
 
This isn’t about a zoning dispute or someone accidentally pouring concrete on the wrong lot. The Israeli government—not just “some Israelis”—has officially authorized and subsidized settlement construction across the West Bank for decades, in clear violation of international law, including the Fourth Geneva Convention. These aren’t rogue contractors; they’re government-backed expansions into occupied territory, complete with military protection, roads barred to Palestinians, and legal systems that separate two populations based on ethnicity.
Authorized? No, recognized what has happened.

As for home demolitions, the “they built illegally” excuse collapses under scrutiny. In Area C of the West Bank, which is under full Israeli control, Palestinians are denied over 98% of building permit applications. So what you’re calling “illegal construction” is often the only way families can build a home at all. Then those homes are demolished—not because of a mistake, but because the system is designed to make Palestinian presence unviable. Meanwhile, Israeli settlements—built without permits or in defiance of court orders—are routinely retroactively legalized.
98% is supposed to prove something? Flood of garbage, blame Israel when it's denied.

This isn’t about enforcing property rights. It’s about using bureaucracy as a weapon of displacement. So if your defense is “well, they didn’t have a permit,” you’ve missed the point entirely—or chosen not to see it. Either way, it’s not the Paul Harvey version. It’s the propaganda version.
That says nothing about whether it improved the overall situation.

What it says is that you’re measuring “improvement” by how much quieter it got for the occupier—not how much worse it got for the occupied.
I'm measuring improvement in people not dying.

Splitting Palestinian leadership between Hamas and the PA wasn’t some incidental development—it was actively leveraged to weaken Palestinian political unity, stall negotiations, and entrench the status quo. You call that concentrating the problem. But the only reason Gaza became “the problem” is because it was isolated, blockaded, and punished collectively.
Gaza became the problem because Hamas was more radical than Fatah and thus gets most of the money.
So if your standard of success is fewer disturbances in the West Bank while Gaza descends into rubble and starvation, then you’re not judging the situation by human dignity or justice. You’re judging it by how manageable the crisis became for Israel.
Gaza only descends into rubble and starvation when they attack.

And no, that’s not peacekeeping. That’s containment. With a body count.
And it's not proper to contain a problem?

It's not just the charter. It was their announced policy of going to war if they won. As with so much of this stuff all you need to do is actually listen to what they are saying, rather than paying attention to what they say they are saying.

Then apply that same standard to both sides. Because if we’re judging legitimacy by what parties say they’ll do, Israel has long announced its refusal to accept a Palestinian state with full sovereignty. It has declared intentions to expand settlements, annex land, and impose “eternal” control over Jerusalem—all open, unapologetic policies. And yet, no one argues that Israel forfeits its legitimacy because of those positions.
Of course they won't---because a state with full sovereignty could freely import weapons. And they're not going to allow that.

But when Hamas—before taking office, under pressure, with no functioning state apparatus—expresses militant rhetoric, you use that as grounds to blockade an entire civilian population indefinitely.
No. They specifically said they would attack, they did so. What's so hard to understand about that?

You say, “Just listen to what they say.” I am. I’m also listening to what the blockade has done: decimated an economy, crippled hospitals, poisoned water supplies, and reduced over 2 million people—half of them children—to a life of permanent emergency.
Hamas wants that. Israel isn't in a position to prevent Hamas from getting that.
So let’s be clear: this wasn’t about protecting peace. It was about punishing democracy the moment it didn’t go the way Western powers and Israel wanted. And if you think the ballot only counts when it favors your preferred party, you’re not defending democracy. You’re dressing authoritarianism in the language of self-defense.
It's somehow wrong to react to a quasi-state declaring war??

I consider "success" to be minimizing the death toll.

Then you should be the first to condemn policies that inflame violence rather than contain it. Because the occupation of the West Bank hasn’t minimized the death toll—it’s created a pressure cooker. Arbitrary arrests, child detentions, home demolitions, land seizures—these aren’t peacekeeping. They’re systemic humiliation. And humiliation doesn’t breed peace. It breeds resentment, radicalization, and the very violence you claim to oppose.
Standard water carrying for the terrorists. The violence follows the money.

