• pjwestin@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    This sounds like the setup to an Onion article: “Biden calls Israel’s response to Gaza, ‘over the top.’ Says that bombing of refugee camps, ‘a bit much,’ and the famine cause by aid blockades, ‘really cringe.’ At press time, President Biden was signing a bipartisan deal to send the Israeli military $20 billion in weapons.”

          • Rob Bos@lemmy.ca
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            8 months ago

            What planet are you on that you’ve never heard of the Canadian extermination of indigenous peoples?

            • 【J】【u】【s】【t】【Z】@lemmy.world
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              8 months ago

              I have heard of it. Have I heard anyone call it genocide though? I don’t think I have. Other than, now this is the second person, whom I consider to be edgelords on the internet until proven otherwise.

              • Perfide@reddthat.com
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                8 months ago

                You’re willfully being ignorant, then. “Canadian indigenous genocide” is the third result down on the autocomplete list on google after typing in “Canadian Indig”, and if you click that result you get a ton of sources including a bunch of news articles talking about the genocide using the word genocide, the website for the Canadian human rights museum which calls it a genocide, and even a scientific paper on the trauma effects caused by it.

                It was a genocide.

                • 【J】【u】【s】【t】【Z】@lemmy.world
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                  8 months ago

                  Canada’s policies aimed at assimilating Indigenous people included outlawing languages, cultural practices and political traditions and forcibly removing children from families. These were deliberate attempts to erase a distinct group of people by destroying the essential foundations of their way of life.

                  I read enough studying law and before that criminal justice with a history minor to know that this quote is completely true and not really that strong of a case by an international law standard. I get their argument though and have a lot of sympathy for the indigenous people throughout North America and the arctic.

  • Maggoty@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    Stop talking and pull the aid. Nothing Biden says on the subject matters while he’s still sending them aid.

    • LostWon@lemmy.ca
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      8 months ago

      Also, he should reinstate funding for UNRWA and stop aiding the IDF effort to starve everyone in Gaza (*also applicable here in Canada and several other countries). Even if the Israeli allegation that UNRWA staffers are all Hamas-affiliated was true, we’re talking about fucking food, medication, and survival essentials for 95% of the world’s most starved people (up from 80% as of recently).

  • iAvicenna@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    Are we continuing on the series for Biden’s campaign ads?

    “You all thought he was supporting genocide but look he is slapping Israel’s wrist! There you go, now you can vote for him with a clear conscience”

    • 🔰Hurling⚜️Durling🔱@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      True, but at least he isn’t the orange orangutan that wants to kill democracy.

      It’s so fucking depressing when you have these two as the most likely candidates and the only third option is so unknown that most people won’t know who they are and even less vote for them.

      Hell, even the NYT doesn’t show de la Cruz in the running - https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2023/us/politics/presidential-candidates-2024.html

    • Hoomod@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      Unfortunately the US elections often come down to voting for the person you dislike less.

      Do I like his stance on Israel? No

      But his opponent (Trump) stance/actions is worse

      So I will hold my nose and do my civic duty

      • Pan_Ziemniak@midwest.social
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        8 months ago

        Basically.

        It felt awful voting for him the first time. Now? Lol. You have to keep perspective that this countrys official stance on Israel from the start has been unwavering support. I think even if we got Bernie in 16 he would have found it hard to do much with this one. Congress would still foot the bill no matter what he did or said. Israel has been a geopolitical oasis for US foreign policy, and say what you will about US foreign policy, but abandoning a long term ally weakens your soft powers exponentially.

        And on that note, abstaining from voting or voting for the nuclear cheetoh because US foreign policy is horrific is ensuring we do/enable far, far worse. And if youre counting on a revolution in the age of drones to occur after the public is fed up with trump and lgbtq folks are in cages, i got news for you: we have absolutely none of the systems in place to care for a populace after all the current systems at play would die in this supposed revolution.

