Uh aktually, the red triangles are only for IOF goons who are about to get owned not goons who already got owned, so the red triangles should be for the five who still haven't been owned yet.
I don’t mean to be pedantic, but I wonder if “liquidated” means incapacitated or if it means dead.
I mean, I really want it to be the later, but I also don’t want to get my hopes up only to find out a bunch of these guys are actually alive but sitting at home with a broken wrist or something.
Their memories are absolutely not a blessing and it's awful seeing people twist such a beautiful sentiment trying to apply it to genocidal deaths squads. Rip bozos.
I wish fascist scholars would study modern day fascism that's laundered through feel good twee like this on facebook and twitter. I feel like it isn't looked into hard enough and plays a huge role in how suburban psychos go full blood and soil in our times.
Nazi Germany is remembered for films like "Triumph of the Will" but most of its artistic output was actually twee and sentimental. I don't think this is a thing about modern fascism but about fascism in general.
Now as someone who lost her dad as a kid and knows the pain and trauma that this can inflict on a child, I must say... The children of these genocidal maniacs will grow up and one day realize they're glad that their parents died. By the time the children are done mourning, they will live in a free Palestine, or they'll have moved to another country, and there they will unlearn the propaganda that they were raised with. After this they will probably shame themselves at first for being glad that their parents died, and deny or struggle to admit that they feel this way; but with time they'll learn to accept this feeling. They will come to treat the suffering that their parents inflicted on myriad children, as if it was inflicted on themselves, and they will spit on their own parents' graves just as their peers whose parents they killed will. This is my prediction.
Even if you don't believe in hell, an enemy that comes out of basically thin air at any moment and knows the battlefield like the back of his hand is something that made Gaza their hell.
Punched me in the heart like a 5.56 through the heart of a Palestinian child running away from an IOF sniper who has a backpack full of lingerie he stole from women he murdered.
May they rest in piss. Considering how the occupier's rescue helicopter aren't targeted by the resistance and the trauma center are not that far off the front, that is an really high casualty rate for a single battalion, right ?
I do really wonder what is the real global casualty rates for the IOF.
More success to the brave resistance, the colonizer will fall.
I don't understand why they don't target the evac helicopters tbh. It seems advantageous if enemy infantry is scared to significantly advance forward for fear that they might not be rescued when they need it. I'm sure the resistance have a good reason not to shoot down the rescues, but guessing what it is is beyond my (admittedly steeped in and informed by american brutality) grasp of strategy.
Edit I just remembered that they are pursuing a strategy of guerrilla resistance where actually you want the enemy to advance
Wounded soldiers are more of a detriment to a military (any equipment and personnel needed to get them out plus a hospital bed, doctors, and medical equipment, possibly for months, once they reach a hospital, all for someone who odds are won't ever be combat fit again) than dead ones are.
In part, if the Resistance shoots down ONE evac copter, western media will made it major headline news and the narrative will be how the Resistance isn’t fighting by Queensbury Rules and so that’s why Israel’s genocide is justified. Meanwhile Israel can blow up 100 ambulances in Gaza and hardly a peep in western news.
It’s a translation from a traditional Jewish (Hebrew) saying that is the most common thing to say when referring to someone who is deceased. You might also refer to a deceased person as “of blessed memory.”
Basically means that their families cherish the memories they have of the dead.
BTW I get the desire to dismiss the value IDF members have or ever had, but non-Zionist Jews also use this phrase, so it's worth understanding what it means.
It's a common honorific for the dead in Judaism (translated from "zichrona livricha"). I don't know Hebrew grammar but I'm assuming it's an objective genitive, more "may our the memory of them be a blessing." In which case it certainly doesn't apply here.
Imagine having the most expensive gear and rigorous training money can buy and 90% of your unit is wiped out by kids who learned how to jerk off just last year. Pathetic
Well the difference is they're not fighting for their life. Resistance fighters and IDF have both trained under the pretense of asymmetrical warfare. It's easy not to take your training seriously if the hardest thing you expect you'll have to do is murder children.
Yeah it did punch me in the heart, filled it with joy. Surely that's a lot of dead 5 star generals or commanders, or whatever zany rank isntrsael gave them.