A recent poll run on an internet board I'm on tasked the members in commenting on where their sympathies lie with the current crisis in the Middle East: Israel, Palestine or neither of the two countries. Instictively, automatically and without doubt my answer was neither. Sentiments akin to the ones I had about the Russia-Ukraine war. Exactly 2/3rds(66.9%) of the board members voted in favour of Isreal, 6% in favour of Palestine and 27.2%in favour of neither(at the time of publishing). I suspect the final results will be more or less aligned in this regard. My premature analysis of the sitaution unfolding in the Middle East was a flashback to the Kavanaugh Gang Rape Hoax. In particular one statement in his prepared remarks: You have sown to the wind you will rip the whirlwind.
These words have rattled around in my head over the past few days as the crisis continues to unfold. Additionally, I can't help but feel that these are some of the consequences of ratifying a stolen American election, at least in part. Hamas' horrific actions did not take place in a vacuum. There was forethought and pre-planning. I have doubts as to whether any specific action on the Israeli side served as a catalyst to these past events other than offer up a pretext for an attack that would have taken place sooner or later. An outlet to pent up anger and opportunism accrued over the years in the Gaza strip. It has been very telling that signififcant swarthes of the global populace feel that Hamas' actions were justified. It may not be proclaimed directly but there seems to almost be a tacit approval of the horrific tactics used.
The Israeli response to the terror attacks has been to unleash a wave of brutality the likes of which haven't been seen in what seems like eons in this particular region. There does seem to be overt approval for these actions with many an american commentator cheerleading this madness. Whatever version of Kabbalah is being used to determine the position of Hamas operatives in Gaza seems to be producing a lot of dead civillians. The justification for this is that there is hardly a difference between Hamas operatives and ordinary Palestinians. After all, a global day of Jihad has been waged. In my opinion, naught more than insane ramblings of Middle Eastern politicians looking to exude an air of authority over a situation that is quickly spiraling out of hand and that did in all likelyhood catch them off-guard.
We don't get to play identity politics with other people's lives. We don't get to cheerlead the decimation of an entire populace because they may have sympathies for terrorists. We also don't get to align with a populace because a subset of terrorists has taken advantage of their desperation to justify horrific actions that are about to drag an entire region into war. We however have the special prerogative of having sympathies for all. Not some group we identify with or whose identity we elevate over another's. For the second time in two years I'm finding that the purported madmen are behoved to become the elder statesmen. To show restraint amidst great provocation and deceptions.