Are We That Civilized?

October 21, 2024

If outrage, grief, and concern were the civilized world’s reaction to the killing of 1,200 Israelis on October 7, 2023, total indifference by the same types seems to be the response to the death of more than 41,000 Gazans, most of them women and children. Here in New York the headline is one and the same, “Israel Under Attack,” never mind the bodies of innocents piling up both in Gaza and now Lebanon. Economy, Society, and ... Hoppe, Hans-Hermann Check Amazon for Pricing.

I know, I know, Hamas started it and Hezbollah deserves it, but we are supposedly civilized people who don’t gloat while innocents are slaughtered. Well, are we that civilized? Back in the ’60s we dropped more bombs on Vietnam than we did on Germany in the ’40s, including Agent Orange, and in Iraq we killed close to half a million Iraqis before “mission accomplished” was announced. Yet the mission was never accomplished, and the neo-cons who moved heaven and earth to start the war are still around urging Israel to kill more people. Yet no one with a moral conscience can ignore the barbarity of those thousands of dead women and children, no matter the Israeli lobby’s Circe-like spells. The latter has succeeded in linking anti-Zionism and anti-Semitism into one and the same, thus any criticism of Israel is now seen, at least here in America, as anti-Semitic.

“Are Palestinian lives the same as those of flies or mosquitoes we kill while swatting them away?”

Israel possesses a mystical ability to always come out of any conflict as the victim, hence I will now recount to you a brief history of victimhood that for once is not an Israeli fable. In 1922 the League of Nations approved the British Mandate, which facilitated Zionist immigration to Palestine. Waves of Jewish settlers arrived and purchased land while using exclusively Jewish labor. They also armed themselves and incrementally dispossessed Palestinians, particularly in rural areas. The rich Rothschild clan had financed many of the settlers, whereas those they dispossessed had been cultivating the land for generations. Hidden History: An Exp... Donald Jeffries Best Price: $9.86 Buy New $14.70 (as of 04:30 UTC - Details)

The 1936–1939 Great Revolt was a Palestinian uprising against the mandate and Zionist immigration. But it was not to be. Zionists insisted that Palestine was theirs, “all of it, unassailable and eternal.” In 1948, the year Israel declared itself a nation, 750,000 Palestinians were expelled from their homes by Zionist militias, and this catastrophe continued after the 1967 six-day war that saw Jerusalem, the West Bank, and the Golan Heights all captured by Israel. When I was based in Jordan back in 1969, I saw the camps the disenfranchised had been living in since ’48, and now, after seventy years, the third and fourth generation are still refugees in overcrowded and dirt-poor camps.

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Taki is an ex-Greek Davis Cup player as well as a former captain of the Greek national karate team. He has won the U.S. national veterans judo championship twice, and in 2008 was world veterans judo champion 70 and over. Since 1967, when he began his career with National Review, he has been a columnist for the London Spectator, the London Sunday Times, Esquire Magazine, Vanity Fair and Chronicles Magazine. In 2002 he founded The American Conservative with Pat Buchanan. He has covered the Vietnam War as well as the Yom Kippur War and the Cyprus conflict of 1974.