        God. Its just frustrating. I get it, i hate US neoimperialism too, but did u miss the bit where the other big players have their populace more under their thumbs? Bc at least here u still have a functioning vote. If u dont throw it away, that is.

      • Crow_Thief@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        Why do you think trump would be worse on israel? Hes the only president in 50-100 years not to start a war. He got us out of afghanistan. Hes not telling the israelis they have our full throated support. And even more importantly, I cant think of a single way for him personally to get rich off of the israeli genocide, so I can only assume he would have zero interest in prolonging it. Like, honestly, he seems like the least bad option weve had in a long time, because we know exactly how he will behave, and its certainly not as bad as all of the presidents who oversaw mass killings. He will be a buffoon, and he will probably attempt another coup. So what? You think the FBI cant contain a second coup, which they are now expecting? If thats the price we have to pay to get a president who doesnt openly support genocide, im more than willing to pay it.

  • gAlienLifeform@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    “There are a lot of innocent people who are in trouble and dying,” the president said in a session with reporters.

    Gee, then maybe you shouldn’t have cut funding to the biggest single relief agency in the area just because Israel told you to (archive part 1, part 2), you fucking clod

    e; Six pages of evidence (archive) about 12 people in an organization of 13000 that we probably didn’t even see (archive) and a bunch of disinformation from Israeli mouthpieces was all it took

    • 【J】【u】【s】【t】【Z】@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      You don’t have to prove with links that we did that. We were joined in it by a broad, multilateral coalition of partners.

      Those who saw the raw intelligence said it was irrefutable and the problem was significantly more widespread than the 13 people directly accused, all of whom the agency immediately fired up on also seeing the intelligence.

      • doctorcrimson@lemmy.today
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        8 months ago

        Half of the budget that was cut was from the USA alone, about 29% of their annual, only 9 nations withdrew funding total.

      • CabbageRelish@midwest.social
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        8 months ago

        This is ass backwards. UNRWA immediately fired the accused employees solely because they were worried about the potential ramifications and figured it wasn’t something worth fighting. They had and have seen zero actual evidence to back it up. Meanwhile, half the west stupidly took this as evidence that the allegations were true and pulled their future funding, while they too have seen zero actual evidence to back up Israel’s claims.

        • 【J】【u】【s】【t】【Z】@lemmy.world
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          8 months ago

          The IDF came to Washington and showed Congress and the IC the texts, social media messages, and cell phone location data, which was described by people briefed as “highly credible” and “irrefutable.”

          Anthony Blinken’s State Department, Joe Biden’s admin, and the foreign affairs committee immediately pulled the money. If the evidence they saw could rationally be disregarded as “stupid,” which is your assessment, even though you yourself have not seen the evidence, you are suggesting what exactly, that the cell phone metadata, social media data, and text logs–which sufficed to put the US government into immediate action–were completely forged? You think the DNI and CIA Director got fooled as to the credibility of the intelligence, but not you, you know the truth? That sounds pretty insane.

          Occam’s Razor: largest employer in a tiny area, terrorist group is extremely popular in that area, some of the employees are accomplices and co-conspirators to that terrorist group?

    • Deceptichum@kbin.social
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      8 months ago

      I’ve called people the wrong name many times, my memories still fine, I think? Where am I? I’ve looked at someone else when talking to a colleague and called them by the name of the person I was looking at instead of who I was talking too.

      I wouldn’t call that a huge issue, embarrassing sure, but not exactly a sign of bad memory.

  • Aceticon@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    *finger wagging strengthens, stern look intensifies*

    *wink* *nod* [keeps sending Israel bombs to use against civilians in Gaza]

      • DragonTypeWyvern@literature.cafe
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        8 months ago

        Could just demand the immediate resignation of Bibi and his government as a prerequisite for a continued alliance, but that would require a spine.

          • DragonTypeWyvern@literature.cafe
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            8 months ago

            Yes. Alliances are mutual pacts, and can be broken by either party when the other becomes objectionable or unprofitable. Or just because.

