• PotatoesFall@discuss.tchncs.de
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    6 months ago

    article

    the weird thing is that Israel’s government is being confusing - the ceasefire is meant to be lasting but they have vowed to invade Rafah anyway until Hamas is toppled.

    Sounds to me like Netanyahus government wants to trade hostages to appease protesters and voters, and then continue flattening Rafah anyway.

      • Viking_Hippie@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        Yeah, because giving up your only leverage permanently in exchange for what basically amounts to pressing pause on the genocide is SUCH a good deal!

        Hamas might be despicable terrorists, but presumably they’re not total idiots!

        That’s the worst deal since the Dutch sold New Amsterdam (now New York) to the English for a bunch of nutmeg! Nutmeg was hella expensive back then 😛

        • PugJesus@lemmy.world
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          6 months ago

          Yeah, because giving up your only leverage permanently in exchange for what basically amounts to pressing pause on the genocide is SUCH a good deal!

          It’s not very good leverage, considering that Israel is ready to finish up its genocide regardless.

          • Viking_Hippie@lemmy.world
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            6 months ago

            The fact that the Israeli government is acting in bad faith and doesn’t actually care about the hostages doesn’t mean that the Israeli people don’t care.

            The fact that people who aren’t genocidal maniacs desperately want the hostages to be freed means that getting them back would be a huge get for the Israeli government, worth many times more than a temporary truce is.

            • PugJesus@lemmy.world
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              6 months ago

              The fact that the Israeli government is acting in bad faith and doesn’t actually care about the hostages doesn’t mean that the Israeli people don’t care.

              Okay, but leverage is typically supposed to be against the one you’re negotiating or dealing with, and Hamas is quite clearly up against the Israeli government at this point in time.

              The fact that people who aren’t genocidal maniacs desperately want the hostages to be freed means that getting them back would be a huge get for the Israeli government, worth many times more than a temporary truce is.

              I don’t see how that follows. The Israeli government is quite clear in its goals - it has killed hostages on its own initiative. It cares only insofar as it would look bad to not negotiate for hostage a release.

              A ceasefire is far more important to Hamas than Israel. Israel wants to keep hammering Gaza. If the negotiations fail, then the answer isn’t “Well, now we can use our leverage!”, it’s “Fuck, our only leverage has gotten us literally nothing”.

              • Viking_Hippie@lemmy.world
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                6 months ago

                If the negotiations fail, then the answer isn’t “Well, now we can use our leverage!”, it’s “Fuck, our only leverage has gotten us literally nothing”.

                Which is basically what Israel is offering. They’re asking for the political points from getting the hostages back and will invade and/or bomb the shit out of Rafah no matter what.

                Or to simplify: giving everything in exchange for basically nothing is a bad deal. Hamas knows it, the Israeli government knows it and the NYT knows it.

                The latter two are just gaslighting people about it to pretend that the Israeli government is being anything approaching reasonable.

                • PugJesus@lemmy.world
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                  6 months ago

                  Which is basically what Israel is offering. They’re asking for the political points from getting the hostages back and will invade and/or bomb the shit out of Rafah no matter what.

                  They’re offering a 40-day ceasefire, which would be more beneficial to Hamas than to Israel. It’s not inherently ridiculous for Hamas to accept in exchange for the hostages. The issue is that Israel isn’t serious, and will dance around with terms so they can claim Hamas rejected it again.

                  Or to simplify: giving everything in exchange for basically nothing is a bad deal. Hamas knows it, the Israeli government knows it and the NYT knows it.

                  But it’s not everything. The hostages are minor at most, and leverage unutilized is as worthless as not having leverage at all. Furthermore, all negotiations are done by the relative positions of the negotiators - if Hamas wants to hold out for a better deal, that’s certainly a valid strategic decision. But it must also be recognized that it is quite probably long odds since Israel is overwhelmingly in the better position at this point in time.

                  Once Rafah is taken, this whole miserable affair is going to wind up. And almost certainly not in a good way.

                  Speaking PURELY from a strategic perspective, what do you think the hostages CAN be traded for? What is something that is realistic for the Israeli government to offer other than a temporary ceasefire? Knowing the Israeli government’s current position and goals? Not “What would be MORAL for them to offer”, what, realistically, can Hamas get out of the Israeli government with these hostages that would be more useful than a 40-day ceasefire and the release of thousands of Palestinian prisoners?

                  The latter two are just gaslighting people about it to pretend that the Israeli government is being anything approaching reasonable.

                  But neither the article nor the headline have the tone you’re talking about.

          • NoneOfUrBusiness@kbin.social
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            6 months ago

            I mean yes and no. Have you seen the protests in Israel? Yeah those aren’t because the Israeli public suddenly cares about human rights; they’re equal parts because Netanyahu wants to get rid of democracy in Israel and because of his disregard for the hostages’ lives in his assault on Gaza, so they are doing their job. And let’s remember that their real role hasn’t come yet; these hostages are there for after the “war” ends because without any hostages Israel will be turning Gaza into beachfront real estate.

            • PugJesus@lemmy.world
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              And let’s remember that their real role hasn’t come yet; these hostages are there for after the “war” ends because without any hostages Israel will be turning Gaza into beachfront real estate.

