mouthporn.net
#lebanon – @noneedforbloodpressure on Tumblr
Avatar

Murex Dibromoindigo

@noneedforbloodpressure / noneedforbloodpressure.tumblr.com

Call me Alex. 20s, USA, She/her, Asian-American, Ace-Aro, Autistic.
Not an adult content/nsfw blog by any means (aka no porn), but there's plenty of untagged swearing and some suggestive humor. Art involving nudity is tagged nsfw. (TL;DR: this blog is rated R, basically)
Please do not message me with flirtatious or sexually explicit content. Friendly conversation, however, is always welcome.
If you are a minor, please blacklist the "nsfw" tag before following
Avatar

We’re still dying btw. Bombs are still being dropped (on historical sites and on the oldest inhabited city in the world (4000 years)). Oh and on people who are dying daily but that doesn’t seem to grab people’s attention anymore.

Oh hey since we’re booping everyone why don’t we boop the donate button, that seems like a fun idea! Let’s try it together. You won’t get a cat paw but you know what you will get? To save someone’s life! To provide for someone’s family! To protect someone!

Oh hey fact, Lebanon is still being bombed.

Avatar

This is what it’s supposed to show

Avatar
irenespring

It sent me here

It might be the same program but I don't think so

I googled "un world food program lebanon donation" and found the US version of the UNWFP statement on Lebanon, and the donate link in that statement led me here, which does appear to be directed to Lebanon. I donated there because I think it is the US equivalent and I didn't know where to look further, all other search results were to other charities. There are a few extra steps and I assume there's some very important bureaucratic reason for that (/s). The US just has to act special and get its own link I guess.

This is the link I found, let me know if it's wrong and I will obviously take the link off the post immediately:

No it’s right I think this is the for the US specifically. Thank you for sharing!! Sending lots of love🫶🏼🫶🏼

Avatar

Casual reminder that the Palestine Children's Relief Fund has a 97% on Charity Navigator and you should donate to it if u can. Despite the limited external aid that's been allowed into Gaza, they've been able to distribute a lot of aid internally. And they are providing needed aid to Lebanon.

Avatar
Avatar
yamelcakes
Despite his recent overtures to Muslim and Arab American voters, Donald Trump privately encouraged Benjamin Netanyahu in a phone call earlier this month to “do what you have to do.”
The Washington Post reported Friday the former president told the Israeli prime minister that he supported Israel’s brutal bombing campaigns in Gaza and Lebanon, according to six anonymous sources. Trump himself has said that he has spoken to Netanyahu at least twice this month, with one phone conversation occurring as recently as Saturday.
According to Senator Lindsey Graham, Trump was especially impressed by Israel expanding its war to Lebanon, and told Netanyahu as much.
“He didn’t tell him what to do militarily, but he expressed that he was impressed by the pagers,” said Graham, who was on a call with Trump and Netanyahu earlier this month, referring to the Israeli attack on Hezbollah last month that used explosive batteries inside pagers. Those explosions killed dozens and injured more than 3,000.
“He expressed his awe for their military operations and what they have done,” Graham added. “He told them, do what you have to do to defend yourself, but we’re openly talking about a new Mideast.”
Avatar
mikkeneko

There may be some folks on this side of the pond who think that Republican and Democratic parties are equally bad when it comes to foreign (specifically Israeli) relations; but Bibi Netanyahu, the guy who is actually carrying out the genocide, seems to think there's a pretty substantive difference! And, like, you'd think he'd be in a position to know. Why anyone on the left is in a hurry to carry water for him, I really don't get.

Anyway, this sort of malicious interference in peace operations is standard playbook for the Republican party; Reagan spiked the negotiations for safe release of the hostages in Iran and Nixon deliberately prolonged the Vietnam war for years, both in order to smear the Democrats in the elections they then won. Unfortunately there's no way to go back in time to vote in those elections.

Avatar

Working Masterpost of Charities for Genocide & Humanitarian Crises

Want to help Palestine, Sudan, Congo, Ukraine, East Turkestan, Armenia or other places facing genocide but don't know where to donate? Have limited funds and want to make sure your money helps as many people as possible? I've compiled some resources to help you get started.

Note that this is a working masterpost, meaning that I'll update it as I find more resources. This is also an inherently non-conclusive list, in significant part because I'm just one person. I urge you to do further research of your own

TIPS FOR DONATING

Charity Navigator and Charity Watch are useful sites to vet charity organizations

If you're employed, check out Charity Navigator's guide to employer donation matches.

GENERAL

Resources here are not specific to any one region in crisis, but you may be able to specify where you want your donation to be used

Region Specific Charities Under the Cut!

Avatar
Avatar
airoehead

call your senators urging them to vote in support of this resolution! especially if they're democrats! urge them in your own words about how much this matters to you. if you want to go even further about it, threaten to withhold your vote in the election unless an arms embargo denouncing Israel is made!

Avatar
Avatar
enarei

is this what it was like in 9/11. trying to reason with people whose entire concept of human decency flies out the window when presented with the possibility of causing the smallest amount of harm to a "terrorist", no collateral damage is too large, no civilian too innocent, no connection too murky for people to deserve to die or be permanently crippled. people citing world war two urban warfare statistics to try to make a bad situation seem less worse and not balking at how fascist they sound

Avatar
Avatar
xclowniex

I am making this in good faith and I genuinely want an answer, ideally from someone who believe this.

With the current information we have, why do people insist Israel is committing a genocide?

South Africa is trying to extend the deadline to find evidence of genocide to present in their court case against Israel. Israel also makes efforts to minimize civilian casualties like warning before they attack and try to get as many people to evacuate as they can before they move to an area.

