Had enough of fake famine Pallyweid? Here is a Hamas feast

FDR_Reagan

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At least we know why the MSM won't show these.
As it debunks the Hamas "Gaza-health-ministry" narrative.


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Caught on Camera: Exposed: This Is What ‘Starvation’ Looks Like for Hamas—Watch the Footage
Jfeed ^
| Jul 23, 2025


Caught on Camera: Exposed: This Is What ‘Starvation’ Looks Like for Hamas—Watch the Footage. IDF footage reveals Hamas Terrorist enjoying lavish meals in underground tunnels while simultaneously pushing narratives of civilian starvation in Gaza. Evidence shows systematic food hoarding..
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DEBUNKED: IDF Shows Plenty Of Food In Gaza - Just Not Distributed | WATCH.
COGAT released a number of clips today showing hundreds of trucks’ worth of food ready to be distributed.
Avi Woolf
Jul 22, 2025 22:34
 
Starvation did you say?

Hillel Fuld.

Fine. I’ll admit it.

There’s starvation in Gaza. You got me.
I can’t lie abt it anymore.
There are indeed people living every day on a cup of water and a pita bread on a good day.
They are being intentionally starved and mocked as they starve.
Those people are the hostages.

IMG_0708.webp
 

Hillel Fuld.

Ok, I’ll dumb it down even more for ya.

  • Nakba? Lie
  • Occupation? Lie
  • Apartheid? Lie
  • Genocide? Lie
  • Starvation? Lie
  • Targeting civilians? Lie
  • Indiscriminately killing? Lie
  • Blocking aid? Lie
  • Stealing land? Lie
  • Committing war crimes? Lie
  • Widespread “settler” violence? Lie
  • Prolonging the war? Lie
  • Institutionalized oppression? Lie
  • Jewish terrorism? Lie

But here’s the kicker.

Almost all of those things are actually true.

About Hamas, not Israel.

Hamas committed (or tried to) genocide on 10/7. Hamas. Not Israel.

Hamas oppresses Gazans, not Israel.

Hamas is starving the hostages.

Hamas targets civilians and uses them as human shields.

Prolonging the war? Hamas has rejected every agreement to end the war. Hamas. Not Israel.

Basically, every single thing that Israel is being accused of is precisely what Hamas does on a daily, sometimes hourly basis.

Get your facts straight.

IMG_0710.webp
 
Starvation did you say?

Hillel Fuld.

Fine. I’ll admit it.

There’s starvation in Gaza. You got me.
I can’t lie abt it anymore.
There are indeed people living every day on a cup of water and a pita bread on a good day.
They are being intentionally starved and mocked as they starve.
Those people are the hostages.

View attachment 1140309
Exactly
 
There is NO genocide in Gaza.
Threads
| July/ 2025


Michal Cotler-Wunsh @CotlerWunsh: There is NO genocide in Gaza.

There is war - waged by genocidal terrorists for whom human tragedy is the strategy; who use own people as human shields/sacrifices; who use int’l ‘humanitarian aid’ & civilian infrastructure to construct hundreds of km of underground hell.

A war that would be over on October 8 if the 251 human beings stolen & held in standing violation of law & morality - 4 of them since 2014 - were returned; & if Hamas war criminals were held to account & prevented from openly declared intent to perpetrate genocidal October 7 atrocities again & again.

But @nytimes will platform those that claim there is, partaking in systematic demonization, de-legitimisation, & application of double/invented standards to 🇮🇱’the Jew’ among nations.

Then again…they also publish blood libellous ‘facts’ from genocidal Hamas terror proxy of a criminal Islamic regime in Iran, including allegations that Israel struck a hospital killing hundreds 11 days after October 7 massacre…only to publish ‘retraction’ when it turns out it was an errant rocket launched by PIJ, another genocidal terror proxy of same murderous regime. #NeverAgainIsNow.
Quote:
Aizenberg@Aizenberg55
· May 20
🧵A strong consensus has formed: there is no genocide in Gaza. Over 50 leading international law, genocide & military experts have rejected the claim. A false narrative pushed by a minority of loud voices falls apart under factual and legal scrutiny. Detail & sources below: 1/
GrZcSTGWQAApGQj

Jul 15, 2025
X

Aizenberg55 Jul 20 • 7 tweets • 3 min read • Read on X 🧵Many “genocide scholars” alleging genocide in Gaza didn’t reach that view through careful analysis of the war. They called Israel genocidal long before 10/7. For example, Martin Shaw, now often cited, called Zionism and Israel’s 1948 founding genocidal years ago. Details: 1
Threads / Archive

