When something bad happens, especially involving anything both emotional and political, it is nice to take a deep breath and think things through.
There is no shortage of opinions out there when it comes to the latest Israeli/ Palestinian conflict. Maybe that’s not even the correct way to describe the conflict, but it’s certainly the way it is being widely portrayed.
There is a saying that the first casualty in war is truth. There have certainly been many pieces of propaganda and outright lies coming from all sides in this latest conflict.
It all “started” on October 7, 2023 when a group of Hamas militants attacked the Israelis, took over an Israeli military base, captured hostages, and killed many innocent people. The number of people killed that day is estimated to be well over 1,000.
Of course, the world didn’t start on October 7th, and this conflict between the Jews of Israel and the Palestinians did not start on October 7th. This may have brought it to another level, but conflict and violence goes back many decades. Maybe it is more accurate to say centuries, but it at least goes back to the formation of Israel in 1948.
Regarding the attack on October 7th, the first notable thing is just how “successful” the attack was from the perspective of the terrorists (and the term terrorist does seem to be an accurate use of the term in this situation).
The Israeli government is supposed to have one of the best (if not the best) intelligence agencies in existence. They are supposed to be very sophisticated. The Israeli government is supposed to have superior military defense. Yet, a bunch of guys with paragliders flew over a wall and issued a violent and deadly attack.
How could the Israeli government not have had warning of an impending attack? And once it started, how could they have been so slow to defend against it?
Either elements of the Israeli government knew this attack was going to happen and allowed it to happen, or else the Israeli government is completely inept. Pick your choice, but you really have to come to one of those two conclusions. There doesn’t seem to be a third innocent option.
Israel’s 9/11 – In More Ways Than One
We are hearing that this was Israel’s version of 9/11. As a percentage of their population, it is worse than 9/11 was for the United States.
The comparison to 9/11 is apt, but not just because of a surprise terrorist attack that caused a lot of death. There are many other similarities. As mentioned above, it was either known it would happen, or it was a complete failure of government to prevent it.
If you believe that two airplanes destroyed three skyscrapers in New York City on 9/11, then you are in the camp that the government is just incompetent. If you believe that explosives helped bring down those buildings, then you can only conclude that it was an inside job. So, you either have an evil government or an incompetent government, or some combination of the two.
Unfortunately, the comparison with 9/11 goes much farther. These were both emotional events, and rightly so. The problem is that people immediately seek revenge, but the revenge is often misguided. The revenge isn’t necessarily against those who perpetrated the actual act of terror.
The U.S. government ended up killing a much greater number of people in Afghanistan than were killed in the U.S. on 9/11. If you include Iraq (because 9/11 was partially used as a selling point for invading Iraq in 2003), then the numbers are even more disproportionate.
Even if you agree with “an eye for an eye”, it still wouldn’t apply if the U.S. government killed 3,000 people in Afghanistan for the almost 3,000 who died on 9/11. The problem is that it is somebody else’s eye. Most of the people killed in Afghanistan had absolutely nothing to do with 9/11.
And so it goes in Israel and the Gaza strip. Most of the Palestinians who have died and will die from Israeli bombs had nothing to do with the attacks on Israel. Maybe a lot of them secretly cheered for it or sympathized with those committing the acts, but they didn’t do it.
The Israeli State
Let’s remember (or learn) several facts about the Israeli government.
First, it was the Israeli government, including Benjamin Netanyahu, that helped create and encourage Hamas in order to give opposition to the Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO). The U.S. government likely helped fund the creation of Hamas. You could say this is another similarity with 9/11 in the U.S., where the U.S. government helped fund Osama Bin Laden back in the day.
An American may find a lot more in common with an Israeli Jew than a Muslim in the Middle East. Still, this doesn’t make the state somehow good. Just as there are many evil people in the U.S. government, there are evil people in the Israeli government who seek power and only pretend to care about the citizenry.
