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Eradication of Palestine

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Benjamin Netanyahu is about to send 1,000s of troops into Gaza.
But his main objective isn’t just to seize the land and steal resources.
He NEEDS full control for one simple reason:
Because it’s a crime scene - a modern-day holocaust - and he needs to cover it up.

Gaza is littered with mass graves, massacre sites, and countless corpses.
But that’s just the start.
Israel has done everything to avoid the full horror being revealed - killing journalists en-masse and banning international observers.
Now they want to burn the full evidence.
Western powers are also fully aware of the details.
They know they’ve enabled a genocide; armed and funded a modern-day holocaust.

If international observers are ever given access, the truth won’t just be undeniable - it’ll mean the death of Zionism and Western imperialism.
The official death toll currently sits at 60,000.
But population-level data shows the real figure must be far in excess of 100,000 - possibly even double, or more.
If control of Gaza ever slips from their grip, the full extent will be revealed.
They simply cannot risk it.

Despite being relentlessly bombed and starved, around two million Gazans survive - crammed into an ever-shrinking concentration camp.
That’s two million eye-witnesses to Israel’s atrocities.
Netanyahu will want all of them disappeared, one way or another.

Yet more war crimes.
With the ground invasion of Gaza, Israel and the West are entering endgame.
Their real plan?
- Bulldoze the graves
- Silence the survivors
- Erase every crime scene

They’ll build over the bodies.
Houses and hotels to hide their holocaust.
Then just hope everyone forgets.
 
Nice cut 'n' paste. Do you all of your content from Twitter/X/facebook? It’s been on those socials for over a week now. Why not just post a link instead of trying to give the appearance of individual thought?
 
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That video I posted shows hospitals and schools been used by hamas as the IDF found tunnels and weapons stored in the hospitals so as bad as it sounds by leveling these buildings there is good reason for it. Also shows the Palestinians celebrating Oct 7th in the streets, dragging hostages around and dancing with joy. What are Israel supposed to do?
 
This video was shot yesterday in Gaza, I am not seeing starving people, they all look pretty happy and well fed to me. Not the images the media will have us believe. It isn't showing anyone upset or shot in the legs, I feel certain that hamas has been putting all of this to the media outlets.

 
If only we had some real journalists on the ground in Gaza to get to the truth.
 
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If only we had some real journalists on the ground in Gaza to get to the truth.
Well do you think this video is made up? What difference who is walking through Gaza with a camera, hardly showing the glamorous side are they.
 
Pretty happy?
It depends who's doing the writing. I could do another interpretation of what's in the video :-

The skyline is a jagged scar of crumbled concrete and twisted steel, where mosques, their domes cracked like eggshells, stand as hollow relics of a city pulverized by war. Sewage snakes through the streets, pooling in bomb craters, a foul testament to a place stripped of its lifelines—no running water, no electricity. Above, the relentless whirr of drones and military helicopters hums like a predator’s pulse, a constant reminder that the sky itself is hostile.

Makeshift tents, patched together from torn tarps and splintered wood, cling to the roadsides, housing families with nothing left but resilience. Shops are a memory, their storefronts rubble. This is a wasteland now, where the only commerce is survival—people sift through the debris, salvaging scraps of clothing, shattered furniture, anything the destruction spared.

No gunfire cracks the air today, no flags stake claims in the dust. There’s no visible defiance, only the quiet desperation of survival. Men, women, and children shuffle through the wreckage, faces gaunt, clutching buckets to fetch water from stagnant pools or distant, perilous sites. Those who have not been killed yet, and can move, do so. The others—the wounded, the trapped—lie silent beneath collapsed roofs and heaps of stone, unseen while the stench of their rotting hangs heavy in the air.

The Israeli onslaught hasn’t relented. Shells still rain down, buildings still collapse, and the drones overhead keep watch. This isn’t a city anymore; it’s a battlefield where life hangs by a thread. The people here don’t fight—they endure, scavenging, fetching water, doing all that’s left in a place where the infrastructure of life has been erased.
 
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Pretty happy?
It depends who's doing the writing. I could do another interpretation of what's in the video :-

The skyline is a jagged scar of crumbled concrete and twisted steel, where mosques, their domes cracked like eggshells, stand as hollow relics of a city pulverized by war. Sewage snakes through the streets, pooling in bomb craters, a foul testament to a place stripped of its lifelines—no running water, no electricity. Above, the relentless whirr of drones and military helicopters hums like a predator’s pulse, a constant reminder that the sky itself is hostile.

Makeshift tents, patched together from torn tarps and splintered wood, cling to the roadsides, housing families with nothing left but resilience. Shops are a memory, their storefronts rubble. This is a wasteland now, where the only commerce is survival—people sift through the debris, salvaging scraps of clothing, shattered furniture, anything the destruction spared.

No gunfire cracks the air today, no flags stake claims in the dust. There’s no visible defiance, only the quiet desperation of survival. Men, women, and children shuffle through the wreckage, faces gaunt, clutching buckets to fetch water from stagnant pools or distant, perilous sites. Those who have not been killed yet, and can move, do so. The others—the wounded, the trapped—lie silent beneath collapsed roofs and heaps of stone, unseen while the stench of their rotting hangs heavy in the air.

The Israeli onslaught hasn’t relented. Shells still rain down, buildings still collapse, and the drones overhead keep watch. This isn’t a city anymore; it’s a battlefield where life hangs by a thread. The people here don’t fight—they endure, scavenging, fetching water, doing all that’s left in a place where the infrastructure of life has been erased.
A bit over dramatic, I see people getting on with their lives and making the best of it. Children happy and playing amongst the wreckage. People talking to each other and socialising, little pop up shops serving the local communities, you have to have a positive attitude to survive.
 
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