              How many hostages have the IDF killed already? Do you really think that if turning Gaza into beachfront real estate and the handful of hostages that are left will be enough to stay the Israeli far-right? Hamas already released 150 hostages once just to acquire a four-day ceasefire. You really think that the hostages are being held for when the “war” ends? Do you really think they’re that valuable? If you were in Israel’s position, with Israel’s goals and morality, would you stop for the hostages? When the “war” ends, the IDF will either have taken them or buried them under the rubble like every other civilian in the strip.

              The hostages are not the trump card people here seem to think they are, and considering Hamas’s negotiating attitude towards them, they are far more aware of that than people here, who seem to want to think that the hostages are the major thing ‘keeping’ Israel from completing their genocide, when the fact is that they’re well on their way, as though the hostages were not an issue at all. The only concession that was realistic was the release of prisoners and a temporary ceasefire; the idea that Israel, which has yearned for this genocide for decades, will suddenly stop for hostages they’ve already shot and bombed to death, and an unknown amount of whom are already dead, is insane.

              Hostages do not have the value people here are telling themselves they do. Certainly not less-than-half the hostages they had a few short months ago, God knows how many have died for lack of medical treatment or getting an Israeli bomb stoving their head in. These hundred-and-something (if that) hostages do not have that value in the context of a war that has already claimed thousands of Israeli lives and tens of thousands of Palestinian lives, in a conflict that has been at fever-pitch, at minimum, for 20 years, more realistically 30, and arguably the last 70 (though I would argue that the phases of the genocide are different enough to be counted as separate attempts at genocide over the full period of Israel’s existence).

              I just don’t understand how people on here are coming to this conclusion. I can’t even say it’s wishful thinking, unless imaginations on here regarding what they wish for are severely limited. It reminds me of when my grandfather would read a news article, immediately come to an impulsive conclusion, and then refuse to change it for any reason. “Hostages are invaluable” is a gut reaction from people who live largely in the West, in lands at peace, by actors who make much more limited demands, and by governments which give more of a damn about PR than the fucking Israelis. And fuck, man, even then - after 9/11, how long did the US go with “No negotiations with terrorists”? Do you think Israeli resolve to finish up their genocide is less than the post-9/11 paranoia and rage in the US?

              I really don’t know how the people on Lemmy are approaching this the way they are. It is utterly detached from reality. It’s like showing that you have two-of-a-kind and then going all-in. The hostages are a two-of-a-kind. If the hostages are the key point, Hamas is fucked; and, as much as I despise Hamas, at this moment in time that also means Palestine is fucked.

              • NoneOfUrBusiness@kbin.social
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                6 months ago

                Okay attitudes towards the hostages can be unrealistic, but I think you’re missing a few key points.

                First of all, the hostages aren’t meant to prevent Israel from completing its genocide. That’s just not the reality on the ground. They’re meant to pull the negotiations in Hamas’s favor. What I meant by “to prevent Israel from turning Gaza into beachfront property” was “so the eventual ceasefire agreement doesn’t have Gaza becoming beachfront property as part of it”. Again, “as part of the ceasefire agreement”. The only thing the hostages are doing now is losing Netanyahu face at home; I’m 100% aware that they’re not holding back the IDF (Hannibal directive anyone?). That said, they have been a central part of negotiation between Hamas and Israel. They’re not the end all be all of genocide enders, but they’re very much valuable because the Israeli government can’t sacrifice Israeli civilians’ lives for a war half the population agrees doesn’t have a clearly defined goal. Or, well, they can, but the protests a few days ago show why that’s a bad idea.

                Hamas already released 150 hostages once just to acquire a four-day ceasefire.

                Correction: So technically it was a week but that aside, the idea was for a pause that would become “something more enduring” in Biden’s words. It didn’t work and that’s why Hamas is now not accepting anything less than a permanent ceasefire. I doubt they went into the deal expecting that it’d end in a week with no progress.

                Do you think Israeli resolve to finish up their genocide is less than the post-9/11 paranoia and rage in the US?

                In a way, yes. Again, remember the protests from a few days ago. The Israeli public is pissed that the hostages aren’t coming back home. This is half the reason they’re opposing the war over there. Meanwhile the genocide, while definitely having their blessing, is a more top-down affair. Could be me misreading the situation, but it seems to me like Israelis are more invested in the hostages’ safe return than in this particular genocide. At least enough of them are that people are calling on Netanyahu to accept the ceasefire deal.

                The hostages alone won’t save Gaza, but their existence or lack thereof will and has had a large effect on negotiations, and it’s natural to think it will have more when Israel is more serious about trying to end the fighting (which will happen eventually; they can’t go on like this forever (hopefully)).

                • PugJesus@lemmy.world
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                  6 months ago

                  They’re not the end all be all of genocide enders, but they’re very much valuable because the Israeli government can’t sacrifice Israeli civilians’ lives for a war half the population agrees doesn’t have a clearly defined goal. Or, well, they can, but the protests a few days ago show why that’s a bad idea.

                  The protests are out of frustration with the government not doing more to return the hostages - but negotiation isn’t the only way to return the hostages. Force is also an option - and judging both by Israel’s previous actions and the invasion of Rafah, seems to be the Israeli government’s chosen route. And, purely strategically, it would be hard to say it’s the wrong decision.

                  Correction: So technically it was a week but that aside, the idea was for a pause that would become “something more enduring” in Biden’s words. It didn’t work and that’s why Hamas is now not accepting anything less than a permanent ceasefire. I doubt they went into the deal expecting that it’d end in a week with no progress.

