University of Southern California, Harvard University, University of Texas at Austin and Columbia University all had student riots on Wednesday, as anti-Israel hostility on college campuses grows.
And in our scenario the 16-year-old girl with the baby and Dead family, she has spent years attacking her neighbors? And she must suffer for it? This is the disconnect we’re not agreeing on.
They cannot leave. It’s literally a closed prison.
Buy your own admission they’re denying food and water and medicine into Gaza. That is also definitional collective punishment.
The whole daddy’s home system and the up to 20 collateral budget for strikes inside of Gaza also speaks to collective punishment
You seem to be operating from the theory that as long as there’s any military justification, or rationale, it’s not collective punishment. Collective punishment is highly effective from a military perspective. There is no denying that. The reason we say collective punishment is terrible, is because your externalizing the pain onto people uninvolved.
Buy your own admission they’re denying food and water and medicine into Gaza. That is also definitional collective punishment.
They are not denying it. They just are not providing it. The US, Jordan and others are dropping food and supplies. Israel has not tried to stop that.
You seem to be operating from the theory that as long as there’s any military justification, or rationale, it’s not collective punishment.
You keep trying to define collective punishment as something you don’t like and not by the laws of warfare.
I asked you to define the laws of warfare, and you link to the Wikipedia page about collective punishment. I quoted the definition from Wikipedia. This fits that definition. I’m operating by your own rules.
@wintermute_oregon well…motivation can be tough to deduce, I can see why some people might look at #Israel sideways. But, the #IDF is largely not doing anything outside the normal scope of war.
And in our scenario the 16-year-old girl with the baby and Dead family, she has spent years attacking her neighbors? And she must suffer for it? This is the disconnect we’re not agreeing on.
They cannot leave. It’s literally a closed prison.
She isn’t suffering for it. She can’t leave because nobody wants her.
Israel isn’t bombing a house to punish anyone. They are bombing a house to kill combatants trying to kill them.
That is why it isn’t collective punishment. They are fighting a war and not punishing people.
Buy your own admission they’re denying food and water and medicine into Gaza. That is also definitional collective punishment.
The whole daddy’s home system and the up to 20 collateral budget for strikes inside of Gaza also speaks to collective punishment
You seem to be operating from the theory that as long as there’s any military justification, or rationale, it’s not collective punishment. Collective punishment is highly effective from a military perspective. There is no denying that. The reason we say collective punishment is terrible, is because your externalizing the pain onto people uninvolved.
You keep trying to define collective punishment as something you don’t like and not by the laws of warfare.
I asked you to define the laws of warfare, and you link to the Wikipedia page about collective punishment. I quoted the definition from Wikipedia. This fits that definition. I’m operating by your own rules.
That definition doesn’t fit the scenario.
Let’s see you articulate exactly how this is collective punishment.
https://hackertalks.com/comment/3556166
You are trying to redefine the situation.
The situation is simple: Hamas declared war on Israel, and Israel is fighting Hamsas. They are not punishing anyone but fighting a war.
Israel’s motivation isn’t to punish anyone. It is to stop Hamas. Punishment has to happen for it to be punishment.
@wintermute_oregon well…motivation can be tough to deduce, I can see why some people might look at #Israel sideways. But, the #IDF is largely not doing anything outside the normal scope of war.