Israel Hamas War, West Bank, Etc. | Hostilities resume

  • Thread starter Thread starter nycfan
  • Start date Start date
  • Replies: 2K
  • Views: 85K
  • Politics 
To answer your question: no. The discussion, at least as it started between me and RaiGuy, was about whether or not Israel is more moral than Hamas. The evidence of Israel being morally superior, at least for me, is overwhelming. Among that evidence is that a) war crimes are recognized by Israel and b) Israel has punished and will continue to seek to punish soldiers who commit war crimes.

War crimes, on the other hand, are a tactic/strategy used by Hamas fighters which are actively encouraged by leadership and will never be punished.
I would say Israel’s war crimes have also been mandated from the very top. So, it seems we will always disagree on that point.
 
We don't have a magic 8 ball to see back in time.

What do you believe?

Given that the blockade was meant too closely monitor what came in to Gaza, do you believe that leaving terrorists completely unsupervised would result in more or less attacks on Israel? Do you believe those attacks would be more or less severe?
There's no blockade in Lebanon and Israel managed to cripple Hezbollah. You know, with old fashioned intelligence gathering.

There is a huge chasm between a blockade and "completely unsupervised," but of course this is what you do. You don't willingly battle except with men made from straw.

What I believe is that the blockade was (and remains so, even more) illegal under international law; that blockades are almost always ineffective in achieving anything other than modest goals; and that what Israel has been doing to Gaza is profoundly wrong. If you don't agree, that's your choice but stop trying to argue that Israel is better than Hamas by pointing to Hamas attacks from the 90s but ignore all of Israel's bullshit over that time period. The blockade was one of the biggest factors that caused 10/6.

And this is not some hindsight. When the blockade was announced, I predicted exactly this: that it would decrease small terrorist attacks but create a society completely dependent on Hamas, and Hamas would organize a larger operation in retaliation. I would take credit for this prediction except that it was hardly unique: pretty much everyone who studies these issues agreed that a massive attack was the most likely outcome.
 
There's no blockade in Lebanon and Israel managed to cripple Hezbollah. You know, with old fashioned intelligence gathering.
Hezbollah isn't Hamas. It's clear, going back to the 80's, that Hamas is actively trying to eliminate Israel.
There is a huge chasm between a blockade and "completely unsupervised," but of course this is what you do. You don't willingly battle except with men made from straw.
Do you not support a 2-state solution? I was under the impression that you did which would give Gaza/Palestine sovereignty.
What I believe is that the blockade was (and remains so, even more) illegal under international law; that blockades are almost always ineffective in achieving anything other than modest goals; and that what Israel has been doing to Gaza is profoundly wrong. If you don't agree, that's your choice but stop trying to argue that Israel is better than Hamas by pointing to Hamas attacks from the 90s but ignore all of Israel's bullshit over that time period. The blockade was one of the biggest factors that caused 10/6.
The question of which side is morally superior is separate from the reality of what Israel has faced on a daily basis, particularly since Hamas took over Gaza, and why a blockade is necessary. There's absolutely no reason to believe the blockade caused anything. When Hamas took over Gaza, the writing was immediately on the wall, at least for those who understand how terrorists work.

Hamas' stated goal is to eliminate Israel. (see excerpt from an Atlantic article below)

It is not reasonable for Israel to not monitor what is coming into Gaza. The literal survival of Israel depends on it and it's silly to believe that extending more sovereignty to Gaza would result in anything but more frequent and more destructive attacks. The blockade didn't cause the Hamas Covenant referenced below. The blockade didn't make Hamas a terrorist organization. Hamas was a terrorist organization for 20+ years before the blockade and their goals were the same in the 80s and 90s - eliminate Israel
And this is not some hindsight. When the blockade was announced, I predicted exactly this: that it would decrease small terrorist attacks but create a society completely dependent on Hamas, and Hamas would organize a larger operation in retaliation. I would take credit for this prediction except that it was hardly unique: pretty much everyone who studies these issues agreed that a massive attack was the most likely outcome.
They are terrorists and their focus is eliminating Israel. Without a blockade, their attempts to meet their goals would only be more successful and destructive.

So, I asked before, but don't recall a complete answer. What should Israel do? If a blockade is illegal, as you're believe it is, what should they do? Just continue to let Hamas make attempt after attempt to destroy Israel?

Released on August 18, 1988, the original covenant spells out clearly Hamas’s genocidal intentions. Accordingly, what happened in Israel on Saturday is completely in keeping with Hamas’s explicit aims and stated objectives. It was, in fact, the inchoate realization of Hamas’s true ambitions.

The most relevant of the document’s 36 articles can be summarized as falling within four main themes:The complete destruction of Israel as an essential condition for the liberation of Palestine and the establishment of a theocratic state based on Islamic law (Sharia), The need for both unrestrained and unceasing holy war (jihad) to attain the above objective, The deliberate disdain for, and dismissal of, any negotiated resolution or political settlement of Jewish and Muslim claims to the Holy Land, and The reinforcement of historical anti-Semitic tropes and calumnies married to sinister conspiracy theories.

Thus, as fighting rages in Israel and Gaza, and may yet escalate and spread, pleas for moderation, restraint, negotiation, and the building of pathways to peace are destined to find no purchase with Hamas. The covenant makes clear that holy war, divinely ordained and scripturally sanctioned, is in Hamas’s DNA.Israel’s Complete and Utter Destruction

The covenant opens with a message that precisely encapsulates Hamas’s master plan. Quoting Hassan al-Banna, the Egyptian founder of the Muslim Brotherhood, of which Hamas is a constituent member (Article 2), the document proclaims, “Israel will exist and will continue to exist until Islam will obliterate it, just as it obliterated others before it.”

Lest there be any doubt about Hamas’s sanguinary aims toward Israel and the Jewish people, the introduction goes on to explain:

This Covenant of the Islamic Resistance Movement (HAMAS), clarifies its picture, reveals its identity, outlines its stand, explains its aims, speaks about its hopes, and calls for its support, adoption and joining its ranks. Our struggle against the Jews is very great and very serious … It is a step that inevitably should be followed by other steps.

After some general explanatory language about Hamas’s religious foundation and noble intentions, the covenant comes to the Islamic Resistance Movement’s raison d’être: the slaughter of Jews. “The Day of Judgement will not come about,” it proclaims, “until Moslems fight the Jews (killing the Jews), when the Jew will hide behind stones and trees. The stones and trees will say O Moslems, O Abdulla, there is a Jew behind me, come and kill him.”

Article 11 spells out why this annihilation of Jews is required. Palestine is described as an “Islamic Waqf”—an endowment predicated on Muslim religious, education, or charitable principles and therefore inviolate to any other peoples or religions. Accordingly, the territory that now encompasses Israel, Gaza, and the West Bank is consecrated for future Moslem generations until Judgement Day. It, or any part of it, should not be squandered: it, or any part of it, should not be given up … This Waqf remains as long as earth and heaven remain. Any procedure in contradiction to Islamic Sharia, where Palestine is concerned, is null and void.

In sum, any compromise over this land, including the moribund two-state solution, much less coexistence among faiths and peoples, is forbidden. Holy War

 
Last edited:

Four Palestinians die in storming of UN food warehouse a day after gunfire at new Gaza aid site​



Hundreds of Palestinians stormed a United Nations food warehouse Wednesday in Gaza in a desperate attempt to get something to eat, shouting and shoving each other and ripping off pieces of the building to get inside. Four people died in the chaos, hospital officials said.

The deaths came a day after a crowd was fired upon while overrunning a new aid-distribution sitein Gazaset up by an Israeli and U.S.-backed foundation, killing at least one Palestinian and wounding 48 others, Gaza’s Health Ministry said.

The Israeli military, which guards the site from a distance, said it fired only warning shots to control the situation. The foundation said its military contractors guarding the site did not open fire. A Red Cross field hospital said the 48 people wounded suffered gunshot wounds, including women and children.…”

——
There are a lot of (mostly right wing and/or Islamophobic) social media reports claiming this is an uprising by Gazans against Hamas (the claim being this is a warehouse of food stolen by and hoarded by Hamas).
 
The question of which side is morally superior is separate from the reality of what Israel has faced on a daily basis, particularly since Hamas took over Gaza, and why a blockade is necessary. There's absolutely no reason to believe the blockade caused anything. When Hamas took over Gaza, the writing was immediately on the wall, at least for those who understand how terrorists work.

It is not reasonable for Israel to not monitor what is coming into Gaza. The literal survival of Israel depends on it and it's silly to believe that extending more sovereignty to Gaza would result in anything but more frequent and more destructive attacks. The blockade didn't cause the Hamas Covenant referenced below. The blockade didn't make Hamas a terrorist organization. Hamas was a terrorist organization for 20+ years before the blockade and their goals were the same in the 80s and 90s - eliminate Israel

They are terrorists and their focus is eliminating Israel. Without a blockade, their attempts to meet their goals would only be more successful and destructive.
There is nothing in this world that you understand and I do not, so shut up with this "for those who understand how terrorists work." Again, you made a life choice not to study. I made a life choice to study. Now, after all this time, I know far more about the world than you do. No matter how many times you stroke yourself to get that full 3.5 inches, you're still not able to have a conversation on this because you don't understand the basics. Sleep in the bed you made.