                  The idea that the pause would become more enduring was wishful thinking after it was agreed to, and by Biden, not the parties involved, who needed to seem like he was trying.

                  and it’s natural to think it will have more when Israel is more serious about trying to end the fighting (which will happen eventually; they can’t go on like this forever (hopefully)).

                  That’s the thing - they don’t need to go on forever. Gaza is almost entirely occupied now. Once Rafah is under Israeli control, where more in Gaza can offer serious resistance? Fuck, man, they’re already building massive camps to ‘move’ the population to. Where is Hamas going to operate, to keep these hostages when that happens? And if Israel kills half of the hostages in the process of rescuing them, do you think that will lose Netanyahu any supporters who aren’t already against him? On the contrary, they’ll spin it as “Look at what the terrorists made us do!”, and if the Israeli left doesn’t swallow it, the centre almot certainly will.

                  They’re not nearly valuable enough to call for a permanant ceasefire. Honestly, I’d say I’m surprised that a 40 day ceasefire is on the table for them - not now, with so little left to occupy - except that I don’t believe the Israeli offer is in good faith. Their value was never extremely high - half of it was spent earlier - and their value is reduced with every Hamas-controlled location that is overrun. Realistically, they’re not worth a permanant ceasefire to Israel, protests or not.

        • grrgyle@slrpnk.net
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          6 months ago

          That’s the worst deal since the Dutch sold New Amsterdam (now New York) to the English for a bunch of nutmeg! Nutmeg was hella expensive back then 😛

          I bet the person who got all the nutmeg thought it was a great deal

  • Th4tGuyII@kbin.social
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    Hamas wants a permanent cease-fire. Israel wants a temporary truce.

    I suppose having your victims very publically calling out for peace, and actively trying to push for negotiations alongside other countries would “confuse” the narrative that they’re supposed to be bloodthirsty animals.

    • mozz@mbin.grits.dev
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      I literally saw an article in the Israeli press talking about: Agreeing to a temporary truce would be a good idea because then we can use the pause to rearm, resupply, and rest, and then resume the killing having netted ourselves some goodwill on the world stage.

      • djsoren19@yiffit.net
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        6 months ago

        Well yeah, that’s been Israel’s playbook for the last 8 decades of conflict.

      • Microw@lemm.ee
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        The reality is that both Hamas and Israel would do the same in a “permanent cease fire”. Hamas famously won’t sign a peace treaty with Israel - that’s how they became famous internationally in the 90s, by refusing the peace process. For the same reason Netanyahu - and most Israeli leaders - won’t sign a proper peace treaty with Hamas. Both want to eradicate the other.

        • Linkerbaan@lemmy.worldOP
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          6 months ago

          Hamas has already stated they would agree to a permanent peace treaty if a Palestinian state is established.

          Ergo only israel is currently in the way of a two state solution.

          • Microw@lemm.ee
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            6 months ago

            Where exactly has it decided that? And I dont mean in some Interview by one Hamas leader. This is a decision that the actual commanding structure of Hamas (most likely, both the Politburo and the military leadership) has to take.

              • Microw@lemm.ee
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                It is, of course, possible that this has all been a PR operation by Hamas, and that it has been making the same calculation as the Zionist movement originally did — i.e., that it could accept a partition of Palestine and then later expand to take the whole thing.

                Hamas has never participated in peace negotiations, has always refused the PLO positions raised during these negotiations and has multiple times stated in public that they want a truce (be it 10 or 30 years) as a temporary measure in the continued fight against the Zionist state.

                I can search for the sources on this when I wake up tomorrow, heading to bed rn

            • Linkerbaan@lemmy.worldOP
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              Hamas again raises the possibility of a 2-state compromise. Israel and its allies aren’t convinced

              In the latest iteration of its stance, senior Hamas official Khalil al-Hayya told The Associated Press in an interview on Wednesday the group would lay down its weapons and convert into a political party if an independent Palestinian state is established in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip along the pre-1967-borders.

              • Microw@lemm.ee
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                Hamas has done these kind of statements for years, they explicitly never accept the Oslo Accords or a recognition of Israel. They dont offer peace, they offer truces. And again: that’s an interview with one single person within Hamas. I can guarantee you that there are multiple senior people within Hamas who will disagree with this proposal - because that always happens. Hamas doesnt work like a top-down organization where the lower personnel silently accepts what the leadership decides.

                • Linkerbaan@lemmy.worldOP
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                  “No they said they want peace but they really don’t wanna! Also ignore israel refusing every peace deal and committing Genocide! And ignore when the Oslo Accords were about to be accepted and then an underling from Netanyahu assassinated the president of israel that was about to accept it! That was actuallly Hamas!

                  Take a look over at the West Bank and it beecomes apparent without a single doubt which of the parties is the constant aggressor that refuses any peace.

            • AreaSIX @lemm.ee
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              Lol, calling it the “politburo” really reveals the particular type of brain rot you’ve got. Hamas are not a communist party, and they are not part of the Soviet union.

              “But ‘politburo’ scary, even if I don’t really have an idea of what it means. Some talking head on TV said it, and it sounded cool, so I’ll repeat it online in order to sound knowledgeable”.

              Stick to words you know the meaning of maybe?

              • Microw@lemm.ee
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                Have you ever taken a look at the structure of Hamas? Here, let me quote the most basic thing you could have read: the Wikipedia article.

                the General Consultative Council (…) elects the 15-member Political Bureau (al-Maktab al-Siyasi) that makes decisions for Hamas.

