President Biden published an opinion article in The Washington Post today, explaining his administration’s policies in confronting Putin and Hamas. His statement shows that he has a long-term vision to end the cycle of violence in the Mideast. I applaud his wisdom and experience.
He wrote:
Today, the world faces an inflection point, where the choices we make — including in the crises in Europe and the Middle East — will determine the direction of our future for generations to come.
What will our world look like on the other side of these conflicts?
Will we deny Hamas the ability to carry out pure, unadulterated evil? Will Israelis and Palestinians one day live side by side in peace, with two states for two peoples?
Will we hold Vladimir Putin accountable for his aggression, so the people of Ukraine can live free and Europe remains an anchor for global peace and security?
And the overarching question: Will we relentlessly pursue our positive vision for the future, or will we allow those who do not share our values to drag the world to a more dangerous and divided place?
Both Putin and Hamas are fighting to wipe a neighboring democracy off the map. And both Putin and Hamas hope to collapse broader regional stability and integration and take advantage of the ensuing disorder. America cannot, and will not, let that happen. For our own national security interests — and for the good of the entire world.
The United States is the essential nation. We rally allies and partners to stand up to aggressors and make progress toward a brighter, more peaceful future. The world looks to us to solve the problems of our time. That is the duty of leadership, and America will lead. For if we walk away from the challenges of today, the risk of conflict could spread, and the costs to address them will only rise. We will not let that happen.
That conviction is at the root of my approach to supporting the people of Ukraine as they continue to defend their freedom against Putin’s brutal war.
We know from two world wars in the past century that when aggression in Europe goes unanswered, the crisis does not burn itself out. It draws America in directly. That’s why our commitment to Ukraine today is an investment in our own security. It prevents a broader conflict tomorrow.
We are keeping American troops out of this war by supporting the brave Ukrainians defending their freedom and homeland. We are providing them with weapons and economic assistance to stop Putin’s drive for conquest, before the conflict spreads farther.
The United States is not doing this alone. More than 50 nations have joined us to ensure that Ukraine has what it needs to defend itself. Our partners are shouldering much of the economic responsibility for supporting Ukraine. We have also built a stronger and more united NATO, which enhances our security through the strength of our allies, while making clear that we will defend every inch of NATO territory to deter further Russian aggression. Our allies in Asia are standing with us as well to support Ukraine and hold Putin accountable, because they understand that stability in Europe and in the Indo-Pacific are inherently connected.
We have also seen throughout history how conflicts in the Middle East can unleash consequences around the globe.
We stand firmly with the Israeli people as they defend themselves against the murderous nihilism of Hamas. On Oct. 7, Hamas slaughtered 1,200 people, including 35 American citizens, in the worst atrocity committed against the Jewish people in a single day since the Holocaust. Infants and toddlers, mothers and fathers, grandparents, people with disabilities, even Holocaust survivors were maimed and murdered. Entire families were massacred in their homes. Young people were gunned down at a music festival. Bodies riddled with bullets and burned beyond recognition. And for over a month, the families of more than 200 hostages taken by Hamas, including babies and Americans, have been living in hell, anxiously waiting to discover whether their loved ones are alive or dead. At the time of this writing, my team and I are working hour by hour, doing everything we can to get the hostages released.
And while Israelis are still in shock and suffering the trauma of this attack, Hamas has promised that it will relentlessly try to repeat Oct. 7. It has said very clearly that it will not stop.
The Palestinian people deserve a state of their own and a future free from Hamas. I, too, am heartbroken by the images out of Gaza and the deaths of many thousands of civilians, including children. Palestinian children are crying for lost parents. Parents are writing their child’s name on their hand or leg so they can be identified if the worst happens. Palestinian nurses and doctors are trying desperately to save every precious life they possibly can, with little to no resources. Every innocent Palestinian life lost is a tragedy that rips apart families and communities.