            I personally consider “being a genocidal fascist abusing the alliance to cement his rule” a deal breaker that can only be resolved with the removal of the offending party from power.

            You don’t?

            • 【J】【u】【s】【t】【Z】@lemmy.world
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              8 months ago

              So your approach to weilding America’s strength and good will, in the name of human rights, is to abandon allies over 35,000 deaths, most of which are civilians? Okay that’s one approach. Not sure how our other allies will feel about it, whether they might stop working with if we try to dictate how they decide to prosecute a war on their border.

              What are you going to say to any emerging powers that are considering whether they want to be part of the western world or if they want to hitch their wagons to Chinese or Russian power? How will you live with yourself when you realize your emotions over 35,000 deaths caused you to end the very alliance that stops tens of millions from dying in an Iranian war and the cascade of failed states that would follow?

              “Being a genocidal fascist”? Who specifically are you even talking about? Israel is a democracy. They don’t have just one person in charge. Are you talking about Netanyahu? You’re going to blow up an alliance and risk tens of millions of lives because you don’t like one politician, whose entire party seems likely to be defeated at the ballot box? How about giving it one election before we try severe sanctions and whatever else you are suggesting America should do to overthrow a leader and party that was democratically elected because it won’t do what we want?

              Seems incredibly ignorant and short sighted, something a kid might suggest.

              • DragonTypeWyvern@literature.cafe
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                8 months ago

                Yes, we absolutely should “abandon” genocidal fascists - who demand billions of dollars in military aid to make everyone in the Middle East our enemies.

                That’s called “Not being evil people that deserve bullets to the face.”

                But, hey, it’s a free country, it’s your right to be on the side of fascism while patting yourself on the back for the mental maturity of defending the status quo at all costs.

                One might even note there’s a whole political party for your kind!

  • Milk_Sheikh@lemm.ee
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    8 months ago

    There was a moral imperative in 1948 & 1967 to support Israel against outside aggression who openly stated they wanted to end Israel. There’s now a moral imperative to protect Gazans and their land as was agreed to in Oslo II.

    Enjoy your mess Joe, you sleepwalked into this one, crisis by crisis by believing Bibi unconditionally until very recently. Because now Egypt is getting testy:

    Netanyahu’s words have also alarmed Egypt which has said that any ground operation in the Rafah area or mass displacement across the border would undermine its 40-year-old peace treaty with Israel. The mostly sealed Gaza-Egypt border is also the main entry point for humanitarian aid.

    That’s a big fucking issue, if Egypt is throwing that language around I doubt Jordan is far behind them. I’ll say it again, is the alliance with Israel worth it, if it jeopardizes US relations with literally every other nation in the gulf?

    • abuttandahalf@lemmy.ml
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      8 months ago

      There was a moral imperative to protect Israel when it was massacring and ethnically cleansing 750,000 Palestinians from their land in 1948? No. There was and continues to be a moral imperative to do everything in order to end the existence of the Zionist entity.

      • Milk_Sheikh@lemm.ee
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        8 months ago

        I don’t have the energy to dive into the pre-1948 history of Palestine beyond to say this;

        • The Nakba was (and remains) a stain on humanity, as a direct result of European nations like Poland, France, and the UK callously using the holocaust as cover for their own anti-Semitic motivations to ‘offload’ their Jewish population into Palestine, at the expense of the locals
        • The British especially, but the Allied powers as a whole, undermined the crumbing Ottoman Empire by promising self-determination to the Arab rebels, all while having already assigned and divided that land for themselves and their Allies after WW1
        • Irgun and other Jewish militias were doing A LOT of terrorism, against both the British in charge during Mandatory Palestine, and the existing Arab population and civilians

        While acknowledging the above, the fact is that in 1948 there was a Jewish population there, who were facing a second genocide attempt that decade. The powers that be washed their hands of it, not unlike the Fall of Saigon or Afghanistan, yet we don’t learn from our interventionism. To unwind this problem requires either a robot peace that both sides want, or one of the two getting ethnically cleansed.