If the goal is truly to minimize deaths, then justice has to be more than force without resistance. It has to be equity, dignity, and the ability for people to live without the daily threat of displacement or dehumanization. Otherwise, what you’re calling “success” is just the temporary silencing of a people with no voice left to resist. That’s not peace. It’s pressure before the next explosion.
Hamas won't accept equality.

Of course it wasn't. But what you are missing is they absolutely do not want sovereignty. To actually become a state would require specifying what they are and that would leave them with an impossible choice. Either they admit they want all of Israel, or they in effect give up on conquering Israel. The latter is treason by their own laws.

And this is exactly the kind of self-justifying loop that ensures permanent conflict. You claim Palestinians “don’t want sovereignty” based on the impossible conditions imposed on them—conditions created and maintained precisely to prevent them from achieving it. You frame their political paralysis as intrinsic, rather than the result of decades of occupation, manipulation, and externally enforced fragmentation.
No. I'm not saying anyone is imposing a condition on them, I'm saying reality is. To declare a state would force them to answer the question about where the border should be. As it stands they can pretend they want two state.

 
If what you have learned is the above twaddle, I think you've done the wrong research.

Then let’s test that. Every major human rights organization—Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, B’Tselem, UN OCHA—has documented widespread civilian casualties, destruction of infrastructure, denial of humanitarian aid, and violations of international law in Gaza. These aren’t fringe groups or Hamas mouthpieces. They’ve criticized both sides, and their findings are backed by satellite imagery, field investigations, eyewitness accounts, and data from international agencies.
B'Tselem is not remotely credible. They bend over backwards to disguise what happened. None of the rest are worth much.

You don’t get to dismiss all of that because it doesn’t fit your narrative. That’s not skepticism—it’s selective blindness. When your standard of “real research” is whatever absolves one side and demonizes the other, you’re not looking for truth. You’re looking for justification. And if you still think every fact that challenges your belief system is “twaddle,” then maybe the only ideology-shaped box here is yours.
The thing is everything you present fundamentally traces back to Hamas. There is no independent data collection going on.

Being well-read isn’t about reading what confirms your worldview. It’s about engaging with uncomfortable facts, checking your biases, and adjusting your conclusions when the evidence demands it. If you’re unwilling to do that, it’s not that you’re under-informed. It’s that you’ve chosen certainty over understanding.
You are the one who refuses to engage with uncomfortable facts.

Yes, Gaza is horrible. That doesn't mean it can be fixed.

Here you go again with your straw men.

I think you are the one incapable of nuance. I think you are the intellectual coward.

Your theories obviously doesn't match reality. Instead of taking a step back to try to see where you fucked up, you are doubling down

Then let’s test it. You claim my theories don’t match reality—but every major intelligence agency, counterterrorism think tank, and international human rights body backs what I’ve said: that dehumanizing language fuels radicalization, that overgeneralizing from the actions of a few creates blowback, and that civilian protections are the legal and moral backbone of any legitimate military campaign.
Which has no bearing on this situation as the radicalization is driven by money.

You’ve justified bombing civilian areas because Hamas embeds there. You’ve said male civilians can be presumed combatants. You’ve dismissed death tolls because they came from Palestinian sources. You’ve claimed that dressing like a civilian forfeits your protection under the law. You’ve repeatedly called skepticism of Israel’s conduct “propaganda” while demanding no equivalent scrutiny of their actions.
You have it backwards.

What he said is that since combatants dress like civilians that he's not going to blame the IDF for shooting civilians. That's not saying they are combatants, but that in the reality of combat you can't tell them apart and that's the fault of Hamas. Hamas does everything it can to cause combatant/civilian confusion, sometimes they succeed. Blame them, not the people they confused.

If that’s not reducing 2.3 million people to guilt-by-association and calling it justice, what is it?
Where does it even address guilt? We are not saying that what's happening isn't bad. We are saying that Hamas is deliberately engineering it and we are placing the blame with those who deliberately set up the situation to cause civilian casualties.

Calling this a straw man isn’t a defense. It’s a dodge. And until you can answer for the principles your rhetoric implies, the only person arguing with imaginary opponents here is you.
Lol. You’re clearly not paying attention to what I am writing. Nor, I think, any of us who support Israel in this thread.

