Samskara

joined 3 months ago
[–] Samskara@sh.itjust.works 0 points 3 days ago (1 children)

Iran‘s Regime has been shouting „Death to Israel“ for decades.

[–] Samskara@sh.itjust.works 1 points 3 days ago

Is talking about it after having watched it acceptable?

 

I have to say, this is just such an in-the-weeds moral stance that it crosses the boundary of reasonableness. Honestly, it's this sort of thing that drove me away from left wing styles of thinking a while ago.

The impact you make on the world in any of your possible actions with regard to Harry Potter is miniscule. Like, truly, utterly insignificant. Are you going to organize an anti-potter boycott? Participate in a protest? Harass the actors in an online trolling movement? Throw eggs at JK Rawling's house? Great! Go do all those things! Actively participate in changing the world for the better! These actions might actually lead to real change.

But denying yourself pleasures in the name of moral purity accomplishes nothing. If all you do is sit at home and think to yourself "I wanna watch the new Harry Potter thing, but I can't, because then I'm a bad person." (or in this case, "I wanna talk to my friends about the new Harry Potter thing I pirated, but I can't, because then I'm a bad person) then you are accomplishing literally nothing except making yourself miserable. Again, if you are going to actually do something, then go do it! But if you don't have the time or energy or interest or social battery to actually do something, then shaming yourself or others into not doing things is actively counterproductive. Go take a road trip without calculating if the pleasure you will derive is worth the carbon footprint! Eat an ice cream cone without feeling bad about the the suffering of the factory farmed cow it came from! Get one of those good-paying jobs in oil and gas or defence and make some goddamned money! You are simply not important enough for any of these actions to have any actual real-world impact. The only thing that happens is that you convince yourself that if you ever enjoy anything, then you are a bad person. You train yourself to constantly be looking for the ways in which life's simple pleasures are destroying the world, so you can feel bad about them.

Just stop it. Be happy. Do whatever you need to do to chill out and enjoy your life and gain some sense of contentedness and security. And then go out and make the world a better place by actually doing something. Hyper-anxious, shame-ridden, depressed know-it-alls rarely create effective social change because no one wants to hang out with them. No one see them and thinks "yeah, that's what I want my life to look like."

In order to lead by example you have to show a path to a better world. Not a cell.

[–] Samskara@sh.itjust.works 0 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago) (1 children)

Well the aid isn’t being blocked.

The flotilla also didn’t agree to stop and search, but had to be boarded and commandeered.

The flotilla could have sailed to Ashdod port and unload their aid there for further delivery on land.

Blockade running is serious business. Can’t let civilians simply sail straight into a combat zone in a foreign country either.

Pretty ludicrous to expect that.

[–] Samskara@sh.itjust.works 1 points 5 days ago (1 children)

The amount of aid getting into Gaza is constantly increasing and at more than 50 trucks per day. The whole supposed aid flotilla didn’t even bring a full truck of aid. It’s a political stunt, not about actually delivering aid effectively.

[–] Samskara@sh.itjust.works 0 points 5 days ago (3 children)

I literally cited that high seas are okay if the course of the ship is clearly intending to breach the blockade.

[–] Samskara@sh.itjust.works 0 points 5 days ago (1 children)

Read the whole linked paper and you will see that detaining ship, cargo, and crew is legal if they refuse to turn around.

You might not be aware, but Israel has been allowing in aid for a while now. There is no total blockade.

Look up definition of merchant ship. Sure you might qualify them as a pleasure ship instead.

[–] Samskara@sh.itjust.works -2 points 6 days ago (3 children)

Watch the linked videos.

[–] Samskara@sh.itjust.works -4 points 6 days ago* (last edited 6 days ago) (1 children)

Pretty good analysis, but focuses too much on oil. It will be a mix of Israeli air strikes and special operations in one direction and long range missiles, drones, and proxy forces in the other.

Israel‘s ability to defend against Iranian drones and missiles was very good last time around. Jordan shoots down anything Iranian in their airspace they can, supporting Israel‘s defense in effect.

Saudi Arabia, Turkey

And most other countries in the region are very happy Israel fights Iran‘s ability to build nuclear weapons. That way they can keep their hand clean.

If Iran gets nukes, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Egypt, and others would want nukes very urgently as well.

The Saudis especially are glad Israel degraded Iran‘s proxy forces in the region. Even the new Syrian government owes its success in part to Israel clapping Hezbollah hard.

The only ones mad at Israel in this case are the ones who hate Israel‘s existence and everything they do out of principle.

[–] Samskara@sh.itjust.works -3 points 6 days ago (6 children)

Watch this to get a better idea who Hasan is and what he thinks and does.

He is very entertaining, but otherwise a political extremist narcissist of the worst kind.

[–] Samskara@sh.itjust.works -1 points 6 days ago (1 children)

Israel doesn’t say unprovoked.

