Part Of The Problem - Another Response to Konstantin
Episode Date: October 9, 2024Dave Smith brings you the latest in politics! On this episode of Part Of The Problem, Dave is joined by co-host Robbie "The Fire" Bernstein to discuss their take on Konstantin Kisin's new vid...eo "Why I'm Off the Fence About Israel's War."Part Of The Problem is available for early pre-release at https://partoftheproblem.com as well as an exclusive episode on Thursday!Support Our SponsorsMonetary Metals - https://bit.ly/4eoich3My Patriot Supply - https://www.preparewithsmith.com/Get your tickets to Porch Tour Herehttps://porchtour.comFind Run Your Mouth here:YouTube - http://youtube.com/@RunYourMouthiTunes - https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/run-your-mouth-podcast/id1211469807Spotify - https://open.spotify.com/show/4ka50RAKTxFTxbtyPP8AHmFollow the show on social media:X:http://x.com/ComicDaveSmithhttp://x.com/RobbieTheFireInstagram:http://instagram.com/theproblemdavesmithhttp://instagram.com/robbiethefire#libertarianSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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What's up everybody? Let's try this again.
Welcome to a brand new episode of part of the problem. I am Dave Smith.
He is Robbie the fire, Robbie the fire, Bernstein, and he is feeling fine today.
I don't even have to ask. I already got the info. Um, you know, know you people know yeah, you don't have to redo the introduction
I'm I gotta figure out these camera angles because if I look directly at it
It feels a little bit like we're filming one of those I've been captured by terrorist videos
Yeah, I've done that that's by the way. That's a theme of today's show
But yes, I've been I've done this before
Like when Pierce Morgan is in New York City and I've gone to the set,
I've done that a couple of times.
He records out of the Fox news building and they tell you before it, like,
bro, we're sitting more or less where we are. Right. And then he tells you,
he goes, don't respond to me. Look at the camera.
The camera right into the fan. So bizarre.
There's something about it that's so just not human to just like,
you're right here. Why would I talk to you when you're here? Anyway, it's odd I can get used to it
I'm gonna do if anyone out there wants to have a blinking contest with me. We will see how long I can go
I will keep this direct pose, but I'm responding to Dave. I'm not staring directly at you
This is good. This conversation has nothing to do with you. Please stop listening in on our private conversation Rob
Yeah, I blink too much, but not today today
Focus, let me plug this Thursday in New Haven getting off a show in New Haven, Connecticut
And then Sunday about to sell out Chicago
So get your tickets for that porch and then I've got New York City and then I've got Phoenix, Arizona
And then filming in Denver, Colorado.
Very excited for that, very excited for Rob's
debut comedy special, it's gonna be awesome.
I've watched you work out this material for a while
and it's really solid, so I'm excited for everyone to see it.
I just saw here in the chat.
What, are we freeze again?
No, no, no, no,
I don't think we froze. I just saw in the chat here, it was, uh,
that PBD announced this. So I guess I'm not, I can go ahead and say it then.
Um, I was, I alluded to this, uh, on yesterday's episode,
but uh, you know, been a big year, a lot of big shows and another big one,
uh, coming up. I will be another big one, uh, coming up.
I will be going down to, uh, to Florida.
I'm going to give you guys a couple of weeks, uh, before I do that thoughts and
prayers, by the way, to everybody just getting a devastated man.
This is a real bad timing with these back to back hurricanes.
Um, but, uh, I will be on, uh, November 5th election night. I will be down there 5th, election night.
I will be down there doing the Patrick Bette David show.
They're doing a big show.
I think it's gonna be one of the biggest live shows
that day, so that should be fun.
I'll be ringing in the election day results
with the PBD boys, so I'm looking forward,
very much looking forward to that.
And yeah, it's been an incredible year and this I think we'll have a couple more big ones for you guys
On that panel, that's pretty cool. I don't know yet. Patrick just reached out and asked me and I was like hell
Yeah, let's do it
But no, but they're doing like a thing like I think they're going
He told me the hours of it all night. It's like all night. Like he was like,
we're going from 8pm to two in the morning or something like that.
And I was like, huh, all right. And he was like, you could take breaks.
Okay. All right. That's a little bit better.
You could like, like you come on the panel for an hour, you go, you know,
eat some food, come back on it.
So it'll be like something like a rotating panel type deal. Um, but it'll be,
it's going to be a big show and obviously there's going to be a ton, uh,
to talk about. Um, okay. So, oh, also, but, uh, I have Detroit,
um, in just a couple of days this weekend,
I'll be back at the house of comedy in Detroit.
And then at the end of the month, me and Rob will be in Kansas city,
Poughkeepsie, Philly, a bunch of fun stuff coming up, comicdavismith.com for all of those tickets. By the month, me and Rob will be in Kansas city, Poughkeepsie, Philly, a bunch of fun stuff coming up comicdavismith.com for all of those
tickets. By the way, I literally, I asked my wife, uh,
earlier today, um, if this makes me gay. Yes. Uh,
which is never a good question. If you're checking with your wife,
the answer is already yes. Is never a good, um,
never a good question to be asking your wife. But anyway, I asked my wife that I was genuinely,
I'm a little sad that you're not coming this weekend.
Oh, that's so sweet, Davey Smith.
I mean, I'm used to things the way I'm used to them.
Just hanging out with strangers all weekend.
I need my Rob there.
Anyway, no, I'm just kidding.
You know what would be a good bit for Patrick by David?
Is that every time you come back, this is more of a me bit be a good bit for Patrick by David is that every time you
come back there's more of a me bit than a you bit but you just show up with the
biggest plate of food and sit back down at the table go have you guys seen the
buffet there
incredible like stained shirt the bib on crab legs
All right. All right. So listen, let's let's get into this because I have a feeling this is this topic is gonna take up the entire show today I was
Internally slightly debating whether or not I wanted to do this
there but I
Landed on the side of yes, I had to cleanse the internet. We, I just feel like we have to it's listen, these are,
we all have our burden in life. You know, our burdens, I suppose.
And our burden is that we got to go through and respond to,
to videos like this. And I should say, you know, we just did it.
We're going to respond today to a Constantine kissing video.
I know we just did one of his, I don't mean to pick on a Constantine.
I like him. As I said in the last episode, we,
we debated Ukraine on Michael Malice's show and I, I,
I've watched some of his stuff.
I've watched a few episodes of a trigger nometry his show
and a, and like, I like the guy, um,
and certainly nothing against him, but he did.
So he made a video yesterday on the, uh,
the anniversary obviously of October 7th and the video is entitled something
like why I'm off the fence about, uh, the, about Israel.
And so he, um, I guess,
I don't know if most people would say he wasn't exactly sitting on the fence.
He was pretty much on the pro Israel side, but leaving that argument aside,
he made this video. It's blown up. Um, I, the last I saw it had like,
I think 3 million views on a Twitter, I think close to a million on YouTube.
And this is in 24 hours. He made the video yesterday
So pretty incredible numbers
and
So anyway, so I saw the video yesterday. I was debating
Responding to it and then it really was I saw his tweet
Obviously, of course the video is is blowing up as I mentioned and so his uh
His tweet Obviously of course the video is blowing up as I mentioned. And so his tweet after the video, he tweeted,
I must say that it is tremendously satisfying that of all the vitriolic meltdowns
this video has generated, not one has addressed
a single argument I made.
I wonder why that is. So I think implying that there isn't
of a response, um, that all people could have is meltdowns about
this and there's really no, you know, uh, taking it on.
I, uh, could not disagree more. And I was kind, I was personally kind of blown away by how weak I thought the arguments were.
So let's see if we can't do what we do and rip this to shreds.
I'm excited.
So we're going to check it out here.
Here is Constantin Kassin.
I'm off the fence about Israel's war. Here is Constantin Kassin. about Israel and had no opinion about the long-running conflict there. I've never been to Israel. I've never been to Gaza.
I've never been to the West Bank.