The world isn't as black and white as you seem to think it is

Then stop painting it that way.
We aren't.
Because every time you excuse mass civilian death as “Hamas’s fault,” every time you reduce complex political violence to “Muslim terrorism,” every time you dismiss documented atrocities as propaganda, you’re not making a nuanced argument. You’re making a binary one—good guys versus bad guys, our bombs versus their knives, justified force versus barbarism.
For the most part it is binary. One side deliberately engineered the situation to cause civilian casualties, the other sometimes can't avoid them.
You claim to reject black-and-white thinking, yet everything you defend rests on exactly that: that one side’s lives matter more, that one side’s suffering counts less, and that one side’s guilt can justify anything.
So Hamas is automatically the good guys by killing so many of their people? Because that's where your argument ends up.

So no—don’t lecture me on nuance while you erase it every time it challenges your comfort. If you truly believed in complexity, you’d stop treating atrocity as a strategy and moral scrutiny as betrayal.
You are the one avoiding nuance.

You keep accusing me of lacking nuance, but every time I introduce it, you retreat behind the same binary shield: “Hamas bad, Israel justified.” That’s not complexity. That’s moral outsourcing.

Let’s start with your claim that all the evidence traces back to Hamas. That’s flatly false. Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, B’Tselem, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, and Physicians for Human Rights have all conducted independent investigations—often using satellite data, open-source verification, eyewitness accounts, and corroboration with international agencies. None of these groups take marching orders from Hamas. And dismissing all of them as “not credible” because their findings make you uncomfortable is not skepticism—it’s deliberate blindness.

You say Hamas is to blame for dressing like civilians, so we shouldn’t fault the IDF for killing civilians. But that’s a complete misreading of international law. The presence of unlawful behavior by one party doesn’t absolve the other of its obligations. If Hamas violates the laws of war by embedding among civilians, that’s a war crime. But that doesn’t mean Israel is then free to ignore its own obligations under Geneva. Civilians don’t lose protection because someone nearby broke the rules. That’s not law—it’s collective punishment.

You also claim the radicalization in Gaza is “driven by money.” That’s a cartoon version of reality. Yes, money plays a role. But so do trauma, displacement, political hopelessness, and years of siege and bombardment. Reducing it to a paycheck ignores decades of research by counterterrorism experts—including RAND, the Soufan Center, and multiple UN panels—that show radicalization is a complex process shaped by real-world grievances. So if you care about preventing terrorism, you can’t just drop bombs and cut off food and expect peace to sprout from the rubble.

Then you say I’m making it sound like Hamas are “the good guys” because so many of their people die. That’s grotesque. No, mass death isn’t virtue. But it is a human tragedy—and it should be treated as such, regardless of who causes it or why. When children are buried under collapsed buildings, the response shouldn’t be, “Well, their leaders brought it on them.” That’s not moral clarity. That’s ethical surrender.

You talk like the world is too complicated for the standards I cite to matter. But here’s the irony: the very laws you dismiss were created precisely because of complex, brutal conflicts—World War II, Vietnam, Bosnia, Rwanda. They were forged in the fires of ambiguity and chaos to ensure that even in war, some lines must not be crossed. If your position is that none of those lines apply here, you’re not defending complexity—you’re erasing the only tools we have to navigate it humanely.

And finally, you accuse me of rejecting uncomfortable facts. But I’m not the one dismissing every independent report, every legal principle, every historical precedent that complicates my side’s narrative. That’s you. You’ve made moral scrutiny synonymous with betrayal, and humanitarian concern synonymous with naivety.

So let’s not pretend you’re the voice of reason while you write off mass civilian death as “inevitable,” and erase the law every time it becomes inconvenient. If your argument can’t withstand international law, history, or basic human empathy—then maybe it’s not the rest of us who need to rethink our assumptions.

NHC
 
I'm not saying they are unfit for statehood. But rather that they want their state to be at war.

Then you’re not describing a people. You’re describing a caricature.

Saying “they want their state to be at war” flattens millions of individuals into a monolith of violence—as if every Palestinian wakes up thinking about armed struggle, rather than survival under occupation, displacement, and blockade. It ignores the decades of polling, protest, diplomacy, and negotiation where the majority have supported a two-state solution, even after repeated betrayals. It erases the people who’ve tried to build institutions, run schools, raise families, and vote for change—only to be punished when the results weren’t convenient for foreign powers.
Where have they ever actually supported a two-state solution? Hint: The poll actually showed they wanted two-state as a step towards conquering Israel, not as coexistence.