        • abuttandahalf@lemmy.ml
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          8 months ago

          Wrong. There was a white supremacist colonialist Zionist presence in Palestine, which aimed to sieze the country for itself and dispossess its natives, which it did through massacres and ethnic cleansing. There was no “second genocide attempt”. There was only Palestinian and Arab self defence in the face of an armed, murderous society that sought to dispossess and erase the Palestinian people entirely. The solution is the destruction of the settler colonialist state and that is what will happen.

          • Milk_Sheikh@lemm.ee
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            8 months ago

            > 'It does not matter how many there are. We will sweep them into the sea. Arab League Secretary-General Azzam Pasha, 1948

            Idk that certainly sounds like “kill them all”

            I’m not denying the origins of Israel, that it was created by colonial powers at the expense of Arabs & Palestinians, nor that it displaced a significant Palestinian population after an organized and protracted campaign of Zionist, Jewish terrorism. However in 1948 the reality is the Jews were there, and the rhetoric from the top was of elimination and eradication - and that is a genocidal act

            • abuttandahalf@lemmy.ml
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              8 months ago

              The quote from Alec Kirkbride’s memoirs:

              “when I asked him for his estimate of the size of the Jewish forces, [he] waved his hands and said: 'It does not matter how many there are. We will sweep them into the sea.”

              It is clear this is referring to the Zionist armed forces that were in fact committing the massacres. This was after the Zionist forces actually pushed the Palestinians of Haifa into the sea under rifle fire. In other instances, the same official declared that equality between Jewish settlers and Palestinians was to be implemented.

              All this being said, I will not mince words, the Palestinian people have every right to remove the Zionist colonial presence from their land, and they had that right in 1948 when this militarized settler society put into action its goal of dispossessing the entire Palestinian people.

            • Cocodapuf@lemmy.world
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              8 months ago

              But one genocide is not better than another. There’s no ethical way to take sides here. What we should really do is end our involvement. The obvious way to avoid being complicit in murder is to stop taking part in it. We should end all support for Israel, no weapons no money. They can get humanitarian aid if need be, but no f-16s or cruise missiles.

              Isreal can either make friends with their neighbors on their own, or they can risk getting wiped out, their choice.

              • Milk_Sheikh@lemm.ee
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                8 months ago

                There is absolutely an ethical side - pro-civilian.

                Walking away completely, right now, would just leave a broken Gaza being strangled by blockade, fractured West Bank constantly being raided by the IDF and/or Zionist mobs or eaten away gradually by an illegal settlements with Israeli state support, and the Golan Heights a contested low intensity battlefield. Palestinians and Arabs in Israel would continue to live under an apartheid ethnostate as second class citizens.

                Retaining the status quo doesn’t solve any of the harms done by Israel, it’s the easy out.

                • Cocodapuf@lemmy.world
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                  8 months ago

                  Honestly, if we ended US financial support for Israel, I think it would make a pretty big difference. Isreal would likely be forced to focus more on stabilizing relations with their hostile neighbors. And any attempt to do that would require employing a very different strategy with Palestine.

    • ComradeKhoumrag@infosec.pub
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      8 months ago

      I hate Israel more than the next guy, but those nations likely wouldn’t be sympathetic to the west’s form of government anyways.

      Israel is not a colony we created because we felt bad for Jewish people. Israel is a colony we created to be able to project power in the middle east.

      So, it’s not about getting Arab nations to like us. It’s about having a place to park stealth bombers those countries don’t have the technology to shoot down. It’s about having a Mafia group willing to do our dirty work so we don’t look that bad doing it

  • Cryophilia@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    You guys are aware that if he cuts funding to Israel, he 100% loses the election, right? He’s not funding Israel for the funzies, or because he just loves genocide. So why do you keep demanding he cut funding?

