Urgent Appeal: Israel’s Genocidal Policy to Destroy North Gaza Hospitals Proceeds Unchecked Amid International Inaction
https://mezan.org/en/post/
and
https://daysofpalestine.ps/
All rescue medical and civil defense workers in North Gaza have been killed, injured, arrested or forced out. Not a single trained person remains to take care of 100-200,000 trapped civilians. Please look at this rescue of a little girl (sole survivor of her entire family)
https://x.com/SMohyeddin/
Jabalia in 2012 (now completely wiped out)..this did not start in 2023
Omar wrote from Gaza: ‘The last breath of Northern Gaza The final cry from Northern Gaza. The last night of Northern Gaza. Northern Gaza is being exterminated. Being killed. Being executed. Dying. Being ethnically cleansed. Oh, the anguish and sorrow I feel for my homeland.’
New UN report: Impacts of war have set back development in Gaza by as much as 69 years. | United Nations Development Programme
They film teir own crime of ethnic cleansing and genocide: Nicola Perugini, Italian international lawyer, calls this ‘self indictment’
https://x.com/PeruginiNic/
https://www.facebook.com/reel/
Ecocide in Gaza https://www.wilpf.org/the-
History of the Israeli army https://youtu.be/OCGtHMxNrXY
But genocide is costly: IMF says Israeli economy will contract in 2025 as war cost balloons past $130M per day
I wrote on social media six years ago (even more relevant today):
We face unprecedented challenges that require unprecedented human responses.Here are some now well characterized challenges that require not so-well discussed solutions: 1) human population shooting up from 7 billion to 10 billion soon, 2) consumption of non-renewable resources at an all time high, 3) climate change accelerating thanks to human activities, 4) water shortage in most of the planet, 5) politicians and other greedy individuals pushing wars and arms-deals that ends-up in genocides like what is happening in Gaza and Yemen. We witness the mass of refugees walking north towards the US border or those refugees in Gaza being shot at the border as they try to return to their homes and lands taken from them by force in Palestine in 1948. These and others resulted from a combination of these factors (though mostly politics driven factors) but they are only a harbinger of much worse things to come. Estimates range from 100 to 500 million “climate refugees” in the next two decades. The violent/repressive response of those in political power will only exacerbate the problems.
Borders, racism, and repressive politics as usual will no longer contain hundreds of millions (nay billions) of people who have no or scarce access to clean water, food, healthcare or education. How do we address this?
First we must understand what faces us honestly. Killing and dismembering one journalist or using white phosphorus and one ton bombs on civilian populations of Yemen and Gaza are symptoms of something far deeper and far more troubling. Second, we must rebel against the status quo while in parallel work to create innovative alternatives. Each of us can and must start to address these challenges. It is hard work and it is not easy.
Burying our head in the proverbial sand will no longer be feasible: We can’t be neutral on a moving train. The work we are doing locally (e.g. at palestinenature.org) needs to go to a much higher level and far more urgently than most people think. We must at least start a more serious conversation and apply more serious work towards solutions. It is perhaps the last test of our humanity. The choices are stark. We can continue down this unsustainable path that could destroy us and our planet. Or we can push hard to get our act together quickly as fellow human beings to care for each other and for this planet. The stakes were never more stark.
Mahatma Gandhi correctly identified seven blunders of the world: wealth without work, pleasure without conscience, knowledge without character, commerce without morality, science without humanity, worship without sacrifice, politics without principle.” And it is good to remember this
(Edgar A. Guest)
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