A main courthouse in Gaza has been destroyed by the Israel Defence Forces (IDF), according to several Israel media outlets.
Footage, showing the demolition of the Palace of Justice, was published on 4 December by Israel media.
A main courthouse in Gaza has been destroyed by the Israel Defence Forces (IDF), according to several Israel media outlets.
Footage, showing the demolition of the Palace of Justice, was published on 4 December by Israel media.
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The issue is then any and every building can be justified as being a “Hamas building” just because they were the group in charge.
This was a courthouse, not just any building.
Government buildings would make up most of the major and largest buildings in Gaza.
Hamas is famous for brutal and public executions in the name of justice. I can definitely see the courthouse being a symbol of terror for the local population, and something you would tear down when attempting to remove a tyrannical government.
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Er, they absolutely did destroy the Bastille. The revolutionary leader Mirabeau started it himself.
I mean we can disagree on the morality of things, but let’s at least keep the facts correct. You’ll find that you cannot visit the Bastille today. Because the Revolutionaries demolished it as a symbol of the monarchy.
Unbelievable the disinformation spread on this site…
On the contrary, it’s incredibly believable, because people generally care much more about their own personal emotional validation than anything annoying that might get in the way of that, like facts.
All while simultaneously circlejerking over how rational and logical we all are, as opposed to those idiot conservatives!
Snark aside, I’ve started to believed that, any time people get emotionally or socially attached to some issue - which includes their own identity as a “good person” - their brains simply shut off, and it takes a level of active work and elevation of truth over validation to overcome that on any platform like this.
@BraveSirZaphod I think a lot of it’s just the human tendency to be lazy about sourcing.
Once at a dinner party I overheard someone confidently telling the people at the other end of the table something that I’d just told him about 20 minutes earlier. There’s no way he’d had time to verify it but he was already treating it as factual.
No that’s ISIS.
Hamas is not famous for that.
@Stovetop it doesn’t make any sense.
Buildings are inanimate parts of civil infrastructure. They don’t have allegience to whichever administration is currently using them.
Tell that to the Bastille.
@BraveSirZaphod unlike the person above I don’t think that’s a very good comparison.
When citizens affect a regime change of their society themselves, they are in a position to decide which amenities to keep for their future use and which they can do without.
When a hostile outside force is affecting a regime change, destroying civil infrastructure so that whoever is left can’t use it after the war, is a form of salting the earth.
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@Stovetop which the British should not have done. But this is not an isolated incident; it’s in a wider context of civil architecture destruction: