To this editor, ModState serves an important function. Much more than a centrist platform that approaches discussion beyond hardline left and right perspectives, our goal here is to get at the root of the issues we address. What good are our beliefs if they are not founded on facts and tempered by empathy? In anticipation of continuing this discussion, this editor submits the following musings.
We have waited over a week before discussing the events of October 7th, 2023 in anticipation of sifting through reports for consistent data and misinformation. On October 7th at 6:30 am, according to a timeline by ABC News, air-raid sirens alerted Israelis of the imminent attack. Hamas had launched an attack directed at Southern and Central Israel. Israel was hit by Hamas’ (Qassem) rockets. Israel claims 2,200 missiles hit their targets. Hamas claims that they fired 5,000. As of Friday, Oct 13th, 1,799 people have been killed and 7,388 have been injured in Gaza while 1,300 people have been killed and 3,227 have been injured in Israel. By the time you are reading this, it is likely that Israel is about to or has begun its siege of North Gaza after issuing a warning to the UN on Friday for 1.1 million people to evacuate south of Wadi Gaza.
News and social media sources have been rife with misinformation. One video showed phosphorous bombs dropped on Gaza by Israel—except the footage is from the war in Ukraine earlier this year. Some early news sources insinuated that Iran’s $6 billion in unfrozen funds went to fund Hamas, making the attack possible—yet the funds remain in a Qatari bank account subject to third-party oversight. Most famously, Israel claims Hamas beheaded 40 babies, but no substantial proof of these claims has been brought forward. The statement seems to have originated with an Israeli journalist who admitted it was hearsay.
Yet behind these stories is a general desperation for the conflict to be over—for some solution to be found. In anticipation of this editorial, this editor has noticed four general camps of thought: Pro-Palestine, Pro-Israel, Calls-for-Peace, and (Two-State) Solutions. The pro-Palestinian/pro-Israeli divide has never been a constructive place from which to launch a discussion on this topic. Likewise, those who call for general peace tend to avoid both learning and integrating centuries of history into their call. We will not entertain, here, the groups who call for the destruction of their perceived opponents. And, so, this editor comments on this week’s events through the platform of solutions—whether one is possible and what it might look like.
Every time the Palestinian-Israeli conflict re-escalates, people are asked to pick a side and are shamed if they do not. “If you are not with us, you are against us.” While there is merit to the idea that silence is complacency, it is also fair to say that demanding someone to make an uninformed decision is equally complicit. Each side becomes more polarized and more entrenched in their beliefs with each act of violence.
A few basic truths must be acknowledged. Counter to what some would have us believe, the attack by Hamas was not unprovoked. An unprovoked attack would require a reality where Israel had, at minimum, not bombed Gaza 16 years into a blockade. It would be more accurate to say this is an escalation of violence in a conflict that began over a century ago. It is also fair to note that Hamas is a terrorist organization. Gaza does not have its own governing body, and Hamas does not represent the civilians confined to live in Gaza—many of whom are refugees from other areas in Israel and Occupied Palestine.
In response to those who call for a solution, this editor asserts that a solution will not be reached if the governments and powers involved prevent accurate retelling of history and censor critique. If we refuse to see the truth of the situation or hold all parties accountable for their roles in this conflict, there is no action or treaty known to man that could effectively end this conflict without major bloodshed. Those who call for a two-state solution want to, yet again, force arbitrary borders onto land to which multiple groups believe they have a right. It is precisely this activity that led to much of the region’s current conflict—the implementation of arbitrary Mandate borders onto land acquired from the Ottoman Empire.
The best this editor can do is return to a sentiment echoed in Theodor Herzl’s Der Judenstaadt, that the creation of a Jewish state would include those who already live there. While this is not true justice for Palestinians, it is reiterated by Khader Abu-Seif, a Palestinian citizen of Israel, in the documentary Oriented. When confronted by an angry Israeli man on the issue of Palestinian rights and Israel, he responds that [they] are all here and [they] must learn to live together.
— Smith, Candace
Under normal circumstances, whoever is involved in an upcoming feature (like, say, a podcast) tends to reconvene with their assigned counterparts prior to conduct what we label in-house as a “pre-cast”, which tends to be exactly what it sounds like. You get with your assigned counterpart(s) and conduct a brief rundown of your notes and go over the macro items, basically conducting what amounts to a live outline of what’s coming up.