It's not a conflict I studied at university or read about extensively.
People on both sides who care passionately about this issue find it hard to believe,
but in truth, most people are like this.
That's why, for many months after the October 7 attacks,
I avoided commenting on the war or even discussing it on our show.
Instead, I read, watched and listened to the endless commentary, debates and discussions
to understand what people on various sides were saying.
Having gathered those perspectives, I then did my best to apply first principles thinking
to the arguments I heard.
Thinking from first principles means stripping whatever you're trying to analyse down to
its core and working back from there.
Context is extremely important to understanding.
When it comes to highly emotive situations like this one, people often flood you with emotional context,
which does not support the argument they're actually making.
There are some obvious examples in this debate, which we will address shortly.
First principles thinking helps you see the structure of arguments.
The logic of an argument is like the skeleton of a body.
You cannot see it from the outside, but it is usually the cause of why the body moves
the way that it does.
Getting to the skeleton of an argument is essential to understanding it.
This was my approach when we had prominent pro-Palestine guests like Basim Youssef and
Norman Finkelstein on trigonometry, as well as pro-Israel guests like Ben Shapiro and Natasha Hausdorff.
It was also my approach when I hosted a fiery debate on the subject of dissident
dialogues and when Safety Namus invited me to discuss this issue on his podcast.
So what does first principle thinking tell us about the conflict?
First, the easiest way to understand a complicated problem is to find a
comparable situation about which you already know what to think.
For example, if we accept that October 7th was a terrorist attack, as I believe most people do,
the obvious approach would be to compare it to other terrorist attacks in recent history.
That, as it happens, is impossible, because on a proportionate basis, the Western world has never experienced an attack on this scale. If we take 9-11, the most impactful terrorist attack in living memory, which shook the world's
dominant superpower to its very core, we see that 2,977 people were killed in a country
of 285 million people.
On October 7th, approximately 1,200 people were killed in a country of just 9 million
people.
Some keep calling October 7th Israel's 9-11.
That isn't remotely true.
If October 7th was Israel 9-11, on a per capita basis, only 100 people would have been killed.
In other words, October 7th was at least 12 times as bad as 9-11.
And that's before accounting for the fact that Hamas took hundreds of hostages, many
of whom have been killed since.
So the obvious question is,
if thousands of armed Mexicans had penetrated the southern border of the United States,
killed 36,000 Americans, and dragged off thousands of hostages,
how would America have reacted?
Alright, let's pause.
Let's, uh, okay, let's...
So, here, Konstantin starts his... It's so here, Constantine starts,
um, is so dramatic with the headphones on off. Yeah, it's not, it's not ideal. It's like pulling off sunglasses. You're investigating. Let's do this. Um, okay.
So, uh, Constantine starts by, um,
saying I think some fairly unobjectionable things. Um,
but then he, when he veers into his first point,
I think he really gets it all wrong. First off, I would make this point.
You know, sometimes like someone's so confident in something that you're almost
like, wait, am I stupid? Am I getting this wrong? But I'm like, no, no, no, no,
listen, that's not what arguing from first principles is.
Like first principles essentially,
uh, means like your,
your foundational views that aren't derived from anything else,
but that you derive the rest of your argument from.
But he just says first principles a bunch and then jumps into a comparison,
but a comparison isn't the same thing as arguing from first principles.
In fact, he hasn't even stated what his first principles are
Anyway, that's kind of neither here nor there. I
As I've I've mentioned before because it's been a year of this and I've heard this argument quite a bit
I think this whole
this argument is just really bizarre and
Not the right way to think about these things.
So like number one, this idea that like, well,
that would be the equivalent of 20 nine 11s or something.
It w it would be 20 times worse than nine 11.
Aye. It, it's on the level of if you like,
um, let's say there was a family that had four kids and you killed one of their kids
and there was a family that had two kids and you killed one of their kids.
And then you were like, yo,
what you did to that family was twice as bad as what you did to that family.
No, not really. Really. You did the same thing to both of them.
You killed one of their kids, a really horrible thing to do.
It's not exactly the case that you can just calculate this by how many people
are in you know what I mean like it's just like not it's like what would you
if someone if you were a family of four and someone broke into your house and
killed two of the people in the house you wouldn't be like this is five
hundred thousand nine elevens for me because you killed 50% of the
population and you killed two people it's bad enough you don't have to like make it this other
thing i just i i think this is a very weak argument and by the way if you're going to
use this argument which i'm saying flat out i reject but then why the fuck? Doesn't the same argument apply to the Palestinians?
Israel has killed far listen the people in Gaza are a smaller population than the people in Israel and
Israel has killed far more people in Gaza than they've killed in Israel
so if you're making this argument and forget forget even in the last year as a response to
You know
October 7th forget october 7th say we're just talking about history from october 6th
2023 and before
Well, okay
Israel has killed way more people in gaza way more than gossans have killed killed in Israel and they're a smaller population.
So I'm just saying if you're going to be fair about this, this I think this whole line of
argument is ridiculous. But if it's valid, then Israel is still more guilty than them
of that. Again, I don't think like it doesn't there's no in terms of like, like philosophically or morally or legally,
nobody ever thinks of things this way. Like you never,
you never get charged with a murder or sentenced to a murder
based on how many people were in the family that you murdered.
And it doesn't get much worse if you did it to a small family
than a big family and I don't see why that logic should apply to countries either.
Look people were killed or something in the ballpark of 1200 people were killed.
It was a I agree it was a horrific terrorist attack but no actually more people were killed
in 9-11 and I don't think it's it's helpful or accurate to frame this as it's so many times worse than
9-11 because Israel is a small country.
Yeah, there's something inhumane about the proportions of death talk, which is what they
keep trying to spin as the arguments with the amount of civilians that are killed to
soldier ratios.
Like at the end of the, even in his example, if let's just say a bunch of people poured
over the border and killed a hundred Americans,
or a thousand Americans, or 5,000 Americans,
I think the takeaway would be, man,
we gotta do something about this border.
It's the same thing if 3,000 or 5,000 Israelis were killed,
you got the same, you come to the same conclusion of,
well, what's going on in this situation?
Why did our intelligence have a failure? It kind it kind of however just to be nitpicky and I kind
of think of the movie saver price saving private Ryan which isn't true of the
Israel example there's something about killing everybody there's something
about like if someone killed all of your kids yeah that might you know what I
mean if you have that's a fair point in in this Context I don't really think it's it's useful at all, but fair enough
No to his point and this is the problem with like it
It's fine to have a discussion about this from starting from first principles
I think that's the best way to to talk about these things but
for him to just jump from saying first principles to,
uh, in obviously apples to oranges comparison to Mexico. Um,
so if Mexico people were to break out of Mexico, I mean,
first they're not really breaking out.
We got a pretty wide open border between here and Mexico. Um,
but obviously the asymmetry in,
in that example is that, okay, but America hasn't occupied
Mexico for 60 years.
We haven't denied them the ability to form their own government.
We haven't denied them the ability to form their own military.
We haven't gone on regular bombing campaigns of Mexico for this entire, uh, period. And so yes, it's like,
if you just assume that there are neighboring countries with like normal
relations, both with their own governments and what if one of these people broke
into, okay, but it's just, it's a different situation.
Even in that situation,
I don't think that the correct response would be that therefore all
Mexican people lose their rights and there is no moral issue with slaughtering
you know like women and children I don't think that follows but it's a
completely different situation. It's somewhat funny that he's going let's
have a first principles conversation and then jumps to an emotional argument of let's understand the scale of the death.
With that said for us, intellectual plebs, can you define,
I think like the nap would be a first principle, but maybe you could define,
I mean, I would, I think it was, I think technically speaking,
like self ownership, um, is the,
would be the foundational first principle and the map is something you kind of
deduce from that, but it's pretty close to, yeah,
I think that, um, our first principles would be, um,
self ownership, private property rights. And from that,
we deduced the non-aggression principle. Um, but yeah, that's more or less,
I think that's how we look at these conflicts that it's like, look,
like people are, people are individuals.
