Pickering Angels

US will be taking name in Jerusalem vote...most dickish admin in history?

basketcase

Well-known member
Dec 29, 2005
62,631
7,075
113
2 more children will lose eyes, shot by Israelis.
https://electronicintifada.net/blogs/maureen-clare-murphy/two-boys-lose-eyes-israeli-fire

2 other children injured when terrorist settlers attacked a school, backed by state terrorist IDF forces.
(I use the word 'terrorist' here to describe attacks on civilians meant to effect political change, here namely ethnic cleansing).
https://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=779699

Who is the one burying their head in the sand?
Of course the Palestinian reports ignore that the youth were injured while involved in riots or that the settler terrorism was a direct response to Palestinian terrorists who were attacking Israeli civilian vehicles.

And despite Ma'an's claims, the IDF was not supporting the settlers, they were breaking up a violent brawl between two groups of ideological zealots. Both groups should go to jail (but then you would once again complain that Israel dares arrest violent Palestinians).
https://www.timesofisrael.com/settl...illage-after-palestinians-stone-israeli-cars/
 

Frankfooter

dangling member
Apr 10, 2015
99,259
26,797
113
Of course Israel has a problem with US support coming from evangelicals hoping for Armageddon.

Don't you see the irony of Bannon's Jew haters being at odds with Hamas Jew haters?
That's just one of the reasons that support for Israel has been plummeting among North American Jews.
Though mostly that's just Israel's human rights record.
 

Frankfooter

dangling member
Apr 10, 2015
99,259
26,797
113
Of course the Palestinian reports ignore that the youth were injured while involved in riots or that the settler terrorism was a direct response to Palestinian terrorists who were attacking Israeli civilian vehicles.
I see, you appear to claim that when Palestinians protest the occupation its a 'riot' and when when settlers attack a school its a response to 'terrorism' instead of an act of terrorism.

But lets be clear on what it is that you are defending here:

You're supporting shooting children in the face and armed terrorists attacking schools with the backing of the army.
You are becoming really quite disgusting.

More than 20 armed Israeli settlers raided a Palestinian school in southern Nablus in the northern occupied West Bank on Thursday, resulting in the injury of two students with rubber-coated steel bullets.
Ghassan Daghlas, an official who monitors settlement activity in the northern West Bank, told Ma’an that Israeli settlers from the ultra-right wing Yitzhar settlement raided the school in the Burin village under the protection of the Israeli army as students were taking their final exams.
Daghlas said that clashes erupted in the village as a result of the settler raid, with Israeli forces shooting live fire, rubber-coated steel bullets, tear gas and stun grenades inside the school grounds, causing more than twenty students to suffer from severe tear-gas inhalation, and injuring two with rubber-coated bullets.
https://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=779699

Defending armed terrorists attacking children taking their exams at school is really quite disgusting.
 

basketcase

Well-known member
Dec 29, 2005
62,631
7,075
113
I see, you appear to claim that when Palestinians protest the occupation its a 'riot' and when when settlers attack a school its a response to 'terrorism' instead of an act of terrorism.
...
Your disgusting bias has you incapable of honesty.

I clearly said both the settlers who attacked the village and the Palestinians who attacked the settlers are terrorists. You continue the lies with your claim that the IDF was backing up the settlers when reality is they showed up to stop the brawl.
Of course the Palestinian reports ignore that the youth were injured while involved in riots or that the settler terrorism was a direct response to Palestinian terrorists who were attacking Israeli civilian vehicles....
Secondly, when protests involve firebombs, rocks, and burning tires, it is a riot.

As usual, you are a fraud and a despicable liar.
 

Frankfooter

dangling member
Apr 10, 2015
99,259
26,797
113
Your disgusting bias has you incapable of honesty.

I clearly said both the settlers who attacked the village and the Palestinians who attacked the settlers are terrorists. You continue the lies with your claim that the IDF was backing up the settlers when reality is they showed up to stop the brawl.
No, this report was just a report of Israeli terrorism, of armed illegal settlers attacking a school during exams with the aid of the IDF.
There was no report of Palestinian terrorism here, though it does look like you are trying to justify terrorism as if it were an appropriate response to violence.
Is that the case?