Since you love to quote ChatGPT here, let's ask it whether the blockade contributed to the Hamas attacks:

Yes, the Israeli blockade of Gaza is widely viewed as one of the factors that contributed to the rise of Hamas and its attacks. The blockade, imposed in 2007 after Hamas took control of Gaza, has severely restricted the movement of people and goods, leading to economic hardship, high unemployment, and deteriorating living conditions for Palestinians.

Hamas has used the blockade—along with broader grievances about occupation, displacement, and the lack of a viable peace process—as part of its justification for armed resistance. While it doesn't excuse attacks on civilians, many analysts and observers argue that the blockade fuels desperation, radicalization, and support for militant groups.

So yes, it's part of the larger cycle. Not the only cause, but definitely a contributing one.


Again, it's just a fact that blockades simply do not have the effect that you seem to think. People have studied this. People who actually know the facts, not people spitballing on a message board. And of course you're just ignoring the effect of the blockade on capital investment.

Of course the upper leadership of Hamas wants to destroy Israel. But intent is not enough; they also need the power to do so, right? I would love to end Kim Jong Un's worthless existence but that's not really something I could do, right? Hamas' leadership is only as powerful as the size and skill of its army. Forced poverty breeds those soldiers. Lack of opportunity breeds those soldiers. Do you really think that Palestinian teenagers are running to join Hamas instead of going to university or working in a factory providing for their families? They do not. They run to join Hamas because they can't do those things and they view Israel as responsible for it.

This is the oldest story in history. Israel has no more ability to stamp out dissatisfaction than did Louis XVI. The harder a government tries to oppress, the worse it goes for them when there's a successful revolt. How did Saddam and family fare after Saddam's rule was over? Oh, yeah. The people just killed them. That's the game you play when you try to use might to make right.
 
If you have to keep telling everyone else that you are the smartest person in the room, there is a good chance that you are not actually the smartest person in the room.
 
If you have to keep telling everyone else that you are the smartest person in the room, there is a good chance that you are not actually the smartest person in the room.
I can only imagine, but since I only have him and Paine on SuperIgnore, I get to miss out. But my guess is something akin to, "you need to shut your trap" or "there is zero possibility I cannot understand something more than you" or "you are no where near my level."
 
If you have to keep telling everyone else that you are the smartest person in the room, there is a good chance that you are not actually the smartest person in the room.
I'm not talking about being the smartest person. I'm simply far more knowledgeable than ZenMode. When he tries to claim the mantle of superiority ("if you understand how terrorists work") then that is the response he will get.

Most of the time, people who brag about being the smartest person in the room are, in fact, among the smartest people in the room. They don't do it because they have to. They do it because it suits their goals at the moment. One of those goals can be "being an asshole" and often is, but that's not really the same thing. I freely admit that my response to Zen was dickish. It was a response to even greater dickishness.

What you miss about me is that I don't care in the slightest about my relative intelligence. My goal is -- very roughly speaking -- to educate people and to learn from people. If everyone on this message board took intelligence pills to become super-geniuses, and as a result stopped saying or believing nonsense, I would be thrilled even if it meant my intelligence had become merely average.

Remember when I made that claim about firefighters and saving people? You were offended and incredibly dismissive of me, and you let me know it in no uncertain terms. I deserved it. Once I figured out that you are actually a firefighter, I've never again made any claim at all about firefighting because why would I? I can just ask a firefighter. BTW, I found the article that I had read about firefighters doing "scouting" in big fires. I remembered it backwards: they were ending that policy in NYC, not initiating it. It had been previously used in big fires long ago because of limited equipment, but it wasn't really followed in practice and so it was rescinded. This was a long time ago.

Anyway, that's the lay of the land here. When you told me, "you don't know what you're talking about" re: fires, you weren't claiming to be more intelligent than me. You were claiming to be more informed. Which you are, on that topic.
 
I'm not talking about being the smartest person. I'm simply far more knowledgeable than ZenMode. When he tries to claim the mantle of superiority ("if you understand how terrorists work") then that is the response he will get.

Most of the time, people who brag about being the smartest person in the room are, in fact, among the smartest people in the room. They don't do it because they have to. They do it because it suits their goals at the moment. One of those goals can be "being an asshole" and often is, but that's not really the same thing. I freely admit that my response to Zen was dickish. It was a response to even greater dickishness.