There is strict gun control in Israel. How do you think Hamas was able rip people from their homes without much of a fight? If Hamas had landed in rural Alabama, or even in suburban Georgia, how far do you think they would have gotten?
Apparently, many Jews in Israel did not learn the right lessons from Germany of the 1930s. They thought because they lived under a Jewish state that they were safe. But the Jewish state disarmed them in a similar way to Hitler. The lesson wasn’t to live disarmed under a government that favored your religion. The lesson should have been to not be disarmed.
And before we get to how the Israeli government treats the people in Gaza, let’s recall how the Israeli government treated the Jews in Israel during COVID hysteria. They were under strict lockdowns and vaccine mandates.
So just as Americans shouldn’t forget what was done to them by their own government, the Israelis should also not forget. A tyrannical regime does not all of a sudden become good just because you were attacked by outsiders.
Radical Viewpoints
It is frustrating watching reports on the establishment news outlets in the U.S. because it seems that most people who get the attention are on one “side” or the other. You will see people protesting the treatment of Palestinians while saying things like, “the Israelis had it coming”.
Maybe the attacks were somewhat predictable. You could say it was a form of blowback and that it wasn’t surprising. But it isn’t correct to say that “they” had it coming. Most of the people who got killed that day never had a hand in killing Palestinians or were directly responsible for treating them like second-class citizens.
Then you have the other side, where American politicians and media pundits are saying things like, “Israel must respond quickly and forcefully to these attacks.” Or you get the even more extreme people like Nikki Haley and Lindsey Graham who are ready to attack Iran and have Israel commit genocide against the Palestinians.
While more Americans tend to fall in the pro-Israel camp, the media likes to put out these extreme viewpoints to stir up more emotions and for people to turn over their consent to the state.
Unfortunately, what you rarely hear are people advocating for caution and peace. It’s like there is no “side” just for advocating peace and not killing innocent people.
The Conditions for Blowback
It doesn’t matter if you take a side. It doesn’t matter your religion. It doesn’t matter your understanding of history and which group you think is at fault or more at fault. You can still recognize that the Palestinians in Gaza are treated like second-class citizens by the Israeli state.
The people in Gaza are treated like prisoners to a large degree. They are barricaded in by a wall. With the latest conflict, the Israelis have shut off power to Gaza and stopped shipments of food and medicine. Just the fact that Israel has the power to do this without blowing up any electrical plants should tell you a lot.
Maybe you think that the Palestinians are animals and are therefore treated like animals. But when you cage an animal and don’t treat the animal well, the animal will react if given a chance.
The Palestinians are human beings. Most of them aren’t terrorists. Like most other people, they want to live their lives according to their own values. They want to have freedom to do what they want to do as long as they don’t harm others.
Most Americans couldn’t understand on 9/11/2001 why people would kill themselves just to damage some buildings and kill innocent people. The state told us that the terrorists hated us for our freedom. But the American people are largely ignorant of the crimes committed by their own government, or they don’t follow through the implications of the foreign policy.
If your friends and family are on the receiving end of U.S. bomb strikes, you can start to understand the anger and desperation.
The Palestinians are a desperate people. They don’t have much of a life. Yet, most of them don’t resort to becoming terrorists. But it shouldn’t be surprising when a small number of them do. It also shouldn’t be surprising that people who vow to enact revenge on the oppressors are given support by those who are being oppressed.
When you have a slave/ master type of relationship and the slave is not free to voluntarily leave, then it shouldn’t be surprising when there is blowback. If the slave sits back and accepts his condition, then there is seeming peace. It is when the slave becomes desperate and starts to resist that you might see violence. It doesn’t mean that the slave should be violent towards anyone else other than the slaveholder, but it isn’t surprising to see violence when they are collective groups and one group acts as the slaves and one group acts as the slaveholders.
Back in the U.S.
This renewed intense conflict in the Middle East is happening just as public opinion was turning against continued funding for the conflict in Ukraine.