Read the article again, check the sources.
More than 20 armed Israeli settlers raided a Palestinian school in southern Nablus in the northern occupied West Bank on Thursday, resulting in the injury of two students with rubber-coated steel bullets.
Ghassan Daghlas, an official who monitors settlement activity in the northern West Bank, told Ma’an that Israeli settlers from the ultra-right wing Yitzhar settlement raided the school in the Burin village under the protection of the Israeli army as students were taking their final exams.
Daghlas said that clashes erupted in the village as a result of the settler raid, with Israeli forces shooting live fire, rubber-coated steel bullets, tear gas and stun grenades inside the school grounds, causing more than twenty students to suffer from severe tear-gas inhalation, and injuring two with rubber-coated bullets.
https://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=779699

This attack is worse then anything Hamas has done in the last month, by the way.
Why do you support these terrorists?
 

basketcase

Well-known member
Dec 29, 2005
62,631
7,075
113
No, this report was just a report of Israeli terrorism, ...
I posted the full story that you and maan propaganda refused to discuss. Palestinian terrorists attacked Israeli cars and those Israelis turned around and terrorized the nearby Palestinian village.
But of course you don't want to discuss Palestinian violence because it interferes with your hate filled agenda.

This attack is worse then anything Hamas has done in the last month, by the way.
There have been at least 20 terror rockets launched from Hamas ruled Gaza this month.
 

Frankfooter

dangling member
Apr 10, 2015
99,259
26,797
113
I posted the full story that you and maan propaganda refused to discuss. Palestinian terrorists attacked Israeli cars and those Israelis turned around and terrorized the nearby Palestinian village.
But of course you don't want to discuss Palestinian violence because it interferes with your hate filled agenda.
From the times article you posted.
Tensions in the northern West Bank have been high since a November clash between Palestinians and a group of hiking settlers. Then, a group of several Israeli dozen youths — chaperoned by two of the fathers — embarked on a tour of the northern West Bank to celebrate the bar mitzvah of Elitzur Libman. As they hiked past the village of Qusra, they said, dozens of Palestinian residents began throwing rocks at them. One of the armed chaperones opened fire, killing 48-year-old Mahmoud Za’al Odeh.

The next week, clashes broke out between settlers and Palestinians in the area after a group of far-right Israeli activist from the Otzma Yehudit group returned to the scene of the deadly clash. One Palestinian man was shot and critically wounded under unclear circumstances. The army did not say then if one of its soldiers had fired the shot that injured the Palestinian.

So this was all in response to the incident where Israeli trespassers went and shot a farmer, are you saying?
That this latest series of attacks, including more Israeli terrorists attacking as school, were all a response from this initial Israeli crime?
Thanks for clearing that up.


There have been at least 20 terror rockets launched from Hamas ruled Gaza this month.
And would you like to also note how many children and civilians have been killed or injured in Gaza this month?
Why not start with Israel's shooting of the unarmed, wheelchair bound, protester?
The guy who had his legs blown off by Israel in 2008 and was shot in the head by a sniper while protesting inside Gaza, inside the prison walls.

Or you could just tell me which is worse, 20 harmless home made rockets or armed terrorists attacking a school during exams with the aid of the army.

Just bring in the ICC already and charge both sides.
End the occupation and apartheid already, this is just disgusting.
 

basketcase

Well-known member
Dec 29, 2005
62,631
7,075
113
From the times article you posted.....
Clearly shows that once again, Palestinian violence was the start of the problem.

Or you could just tell me which is worse, 20 harmless home made rockets
And once again you minimize Palestinian terrorism despite EVERYONE including the groups you like quoting (UN, Amnesty, B'Tselem) calling those rockets terrorism.
 

basketcase

Well-known member
Dec 29, 2005
62,631
7,075
113
p.s. I can't wait to see the hundreds of posts where you condemn Iran for shooting and arresting protesters.
 

Frankfooter

dangling member
Apr 10, 2015
99,259
26,797
113
Clearly shows that once again, Palestinian violence was the start of the problem.
A bunch of illegal settlers go trespassing on Palestinian land where they shoot a farmer on his land and you blame Palestinians?
That's disgusting.