                “Politburo” is the german word for “political bureau”. Simple as that. And has nothing to do with communism.

                • AreaSIX @lemm.ee
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                  How are you this dense and don’t already have your own moon orbiting around you?

                  Yes, political and bureau are two English words, and if you had used them, they’d correspond to your quote from a wikipedia article. However, you used “politburo”, which is the abbreviation used to denote the political bureaus of the communist parties within the Soviet sphere. You know, like compromising material being an English phrase, while the abbreviation “kompromat” is a Russian intelligence abbreviation from the Stalin era.

                  It’s odd for someone getting their worldview through Wikipedia to not at least look for the wiki article for politburo. But in any case, I’d suggest not limiting yourself to the non existent nuance in Wikipedia and try to dig a little bit deeper in order to understand the words you’re using to sound smart online.

    • geneva_convenience@lemmy.ml
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      Rumors are that Hamas accepted a temporary ceasefire deal this time with American verbal guarantees that they would not let Israel continue after the 40 days passed.

      • Karyoplasma@discuss.tchncs.de
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        If that’s the reassurance they needed, they are monumentally stupid. The US supports Israel and anything they decide to do unconditionally.

      • FrowingFostek@lemmy.world
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        Low quality bait. The IDF does not represent the Jews. The same way the state of Israel doesn’t represent the Jews. To say otherwise is a false equivalency.

      • figaro@lemdro.id
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        Bro this sort of thing is actually racist. Jewish people I know aren’t for genocide. It’s like the US - the government sucks, yes, but most people are just living their life trying to be happy, and don’t want to harm others.

  • Alien Nathan Edward@lemm.ee
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    6 months ago

    “Those sons of bitches are only doing everything we asked them to in order to confuse us and make us look bad.”

  • Crack0n7uesday@lemmy.world
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    While I want this to end as much as most people, a ceasefire is not the same as a peace agreement. North and South Korea have had a ceasefire since before I was born, but they constantly try to scare the world into thinking it could end at any moment, WW2 ended with a peace treaty, and the Nazi regime was officially removed from power as part of the treaty.

    • Linkerbaan@lemmy.worldOP
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      Of course it’s only a matter of time until israel starts violating the ceasefire as they always do.

      But at least Netanyahu will go to jail first.

        • underisk@lemmy.ml
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          nobody thinks israel is going to break the ceasefire because they’re jewish. they think that because of israel’s well-documented history of repeatedly breaking ceasefires.

            • Jax@sh.itjust.works
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              I don’t even know how to respond to this, it’s that fucking ridiculous.

              Soon simply criticizing a Jewish person will be anti-semitic to people like you.

                • Jax@sh.itjust.works
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                  If South Africa has been a corrupt shithole for 10 years, it doesn’t somehow magically become not-a-shithole because the president changes.

                  The potential for it to become not-a-shithole is there. It is not somehow magically fixed because one person is changed.

                  I can’t fucking believe I have to explain this shit, Jesus christ you people are the reason no one understands why Biden isn’t responsible for inflation.

        • Glytch@lemmy.world
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          6 months ago

          Expecting Israel to abide by ceasefire agreements is like expecting the US to abide by treaties with native tribes.

        • grrgyle@slrpnk.net
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          Maybe… But I believe they were talking about the Israeli state, which isn’t just being held hostage by one deranged man.

          Maybe not as bad as Netanyahu, but there are plenty of conservative death worshipers waiting in the wings to take his place.

          I imagine plenty of progressives too, but I worry not enough

            • PriorityMotif@lemmy.world
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              Israel seems like a pretty antisemetic country to me:

              Any Jew who immigrates to Israel as an oleh (Jewish immigrant) under the Law of Return automatically becomes an Israeli citizen. In this context, a Jew means a person born to a Jewish mother, or someone who has converted to Judaism and does not adhere to another religion. This right to citizenship extends to any children or grandchildren of a Jew, as well as the spouse of a Jew, or the spouse of a child or grandchild of a Jew. A Jew who voluntarily converts to another religion forfeits their right to claim citizenship under this provision.

              Foreigners may naturalize as Israeli citizens after residing in Israel for at least three of the previous five years while holding permanent residency. Candidates must be physically present in the country at the time of application, be able to demonstrate knowledge of the Hebrew language, have the intention of permanently settling in Israel, and renounce any foreign nationalities. Although Arabic was previously an official language and has a special recognized status, there is no similar knowledge stipulation for it as part of the naturalization process. All of these requirements may be partially or completely waived for a candidate if they: served in the Israel Defense Forces or suffered the loss of a child during their military service period, are a minor child of a naturalized parent or Israeli resident, or made extraordinary contributions to Israel. Successful applicants are required to swear an oath of allegiance to the State of Israel.

              Dual/multiple citizenship is explicitly allowed for an oleh who becomes Israeli by right of return. This is to encourage the overseas Jewish diaspora to migrate to Israel without forcing them to lose their previous national statuses. By contrast, naturalization candidates are required to renounce their original nationalities to obtain citizenship. Persons opting to naturalize are typically individuals who migrate to Israel for employment or family reasons, or are permanent residents of East Jerusalem and the Golan Heights.