      • Cryophilia@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        What’s to explain? There’s more potential voters for Biden who support Israel than oppose it. Especially given the inconsistent nature of the voters who oppose. Biden is already at risk of losing the election. He can’t afford to alienate them.

        The far left is a small sliver of the Democratic party. And they don’t matter in presidential elections because they mostly live in democratic states. Biden needs the support of moderates in swing states, and that means supporting Israel.

          • Cryophilia@lemmy.world
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            8 months ago

            I’m sure that’s what you want to believe, but it’s just not true. The political landscape is what it is right now.

    • hark@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      “Sure there’s a genocide, but think of the votes!!” Meanwhile if you’re told that biden will lose votes because he supports genocide, you’ll probably respond with “but the other guy!!” So basically we just have to full-throatedly support genocide, huh?

      • Cryophilia@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        This is so stupid that if it were any other topic I’d accuse you of being a MAGA. Utterly nonsensical.

        Meanwhile if you’re told that biden will lose votes because he supports genocide, you’ll probably respond with “but the other guy!!”

        Yes. The other guy will make the genocide worse. It’s a simple concept. You have one guy who’s against the genocide but needs to support it, vs the other guy who is fully on board the genocide train and would happily make it worse.

        So yes. What about the other guy is an extremely important thing to say.

        So basically we just have to full-throatedly support genocide, huh?

        Not unless I want to? What a weird non sequitur. The only people jumping for joy that brown people are getting killed are right wingers. Whom you are helping by asking Biden to sacrifice himself.

        • hark@lemmy.world
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          8 months ago

          israel’s goal is the complete removal of the Palestinian people from their lands, whether that’s through genocide or other means, they don’t care. You’re saying that somehow trump will make this worse. How can it get worse than genocide? Regardless, you’re saying that no matter who we vote for, we get genocide. So tell the people who have this as their most important issue: what difference does their vote make? For someone who claims that only other people “jump for joy over brown people getting killed” you sure do fight hard to defend someone who is killing “brown people”. I dunno, maybe you think you’re superior because you imagine others are jumping for joy over death while you, the enlightened democrat, merely just don’t care about “brown people” dying in the face of votes.

          Speaking of stupid, just because I criticize biden, doesn’t mean I’m a trump supporter. It’s incredibly stupid to think there are only two sides in this.

          • 【J】【u】【s】【t】【Z】@lemmy.world
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            8 months ago

            21% of the Israeli population are Arabs. Over 2,000,000 people, many are Palestinian. Virtually all of them live perfectly peaceful lives and recognize Hamas for the terrorist organization that it is. There are Palestinians working in the Israeli government, elected to office. They hold seats in Israel’s legisture.

            How could trump make it worse? Well right now the daily death tolls are steadily decreasing, aid into the region is increasing, the war strategy is becoming more precise, Biden is pressuring Israel to an extent that is unprecedented for America, and oh I don’t know: America has future presidential elections scheduled, we’re not in a hot war with Iran and have a policy of containment that is has so far staved off another US mid east war.

            Cons? A country America does not control has killed 35,000 people in open war against actual terrorists over a period of four plus months, but most of whom are civilians. Let’s say the UN finds it to be a case of wanton genocide, let’s say the current trend fully reverses and Israel starts using helicopter gunships to mow down fleeing civilians by the hundreds, as in the case of the Rohingya genocide. Let’s assume that instead of 1% of the population of Gaza dead, Israel goes full genocide and kills all 2.5 million Gazas and moves in Israeli settlers. That’s worst case scenario in your view, right? I just say it seems very unlikely given the current state of the war but let’s say this is the slipperiest slope ever.

            Or…could have a dictator in America. Could have a guy whose loyalty has again and again been to Russia, Saudi Arabia, and himself. Guy who flagrantly breaks the law on televsion. Has said that he would use collective punishment on terrorists and their families. Trump thinks Bibi is a great, smart, and strong leader. Trump started a hot war with Iran already which only ended because Iran accidentally shot down a civilian airliner.