And once again you minimize Palestinian terrorism
You are busy minimizing settler terrorism, where armed settlers with the backing of army attacked a school full of children taking exams.

The latest articles on Gaza are now past calling it the 'world's largest open air prison'.
Congrats, Gaza has graduated to 'death camp'.

History is inexplicable. It has a way of seizing the chosen few to deliver a commanding message that transcends the tapered, often rote, confines of time, place and journey.

Like the mystery of magic, defining moments seem to find powerful launch through the flash of a sudden second and echo through the voice of those destined to become iconic well beyond the rhyme of powerful lyric alone.

To them, theirs is a journey of the ages. For those fortunate enough to witness such passage it is a transcendent reminder that greatness is measured not through acquired wealth or power but by the prompt of the principle, courage and sacrifice of the few.

Who can forget Faris Odeh, 15 years old when he stared down a tank with little more than a stone in his hand, murdered by Israel in Gaza? Or 23 year old Rachel Corrie, on that mist covered morning, armed with a bullhorn as she faced off against a bulldozer to save a home, murdered by Israel in Gaza.

And now legend has taken 29 year old Ibrahim Abu Thuraya from us. Disabled but not disarmed, he had the boldness to stand his ground clutching his weapon, the flag he loved… murdered by Israel in Gaza.

What is there about a tiny enclave known as Gaza that so offends, so alarms, so intimidates Israel? It would be far too easy to say nothing and simply reduce it to Tel Aviv’s voracious chase of its off-shore gas reserves or its potential as a Mediterranean tourist coastline …once cleansed of its native population and the destruction which bears the marked Star of David.

No. Gaza terrorizes Israel not by force of arms but through the endless resound of its resilience and the muscle of its inspiration.

To millions of Palestinians under siege in Palestine, or those forcibly exiled by a Diaspora now 70 years of age, and to its chorus of supporters worldwide, Gaza stands as a shining beacon of resistance and hope. Yet, to romanticize Gaza is to lend excuse to Israel and no such apologia will be offered here.

50 miles from the destruction that is Gaza sits Tel Aviv… as so much a marker of grotesque Israeli indifference.

Indeed, not a day passes without a new tease from the “third hottest city” in the world and “party capitol of the middle east” whether it’s the pristine Mediterranean seashore, cosmopolitan restaurants, coffeehouses, and galleries or hip after hour dance and bar scene of the “City that Never Sleeps.”

Ranked as the 25th most important financial center in the world, Tel Aviv has the third-largest economy of any city in the Middle East and draws well over a million international visitors annually to its numerous upscale hotels. Home to Israel’s only stock exchange, it has some 70 skyscrapers as tall as an American football field and includes one with 80 floors topped by a spire 150 feet in height.

Described as a “miniature Los Angeles,” Tel Aviv has been called one of the 10 most technologically influential cities in the world. Serving as home to numerous venture-capital firms and scientific research institutes, it has hundreds of startup companies, textile plants and food manufacturers.

Israel’s second largest municipality, Tel Aviv never wants for “culture” and entertainment. Its population of almost half a million, with an unemployment rate of approximately 4% and income 20% above the national average, can choose from eighteen of Israel’s 35 major centers for the performing arts. The Tel Aviv Performing Arts Center is home of the Israeli Opera and the Cameri Theatre. The Heichal HaTarbut is Tel Aviv’s largest theatre and home to the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra.

But an hour’s drive, yet worlds away, sits Gaza; home to two million Palestinians.

Once known, in polite social circles, as the earth’s largest open air prison, it long ago moved on from jail to Israeli administered death camp. Whether by embargo or bombs, it is simply impossible to watch the life and death of the coastal enclave without seeing Israel’s criminal plan unfold.

With the first blush of sunrise, the streets of Gaza City fill rapidly with those who’ve survived its ritual night of darkness illuminated solely by bursts of another Israeli bombing run. For them, with each passing hour, the taste of daylight portends a constant race against what little time remains to shop at empty markets, rush for medicines long gone, or dangerously dated, search for missing bottled water, or attend to the needs of family too paralyzed or ill to join the chase.