If war is all you see, maybe it’s because peace was never given room to grow. When elections are invalidated, borders are sealed, leadership is imprisoned or assassinated, and civil infrastructure is systematically undermined, what do you expect to remain? You can’t suffocate a people’s options and then fault them for gasping.
Yeah, the sponsors of the terror have ensured pace can't grow.

So? You calculate those things to ensure there's enough.

No—you calculate calories to limit them when your goal isn’t just security, but coercion. And that’s exactly what Israel did. In 2012, following a court petition, Israel was forced to release documents showing that its military planners had literally calculated the minimum caloric intake required to keep Gaza’s population just above malnutrition—about 2,279 calories per person per day—not to ensure health, but to “put the Palestinians on a diet,” as one official phrased it. This wasn’t about humanitarian management. It was about collective pressure.
2,279 calories/day is plenty for most people. I don't know the details to address it more specifically.

The blockade doesn’t just restrict weapons. It chokes fuel needed for hospitals, building materials for reconstruction, and permits for medical evacuations. It bars students from leaving to study, splits families, and prevents economic development. You’re pretending it’s a logistical tool. But every credible humanitarian organization—from the UN to the Red Cross—calls it what it is: collective punishment.
Fuel? Hamas had plenty. They weren't distributing it.
Building materials? You realize building materials can be used for military purposes? I expect a lot of trouble over this in the future as it has become very apparent that the safeguards meant to keep stuff from being diverted were seriously flawed.
Permits for medical evacuation? You mean for Hamas leaders to escape.

Hamas didn’t create the blockade. Israel did. Hamas didn’t restrict fuel, building supplies, or medical evacuations. Israel did. Hamas didn’t enforce a land, sea, and air closure that made it impossible for Gazans to leave even for cancer treatment. Israel did.
Hamas created the reason for the blockade.
Gaza’s suffering didn’t start on October 7th. The UN was calling it unlivable back in 2015. The economy, infrastructure, and public health system were already in collapse before this war. That didn’t happen because of rockets. It happened because of a systematic policy of isolation and control over 2 million people, half of whom are children.
Yeah, Gaza used to be prosperous. Until the Second Intifada. They threw it away.

There was no humanitarian catastrophe until 10/7. But Iran wanted to prevent Israel and Saudi Arabia from making up and Russia wanted a distraction from what they were doing in Ukraine.

That’s simply false—and historically indefensible. There was a humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza long before October 7. The United Nations, the World Bank, the World Health Organization, and countless humanitarian agencies had been sounding the alarm for over a decade. By 2012, the UN was already warning that Gaza would be uninhabitable by 2020 due to collapsing infrastructure, undrinkable water, failing sewage systems, and electricity blackouts. By 2015, over 80% of Gaza’s population depended on humanitarian aid just to survive. That crisis wasn’t the result of Iranian plots or Russian diversions. It was the direct outcome of a long-standing blockade, repeated military assaults, and a deliberate policy of restriction that targeted the civilian economy.
You realize all of that was Hamas? Everything went to weapons.

And it most certainly was due to Iran. Destroy the economy so people have no choice but to do what Hamas wants them to, even if it's extremely dangerous or even suicidal. (Hamas would send families into the no-go zone by the border so they would get shot and Israel would be pressured into not keeping people away from the border.) Hamas takes the aid, doles it out to those who do it's bidding.

And no, the period before October 7 wasn’t some calm, functioning society suddenly thrown into chaos by foreign meddling. In the years leading up to that date, Gaza’s economy had all but collapsed. Unemployment was among the highest in the world. Movement was tightly restricted, not just for goods but for people—students, patients, and workers alike. Medical care was crippled by permit denials and equipment shortages. Families went days without electricity. Homes destroyed in previous wars couldn’t be rebuilt because Israel blocked construction materials. None of that required Iran or Russia to fabricate. It was all happening in plain sight.
I didn't say it was functioning. Hamas has been destroying it for a long time.

