Pattern-chaser wrote: ↑December 10th, 2023, 12:29 pmHamas did not "start" the current conflict. Their attack took place in the historical, political, and geographical context of the Middle East. It was a response. Without context, there is no sense to be found. [There is little enough sense in this conflict to begin with.]
No, Hamas started the current conflict. They may not have started all the others, but they deliberately started this conflict to shore up their failing domestic position (because they are horrible at governing) and to stymie the Israel/Saudi deal. It was done with assistance from Moscow to further drain the funding, will and resolve of the west. This war is part of a far larger one that includes China, the US, Russia, Ukraine, Venezuela and Guyana.
Many of those supporting Hamas (who know little about the situation, aside from Hamas propaganda) are doing so due to their own dashed hopes and lack of life prospects. Some in the west who are struggling consider themselves to be the "fellow oppressed". They are reflexively joining forces with what they perceive to be underdogs against western imperialism. The west now has many millions of useful idiots, they have become key to the strategies of those seeking the west's fall. Of course, if the west falls, all those useful idiots will fall too.
The west is very far from perfect but Europe has generally been the strongest civilising influence on the world for a long time, and this fact ignored for fear of being called "racist". The west deserves to be defended. That we are increasingly not defending ourselves is a concern. Self-criticism is essential, but siding with those who hate the west and its "decadent" (ie. humane) cultures is naive and self-defeating.
The west ideally needs to address inequality, but it probably won't. Corporations and billionaires need to allow more wealth to trickle down to the people. (Maybe they could even pay a tax or two? How about it, Rupert and Lachlan?). Otherwise the restive will become even more restive. I believe that the Palestine demonstrations have been significantly boosted by those who are actually protesting against a global order that squeezed them out. Any excuse to have a go.
However, their enemy's enemy is not their friend in this case. Those gays marching? They would be killed in Palestine. Lesbians would be raped and killed. Other women would have severely curtailed rights. Yet they march for Palestine. If they were actually concerned about injustice, they would have marched for the Uyghurs and Ukrainians because they have had it much worse than Palestine.
Instead, people are
pretending to care about injustice that doesn't affect them personally because there's so much injustice, there's no logical place to start. They care enough to hang around with their pals building up social brownie points but not enough to actually give money to the cause.
Pattern-chaser wrote: ↑December 10th, 2023, 12:29 pmAlthough many recent victims happen to be Jews, they were attacked because they are Israelis. So, just because some of the victims are Jews, this does not lead to the conclusion that their enemies must be Nazis. The Nazis targetted Jews because of their religion; modern Palestinians target those they see as invaders: Israelis.
People are happily marching alongside extremists shouting "Gas the Jews". Jews in universities in the US, Canada, UK and Australia are being targetted. So, the conflict has quickly become about
Jews, not Israelis. Jews are the only group (aside from whites generally) not to receive the usual anti-discrimination protections on campuses.