[–] Samskara@sh.itjust.works -5 points 6 days ago (1 children)

Iranian revolutionary guard generals are not innocent and actually quite good at oppression.

 

PCPSR regularly polls Palestinians about their opinions related to the conflict and their living conditions.

Favorability of the October 7 attack, the belief that Hamas will win the war, and support for Hamas continue to decline, but the overwhelming majority is opposed to Hamas disarmament and does not believe that release of the hostages will bring an end to the war. Nonetheless, about half of Gazans support the anti-Hamas demonstrations and almost half want to leave the Gaza Strip if they could. Support for the two-state solution remains unchanged but support for armed struggle drops

  1. Support for Hamas’ decision to launch the October the 7th offensive continues to decline

  2. Humanitarian conditions in the Gaza Strip: 53% of Gazans say they have enough food for a day or two

  3. War crimes and atrocities: When asked if Hamas had committed the atrocities (…) against Israeli civilians, such as killing women and children in their homes. The overwhelming majority (87%) said it did not commit such atrocities

There are several more questions including future government of Gaza, hostages release, two state solution, and more.

 

We can expect aid to enter Gaza again soon, which is good news. The bad news is the IDF plans to expand their offensive.

Israel is planning to radically alter the way humanitarian aid is distributed in the Gaza Strip when it begins allowing assistance into the enclave in the coming weeks after what will have been a nearly two-and-a-half-month freeze, an Israeli and Arab official familiar with the matter told The Times of Israel this week.

The plan is to transition away from wholesale distribution and warehousing of aid and to instead have international organizations and private security contractors hand out boxes of food to individual Gazan families, according to the officials.

Each family will have a designated representative tasked with reaching an Israel Defense Forces security zone in southern Gaza, where aid will be distributed after going through several rounds of inspection. Each box will have enough food to last several days until family representatives will be allowed to return to the security zone to receive another parcel, the officials said, adding that Israel believes this method will make it harder for Hamas to divert aid to its fighters. (…)

The IDF in recent days has recommended that the Israeli government approve the resumption of humanitarian aid deliveries to the Gaza Strip, regardless of a hostage deal with the Hamas terror group, in a bid to avoid starvation among the Palestinian civilian population, according to military officials who briefed reporters earlier this week.

The IDF has made it clear to the political echelon that resuming the entry of aid will soon be necessary to avoid violations of international law and future legal problems for commanders taking part in the military operation. (…)

The military official acknowledged that “despite the military pressure being exerted, the Hamas terror organization remains unwilling [to agree to a deal].”

Therefore, the military official said the IDF was preparing to call up a large number of reserve troops in the coming period to “significantly” expand the offensive in Gaza by operating in new areas of the Strip.

 

Sides in an armed conflict have an interest to exaggerate or downplay losses. This report tries to poke holes in the reports of casualties from Gaza by examining the released data. Collecting casualty data under the conditions in Gaza is of course difficult and bound to not be perfect.


Key Findings

The Ministry of Health (MoH) under the Hamas government in Gaza has produced casualty data throughout the 2023–2025 Hamas–Israel war in Gaza. Our analysis of this data, which drills into records produced by Gaza hospitals, shows the following:

  1. LOCAL DATA PROVIDES A STRONG SIGNAL THAT ISRAELI MILITARY TRIED TO LIMIT GAZAN CIVILIAN HARM: Empirical evidence across cross-sections of the data provided by the MoH itself showed that the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) took measures that tried to avoid harming women and children. To illustrate: in Khan Yunis across January-May 2024, MoH data showed that women and children combined (who comprise 75% of the Gazan population) comprised 34% of all deaths; that is, less than half of the 70% Hamas claimed.

  2. CUMULATIVE DATA FOR ENTIRE WAR SHOWED LESS CIVILIAN HARM THAN HAMAS ALLEGED: The most recent (March 2025) cumulative list of 50,021 identified casualties showed that the proportion of women and children’s mortalities (W&C) over the whole war was 51% (25,401 / 50,021). (Across 2024, women and children comprised 40% to 43% of the injured.) Approximately 45% of all Gazan deaths were legal fighting-age males (18 ≤ M ≤ 59) but a significant additional component as child casualties were male underage combatants. These statistics signal that, over the whole war across all Gaza, the IDF sought to avoid civilians and that harm to civilians was far less than Hamas alleged publicly.

  3. RECENT PREPONDERANCE OF MALE CASUALTIES: MoH March 2025 data showed that, among 11,224 new casualties in the seven months since 7 October 2024, there were 8,565 males (76.3%) and 2,659 females (23.7%). Among these new casualties, 58% were legal combat-age males and an additional unknown but significant proportion were underage combatant males. The reduced proportion of casualties that were women and children (down to 38%) over the most recent 7 months of data-reportage indicates improvement over time of Israeli efforts to avoid Gazan civilian harm. The new data raises questions about whether a large number of males previously went unreported, or whether Hamas had simply over-represented women and children casualties in the past.

