Hamas attacks Israel
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wrote on 1 May 2025, 02:29 last edited by
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wrote on 6 May 2025, 23:13 last edited by
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wrote on 30 May 2025, 08:55 last edited by
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wrote on 30 May 2025, 12:26 last edited by
@jon-nyc said in Hamas attacks Israel:
Not that I know too much about him, but I found this surprising.
Wow. That’s troubling.
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wrote on 2 Jun 2025, 02:24 last edited by
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wrote on 4 Jun 2025, 15:46 last edited by
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wrote on 7 Jun 2025, 14:31 last edited by
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wrote on 7 Jun 2025, 17:51 last edited by
If Greta's activism has any effect, the iceberg will be bigger and stronger.
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wrote on 17 Jun 2025, 16:51 last edited by
Sad and deranged. Not sure how to make people like this see sense.
Link to video -
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wrote on 26 Jun 2025, 02:50 last edited by
Interesting article to me.
https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2025/06/sinwar-march-folly/683290/
One would think that Yahya Sinwar, until recently the leader of Hamas in Gaza, had absorbed the lessons of 1967. But he overestimated his own capabilities, and those of the Iranian-led “Axis of Resistance.” Like the leaders of Iran, he spoke violently and with great confidence. He allowed his reasoning capabilities to be overwhelmed by conspiracism and supremacist Muslim Brotherhood theology. He also made the same analytical mistake Nasser had made: He underestimated the desire of Israelis to live in their ancestral homeland, basing his conclusion on an incorrect understanding of how Israel sees itself.
In the end, the October 7 massacre Sinwar ordered did not cause the destruction of Israel but instead led to the dismantling of its enemies. Hamas is largely destroyed, and most of its leaders, including Sinwar, are dead, assassinated by Israel. Hezbollah, in Lebanon, is comprehensively weakened. Syria’s Bashar al-Assad, Iran’s main Arab ally, is in exile in Moscow, his country now led by Sunni Muslims hostile to Iran’s leaders. Iran’s skies are under the control of the Israeli Air Force, and its $500 billion nuclear program appears to be, at least partially, rubble and dust.
Not since Nasser has anyone in the Middle East been proved so wrong so quickly.
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wrote 6 days ago last edited by
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wrote 6 days ago last edited by
As much as I’d love to see the complete extermination of Hamas, I’m not sure it’s possible.
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wrote 6 days ago last edited by
Win/lose? Bringing the hostages back. How?
Ridiculous hostage swaps, one for a thousand?
Make the Gaza strip a country because it's somehow preferable to action against Hamas?Rewarding the perpetrators of 7th October atrocities in anyway is unacceptable. We need to enforce harsh deterrence.
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wrote 5 days ago last edited by
Occupy Gaza
"Momentum builds toward Netanyahu’s plan to occupy all of Gaza"
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wrote 3 days ago last edited by
Occupy Gaza
https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2025/08/07/israel-gaza-occupation-hamas-netanyahu-zamir/
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu intends to expand military operations to occupy all of Gaza, including in areas where hostages are being held.
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wrote 3 days ago last edited by
I give him points for pursuing a course of action that could in theory solve most of the issue.
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wrote 3 days ago last edited by Mik 8 Jul 2025, 20:20
Anything else just puts them back in the same spot in a few years. Something has to change the mindset.
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wrote about 17 hours ago last edited by
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wrote about 17 hours ago last edited by
Look on the bright side. they were likely Hamas there to intercept the aid.