What you miss about me is that I don't care in the slightest about my relative intelligence. My goal is -- very roughly speaking -- to educate people and to learn from people. If everyone on this message board took intelligence pills to become super-geniuses, and as a result stopped saying or believing nonsense, I would be thrilled even if it meant my intelligence had become merely average.

Remember when I made that claim about firefighters and saving people? You were offended and incredibly dismissive of me, and you let me know it in no uncertain terms. I deserved it. Once I figured out that you are actually a firefighter, I've never again made any claim at all about firefighting because why would I? I can just ask a firefighter. BTW, I found the article that I had read about firefighters doing "scouting" in big fires. I remembered it backwards: they were ending that policy in NYC, not initiating it. It had been previously used in big fires long ago because of limited equipment, but it wasn't really followed in practice and so it was rescinded. This was a long time ago.

Anyway, that's the lay of the land here. When you told me, "you don't know what you're talking about" re: fires, you weren't claiming to be more intelligent than me. You were claiming to be more informed. Which you are, on that topic.
Ok, upon elaboration I can see what you were trying to say. It just came across as very arrogant, but I can see that is not what you were going for.
 
There is nothing in this world that you understand and I do not, so shut up with this "for those who understand how terrorists work." Again, you made a life choice not to study. I made a life choice to study. Now, after all this time, I know far more about the world than you do. No matter how many times you stroke yourself to get that full 3.5 inches, you're still not able to have a conversation on this because you don't understand the basics. Sleep in the bed you made.
That's all weird....
Since you love to quote ChatGPT here, let's ask it whether the blockade contributed to the Hamas attacks:
I have never quoted ChatGPT.
Yes, the Israeli blockade of Gaza is widely viewed as one of the factors that contributed to the rise of Hamas and its attacks. The blockade, imposed in 2007 after Hamas took control of Gaza, has severely restricted the movement of people and goods, leading to economic hardship, high unemployment, and deteriorating living conditions for Palestinians.

Hamas has used the blockade—along with broader grievances about occupation, displacement, and the lack of a viable peace process—as part of its justification for armed resistance. While it doesn't excuse attacks on civilians, many analysts and observers argue that the blockade fuels desperation, radicalization, and support for militant groups.

So yes, it's part of the larger cycle. Not the only cause, but definitely a contributing one.


Again, it's just a fact that blockades simply do not have the effect that you seem to think. People have studied this. People who actually know the facts, not people spitballing on a message board. And of course you're just ignoring the effect of the blockade on capital investment.
Yes, people who study things can come to some conclusions. That doesn't mean those conclusions automatically apply in all situations.
Of course the upper leadership of Hamas wants to destroy Israel. But intent is not enough; they also need the power to do so, right?
Which they likely acquired when they went from a terrorist organization operating within Gaza to controlling the government of Gaza.
I would love to end Kim Jong Un's worthless existence but that's not really something I could do, right? Hamas' leadership is only as powerful as the size and skill of its army. Forced poverty breeds those soldiers. Lack of opportunity breeds those soldiers. Do you really think that Palestinian teenagers are running to join Hamas instead of going to university or working in a factory providing for their families?
Yes, I do and there is significant evidence to support that belief. Here. Here.

The mistake that many liberals make is assuming the all cultures want and prioritize the same things. We all just want freedom and prosperity and to be able to pursue our dreams, right? That is not true for many Muslims and it's not just terrorists. Their time on Earth is borderline meaningless because their belief is an eternal afterlife is strong.... VERY strong. It's not uncommon for Muslims, not just terrorists, to chant "We love death more than you love life."

They aren't kidding.
They do not. They run to join Hamas because they can't do those things and they view Israel as responsible for it.
I disagree.
This is the oldest story in history. Israel has no more ability to stamp out dissatisfaction than did Louis XVI. The harder a government tries to oppress, the worse it goes for them when there's a successful revolt. How did Saddam and family fare after Saddam's rule was over? Oh, yeah. The people just killed them. That's the game you play when you try to use might to make right.
What Israel is doing with the blockade isn't stamping out dissatisfaction, it's survival. For reason mentioned above, there will never be a shortage of Muslim terrorists... at least not in the near future because only a significant re-interpretation of their holy doctrine will cause such a change and that ain't happening soon. Does the blockade cause a few more people to fight for Hamas? Maybe, but the belief that with sovereignty, and all the freedom they can take, that they'd suddenly abandon their religious mission to destroy Israel is unsupported to say that least. No, previous studies don't change that unless those previous studies include groups of people who don't care about their lives on Earth.