So the idea that October 7 marked the beginning of humanitarian disaster is a convenient fiction. What changed after 10/7 wasn’t that suffering began—it was that the suffering stopped being slow and became cataclysmic. Blaming Iran or Russia for that spiral is not an explanation. It’s a distraction. The reality is simpler, and harder to stomach: a civilian population was pushed past its breaking point after years of siege, isolation, and despair. You don’t get to erase that suffering just because acknowledging it makes your narrative harder to defend.
It's not the beginning, it's just a big step worse.

I'm looking, I'm seeing what pretends to be.

Then maybe the issue isn’t your eyesight—it’s your filter.

Because satellite imagery doesn’t “pretend.” Entire neighborhoods in Gaza—Shujaiya, Jabalia, Khan Younis—have been leveled. That’s not activist spin; it’s confirmed by the UN, Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, and independent analysts using open-source data and high-resolution satellite scans. Hospitals reduced to rubble. Schools turned to ash. Camps for the displaced struck multiple times. These aren’t stories whispered in the shadows—they’re documented with timestamps and GPS coordinates.
The problem is you think the evidence says things it doesn't.

As for starvation, multiple UN agencies and the World Food Programme have issued formal warnings of famine. Malnutrition rates among children have soared. Aid convoys have been blocked or attacked. When doctors are performing surgeries without anesthesia and children are dying of dehydration, that’s not “a few medical cases.” That’s systemic collapse.
Hamas has said. If they had been telling the truth the place would be pretty much dead by now.

And children dying of dehydration? Ever think that using the sewer pipes for rockets might have something to with that?

And, yes, it's systemic collapse--as Hamas intended.

So if you still claim you “see nothing,” then you’re not seeing reality. You’re clinging to a version of events where evidence is always suspect if it implicates your side. But facts don’t go away just because you choose not to believe them. What you’re seeing isn’t a lack of destruction—it’s your own refusal to let the facts in.
I see claims that if true would produce very different results than we are seeing.

I have yet to see a picture of an entire neighborhood reduced to rubble. The photos always follow the line of devastation caused by the tunnel collapses, there are always other buildings that didn't.

I do agree an awful lot of housing in Gaza has been destroyed. The fact that in some areas Hamas has booby-trapped basically everything has something to do with it. If Israel sees a booby trap they simply blow it up. No way they're going to try to defuse something that likely has an observer and command detonation. Blame the side that placed the booby traps.

Then let’s be honest about what you’re defending. Because what you’re describing isn’t precision—it’s devastation rationalized after the fact. “Following the tunnel line” doesn’t mean damage is limited. It means it’s concentrated and destructive, collapsing everything above and around it. Entire sections of Khan Younis, Gaza City, and Jabalia show mile-long stretches of pancaked buildings, many far beyond the tunnel line. That’s not a surgical strike. That’s urban collapse on a massive scale, confirmed by Maxar satellite imagery, UN OCHA assessments, and international humanitarian reports.
"the tunnel line"??? You realize the tunnel network under Gaza was about the most extensive tunnel network in the world?

And blaming booby traps as justification for razing blocks misses the legal and moral point: if a military objective—like a tunnel or a rigged structure—can only be neutralized by leveling an entire neighborhood, then the strike is not lawful. Proportionality is not suspended just because the enemy fights dirty. If it were, every war crime could be excused by the other side’s tactics.
No. A booby trap makes the building military and says it's reasonable to destroy the building. If each building is booby trapped then each building gets destroyed.

You say “blame the side that placed the booby traps”—fine. But that doesn’t absolve the side that knowingly bombs where civilians live. International law doesn’t allow you to declare urban centers free-fire zones because the enemy is ruthless. That’s the exact kind of spiral the Geneva Conventions were written to prevent. And ignoring that—like you’re doing here—isn’t realism. It’s complicity with impunity.
Nobody's bombing booby traps. That's ground troops inspecting with drones.

None of them have the ability to actually confirm it, therefore their words are garbage. And note how we have month after month after month of report of catastrophic food conditions--yet only 60 deaths that can be blamed on malnutrition and we don't see a gaunt population. Just look at pictures from areas of actual famine.

That’s not how evidence—or suffering—works.
Yes it is.