I don't, when I say that, I don't mean this,
that position gets caricatured a lot. I don't mean to say that we don't,
we're not clearly we're social animals and we,
we need groups and collectives. However,
people act as individuals. We, people act as individuals.
We, they suffer as individuals.
We punish people as individuals for their crimes. Um,
and the fact is that there are a lot of people in,
in Gaza right now who are not guilty of doing anything that
warns them losing their rights, and yet they still have.
And it's literally the same reason why we think October 7th was horrible.
This is the same reason why we think the response to it is also horrible.
Okay, let's keep playing the video.
Mexico to speak of. in the video. them. Number one, history did not start on October 7th. The crux of this argument, when broken down to its central premise, is that the state of Israel is illegitimate.
In this conception, Israel was created because land belonging to Palestinians was taken by
Western powers and given to European Jews fleeing the Holocaust. Palestinians were not
consulted, did not give consent, and found themselves kicked out of their homes. Israel
is a settler colonial state.
Two, October 7th was a response to Israeli brutality and oppression.
Those of you who watched my debate with Safety and Amos will recall that he made this argument
repeatedly.
The people of Gaza and the West Bank are treated so badly, he argued, the response we saw on
October 7th was totally understandable.
An act of resistance aimed at redressing the wrongs they have suffered.
Three, Israel is killing civilians.
The scenes of parents pulling their children out of rubble speak for themselves.
Four, Israel is engaged in indiscriminate attacks, which is why so many innocent people
are dying.
This argument aims to prove that Israel is the bad guy in this war because it is killing
lots of people, either deliberately or due to a callous disregard
for the lives of Palestinians.
These are, to the best of my knowledge,
the four principle arguments made by
the Israel side.
Could we pause for a second?
This is driving me nuts,
because his starting point is to try and get you
to justify terrorism, which I don't.
What happened on October 7th was terrible,
and they should not have done so.
And to have a conversation about what Israel's doing, both sides can be wrong.
October 7th was wrong. The fact that Israel is responding and killing innocent civilians in Gaza is wrong as well.
This seems to try and present the argument that you have to justify that October 7th was okay if you also want to take
the attitude that Israel killing civilians is,
or maybe I'm jumping to a conclusion here,
but it seems to me like he's trying to force you
into a lane where you're actually trying to defend
that October 7th wasn't terrorism or wasn't wrong,
which I'm not here to say that.
Yeah, exactly.
Well, there certainly certainly as like you can
Well, look he's I think gonna go through all of these that he just laid out it does feel a little straw manny
None of these are justification for what happened on October 7th
Well, yeah, sure, but also the idea that which I'm, I think I can speak for Safedin when I say this,
because he's the guy that he mentioned there.
But if you say that the treatment,
that's the number two, I mean,
we'll get into all of this in a sec.
But if you say the treatment of someone is so,
of a group of people is so brutal,
that that's what led to an attack,
that's not justifying the attack.
Like again, it's like if there's, if a, if a...
It's like saying blowback is not a justification
for ISIS engaging in terrorism.
Yeah, it's an explanation, not a justification.
Like it's like if you, you know, if a guy comes home
and finds his wife in bed with another man
and kills both of them, you know, to be like,
if you were like, why did he do that?
And you're like, well, he found his wife cheating on him. That's not saying it's justified to kill both of them that you know to be like if you were like why did he do that and you're like well he found his wife uh cheating on him that's not saying it's justified to kill both of
them but it is an explanation it's like hey here's what happened this is what led to that and like
okay you can it's just anybody who's like a third grader should be able to understand that you can
keep both of those things in your head at the same time that you can understand that like this,
like is an explanation for what's happened.
And this was a major motivating factor in this horrific crime without going like
therefore the crime is justified because there was a motivator. In fact,
this is literally what detective work is. Like the means,
motive and opportunity are the first things they look for when they're trying to figure out who done it
Like that's very basic stuff
But anyway, he kind of laid these all out here
He's gonna I think go into more detail about them. So let's let's try to respond to each one. So let's let's keep playing
to each one. So let's keep playing.
All right. If there are others, please let me know in the comments and I will address them in a follow-up video. Let's go through the arguments one by one. And for the sake
of argument, let us accept that every point in each argument is valid and historically
accurate. I know many viewers will find this objectionable, but I believe the best way
to unpack this entire discussion is to take people's arguments as valid and see if they make sense.
The first argument, whose central premise is that Israel is illegitimate, seems to
be at the core of every debate.
It feels reasonable and logical to many people to contextualize Israel's response to October
7th in this way.
After all, if Israel was created through illegitimate means, it puts the discussion on an entirely
different footing, doesn't it?
Well, actually, no, it doesn't.
Again, let's think from first principles.
If we believe every pro-Palestinian claim and accept that Israel was created through
the forced placement of European Jews in a foreign land by Western powers, we must look
for a comparable situation in which a country was created through some form of displacement of the native population.
Most of you live in such a country.
The United States, Australia, New Zealand, and Canada are all the products of invasion,
colonization, and brutal conquest.
If you go back far enough, so is almost every other country in the world.
Like it or not, Israel exists.
It's home to over nine million people. The idea that
they would, could or should accept the destruction of what is now their country is absurd. The
United States government would not tolerate missile strikes and terrorist rampages from
Native American reservations. Neither would any government of any country.
All right, let's pause it. This is too ridiculous. All right. Um, so first of all, again, I just gotta say this, this,
let's think about this from first principles and then just make a comparison and
go, Oh, other people have done it too. So no problem.
That's not what thinking from first principles is. That's not what that means.
Um, look, it is again, I mean,
I don't want to spend too much time on this because he said let's take it as
Okay, this this claim is true. But then he did kind of like shoehorn in there
Like I know a lot of people disagree with me, but we're just gonna treat it like it's true. There is no debate like
There's no argument about this
Even the the Israelis themselves will tell you
what gave them the authority to create their state.
It was the UN resolution in 1947, right?
Or the UN recommendation, the partition recommendation.
Okay, well who voted for that?
The bunch of European powers.
There wasn't any, I forget the distance
of the nearest country, but it's like I think over a thousand miles
Was like the nearest country that voted for the partition
Everybody in the area most of whom just didn't have a seat at the table, but everybody in the area was against it. So yes
It was the Balfour Declaration that first said that the Jews could have a homeland in
Israel, and it was the UN partition recommendation that ultimately they seized on to create the
state of Israel.
And 750,000 Palestinians got kicked out of their homes and not allowed back.
I mean, people, there's some debate amongst historians about what percentage of them were
forcefully kicked out versus what percentage of them fled or whatever
But 100 of them were not allowed to return to their homes
So again anyway, there's no debate about that
But okay me saying that it's not then you can't deduce from that that I go
therefore
Israel should allow themselves to be destroyed
whatever exactly Constantine is envisioning by that.
And while, look, I'm not going to say nobody says that because I'm sure you can find, you
know, members of Hamas or crazy, you know, like 20 year old people protesting at college
campuses who say some dumb shit.
But if your whole thing here is like, I'm not trying to straw man.
I'm trying to take on the best of the arguments and please let me know if
there's other arguments, I'll do a follow up video.
If you're not just taking on the dumbest argument on the other side and you're
actually trying to take on the best arguments, that's not what anybody is saying.
That's not what any serious person who's like critical of Israel is saying hey
You did an ethnic cleansing campaign in 1948
Therefore you all have to die or therefore Israel has to be destroyed. There have been lots of different
Steps along that there's been lots of periods of negotiation
throughout the history of the Israeli Palestinian conflict
starting in the the late 70s at camp david
the oslo accords in the 90s um the second camp david summit in in the year 2000 hebron there's
been like a bunch of these things every single one of them the starting point has been based around a two state solution.
The argument is not, and this, by the way, includes Yasser Arafat and the PLO, the Palestinian
authority, and yes, even Hamas has at different points accepted 1967 borders.
