Blood Money Politicians 

Some politicians are doing a terrible thing – they’re getting rich from wars. They encourage fights and wars just to fill their own pockets, and the last thing they think about is the lives that get ruined in wars.

These politicians pretend to work for the public and for upholding human rights , but behind the scenes, they’re causing trouble on purpose to make money. Families suffer, cities get destroyed, and the corrupt politicians don’t even listen to the cries of the people who are suffering. All of this suffering is just a small problem for these politicians compared to the big profits they make.

It’s disheartening to see moral values fade away for self-interest. Those entrusted with safeguarding their nations and upholding human rights and high morals are instead causing chaos and wars for personal gain, like Mr. Biden, Mr. Sunak, and the other many politicians, such as the disgraced congressmen senator shown in the video. The stain left by these war-profiteering politicians on the fabric of humanity is indelible, casting a dark shadow over the principles of justice, compassion, and empathy.

In the face of such corruption, it’s crucial for societies to unite against these nefarious actors.

More on this topic

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Evidence of Nazi Character of Israeli Apartheid

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Palestinian Keffiyeh: The New Crime!

Background:
Over the Thanksgiving holiday weekend, three Palestinian college students were shot in Vermont, two of them while wearing keffiyehs, in a crime their families have said was “fueled by hate.” 

Arabic echoes, a keffiyeh worn,
Symbols of heritage, on this morn.
Walking the streets of Burlington town,
Thanksgiving joy turned to a darkened frown.

Hisham Awartani, a mind so bright,
Math genius faltering in the hostile night.
A bullet’s strike, a spinal cord frail.
Kinnan and Tahseen, in silence laid. 

Media’s echo, a political storm,
Antipalestinianism, a rising norm.
In Gaza’s throes, a toll so vast,
A legacy of pain, a shadow cast.

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”This is for Gaza”

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Israeli Soldiers — ‘It’s Permissible to Shoot Everyone’

Julia Conley, July 9, 2024

Source

Israeli publications +972 Magazine and Local Callinterviewed six soldiers released from active duty who gave detailed accounts of how they attacked civilians in Gaza. 

Israeli military during ground invasion of the Gaza Strip on Oct. 31, 2023. (IDF Spokesperson’s Unit, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 3.0)

Disputing the repeated claims of Israeli officials and their vehement supporters in the Biden administration who have scoffed at concerns that the IsraelDefense Forces are targeting civilians in Gaza, in-depth reporting on Monday based on the testimony of six former IDF soldiers described1 how they were encouraged to fire their weapons to relieve “boredom” and felt “authorized to open fire on Palestinians virtually at will, including civilians.”

In their latest investigative report on the IDF’s rules of engagement in Gaza, Israeli publications +972 Magazine and Local Call interviewed six soldiers who had been released from active duty. 

Medical providers and eyewitnesses have described the shooting of Palestinian women and children by Israeli snipers, and footage has shownunarmed Palestinians being executed while walking along a road. The soldiers confirmed that the IDF has been operating with “total freedom of action,” as one said, since October.

“If there is [even] a feeling of threat, there is no need to explain—you just shoot,” said a soldier identified as B. 

If troops see a person approaching and don’t know whether they are armed or pose a threat, “it is permissible to shoot at their center of mass [their body], not into the air… It’s permissible to shoot everyone, a young girl, an old woman,” said B. 

The soldiers said they sometimes fired their weapons as “a way to blow off steam or relieve the dullness of their daily routine,” with one reservist saying that they wanted “to experience the event [fully].”

The reservist described shooting “for no reason” at times, “into the sea or at the sidewalk or an abandoned building,” while a soldier identified as S. told +972and Local Call that the IDF would engage in a tactic called “demonstrating presence,” in which they would repeatedly fire their weapons to show any Palestinians in the area that they were there. 

They would “shoot a lot, even for no reason — anyone who wants to shoot, no matter what the reason, shoots,” said S. 

The report follows the publication of an analysis by medical experts in The Lancet, who said the death toll in Gaza — officially over 38,000 — could be off by roughly 150,000 people due to the deaths of Palestinians who have starved, died of medical conditions that couldn’t be treated due to the destruction of the healthcare system, and succumbed to other “indirect” impacts of the war. 

Al Jazeera journalist Laila Al-Arian saidthat the confessions of the Israeli soldiers to +972 only confirm what “has been clear since the beginning.”