            What if we did have a hot war with Iran? 35,000 sounds bad so bad to you #GenocideJoe (again, heçs president of America, not Israel), right? How does 3,500,000, sound? How does 35,000,000 sound to you? Are those numbers still the same thing in your mind? Population of Iran is 100,000,000. How many would die in the increasingly inhospitable climate of the mid east with a few more failed states to deal with, tens of millions of refugees fleeing to Europe, Africa, and Asia. How about 35,000 people dying every day for months or years on end?

            Your sincere concern for Palestinians is humanitarian in nature, right? War with Iran would be an utter catastrophe and make the 2023 Israel-Gaza war seem like a footnote. These are my sincere opinions, anyway.

            • hark@lemmy.world
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              8 months ago

              Arabs are basically second-class citizens in Israel: https://www.jta.org/2016/04/12/israel/4-ways-jews-and-arabs-live-apart-in-israeli-society

              “aid into the region is increasing” are you counting from when the US pulled funding based on israel’s claims (without a shred of evidence)? The war strategy is becoming more precise in that they tell Palestinians exactly where to gather so they can be bombed in a precise location. How is biden pressuring israel when he pushes so hard to get more billions of dollars into their hands? Your idea of pressure is very different from, well, I guess anyone living in reality.

              I know you’re trying to invoke the “slippery slope” fallacy, but just one look at a map showing israel’s constantly expanding borders should make it obvious to anyone that this “slippery slope” is not a fallacy, but real. After israel completes their obvious mission of complete ethnic cleansing, you’ll be shrugging your shoulders and probably saying something like “it’s regrettable, but that’s all in the past, we’ll do better in the future”.

              Yeah, trump is bad, but biden is not any better on this specific and important issue. You know how you get trump re-elected? By being stubborn and ignoring voters. There is a pretty important bloc of Arab-American voters in Michigan (you know, the state Hillary lost in 2016) that have some pretty strong opinions on this matter.

              War with Iran is inevitable because that’s what israel wants: total domination of the Middle East. Ever wonder why countries like Iraq, Syria, Libya, and others were toppled with great help (or direct action) from the US? All enemies of israel get destroyed and it’s no mere coincidence. War with Iran is inevitable and, like the map of israel’s ever-expanding bordering, anyone paying even a bit of attention can see this obvious trend.

          • Cryophilia@lemmy.world
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            8 months ago

            How can it get worse than genocide?

            Harder, faster, more brutal, less consequences.

            Look, I can tell you’re one of those people for whom words short-circuit your brain. Once you hear a certain word, you stop thinking and just start emoting. Genocide. Pedophile. Guns. It prevents you from thinking about the how and the why because you’re blinded by anger.

            Depopulation and mass killing are both genocide, but one is worse than the other. Attempting a genocide over 30 years is not as bad as attempting a genocide over 3 months, because we are more likely to stop the former.

            It’s incredibly stupid to think there are only two sides in this.

            There literally are only two sides, that’s how our voting system works.

            • hark@lemmy.world
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              8 months ago

              We as individuals are more than our political system. Well, you certainly aren’t, but other people are. israel are doing this genocide as fast as they can and biden is pledging billions in support of them as they do it. Do you think trump would pledge more billions? Do you think he’d pledge US troops to join in? You’re dealing in hypotheticals and trying to shut down any criticism of the current president who has the power to stop this. How about we don’t have genocide, or is idea too mind-blowing for your supposedly not-short-circuited brain to understand?

              Following your logic, the civil rights act should’ve never been passed since it cost democrats votes from racists.

              • Cryophilia@lemmy.world
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                8 months ago

                Do you think trump would pledge more billions?

                Yes.

                You’re dealing in hypotheticals

                Yes.