Our goal should not be simply to stop the war for today — it should be to end the war forever, break the cycle of unceasing violence, and build something stronger in Gaza and across the Middle East so that history does not keep repeating itself.
Just weeks before Oct. 7, I met in New York with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. The main subject of that conversation was a set of substantial commitments that would help both Israel and the Palestinian territories better integrate into the broader Middle East. That is also the idea behind the innovative economic corridor that will connect India to Europe through the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Israel, which I announced together with partners at the Group of 20 summit in India in early September. Stronger integration between countries creates predictable markets and draws greater investment. Better regional connection — including physical and economic infrastructure — supports higher employment and more opportunities for young people. That’s what we have been working to realize in the Middle East. It is a future that has no place for Hamas’s violence and hate, and I believe that attempting to destroy the hope for that future is one reason that Hamas instigated this crisis.
This much is clear: A two-state solution is the only way to ensure the long-term security of both the Israeli and Palestinian people. Though right now it may seem like that future has never been further away, this crisis has made it more imperative than ever.
A two-state solution — two peoples living side by side with equal measures of freedom, opportunity and dignity — is where the road to peace must lead. Reaching it will take commitments from Israelis and Palestinians, as well as from the United States and our allies and partners. That work must start now.
To that end, the United States has proposed basic principles for how to move forward from this crisis, to give the world a foundation on which to build.
To start, Gaza must never again be used as a platform for terrorism. There must be no forcible displacement of Palestinians from Gaza, no reoccupation, no siege or blockade, and no reduction in territory. And after this war is over, the voices of Palestinian people and their aspirations must be at the center of post-crisis governance in Gaza.
As we strive for peace, Gaza and the West Bank should be reunited under a single governance structure, ultimately under a revitalized Palestinian Authority, as we all work toward a two-state solution. I have been emphatic with Israel’s leaders that extremist violence against Palestinians in the West Bank must stop and that those committing the violence must be held accountable. The United States is prepared to take our own steps, including issuing visa bans against extremists attacking civilians in the West Bank.
The international community must commit resources to support the people of Gaza in the immediate aftermath of this crisis, including interim security measures, and establish a reconstruction mechanism to sustainably meet Gaza’s long-term needs. And it is imperative that no terrorist threats ever again emanate from Gaza or the West Bank.
If we can agree on these first steps, and take them together, we can begin to imagine a different future. In the months ahead, the United States will redouble our efforts to establish a more peaceful, integrated and prosperous Middle East — a region where a day like Oct. 7 is unthinkable.
In the meantime, we will continue working to prevent this conflict from spreading and escalating further. I ordered two U.S. carrier groups to the region to enhance deterrence. We are going after Hamas and those who finance and facilitate its terrorism, levying multiple rounds of sanctions to degrade Hamas’s financial structure, cutting it off from outside funding and blocking access to new funding channels, including via social media. I have also been clear that the United States will do what is necessary to defend U.S. troops and personnel stationed across the Middle East — and we have responded multiple times to the strikes against us.
I also immediately traveled to Israel — the first American president to do so during wartime — to show solidarity with the Israeli people and reaffirm to the world that the United States has Israel’s back. Israel must defend itself. That is its right. And while in Tel Aviv, I also counseled Israelis against letting their hurt and rage mislead them into making mistakes we ourselves have made in the past.
From the very beginning, my administration has called for respecting international humanitarian law, minimizing the loss of innocent lives and prioritizing the protection of civilians. Following Hamas’s attack on Israel, aid to Gaza was cut off, and food, water and medicine reserves dwindled rapidly. As part of my travel to Israel, I worked closely with the leaders of Israel and Egypt to reach an agreement to restart the delivery of essential humanitarian assistance to Gazans. Within days, trucks with supplies again began to cross the border. Today, nearly 100 aid trucks enter Gaza from Egypt each day, and we continue working to increase the flow of assistance manyfold. I’ve also advocated for humanitarian pauses in the conflict to permit civilians to depart areas of active fighting and to help ensure that aid reaches those in need. Israel took the additional step to create two humanitarian corridors and implement daily four-hour pauses in the fighting in northern Gaza to allow Palestinian civilians to flee to safer areas in the south.
