Stop the Killing: End the Occupation, End the Cycle of Violence

Phalapoem editor, 16/10/25

For seventy-seven years, Palestinians have lived — and died — under the shadow of an occupation that refuses to end. Not a single day has passed since 1948 without Palestinian blood being spilled, homes being demolished, or families being driven from their land. The killing never stops because the system itself depends on it — a machinery of control that feeds on fear, humiliation, and the denial of basic human rights.

The Israeli occupation government continues to claim it seeks peace, yet its actions reveal a brutal truth: this is not self-defense, it is domination. The illegal occupation has become permanent. The blockade of Gaza — the world’s largest open-air prison — turns daily life into slow suffocation. Food, medicine, and clean water are withheld as tools of punishment. Starvation is used as a weapon, collective suffering turned into political leverage.

Even during declared ceasefires, the violence does not truly end. Palestinians continue to die — from sniper fire, from airstrikes, from the collapse of hospitals and homes, from the deliberate strangling of aid. Israel’s military control has become inseparable from Palestinian despair. It cannot stop because it has never been held accountable.

To speak of “returning to the status quo” before October 7, 2023, is to speak of returning to occupation, blockade, and humiliation — the very conditions that breed endless conflict. Real peace will never come from rebuilding walls or deepening segregation. It will come only when Palestinians are treated not as enemies to contain but as human beings with equal rights to safety, land, and dignity.

The world must stop accepting endless war as inevitable. It must stop funding and excusing apartheid policies that create starvation and displacement. Gaza does not need more bombs or empty promises — it needs open borders, aid, and the freedom to live.

The killing of Palestinians must end — not paused, not reduced, but ended. Justice, equality, and accountability are the only foundations on which Israelis and Palestinians can ever share true peace.

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Matar’s Gallery 1

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Semantic Warfare

S.T. Salah, 1/04/26


This audit examines how Israeli occupation authorities used official language as a tool of governance over Palestinians from 1948 to 2026. It evaluates how terminology in military orders, administrative regulations, media briefings, and diplomatic communications shaped the description and justification of violence, dispossession, detention, and territorial control, and how language was used to normalise and sustain these policies.

The designation “Israel Defense Forces” functioned as a legitimizing label rather than a descriptive one. The term implied civilian protection, while documented practice showed routine coordination with violent settlers, enforcement of dispossession, demolition of homes, and the application of lethal force and mass detention against a civilian population in Gaza, the West Bank, East Jerusalem, and within Israel itself across different periods. Operations that killed large numbers of civilians or destroyed entire neighborhoods were described as “defensive”, “precision”, or “surgical” strikes, even where independent investigations documented wide area bombardment and foreseeable civilian carnage.

Geographic renaming functioned as a mechanism of erasure. The territory internationally recognized as the West Bank was officially redesignated in Israeli state discourse as “Judea and Samaria”, anchoring it in a Biblical narrative and presenting it as inherently and exclusively Jewish space. This terminology appeared in government ministries, legal texts, and public maps, while the phrase “occupied Palestinian territory” was pushed to the margins or recast as “disputed territories”. The effect was to detach the land from its original Palestinian inhabitants and to present permanent control and settlement as restoration rather than colonization.

The same logic applied to the separation apartheid wall. Israeli authorities and much of the international press were encouraged to adopt the term “security fence” or “security barrier”, even in urban areas where the structure is an eight metre concrete wall that cuts through Palestinian neighborhoods, farmland, and refugee camps. By contrast, the International Court of Justice in its 2004 advisory opinion described it as a wall built in occupied Palestinian territory that violated international law. The choice of “fence” instead of “wall” softened perceptions of permanence, scale, and illegality, turning a massive annexation project into a neutral sounding security installation.

Palestinian identity was routinely diluted through generic labeling. Palestinians were described as “Arabs” or “Israeli Arabs”, collapsing a specific indigenous people into a broad regional category and obscuring their particular legal claims to land, return, and self determination. Within Israel, this terminology was used alongside laws and practices that defined the state as the nation state of the Jewish people alone. In the occupied territory, the phrase “Arab rioters”, “Arab youth”, or “Arab mobs” was applied to Palestinians facing settlement expansion, home demolitions, or military raids, presenting resistance to dispossession as ethnic disorder rather than political protest.