“Israeli soldiers in Gaza are operating under the premise that they can kill anything that moves and that every Palestinian is fair game for slaughter,” she said. 

Israeli soldiers around Gaza Strip on Oct. 7. (IDF Spokesperson’s Unit, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 3.0)

The soldiers also described “routinely” executing Palestinian civilians because they had entered an area designated a “no-go zone” by the IDF, and allowing their surroundings to become “littered with civilian corpses, which are left to rot or be eaten by stray animals.”

The soldiers were instructed to hide the bodies when international aid groups arrived, to ensure that “images of people in advanced stages of decay don’t come out.” 

S. said they “saw a lot of civilians — families, women, children,” and confirmed that “there are more fatalities than are reported.” 

“Every day, at least one or two [civilians] are killed [because] they walked in a no-go area. I don’t know who is a terrorist and who is not, but most of them did not carry weapons,” they said. 

B told +972 and Local Call that the army suspects any male between the ages of 16 and 50 of being a terrorist, and treats anyone walking around outside or looking at the IDF from a building as suspicious — and a legitimate target.

“You shoot,” said B. “The [army’s] perception is that any contact [with the population] endangers the forces, and a situation must be created in which it is forbidden to approach [the soldiers] under any circumstances.”

The report follows previous revelations from the Israeli news outlets on the IDF’s use of artificial intelligence to target Palestinians, with little regard for civilians who might be killed when suspected Hamas members were attacked in their homes. 

A soldier identified as A. said that working alongside commanders in an operations room and determining which buildings should be struck “felt like a computer game.”

“I, too, a rather left-wing soldier, forget very quickly that these are real homes,” said A. 

“Only after two weeks did I realize that these are [actual] buildings that are falling: if there are inhabitants [inside], then [the buildings are collapsing] on their heads.”

Yuval Green, who served in the 55th Paratroopers Brigade late last year and signed a letter with 40 other reservists last month refusing to take part in the invasion of Rafah, testified that soldiers were ordered to burn down homes that they had occupied.

“If you move, you have to burn down the house,” he said, adding that the policy did not make sense to him in an operation that was supposedly aimed at targeting Hamas. 

“We are in these houses not because they belong to Hamas operatives, but because they serve us operationally,” Green said. “It is a house of two or three families — to destroy it means they will be homeless.”

Policy analyst Tariq Kenney-Shawa addressed those who might be surprised that “Israeli soldiers would so readily admit their war crimes.”

“It’s simple,” Kenney-Shawa said. “They’ve never faced any consequences. They are only rewarded for their massacres.”

Yael Berta of the Middle East Initiative said the latest dispatch from +972 regarding the orders IDF soldiers are given is likely just a fraction of the truth that will eventually come out about the war in Gaza. 

“I am pretty sure we don’t know half of what went on during these nine months in Gaza,” she said

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Don’t Be Fooled by Antony Blinken’s Crocodile Tears

The secretary of state is very good at projecting empathy about the horror in Gaza. But his actions speak much louder than his words.

TARIQ KENNEY-SHAWA

Antony Blinken holds a news conference at the State Department Harry S. Truman headquarters on March 13, 2024 in Washington, DC.
Antony Blinken holds a news conference at the State Department headquarters on March 13, 2024 in Washington, D.C. (Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images)

On June 8, 1976, then–Secretary of State Henry Kissinger stood before a gathering of the Organization of American States (OAS) in Santiago, Chile, and warned Gen. Augusto Pinochet that his regime’s shocking human rights violations had “impaired” the United States’ relationship with Chile. 

Pinochet had seized power three years earlier in a CIA-backed coup that brought an end to civilian rule in Chile and marked the beginning of a 17-year dictatorship characterized by widespread human rights abuses, political repression, and economic instability. The region was reeling, and Kissinger seized the opportunity to call on Pinochet to observe the “fundamental standards of humane conduct.”

But Kissinger sent a very different message behind the scenes. In a private meeting the day before his OAS address, he reassuredPinochet of his full support and that his public statements would be nothing more than necessary political theatrics. “We want to help, not undermine you,” Kissinger said, adding, “You did a great service to the West in overthrowing Allende.”

