Comment by andsoitis

Comment by andsoitis a day ago

7 replies

> I'm very sorry but advocating for not bombing hospitals in Gaza is not "supporting a terrorist group."

I don't think we disagree on this.

In practice, protests are a mix of people but onlookers take a binary stance. It is not going to be difficult to see at protest a poster or cameras capture someone shouting something like "globalize the infitada! or or death to America".

Complicating matters further, protest organizers and the protesters themselves have more of a fluid behavior and motivations - it is not a club where membership is controlled and patrolled, a protest's mission is usually a little vague and fluid, etc.

And that is, I think, where the real risk lies - you are at a protest and you can find yourself surrounded by others who ARE supporting Hamas even if you're not and you get lumped together.

This happens on "the right" as well. You'll have some Neo-Nazi's in a conservative protest against XYZ, and now all of a sudden they're all Nazi's.

It is deeply unfortunate.

[removed] a day ago
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boston_clone a day ago

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  • andsoitis a day ago

    > Guess what, friend. If you have neo-Nazi's showing up to your protest and people don't immediately throw them out, you are now at a neo-Nazi event.

    Do you apply the same logic when people waving pro Hamas flags or chants show up at an anti-Israel rally?

    If you are, you are doing the same thing as the administration! If you do not, why the unequal treatment?

    • immibis 41 minutes ago

      I've literally never seen a pro-Hamas protestor at an anti-Israel rally, but neo-Nazis seem to be at every conservative rally. Why is that? Is it because conservatives support free speech?

    • boston_clone a day ago

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      • andsoitis a day ago

        > To most sensible people, that’s an easily recognizable false equivalence. Zionists and their ethically bankrupt apologists disgust me, and those views are not welcome here.

        Ouch