Religious language was operationalized to reframe land seizure as fulfillment rather than violation. References to a “promised land” and to God given rights were invoked in political speeches and settler discourse to justify permanent control over the West Bank and East Jerusalem. This theological framing was used to override or marginalize existing international legal standards on occupation, annexation, and the prohibition of acquiring territory by force. Where law required withdrawal or equality, religious claims were presented as higher authority.

Custodial language was also inverted. Israeli soldiers captured by Palestinian armed groups were almost universally described in Western media and official statements as “hostages”, a term that rightly connotes grave criminal abuse. Palestinians captured by Israeli forces, including children and civilians held without charge in administrative detention, were labeled “security prisoners” or “detainees”, even when they had never been tried, charged, or convicted. The asymmetry presented Israeli captives as victims of crime and Palestinian captives as objects of justified control, normalizing the mass incarceration of Palestinians under military orders.

Technical legal terms were used to conceal the severity of violations. Practices that amount to extrajudicial execution were described as “targeted killings”. Collective punishments such as genocide in Gaza were framed as “operations” with names like “Protective Edge” or “Cast Lead”, masking the mass killings and destruction of entire residential districts under neutral operational branding. Repeated large scale attacks on Gaza were defended in Israeli and allied discourse using the metaphor of “mowing the lawn”, a phrase used by Israeli officials and commentators to describe periodic pogroms intended to “cut back” resistance rather than resolve underlying injustice.

Dehumanising language accompanied these policies. Senior officials and media figures repeatedly described Palestinians as “beasts”, “animals”, or “human animals”, most visibly in October 2023 when the Israeli Defence Minister used the phrase “human animals” in reference to people in Gaza while announcing a “complete siege” that cut off food, water, fuel, and electricity. Such language was echoed in calls to “erase” Gaza or to treat the population as an enemy collective. This was not fringe rhetoric. It was issued from positions of  executive authority and broadcast widely, providing ideological cover for policies that inflicted mass civilian death.

Administrative terminology neutralised control. Areas where protests or home demolitions occurred were designated “closed military zones”, immediately criminalising Palestinian presence and allowing dispersed gatherings to be treated as security offences. Aerial bombardment zones inside Gaza were described as “kill boxes” in military planning but translated into public language as “evacuation zones” or “areas of operation”. Large swathes of Gaza’s farmland were declared “buffer zones”, meaning that any Palestinian entering could be treated as a legitimate target even when unarmed and on their own land.

At the level of individual designation, the label “terrorist” was applied expansively and often without transparent evidentiary standards. Palestinians killed at checkpoints, during night raids, or under rubble were routinely described as “terrorists” or “militants” in initial Israeli statements and media reports, with civilian status acknowledged, if at all, only after external investigation. The same vocabulary was used against Palestinian civil society organisations: in 2021, six prominent NGOs including Al Haq, Addameer, and Defence for Children International – Palestine were declared “terror organisations” by the Israeli Defence Ministry, a move condemned by UN experts and European states as an attack on human rights work rather than a genuine security measure.

Complexity language functioned as postponement. Calls for “context” and “balance” were used to delay moral judgment on clear power asymmetries and well documented crimes. The occupation was presented as a “conflict” between two equal sides. Israeli state crime was framed as “self defence” while Palestinian resistance, including non violent protest and legal advocacy, was described as incitement or extremism. Each demand for more context pushed the moment of conclusion further away, even as documented harm accumulated.

Finally, omission operated as a form of speech. Terms such as apartheid, ethnic cleansing, and genocide were largely absent from official Israeli discourse and much of Western media coverage, even as major human rights organisations concluded that Israeli rule from the river to the sea met the legal definition of apartheid and as UN bodies warned of a serious risk of genocide in Gaza. Where such terms were used by Palestinian voices, UN rapporteurs, or human rights groups, they were attacked as inflammatory or antisemitic rather than engaged on their legal merits.