If this deception sounds familiar, it should. It represents the United States’ enduring bipartisan tradition of paying lip service to human rights, international law, and democracy, all while supporting oppressive regimes loyal to its geopolitical interests. Kissinger is reviled as the leading architect of this strategy by some. He is revered as one of its most ruthlessly effective practitioners by others.

As we speak, Secretary of State Antony Blinken—who said after Kissinger’s death that his predecessor had “set the standard for everyone who followed in this job”—is not only following in Kissinger’s footsteps but fine-tuning his craft, as he attempts to reconcile Washington’s unconditional support for Israel’s assault on Gaza with its professed adherence to the “rules-based” order. Blinken takes every opportunity to urge Israel to implement measures to reduce civilian casualties in Gaza. With his trademark gaze of sincerity, complete with quivering voice and teary eyes, he has mastered an air of empathy Kissinger could have only dreamed of. “I’ve seen images of Palestinian children, young boys and girls pulled from the wreckage of buildings,” Blinken said in a November press conference. “When I see that, when I look into their eyes, through the TV screen, I see my own children.”

We do not yet know what Blinken has said to Israeli officials behind closed doors—that may have to wait until the inevitable memoirs start coming out—but actions speak louder than words. 

Over the last four months, the Biden administration has pushed for over $14 billion in unconditional military aid to Israel. That money—which has yet to be approved by Congress because the White House has tied it to a Ukraine aid package that House Republicans oppose—would be in addition to the $3.8 billion in aid that Israel receives annually as a matter of course. It’s also separate from the millions of dollars’ worth of artillery shells and ammunition the Biden administration has sneaked past Congress in recent months. Israeli forces have used their US-supplied weapons on Palestinian civilians to devastating effect. A recent investigationby +972 Magazine found that, despite Washington’s public calls for Israel to “minimize civilian harm,” Israeli forces intentionally target civilian infrastructure in Gaza to “create a shock” as a means of deterrence.

If that weren’t enough, Washington has kneecapped all diplomatic efforts to hold Israel accountable under international law. Last month, the US vetoed yet another cease-fire and hostage exchange resolution at the United Nations Security Council (UNSC)—the third time it has done so in five months. (On Thursday, the US put forward a UNSC resolution calling an immediate cease-fire “imperative,” though observers noted that it stopped short of actually demanding one.) It also continues to oppose the ongoing International Court of Justice investigation into accusations that Israel is committing genocide. Remember, these are institutions that represent the essence of the international order the US claims to uphold.

Unlike Kissinger, Blinken does not come off as proud of the blood on his hands. In fact, we should not be surprised if, once the extent of Israel’s crimes becomes more widely recognized, along with Washington’s role in enabling them, Blinken profusely apologizes for the role he played and pleads for forgiveness. But the blood is still there. Blinken is just more interested in hiding it than Kissinger was. And because he represents a Democratic administration, those who would vehemently oppose the same policies if they were introduced by conservatives like Blinken’s predecessor Mike Pompeo are much more prepared to give Blinken the benefit of the doubt.

By using flowery, intensely personal rhetoric to push the idea that human rights are a top priority in Gaza, Blinken’s carefully crafted image of sincerity serves to obscure not only the material support the US provides to Israel but also Washington’s active facilitation of the genocide of Palestinians in Gaza. This calculated manipulation of public perception perpetuates a cycle of impunity, ensuring that if there ever comes a day when Israel and its enablers are held accountable, the Biden administration can plead innocence.

But enacting Washington’s two-faced Israel-Palestine strategy has transcended the individual statesperson. It has transformed into a collective effort. When President Biden publicly recognizes Israel’s tactics in Gaza as “over the top” and his administration leaks stories to the press about his endlessly “mounting frustration” with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, they are playing the same game. The Biden administration is deploying a smokescreen and buying Israel time by distracting the public with lofty rhetoric about human rights and concerns for Palestinian civilians while doing everything in its power to ensure that the flow of weapons to Israel continues uninterrupted. Because at the end of the day, protecting Israel as a strategic investment is the top priority.

We are seeing this play out in real time as Israel vows to invade Rafah, where over a million Palestinians were forced to flee in the face of its onslaught. The Biden administration has made a show of verbal protest, warning Israel that it would not support a full-blown assault on Rafah “without a credible plan for ensuring the safety” of civilians. Yet, instead of using actual leverage to dissuade Israel before it is too late, Biden and Blinken continue to give Netanyahu all the tools he needs to carry out his next massacre. The blueprint remains the same as in Kissinger’s day: empty calls for restraint and civilian protections in public, but an uninterrupted flow of weapons behind the scenes.