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PROPAGANDIST OMER BARTOV

Pallyweid Reminder.
Within weeks of Swords of Iron, in mid Nov 2023, CNN's radical C. Amanpour rushed / reached out to [unsurprisingly] Omer Bartov with hopes he would utter the G word. He basically concluded then that if Bibi only fires a few right wing conservatives all will be just fine. AKA politicized hack "genocide expert."
7.24.25

___


I’m a Genocide Scholar”… And I’ve Been Prepping My NYT Genocide Case Against Israel for Years.
Rachel O'Donoghue. HR, July 17, 2025.

“I’m a genocide scholar,” proclaims the headline of Omer Bartov’s recent guest essay in The New York Times. And therefore, he assures us, “I know it when I see it.”

Except this isn’t the first time Bartov, a professor of Holocaust and genocide studies at Brown University, has thought he saw genocide, or something like it, in Israel’s actions toward the Palestinians. In fact, it’s not even the first time since last year.

Although Bartov opens the piece by saying that “a month after the Hamas-led terrorist attacks on Israel on October 7, 2023,” the situation “did not seem to me to rise to the crime of genocide,” a quick review of his public record suggests he had been laying the groundwork for this accusation long before the war in Gaza began.

July 2025 wasn’t some dramatic moral epiphany revealed to readers of The New York Times. Bartov had already publicly declared Israel’s actions a genocide back in December 2024 in an interview with fringe website Democracy Now! His NYT op-ed is simply a polished retread of that declaration.

In the NYT piece, Bartov writes:

“By May 2024, the Israel Defense Forces had ordered about one million Palestinians sheltering in Rafah […] to move to the beach area of the Mawasi, where there was little to no shelter. The army then proceeded to destroy much of Rafah, a feat mostly accomplished by August.”

He concludes that at this point, “it appeared no longer possible to deny” that Israeli operations matched what he calls statements “denoting genocidal intent.”

But Bartov’s definition of genocide has always been suspiciously elastic, at least when it comes to Israel. And his eagerness to draw Holocaust analogies long predates this war.

In 2019, Bartov signed an open letter in The New York Review of Books attacking the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum for criticizing Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s use of the phrase “concentration camps” to describe U.S. immigration detention centers. The Museum had objected to invoking Holocaust-era language for partisan ends. Bartov disagreed, calling the Museum’s stance “fundamentally ahistorical” and claiming it undermined Holocaust memory and education.

In other words, Bartov has a habit of defending far-fetched analogies, so long as they point in the direction he favors.

This pattern continues in his commentary on Israel. In May 2021, during a short war triggered by a Hamas rocket barrage on Israeli civilians, Bartov wasn’t focused on terrorism, incitement, or Hamas’s genocidal charter. Instead, he urged American universities to “teach about Israeli state violence against Palestinians” and to feature “Palestinian scholars and activists” in conferences on genocide and mass violence. He has used the term “Nakba” (catastrophe in Arabic) to describe modern Israel’s founding in 1948, when it was attacked by a coalition of neighboring Arab armies.

When the New York Times Needs a (Jewish-Israeli) Genocide Scholar
When The New York Times wants to amplify accusations of genocide against Israel, it doesn’t turn to fringe activists or anonymous social media accounts. It finds a Jewish Israeli professor willing to say it in their pages. Bonus points if he’s spent years blurring the definition of genocide and repurposing “Never Again” for unrelated political causes.

Let’s also be honest. Identity politics plays a role here. The Times knows that featuring a Jewish Israeli lends the accusation a veneer of credibility and “internal dissent.” It’s not subtle. It’s strategic.

But if we’re going to talk about genocidal intent, we have to look at the actual statements Bartov cites. HonestReporting board member Salo Aizenberg has done just that, and found Bartov’s examples either wildly out of context or plainly misrepresented. Phrases like “the enemy will pay a huge price” or “turning Hamas strongholds into rubble” are spun as genocidal, despite clearly referring to Hamas. Warnings for civilians to evacuate are presented as evidence of extermination. Even Netanyahu’s use of the biblical phrase “Amalek,” found on memorials at Yad Vashem and The Hague, is treated as uniquely sinister. Bartov’s case, in short, relies on selective quoting and distortion. (Full breakdown embedded below.)

