…that page literally isn’t loading on my computer. I’ve just tried two different browsers.
But on the homepage it says this:
As I said: everyone uses the same numbers. Even the people that you cited.
And the page you linked to finally loaded. And the context you are missing:
The verification process is something that takes time. Maybe weeks. It could be months. But as the Intercept points out: in previous conflicts, the numbers from the MOH and the numbers after verification are always broadly the same.
The MOH numbers are not propaganda. They are a broadly accurate snapshot, most probably an undercount, of the number of Palestinians that have died so far in the conflict. The numbers are being used by the very agency you cited, and I’m comfortable to use them here.
But thanks for the update. 15,500 dead. 41,000 wounded.
…if the US State Department can take it at face value, and if the very organization you cited can take it at face value, with all the appropriate caveats in place, I can take it at face value as well.
The question in this thread is “will Israel destroy Hamas?”. Related questions are “can they do so?” And “how many civilians will they kill trying to do so?”
Linking to an article from 2019 about an IS attack does not equal US perpetrates terror acts. If you have the correct link, start a new thread with it.
Also this is off topic for Israel/Hamas discussion anyway.
So drop this off-topic mis-information immediately.
Here is the kind of people that some liberals support-
Shachar was referring to the mounting evidence of rape, sexual violence and mutilation of women and men during the Hamas attacks in southern Israel on Oct. 7.
But sexual assault appears not to have been confined to Oct. 7. Two Israeli doctors, who have been treating released hostages, and an Israeli military official familiar with the matter confirmed to USA TODAY that some released hostages revealed they suffered violent sexual assaults in captivity.
All three spoke on the condition of anonymity.
One of the doctors assessed that “many” of the released Israeli female hostages aged 12 to 48 − there are about 30 of them − were sexually assaulted while held by Hamas in Gaza. The voices of so many of these women and girls were stolen by Hamas, but their bodies tell the tale,” Pildis said. “Broken pelvises. Mutilated genitals. Brutalized bodies. Then we have eyewitnesses coming forward with stories of gang rape, of torture, of murder."
Anti-Jewish bias makes it easier for some people to refuse to believe these accounts of sexual assault, Pildis said.
“We are living in this believe-all-women era, and somehow that philosophy vanished very quickly when we’re talking about Israeli women,” she said. “It’s really hard not to see that as ingrained antisemitism, ingrained bias that leads people not to want to believe these voices.”