In other words, the real conversation is not about
whether Israel or all the Jews in Israel need to be kicked out
or killed or something like that. The conversation is about
Gaza, the West Bank and East Jerusalem, and whether that
the land that Israel is occupying, that is not theirs.
That's what the conversation is about. And so is it if I were to say that hey, the way that Israel was founded was really fucked up to a lot of Palestinians.
A lot of Palestinians got kicked out of their lands. It was a giant ethnic cleansing campaign.
You can't deduce from that that they are for I think no, they are for I think the founding of Israel was fucked up.
I don't think there's anything wrong with acknowledging that and like if you if you were talking to a group of Native Americans
in America
Um, I don't think there's anything wrong with acknowledging that like yeah, you guys your ancestors were mistreated for sure
You know, does that mean that we're all going to stop being America?
No, but it does mean that I don't know, we could acknowledge that it was wrong.
And hey, guess what?
If the if there are still some Native Americans around, as we do have in parts
of this country, they ought to have their natural rights protected just like
everybody else.
They ought to be given full citizenship.
They ought to have the same freedoms as everybody else ought to have
That's where you know what? I mean, you could just as easily draw that from the conclusion from it
It's like yeah, Constantine is not wrong. There's nine million people there. They have lives there now. What are you gonna do?
Ethnically cleanse nine million people to make up for an ethnic cleansing of 750,000
people in the late 40s?
No.
But that doesn't mean you can't recognize that, hey, that was wrong.
And like, so again, we do this all the time.
And for him to say like, all of these countries were started that way, like, yeah, governments
are started in fucked up ways.
Okay.
Still doesn't mean we can't acknowledge that and that's I
don't know what's and you know, I think that he said something
about the the Native American reservation attack, right? Like
if we were attacked by Native Americans who are living on a
reservation, would we just go, um, hey, we did mess up things
to the Native Americans. They are for, they have the right to slaughter all of us. No, of course not.
But let's say you had a native American reservation and some people left it and
went down and just started gunning people down.
And then they went back into the, uh, the reservation. Would, would we say,
Hey, this is in the territory of the United States of America.
So you know what would happen next?
The fucking police go in and they try to find the people who did it.
What we would not do is call in the fucking Air Force and just start bombing
fucking women and children, because that's never an acceptable way
to police your own country.
Like governments only do this shit in war, like governments. I mean, okay, listen
There's there's exceptions to this governments have done some pretty messed up things
But generally speaking what we all consider to be right or not only just right that's like an understatement
but what we consider to not be
catastrophically evil is
like if there was a
You know like within the United States of America, like if there was a um You know like within the united states of america, even if there was a a terrorist
um timothy mcveigh or someone like that and he
You know ran into an apartment complex while there was a manhunt for him
And and the cops were like, uh blow up the building
Just blow up the whole building and kill all the women and children who are
inside. Cause there's a terrorist in there. We got to get them. Uh,
we would all object to that because like, no,
that's just totally unacceptable. That's not what you do. You don't like,
you don't, people don't just lose their rights because you got, well, no,
he's using them as human shields. Therefore all the deaths are on him.
It's like, no, that's, I'm human shields. Therefore all the deaths are on him. It's like no, that's I'm sorry
We would all object to that now things are different
In terms of precedent are not necessarily in terms of morality, but things are different with foreign countries, but okay
Then it almost leads to the question of like I mean if you've been occupying a country since 1967
I mean if you've been occupying a country since 1967
They're essentially your people
Like you can't just attack them the way you would a foreign country because they don't have their own military They don't have their own government. They are a captive people and so no
It's like the Native American example. No, I don't even in the United States of America and our government's a pretty fucked up government No, I do not think that
If we were attacked from native americans from an indian reservation that we would send in the air force
And now if you want to add onto this let's just say that in the you know
One of the things about uh indian reservations in the united states of america is that they are free to leave
Like they can leave they could go get a place somewhere else.
Like we gave them that land,
but they don't have to stay there.
It's a little different than Gaza.
They're also allowed to order things.
They can do business.
They can ship things into their reservations.
They can do what they want.
They have businesses in that, right?
It's a pretty big difference between Gaza.
So what you're talking about with Gaza is an area that's something it's like five
by 25 miles. Why? It's, it's,
it's a small area of land that has been occupied militarily by Israel since 1967.
And then since 2006 has had a full blockade around the country.
They don't have an airport, a sea port. They're not,
they can't come and go as they play. So like, no, I'm sorry,
but like that's not exactly, it's not an apples to apples comparison.
And even in your example, no, I don't think we would be like, Oh,
it's okay to just fucking slaughter people there now. All right, guys,
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Alright, let's get back into the show
All right
Do you want to anything you want to just state it If you're going to put forward all of these arguments
for basically the way Hamas would use them
and say this is why we can engage in terrorism,
I'd go, no, you can't engage in terrorism.
If you want to take this same list of arguments
and say, here's why Israel needs a different solution
than killing civilians in Gaza,
then wow, we have a really compelling list of arguments for why Israel probably needs a two-state solution and start
Do something nice for those people because it's got a bad history that's gonna provoke violence
But it's cartoonish to put forward these arguments as if everyone's out there going
This is why October 7th was justified
Right and not as the list of reasons for why Israel is not justified
for currently killing civilians.
Right.
Yeah.
All right.
Let's keep playing.
...instances.
Peace in the Middle East will not be achieved by attempting to undo many decades of history.
The second argument centers on the idea that October 7th was a response to Israeli occupation
and brutality.
This again seems reasonable to many people.
After all, what would it take for you
to behave the way Hamas did on October 7th?
The problem with this argument is that what happened
on October 7th was not an attempt
to weaken Israel militarily.
It was not an attempt to break Hamas militants
out of Israeli jails.
It was not an attack on the Israeli Defense Force.
It was not a prison breakout, as some people like to describe it, because when people break out of Israeli jails. It was not an attack on the Israeli Defense Force. It was not a prison breakout,
as some people like to describe it,
because when people break out of a prison,
they don't normally head to the nearest town
and start massacring women and children.
October 7th was, by design and implementation,
a terrorist attack whose purpose was to slaughter civilians,
terrify Israeli society, and nothing else.
This was not an act of resistance,
it was an act of terrorism
Which is why Israel had to react to in the manner that it has. All right, let's pause it here. Holy moly
Okay, this I think is
the weakest part of
Constantine's entire video and that I gotta say that's really saying something. This is just really bad. So he goes, you know,
a lot of people think that the occupation is what led to October 7th.
And you know, that kind of plausibly sounds right, but the prop,
the flaw in this argument is that they didn't try to weaken Israel
militarily. They just had a terrorist attack.
This just doesn't follow. Like this just isn't logic. It goes like, uh,
he goes, a lot of people describe it as a prison break,
but prisoners don't typically go and slaughter a whole lot of people after they
break out of prison. And you're like, wait, okay.
But if they did, then did they not break out of prison?
Are you telling me because they went and slaughtered a bunch of people,
then they didn't break out of prison? They were just in prison.
They broke out, but because they slaughtered because they don't typically do that,
it's no longer a prison break. The logic of this just makes no sense whatsoever.
And, you know, he just sneaks in there as an assertion that that's why Israel's
justified in responding the way that they responded. Um, well, look,
it seems to me that, okay,
the Hamas attack Hamas is not, uh,
uh, a modern military. Um, they're not, they're, they're not a government.
They're, you know, but they're, they're pretty much like they're the toughest gang and an Israeli prison
essentially. But you know, it was a fairly sophisticated attack.
They hit him by a land, air and sea. It was coordinated. They knew that,
you know what I mean? Like they broke into the fortress of the world.
And I don't think it's so crazy to go like,
they probably,
probably one of their major goals was what most terrorists
attacks goals are, which is that the action is in the reaction.
