“No one is looking at us or the extent of this disaster or the crimes that we are experiencing in Gaza,” he said. Still holding his microphone, he slid off his flak jacket marked with the word PRESS and unstrapped his helmet.

“These protection jackets and helmets don’t protect us,” he said, flinging the equipment to the ground. “Nothing protects journalists. … We lose our lives for no reason.”

    • TinyPizza@kbin.socialOP
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      1 year ago

      Your right, Israel should cease it’s indiscriminate violence now and call for an immediate stabilization of the civilian population on the ground. That was a big leap for you man. Proud of you Dobby!

        • TinyPizza@kbin.socialOP
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          1 year ago

          Hamas doesn’t care if those civilians and journalists die anymore than probably Israel does. It goes to show how stupid this is because everyday Israel becomes more the murderer, more the oppressor, more the aggressor, more the monster. I’m sure Hamas leadership love it because they literally have to do nothing as proud Israel marches into the history books as the land hungry maniac butcher of the middle east. This is how a 9/11 works and you buffoons are out here trying to roast Hamas marshmallows on the smoldering corpses of women and children.

          • Cleverdawny@lemm.ee
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            1 year ago

            Sounds like it was a bad idea for the Gazans to put them in charge of their government. Maybe they should do something about that

            • medgremlin@lemmy.sdf.org
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              1 year ago

              They took power illegally years before the literal majority of Gaza citizens were even born.

              Edit: My apologies, the ones that are almost legal adults would have been infants or toddlers at the time Hamas seized power. They really should have done something about that while they were learning how to walk and speak. /s

              • Cleverdawny@lemm.ee
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                1 year ago

                Okay, and? I’m sorry, my dude, but Hamas won the election before they illegally seized power, and it’s not like the people of Gaza have tried to do anything about that. Who is supposed to do it for them?

                Yeah, it sucks that sometimes the citizens of a nation pay the price for the actions of their leaders. But who else can change their leaders for them?

                • medgremlin@lemmy.sdf.org
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                  1 year ago

                  You’re talking about a population with extremely limited resources that is literally 50% (or more) children that has been under two fascist boots for the last decade and a half. There does come a point where a level of desperation combined with a possibility of a better future will instigate a revolution, but right now? They don’t see a possibility of a better future. With Israel’s Likud on the other side of the wall and no resources to rebuild after a coup, what’s the point in gambling everything on maybe being able to overthrow the more local oppression?

                  Also, education in Gaza is very inconsistent and most political revolutions are started by people with education and nothing to lose.

        • Zorque@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          Lots of people should do lots of things to make the world better. I feel they’re not going to, though.

  • TWeaK@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    At 8:30 p.m. Thursday, after signing off from a live report on Gaza’s soaring death toll, Abu Hatab headed to his nearby home in Khan Younis where he lived with his wife, six children, brother and brother’s family, his colleagues said.

    On his way, he spoke to the Palestine TV bureau chief, Rafat Tidra.

    “He was so professional, as always,” Tidra said. “In that conversation, he was focused on what he was going to report the next day, how we were going to work.”

    At around 9:30, an Israeli airstrike hit his house, wiping out the Abu Hatab family. No one survived. His neighbor’s houses only sustained limited damage from the blast.

    So was there a Hamas base under this journalist’s private residence or something?!