SATURDAY: "The images are disturbing," he said!

SATURDAY, JULY 26, 2025

In Gaza, mother and child: We've heard it said that starvation can be a difficult way to die.

It can also be a difficult thing to see, especially so if the starving person is, in fact, a child.

This was the week when the major news orgs began showing photos of such starving children. Yesterday morning, the New York Times did exactly that.

The Times published a very large photograph—a photo which dominated the space above the fold on the front page of its print editions. The caption beneath the photo said this:

Mohammed Zakaria al-Mutawaq, about 18 months, with his mother, Hedaya al-Mutawaq, who said he was born healthy but was recently diagnosed with severe malnutrition. A doctor said the number of children dying of malnutrition in Gaza had risen sharply.

That was a tough photo to look at. Subscribers didn't need to be physicians to suspect that the child in the photograph was perhaps approaching death.  

For those blocked by the newspaper's paywall, the photo can be seen here. To our eye, there's a hint of the Pietà there.

It was a very large photograph. Beneath that photo, a front-page report bore this headline:

Young, Old and Sick Starve to Death in Gaza: 'There Is Nothing'

Online, the dual headline says this:

Gazans Are Dying of Starvation
After 21 months of devastating conflict with Israel, Gaza’s most vulnerable civilians—the young, the old and the sick—are facing what aid groups say is impending famine.

On Thursday evening, the PBS NewsHour had aired a similar report—a report which condemned its viewers to look at similar visuals. Online, the PBS report carries this title:

Inside Gaza’s neonatal wards where babies born into a war zone battle the odds

You can watch that report by clicking here. "A warning," Nick Schifrin says before the visuals start. "The images in this story are disturbing."

We'd offer a different characterization: 

Extremely hard to watch.

Viewing the visuals, we thought of somewhat similar visuals which emerged from Europe, in the last century, after General Eisenhower's troops finally reached some of the sites where, among other atrocities, starvation was occurring. Anne Frank, a sacred child who's known all over the world, was almost able to hang on long enough to be saved.

We thought of a saying—"Never again"—and of a major American movie. 

More on that movie below. For now, this is the way a front-page report begins in today's New York Times:

No Proof Hamas Routinely Stole U.N. Aid, Israeli Military Officials Say

For nearly two years, Israel has accused Hamas of stealing aid provided by the United Nations and other international organizations. The government has used that claim as its main rationale for restricting food from entering Gaza.

But the Israeli military never found proof that the Palestinian militant group had systematically stolen aid from the United Nations, the biggest supplier of emergency assistance to Gaza for most of the war, according to two senior Israeli military officials and two other Israelis involved in the matter.

In fact, the Israeli military officials said, the U.N. aid delivery system, which Israel derided and undermined, was largely effective in providing food to Gaza’s desperate and hungry population.

Now, with hunger at crisis levels in the territory, Israel is coming under increased international pressure over its conduct of the war in Gaza and the humanitarian suffering it has brought. Doctors in the territory say that an increasing number of their patients are suffering from—and dying of—starvation.

For ourselves, we don't know why the food aid system has failed to work. But as the Times report continues from there, the reporting becomes more dire:

More than 100 aid agencies and rights groups warned this past week of “mass starvation” and implored Israel to lift restrictions on humanitarian assistance. The European Union and at least 28 governments, including Israeli allies like Britain, France and Canada, issued a joint statement condemning Israel’s “drip-feeding of aid” to Gaza’s two million Palestinian residents.

Israel has largely brushed off the criticism.

David Mencer, a government spokesman, said this week that there was “no famine caused by Israel.” Instead, he blamed Hamas and poor coordination by the United Nations for any food shortages.

Israel moved in May toward replacing the U.N.-led aid system that had been in place for most of the 21-month Gaza war, opting instead to back a private, American-run operation guarded by armed U.S. contractors in areas controlled by Israeli military forces. Some aid still comes into Gaza through the United Nations and other organizations.