And when the main Israeli leadership fails to meet even the loosest standard for genocidal intent, Bartov simply pivots to fringe figures with no operational control, like Smotrich or Nissim Vaturi. That move alone concedes how weak his central thesis really is.

The New York Times wants readers to see Bartov’s genocide declaration as a bold moral stand. But it isn’t. It’s the culmination of years of unfair and unfounded accusations against the Jewish state, now rebranded as expert opinion.

What else is new?


“I’m a Genocide Scholar”… And I’ve Been Prepping My NYT Genocide Case Against Israel for Years | HonestReporting

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The same racist Islamo Arab "journalists" on CNN spreading fake news, day in day out. Hyperbolic language based on falsehoods.

  • Nadeen Ebrahim
  • Abeer Salman
  • Karim Khader
  • Ibrahim Dahman
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What is Pallyweid?

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Last edited:
No, Israel Is Not Committing Genocide in Gaza.

July 22, 2025.

By Bret Stephens.
Opinion Columnist

It may seem harsh to say, but there is a glaring dissonance to the charge that Israel is committing genocide in Gaza. To wit: If the Israeli government’s intentions and actions are truly genocidal — if it is so malevolent that it is committed to the annihilation of Gazans — why hasn’t it been more methodical and vastly more deadly? Why not, say, hundreds of thousands of deaths, as opposed to the nearly 60,000 that Gaza’s Hamas-run Health Ministry, which does not distinguish between combatant and civilian deaths, has cited so far in nearly two years of war?

It’s not that Israel lacks the capacity to have meted vastly greater destruction than what it has inflicted so far. It is the leading military power of its region, stronger now that it has decimated Hezbollah and humbled Iran. It could have bombed without prior notice, instead of routinely warning Gazans to evacuate areas it intended to strike. It could have bombed without putting its own soldiers, hundreds of whom have died in combat, at risk.

It isn’t that Israel has been deterred from striking harder by the presence of its hostages in Gaza. Israeli intelligence is said to have a fairly good idea of where those hostages are being held, which is one reason, with tragic exceptions, relatively few have died from Israeli fire. And it knows that, as brutal as the hostages’ captivity has been, Hamas has an interest in keeping them alive.

Nor is it that Israel lacks diplomatic cover. President Trump has openly envisaged requiring all Gazans to leave the territory, repeatedly warning that “all hell” would break out in Gaza if Hamas didn’t return the hostages. As for the threat of economic boycotts, the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange has been the world’s best-performing major stock index since Oct. 7. 2023. With due respect to the risk of Irish boycotts, Israel is not a country facing a fundamental economic threat. If anything, it’s the boycotters who stand to suffer.

In short, the first question the anti-Israel genocide chorus needs to answer is: Why isn’t the death count higher?

The answer, of course, is that Israel is manifestly not committing genocide, a legally specific and morally freighted term that is defined by the United Nations convention on genocide as the “intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group, as such.”

Note the words “intent” and “as such.” Genocide does not mean simply “too many civilian deaths” — a heartbreaking fact of nearly every war, including the one in Gaza. It means seeking to exterminate a category of people for no other reason than that they belong to that category: the Nazis and their partners killing Jews in the Holocaust because they were Jews or the Hutus slaughtering the Tutsis in the Rwandan genocide because they were Tutsi. When Hamas invaded on Oct. 7, intentionally butchering families in their homes and young people at a music festival, they also murdered Israelis “as such.”

By contrast, the fact that over a million German civilians died in World War II — thousands of them in appalling bombings of cities like Hamburg and Dresden — made them victims of war but not of genocide. The aim of the Allies was to defeat the Nazis for leading Germany into war, not to wipe out Germans simply for being German.

In response, Israel’s inveterate critics note the scale of destruction in Gaza. They also point to a handful of remarks by a few Israeli politicians dehumanizing Gazans and promising brutal retaliation. But furious comments in the wake of Hamas’s Oct. 7 atrocities hardly amount to a Wannsee conference, and I am aware of no evidence of an Israeli plan to deliberately target and kill Gazan civilians.

As for the destruction in Gaza, it is indeed immense. There are important questions to be asked about the tactics Israel has used, most recently when it comes to the chaotic food distribution system it has attempted to set up as a way of depriving Hamas of control of the food supply. And hardly any military in history has gone to war without at least some of its soldiers committing war crimes. That includes Israel in this war — and America in nearly all of our wars, including World War II, when some of our greatest generation bombed schools accidentally or murdered P.O.W.s in cold blood.