This stands in stark opposition to Hamas’s terrorist strategy: hide among Palestinian civilians. Use children and innocents as human shields. Position terrorist tunnels beneath hospitals, schools, mosques and residential buildings. Maximize the death and suffering of innocent people — Israeli and Palestinian. If Hamas cared at all for Palestinian lives, it would release all the hostages, give up arms, and surrender the leaders and those responsible for Oct. 7.
As long as Hamas clings to its ideology of destruction, a cease-fire is not peace. To Hamas’s members, every cease-fire is time they exploit to rebuild their stockpile of rockets, reposition fighters and restart the killing by attacking innocents again. An outcome that leaves Hamas in control of Gaza would once more perpetuate its hate and deny Palestinian civilians the chance to build something better for themselves.
And here at home, in moments when fear and suspicion, anger and rage run hard, we have to work even harder to hold on to the values that make us who we are. We’re a nation of religious freedom and freedom of expression. We all have a right to debate and disagree and peacefully protest, but without fear of being targeted at schools or workplaces or elsewhere in our communities.
In recent years, too much hate has been given too much oxygen, fueling racism and an alarming rise in antisemitism in America. That has intensified in the wake of the Oct. 7 attacks. Jewish families worry about being targeted in school, while wearing symbols of their faith on the street or otherwise going about their daily lives. At the same time, too many Muslim Americans, Arab Americans and Palestinian Americans, and so many other communities, are outraged and hurting, fearing the resurgence of the Islamophobia and distrust we saw after 9/11.
We can’t stand by when hate rears its head. We must, without equivocation, denounce antisemitism, Islamophobia, and other forms of hate and bias. We must renounce violence and vitriol and see each other not as enemies but as fellow Americans.
In a moment of so much violence and suffering — in Ukraine, Israel, Gaza and so many other places — it can be difficult to imagine that something different is possible. But we must never forget the lesson learned time and again throughout our history: Out of great tragedy and upheaval, enormous progress can come. More hope. More freedom. Less rage. Less grievance. Less war. We must not lose our resolve to pursue those goals, because now is when clear vision, big ideas and political courage are needed most. That is the strategy that my administration will continue to lead — in the Middle East, Europe and around the globe. Every step we take toward that future is progress that makes the world safer and the United States of America more secure.

Biden wishes to exact a Pax Americana in the world. It’s aimed at getting reelected with votes of the most privileged and the hope that the disenfranchised will step in behind because of a most horrendous choice; a perceived lesser among true evils.
The people of this empire may do just that. But the result will be far less peaceful and more virulent than Biden, and apparently you, will ever imagine. Israel wants not just a land of their own, but an empire. The people of Palestine will only be defeated only if and when they are successfully erased by Zionist murder. I doubt that will happen and more likely “America” will be rewritten. The world will issue its verdict. Enjoy your arrogance and veiled racism. It will not pass the test of history.
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Your comment proves that no good deed goes unpunished. Instead of working on the foundation laid by this op-Ed, you look to perpetuate the bad and make it worst . It never ceases to amaze me how myopic and tendentious people , like yourself , can be .
Signed looking to make the world better , Marc
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It is you who is one of the many anti-American, anti-Semitic, pro-Putin trolls who cheers on when Putin annihilates civilians in his quest for Pax Russian authoritarian rule.
It is clear that Israel has a history of giving up land for peace. They have already done so in Sinai and the Golan Heights.
There are folks like you that believe the mere existence of a Jewish state – tiny as it is in the huge middle east – is not allowed because you prefer Jews top be wiped off the face of the earth.