              Male spouses under 35 and female spouses under 25 ordinarily resident in the Judea and Samaria Area (administrative division for the West Bank under Israeli law) outside of Israeli settlements are prohibited from obtaining citizenship and residency until reaching the relevant age. The 2003 Citizenship and Entry into Israel Law effectively discouraged further marriages between Israeli citizens and Palestinians by adding cumbersome administrative barriers that made legal cohabitation prohibitively difficult for affected couples. About 12,700 Palestinians married to Israeli citizens are prevented from obtaining citizenship under these restrictions. Affected persons are only allowed to remain in Israel on temporary permits, which would lapse on the death of their spouses or if they were to fail to receive regular reapproval by the Israeli government.

    • bountygiver [any]@lemmy.ml
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      6 months ago

      either way a ceasefire would stop a lot of immediate deaths, and give both party a lot of time to figure their shit out.

      • Crack0n7uesday@lemmy.world
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        Ben dude doesn’t want to give Palestinians a chance to regroup while he faces his own political discord at home in Israel. I am only looking at this from an outside perspective, I could be wrong. It’s not a bad strategy, Russia be doing it for years now.

    • lud@lemm.ee
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      Sure, but at least a short period of people not being bombed or killed sounds great.

  • Hamartia@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    I wonder if those totally-bias-free media bias checker sites that folks like to use to discount leftwing news sources have reflected on any of NYT’s latest propaganda?

    lol nope!

    Nothing quite says highly factual democratic socialism (center-left) quite like churning out one sided propaganda for an appartiting, genocidal group of ethnofascists.

    • daltotron@lemmy.world
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      Nothing quite says highly factual democratic socialism (center-left) quite like churning out one sided propaganda for an appartiting, genocidal group of ethnofascists.

      I mean you’re legitimately more right than you know

  • PugJesus@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    The terms Hamas had agreed to were not immediately clear, but a senior Israeli official quickly said that the terms were not those that Israel had agreed to.

    Looks like the headline matches reality.

    You keep spewing totalitarian cacophony, you crazy diamond.

    • Land_Strider@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      Linkerbaan vs PugJesus. Linkerbaan ratio is 5, PugJesus ratio is 2. Draw is 1. Results at 10pm.

      On the serious note: An accessible link would be appreciated.

      • PugJesus@lemmy.world
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        Wayback machine cuts off early, but this is what it gives:

        https://web.archive.org/web/20240506193731/https://www.nytimes.com/2024/05/06/world/middleeast/israel-hamas-gaza-ceasefire-talks.html

        The announcement by Hamas on Monday that it had accepted terms of a cease-fire added to the uncertainty that began over the weekend, when officials said that the armed group and Israel had reached an impasse after months of talks.

        As if to underscore that the fighting would continue, Hamas militants on Sunday launched rockets from Rafah, their last stronghold in Gaza, killing four Israeli soldiers. The following morning, Israel announced a mass evacuation of areas in Rafah, escalating fears that the military would soon begin a long-anticipated invasion of the crowded city.

        Hours later, Hamas suddenly announced that its leader, Ismail Haniyeh, had accepted a cease-fire proposal based on a plan proffered by Egypt and Qatar, which have been mediating the negotiations with Israel. The terms Hamas had agreed to were not immediately clear, but a senior Israeli official quickly said that the terms were not those that Israel had agreed to.

        While Israel and its main ally, the United States, said they were reviewing the proposal Hamas had agreed to, the public statements by the two sides in the war suggest that they remain far apart on key issues needed to reach a truce. Here is a look at those differences.

        Hamas wants a permanent cease-fire. Israel wants a temporary truce. The two sides are stuck on a fundamental question: will this cease-fire be a temporary pause to allow an exchange of hostages for prisoners or a long-term end to the fighting that would leave Hamas in power?

        Israel insists on a temporary cease-fire, saying it will keep fighting afterward with the eventual aim of toppling Hamas’s rule in Gaza. Hamas demands a permanent cease-fire and vows to remain in power there.

        AP is saying the same thing.

        https://apnews.com/article/israel-palestinians-gaza-hamas-war-humanitarian-aid-8659eae6e0a7362504f0aa4aa4be53e0

        • Land_Strider@lemmy.world
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          Thank you. It kinda sounds like there is a lack of information on what Hamas agreed to, for which I saw a post saying release of 33 hostages for 40 days of ceasefire. Can’t find it atm tho, the post may have vanished if it weren’t backed up with news.

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            Al Jazeera: Here are all the details of what Hamas agreed to

            Washington Post: Here’s a quick overview of the plan, and details of what Israel doesn’t like about it

            BBC: Here’s a quick overview and Israel’s reaction

            NYT: OMG who can even say what might be in this proposal. Like the flying dutchman, it is an elusive and mysterious beast, and we need to wait for the light of the full moon to even glimpse its outline. Plus you know, Hamas lies all the time.

            Also NYT: the “armed group” (i.e. Hamas)

            Also NYT: “As if to underscore that the fighting would continue, Hamas militants on Sunday launched rockets” (motherfucker the Israelis are “militants” and “fighting”, too) … “killing four Israeli soldiers” (oh, so they attacked the soldiers in Gaza attacking them? I see the problem – they should have blown up an Israeli hospital or university; then apparently you’d be fine with it.)

            I genuinely can’t continue because I’m getting for real pissed off about it. But I think it’s safe to assume the whole fucking article is written this way. I actually started paying again for a subscription to the NYT because I like journalism, but I think I may cancel it and send them a short note explaining why, like an angry middle-aged white woman storming out of a Starbucks.