And the idea is like, like Osama bin Laden was very explicit about this, right? That he never thought that knocking down the twin towers was going to,
you know, destroy America,
but he did think he could lure us into a war in Afghanistan that and that
ultimately that could destroy America. Now we spent 20 years there.
I, you could certainly argue it didn't destroy America, but then again,
pretty rough, pretty rough 20 years
for the United States of America.
And we certainly did more damage to ourselves
than Osama bin Laden ever could have
directly done to us, right?
So it seems pretty likely that the goal for Hamas
was exactly what they got.
That they thought they could provoke Israel
into an overreaction that would then look I mean look at what's happened over
the last year. They have turned global opinion against Israel in a way that
would have been unimaginable a year and two days ago. You know it's just you
couldn't so no it's not clear that there was there wasn't some type of strategic goal here to weaken Israel, but it doesn't look.
First of all, a whole lot of IDF soldiers were killed on October 7th.
So it's not as if they didn't go after military targets.
They weren't trying to weaken Israel.
But regardless of any of that, the whole argument just has nothing.
This is just nothing. Like, look, if you, if I were to, um, let's say I, I were to,
uh, I don't know if you were to, to trap someone in your basement, kidnap them and hold them
prisoner in your basement and, uh, just abuse them and mistreat them and keep them prisoner in your basement and just abuse them and mistreat them and keep them
in the most horrible conditions and then that guy broke out of the basement and killed everybody in
the house including the women and children just broke out went crazy on a rampage killed everybody
could I deduce from that that this had nothing to do with me kidnapping him and keeping him in my
basement because he didn't just come out and try to
Weaken me
He came out and just indiscriminately killed everybody
Therefore there's no connection to me kidnapping and torturing this guy in my basement
Do you see how ridiculous that sounds like?
In this scenario, you'd go obviously these two things two things are connected. Now, yes, once he broke out, he did not target the people who
were guilty.
He just indiscriminately killed a whole lot of people.
But that doesn't mean there's no connection between what you
put this guy through and what he ultimately ended up doing.
Constantin is simply providing no argument here whatsoever.
And for anybody, for anybody to look at
the conflict between the Israelis and the Palestinians and to say that 60
years of occupation is an irrelevant factor that has nothing to do with the
beef here. I mean I don't know how you could possibly look at it and say that that there's no there is no
Factor that that you've dominated a group of people for longer than the soviet union occupied eastern europe
And you think that there's there's no way that that's a contributing factor not just to what the actual um,
You know militant members of hamas did on october 7th
the actual militant members of Hamas did on October 7th, but to their popular support, to the fact
that they were able to win a plurality of seats
in elections in 2005, you think this is irrelevant?
Why?
Because they went after civilians?
Therefore, the occupation doesn't count or something?
I mean, please, explain it to me.
Say it slower so I can understand.
But what is the actual argument here? So if they had broken out and just
attempted to degrade Israel militarily, then we could blame the occupation. But
if civilians get killed, then we can't. And by the way, as I said in the
beginning, do we apply that standard to
Israel also if innocent civilians are killed does that mean so like in other
words it would be the equivalent argument if I were to say this war in
Gaza over the last year has nothing to do with October 7th and you were to be
like I'm pretty sure that was a pretty big factor involved in it you know and
like even if you were to argue that like, well,
that's not really what Benjamin Netanyahu and his war cabinet care about.
You go like, okay, maybe it's certainly the reason why he's got enough popular
support to get away with doing this, right?
Like October 7th is a pretty big factor in this, but I was go, well,
October 7th was a big factor. They would only kill the Hamas terrorists.
They wouldn't kill all these innocent people, right?
You would never hear an argument that retarded being made.
And yet you're making that argument.
You're making the argument that what,
because there happened to be a music festival going on there and they killed a
bunch of people at this music festival, therefore the occupation was not a factor.
Now listen, don't get me wrong. Like it was,
Now, listen, don't get me wrong. Like it was, it's a horrible thing to do to kill these,
these young people at a music festival.
And it's totally unjustified,
but they were also having a music festival right by the gates of a prison,
which I know these are like young lefties and they don't even think about it,
but it is,
if you're inside the prison might be seen as kind of provocative and yeah when terrorists broke out of it
They they were right there and they killed a whole bunch of innocent people there. All right, it's horrible
That doesn't at all prove that the occupation hadn't was not a motivating factor
And I think it's just it's just so obvious on the face of it that it is
in the same way that the guy
who I kept in my basement
was like if he breaks out and kills
everyone in my house, it goes like,
well, yeah, we're kind of going to
look at that as one of the major
motives.
I don't know how you could not.
All right. Here, let's keep playing.
The country would have done the same.
The third argument is that Israel is killing civilians.
This is the one claim made by the anti-Israel side that is undeniably true.
However, this is an example of the emotive but irrelevant context I mentioned earlier.
Civilians are always killed in war.
The question is not whether they are being killed,
but who bears responsibility for their deaths and who can stop the killing. Again, applying first principles thinking we must reach for
a comparable example. There is no exact-
Can you just pause again? This is driving me nuts. He keeps saying it, because of first
principles we have to look for a comparison and he never defines what his first principles
are.
Yeah, this is not first principle thinking. It's not to just go like,
well, people always die in war. It's like, yeah, that's why war is really, really bad.
And that's why the onus should be on you to only fight a war when you absolutely have
to. And that's what I've been saying for the last year. And if you're targeting and killing
civilians to win a war, you're probably in the wrong. Yeah, I mean like anyway, it's all just like the idea that he's gonna say
Okay, so this is another thing that people do which I you know, I don't care for
It's never been my style, but it's the old Sam Harris thing where you go like, you know a lot of people
Rely on emotional rhetoric, but I think of things logically and deduce from that what you know, and it's like, okay
First of all, I'm not so sure that it's appropriate
when you're watching
Quite literally babies suffocate to death to not have any emotion about that
Like don't get me wrong. You don't't wanna just like be overtaken by your emotions
and lose the ability to think critically,
but the idea that we're all supposed to have
like a value-free, moral-free, unemotional discussion
about exactly how many babies you can starve to death
and bury under the rubble of buildings.
Like, no, I think it actually makes sense
to be morally outraged sometimes.
I think sometimes that is an appropriate reaction.
I think that's in us for a reason.
I think if you were an abolitionist in the year 1840,
and you're trying to abolish slavery,
and you got up there and you were like, um
Well, let me just make an argument for you guys about how um
Slave labor picking cotton is an inefficient economic vehicle to produce the most cotton
And in fact if you have a voluntary participant
They're more likely to do a better job because they want to make more money because they what it's like by the way
I believe all of that, but if an abolitionist was arguing that way in 1840
I think I'd be like dude you're doing this all wrong like slavery is a moral outrage
And you should lead with that and like killing the killing somebody's kid is the worst fucking thing you can do in the world
There's nothing worse than that, man.
And like when you're doing it on such a large scale, yeah,
there's going to be some emotion involved. There's nothing wrong with that.
It's like, look, I'm fairly,
this is one of the things that people criticize me about.
And I get fairly like worked up about this topic,
but I'm still going and winning every debate I do on it because I also still
have arguments,
but I can have all of my arguments and also still be like,
this is a fucking outrage. Like there's nothing wrong with that. Now,
for your counter to that, to just be, um, you know,
whatever, like, okay, well that's an emotional argument. Um,
but the question is who has, whose responsibility is it? It's like, well, that's an emotional argument. But the question is who has whose responsibility is it?
It's like, okay, but you have to actually make an argument why that's not
Israel's responsibility. Like, and no, just saying,
just like I said with the local police example, just because, um, uh,
uh, a bad guy, a murderer,
a terrorist runs into a building with a bunch of people.
If the local police came and blew up the building,
they couldn't just get out of
responsibility free card their way out of it by being like, he was a bad guy.
Human shields. If he had turned himself in, we wouldn't have done it. Okay, well that might be true,
but you still don't have a right to do that. It's still appalling that you did it and
sorry, there's just there's not an argument here.