The number of Jews who were expelled from other Arab states after 1948 compares with the number of Palestinians expelled from Israel. The only difference is that by expelling them, other Arab states have virtually no Jewish population at all. While Israel still has a significant Arab population.
You who hate democracy should be called out as the trolls you are. Your concern for Palestinians is about as real as your concern for all the middle eastern civilians wiped out by Putin’s friend in Syria.
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Hate has no place in this debate. Period. The use of the word “Zionist” shows a bias that will never be eradicated from those who believe that the Israeli government represents the Diaspora.
I have heard the term “Zionist” over and over used by those who seek to place blame on all Jews for the war in the Middle East. The story is not so cut and dry: Netanyahu is an extremist and there are some who firmly believe he faltered in his ability to keep Israelis safe. Hamas, as leadership, was supported by Palestinians, however I am guessing you cannot find many who would still do so as Hamas utilizes the tactics of hiding among innocents, although, who knows what people are being told on the ground? There is so little safe access to information there that the propaganda outfits are all that people have to get the story.
I have been chatting with an Egyptian-American who insists that Israel is represented by “Zionists” who rule the world through the power of AIPAC and the major media outlets. I have learned that the word “Zionists” is anti-Semitic code for “all Jews are bad and must be stopped from having power.” This person blames Biden and the West for supporting any atrocities by the hand of Israel and will not vote for Biden in the next general election. This person is equating Jewish people with overreach. There is no changing the minds of people who use this propaganda as philosophy.
The fact that politics and ideology have become one and the same is emerging as the real
reason we have so much political strife, even here in the United States. People like to choose sides—only, there are not just two definitive sides here. Hamas is the enemy of humanity. Israel, for all its military power and land-grabbing has not always been the best actor in the struggle to maintain a state. I feel for the innocents caught in the middle. They represent the side that is human where all other entities are easily dehumanized by this war: i.e. the military, leaders, and allies.
We forget the complexity of the issue when we start taking sides as if one is equally good and one is equally evil or one is equally innocent and one is equally guilty. We are talking about government leaders, not civilians, yet so many would lump all people with their government. Palestinians are victims here, no doubt, however this doesn’t discount the fact that Israelis are also victims. We need to call out the use of terminology that is so embedded in anti-human propaganda that it hurts innocents.
Here is an article that separates AIPAC from the Democratic Party:
https://jacobin.com/2023/11/aipac-democratic-primary-spending-andy-levin?fbclid=IwAR1blOMXs8iVsJEoM-l9dFAy39zovktcjbbLl-ZUguYT8ngKx32nv00-9c0_aem_ASvkTLNaY2vd0erGWxZVmueTnpk056dzhG_yB1L786tAFMy7DZtd-stajVcYDzpIHVY
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Thank you, LG.
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The conflict is all about hate.
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It feels sad that so many older people in this country are not uncomfortable with the slaughter of Palestinians including thousands of children. Listen to the youth – they are the ones who will have to live in this world after we and the American empire are gone.
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I am extremely disturbed with children being slaughtered. Using the words “not uncomfortable” doesn’t cover the sickness I feel when children are slaughtered. Some of us want to stop it. But I find it sad that you are “not uncomfortable” with Hamas intentionally slaughtering children and then retreating to places where they tell Palestinian families not to leave because they assume that Israelis would not be as uncaring about children’s lives as they are.
Where is your condemnation of Hamas? Where is your demand that Hamas be disempowered?
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Oh for Pete’s sake, grow up.
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I agree that Putin and Hamas, and by default Iran’s government, must be defeated and/or eliminated along with North Korea.
Still, I’m concerned Benjamin Netanyahu and his extreme right allies mean to evict all Palestinians from the Gaza strip and turn them into homeless people, refugees, without a country or land to call or think of as their own.