            • PugJesus@lemmy.world
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              6 months ago

              NYT: OMG it’s so uncertain

              It literally is uncertain. Like, that’s what this development has created for those of us observing.

              (motherfucker the Israelis are “militants” and “fighting”, too)

              “Militants” is a common usage term in journalism for combatants who are not or may not be formally a part of a state apparatus. Considering large parts of Hamas are ‘off the books’ of the local government in Gaza and a good number of those fighting currently are likely not regular soldiers, it’s not unreasonable to call them militants.

              • mozz@mbin.grits.dev
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                It literally is uncertain. Like, that’s what this development has created for those of us observing.

                My point is that what Hamas agreed to isn’t uncertain (at least at this point). IDK, maybe there’s some timestamp issue where NYT published the OP article before it was clear… but as of last night (after the timestamp on the Al Jazeera article laying out everything in detail), the NYT wrote “Hamas’s Offer to Hand Over 33 Hostages Includes Some Who Are Dead”. I still haven’t seen any NYT article that simply lays out what the basic agreement details are; they seem to have wanted, with the “dead hostages” article, to just seize on an I-guess-technically-accurate data point and present it to make Hamas sound duplicitous and deadly, and then call it a day, with their readers still uninformed on the broad factual details of what was happening with the cease-fire talks.

                “Militants” is a common usage term in journalism for combatants who are not or may not be formally a part of a state apparatus. Considering large parts of Hamas are ‘off the books’ of the local government in Gaza and a good number of those fighting currently are likely not regular soldiers, it’s not unreasonable to call them militants.

                From Wordnik:

                from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.

                • adjective Fighting or warring.
                • adjective Having a combative character; aggressive, especially in the service of a cause.
                • noun A fighting, warring, or aggressive person or party.

                from The Century Dictionary.

                • Fighting; warring; engaged in warfare; pertaining to warfare or conflict.
                • Having a combative character or tendency; warlike.

                from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.

                • adjective disposed to warfare or hard-line policies
                • adjective engaged in war
                • noun a militant reformer
                • adjective showing a fighting disposition

                From Encyclopedia.com:

                Militant, in contemporary academic, activist, and journalistic interpretations, refers to an individual (as a noun) or to a party, a struggle or a state (as an adjective), engaged in aggressive forms of social and political resistance.

                My point is that by deciding that Hamas people with guns can’t be “soldiers,” but IDF people with guns can, the NYT is giving a subtle stamp of legitimacy to the IDF.

                I get what you’re saying – it’s not exactly a typical war. But I would argue that the IDF’s conduct is also equally non-typical for a “normal” armed conflict between capable state actors. It’s misleading to even call it a “war” – it is, very literally, more of a terrorist operation by Israel, blowing up civilian infrastructure and killing innocent people to put pressure on the Gaza state apparatus (such as it even exists) to agree to political terms they otherwise would never accept, to stop the killing.

                If we’re calling Hamas “militants” out of pure desire for accuracy, can we start calling people who work for the IDF who blow up universities and snipe doctors “terrorists”? And mount a factual defense of that term, based on their conduct in the “war”? Because I think I could make a pretty good argument for why that term applies to them more accurately than “soldiers” and “war” for what’s happening on the ground right now.

                • PugJesus@lemmy.world
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                  My point is that by deciding that Hamas people with guns can’t be “soldiers,” but IDF people with guns can, the NYT is giving a subtle stamp of legitimacy to the IDF.

                  Let me put it this way - it was Nazi soldiers which rampaged across Europe during WW2.

                  Soldier is not a designation of morality or legitimacy. It is a designation of association - namely, association with a state’s military apparatus. Excluding paramilitaries, which are generally (though not always) referred to with other terms.

                  If we’re calling Hamas “militants” out of pure desire for accuracy, can we start calling people who work for the IDF who blow up universities and snipe doctors “terrorists”? And mount a factual defense of that term, based on their conduct in the “war”? Because I think I could make a pretty good argument for why that term applies to them more accurately than “soldiers” and “war” for what’s happening on the ground right now.

                  The category of ‘state terrorism’ is contentious, I wouldn’t reasonably expect it to be used in a reputable news source at this point in time (though I would be thrilled if it was used in one). But I agree that the description is absolutely apt.

          • Land_Strider@lemmy.world
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            Thank you. It kinda sounds like there is a lack of information on what Hamas agreed to, for which I saw a post saying release of 33 hostages for 40 days of ceasefire. Can’t find it atm tho, the post may have vanished if it weren’t backed up with news.

            Edit: Thanks @mozz@mbin.grits.dev for the link below.

    • Linkerbaan@lemmy.worldOP
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      A ceasefire for you is when israel can keep committing Genocide and Hamas doesn’t fight back right?

      • PugJesus@lemmy.world
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        A ceasefire is when both sides agree to cease firing. The article headline is quite clearly correct, but I know you aren’t interested in facts.

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          Conveniently ignore that Hamas accepted the ceasefire deal proposed by Egypt and Qatar, which means that both israel and Hamas very well know what is in the deal.

          A cease fire is when both sides stop firing. Then you need the word deal to get there. Which Hamas has accepted and israel has not.

          • PugJesus@lemmy.world
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            Conveniently ignore that Hamas accepted the ceasefire deal proposed by Egypt and Qatar, which means that both israel and Hamas very well know what is in the deal.

