ZIONIST CRUELTY STARVES KIDS IN GAZA
the genocide is ongoing, and what else really matters except to bring it to a halt?
With unfeeling evasions, the Biden Administration is no closer to explaining its own participation in the war crimes of Israel; yet they surely deserve to be recognized as accessories to the slaughter and starvation of children. The rest of the world can identify which nations are complicit. They are fully awake now, and know why Gaza is being called “the graveyard of children”.
What is necessary is honesty. With each day that passes, Gaza’s children die of hunger; and more gaunt faces and skeletal bodies appear. Children require emergency care. Banal and disgusting, dismissive language issues from the Israeli Prime Minister’s mouth: an engrossing spectacle that marks deception and smugness in the face of crimes against humanity, without any regret for the deliberate starving of thousands of Palestinian children.
And no memory is encouraged. No reminder of history is permitted so long as the hysteria of hatred is running wild, in the offices of government and the ranks of the armed forces. Bibi Netanyahu’s psychotic government becomes the agent of its own destruction. Israeli soldiers have shot civilians who risk their lives by simply approaching the places where delivery trucks arrived with basic supplies, like flour.
On February 29th
Eva K. Bartlett, IN GAZA and beyond:
CEO of Medical aid for Palestinians, Melanie Ward, in an interview with CNN, named Israel as the cause of starvation in Gaza.
“It’s very simple: it’s because the Israeli military won’t let it in. We could end this starvation tomorrow very simply if they would just let us have access to people there. But it’s not being allowed. This is what they said [on October 9], ‘Nothing will go in’,” Ward said.
She described the starvation as “the fastest decline in a population’s nutrition status ever recorded. What that means is that children are being starved at the fastest rate the world has ever seen. And we could finish it tomorrow, we could save them all. But we’re not being able to.”
Students staging protests and encampments at several universities across the US have called out these institutions for complicity in the genocide of people in Gaza. Any criticism of Israel’s war crimes faces immediate censorship. So what else will define the irreducible evil of Zionism better than its contempt for the way the world sees it? And how can these kids be confused once they have watched Bibi Netanyahu on camera, as he says that "Israel is not starving anyone"? How this psycho can goof around horror is just by denying it exists.

President Biden also rejects the idea that a genocide is going on in Gaza, or that a policy of starvation is being enacted according to those plans Israeli leaders announced at the beginning of their operation. Our brash President confuses Jewish values with the crude values of Netanyahu’s openly psychotic government. Biden ignores genocidal intent and pays no mind to the recent bombing of civilian tent encampments in Rafah, that littered the ground with corpses.
Regarding the rulings of the International Courts, genocidal intent is clearly demonstrated and can be read in the Israeli leaders’ own words. The ICC has issued calls for arrest warrants for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Yoav Gallant—whose public words left no room for doubt—as he announced a complete siege of the Gaza Strip.
“There will be no electricity, no food, no water, no fuel – everything will be closed.”
International Humanitarian Law is important, as historian Norman Finkelstein has recently said, in a conversation with Professor [Bennie] Morris:
If on October 7th you really truly believed that international law is an irrelevance, if you really believe that, then Hamas did nothing wrong on October 7th, because the wrongness of the deed springs from the fact that International Humanitarian Law—IHL as it is called—distinguishes between civilians and combatants….the fundamental principle is the principle of distinction—you have to distinguish between civilians and combatants—civilian sites and military sites.
And as I said to Professor [Bennie] Morris, “if you don’t believe in the law, then don’t complain about what happened on October 7th, because you can’t have it both ways. The law becomes operative when you are the victim, and inoperative, when you are the perpetrator.”