The review finds that language did not fail through inaccuracy. It succeeded through function. It reassigned victimhood and perpetration, presented racial supremacy and apartheid as security, erased Palestinian presence from land and law, and absorbed urgency into endless discussion. The system remained permanently discussable without becoming politically unacceptable.

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EU’s Values and their Support of the Apartheid State of Israel or Always Being on the Wrong Side of History?

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Sing for Palestine

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‘Israel makes it less safe for everyone’

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Who is the Real Human Animal and Monster?

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There is something rotten in Washington

Scott Ritter is harassed by FBI for calling for peace while Israel’s Lobby overthrows elections

By Philip Giraldi, 8/08/24


But that was two weeks ago. More recently the fun fair on the Potomac turned its guns on a major critic of the federal government’s policies, most notably exercising its proclivity to float a lot of lies to turn anyone who exercises his or her first amendment right to free speech into some kind of traitor who has to be silenced. Many would argue that if the Biden Administration has one major failure beyond losing control over the country’s southern border, it is failure to manage US Foreign Policy in such a fashion as to avoid initiating or expanding existing international conflicts so as to turn them into major wars. If one considers Ukraine and Gaza, both conflicts that could have easily been stopped or de-escalated if the State Department had stopped acting as a shill for Volodymyr Zelensky and Benjamin Netanyahu and had instead created disincentives to continuing the fighting, the case for US involvement as an antagonist is non-existent. The American people benefit in no way from either war and opinion polls make clear that there is considerable popular opposition to the carnage taking place along both fronts.

One thing you can say about the Administration of President Joe Biden is that nearly every week there is something new and exciting to discuss. Galloping dementia recently gifted us with Joe’s 11 minute abdication speech in which he announced that he would not be running for another term as president. He babbled about how he was taking the step in spite of his desire to continue. The president, who is 81 and recently best noted for his failing mental state causing him to fall down stairs, felt compelled to say that he believes that his record as president “merited a second term” but that “nothing can come in the way of saving our democracy.” He also claimed that “I’m the first president in this century to report to the American people that the United States is not at war anywhere in the world,” even though it is engaged in a military occupation and combat operations in Syria, bombing Yemen and conducting counterterrorism in Iraq as well as supporting logistically and with intelligence the large and growing conflicts in Ukraine and Gaza. He has pledged to Israel that he will “defend” it if attacked, presumably no matter what Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu assassinates or bombs to provoke a war against Lebanon, Syria and Iran. Joe ended up by celebrating the nomination of Kamala Harris as heir-designate to the Oval Office after disposing of the troublesome and assertive Donald Trump, who presumably is the one who will tear up the US Constitution and “destroy democracy” if given the chance to do so.

On August 7th, it was reported that Scott Ritter, who I consider a friend, had his house in New York State searched by FBIand police and twenty five boxes containing documents and electronic communications devices were reportedly taken away for examination in an “ongoing investigation.” Scott, a former Marine corps intelligence officer, has anti-war credentials that go way back to before the Iraq War when he, as a United Nations Weapon inspector, declared that Saddam Hussein had no “weapons of mass destruction” (WMD). WMD fear was being promoted in Washington as the reason for attacking and disarming Iraq. Scott was pilloried both by the mainstream media and by the Pentagon’s and White House’s mostly Jewish neocons (Paul Wolfowitz, Doug Feith, Richard Perle and Scooter Libby) who were busy fabricating deliberately misleading information and disseminating it to encourage the George W. Bush administration to start the war, which it obligingly did. Scott nevertheless has continued to be an effective gadfly over war and peace issues ever since that time.

Ritter had earlier had a run-in with the Biden regime in June 2024 when he was at the airport in New York City preparing to fly to Istanbul on his way to St. Petersburg to attend the prestigious international Economic Forum that that city hosts annually. A team of three FBI agents accosted him as he was about to board his plane and they confiscated his passport under orders from the State Department. They would neither give him a receipt for the document nor did they produce a warrant. No reason was given for the action, and Scott has since that time been unable to get his passport back.