There are repeated claims that large numbers of people will die soon. Again and again and again. But the situation doesn't change, yet large number of people don't die, we don't see a population in famine. Thus the claims of famine are false.

You dismiss findings from UNICEF, WHO, and the World Food Programme as “garbage” because they don’t align with your worldview. But these are organizations that operate on the ground, with access to hospitals, aid networks, and field data. They’ve documented acute malnutrition, wasting in children, and collapsing food systems. You don’t get to hand-wave that away with internet image searches and anecdotal skepticism.
No, I dismiss them because they don't match observed reality.

And your fixation on “only 60 deaths” betrays a grotesque misunderstanding of what famine and starvation look like. Malnutrition doesn’t always kill immediately—it stunts growth, weakens immune systems, increases susceptibility to disease, and causes long-term damage. Children dying from infections because they’re too weak to fight back aren’t counted in your “malnutrition death” stat—but they’re victims of hunger all the same.
I've seen the effects of chronic shortage: anyone born in China before about 1980. The effect as those born in capitalism came of age was quite noticeable--I could see over the heads of virtually everyone born before 1980, now I'm simply taller but I can't see over the crowds anymore.

But that's not the situation in Gaza. The claim is large numbers will die. Will die. Will die. But strangely don't.

As for your claim about how people “should look” in famine: that logic failed in Yemen, it failed in Somalia, and it fails here. Starvation isn’t a Hollywood trope with skeletal figures lining the streets. It’s a creeping breakdown, made worse when aid is blocked, infrastructure is destroyed, and desperation becomes normalized. And pretending it’s not real because it doesn’t fit your chosen imagery isn’t just denial—it’s complicity in whitewashing a humanitarian disaster.
And lots of people die of it. Both of those countries had around 25k/yr deaths from it. Gaza somehow doesn't.

No, it's not denial. It's looking at the claims and finding they contradict reality.

And repeating my words back at me doesn’t make them less true—it just shows you’ve run out of your own.

You say you’re looking, but all your responses reveal is a refusal to see what the world has already documented. This isn’t about agreeing with every critic—it’s about recognizing reality when thousands of civilian deaths, collapsed neighborhoods, and credible famine warnings are staring you in the face.
You aren't coming up with any evidence. The only part of that that would be evidence at all is the famine warnings--but somehow they never materialize.

If your only defense is to mirror my argument without refuting it, then maybe it’s because deep down, you know the facts aren’t on your side. Denial isn’t a counterpoint. It’s just the last refuge when there’s nothing left to stand on.

NHC
You aren't making an argument. You are treating a lot of dead as proof, it's not.
 
Collective targeting? The ratio of civilians and combatants makes it very clear that it is very precise targeting.

No, the ratio doesn’t make that clear—it obscures it. A statistic doesn’t prove precision. It just averages destruction. When you level entire city blocks to hit a tunnel or drop bombs knowing civilians are sheltering nearby, it’s not “surgical.” It’s calculated risk at best, collective punishment at worst.
This doesn't make sense.

Precision isn’t about the bomb’s coordinates—it’s about the decision to drop it knowing who’s likely to die. And if the result is tens of thousands of civilian deaths, decimated infrastructure, and a humanitarian system in collapse, then the math doesn’t exonerate you. It indicts the method behind it.
The math makes it very clear. The bombs were hitting things, not people.

Continuing to repeat claims that contradict reality doesn't make them true.

Then show me the reality you’re defending.

Because the one documented by satellite imagery, confirmed by UN agencies, and witnessed by thousands of journalists and aid workers includes bombed-out hospitals, collapsed schools, and children pulled from rubble. It includes a death toll where over half are women and children, and an aid blockade that leaves people starving and drinking contaminated water. That’s not propaganda. That’s data.
That is propaganda. You are taking Hamas' claims as automatically true.

Satellite imagery can show you collapsed buildings. It can't show why. It can't show the dead. And everything on the ground is controlled by Hamas.

If you want to call that “not reality,” then the burden is on you—not to scoff, but to disprove it. And unless you can refute the mountains of independent evidence with something more than denial, all you’re doing is burying facts beneath personal disbelief. That’s not truth-seeking. That’s shielding comfort with contempt.
We have basically zero independent evidence. Nobody is in a position to verify much of anything.

