Bè ragazzi godetevi @FianoEmanuele: come si batte contro le sanzioni per Israele, nemmeno Ben Gvir in persona.
Per non parlare del suo amore per Golan e Lapid.
Pensavo di aver esaurito lo schifo e invece no: @SinistraXIsrael riesce sempre a farmi vomitare.
🇮🇱⚔️🇱🇧 "The entire first line of Lebanese villages has been destroyed. We are destroying all the houses. The residents will never see them standing before their eyes again." - Israeli Occupation Minister Katz bragging about war crimes on TV.
🇮🇱⚔️🇱🇧 "The entire first line of Lebanese villages has been destroyed. We are destroying all the houses. The residents will never see them standing before their eyes again." - Israeli Occupation Minister Katz bragging about war crimes on TV.
Donald Trump ha attaccato l’Iran il 28 febbraio per far cadere il regime e smantellare il nucleare. Quasi quattro mesi dopo il regime è in piedi, l’uranio arricchito è dov’era, e il quello festeggia. La guida suprema Ali Khamenei è morta sotto le bombe, certo: solo che al suo posto siede il figlio Mojtaba, eletto dall’Assemblea degli esperti l’8 marzo, una dinastia al posto della dinastia. Cambio di regime da manuale, lo chiamava Trump. Auguri.
Ma attenzione, quello che si firma venerdì 19 giugno a Ginevra è un memorandum d’intesa, la pace è un’altra cosa: una tregua di 60 giorni che riapre lo Stretto di Hormuz e libera 25 miliardi di dollari di asset iraniani congelati. Teheran incassa ossigeno e tiene la sua postura. Washington rinvia il nucleare e porta a casa una foto. Due fasi di guerra, militare e blocco navale, costate decine di miliardi, e nessuna vera concessione strappata al tavolo.
E Israele? Benjamin Netanyahu non ha firmato niente, anzi continua a bombardare Beirut e si tiene le zone cuscinetto in Libano, Gaza e Siria. «Lo scontro non è ancora finito», dice, «non solo contro l’Iran ma anche contro i suoi proxy». Tradotto: la guerra resta aperta perché aperta conviene.
Intanto il 14 giugno, per i suoi ottant’anni, Trump si è regalato un torneo di arti marziali alla Casa Bianca, 60 milioni di dollari, gabbia ottagonale sul prato sud e un bombardiere a illuminare il cielo. Il 37% di gradimento e i gladiatori in giardino. La pace come spettacolo e la guerra come fondale: del resto chi guadagna dal conflitto permanente non ha motivo di chiuderlo. La prossima la stanno già preparando.
Buon martedì.
(il mio #buongiorno per @Left_rivista)
https://t.co/Pt8TzabwJT
@jacopo_iacoboni Penso di non offendere la tua intelligenza se scrivo che, a spanne, se un iskander atterrava lì, al posto delle sei cupole ci sarebbe stato un bel buco.
Ma Eshkol Nevo chi? Quello che per due anni di genocidio ci ha deliziato con i suoi raccontini di preoccupazione per la figlia arruolata nell’esercito genocida? Un po’ tipo scrittore tedesco nel ‘41 con il figlio nelle SS. Dovremmo commuoverci?
@gattulli65@vitriol24841464 A parte che "terre offerte" è una mezza cazzata che ora mi pesa spiegare (badta wikipedia). Ma è con "ad Arafat" che l'ignoranza abissale fa la sua comparsa, non rendendo giustizia a generazioni di ebrei colti
Questa la dice lunga sulla competenza degli storici dell'arte...
Scambiano il «3» per un «8» e non riconoscono il dipinto, così l'opera d'arte italiana del Trecento finisce all'estero e sarà venduta: «Valutata 38.000 euro ne vale più di 500.000» https://t.co/l3BHgse2TR
@MarianoGiustino@RadioRadicale Ma dove cazzo finisce l europa? Nello xinjang passando per il tajikistan? E perché i poveri armeni li abbiamo lasciati alla mercé degli atzeri solo un paio di anni fa?
One of the most horrifying scenes in human history has been revealed.
When Israel forced thousands in Gaza to collect flour mixed with sand due to severe famine.
A moment the world must never forget.