While Tel Aviv remains a constant tease of new ventures, glorious dining and enrapt theater going, Gaza lives a repetition of bare survival… at least for the lucky.

For others, it’s an endless wail of mourn as infants are laid to rest with lungs once barely filled with the breath of life. Alongside them sleep the young who, traumatized by the unbearable pain of living, tragically surrendered to the calm of willing death. Next to them lie the “elderly” who grew old and ill far too soon while their generation is coming of age and power everywhere else.

By now, it seems some have grown inured, indeed, comfortable with the visible suffer that is uniquely Gaza. Unlike an explosive genocide that unfolds overnight, impossible for many to ignore, Gaza has long simmered out of sight…out of mind.

Entering its second decade of complete isolation and embargo, Gaza periodically, inevitably, explodes from mindless rage in which Israel seeks to “mow the lawn” for little more than the embattled enclave’s determined resilience.

In late 2008 through early 2009, Israel unleashed an all out military attack on the defenseless population of Gaza. When the toxic white phosphorous cleared, some 1,417, mostly civilians, lay dead along with 13 Israeli soldiers… 4 from friendly fire.

In 2014, Israel undertook a 50 day all-out assault on Gaza as it once again targeted the entire enclave with massive disproportionate force.

Although some debate continues over the exact results, according to most estimates up to 2,310 were killed of whom 1,492 were civilians, including 551 children and 299 women. Another 10,895 were wounded including 3,374 children of whom 1,000 were left permanently disabled.

Among the infrastructure leveled were 220 factories, dairy farms with livestock and the orange groves of Beit Hanoun. 138 schools and 26 health facilities were damaged and thousands of homes totally destroyed or severely damaged. The lone power station in Gaza and its transmission lines was targeted and severely damaged. Sewage pumps and a major sewage pipe serving 500,000 inhabitants were destroyed. 10 out of 26 hospitals were damaged or destroyed along with several TV stations. 203 mosques were damaged, with 73 destroyed … along with two of Gaza’s three Christian churches.

Israel lost 66 soldiers and 5 civilians, including one child. 469 Israeli soldiers and 261 civilians were injured.

Four years later, conditions have only worsened in Gaza. Where once the UN announced it would be uninhabitable by 2020, for all intents and purposes, that day has come and gone. Yet the determination of its people continues on.

Gaza Today

Today, years of Israeli attacks and siege, have left Gaza reeling from an absence of a basic infrastructure capable of meeting even the minimal needs of its two million people.

Whether its electricity, clean water, healthcare, or sewage treatment and waste management, Gaza is undergoing a very public humanitarian crisis now entering its second decade.

In Gaza, abject poverty is rampant. At 41.1 percent, the unemployment rate is the highest in the world. Its youth unemployment is 64 percent. Currently there are 50,000 young women and men with university and graduate degrees unable to find work in their chosen fields… or any other. That figure grows each year by some 17,000 to 18,000. While once the industrial and production sectors offered more than 120,000 job opportunities per year, now less than 7,000 such positions become available.

Although thousands of homes damaged or destroyed during Israel’s attack in 2014 are still in need of repair, the construction sector is practically idle and essentially out of business. It used to contribute to about 22 percent of local production and offered some 70,000 job opportunities.

Sixty per cent of Gaza lives under the poverty line. Over a fifth of it lives in “deep poverty.” According to the U.N. Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA), “over 80 percent of the people in Gaza depend on humanitarian assistance.”

Another report by UNOCHA found that over 80 percent of its displaced families have borrowed money to get by in the past year, over 85 percent purchased most of their food on credit, and over 40 percent have decreased their consumption of food.

According to UNICEF a third of Gaza’s children suffer from chronic malnutrition and micronutrient deficiencies that can stunt development and affect overall health.

In other, less visible, ways, the residual impact of years of Israeli attacks and a decade long siege have produced a palpable and deleterious psychological impact on the people in Gaza.

In the immediate aftermath of the attack OCHA estimated that at least 373,000 children required psychosocial support. Today the UNRWA Community Mental Health Programme has found that Gazans are experiencing increasingly higher levels of stress and distress. The World Health Organization (WHO) has found Post Traumatic Stress Disorder to be widespread with studies indicating that upwards of 54% of Gaza’s children, teens and adults either symptomatic, or suffering from its full-on effects.