Like, I don't know.
This is, you know, as, well, whatever.
Let's let him finish the argument.
We'll respond more.
Mind, there is some useful context we can consider.
Hamas has repeatedly stated that given the opportunity,
they will repeat the October 7th attacks
again and again and again.
While this may seem shocking to us in the West, it makes perfect sense given that Hamas
believes Israel is illegitimate and would like to see it gone.
This means that unless Israel destroys or degrades their ability to carry out their
threats, it is likely to experience more terrorist attacks again and again.
Does anyone seriously…
Okay, so there's a lot wrong with that argument, right?
And again, this is what the problem and this is part of why, you know,
it's not a coincidence that he's constantly saying first principles while never telling you what his first principles are and
never saying like how we apply these equally to both sides, but for listen,
saying like how we apply these equally to both sides. But for,
listen, um, of course, Benjamin Netanyahu, because he's, uh,
you know, corrupt blood soaked monster has never allowed a real investigation
into October 7th. And so we are all speculating to some degree,
um, that we know what we know. Um,
but there's pretty much no question that
october 7th was an enormous failure by the israelis gaza is
i believe the most surveilled area in the world
and israel is the most fortified and the fact that they allowed this to happen
was a a monumental failure um my point is essentially just that they allowed this to happen was a monumental failure.
Um, my point is essentially just that they could just not fail again.
We also know that Israel propped up and directed funds toward Hamas for years
before October 7th. So no, it's not a given that October 7th are just going to keep happening over and
over again. If Israel doesn't like destroy Gaza. That's just not true.
If Israel is more than capable of,
of protecting its people against Hamas.
So that and the fact that Hamas has vowed,
there's members of Hamas who have vowed to do October 7th over and over again.
Well, I mean, first of all all that doesn't really mean anything.
What matters, what counts is their ability to actually do it, not whether they say it or not.
But again, if this is your standard, okay. What have the Israeli leaders been saying? You see, you could just as easily use this logic as a reason for why the Palestinians
need to embrace terrorism.
To say, hey, look, the Israelis have killed far more of us, look at all these innocent
people over here who have died, and they themselves have said, we're Amalek, or we're going to
continue the bombing campaign, we're not going to stop. We're rejecting ceasefires.
You know, I mean, if you want to go with the South Africa case that they took to the Supreme
Court where the excuse me to the International Court of Justice at the UN where they essentially
ruled that Israel was plausibly committing a genocide.
The entire I don't know if you saw any of this, but the entire South African case was
quotes from Israelis.
That was like the whole thing.
I forget it was like 600 pages of
quotes from Israelis.
And this is what there's and not just
like, you know, soldiers and citizens,
but like the top level guys from
the prime minister all through his
cabinet, all through the military
of them just talking about how much
they're going to fucking destroy Gaza.
And over the last year, they've been doing it.
So if you're going to say, well, Hamas said they're going to do more October 7th, therefore
you're justified in killing innocent people.
Well why the double standard constantly?
Why do we always have to have two different standards?
Why doesn't in any of these videos,
anyone attempt to have one standard and hold both parties to it,
which by the way is what we do. You know, for as much as everybody, uh,
like acts like, you know, we're the ones who are biased here.
That's what we do every time we talk about this.
There is one standard that I'm holding both of these parties to. Um,
but this idea that, you know,
it's because they,
they pulled off a terrorist attack and because they've said they'll do more of
them. Therefore Israel can't, you know, has no other option.
The logic just falls flat. And then on top of that,
the other major point here is that when you just like
Because all these things kind of play into each other, right?
So when you just did the the stupid thing you did on his last point
Where he just dismissed the idea that the occupation is a motivating factor based on no logic whatsoever
Literally no logic just well if if it was a motivating factor
Then they would have tried to degrade Israel military and not killed innocent people, which makes no sense at all. Um, but when you,
when you dismiss that away,
it does make it more convenient for you if you want to make this argument,
because then you could go, well,
they're going to do these terrorist attacks over and over again.
And their only way to do it to stop that is to go kill a whole bunch of people.
And you're like, okay, but what if,
what if those of us who are saying that like blowback is real and that people
don't very much like being dominated,
what if you didn't dismiss us with that nonsense and then you considered the
possibility that you're only going to create more people who hate you?
Like you think, what do you think the end of all of this is?
What do you think the young men in Gaza who have now lived through all of this?
What do you think they come out of this loving Israel? You know, again,
this is not like, I know I'm like a bleeding heart libertarian who's known for
being anti-war. Um, but this is,
it was general McChrystal, like no dove, right? This was the guy running the
war in Afghanistan and he was the guy who coined the term insurgent math. What's 10
minus 2? 20. And that's this whole thing where he goes up on a blackboard and he goes, what's
10 minus 2? And everyone in the crowd is like 8 and he's like no 20 because that's how insurgent math works and this was him and all he was I mean
he was just a sir yes sir general we're gonna go win this war that's my job I'm
gonna go win this war for you and the point he was making was like look you
give us a list of these insurgents we take out two now there's there's 12 more
because the two that we took out two. Now there's 12 more,
because the two that we took out had brothers and cousins
and uncles and all these people who were maybe like
on the edge and now they were like, okay,
I'm taking up arms, I'm joining the insurgency.
Then this, I mean, look, again,
the other thing about this is for people who know anything
about the history at all,
the thing that gets like frustrating with this
is like, Constantine is gets like frustrating with this is like
Constantine is trying to pretend that this dynamic doesn't exist. Even though
so many of the top Israeli leaders have admitted this over the years. Like they've admitted, they all know this is the case.
None of them at the top levels of the Israeli government really have any
questions about why the Palestinians hate their fucking guts.
It was Ehud Barak, the former prime minister before Netanyahu, who said, if I was a Palestinian,
if I was a young Palestinian, I'd join one of these terrorist organizations too.
And you know why?
He knows that?
Because that's what the Jews did. That's what the Jews did in Palestine under the British
League of Nations mandate. They themselves were the terrorists to drive out an occupying force.
Moshe Dayan had a great quote about why the Arabs hate the Israelis so much.
He was like, yeah, because we kicked them all off their land.
They're living in refugee camps while we build a society on the land that used to be theirs.
A rocket science?
I mean, again, that doesn't justify terrorism.
That doesn't mean they should be allowed to kill any innocent people at all.
But if you want to have a conversation about this thing, you're not even like if you're pretending that dynamic isn't there
You're just not really talking about the situation
That that's what it is. And it you know, I it's not that hard, you know
This is what's so great about a Darrell Cooper's whole series on this and and, it almost became like a meme because he's like throughout the whole thing,
he's always like, what would you do? Like, no,
what would you do if you were in this situation?
And one of the reasons why this is all,
this has just always come very natural to me is why I think part of the reason
why I like Ron Paul's whole blowback thing resonated so much with me.
It's not, and this is a particularly male thing. I don't know if women,
for the female listeners, for all 10 of you, I don't know if this is,
if you relate to this as much, but for a man, I think it's very, for me,
it's always just been very easy. And then I felt this way before I had kids,
but particularly having little kids, like it's just very easy to go like,
oh yeah,
like if someone did something to one of my kids,
there is no level of evil that I couldn't stoop to. Like I could,
it's very, and this, and I can apply this to both sides. If I,
if one of my kids was killed on October 7th,
I can very easily understand the mentality of going fucking flat in the place.
Don't leave one soul alive. Kill them all.
And also, I can understand if you're a Palestinian and one of your kids was killed
being like, I'm joining up with Hamas. That's it.
We're going to kill some of them now.
Like, it's not that difficult to put yourself in that situation.
All right, let's keep playing.
in that situation. Alright, let's keep lying. with anything other than all-out war? And who can end the killing? Well, theoretically Israel could of course,
but for the reasons we just discussed,
they can't, weren't and shouldn't.
That leaves Hamas, who could have returned the hostages
and surrendered the people who took them.
What is more, they could hide their civilians
in the vast network of tunnels they've built
to reduce casualties.