“The number of refugees worldwide increased from 27.1 million in 2021 to 35.3 million at the end of 2022, the largest yearly increase ever recorded, according to UNHCR’s statistics on forced displacement. The increase was largely due to refugees from Ukraine fleeing the international armed conflict in their country.”
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Lloyd,
I have no inside track about what willhappe in Gaza, but I seriously doubt that Netanyahu wants to occupy Gaza. The Israelis exited Gaza in 2005. They know it was a disaster. As soon as there is an election, Bibi will be out. I am hoping that the Israelis elect a new leader who is as aggressive in pursuing peace as Bibi is in pursuing war.
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This is how a president thinks. This is what a president does.
Can anyone imagine Donald Trump speaking this clearly and intelligently? Can anyone imagine for one tiny second Donald Trump speaking this way? Thinking this way? Acting this way?
Of course you can’t. It is impossible to imagine, because we know Trump, what he is, what a tiny, misshapen ball of id and rage and anger he is.
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Haaretz is now admitting that Israeli forces fired at people fleeing the music festival. IDF, not Hamas, killed most of the civilians. So I guess Haaretz is now Hamas propaganda.
https://www.haaretz.co.il/news/politics/2023-11-18/ty-article/0000018b-e1a5-d168-a3ef-f5ff4d070000
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I have a problem with a reader named Dienne. She is convinced that Israel is responsible for the barbaric slaughter of men, women, and children on October 7 by Hamas terrorists.
Her first premise is that whatever happened on October 7, Israel deserved it, even the many peace activists who lived in the kibbutzim near the Gaza border, even the babies, who were brutally murdered, even the families who huddled together and were murdered together. The Israelis deserved October 7 because their government’s policies toward the Palestinians are unjust. I agree that Israel has not treated the Palestinians justly, but I do not accept that the atrocities committed on October 7 were deserved.
Her second premise is that nothing much happened on October 7. The Israelis are lying when they claim there was a massacre. Anyone who says there was a massacre is spouting Israeli propaganda, she says. Apparently she believes that some well-mannered members of Hamas dropped in to talk with their Israeli neighbors and there were a few fistfights.
She insists that any claim of war crimes and atrocities are Israeli
propaganda. Mention the beheadings, and she knows they never happened, because Hamas said so. Mention the gang rapes, and she knows they didn’t happen, because Hamas says so. Anything bad that happened was caused by or done by the Israelis.
I have blocked most of her comments, because they are so bigoted.
Tonight she sent an article from the liberal Israeli paper Haaretz, which I subscribe to in English.
She says the article proves that “most” of those killed at the Nova dance festival were killed by IDF helicopters. But the article doesn’t say that.
The article says that some of those at the dance were killed by friendly fire, not most. That’s a big difference.
https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/2023-11-18/ty-article/.premium/israeli-security-establishment-hamas-likely-didnt-have-prior-knowledge-of-nova-festival/0000018b-e2ee-d168-a3ef-f7fe8ca20000?utm_source=App_Share&utm_medium=iOS_Native
Her version is written in Hebrew, which I can’t read. Mine in English.
Haaretz wrote:
“The growing assessment in Israel’s security establishment is that Hamas terrorists who committed the October 7 massacre didn’t have advance knowledge about the Nova music festival held next to Kibbutz Re’im, and decided to target the party spontaneously.
“The assessment is based on terrorist interrogations and the police’s investigation of the incident, among other things, which reveal that the terrorists intended to infiltrate Re’im and other kibbutzim near the Gaza border.
“According to a police source, the investigation also indicates that an IDF combat helicopter that arrived to the scene and fired at terrorists there apparently also hit some festival participants. According to police, 364 people were murdered at the festival.
“Senior security officials estimate that Hamas found out about the party through drones or parachutes, and directed the terrorists to the location using their comms system. In a video from one of the terrorists’ bodycams, he is heard asking a captured citizen for directions to Re’im.””
How clever Dienne was to change “some” to “most.”
Why is she eager to acccuse Israelis of massacring their own people?