According to WHO between 10 and 20 percent of the population suffer from severe mental illness. Because of isolation, community pressure or lack of treatment opportunities the figure is likely much higher. Once unheard of, suicide has now becoming a familiar occurrence in Gaza clearly suggesting that the coping skills of Palestinians are being exhausted. Euro-Mediterranean Human Rights Monitor reported at least 95 people tried to commit suicide in the Gaza Strip in the first quarter of 2016, a nearly 40 percent increase from previous years.

Life in Darkness

For nearly a decade, Tel Aviv has held a yearly blackout in support of Earth Hour. Meanwhile, millions of nearby Palestinians struggle to eke out a life of bare existence with twenty-one hours of darkness each and every day.

Indeed, while Tel Aviv has converted an idle power station named “Gan HaHashmal” (Electricity Park) into a public park, recently OCHA published new data that shows electricity for Gaza has dropped to a total of just three hours daily and at times that vary from day to day. Lacking any advance notice as to when the electricity will go on, or off, the most rudimentary of life’s work is left largely to little more than blind wish leaving familial, educational, employment and health tasks either undone or incomplete.

According to the WHO, power cuts and fuel shortages have created constant crises for Gaza’s 14 public hospitals; threatening the closure of essential health services leaving thousands of people without access to life-saving medical care.

In Shifa hospital, tiny premature babies, some with multiple infections or congenital diseases, lie crammed in incubators fighting for life as lights sputter. With electricity virtually cut off, their life support is entirely powered by a generator with unpredictable current.

At any given time, power loss threatens the lives of hundreds of the new-born and adults in neonatal and intensive care units and some 658 patients requiring bi-weekly haemodialysis, including 23 children. Refrigeration systems for blood and vaccine storage are also at risk.

With adversity often the mother of invention, many in Gaza have struggled to keep pace with the needs of energy through use of poorly vented generator systems and candle light when available. According to Al Mezan, 29 people including 24 children have died since 2010 from fire or suffocation incidents related to attempts to overcome power outage. In one such tragedy, three siblings were killed after their home caught fire from the candles being used during the power outage.

Water Crises in Gaza

While Tel Aviv holds a yearly contest with an award of free parking to the family that has consumed the least amount of water, in Gaza it would be a competition without a challenge.

As a result of repeated attacks that have targeted Gaza’s water infrastructure… and a 10 year embargo on materials necessary for its repair, a crises in the making has now reached one of epic proportions unmatched anywhere else in the world.

For two million people, it is estimated that 3% of the water of Gaza remains fit for human consumption. In particular, it poses grave risks to its children.

As a result of untreated sewage dumped into the Mediterranean Sea, agricultural chemicals and unfiltered seawater, the rest of Gaza’s water is dangerous; 68% of it biologically contaminated during storage or transportation to Gaza’s households. Indeed, recent studies have shown Gaza’s water contains a large concentration of chloride… as well, nitrate rates two to eight times higher than the WHO recommends.

Recently the UN warned its underground water aquifer, upon which the territory is almost entirely dependent, will soon be completely contaminated; stripping Gaza of access to all its water.

With the shortage of clean water comes the well based fear of a deadly cholera epidemic… particularly in a community with an unusually young population. This is all the more likely where signs of acute malnutrition and severe wasting are an increasing phenomenon among the young children in Gaza.

Healthcare Dying
https://www.counterpunch.org/2017/12/29/parallel-worlds-gaza-and-israel/
 

basketcase

Well-known member
Dec 29, 2005
62,631
7,075
113
A bunch of illegal settlers go trespassing on Palestinian land where they shoot a farmer on his land and you blame Palestinians?

...
And back you your fraud and your support for terrorism.

1) You have claimed that there are no defined borders so it can't be Palestinian land unless there is a negotiated peace deal - or are you admitting your stance is more fraudfooter garbage?

2) You have said that settlers throwing rocks at Palestinian kids is terrorism and I agree. It is disgusting that you openly support Palestinian terrorists throwing rocks at Jewish kids. That is even worse that you trying to excuse Hamas terror rockets.

