• Rentlar
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    1 year ago

    My colleagues and I, like so many Canadians, were aggrieved and outraged by Hamas’ deliberate and unconscionable attack on Israeli civilians. We are now horrified by Israel’s incessant and indiscriminate attacks on Palestinian civilians and civilian spaces, including hospitals, in Gaza.

    The relentless killings, destruction of essential infrastructure and withholding of items including water and medicines essential for survival amount to brazen and repeated violations of International Humanitarian Law (IHL). IHL remains the clearest expression of our global agreement to preserve a space for humanity in war. For governments committed to this principle and legal framework, including Canada, now is the time to defend it wholeheartedly and unequivocally.

    More organizations, particularly Canadian and U.S. based humanitarian aid orgs, charities and doctors associations need to make statements like this.

    War sucks ass even if our “friends” and “friend’s friends” are doing it.

    • TWeaK
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      91 year ago

      War sucks ass, but it sure as hell does make a lot of money, and meanwhile people are too busy being riled up to really focus on that aspect.

      • @conno02
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        31 year ago

        yeah-- that’s why we put so much money into israel. it stims the shit out of our economy

        • TWeaK
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          111 year ago

          It doesn’t really stimulate economy, it just pays the people who own arms businesses.

          Stimulating the economy involves giving money to people who have less, such that they can spend more. People who have an excess of money don’t spend more, they just get better at hiding it away.

          • @conno02
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            41 year ago

            you sound more knowledgeable than me on this so im just gonna have faith that you’re right

        • @dx1OP
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          1 year ago

          The majority of that money (FMF) comes from our taxes, goes to Israel, Israel is bound to spend it on arms from American arms companies, the owners (stockholders) of those companies get the profits, cycle some of it back to politicians and lobbyists, etc. So it’s a net gain for the beneficiaries, but a net loss for the rest of the population. It also makes our infrastructure more targeted towards arms production and less for our own needs. There isn’t an additional inflow of money, so that essentially means a net loss.

          That’s essentially the broken window fallacy on one hand, and actual redistribution of wealth upwards on the other hand.

    • More organizations, particularly Canadian and U.S. based humanitarian aid orgs, charities and doctors associations need to make statements like this.

      Many did already and did so regarding many aspects of the Israeli occupation, like imprisonment without access to legal counsel or charges, non persecuted murders and forced displacement by “settlers” supported by the IDF and many more aspects of blatant human rights violation.

      But the western governments close their eyes, put their fingers in the ears and scream “LALALALALA” whenever pressed on the topic.

  • @[email protected]
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    31 year ago

    I see members of “Doctors without borders” being mistakenly hit with missiles in the future.