            And Israel says the deal Hamas agreed to isn’t the deal they agreed to. Did you even read the article? Jesus Christ.

            Four downvotes inside of a minute, lmao.

            • Linkerbaan@lemmy.worldOP
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              Good job you got there!

              Hamas accepts the deal.

              Israel rejects the deal.

              See that’s what the article title should be. Not “complicates things”.

              • Windex007@lemmy.world
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                I accept the deal in which you hand deliver me all of your money.

                When should I be expecting you?

                (For the record, I’m 100% in favour of Israel immediately stopping all offensive action and immediately withdrawing from Gaza and being forced to immediately let aid in)

                But this particular sticking point is kinda nonsense. If both parties aren’t involved in the development of the terms, then it’s just a political stunt to announce you’ve accepted them.

                Israel could JUST as easily draft their own terms, and announce they’ve agreed to them.

                • Linkerbaan@lemmy.worldOP
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                  Israel could JUST as easily draft their own terms, and announce they’ve agreed to them.

                • PugJesus@lemmy.world
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                  Linkerbaan thinks October 7th was legitimate resistance and the most precise irregular operation in modern military history. I guess all those civilians were Secret Zionist Spies. You’re not going to get through to them.

              • PugJesus@lemmy.world
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                Hamas accepts the deal. Israel’s final response is uncertain - they commented that it was not the deal they agreed to, and it is not simply a matter of “Hamas has agreed, the ceasefire can go into effect”. But neither is it a rejection on the Israeli side. It ‘complicates things’.

                Keep trying. You’ll show those big bad Lamestream Media types what for eventually, right?

                • FarmTaco@lemmy.world
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                  I have accepted a deal Negotiated by Qatar where @PugJesus gives me all of his money indefinitely, this will go into effect immediately.

                • Linkerbaan@lemmy.worldOP
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                  Is israel does not accept the ceasefire and invades Rafah after the proposal…

                  Then israel rejects the deal.

                  We’re not in a stalemate position. We’re talking about ignoring it and commencing a massively invasion to Genocide thousands of Palestinians

                  The mental Gymnastics you’re willing to do to defend israels Genocide is absolutely astounding.

                  The new deal accepted by Hamas was even brokered with massive American involvement:

                  The officials claimed CIA director Bill Burns and other Biden administration officials who are involved in the negotiations knew about the new proposal but didn’t tell Israel.

                  Between the lines: Two Israeli officials said Israel is deeply suspicious that the Biden administration gave guarantees to Hamas through the Egyptian and Qatari mediators about its key demand that a hostage deal will lead to the end of the war.

            • Mastengwe@lemm.ee
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              Dude has tons of sock puppet accounts. I got downvoted 18 times within minutes of responding to this guy before.

  • capital@lemmy.world
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    These snips of headlines with a little response are nearly always misleading.

    This adds nothing to the conversation.

  • plz1@lemmy.world
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    When NYT can’t properly pluralize a word that already ends with “s” in a headline…

      • cone_zombie@lemmy.world
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        It’s actually the correct way to use the possesive. You only use the apostrophe when the noun is plural and ends with “s”

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    It’s crazy how suddenly you guys see Hamas as the good guys all of a sudden. I can tell you about all their atrocities and rapes, but I’ll just get hit back with whataboutisms. Even if you point out that there are no good guys in charge in this conflict, people downvote cause they see Hamas as heroes, which is insane.

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      Can you seriously not understand that people have basic fucking empathy and don’t want children to starve? Families to be seperated by bombs?

      Yeah, Hamas is awful. The Palestinian people would likely kill me for expressing my gender in a way that is barely safe in the US. I don’t fucking care, no culture deserves genocide. That should not be considered a controversial statement.

      • Son_of_dad@lemmy.world
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        Hamas doesn’t give a single shit about starving children. Their leadership are old rich men living in comfort abroad.

        Nobody is arguing against stopping this madness, but you’re white washing history by making Hamas out to be the victim here. Fuck Hamas, they don’t care about Palestinians. Neither do Arabs or Muslims. Nobody despises Palestinians more than other Arabs. You’re being used to Stoke outrage. You’re pushing their propaganda that Hamas was a peaceful organization just minding it’s business

        • djsoren19@yiffit.net
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          Did I ever say that Hamas was good or ethical? Did I even say that I liked the Palestinian people? You are making the argument that an entire ethnic group should be murdered, abused, humiliated, and then dumped into mass graves because of the actions of a few assholes. That is what you are supporting. Look in the fucking mirror and realize that there is never, ever, under any circumstances, any excuse that you can use to justify what Israel is doing right now. The victims are the Palestinian people who are being fucking massacred.

          • Son_of_dad@lemmy.world
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            I said Hamas bad, and you jumped in with whataboutisms and defense. Your actions told me what you were.

        • NoneOfUrBusiness@kbin.social
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          Their leadership are old rich men living in comfort abroad.

          Uh… No. Their leadership has two sides: Leaders in Gaza who actually manage the organization and command the fighting, and leaders abroad who get funding and negotiate with Israel and other countries. What do you expect? For their Gaza leadership to just ride an airplane from Gaza airport and attend diplomatic meetings? Because Israel blew that up 22 years ago. Point is: To function as a resistance organization Hamas needs some of its leadership to live abroad out of Israel’s reach.

