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Abraham Washington's avatar

Netanyahu says he won't stop until Hama is destroyed, but every day he creates a new wave of Hamas recruits among the boys and girls living amid the daily death and ruins of Gaza. For them, every day is like Israel's Oct. 7, and they will not forget or forgive, and the endless hatred and violence will only continue.

I also see Netanyahu as yet another example of a self-aggrandizing leader who cannot and will not surrender power. A ceasefire, the release of hostages, the beginning of international reconstruction in Gaza, these could all achieved if Netanyahu agreed. But he won't, because then he'd be out of power, and subject to accountability for allowing Oct.7 to happen in the first place. (Not to mention accountability for the crimes for which he tried to over-rule the Supreme Court prior to Oct.7.)

So a man in power refuses to cede power, and his impossible goal of destroying Hamas is only creating a new generation of Hamas. And destroying Israel's reputation in the world.

Every time history repeats itself, the cost goes up.

Netanyahu over-coming his insatiable lust for power and leaving (maybe a family intervention?) might be the beginning of some resolution in Gaza, and easing of some of the inflammatory words and action of people around the world.

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Frank Sterle Jr's avatar

A Canadian columnist wrote how during a post-10/7 concert at Vancouver’s Hollywood Theatre, “a band member said something about a free Palestine. This, according to attendee Hanah Van Borek, led to a few shouts from the audience: ‘F--- the Jews!’ It was clearly audible in her area of the crowd, a person who was with her confirms, but nobody around them shut this down. There were some cheers of support, though. ‘My whole body went into shock,’ says Ms. Van Borek, who is Jewish.

“Ms. Van Borek left the venue and explained why to security staff. She says a worker encouraged her to go back inside and reassured her she was safe. ‘Nobody will be able to tell that you’re Jewish,’ he said, according to Ms. Van Borek. (Oy.) She did return to the show, but Ms. Van Borek was — and is — rattled. She supports the band’s right to make political statements. It was the shouts from this group — and the silence around them — that were alarming.”

I have long been, and still am, critical of what I see as clear decades-long maltreatment [to put it mildly] of the general Palestinian populace by the Israeli government and security/defense agencies — and, with few exceptions, the Western mainstream news-media’s seemingly intentional tokenistic (non)coverage of it.

By doing so, that media, whether they realize it or not, have done a disservice to its own reputation and the Israeli/Jewish people themselves [the road to hell, after all, is also paved with good intentions]. Not as widely criticized thus publicized as the violence are the considerable fossil fuel reserves beneath long-held Palestinian land that are a plausible motivator for war.

However, likely due to not having Jewish heritage thus experience, I still never expected the level of anti-Semitic attacks in the West since immediately after the 10/7 Hamas attack against Israel.

It’s plainly wrong for them to be mistreated and even terrorized, as though they are personally responsible for the atrocities being committed overseas. And it should be needless to say that Western-world Palestinians and Muslims similarly must not be collectively blamed and attacked for the acts of Hamas violence in Israel or Islamic extremist attacks outside the Middle East.

Also, great insensitivity was publicly shown by some in the West immediately after the 10/7 attack towards Jews freshly mourning the victims, especially when considering that many or most young Israelis and Jews elsewhere were not accustomed to such relatively large-scale carnage (at least not as much as is seen in other parts of the Middle East) in post-9/11 times.

Additionally concerning about all of the highly publicized two-way partisan exchanges of fury is: what will young non-Israeli Jewish, and Palestinian, children living abroad think and feel if/when they hear such misdirected vile hatred towards their fundamental identity? Scary is the real possibility that such public outpour of blind hatred may lead some young children to feel very misplaced shame in their heritage.

With the Palestinian-Israeli conflict — past and present, but seemingly now more than ever — there has been widespread partisanship via Internet and news commentary. The politics of polarization outside of Israel and even the Middle East, perhaps in part for its own sake, has gotten quite disturbing.

Within social media especially, the angry and thoughtless two-dimensional views are especially amplified, including the majority posted by non-Jews and non-Palestinians.

It arouses a spectator-sport effect or mentality, with many contemptible trolls residing well outside the region yet actively supporting the ‘side’ [via politicized commentary posts] that they hate less. I anticipate many actually keep track of the bloody match by checking the day’s-end death-toll score, however extremely lopsided those numbers.

Meanwhile, Western-government political indifference towards the mass starvation and slaughter of helpless Palestinian non-combatants will only have further inflamed long-held Middle Eastern anger towards the West.

Some countries’ actual provision, mostly by the U.S., of highly effective weapons used in Israel’s onslaught will likely have turned that anger into lasting hatred seeking eye-for-an-eye redress.

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