Why is she unwilling to admit that the terrorists committed terrible atrocities?
I don’t know.
I will say, as I have repeatedly said, that Hamas is a terrorist group that has betrayed the Palestinian people, thwarted peace agreements, and is committed to erasing the state of Israel and killing every Jew.
I will repeat that I feel deep sorrow for the Palestinian people and their suffering.
I hope for the day when Palestinians have their own state and are able to live in peace, prosperity, and dignity.
I would like to see new leadership in Israel, leaders who know that the only way to end hostilities is by seeking a lasting peace settlement.
I would think it just to promote land for peace. Specifically, to withdraw the West Bank settlements and create a land bridge between Gaza and the West Bank.
But anti-Semitism and Islamophobia have no place on my blog. I will post nothing that attacks Israel or Jews or Palestinians or Muslims.
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Thank you, Diane, for this very important post.
I think it is super weird that dienne77 would link to an article in Hebrew unless she is Israeli and reads Hebrew better than English. Which I doubt.
How did she even get the link to copy and paste and how does she know what the article says?
I know you doubt she is a troll, but I find it odd that all her reasoning ability is MIA whenever it comes to defending Putin or Trump, or demonizing Israel or Democrats. The one thing the Russians and far right American neofascists are very good at is propaganda. And they play the long game. There is a book or long article that describes the way this worked in 2015/16, first posing as people concerned with the same issues (like racism) on some facebook page, and later starting to posts “truths” to educate folks about how racist the Democrats were to depress the vote. It worked.
I realize this sounds unlikely and perhaps it is. However, I don’t understand how dienne77 would even find a Hebrew-language article nor know what it said. If she didn’t intentionally spread lies, then she is acting as a useful idiot. If so, maybe she will learn a lesson that copying and pasting links from sources you “trust” that turn out to be completely false makes you lose your own credibility about everything.
At least it should. I don’t care what Tucker Carlson says about ANYTHING – even if he happens to be supporting public schools. Nothing he says can be trusted nor should be trusted. There should be a point where you have to earn credibility. And you don’t earn credibility because sometimes you say something true and something you don’t. You earn it by doing your best to be truthful and correcting yourself when you learn you have mistakenly posted something that is wrong. That’s why I have so much admiration for you, Diane, because that’s what you do. That’s what honest people do. They don’t double down on the lie.
How did dienne77 even find this link? Is she an intentionally deceptive troll, or is she being used by others who know she will fall for their propaganda and amplify it to give their lies credibility?
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I know Dienne is not a troll because I met her an an NPE conference in Chicago.
What I do know is that she hates Ukrainians and Israelis. She defends Putin and excuses Hamas. She’s entitled to her opinions but I’m not obliged to post them when I consider them bigoted.
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Diane, I used to agree with Dienne. That was an error. You are great for changing when presented with new information. You must do what you feel is right, of course, but I’m on the side of blocking her. She’s gotten downright mean.
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Dienne is in moderation. She’s not alone. Others who are in moderation include Trumpers, commenters who are insulting or hateful either to me or other readers.
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It actually doesn’t even say that some were killed by friendly fire. It says some were “hit.” That’s a careful choice of wording.
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Yesterday, the progressive Israeli publication “Haaretz” reported that some festival-goers at the Nova dance on October 7 may have been “hit” by gunfire from an Israeli helicopter. Official sources told “The Times of Israel” that the report about the helicopter was wrong.
“The Israel Police issued a statement reacting to a claim in Haaretz that an IDF helicopter that arrived at the site of the Supernova festival near Re’im on October 7 may have killed some Israeli civilians.”
“The Haaretz article in Hebrew cites an unnamed Israel Police official saying that its investigation of the incident found that an IDF helicopter at the site that was firing at terrorists “apparently harmed a few partygoers who were in the area.”