But bungled humanitarian schemes or trigger-happy soldiers or strikes that hit the wrong target or politicians reaching for vengeful sound bites do not come close to adding up to genocide. They are war in its usual tragic dimensions.

What is unusual about Gaza is the cynical and criminal way Hamas has chosen to wage war. In Ukraine, when Russia attacks with missiles, drones or artillery, civilians go underground while the Ukrainian military stays aboveground to fight. In Gaza, it’s the reverse: Hamas hides and feeds and preserves itself in its vast warren of tunnels rather than open them to civilians for protection.

These tactics, which are war crimes in themselves, make it difficult for Israel to achieve its war aims: the return of its hostages and the elimination of Hamas as a military and political force so that Israel may never again be threatened with another Oct. 7. Those twin aims were and remain entirely justifiable — and would bring the killing in Gaza to an end if Hamas simply handed over the hostages and surrendered. Those are demands one almost never hears from Israel’s supposedly evenhanded accusers.

It’s also worth asking how the United States would operate in similar circumstances. As it happens, we know. In 2016 and 2017, under Barack Obama and Trump, the United States aided the government of Iraq in retaking the city of Mosul, which was captured by the Islamic State three years earlier and turned into a booby-trapped, underground fortress. Here’s a description in The Times of the way the war was waged to eliminate ISIS.

As Iraqi forces have advanced, American airstrikes have at times leveled entire blocks — including the one in Mosul Jidideh this month that residents said left as many as 200 civilians dead. At the same time, the Islamic State fighters have used masses of civilians as human shields, and have been indiscriminate about sniper and mortar fire.

This fight, carried out over nine months, had broad bipartisan and international support. By some estimates, it left as many as 11,000 civilians dead. I don’t recall any campus protests.

Some readers may say that even if the war in Gaza isn’t genocide, it has gone on too long and needs to end. That’s a fair point of view, shared by a majority of Israelis. So why does the argument over the word “genocide” matter? Two reasons.

First, while some pundits and scholars may sincerely believe the genocide charge, it is also used by anti-Zionists and antisemites to equate modern Israel with Nazi Germany. The effect is to license a new wave of Jew hatred, stirring enmity not only for the Israeli government but also for any Jew who supports Israel as a genocide supporter. It’s a tactic Israel haters have pursued for years with inflated or bogus charges of Israeli massacres or war crimes that, on close inspection, weren’t. The genocide charge is more of the same but with deadlier effects.

Second, if genocide — a word that was coined only in the 1940s — is to retain its status as a uniquely horrific crime, then the term can’t be promiscuously applied to any military situation we don’t like. Wars are awful enough. But the abuse of the term “genocide” runs the risk of ultimately blinding us to real ones when they unfold.

The war in Gaza should be brought to an end in a way that ensures it is never repeated. To call it a genocide does nothing to advance that aim, except to dilute the meaning of a word we cannot afford to cheapen.
 
Famine so fake there is increasing global outage such that Israel is rushing to air drop food aid and open the border with Egypt.
 
Famine so fake there is increasing global outage such that Israel is rushing to air drop food aid and open the border with Egypt.
There is no famine and there would be no reason to fear famine if the so called Palestinians would end the war, but since the Palestinians refuse to end the war, Israel is taking extraordinary steps to prevent famine and to feed the people of Gaza who seem almost universally to have no other goals or values than to try to kill all Israelis.
 
At least we know why the MSM won't show these.
As it debunks the Hamas "Gaza-health-ministry" narrative.


%%%


Caught on Camera: Exposed: This Is What ‘Starvation’ Looks Like for Hamas—Watch the Footage
Jfeed ^
| Jul 23, 2025


Caught on Camera: Exposed: This Is What ‘Starvation’ Looks Like for Hamas—Watch the Footage. IDF footage reveals Hamas Terrorist enjoying lavish meals in underground tunnels while simultaneously pushing narratives of civilian starvation in Gaza. Evidence shows systematic food hoarding..
0558bea0-67bc-11f0-8f16-151e8b5ba486__h1536_w2048.jpg


1fb31cf0-67bc-11f0-8f16-151e8b5ba486__h1536_w2048.jpg
Can't you get more than one picture of one place or people whom we do not know at a place that has no address?
 
15th post
Unbelievable hypocrites just like the genocide loving Zionists posting here.
 

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