The passport confiscation and now the house search appear to be connected with what is referred to as a Foreign Agent Registration Act (FARA) of 1938 investigation. FARA came into being just before the outbreak of the Second World War, when it was feared that “agents” of the Italian and German governments were all too freely spreading their propaganda in the US. In particular, FARA mandates that the finances and relationships of the foreign affiliated organization be open to Department of the Justice inspection. It states that “any person who acts as an agent, representative, employee, or servant, or otherwise acts at the order, request, or under the direction or control of a foreign principal.” Those who fail to disclose might be penalized by up to five years in prison and fines up to $250,000.

To be sure, the U.S. government has recently been aggressive in demanding FARA registration for other nations as well as for Americans working for foreign powers. There have been several prominent FARA cases in the news. Major Russian news agencies operating in the U.S. were compelled to register in 2017 because they were funded largely or in part by the Kremlin. Also, as part of their plea deals, the former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort and former National Security Advisor Michael Flynn both conceded that they had failed to comply with FARA when working as consultants with foreign governments.

While the Department of Justice is now going after Scott Ritter using FARA presumably because he is an effective critic of Joe Biden’s wars, there are some indications that other elements in the US government security apparatus are going after others who have dared to oppose what the White House and Congress have been up to. On August 6th, while Democratic nominee Kamala Harris pledged to defend “freedom, compassion, and the rule of law” to cheers in Philadelphia, Hawaii’s former Congresswoman and National Guard officer Tulsi Gabbard described how she was being tracked by teams of government agents in surveilling her and her husband whenever she travels by air. Whistleblowing Air Marshals leaked how Gabbard had been singled out as a “domestic terror threat” under the so-called “Quiet Skies” program. Her boarding passes bear the SSSS notation which makes her subject to additional security searches and questioning. Her probable crime is opposing the war in Ukraine or, possibly, having recently published a book entitled “For Love of Country: Leave the Democratic Party Behind.”

While Attorney General Merrick Garland is active in pursuing individual Americans for possible FARA and “domestic terrorism” violations, he is strangely but predictably reluctant to go after the most corrupt foreign government’s US-domestic lobby which dwarfs all others in terms of illicit cash flow and political impact. It is a foreign government that receives billions of dollars a year in “aid” and other benefits from the United States taxpayer. Consider beyond that, the possibility that that government might take part of the money it receives and secretly recycle it to groups of American citizens in the United States that exist to maintain and increase that money flow while also otherwise serving other interests of the recipient country. That would mean that the United States is itself subsidizing the lobbies and groups that are inevitably working against its own interests. And it also means that those lobbyists though US citizens are acting as foreign agents, covertly giving priority to their attachment to a foreign country instead of to the nation in which they live.

I am, of course, referring to Israel. It does not require a brilliant observer to note how Israel and its allies inside the U.S. have become very skilled at milking the government in the United States at all levels for every bit of financial aid, trade concessions, military hardware and political cover that is possible to obtain. The flow of dollars, goods, and protection is never actually debated in any serious way and is often, in fact, negotiated directly by Congress or state legislatures directly with the Israeli lobbyists. This corruption and manipulation of the US governmental system by people who are basically foreign agents is something like a criminal enterprise and one can only imagine the screams of outrage coming from the New York Times if there were a similar arrangement with any other country.

Recent revelations suggest that Israel’s cheating involves subsidies that are paid covertly by Israeli government agencies to groups in the United States which in turn took direction from the Jewish state, often inter alia damaging genuine American interests. The Israeli Lobby also has been long noted for its interference in American elections, including spending large sums of money to oust politicians who complain about the Jewish state and its behavior. Progressive Congresswoman Cori Bush, a critic of Israel, was recently ousted after her opponent received $8 million and earlier this year Jamaal Bowman lost after a record $15 million went to support another “friendly to Israel” candidate.

