Israeli evacuation orders are escalating by the day. In the past 48 hours alone, vast areas of northern Gaza and Gaza City have been emptied. Today, the Israeli military issued a new evacuation map for Gaza City, instructing residents to move south—without designating a single safe destination.
Families leave as soon as the orders arrive. Experience has taught them a brutal lesson: those who remained behind in the past were buried beneath the rubble of their homes. But where are they supposed to go? No one has an answer.
Now, wherever you walk in Gaza, you see families living in the streets. Along the main roads, makeshift tents—little more than worn-out fabric—line both sides, offering minimal protection.
The beach, once a sanctuary for children, is now covered in tents, a desperate refuge for those with nowhere else to turn. Yet the evacuation orders keep coming. More families are forced to abandon their homes, the fragile shelters they fought to make livable, and walk toward the unknown—toward places without water, electricity, or sanitation.
And the world watches. And condemns.
#GazaGenocide
If you look at the entire history of musicians getting paid,the record label era is going to look like a hyper-capitalist detour, propped up by the monopolization of distribution. Artists and their patrons have had a much longer relationship and that’s where we’re headed back to, which is good.
@jerrevdh I think consumers have never had it better than now, so much so that it’s quickly killing entire industries. Artists have made so many concessions to give power over to listeners that a hard correction is needed to ensure survival.
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