Instead, they refuse to build bomb shelters
and do everything they can to maximize civilian casualties.
That's not my opinion.
It's something Hamas are themselves proud of.
A senior spokesman for the group, Sami Abou-Zuhri, gave an interview on Palestinian station Al-Aqsa TV
the last time this conflict flared up.
The policy of people confronting Israeli warplanes with their bare chests in order to protect their homes
has proven effective against the occupation, he said.
We in Hamas call upon our people to adopt this policy in order to protect Palestine.
All right.
All right.
Let's pause it there.
So this is like what gets frustrating about this argument.
So first of all, in your own example here, even in the quote that you're citing he said what it's an
effective tool against the occupation now yes the constantin we're not pro
Hamas no matter how much all you guys have to pretend that we are that's not
the argument okay like you know he goes, it's pretty funny cause he actually,
I think catches himself at one point where he's like, who could end this?
And he's like, well, of course Israel could end this, but they can't,
shouldn't and won't, you know, because we love what we've previously said,
but you haven't made any points yet.
Actually nothing that you've said has proven that Israel shouldn't stop what
they're doing. Um, but yeah, there's, there's no argument, I guess, here from me.
Yeah.
Hamas could do things differently.
That would be better.
Okay.
But yes, Hamas is a terrorist organization.
Like they're probably not going to do that.
Um, we're also not like funding and arming and giving logistical intelligence
support to Hamas to carry out attacks like October 7th, but we are doing all of that
for Israel while they kill far more innocent people than Hamas did. Okay. So there's a
pretty big asymmetry there. But yes, Hamas could, there are things, again, this is the equivalent of saying,
in my example, of where the cops come in and say, just blow up the apartment building with all the
women and children inside. If you were to say, well, the guy could just come out and surrender,
then we wouldn't have to kill all these women and children. Would anyone accept that? If their local
police department said that? You'd be like, yeah, okay
Well, he's not doing that and the answer then isn't we kill all the women and children
That's the point and nobody here is saying again
There are you I'm not saying you can't find dummies out there who are saying this but to just take on the argument of that
It as if again, like you said, it's almost like it's almost as if he's presuming that the other side is
Pro Hamas pro October 7th that you're like, well Hamas didn't do that. Yes. No, we got it
We got it Hamas does not care about innocent Palestinians dying. Neither does Israel
That that's and then so if you have this dynamic here, right where you have the Israeli government and you have Hamas
Okay, and both of them do not give a shit about innocent Palestinians being slaughtered as an outsider
It kind of feels like hey if there's a group here, I'm gonna stick up for
Maybe it's the innocent people who nobody cares about
Slaughtering there's also an interesting dynamic here where he kind of is,
it doesn't seem to ever like occur to Constantine that you're like,
Oh, okay. So if your claim is that Hamas is not building bomb shelters to
protect their innocent people when they could, which may be true. I don't,
I don't know, but maybe.
Okay. So it's kind of like they want more of those innocent people to die.
Why is that?
And why is it that you are on the same side as Hamas right now?
Right?
Like if Hamas' goal is for more innocent people to die so that the whole world can see how brutal Israel is
Wouldn't the person who's against Hamas want to not hand that to them? Doesn't that kind of make sense? I
Don't know. He also uh He pulls up a bad quote
And that I guess of all the arguments that the game theory of how do I combat an enemy that's going to use humans
Human shields and that it did incentivize the behavior of using human shields
But with all that said I mean I saw Israel claim
Hey, there was a main military base under a hospital and we got to take out a hospital and then it turned out
It was a tunnel that they had built right that they were pointing to as evidence and there's been times that they said
Hey, here's a safe corridor,
and then blowing up people in the safe corridor.
And there's been the daddy's home thing,
which is they don't kill a target
until he actually returns to his home.
So even amidst the game theory argument of,
we have no other way to deal with this enemy,
the quote that he's pulling isn't even saying that.
It wasn't saying, hey, we need everyone to go out there
with their chess and protect Hamas
because we need to win this thing
and so you guys have to protect us.
It was if you want to protect your home.
Yeah.
Which also is understandable.
If I own a home and you tell me, hey, we're flattening it.
And then I'm like, well,
you're gonna have to go through me.
I understand making that decision. And the Hamas leader is not saying, hey, you're going to have to go through me. I understand making that decision.
And the Hamas leaders not saying, hey, we need everyone out there to protect us.
They're like, this is going to work to protect your home.
And I understand that if you have nothing, you've got nowhere to go.
And someone just drops a leaflet in your house and goes, you got to leave.
We're flattening this thing.
And like, well, fuck you. Yeah, I'm not going anywhere.
You want to kill me? That's on you.
Yeah, I just understand that decision. And I to kill me? That's on you. Yeah.
I understand that decision.
And I'm just saying even the quote that he's pulling up
from the Hamas leaders, not saying,
hey, we're all the civilians are protecting us
because they support us and that's how we win.
They're saying if you want to protect your home,
don't leave it.
All right guys, let's take a moment
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Israel's attacks are indiscriminate and designed to inflict civilian casualties.
This is actually the simplest argument of the four to address, because it is an empirical
matter.
The war in Gaza is not the first conflict in human history.
We can compare the ratio of combatant to civilian deaths in this war to others.
What happens when we do?
Historically, urban warfare operations result
in a casualty ratio of nine civilians
for every one enemy fighter killed.
In Gaza, it is two to one.
In other words, despite the deliberate attempts
by Hamas to increase the number of civilian casualties,
Israel has been extraordinarily successful
in reducing them.
This doesn't mean that there won't be incidents in which innocent Palestinians are killed,
and, as in any war, there will likely be war crimes committed by both sides.
But overall, the numbers don't lie.
If you need further evidence that claims of Israel's indiscriminate attacks are nonsense,
just look at the way various commentators reacted to what has been dubbed Operation Grim Beeper.
Thousands of Hezbollah pages were rigged with explosives and then detonated simultaneously, Look at the way various commentators reacted to what has been dubbed Operation Grim Beeper.
Thousands of Hezbollah pages were rigged with explosives and then detonated simultaneously,
killing and injuring thousands of terrorists and a small number of bystanders.
The pages in question were not picked at random.
Israel specifically selected a batch of senior Hezbollah operatives.
And still, people like Hamza Yousuf, Scotland's former first minister, complain about Israel's indiscriminate attacks.
This was, definitionally, the most precise, targeted and surgical large-scale anti-terrorist operation in human history.
In summary, I've engaged with an open mind and in good faith with the—
Keep pausing, I'm sorry. a lot. The Hezbollah beeper incident is still rather unclear to me because the reporting
afterwards did not really, from the mainstream sources that I read, they did not really seem
to explore to what extent there were civilian casualties from that attack. And the media
seemed to move on from it pretty quickly.
Yeah. I mean, the video that he's showing is in a market
With that said though, I don't know the blast radius. Yeah, it's certainly putting people at risk
I mean, okay, you know look again like no you haven't I mean you really haven't seen the amount of outrage
About the anywhere near the same about that attack as you have about what's been going on in Gaza over the last year.
But let me just take on this or just real quickly,
cause there's really not much to it. Um, this is a, this,
this thing about the ratio of, uh, um,
combatants to civilians is just bullshit. It's all just bullshit.
The numbers are complete bullshit. You're going off Israel
I mean they even like officially say how they keep the numbers, but it's guesswork
Essentially Israel is dropping bombs left and right and then they're trying to claim
How many of the people that were killed on the bottom were Hamas fighters?
They've changed the number several different times Different representatives from the Israeli government have said different
numbers simultaneously. The truth is they just don't know.
And so to draw the conclusion from that, that, Oh,
the ratio is better than any of these other urban conflicts.
Um, number one, it's bullshit. They don't know that.
And I find it to be a highly dubious, uh, claim,
you know, again, that's like, it's one
metric and you don't even have the numbers.