Unfortunately, the Republican base and MAGA group that had become better on foreign policy sank right back into its old ways as soon as Israel was attacked. Many of the people who said that we need to stop sending money to Ukraine and to take care of America first all of a sudden flipped the script with Israel. Now we have to do everything to support Israel, which basically means sending money and weapons, just the same as Ukraine.
It is disappointing but not surprising. Fox News was already bad, but at least you could get a little variety of viewpoints there. Now it is absolutely terrible. It is as if we are back in 2001 after 9/11 or in 2003 with the Iraq War.
Some of the hardcore political leftists/ socialists understand the plight of the Palestinian people, but it is difficult to associate with these people. And those who speak up often fail. They make the same mistake on the other side. Instead of just preaching for peace, they will say things like, “They had it coming.” As if the people attending a music festival or lying in bed in their house had it coming and deserved death.
Some so-called libertarians have been bad on the issue as well, all of a sudden adopting a collectivist attitude. They think the attack on Israel justifies blowing up innocent people in Gaza.
The only sensible things are coming from hardcore libertarians. There are probably a few people out there who are preaching peace on both sides, but it either doesn’t get reported or it isn’t articulated well and has a slant to it.
There have been protests coming from both sides in the U.S. and many words have been exchanged by both sides. Unfortunately, it is mostly pro Israel or pro Palestinian. There are few demonstrators who are just demanding peace and liberty.
The good news is that this happens in the United States and it is mostly peaceful. Even though many of the demonstrators are not advocating for peace, they are being peaceful themselves. If these groups collided somewhere else, it probably wouldn’t be peaceful.
Still, coming from U.S. politicians and U.S. media, it is almost universal support for Israel. This means support for Israel bombing the Palestinians. When virtually everyone in the ruling elite are agreeing on something and you find yourself agreeing with them, you should check your own arguments and realize that something bad is happening.
A Libertarian View of Peace and Self-Defense
A lot of people have proclaimed that Israel has a right to defend itself. The problem is, when this is spoken by most people about a country, it is a collectivist notion of self-defense.
When this is said, it typically means that Palestinians killed a bunch of Israelis, so Israel has the right to kill a bunch of Palestinians.
If Person A is trying to kill Person B, then Person A has a right to defend himself.
If Person A from Country A kills or tries to kill someone from Country B, it gives the right of Country B to defend itself from Person A from Country A, which could include killing person A from Country A. But it doesn’t give the right to Country B to kill Persons B, C, and D from Country A.
This works both ways in the Israeli/ Palestinian conflict.
The only proper libertarian position is that violence is never acceptable unless it is in self-defense. But it has to be in self-defense against those who are actually using violence at the other end.
If Hamas had only captured an Israeli military base and attacked military soldiers, there could be a legitimate debate on this and whether it should be classified as self-defense by Hamas and the Palestinians. But the attack by Hamas killed many innocent people, which makes it unacceptable from a libertarian viewpoint.
If the Israeli government retaliated only against those who attacked or helped orchestrate the attacks against innocent people, then this would be legitimate self-defense. But the Israeli state is dropping bombs and blowing up buildings, which kills innocent people. This, too, is unacceptable.
(Many people refer to “women and children”, but the term “innocent people” is more accurate. There are many innocent men who should not be targets just because they are men.)
The only long-term solution to this conflict has to be a libertarian solution. The people of Israel need a drastically scaled back government that only uses violence in actual self-defense. The Palestinians must be free to declare independence from Israel. At the very least, they must be free to immigrate out of the prison that is Gaza.
This conflict goes back many decades. There are Palestinians today who had parents and grandparents who may have had land seized from them many decades ago. It becomes difficult to right these wrongs. But if you allow them to be free going forward, then most of them will get over the recent wrongdoings in history at least enough to move forward and not promote the use of violence.
A peaceful coexistence with respect for property and self-governance is the only way to move forward with a chance for lasting peace. The only thing we can do is to not condone any violence used against innocent people and to advocate for liberty.