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Are our government's complicit in a coming genocide?

I really want to be wrong but I fear that I am not.

I started off predicting that tens of thousands would die in Gaza. I really hate to say that but think it will be in the hundreds of thousands. All the signs are that Israel is trying to make Gaza so insufferable that nobody who stays can survive. They want Egypt to open its border and the longer it doesn't, they will try and blame them for the deaths.

The Palestinians have the name 'Nakba' (I believe it means catastrophe in English) for when 700,000 were forced to leave their homes and move to the fringes of Israel in 1948. They are already referring to this as the second Nakba.

The IDF is trying to destroy Hamas but their method for doing so is to eradicate (by death or relocation) all the Palestinians from the Gaza Strip. Everything points to this. The decision to tell Palestinians to leave the northern half of Gaza, the diplomatic pressure on Egypt, and the dehumanising language that regards all Palestinians as enemy combatants. The cutting off of all power and food. The Zionist project has wanted a Jewish-only state for some time and they are using the attack by Hamas as an excuse to do just that. Unless Western governments stop them, I think that this will happen.

Hamas deserve condemnation for their disgusting attack on Israeli civilians, however, this is not a case of both sides being the same. You can simultaneously condemn the Hamas attack and also stand against a tragedy that is literally two orders of magnitude greater. I can hate Saddam Hussain and also disagree with the invasion of Iraq.

Is violence committed by a Western-backed state more morally acceptable than what Hamas did? Do we really value all lives the same?

I'm going to bed now but I will probably reply tomorrow.
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I learned my country can be complicit in genocide when then General and now Senator Romeo Dallaire was given like 500 peacekeepers to stop the Rwandan genocide and all requests for backup were ignored.
RedBaron · M
@PicturesOfABetterTomorrow It goes back further, to when the US under FDR failed to help Jews and other victims escape Nazi persecution and death camps and turned away the ship [i]St Louis[/i] full of Jewish refugees.
@RedBaron Well I am Canadian and I am only 41. Rwanda was my wakeup call that all this "think of the civilians" stuff was bullshit.

Not to mention everyone at the time was trying to outdo each other with moral outrage over the decidedly more white Yugoslavia.
RedBaron · M
@PicturesOfABetterTomorrow I am only 63, but I’m a student of history and the information is readily available.

Canada turned them away as well.

https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/ms-st-louis
@RedBaron Oh absolutely. I am a history nerd.

But that was the event that turned me into someone who didn't take my country's narrative at face value anymore.
RedBaron · M
@PicturesOfABetterTomorrow If you read the linked story, you will see that Canada had an atrocious history with immigration restrictions from roughly 1919-1945 and was no more helpful to European refugees than the US was.
@RedBaron Oh absolutely. No disputing that. We also turned away Sikhs when they were being killed by the Indian government which is coming up again lately with the Indian government murdering people on Canadian soil.


But I think we all have that one event where you learn that your country's claims of being morally superior is exposed as total horseshit.
RedBaron · M
@PicturesOfABetterTomorrow Most have more than one.