There are no international observers. There are no independent journalists. There are no humanitarian organizations. All of that is a sham, if you operate in Gaza you report what Hamas wants you to report. The only thing that's valid is satellite imagery and note that it's nowhere near as detailed as you think it is. The best of them are now at 15cm resolution. That's a bit better than what Google typically offers over urban areas--enough to see structures, not enough to see most details about those structures. Any good imagery is coming from drones and there's no way reporters are getting independent drone images over Gaza. There's no way to distinguish a reporter drone from a spy drone, they'll be targeted. (And that's even assuming there's a difference. Al Jazeera got kicked out of Israel because they refused to stop running realtime reporting that would be useful to Hamas. Hint: Armies anywhere do not like realtime reporting of their activities!)

So let me get this straight—every journalist is compromised, every humanitarian organization is a puppet, every UN agency is a fraud, and the only acceptable source of truth is…your personal skepticism?
Every source on the ground in Gaza is compromised. And bad data remains bad data no matter how many times you filter it through another mouthpiece. We have a fair amount of credible video but it usually doesn't show the dead and often doesn't show the way. (And when it does you ignore it. Why did you not see that rocket launcher in the middle of the frame??) And you can't hope to construct an overall picture from a sample set that is inherently highly biased (cameras aren't pointed randomly.)

That’s not critical thinking. That’s conspiracy logic.
Conspiracy? It's not hidden. We can all see what's happening--all the data is from Hamas. Who else has any ability to get data??

There are no grand conspiracies, but extremely bad stuff can operate behind a bit of confusion plus the natural bias towards it's normal. Look at what happened in the last election--there's no great MAGA conspiracy, they told us what they were going to do. But point it out and you got branded a chicken little.

When Human Rights Watch, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, Médecins Sans Frontières, the World Food Programme, and dozens of independent journalists all report the same patterns of devastation, starvation, and civilian death—across months, locations, and languages—that’s not Hamas stage-managing the global narrative. That’s converging evidence from professionals risking their lives to document war.
They report what Hamas wants them to report. There's an awful lot of stage managing in the stuff we see out of Gaza and occasionally a reporter will tell the truth that they are told what to report.

You don’t get to wave all that away by claiming Gaza is a blackout zone of lies while insisting your version of events—untethered to fieldwork, firsthand testimony, or verified reporting—is the only truth. That’s not skepticism. That’s faith in your own bias masquerading as insight.

And if your standard is “I’ll only believe it if I see drone footage I personally approve of,” then no amount of evidence will ever be enough—because you’ve already decided the only valid reality is the one where Israel can’t be held responsible.
It's not that I must personally approve it. I want credible documentation, not just providing a bullhorn for Hamas.

Repeating misinformation doesn't make it true.

Then prove it’s misinformation—with something more than your personal disbelief.

Because what you call “misinformation” has been investigated, corroborated, and published by institutions with decades of experience documenting war crimes—often in conflicts where they’ve condemned both sides. You don’t get to dismiss all of that as fake just because it contradicts your preferred narrative. That’s not discernment. That’s denial.
You continue to claim this, yet not a hint about how they are actually supposed to ground truth anything.

You’ve offered no counter-evidence. No citations. No data. Just a reflexive rejection of anything that implicates Israel, no matter how widely reported or carefully documented. That’s not a defense of truth—it’s an escape from it.

If you want to challenge the facts, then bring something verifiable. Otherwise, what you’re really repeating isn’t truth or skepticism. It’s propaganda with a flag on it.
We have no evidence in either direction other than catching mistakes Hamas made in their stories. But we have a lot of negative evidence. Dead that don't exist. AI images of supposed Israeli misdeeds. Emotional appeals rather than reason. Damage inconsistent with the claimed actions. Look with a critical eye towards everything out of Gaza, look for inconsistencies. So far I'm not aware of video that is fake but the descriptions sometimes aren't accurate--just because something happened doesn't mean it's when claimed, where claimed, or even remotely of what is claimed. (Simple example: Al Jazeera showed a video of the hospital that got hit early on--except that the video cut off some seconds before the event happened. By light of day a critical eye would know what had happened. Big boom, superficial damage, no crater--that was an rocket that blew at or just after launch, not anything Israel threw. And then the claim it was an Iron Dome intercept--never mind that there's utterly no way Iron Dome could possibly hit a rocket going up because it takes time for the missile to get there. Even if they fired the moment the rocket lifted off the intercept point would be quite a ways downrange. Not that Iron Dome has the range to do that, nor would anyone fire a terminal defense missile at a rocket going up.)

