zenith-nadir
Illuminator
- Joined
- Feb 3, 2004
- Messages
- 4,482
Don't be surprized by this BBC article Giz. This isn't a story about something that happened rather it's a story spun out of what "could" happen. It must have been a slow news day.My view: The BBC appears - consistently - to be desperate to avoid offending the "underdog" in it's reportage, leading to slanted writing whereby anyone without other sources of info (lgf etc) would be steered towards accepting the "underdogs" version of events, facts be damned.
All we have to do is read the words:
...and Israel could land on the moon, it could invade Poland, it could turn the sky a pretty color of purple. Those are all hypotheticals just like the byline of the article " Israel could occupy Gaza again".Israel 'could occupy Gaza again'
So what's the big surprize? Israel will consider re-occupying Gaza if the rockets don't stop. Damn those mean old Israelis oppressing the Palestinians like that. How dare they consider things. Meanwhile since Israel left Gaza the rockets have been coming every day. Yesterday, (Apr 20th), there was seven Qassams fired at Israel.An Israeli general has said Israel will consider re-occupying part or all of Gaza, if Palestinian militants continue firing rockets across the border.
In the author's expert opinion I guess. The rockets are a psychological weapon against a civilian population. Like the V1 & V2 were psychological weapons against a civilian population during WW2. These daily bombardments of Palestinian rockets on Israeli civilians causes shock-related illnesses, property destruction and death. No big deal I guess if you are a BBC reporter in your comfy climate-controlled office in London....I wonder how the reporters at the BBC would like these rockets landing in and around where they live in London every day. Would their tune change?The rockets rarely cause significant damage or casualties.