These, however, are not normal circumstances. This sudden and brazen series of rocket attacks occurred on the cusp of a major holiday, which for all intents and purposes has become something of a historical habit for the State of Israel. This remark is by no means my being flippant over this sudden and senseless loss of life for one of America’s most important alliances the world over. But as I advised my nephew (when he asked), there’s something rotten in Denmark here. I’ve no intention of absconding with the topic here, and Candace and I agreed from the outset that we’ll review potential conspiracy theories “live” when we record the podcast episode(s) following this article. With that, I’ll return to the road and hit the obvious marks between the lines.
I can hear the howling now. Part of the gig whenever you take a stand (or dozens of them, as has been the case with ModState over the better part of the last decade), is that you’re due for some heavy criticism. As I told Candace and Nate earlier this week, though, I consider “Israel/Palestine” to be the “Roe v. Wade” of geopolitics in that, for all intents and purposes, the public allows no middle ground, will brook no attempts at compromise from the outset.
Enters the stage: from seemingly disparate places on the so-called political spectrum, Candace Smith and yours truly. The SOP (Standard Operating Procedure) since 2017 has been a pragmatic answer to the nature of having the shares of our enterprise divided into an exactly even split: Nate and myself naturally reviewed all major decisions together, but I had veto authority within the editorial side of the house whilst Nate carried that same power on the multimedia side. In technical terms, this power-sharing structure continues to this day. However, as we slowly grew to include more voices, and as discussions regarding external investment take shape and we’re taking several “next steps” (albeit gingerly) that may appear radical for those familiar with our modus operandi of the past 6-plus years. “Deputy” added to the title of the managing editor, Nate not hosting every episode the podcast, and now, we’re finally teed up with the opportunity to put the opposition on blast courtesy of an eruption in the long simmering “Israel v. Palestine” affair and we deliver…this?
Yes, this is the first step forward in our multi-faceted (editorial and multimedia) coverage of this round of the Israeli/Palestinian conflict. We are well aware that, as a body politic, the vibe is akin to the scene in Gladiator where, Maximus having subdued the venerable Salt-dog Tigris of Gaul meant to be his own undoing, the entire crowd roars with approval at the Emperor’s sign to kill his opponent. Check. Got it. Memorandum received.
Let not your collective hearts be troubled. Whether you’re one of the majority of our audience who hail from the United States of ‘Merika or the European Union, or if you’re one of the blockade runners who check in from Pyongyang or Turpan, we are indeed gearing up for a fight. It’s just not the one everyone anticipated, where Nate “the Great” Wellein hosts and plays parent whilst keeping Candace “Free Palestine” Smith and Jack “’Munich’ Was Mild” DeViney from putting one another to the sword.
Which brings me back full-circle to the point from a few paragraphs ago about our Standard Operating Procedure or MO (Modus Operandi). Candace intends to elaborate further on the sentiment that Hamas is an organization largely comprised of bad actors but whom the Palestinians feel little option but to turn to (not dissimilar from the original reason for the existence of the Black Panthers). Similarly, I intend to state strongly that while the civilian Palestinian is caught between a rock and a hard place, they’ve not helped their cause by allowing Mahmoud Abbas to indefinitely delay free elections which, fair or not, has given Israel and its Western Allies an easy out from talks by virtue of there being no clear negotiating partner with whom to talk. Nevertheless, Candace felt certain it was as important to identify our role (and responsibility) amidst these crises as it is for her to tell me what’s what. She’ll get that chance, as it’s written in the stars several times over that Megiddo is a battlefield not far, far away at all and the dogs of war know the way.
For my part, I feel equally compelled to say I’m glad we didn’t get too crazy with the Cheez Whiz right out of the gate and issue a bunch of gut reactions like, say, the President of the United States did.
Afterall, the whole point of being able to watch all of your favorite shows on any and all of your devices is that it’s not your little darlings being faced with the reality of “kill or be killed”, it’s somebody else’s. Similarly, this precisely where we again draw the distinction in our being a current events publication, as opposed to being a news organization. The volume needs to come down, as the pan-partisan tinnitus isn’t helping advance anyone’s cause. A little subtlety, a little grace, and maybe taking a breath and letting the other person finish more than one sentence while we listen to what one another actually have to say. Because, let’s be real, here. If you want more of the ad hominem, talking over one another, insult messaging with virtually no regard to what happens to our country as a result of this, if that’s the dialogue you want, as in, you miss it already? Well then you know where to go: literally anywhere else.
— DeViney, J.