"Nuestro propósito no es conquistar tierras, es nuestra seguridad. Llevamos con nosotros una vocación moral, somos una bendición y una fuente de ética para el mundo entero".
Isaac Herzog, presidente del apartheid sionista de "Israel", mientras invade tierras de 3 países a la vez y bombardea Gaza y Líbano, afirmó que no buscan ninguna conquista y que son una bendición para el mundo entero.
Han bombardeado a más de 65.000 niños en Gaza y estos talibanes con kipá salen a darte lecciones de ética y moralidad... no se puede inventar a gente tan cínica y criminal como esta.
Leen Hijaz, valedictorian at her high school in North Carolina, said the following in her graduation speech:
"Before I leave the stage, I have one last thing to say. Every single person here has a voice; we have the privilege to use it when millions around the world are struggling and suffering to be heard. Whether it’s the millions suffering in Palestine, Sudan, Congo, Afghanistan and so many other countries around the world, or families being torn apart by ICE. These are not just an issue here; they are happening there, they’re happening right here as I speak. My point is, we’re not given a voice to stay silent."
Corey Robin, a political theorist at Brooklyn College, writes: "The mere mention of Palestine—maybe ICE, too—sent the high school principal, Melissa Moore, hurtling across the stage to seize the microphone from Hijaz, and stop her from saying these unapproved words.
Just look at this photograph: A young Muslim woman, speaking out, and a desperate, terrified principal trying to shut her down, lest the student say something unauthorized, disapproved, discordant with the views of an increasingly small clique of government officials and voters.
It's so pathetic. It reads like a comic play by Václav Havel. It looks like the desperate last days of the Soviet Union. I can only hope Hijaz speaks for a generation that will, one day, sweep all this garbage into the dustbin of history".
I find myself in a quandry. I have come to fully believe that Israeli society has crossed a point of no return. I don't know the extent to which Israel is capable of destabilizing the world. I know that as a society, we are morally bankrupt. No solution is to be found in optimistic dreams about coexistence. "Peace" is meaningless im genocide. Israeli outrage at Israel's genocide is a moot point. There is nothing Israelis can "say" that makes it right. Israel does not deserve the same place at the table as the Palestinians. Israel does not deserve a place at any table.
On the other hand, I have no other place. I am Israeli. I do not think Israel can be "disbanded". Israel is here. It is ceaselessly committing crimes against humanity as well as against human decency (not just within a legal framework, that is), debasing its neighbors, its supporters and itself. But it cannot simply be revoked. Israel must suffer the consequences of its own actions. It must be stopped and humbled. In its current supremacist form, it has no legitimacy, but I would not wish for it to disappear. More wrongs do not make a right. Right makes right. I find I must speak out in defense of this right and this good.
But what relevance do my words have? What is the point of being serially outraged? I don't feel myself entitled to be heard, certainly not in serial fashion. The genocide is being carried out in my name. What weight do my words of anger and condemnation carry? My presence confers neither comfort nor effect on the fight against genocide and ethnic cleansing. I must speak, but to what purpose? It certainly isn't redemption. There is no redemption for my society. I am not claiming its potential virtue. Human beings are never devoid of virtue, but that does not really matter now. Israel has wronged so much, taken and despoiled and killed, has paid it forward even in the Palestinian and Lebanese gene pools.
One voice should be heard right now, and that is the voice of Israel's victims. There is not a single attack on Israel that is not grounded in an Israeli attempt to uproot and destroy ar this moment. The only other voice permissible belongs to international tribunals, leaderships and institutions (with the hope that they choose to use this voice).
When I write or speak I do so from the most particular (selfish, perhaps) aspects of my existence. I feel as though I have no other choice. But I have no illusions about changing Israeli minds or even about my own virtue. My heart breaks daily still over the myriad ways in which overt genocide shapes my present and my future. This heartbreak deserves no pity or consideration. My words are gray and deflated, sad as lonely, little wrinkled balloons. That is as it should be.
I have no wish to be a strategic analyst. There are many wiser and more capable than I am. I am outraged all the time, angry and sad and shaken as a basic stance towards life. This isn't an equal and opposite reaction to actions taken by Israel. This quagmire is my life as an Israeli Jew. The desperate wish I do have is to maintain my humanity in the most literal sense, a framework that will allow me to delay my disintegration as a person. Is that enough?