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442214


Date: October 11, 2024 at 03:36:12
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: “Our democracy is at stake” has been an ongoing refrain this election

URL: https://www.counterpunch.org/2024/10/10/the-mounting-costs-of-ennabling-israels-war-on-gaza/


Nathaniel St. Clair@NatStClair

“Our democracy is at stake” has been an ongoing refrain this election season.
But it’s also a threat to our democracy when elected officials ignore the vast
majority of their constituents who have rightly demanded a permanent
ceasefire and arms embargo.

OCTOBER 10, 2024
The Mounting Costs of Enabling Israel’s Genocide in Gaza
FARRAH HASSEN

Photograph by Nathaniel St. Clair
"The U.S. government often claims to stand for the rule of law, but this past
year has made it painfully clear that this doesn’t apply to Palestinians. The
moral, financial, and security costs of U.S. support for Israel’s rapidly expanding
wars are adding up for Americans, too.

Since October 7, 2023, around 42,000 Palestinians have been killed in Gaza,
plus over 700 more in the West Bank. Over 1,100 Israelis have been killed, too.
These tragedies are a direct consequence of Israel’s illegal, U.S.-backed
occupation of Palestinian territory and its war on Gaza, which must both end
immediately.

From the mass killing and maiming of Palestinian civilians to the forced
starvation and deliberate destruction of Gaza’s health infrastructure,
Palestinians and international experts have warned from the start that Israel is
committing a “textbook case of genocide” in Gaza.

Despite the International Court of Justice finding genocide “plausible” and
calling on Israel to prevent it and ensure the delivery of lifesaving aid, Israel —
like the U.S. — has ignored all of the court’s orders.

The U.S. has enabled this ongoing genocide and other crimes by providing
unconditional support for Israel despite mounting atrocities. This has
emboldened Israel to expand its assault to Lebanon, Syria, and Yemen as it
threatens to drag the U.S. into a wider war with Iran.

None of this is inevitable.

As Israel’s chief supplier of arms, the U.S. has sent billions worth of high-
powered explosives since October 7, which have turned up at massacre after
massacre committed by Israel’s military. That’s a violation of our own laws
barring assistance to forces that commit human rights abuses or block delivery
of humanitarian aid, as Israel has done.

“Our democracy is at stake” has been an ongoing refrain this election season.
But it’s also a threat to our democracy when elected officials ignore the vast
majority of their constituents who have rightly demanded a permanent
ceasefire and arms embargo on Israel. Instead of listening to voters, our leaders
have backed violent crackdowns on protests, which threatens our First
Amendment rights.

The costs of war always reverberate at home. Our policymakers have
expressed support for the war using racist, dehumanizing rhetoric, which has
directly contributed to rising anti-Palestinian, Arab, and Muslim hate crimes,
harassment, and discrimination.

And even though most Americans oppose Israel’s war on Gaza, we’re still
paying for it.

Brown University’s Costs of War Project estimates that over the past year, the
U.S. has spent at least $22.76 billion and counting on Israel’s onslaught in Gaza
and other U.S. military operations in the surrounding region. In August, the
Biden administration approved an additional $20 billion in arms sales to Israel.
All this comes on top of the $3.8 billion the U.S. already sends Israel in military
aid each year. That same $3.8 billion a year could fund 29,915 registered
nurses, 394,738 public housing units, or 39,158 elementary school teachers,
according to the National Priorities Project.

As our post-COVID safety net continues to crumble, more people are left
unable to afford housing, health care, groceries, education, and other basic
necessities. Compounding these challenges, more states are battling climate
disasters. We desperately need those funds at home, not funding wars and
lawlessness abroad.

Nevertheless, many of our elected officials would rather support the military-
industrial complex than their own constituents. In a particularly flagrant
example, Republican Senator Lindsey Graham recently appeared on Fox News
to plead for more U.S. weapons for Israel in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene,
which had ravaged his home state of South Carolina.

More than statistics, law, and politics, our nation’s role in the Palestinian
genocide should shake our conscience and cause us to question its morality.

Are human rights and justice good for some but not others? And can we
recognize our complicity in this genocide and not take action to end it?
However one answers these questions, our shared humanity hangs in the
balance.

Farrah Hassen, J.D., is a writer, policy analyst, and adjunct professor in the
Department of Political Science at Cal Poly Pomona."


Responses:
[442215] [442219]


442215


Date: October 11, 2024 at 03:44:22
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: our shared humanity hangs in the balance


And even though most Americans oppose Israel’s war on Gaza, we’re
still paying for it.

Brown University’s Costs of War Project estimates that over the past year, the
U.S. has spent at least $22.76 billion and counting on Israel’s onslaught in Gaza
and other U.S. military operations in the surrounding region. In August, the
Biden administration approved an additional $20 billion in arms sales to Israel.

All this comes on top of the $3.8 billion the U.S. already sends Israel in military
aid each year. That same $3.8 billion a year could fund 29,915 registered
nurses, 394,738 public housing units, or 39,158 elementary school teachers,
according to the National Priorities Project.

As our post-COVID safety net continues to crumble, more people are left
unable to afford housing, health care, groceries, education, and other basic
necessities. Compounding these challenges, more states are battling climate
disasters. We desperately need those funds at home, not funding wars and
lawlessness abroad.


Responses:
[442219]


442219


Date: October 11, 2024 at 10:05:12
From: mitra, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: our shared humanity hangs in the balance




There is a difference in "opposing the war in Gaza" and
opposition to overstepping boundaries.

Israel has a right to defend themselves, but not starve
innocent people, on the way to crimes against humanity

This is an important distinction. Israel has been and
continues to be under attack, they have a duty to
defend their people.




Responses:
None


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