  4. DOWNWARD TREND IN OVERALL CASUALTIES: The highest rates of combatant and civilian casualties occurred in October 2023 to early January 2024, according to time- stamped MoH casualty data made available in 2025. The rate of overall casualties declined through 2024 down to an intensity of 10 to 20% of the initial rate in October 2023.

  5. CONTRADICTORY HAMAS WAR CASUALTY NARRATIVES: Smoothly packaged and widely propagated Hamas Government Media Office (GMO) information press releases that claimed 70% women and children casualties were in contradiction with the more reliable Ministry of Health raw datasets. GMO data showed that children’s deaths were more numerous than adult women or men, while MoH data showed that men were most numerous. Nevertheless, MoH ‘dashboard’ infographics and public statements were demonstrably false when compared to its own datasets; for example, its repeated publishing of a 70% women and children casualty rate that was inconsistent with its detailed hospital- sourced datasets. These various contradictions enabled Hamas to argue various different narratives when convenient.

  6. OBSCURED CASUALTY DATA TRENDS: The Ministry data did not describe the war chronologically nor provide a reliable picture of trends across time because date-stamped information was never published, despite being held. The dates of deaths of Gazans were not published with their identity details. The data contained so many inconsistencies, Hamas Casualty Reports are a Tangle of Technical Problems 6 major changes and large-scale corrections shuffled across different time periods that, in general, it was almost unusable for studying casualty trends. The changes also made it difficult to test even very simple hypotheses with the data.

  7. COMPROMISED INTEGRITY OF DATASETS DUE TO UNVERIFIED DATA: Standard verification of identities of casualties was done in hospitals and morgues by verification of bodies and documents but there were 15,070 unidentified casualties reported by 31 March

  8. Almost 14,000 were later identified via online electronic forms by 7 October 2024. Verification processes for identification of many of these casualties were dubious. Due to their many anomalies, such as inclusions of living people on the list, doubts remain concerning both identities of casualties and actualities of deaths. This concern was recognised as serious even by the Hamas MoH Chief Data Scientist and Director of Information.

  9. SUPPRESSION OF DATA ON HAMAS CASUALTIES: Many Hamas combatant casualties were not listed, as key Hamas leaders known to have been killed were not listed as casualties. For example, some of Hamas leader Sinwar’s close family who were initially on the lists were taken off. If significant numbers of Hamas adult male combatants were not listed, then all estimates of the proportion of women and children casualties were actually lower.

  10. MISLEADING EXPLANATIONS OF DATA ANOMALIES: The MoH Director of Information gave various contradictory explanations for data anomalies. For instance, repeated explanations that each non-standard identification went through a verification process of approval by a judicial committee and that no natural deaths were included proved false. The MoH’s inability to explain its basic data-processing procedures hindered data analysis.

  11. ERRONEOUS FOREIGN ACADEMIC AND MEDICAL ACCOUNTS OF CIVILIAN DEATHS: Academic epidemiological studies forecast exaggerated Gazan casualties, vastly greater than actual casualties later reported by the Hamas Ministry of Health, and were based on erroneous modelling. Their predictions can be proved to be false retroactively by MoH data. Similarly, foreign doctors visiting Gaza from Western countries to provide medical assistance published allegations that Israeli Defence Forces targeted women and children; these proved to be inconsistent with MoH’s Gazan hospital datasets.

  12. DISINFORMATION SUCCESS: The Hamas Ministry of Health provided disinformation that served Hamas’s wartime narrative. For example, it presented all Gazan war casualties as civilians and none as combatants, falsely presented adult male casualties as women and children, and its datasets did not separately list deaths by natural causes nor disclose those killed by Hamas itself. Casualty data was deleted, shuffled across periods, recategorised across incomparable categories and included corrupting data. Yet the Ministry of Health civilian casualty numbers were widely accepted as having integrity and supporting allegations of genocide, thereby achieving a strategic victory for Hamas.

 

RAMALLAH, May 2, 2025 (WAFA) – The Presidency strongly condemned Israel's ongoing aggression and escalating crimes against the Palestinian people across all areas, particularly in the Gaza Strip, as well as its continued policy of siege and starvation.

In a statement issued on Friday, the Presidency stressed that the international community must act swiftly to put an end to the unprecedented atrocities being perpetrated against the Palestinian people.

The Presidency also expressed its categorical rejection and firm condemnation of the looting and theft carried out by criminal gangs targeting warehouses and storage facilities of humanitarian aid designated for the people of Gaza.

It held Hamas-affiliated gangs primarily responsible, emphasizing that the Palestinian people will not forgive these disgraceful acts committed in such a critical time, especially in the besieged Strip.

The Presidency underlined that all such gangs and their affiliates are well known to the Palestinian public and will top the blacklist to be held accountable and brought to justice in accordance with the law at the appropriate time.

 

Shows a house being searched and three Palestinians forced to strip in sun and being arrested.

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