Friday, August 2, 2024

Bernie Sanders on Gaza

I, am of course on Bernie Sander's mailing list. While most of the e-mails are for fund raisers for Democrats or asking for support for some initiative of his on congress,, or support for his going arund the country, this was just strait talk as only Bernie can do it. I am sure he would not object to me reprinting it here 


Dear Jack,

These are crazy and fast-moving political times. Joe Biden has withdrawn from the presidential race, Kamala Harris is the Democratic candidate, there was an awful assassination attempt against former President Donald Trump, and a weird Republican Convention.

But with all of that going on, it would be irresponsible for us to ignore one of the worst humanitarian disasters in modern history, especially when that disaster has been aided and abetted by U.S. taxpayer dollars and weapons.

I am talking about what is going on in Gaza.

Now, I will start with the obvious: Israel had the right to defend itself against the horrific Hamas attack on October 7th which killed 1,200 innocent Israelis and took over 200 captives.

But since that attack, Netanyahu’s extreme right-wing government has waged what amounts to total war against the entire Palestinian people, making life unlivable in Gaza and killing tens of thousands. These actions have trampled on international law, on American law, and on basic human values.

Since this war began, among a population of 2.2 million people, at least 39,000 Palestinians have been killed and 89,000 injured — sixty percent of whom are women, children, or elderly people. Most observers believe that death toll is much higher, because thousands of people remain buried under the mountains of rubble.

But it is not just death and injury.

As American media has been focused on presidential politics, children, women, innocent people in Gaza are wondering where their next meal will come from and many are starving. Some to death.

According to an organization called the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification — a partnership of the United Nations and major relief agencies — almost half a million people in Gaza face “catastrophic levels of acute food insecurity” and even more at high risk of famine.

Famine.

In 2024.

Starving to death is not quick. It is not painless. There is hunger. There is weakness. Then there is weight loss. And then the body cannot provide the nutrients vital organs need to survive. There are hallucinations and convulsions. Their loved ones watch on — scared, helpless, heartbroken. Until the heart stops... and the person dies.

Imagine that.

But it is not just the death, the hunger, and the starvation.

Some 1.9 million people have been driven from their homes, 90 percent of the population. Take a deep breath. 90 percent of the population driven from their homes — and forced to find new shelter time and time again as they continue to be displaced.

Gaza’s civilian infrastructure has also been devastated. Water and sewage systems have been made inoperable. And the result: raw sewage is running through the streets, spreading disease, and there is very little clean water. Cases of hepatitis, dysentery, and other infections are on the rise. And cases of polio have now been detected.

But there is more. Oh yes, there is much more.

Gaza had twelve universities, schools of higher learning. Every single one of them has been bombed, and 88 percent of all school buildings have been damaged.

21 of Gaza’s 36 hospitals are completely out of service, and the remainder can only partially function. The World Health Organization has recorded more than 1,000 attacks on healthcare facilities since October 7th.

Can you imagine what it means to be 5 years old, seeing buildings collapsing, people dying, being shuffled from camp to camp, no education to speak of, all while suffering from hunger and thirst?

That’s what these kids are going through today.

It is hard to believe.

When people ask what keeps me up at night — this keeps me up at night.

So yes, as I have said many times, Israel has the right to defend itself against Hamas terrorism.

But no, it does not have the right to go to war against the entire Palestinian people and create one of the worst humanitarian disasters in modern history.

And they certainly do not have a right to use starvation of women and children as a means of war.

Last month, the International Criminal Court (ICC) accused Netanyahu, his defense minister Yoav Gallant, and three Hamas leaders — Yahya Sinwar, Mohammed Deif, and Ismail Haniyeh — of war crimes and crimes against humanity in the Gaza Strip and Israel. And the Court is right.

As you know, the United States has offered Israel unconditional financial support for many years. That relationship must now change. Instead of begging Netanyahu’s extremist and racist government to protect innocent lives and obey U.S. and international law, our new position must be simple and straightforward: Not another nickel for the Netanyahu government until there is a fundamental change in their policies.

History will judge what we do right now. History will judge whether we stand with starving children, whether we uphold America’s professed values, or whether we continue to blindly finance Netanyahu’s war machine.

This is an issue we must keep our attention on, no matter what else is happening in the news and in politics in the weeks and months ahead.

In solidarity,

Bernie Sanders

13 comments:

  1. Makes me think of Jeremiah 14:17-22. It came up in last Tuesday's Mass readings. "Let my eyes stream with tears, day and night, without rest...If I walk out into the field, look! those slain by the sword. If I enter the city, look! those consumed by hunger..."
    All those years, and we still have not learned to live in peace with one another.

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    1. Just as Obama was rather good at echoing MLK and other Black preachers, Bernie is good at echoing the prophets.

