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'100-200,000, not two million': Israel's finance minister envisions depopulated Gaza
(www.haaretz.com)
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I'd honestly love to know more about what it's like to be an Israeli right now. I'm adamantly pro cease-fire and have always been pro "let people keep their homes" and anti-apartheid, but never anti-Israeli citizen or Palestinian citizen to be fair. In the US we talk a lot about our government being colonizers and how the founding fathers shouldn't be praised and we try to find ways to honor stolen land, albeit, it feels performative since I certainly can't just give up my home if someone's ancestor came back and asked for it. Anyways not to try to point too many fingers, but hopefully just offer a glimpse of my own moral dilemmas that feel impossible, I'm just wondering what the perspective is for you all? Is the segregation discussed? Is the foundation of Israel controversial among Israelis at all?