And when you look back at events in the past you consistently find reality comes to pretty much agree with Israeli claims. (Obvious example, the Jenin "massacre". Hundreds dead, the world went nuts. Israel demanded that any inspection team be qualified in actually reconstructing what happened. Ended up with no inspection because the claims eroded down to the about 50 that Israeli claimed to have killed.)
 
Even Israel’s own government has acknowledged high civilian casualties. IDF spokespeople have openly called the toll “tragic” and admitted that children are dying in large numbers. And human rights organizations—Israeli, Palestinian, and international—have documented these patterns for years, long before this war.
Sure they are high. You persist in using that as proof of wrongness. And proof that Israel did it--we have plenty of situations where Hamas is the primary suspect.
In some posts you try to deflect that Israel actions led to the deaths of children.

In some posts you say this is needed to save Israeli lives from an imminent threat of attack from Hamas.

This seems almost equivalent to your support of firearms. Effectively, "People are going to die, so we can be safer."
Hamas chose the path of war. Israel is entitled to do what it takes to remove the threat. Geneva doesn't say you have to stop defending yourself because the other side managed to get too many civilians killed.
 

What do you think is good about that article? All I saw is emotionally manipulative language. And a disregard for the political realities.

Normally when there's a war on civilians caught in the war zone try to flee. Yet, the Palestinians aren't welcome anywhere else in the Middle-East. These are all Muslim countries. Yet, have their doors firmly shut to the Palestinian refugees. Jordan is an ethnically Palestinian country. They to, have their doors shut to the Palestinians. The Syrian refugees found refuge outside Syria. It wasn't easy. But they were welcome. And there was a hell of a lot more Syrians. Saudi Arabia have massive camp cities around Mecca that could swallow ten times the population of Gaza easy. And with aircon to spare for pilgrims. Yet, Saudi Arabias doors are firmly shut.

Why do you think the other Muslim countries are so hostile to the Palestinians? He forgot to mention this dimension in the article. This guy is just another dumb western urbanite, blindly swallowing Hamas propaganda. The other Muslim countries have been using the suffering of the Palestinians as a proaganda weapon against Israel since 1948. They could have taken in the Palestinians, around about that time they expelled all their Jews and sent them to Israel. But they didn't. And still don't.
 
Last edited:
An Iranian friend just posted this in a chat. I thought it was funny and worth reposting. He's an exile Irainian, so therefore against the Mullahs, against Hamas and... sort of... for Israel.

"The West is more divided than ever, with Palestinian activists who are clearly lacking meaning, purpose, and direction in their lives having become so radicalized that they are completely blind to the fact that they are supporting a movement that hates them. They are like a church without a god. They submit to a higher purpose, but do not know what it is. The Israelis, of course, have neither the time, the means, nor the inclination to try to accommodate clueless posing Westerners while they struggle for their survival, and the rest of the world rubs its hands at the wests self-inflicted decline. We (westerners) have become a caricature of ourselves, so our downfall is probably well deserved."
 
Let's opress our queers because... fuck western values. Let's instead defend those who wants to destroy us

 

Since Hamas fighters are dressed as civilians, I'd say that gives the IDF a moral free pass to shoot any male and adult civilians. They're not. They're being extremely cautious. But I don’t think they have any moral obligation to.

The moment Hamas fighters dressed as civilians they get 100% of the blame for Palestinian civilians accidentally getting killed by IDF

You really are grasping at straws in this discussion
That would only apply in ground combat.

Hamas has spent two decades booby trapping Gaza, making it as hard as possible for ground combat. Urban warfare already favours the defenders to an extreme degree.

It would be suicidal for Israel not to lead with artillery and air strikes. Its up to Hamas to get civilians out of harms way. But they're not. They're using Palestinian civilians as human shields. Which is a horrible war crime. But a war crime committed by Hamas. Not Israel.

Its a defensive war for Israel. They're morally off the hook here
 
Back
Top Bottom