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  2. All's I can figure is that the IDF provides so much intelligence about the region that the policy makers in the State Department advise the administration to pay for it with a generous and steady supply of weaponry. And I'm guessing State also argues that it destabilizes Israel long-term if the U.S. is unpredictable about providing assistance to put down terrorist attacks. So we maintain current levels of support and wait out Netanyahu until someone more moderate comes in. Meantime, we try to relieve suffering with infusions of food, water, and medicine, an effort that has not been going too well. The result, of course, an incredibly expensive response in which we are bashing Gaza with one hand and trying to fix it with the other.

    A second Trump administration will halt humanitarian efforts, let Israel pound Gaza to a pulp, and work out a nice deal for Jared to some ritzy new seaside hotels.

    I hope a Harris administration will take a hard look at what we get in exchange for propping up Zionist extremists. Giving in to Netanyahu on Gaza just encourages the Israeli right wing and will lead to more horrors.

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  3. We have many connections with Israel, it's true. The IDF trains our twitchy shoot-first-think-later police which turns us all into Palestinians. They provide software like Pegasus which empowers the surveillance state and aids our international espionage. Gaza has been a beta test bed for Israeli surveillance technology. So maybe it's worth killing all those kids.

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    1. Oh, geez, I didn't realize the IDF were training our cops. Where'd you learn that? I just figured the bad cops are ex military or Call of Duty enthusiasts who can't grasp the diff between community policing and war zone tactics.

      I'm not justifying our involvement in Gaza. We looked the other way when Israel disenfranchised non-Jews and fringe groups started claiming Palestinian land for settlements to expand the borders and maintain a Jewish majority. We should have seen where that would lead and been less eager to support that set-up. But everybody felt guilty about Hitler, so there ya go.

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    2. https://www.amnestyusa.org/blog/with-whom-are-many-u-s-police-departments-training-with-a-chronic-human-rights-violator-israel/

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    3. Well, that's disturbing, though it's hard to know from the report a) the actual extent of Israeli cop training/influence in the US, b) what's in the training programs, and c) what other factors are driving cops to resort to deadly force at the drop of a hat.

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    4. It certainly requires a closer look. With the direction our police are moving, IDF training would be the ideal. The IDF is an occupying force and those techniques seem to be becoming more desirable as our police become an occupying force, already 15-25% ex-military used to killing with impunity/immunity. A friend of mine says the cops are more interested in order than law. I think our whole culture has been changed by the brutal, useless wars we've waged over the past few decades. Also, our politicians have been lionizing cops and increasing their funding. They believe problems caused by societal dysfunction can be fixed by a militarized police.

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    5. On the other hand, my son's best friend from high school is a cop. More in the protector mode than the Rambo one. But he's a big, fit guy. I don't think anyone gives him much trouble. He rose through the ranks and is now chief of police. His town is more Mayberry than Washington DC. But even a Mayberry town has drug and gang issues now.

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    6. We have had good community policing here. The new chief is a woman. She does a good job with rumor control, responding occasionally to the nuttier and possibly actionable posts on the town's social media page.

      Lot of abandoned buildings in the area have attracted meth cookers and unsupervised teenagers in the past. A few incorrigible addicts cause constant headaches.

      The goat and chicken people are getting out of hand. A lot of people got flocks during covid and are just turning them loose now. I suggested the city round up the goats and let them eat overgrown lawns at abandoned properties.

      Everybody has home security cameras (except us), and if anybody comes to their door they don't know, they post screen shots on Facebook with big stranger danger warnings. In almost every case, it's a delivery person, somebody from the water department, the county dog census people, or an Amazon delivery person looking for a house number.

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    7. Jean, LOL, therapy chickens are a thing now. Neighbors down the street have an autistic child. And four colorful hens that are her pets. When I'm out for a walk, they cluck softly. I much prefer them to the little dogs that bark noisily and threaten with an AR-15 if they even catch sight of a walker ( just kidding about the AR-15. They wish!)

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    8. Way too many chickens in the road here. Plus avian flu is on the rise here and spreading to dairy herds. The dimwits are not taking precautions. Our egg supplier out in the country has fenced in chicken run with wire mesh on top to keep wild birds out.

      Not supposed to have chickens or goats in the city limits, but cops seem to be trying to work with people to help the re-home their animals. The 4-H kids took some.

      Yeah, yappy little dogs. Don't get me started on them.

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  4. I don't know any Palestinian-Americans but one of the ladies with whom I take a walk once a week does. She has known one gentleman for years. He has had relatives in Gaza. But only recently has he lost several of them. This tells me that the number of approximately 40,000 dead is greatly underestimated. Activist writer Chris Hedges has lost several friends he made while reporting for the NYT. I think the number is more like 200,000 or higher.

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