Under international law, hamas occupying hospitals and schools means that they are no longer protected areas and in those places, any civilian casualties caused by reasonable force are attributed to hamas and therefore don't count towards evidence of genocide.

Death toll doesn't automatically equal genocide as there has to be intent for it to count as one.

We can all agree that Israel has committed war crimes and even if they didn't, what is happening is utterly terrible.

So why insist on it being a genocide instead of a terrible war? Why can't it be a massive tragedy without it being called a genocide?

And I know I'll get certain comments from other jews so I'll make it explicitly clear, I'm not talking about antisemites who call it a genocide because they want a socially acceptable excuse to hate jews, I'm talking about people who are not antisemitic and call it a genocide

Avatar
wyf-of-bathe

!!!!!! I have something for you!! Sincerely! I read this article when it came out and I think there's a lot of value in what the author says. He articulates exactly what has made me so uneasy regarding (mostly Israeli) conversations around the war, and he does it with incredible empathy toward all sides. I am neither Israeli nor Jewish, but the author is both, so I'm far more comfortable with showing you his opinion rather than presenting my own.

It's a very long read and suitably heavy, so it may be best to read it across multiple sittings rather than all at once. Mind you, he includes a lot of direct comparisons to the Holocaust... because he's a Holocaust scholar, in addition to credentials as former IDF. Your mileage may vary, but he does know the history, and he's coming from a perspective of affection for Israel rather than hatred of it.

As a former IDF soldier and historian of genocide, I was deeply disturbed by my recent visit to Israel

This summer, one of my lectures was protested by far-right students. Their rhetoric brought to mind some of the darkest moments of 20th-century history – and overlapped with mainstream Israeli views to a shocking degree

By Omer Bartov

13 Aug 2024

On 19 June 2024, I was scheduled to give a lecture at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev (BGU) in Be’er Sheva, Israel. My lecture was part of an event about the worldwide campus protests against Israel, and I planned to address the war in Gaza and more broadly the question of whether the protests were sincere expressions of outrage or motivated by antisemitism, as some had claimed. But things did not work out as planned. When I arrived at the entrance to the lecture hall, I saw a group of students congregating. It soon transpired that they were not there to attend the event but to protest against it. The students had been summoned, it appeared, by a WhatsApp message that went out the day before, which flagged the lecture and called for action: “We will not allow it! How long will we commit treason against ourselves?!?!?!??!!” The message went on to allege that I had signed a petition that described Israel as a “regime of apartheid” (in fact, the petition referred to a regime of apartheid in the West Bank). I was also “accused” of having written an article for the New York Times, in November 2023, in which I stated that although the statements of Israeli leaders suggested genocidal intent, there was still time to stop Israel from perpetrating genocide. On this, I was guilty as charged. The organiser of the event, the distinguished geographer Oren Yiftachel, was similarly criticised. His offences included having served as the director of the “anti-Zionist” B’Tselem, a globally respected human rights NGO. As the panel participants and a handful of mostly elderly faculty members filed into the hall, security guards prevented the protesting students from entering. But they did not stop them from keeping the lecture hall door open, calling out slogans on a bullhorn and banging with all their might on the walls. After over an hour of disruption, we agreed that perhaps the best step forward would be to ask the student protesters to join us for a conversation, on the condition that they stop the disruption. A fair number of those activists eventually walked in and for the next two hours we sat down and talked. As it turned out, most of these young men and women had recently returned from reserve service, during which they had been deployed in the Gaza Strip. This was not a friendly or “positive” exchange of views, but it was revealing. These students were not necessarily representative of the student body in Israel as a whole. They were activists in extreme rightwing organisations. But in many ways, what they were saying reflected a much more widespread sentiment in the country. I had not been to Israel since June 2023, and during this recent visit I found a different country from the one I had known. Although I have worked abroad for many years, Israel is where I was born and raised. It is the place where my parents lived and are buried; it is where my son has established his own family and most of my oldest and best friends live. Knowing the country from the inside and having followed events even more closely than usual since 7 October, I was not entirely surprised by what I encountered on my return, but it was still profoundly disturbing.

[Remainder of article under the cut]

Avatar
Avatar
jewishvitya

Looking at a tweet about three school teachers that Israel killed in Lebanon, and the promoted post under it is an article with "how many rockets does Hezbollah have? How accurate are they? And can our shelters withstand them?"

I can't put in words how I feel about this, so I'm just... writing it as is.

I had this in my drafts trying to put my thoughts into words and now I'm hearing we dropped a bunker buster on Beirut too.

We apparently collapsed 6 buildings in one attack.

Avatar
Avatar
booasaur

The entire neighborhood is just gone.

This is the Dahiya doctrine:

The Dahiya doctrine, or Dahya doctrine, is an Israeli military strategy involving the large-scale destruction of civilian infrastructure in order to pressure hostile governments. The doctrine was outlined by former Israel Defense Forces (IDF) Chief of General Staff Gadi Eizenkot. Israel colonel Gabriel Siboni wrote that Israel "should target economic interests and the centers of civilian power that support the organization". The logic is to harm the civilian population so much that they will then turn against the militants, forcing the enemy to sue for peace.

This post is from a few days ago, but know that the Beirut is still being bombed; things are escalating (NBC; Sept. 30, 2024)

Avatar
Avatar
enarei

is this what it was like in 9/11. trying to reason with people whose entire concept of human decency flies out the window when presented with the possibility of causing the smallest amount of harm to a "terrorist", no collateral damage is too large, no civilian too innocent, no connection too murky for people to deserve to die or be permanently crippled. people citing world war two urban warfare statistics to try to make a bad situation seem less worse and not balking at how fascist they sound

You are using an unsupported browser and things might not work as intended. Please make sure you're using the latest version of Chrome, Firefox, Safari, or Edge.
mouthporn.net