Your lies and your support for Palestinian violence shows quite clearly that you don't care about peace or human rights but merely want Israel destroyed.
 

Frankfooter

dangling member
Apr 10, 2015
99,259
26,797
113
And back you your fraud and your support for terrorism.

1) You have claimed that there are no defined borders so it can't be Palestinian land unless there is a negotiated peace deal - or are you admitting your stance is more fraudfooter garbage?

2) You have said that settlers throwing rocks at Palestinian kids is terrorism and I agree. It is disgusting that you openly support Palestinian terrorists throwing rocks at Jewish kids. That is even worse that you trying to excuse Hamas terror rockets.

Your lies and your support for Palestinian violence shows quite clearly that you don't care about peace or human rights but merely want Israel destroyed.
1) If you are arguing there is no Palestine, you are arguing that this murder happened inside apartheid Israel.

2) We are talking about the murder of a civilian by armed trespassers, not rock throwing here. I note that you are supporting murder and now it appears, a death camp. Talking about the evils of rock throwing while you defend murder and death camps is disgusting.

Your defense of apartheid, death camps and terrorism show that you clearly don't care about peace or human rights.

Both sides should stop the violence.
Israel should end the occupation or give Palestinians equal rights.
Now.
 

basketcase

Well-known member
Dec 29, 2005
62,631
7,075
113
1) If you are arguing there is no Palestine, you are arguing that this murder happened inside apartheid Israel.
You are the one denying that Israel has borders. You can't have it both ways.

2) We are talking about the murder of a civilian by armed trespassers, not rock throwing here.
As usual, you want to criticize Israelis but refuse to hold Palestinians accountable for the instigating actions.

You have said rock throwing is terrorism. That means that the Palestinians who attacked kids on a hike committed an act of terrorism. The dad who shot back should IMO be charged with manslaughter or reckless use of a firearm. It also means that the settler terrorists who attacked the Palestinian village were responding to Palestinian terrorism of throwing rocks at civilian cars.




I note that you are supporting murder and now it appears, a death camp. Talking about the evils of rock throwing while you defend murder and death camps is disgusting.
And here you admit you have no basis to argue on and instead have gone back to being a pathetic liar.
 

Frankfooter

dangling member
Apr 10, 2015
99,259
26,797
113
As usual, you want to criticize Israelis but refuse to hold Palestinians accountable for the instigating actions.
The instigators here are the armed illegal squatters who were trespassing on Palestinian's property, not those who tried to defend their homes.

Are you really stating that Palestinians aren't allowed to defend their homes?

If the illegal settlers did not try to march onto Palestinian land there would have been no rocks thrown at them and no murder by settlers.
 

basketcase

Well-known member
Dec 29, 2005
62,631
7,075
113
The instigators here are the armed illegal squatters who were trespassing on Palestinian's property, not those who tried to defend their homes....
Fraudfooter strikes again. You have pretend to believe that the borders need to be negotiated but once again you have predetermined what they are.

Even worse, you consider civilians walking (or driving) by a village to be to be justification for terrorism (and yes, you have described throwing rocks at civilians as terrorism). But of course you also described legal Jewish immigrants legally buying land in the late 19th and early 20th century as justifying violence so at least you are consistent there.
 

basketcase

Well-known member
Dec 29, 2005
62,631
7,075
113
This is in an area that you clearly stated was Palestine.
Are you changing your mind and stating this is part of apartheid Israel now?
Oh? According to you I haven't given any borders for Israel. Now you tell me I have. Of course you need to lie about what I post because if you were honest, you would have to admit you are a complete fraud when it comes to morals.


And since when is it normal to commit terrorism against civilians who were walking near your town?
 

basketcase

Well-known member
Dec 29, 2005
62,631
7,075
113
You mean like shooting a civilian farmer on his field?

Why are you excusing this terrorism?
So you don't want to admit that the Palestinians started that incident by attacking a bunch of kids on a hike.

As I said, that guy should have been charged with negligent homicide or at least reckless use of a firearm but facts clearly show his actions were in response to Palestinian terrorists who attacked a bunch of kids walking near their village.
 