“A police statement says that its investigation focused only and solely on police activity, and not any IDF activity, and therefore did not provide “any indication about the harm of civilians due to aerial activity there.”
“The statement calls on news outlets to “take responsibility for their publications and only base stories on official sources.”
“Elements of the Haaretz article were taken widely out of context on social media and used to blame Israel for hundreds of civilian deaths on October 7, none of which has any basis in fact and in extensive reporting about the massacre.”
https://www.timesofisrael.com/liveblog_entry/israel-police-slams-haaretz-claim-idf-helicopter-may-have-harmed-civilians-on-oct-7/
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“A ceasefire is not peace.” Yes. President Biden is good.
Last night, while I was posting comments about this subject, I was sitting on an upstairs balcony at my favorite restaurant across the street from the L.A. Israeli embassy. There are peaceful Palestinian demonstrations there every couple weeks (peaceful except for the calls over loudspeakers for intifada and occasional swastikas spray painted on the building). I was depressed by what I was witnessing at first, but last night became different and informative.
The gathering for Palestinians was at least twenty times larger than usual. It overflowed into the street, blocking rush hour traffic on Wilshire Blvd. That’s a big deal. The organizers, a couple dozen of them, wore yellow safety vests and stood next to the police down the street, as if they had some right to direct traffic. It started off as usual, with a woman doing call and response over a loudspeaker about shutting down Israel.
But what was interesting this time was the crowd. Most of the participants were no activists. Activists at these gatherings in support of Palestinians usually do not show up wearing booty shorts and sports team jerseys. This crowd seemed not motivated by politics or religion; they seemed motivated by social media. They were young. They were white. They were partying, drinking and smoking.
The most fascinating thing happened at sundown. A Christian group showed up across the street from the demonstrators with a louder loudspeaker than the Palestine group, talking over the other loudspeaker, hardly pausing for breath., calling on the demonstrators to repent in the name of Jesus or face hellfire. Bad, bad hellfire. The Palestinian organizers fell silent, discombobulated. After an hour of listening to preaching about Jesus, the LAPD rallied and cleared the street.
Here’s my point: Support for terrorism is just a loosely put together internet thing out here on the Left Coast. Elon Musk and Tik Tok are the silly fringe. Those on soap boxes are the fringe. They’re laughable. President Biden is the leader of this free nation. He is our voice, democratically elected. I put my faith in him to lead. The voices of dissent are the voices of partiers wearing booty shorts and football jerseys.
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Very interesting. Thanks for such a detailed personal account of what you saw at the demonstration.
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The anti-Semitism that I read saddens me so much. I have read a great deal about the history of the region and of my people. It is so complicated and nuanced. One thing I do know is that you cannot separate Judaism from Zionism, which some have turned into a pejorative term. Read our siddurim (prayer books). It is full of references to a return to Jerusalem. The word Jew itself means someone from the tribe and area called Judah. I always write that Israel is an imperfect democracy, but so are we. But good people strive to do better. The beliefs of terrorists and authoritarian leaders are black holes in which there is no way out. Only those who strive in a democracy to make the world better one cautious step at a time attempt to bring us into the light.
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I’ve been hearing that many young people are so disillusioned with Biden that they’re considering not voting in the next presidential election.
This would be beyond tragic; as any vote not for Biden is one step closer to a second Trump administration.
The Hamas attack was extremely well thought out and effective in it’s impact, relating to world opinion. Considering it’s ties to Iran and that nation’s ties to Russia; I wonder if our next presidential election was included in the calculation. Trump is definitely Putin’s candidate of choice.
Might be a stretch…but even if it wasn’t part of a broader plan, the upshot could end up effecting the 2024 election.
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The leaders of Hamas met with Putin a few weeks ago.
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Does anyone else think that Hamas will “free the hostages” in a deal with Trump like Iran did with Reagan? That thought has been swimming in my head for days. We cannot allow this nightmare to continue for the civilians. Humans are not political pawns.
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