There are these numbers are just made up, but it,
it's like one metric. I don't know why that should be the one.
Um, uh, again, just like in the same way that I think it's kind of bullshit to measure
the, how awful a terrorist attack is based on your total population size.
I also think it's kind of bullshit to measure a war's morality based on a
ratio. There's other metrics you could use. Here's one.
More kids have died in this war.
More kids have been killed than in any of those conflicts that he's talking
about. That one actually means a lot more to me. As I said before,
as a parent of two little kids,
I just think killing someone's kids,
the worst goddamn thing you can do in the world and like just killing a child,
there's just nothing more evil than that to me or a few things more evil.
I don't know. Maybe torturing a child's worst, whatever. It's pretty,
pretty bad. And, um, that now part of that is just because there's so many kids
in Gaza. It's such a densely populated area and there's a lot of children there.
There's over a million kids. Um, but I don't know, why can't we just use that, that ratio or use that metric?
And in terms of the word indiscriminate, um,
I don't know,
let's just say Israel is knowingly killing huge numbers of innocent civilians
and they know that that's going to be the result of this.
And there's absolutely
It is absolutely reasonable and justified to be appalled by that, you know, Israel
Has had a terrorism problem
Pretty much their entire history and they've always before Benjamin Netanyahu
dealt with terrorism with special ops targeted assassinations things of that nature
they never treated it as a military problem the way Benjamin Netanyahu is now and
You know the idea that you are
committing mass slaughter
Of a group of people who you have dominated and controlled for nearly
60 years.
The idea that people would be appalled by that is completely reasonable.
I just don't think I like on any one of these points,
I don't think Constantine has landed a blow. You know, like I,
I saw Tim pool tweeted out that he said this video was brilliant and I was like
watching him like, where's the brilliant part? Like what part of this is like, Tim pool tweeted out that he said this video was brilliant and I was like
watching him like, where's the brilliant part? Like what part of this is like, yo, wow, I never thought of this conflict this way.
It's just straw manning the opposition to this and landing no real points.
I just thought maybe I'm missing something here. I don't see anything in this.
I don't think he's landed a single blow on the critics of Israel
All right. We do we do have to wrap up. Let's play the rest of the video and then we'll we'll wrap
Laguna's presented to me over the last year on balance
I regard them as disingenuous irrelevant and designed to pull at my heartstrings in order to obscure the harsh reality of this conflict
and designed to pull at my heartstrings in order to obscure the harsh reality of this conflict.
We would respond exactly the way that Israel has. The only difference is we would do so with the support of every member of the international community, while Israel has to fight not only
the terrorists who want to wipe them off the map, but Western apologists for those terrorists as well.
If you enjoy these videos...
All right, let's turn it off. Okay.
So I guess I would just say, um, in conclusion, I'm, uh,
number one, as I've said before, happy to have a, uh,
another conversation or debate with Constantine about this stuff.
I'll host if he'd like, or he could host or whatever. If he wants to do that,
I'm more than happy, uh, to do that. But I would just say in conclusion that, you know,
the argument that we would respond the same way is kind of an interesting one.
It is certainly not an argument from first principles.
It is simply just saying like like we would do it too.
That's certainly, you know, look after nine 11, yeah,
we collectively lost our minds and fought a whole bunch of wars and killed a whole bunch of innocent people and spent trillions of dollars on it and
destabilize the entire middle East. Um,
I don't think that was a good idea in hindsight.
I think that's pretty unanimous now.
Even John McCain wrote in his memoir that the war in Iraq was a good idea in hindsight. I think that's pretty unanimous now even john mccain
Wrote in his memoir that the war in iraq was a mistake, right? So even like but I I think there's like john bolton and dick cheney may still be hanging on to it was a good idea
Pretty much everyone else across the world
Acknowledges that that was a big mistake. And so
You know, we would do this even if true which I don't exactly know if that's true. Um, but that,
that really isn't anything. Um,
but I think that the idea that you're going to sit here,
this is something I've been saying for the entire last year,
but it's worth repeating again,
if you're going to essentially make this argument that, Hey, we would do that if that happened to us,
nobody can be expected to tolerate something like that and not respond.
Just somebody please explain to me why that only applies to Western countries
and not Muslim countries.
Like, like why it's like, okay, if you're like, what is,
this is almost why like it would actually be useful to have a conversation from
first principles and explain to me what your principles are so we can try to
apply these to, you know, equally across the board.
But why is it that, you know,
like this is the point that I made in my debate with Laura Lumer
which you know, I mean she just really kind of humiliated herself in that debate, but
you know, it's like she'll be like well
Hey, the Palestinians did this to Israel and therefore if their people aren't gonna rise up and overthrow that government
You know what? I mean, they've accepted the status quo and therefore their fair game now to be targeted and it's like
Okay, but what about the people of Iraq?
Do they get to say that like it if they had obviously they don't have the power to do anything to us
But if they did would Iraq be justified to just come slaughter people over here
Would they be justified to just come slaughter people over here?
Would they be justified to just be like, well, we're going to be,
but we'll drop leaflets first,
but then we're just going to be bombing neighborhoods.
Are they justified in doing that if they were to say, Oh, you know,
all these politicians, they all live in suburbs of Washington, DC.
They're using those people as human shields.
They're embedded amongst the civilian population. So, you know, gotta just kill everybody. No, by the way,
Iraq could make such a better argument than Israel
could. Like Iraq could sit there and say,
you guys have been bombing us since 1991.
Literally that's how long we've been bombing Iraq.
George H.W. Bush launched a war there.
Bill Clinton had a sanction regime and years of bombing campaigns.
Of course, George W. Bush launched the regime change war against Saddam Hussein.
Obama continued it.
Trump continued it.
Biden has continued it.
There's still troops in Iraq right now.
Does Iraq have a right
you know oh we can't tolerate this therefore we're allowed to go kill people
over there and again more relevant to this conversation why doesn't that also
apply to the Palestinians? Why don't the Palestinians have the right to say that
like it look essentially what it all comes down to are two things this is
what these this entire debate always comes down to.
Number one, you value Israeli life more than you value Palestinian life. That's it. Because don't
tell me for a second if October 7th happened, but the ratio was better. Right? Like if they if they
had killed if they were able to say, hey, we killed two IDF soldiers for every one person at this concert,
therefore it's okay. Right? Therefore we should continue to do it.
No, you would never accept that because when you're talking about the innocent
Israeli life, you actually value that as real human life.
Okay.
You would never make this calculation if we were talking about Americans or
Israelis. And number two, the other bias bias and I, you know, I gotta like coin a term for this.
It's like, um, barbaric bias.
So the fact is that Hamas is primitive and barbaric and Israel is rich and sophisticated.
And so when Hamas kills innocent people, they do it by grabbing them with their bare hands and
murdering them and when Israel kills innocent people they do it by pushing a button and
Dropping a bomb on them and I understand there is a bias and foot to some degree for good reason
There is a bias against the first there's something scarier to us about Hamas
against the first there's something scarier to us about Hamas than drone bombs you know and I get that you know if you if I had the choice of my
neighbor either being one of the members of Hamas who stormed Israel on
October 7th or an IDF pilot I'd pick the IDF pilot you know like I think he's can
compartmentalize the fucked up shit
He does and could be a well-adjusted normal member of society that Hamas guy probably not, you know
So like I get there's a difference. However
If you think about this, right if somebody killed one of your kids
It probably wouldn't be that comforting to you if you were like don't worry. They did it by pushing a button
Don't like to the people on the other end of those drone bombs to the people on the other end of those bombs and those you know
there
To them the same thing happened to them. It's still their family. It's still their friends still their neighborhood that got destroyed
it's just essentially it all comes down to those two things.
Number one,
valuing Israeli life more than Palestinian life and number two just like,
Oh,
but it doesn't feel so barbaric when you do it with a modern military.
I think that's what this really all comes down to. All right,
we got to wrap on that. Thank you guys for listening. Catch you next time.
Peace.