Democratic Rep. Rashida Tlaib refused to apologize Wednesday for saying on Tuesday that Israel is to blame for the hospital explosion that day in Gaza, an accusation that sparked political backlash against her from Republicans as Israel denies fault.

Tlaib joined thousands of protesters calling for a ceasefire in Gaza during a solidarity rally hosted by the left-leaning group Jewish Voice for Peace at the National Mall. She was visibly emotional, at times pausing her speech to openly weep and criticizing lawmakers who have not backed a ceasefire resolution.

  • @[email protected]
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    -11 year ago

    The thing is that the Islamic Jihad and Hamas don’t want to negotiate, since they won’t accept a two-state solution, so peace is not possible while any of them has a militarized branch. There are plenty of people in Israel that don’t want to negotiate but at least on the Israeli side the only group that needs to stick to the plan is the IDF which will follow the orders they get.

    • @[email protected]
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      61 year ago

      If you see what’s going on in the West Bank, Israel is also doing everything it can to make a two state solution impossible

    • NoneOfUrBusiness
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      -31 year ago

      since they won’t accept a two-state solution,

      They will. Well at least Hamas well. They changed their charter in 2017 to reflect that.

      • @paintbucketholder
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        101 year ago

        Yeah, but then Hamas went ahead and murdered 1,400 civilians in Israel. After this, why exactly would Israel want to negotiate with terrorists?

        • NoneOfUrBusiness
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          11 year ago

          Mostly so this mess doesn’t happen again? Hamas and others like it are a symptom, not a cause.

            • NoneOfUrBusiness
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              11 year ago

              The thing is: The atrocities themselves are symptoms. A free Palestine wouldn’t foster the conditions necessary for this kind of bullshit to happen at a large scale.

              Note: I condemn any and all murder of civilians.

                • NoneOfUrBusiness
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                  01 year ago

                  Is it not a symptom of their decisions, as people? Is it not a symptom of their sheer depravity?

                  The thing is: You normally can’t gather large numbers of those people and convince them to attack random civilians, especially when it involves a very good chance of dying. There’s a very specific combination of desperation and hopelessness that makes things like these

                  The debate is not over civilian deaths, it’s over settlements and rocks and territory.

                  That’s just so wrong I can’t… Every year innocent people die in the West bank at the hands of the IDF and settlers. Also the “rocks and territory” are people’s homes. People are getting chased out of their homes for the sin of being born on land Israelis wanna settle. The West bank is definitely preferable to Gaza, but 7000 civilians died there since the Israeli occupation. The current state of the West bank is not a good argument against Hamas.

                  But Hamas reacted to to Israel’s unilaterally ending the occupation in Gaza by dramatically ramping up rocket fire.

                  There was the whole blockade mess. That’s the cause of the rocket fire. Hamas has been pretty explicit about that, and signed two ceasefires before that had them stop launching rockets in exchange for Israel lifting the blockade (the blockade wasn’t lifted, so the rocket attacks came back).

          • @paintbucketholder
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            61 year ago

            Israel has negotiated with Hamas before.

            Hamas had virtually free reign in Gaza for the past 17 years, despite violently pushing out Fatah and never holding elections again.

            That didn’t stop Hamas from murdering 1,400 civilians in Israel.

            What results should Israel expect if they negotiated with Hamas this time?

            • NoneOfUrBusiness
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              1 year ago

              Israel has negotiated with Hamas before.

              And then went back on the results of those negotiations. Two ceasefires were signed before, and in both the blockade being lifted was a condition that Israel didn’t fulfill no matter how long Hamas waited.

              Also you’re being very disingenuous by ignoring the blockade. You can’t call the situation in Gaza “free reign”.

              • @paintbucketholder
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                51 year ago

                It’s not like the ceasefires were unilaterally observed by Hamas, and only broken by Israel.

                I’m not even trying to defend Israel here. My entire point is that there is absolutely no reason to put your entire trust into a terrorist organization that just murdered 1,400 civilians.

                • NoneOfUrBusiness
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                  01 year ago

                  It’s not like the ceasefires were unilaterally observed by Hamas, and only broken by Israel.

                  At first that was the case. Hamas only broke the ceasefires when it became apparent that the most important part to them, lifting the blockade, wouldn’t happen.

                  My entire point is that there is absolutely no reason to put your entire trust into a terrorist organization that just murdered 1,400 civilians.

                  We can both condemn the murder of civilians (by both sides) and condemn Israel for not trying to make peace. This isn’t trust; this is working off their official position and past examples. Them being a terrorist organization has nothing to do with that.

            • @Jonna
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              -21 year ago

              Hamas won the 2006 election, and Fatah and the rest of the world opposed them taking office. Hamas and Fatah fought it out, and Hamas won in Gaza and Fatah in the West Bank.

              You’re right that Hamas hasn’t allowed elections since then, but simply saying, 'violently pushing out Fatah ’ is much less than accurate.

              It should also be noted that Hamas won that election because Fatah’s strategy of negotiations was seen as a dead end and Israel is responsible for that. And of course, there might not even BE a Hamas if Israel hadn’t funded Hamas as a divide and conquer strategy against the Palestinian secular nationalist movement .