• @[email protected]
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    11 months ago

    Have you ever wondered what those people might have experienced that would lead them to hate Israel so much?

    • capital
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      -911 months ago

      That’s a different point, isn’t it? The comment above seems to suggest that Hamas doesn’t have support from the vast majority of Palestinians. In reality, if they had weapons, it appears they might use them the exact same way Hamas did.

      I was directly replying to that point.

      • @[email protected]
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        111 months ago

        So only 30% of Gazans don’t support what Hamas is doing? Gee I wonder what would happen if 30% of a country rose up against its dictators.

        Much tinier percentages of people have overthrown dictators.

        If those 70% want to pick up weapons to attack Israel, then at a bare minimum it would mean less injustice in the Israeli bombings. (still massive injustice even if only 30% in an area are non-combatants don’t get me wrong).

        Gazans are being held, in a de facto sense, responsible for the actions of Hamas, in the sense they are feelings the attacks meant for Hamas.

        But without the opportunity to bear arms, Gazans cannot, in any circumstance, be actually ethically responsible. They are being actively prevented from taking a stance of responsibility because they are actively prevented from having any power.

        Weapons are power. Without power they can have no responsibility. And yet they are being held responsible by Israeli weapons. It is unjust.

        Gazans should have the opportunity to throw off their dictators. If they take that opportunity, and instead use it to join those dictators, so be it. They can feel the consequences of that. They already are.

        The blockade of weapons prevents this situation from resolving in a just way.