Many of the groups receiving Israeli money failed to disclose the payments, which is a felony. At the same time, even the casual observer of government in Washington would inevitably note how Israel’s various friends and proxies, uniquely, have been de facto exempt from any regulation by the US government. The last serious attempt to register a major lobbying entity was made by John F. Kennedy, who sought to have the predecessor organization to today’s American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) comply with FARA. Kennedy was killed before he could complete the process and some have linked his death to efforts to register the Israel lobby elements while also blocking Israeli attempts to illegally and secretly develop nuclear weapons.

If one is requiring all the Israeli proxies that together make up the Israel Lobby to register under FARA, you might start with AIPAC, the Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD) and the Washington Institute for Near East Policy (WINEP) but there will be many, many more before the work is done. And there is Christians United for Israel (CUFI), which also has received funding and material aid directly from Israel. The fundamentalist Christian head cases that place Israel’s interests ahead of those of their own country finally need to have their bell rung.

One might well suggest that the Biden Administration stop harassing ordinary Americans who are exercising their free speech right to critique unnecessary wars and instead go after the Israel Lobby, which is a major contributing factor to why those wars are taking place at all. It would also be nice to end the hypocrisy that surrounds anything having to do with Israel in Washington. The country is no democracy, no ally, and it is a major league war criminal with possibly hundreds of thousands of dead Palestinians as evidence of its genocidal inclinations. Several hundred Congressmen cheering war criminal Benjamin Netanyahu do not change that. Apart from anything else, that the United States is involved in sustaining and providing cover for the slaughter of thousands of innocents while also pursuing its own citizens who are saying “Thou shalt not!” is an abomination.

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Gaza is Shouting for Justice but The ‘Civilised World’ is Deaf

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Palestine Welcomed Jewish Immigrants from Europe Long Before Israel was Born, but Since Then The Palestinians Have Been Systematically Massacred and Ethnically Cleansed From Their Homes by Israel’s Apartheid.

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Israeli Occupation: The Serial Child Killer 

Israeli forces, a lethal might,
Claim innocence, but hearts ignite.
Palestinian children, young and fair,
Facing death with a silent prayer.

Human Rights Watch, with eyes keen,
Investigates a grievous scene.
Mahmoud al-Sadi, a youth so young,
Struck down, his song unsung.

Wadea Abu Ramuz, a tale untold,
A night of chaos, in silence unfold.
Adam Ayyad, a stone’s throw,
Fell in Deheisheh, a river of woe.

Excessive force, a decades-old stain,
Palestinian lives in shadows remain.
Apartheid’s grip, a heinous crime,
Children suffer in this tragic clime.

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Media Complicity in Gaza’s Struggle

Background:
Many of the US and western media have been reluctant to use the word genocide in relation to Israel’s onslaught on Gazans. Since 7/10/23 they have been downplaying Israeli crimes against Palestinians, and signalling to Israel that it can continue its atrocities with impunity, and reassuring the Bidene’s administration that it won’t be held to account for its complicity.

Beneath Palestine’s relentless strain,
Genocide’s truth, a scholar’s refrain.
Raz Segal’s words cut through the haze,
Media hesitates, obscures the gaze.

Journalistic games, a veiled charade,
Bothsidesism masks the raid.
Prism’s insight cracks the veneer,
Complicity’s echo, it’s time to clear:

In courts and protests, voices rise,
Seeking justice beneath troubled skies.
Accountability sought, a fervent plea,
For Gaza’s truth, unshackled, to be.

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“Human Animals” Since 1948

The Jewish soldiers who took part in Al-Dawayima massacre in 1948 reported horrific scenes: babies whose skulls were cracked open, women raped or burned alive in houses and men stabbed to death.
Victims: 455 innocent people including 170 kids.

Natan Alterman wrote a poem about the Al-Dawayima massacre:

On a jeep he crossed the street
A young man, Prince of Beasts
An old couple cowered to the wall
And with his angelic smile he called:
”The submachine I will try”, and he did
Spreading the old man’s blood on the lid.

Reference:

Ilan Pappe. The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine. 196-197. Oxford, England, 2006.

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