So, I've asked multiple times and haven't received an answer. What should Israel do? Give Gaza their state sovereignty and pray that more deadly weapons aren't immediately pumped in there from terrorist countries around the world?
 
Last edited:
So, I've asked multiple times and haven't received an answer. What should Israel do? Give Gaza their state sovereignty and pray that more deadly weapons aren't immediately pumped in there from terrorist countries around the world?
1. From your link:

"Trisko Darden stresses that terrorism and terrorist recruitment must be understood as context-specific. What drives either in Turkey or Latin America may be quite different from what drives them in Nigeria or Sri Lanka. But regardless of geography, common factors can include limited economic opportunities for young people, systematized discrimination and corruption on a governmental or societal level."

Obviously many of the leaders are educated and affluent. The grunts who actually do the work? Not so much. This is incredibly well-established.

2. I'm not going to give you an answer. I don't know what Israel should do, because a) I'm not Israeli; b) I'm not a military strategist; c) I don't know Israeli law; d) I don't have any insight to the facts on the ground.

You like to spout off on topics you know nothing about. I do not. What I do know is that the blockade is illegal, largely ineffective and wrong. There is no law that says a person must have an opinion about everything regardless of knowledge
 
1. From your link:

"Trisko Darden stresses that terrorism and terrorist recruitment must be understood as context-specific. What drives either in Turkey or Latin America may be quite different from what drives them in Nigeria or Sri Lanka. But regardless of geography, common factors can include limited economic opportunities for young people, systematized discrimination and corruption on a governmental or societal level."
Common factors "CAN" include, not "DO ALWAYS" include.
Obviously many of the leaders are educated and affluent. The grunts who actually do the work? Not so much. This is incredibly well-established.
You've yet to provide any relevant support for this being a significant factor as it relates to Muslim terrorism.
2. I'm not going to give you an answer. I don't know what Israel should do, because a) I'm not Israeli; b) I'm not a military strategist; c) I don't know Israeli law; d) I don't have any insight to the facts on the ground.
Here are the relevant facts: Israel/Israelis live next door to a group of people who are quite literally hell-bent on wiping them off the face of the Earth and Israel has quite literally no governing body to turn to for help. Nobody. Why? Because terrorists don't give a flying fuck about the UN and their resolutions or anything else the UN has to say. Plus a significant portion of the UN likely wants Israel wiped out.
You like to spout off on topics you know nothing about. I do not.
You keep claiming I spout off about things I don't know about while you seem to be wholly uninformed about the realities of not only Muslim terrorists in general, but especially Hamas.
What I do know is that the blockade is illegal, largely ineffective
You believe, based on generic research, that it's ineffective, yet you likely know, without admitting it, that not regulating Gaza would resort in the death of significantly more Israelis.
and wrong.
Sure. What Israel should do is the "right* thing which would result in mass murder of its people.
There is no law that says a person must have an opinion about everything regardless of knowledge
I Never said there was. It's just interesting that you have all kinds of things to say, but can't muster even a thought when asked what Israel should do.
 
I will tell you what Israel should do. They should stop killing Palestinian civilians. They have extracted their revenge for a terrorist attack almost 2 years ago. What they are engaged in now is ethnic cleansing. It is unconscionable and we should not be supporting them.
 
Because they know exactly which ones are Hamas, right?

Can you imagine how many future terrorists Israel is creating every day? I assure you Israel knows, which is why they are choosing to eradicate Palestinian children. They just see future terrorists because they know their behavior is radicalizing any child that survives this abomination they are perpetrating.
 

Israel accepts a US proposal for a temporary Gaza ceasefire and Hamas gives a cool response​



“Israel has accepted a new U.S. proposal for a temporary ceasefire with Hamas, the White House said Thursday.

… Hamas officials gave the Israeli-approved draft a cool response, but said they wanted to study the proposal more closely before giving a formal answer.

… a Hamas official and an Egyptian official independently confirmed some of the details. They spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the sensitive talks.

They say it calls for a 60-day pause in fighting, guarantees of serious negotiations leading to a long-term truce and assurances that Israel will not resume hostilities after the release of hostages, as it did in March. Israeli forces would pull back to the positions they held during the ceasefire Israel ended that month.

Hamas would release 10 living hostages and a number of bodies during the 60-day pause in exchange for more than 1,100 Palestinians imprisoned by Israel, including 100 serving long sentences after being convicted of deadly attacks.

Each day, hundreds of trucks carrying food and humanitarian aid would be allowed to enter Gaza, where experts say a nearly three-month Israeli blockade — slightly eased in recent days — has pushed the population to the brink of famine….”
 
Back
Top