Kissinger’s style has become a playbook for successive US administrations, each of which has perfected and streamlined the art of duplicity. Those who celebrated Kissinger’s death, who hold him up as the evil of all evils, are missing the bigger picture. Kissinger’s legacy is alive and well. Just look at Antony Blinken

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“This obvious genocide is not what it looks like”

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Survivors of UK terror attacks warn: ‘Don’t equate Muslims with extremists’ 

Open letter signed by families of victims including Manchester Arena bombing says debate ‘must not play into terrorists’ hands’

Jon Ungoed-Thomas

Sun 10 Mar 2024

More than 50 survivors of terrorist attacks, including the Manchester Arena bombing and the London Bridge attacks, have signed an open letter warning politicians to stop conflating British Muslims with extremism.

The signatories include Rebecca Rigby, the widow of soldier Lee Rigby who was murdered in south-east London in 2013, and Paul Price, who lost his partner, Elaine McIver, in the Manchester Arena attack in 2017. They caution against comments which play “into the hands of terrorists”.

Survivors of terrorist atrocities in the UK and overseas driven by Islamic extremism say they are “only too aware” of the threat and its devastating impact. They say fighting and defeating the threat should be a national priority.

The open letter, coordinated by Survivors Against Terror, a network of survivors of attacks in Britain and British people who have been affected overseas, says: “To defeat this threat the single most important thing we can do is to isolate the extremists and the terrorists from the vast majority of British Muslims who deplore such violence.

“In recent weeks there have been too many cases where politicians and others have failed to do this; in some cases equating being Muslim with being an extremist, facilitating anti-Muslim hate or failing to challenge it.”

The former Conservative party deputy chair Lee Anderson was suspended from the party after refusing to apologise for remarks about London mayor Sadiq Khan made on GB News. His comments that the mayor was under the control of Islamists were criticised by the Labour party as “unambiguously Islamophobic”.

Former home secretary Suella Braverman faced criticism after writing an article in the Telegraph last month which said “the Islamists, the extremists and the anti-Semites are in charge now”.

Humza Yousaf, first minister of Scotland, warned Braverman was stoking “the fires of racial and religious tensions”.

Paul Price, who was badly injured in the Manchester Arena attack in May 2017, said terrorists exploited division, and politicians should focus on what unites communities. “Terrorists want people to take sides and for people to get angry,” he said. “It should be everyone against the terrorists.”

Rebecca Rigby, from West Yorkshire, whose husband Lee was murdered near a barracks in May 2013, said: “Lee’s death was used by some to drive hatred against Muslims in general. That’s not what Lee would have wanted and it’s not what our family wants.

“If we are serious about tackling terrorism the most important thing we can do is differentiate between the vast majority of Muslims who are our peaceful neighbours, and the small number of extremists.”

Darryn Frost, who used a narwhal tusk to help tackle the terrorist behind the London Bridge attack in 2019, said: “I think it’s dangerous when any of our leaders marginalise communities and paint a very broad brush. People need to consider the power of their words because they have the power to incite further hatred.”

The letter is published in advance of the fifth anniversary, on 15 March, of the far-right terrorist attack on two mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand, in which 51 people were killed. The letter’s signatories stress the importance of not fuelling anti-Muslim hate.

Brendan Cox, co-founder of Survivors Against Terror, has warned of the risk of politicising extremism.

“Anyone using the issue to seek tactical party advantage risks undermining that consensus and making our efforts less successful,” he said. “The message from survivors of attacks is clear: you can play politics all you like, but not with the safety of our country.”

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Falsely Safe

Voice of Palestine, 27/05/24

Who shelters the frightened with mere tents,
Against missiles of death so cruel?
Who builds a refuge for families,
From a fate they can’t outrule?

Their home in rubble, hope in flight,
In falsely safe Rafah, they sought peace,
They set up a tent, slept through the night,
But never saw the dawn release.

The tent, a grave where dreams were stilled,
A fragile shield that couldn’t save,
In silence now, their story’s told,
Of lives erased, of hopes betrayed.

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From Manchester with love

Voice of Palestine

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