                How about we don’t have genocide

                That’s not really an option. The most Biden could do is make it a little less genocidey, until Trump wins and then it gets a whole lot more genocidey.

                the civil rights act should’ve never been passed since it cost democrats votes from racists.

                Democrats won the undying fealty of the single most reliable voter bloc: Black women. Black women vote every time, even when forced to vote for the lesser of two evils. Black women always vote Democrat. They will trudge through snow or hurricanes to vote Democrat. Can you say as much for the far left? Realistically, if Biden cut off aid to Israel tomorrow, there’s a decent chance you’d find something else he did that you didn’t like that you’d use as an excuse to not vote.

                More importantly, the Civil Rights Act was popular enough that it couldn’t get undone by future administrations. Anything Biden does to help Palestine or thwart Israel will be immediately undone next year when Trump takes over.

                Not to mention the very real possibility of the end of our democracy. I know we’re talking about Israel here so I won’t dwell on it, but it’s worth keeping in mind even in terms of helping Palestine long term. Can’t help Palestine if we’ve become a Christian theocracy. Hell, we’d probably have troops there ourselves participating in the massacre.

                • hark@lemmy.world
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                  8 months ago

                  The possibility of the end of our democracy is precisely because of the many times we’ve gone along with “this is just how things are” and democrats insisting that we have to work with republicans while republicans kept getting worse and worse, moving the overton window to the right. Democrats need to put their foot down and pull back the overton window to the left, that is how we can make some real changes. Democrats doing this would show people that there is a party that will actually fight for them, a party worth going through the trouble of voting for. I thought this was the lesson that would be learned from 2016 when democrats pushed through a “safe” “centrist” candidate and lost, but instead they’ve doubled down.

                  israel doesn’t need to have bipartisan support. Yes, aipac has a lot of power, but it’s because of this undying support for israel which creates this feedback loop. Doing the right thing is worth it in the long run.

      • Cryophilia@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        If he cuts funding, a large number of people who are currently indifferent would then become very heavily against him.

  • Rapidcreek@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    The administration is clearly over Netanyahu, Blinken had some pretty strong comments on this week’s trip. He also met with Gantz, Eisenkot and Lapid so they’re clearly looking at the post-Netanyahu era.

    • hark@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      The post-netanyahu era will look just like the netanyahu era, just like how US presidents will change but the military industrial complex marches along the same line.

      • Rapidcreek@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        Israeli history would say otherwise. When a leader is forced out, there is a change in government policy and position.

        • adoth@lemmy.world
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          8 months ago

          Well not for the past 75 years. They have been ethnically cleansing Palestinians and building illegal settlements on Palestinian internationally recognised land for decades. Not to mention the continuous oppression of Palestinians under their occupation and many other horrors.

          • Rapidcreek@lemmy.world
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            8 months ago

            We can start with Golda Meir and the Yom Kippur War, in 1973. It was thought by Israelis that she was taken by surprise. Israelis waited until the shooting stopped and forced her out in favor of Rabin who made peace and signed the Oslo Accords. Which was his undoing since it was the reason given for his assassination. There are other examples.

            • Shyfer@ttrpg.network
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              8 months ago

              It was still a pretty shitty deal for Palestinians. Israel still kept control over their borders, air space, and waters. It didn’t address the settlements, it was meant to undermine their attempt for a state, it didn’t address refugees. And even though it was a terrible deal for Palestinians, it was still too much for the Israeli right-wing. They do not want peace or true Palestinian sovereignty, and never have for all those decades.

    • 【J】【u】【s】【t】【Z】@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      Hard agree. People want Biden to call for Netanyahu to get the Noreaga treatment. That’s not how displomacy works.

      But this will be the end for Netanyahu, if Israel is to have any credibility. America has work to do on this front right now, too: by making sure that fat orange fuck that wants open war with Iran doesn’t get reelected, and end up killing tens of millions of people after the cascade of failed mid-east states that would follow.