• @Olgratin_Magmatoe@startrek.website
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    9 months ago

    Because historically speaking, mass bombing campaigns has never been considered a genocide.

    Why? I’m trying to ask you what is the fundamental difference.

    Why is forced sterilization considered genocide, but the intentional killing of children not?

    The issue at play here is that Hamas was incredibly shitty with the planning of their food security

    Everybody can play the blame game. That doesn’t mean Israel should get a free pass for shutting off the water in areas they occupy, or for preventing food aid from arriving. They are aware that doing so will lead to civilian deaths, and will force them from their homes.


    Also, see the above links, I edited my comment to add additional support for the comparison to Russia’s actions against Ukraine.

    • @dragontamer@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      Why? I’m trying to ask you what is the fundamental difference.

      Intent. We can kill a million in Tokyo and many of them civilians through the use of firebombs explicitly designed to spread fires across wooden structures that the Japanese were known for in the 1940s. But if we’re not “intending” to erase the Japanese off the face of the earth, then its not a Genocide.

      Why is forced sterilization considered genocide, but the intentional killing of children not?

      Intentional killing is “just” murder. For it to rise to the level of genocide is for the intent to be beyond just “intentional”. It needs to be “Intending to wipe out the people and destroy them entirely”.

      Now you and I can agree that murder is bad. In fact, I can agree with you that murder is bad. But a ton of murder, or even thousands or tens of thousands of cases of murder is not yet a genocide. Genocide is a word reserved for a horrible ethical crime beyond even just “Tens-of-thousands murdered”.