          Nobody despises Palestinians more than other Arabs.

          I hear this a lot but nobody really justifies it. As an Egyptian at least according to my experiences it’s very incorrect.

          Edit: Formatting.

    • Twinklebreeze @lemmy.world
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      When one side has committed such vast amounts of resources towards villainy, comparatively, it tends to make the other guys look better.

      • Son_of_dad@lemmy.world
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        Have you even heard of Yasser Arafat or the history of the region? It’s like you kids just tuned in to the latest episode and made your decisions about who the bad and good are. All, EVERY SINGLE DOLLAR of Hamas resources go to rockets to shoot at schools and towards their own goals of ethnic cleansing. But you weren’t being told to be outraged for the last 6 decades, so you didn’t give a fuck till Instagram told you to.

        Even if I say there are no good guys in charge in this conflict, I get dowvoted. Because you can’t accept that Hamas is bad, you just can’t.

        • Twinklebreeze @lemmy.world
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          I don’t use Instagram. I don’t use tiktok. Lemmy and mastodon are all I really use and I’m only on mastodon for the funny stuff. I know very little of the history of the area, and I’m not a history buff. Don’t care to learn. What I know is from the news (which can still impart biases of their own of course). Yes hamas is bad. The Israeli government is just as bad. They are using their military advantage to bomb families and starve children. They are committing genocide and we’re supposed to accept this because some of the people they kill are also bad? Fuck that. The atrocities committed by each side are on different scales. It doesn’t take much character to denounce genocide.

        • NoneOfUrBusiness@kbin.social
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          Have you even heard of Yasser Arafat or the history of the region?

          We did, but let’s hear your explanation.

          All, EVERY SINGLE DOLLAR of Hamas resources go to rockets to shoot at schools and towards their own goals of ethnic cleansing

          Correction: Every single dollar of Hamas’s resources goes to rockets that force Israel to spend ridiculous amounts of money to stop them. They can also be used in saturation to deal more serious damage to Israel’s economy, as they are right now by forcing evacuations for some one hundred thousand people. Now it’s not pretty, but you won’t be taken seriously if you don’t acknowledge the reason they’re launching these rockets.

          • cole@lemdro.id
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            6 months ago

            do you really think that Hamas would stop launching rockets if Israel stopped intercepting them?

    • bloodfart@lemmy.ml
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      6 months ago

      So I gotta ask, I been seeing people throw around the rapes again and it can’t possibly be the debunked nyt stuff right?

      • Son_of_dad@lemmy.world
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        You realize this shit has been going on for like 7 decades right? Nyt debunked all of it? No they didn’t

        • bloodfart@lemmy.ml
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          Oh you’re talking about all Hamas’ atrocities and rapes over the last 70 years.

          Hamas, the organization founded in ‘87.

          • Son_of_dad@lemmy.world
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            The Muslim brotherhood suddenly changes its name in 87 and you all think it’s a whole new thing lol

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                  The Protestant reformation famously was a bunch more than Martin Luther “changes [the churchs] name”.

                  That’s also a pretty bad comparison because both Catholics and Protestants treat each other as something different.

                  Even non-Christians see a significant difference.

                  What are you trying to say? Clearly metaphor and simile aren’t working right now…

    • NoneOfUrBusiness@kbin.social
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      It’s easy to be the good guy when your opponent is genocide. I don’t think many people consider Hamas good people in a vacuum.

        • NoneOfUrBusiness@kbin.social
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          I literally said otherwise. At this point you’re just looking for an argument or want to believe everyone who disagrees with you is a terrorist supporter.

          • Son_of_dad@lemmy.world
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            I mean you’re upset about genocide but you never cared that Hamas wrote it into their Charter from the beginning that their goal was the genocide of the Jewish descendants and their extermination from the middle east.

            So you only cared about genocide until recently.

            • NoneOfUrBusiness@kbin.social
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              Uh… I do not, in fact, like Hamas or the general state of anti-Semitism in the middle east. I just recognize that it’ll only go away after, not before, Israeli Apartheid. Also Hamas updated their charter in 2017 to accept a two-state solution so… Yeah.

      • Son_of_dad@lemmy.world
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        Pretty much. These are the same college kids who like to tell me what should be offensive to me as a Latino. They don’t realize that them jumping in to defend me against invisible discrimination, is their own form of white supremacy and colonialist attitude. “this brown person should be offended at that man wearing a sombrero, and only I a young educated white kid can defend him!”

      • Cryophilia@lemmy.world
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        I’ve been saying it for years. Zoomers are dumb. We have statistics to prove it. For years, people have been saying “oh gen z is so accepting, so progressive”. Yeah but that doesn’t matter because they’re stupid and stupid = easily manipulated.

        • PugJesus@lemmy.world
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          Nah. No dumber than previous generations. Fuck, man, do you remember the internet in the 2000s and 2010s? Millennials and Gen X weren’t any brighter. And the Boomers had lead poisoning.

          • bitwolf@lemmy.one
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            Idk. Boomers told millenials not to believe everything we see on TV.

            Millenials were quick to get skeptical about everything and applied that logic to the internet as well.

            However boomers appear to be believing everything they see on social media / news broadcasts.

            And Gen Z appears to believe everything they see on TikTok.

    • Cryophilia@lemmy.world
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      That’s just tankies doing tankie things.

      Every fault can be excused, as long as you’re an enemy of the US.