Frankfooter

dangling member
Apr 10, 2015
99,259
26,797
113
So you don't want to admit that the Palestinians started that incident by attacking a bunch of kids on a hike.

As I said, that guy should have been charged with negligent homicide or at least reckless use of a firearm but facts clearly show his actions were in response to Palestinian terrorists who attacked a bunch of kids walking near their village.
'Taking a hike'?

They went on a fully armed hike trespassing on an occupied people's land, where every week we hear about them 'colonizing' or stealing Palestinian land like this.
https://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=779714

How is that just a 'hike' in this political context?
Are you that evil that you really support people threatening and stealing peoples land by force?

Here, you need to read this report by a Jewish Israeli on the protests at Ahed Tamimi's village and the shit they have to live through.
You need to tell me why you think this evil is 'moral', why you support this kind of horror.

The Tamimi family has been demonstrating every Friday for about a decade, protesting the takeover of Nabi Saleh’s natural water spring by nearby settlers. As Bassem Tamimi once explained to me, in quite fluent Hebrew, the villagers said nothing when the army built the settlement of Halamish (originally Neve Tzuf) on their land. But when the settlers confiscated their spring, and the army then prevented the Tamimis from accessing it, Bassem and his extended family decided to draw a red line.

Every week they gather at the top of the hill inside their village, carrying flags and banners, and walk toward the road that separates them from the spring. The goal is simply to cross the road and walk to the spring. And every week, the army deploys security forces inside and around the village to stop the protesters from reaching their destination.

The way it works is this: at around noon, military vehicles enter the village and park at the bottom of its bisecting road. Security forces, heavily armed and wearing combat gear, descend from the vehicles, load their weapons, and wait. Sometimes they start shooting as soon as the demonstration begins, and sometimes they wait for a teenager to throw a stone in their direction before opening fire.

As Ben Ehrenreich notes in his New York Times Magazine article about Nabi Saleh, the army spokesperson told him there has never been a single case of a soldier being injured by a stone at those demonstrations. But over the past few years, soldiers have injured and killed several demonstrators.

In one now notorious incident, a soldier cracked open the rear door of his armored jeep as it was on its way out of the village, and shot a tear gas canister directly into the face of Ahed’s 21-year-old cousin Mustafa, killing him. No-one was ever censured or prosecuted for that act of murder.

These are just a few of the things I saw in Nabi Saleh.

Once, I was standing on the roof of a home with three teenage girls who lived there. We were watching the demonstration from a bit of a distance — maybe 150 meters. Suddenly one of the soldiers standing down the road pivoted in our direction, raised his weapon, aimed, and shot tear gas canisters directly at us. He shot another couple of canisters at the house, shattering the living room window. The older girl told me that her family had stopped replacing it every time the soldiers broke it; the glass had become too expensive.

I also witnessed soldiers deliberately blanketing a small house in tear gas until its occupants, coughing and retching long streams of mucus, were forced to emerge. They were two elderly women, wrinkled and bent over, and a young woman in her twenties.

I’ve seen soldiers grab crying children and shove them into military vehicles, pushing aside their screaming mothers.

I’ve seen soldiers grab a young woman by her arms and drag her like a sack of potatoes for several meters along an asphalt road so hot that it melted the rubber soles of my running shoes, before tossing her into a military vehicle and driving away.

I’ve had my ankles singed black when a security officer looked me straight in the eyes and threw a stun grenade at my legs.

Israeli army sharp-shooters regularly shoot unarmed demonstrators in Nabi Saleh with both rubber-coated steel bullets and live ammunition. They break into houses and drag people out, arresting them on the claim that they allowed demonstrators to hide in their garden.

And then I would go back to Tel Aviv and be told by my friends that I could not have seen what I saw, because “our soldiers” do not behave that way. Soon, I had to distance myself from those friends in order to keep my own emotions in check.

I write these sordid descriptions of what I saw at the demonstrations as a means of explaining how and why that place radicalized me. After Nabi Saleh I was, in a way, broken. The impact of the violence on my psyche was exhausting and traumatic, with long-lasting effects that I still experience today.
https://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=779714

Why do you support this kind of shit happening?
Are you really that evil?
 
Toronto Escorts