The new system has proved to be much deadlier for Palestinians trying to obtain food handouts. According to the Gaza Health Ministry, almost 1,100 people have been killed by gunfire on their way to get food handouts under the new system, in many cases by Israeli soldiers who opened fired on hungry crowds. Israeli officials have said they fired shots in the air in some instances because the crowds came too close or endangered their forces.

Last evening, on CNN, we watched as a doctor reported from Gaza about those food aid-related shootings. We can't give you the perfect truth about any of these disputed events. But that's what the news report says in today's New York Times.

Never again, or so the vow claimed. Then too, there's the painful 1964 film to which we've already referred:

The Pawnbroker

The Pawnbroker is a 1964 American drama film directed by Sidney Lumet, starring Rod Steiger, Geraldine Fitzgerald, Brock Peters, Jaime Sánchez and Morgan Freeman in his feature film debut. The screenplay was an adaptation by Morton S. Fine and David Friedkin from the 1961 novel of the same name by Edward Lewis Wallant.

The film was the first produced entirely in the United States to deal with the Holocaust from the viewpoint of a survivor. It earned international acclaim for Steiger, launching his career as an A-list actor... 

In 2008, The Pawnbroker was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically or aesthetically significant."

Plot

In Nazi Germany, Sol Nazerman, a German-Jewish university professor, is sent to a concentration camp along with his family. He witnesses his two children die and his wife raped by Nazi officers before she is killed.

Twenty-five years later, Nazerman is haunted by his memories. He operates a pawnshop in an East Harlem slum while living in an anonymous Long Island housing tract with his sister-in-law, who is also a Holocaust survivor, and her husband. Numbed and alienated by his experiences, he has trained himself not to show emotion. He describes himself as beyond bitter, viewing the poor people around him as "scum" and "rejects." He acts uninterested and cynical towards his desperate customers and gives them much less than their pawned goods are worth.

The plot continues from there. For better or worse, the film suggests that a person who, through no fault of his own, becomes the victim of unspeakable viciousness may perhaps, through no immediate fault of his own, be robbed on his own humanity in the process.

We frequently think of [NAME WTHHELD] at such times as these. More specifically, we think of the things she said about President Obama in the first few weeks after October 7.

We marvel anew at the remarkable things she said! We also marvel at the fact that we still see her on cable news programs—sometimes on CNN, sometimes on the Fox News Channel.

Last week, we even saw her praising God, along with Rachel Campos-Duffy, on Fox & Friends Weekend. Once again, we couldn't help remembering what she had said back then.

For the record, very few of us do as much as we possibly could about such events as the ones we're discussing. (We always marvel at the doctors and nurses who volunteer to go to such places to serve.)

Few of us do as much as we could! It might be worth keeping such thoughts in mind before we unload on the others.

54 comments:

  1. Maybe Trump will give Israel a huge tax break, like the ones he gave to corporations which hire illegal immigrants instead of white people.
    Or is Trump giving the corporations who hire illegal immigrants instead of white people different, because that was what we voted for?

    ReplyDelete
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    1. $85/hr provide by Google, I am making a good salary from home $6580-$7065/week , which is amazing, under a year ago I was jobless in a horrible economy. I thank God every day I was blessed with these instructions and now it's my duty to pay it forward and share it with Everyone,

      Here is I started====)> www.join.work43.com

      Delete
    2. You must be a lazy fuck. I make $10,395 - $12,682 per week.

      Delete
  2. I liked it better when the media would report things we didn't know, instead of repeating every single day that Republicans nominated a child rapist three times in a row to be President of the United States.

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    1. Adam Cohen (My Personal Views Only)

      It’s mind boggling

      He kidnapped immigrant kids

      Let 400,000 people die due to COVID

      Literally started a coup

      Stripped healthcare from 10 million Americans by slashing Medicaid

      And took food from starving kids by cutting SNAP

      But it might ultimately be the Epstein scandal that brings Trump down

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  3. https://archive.is/2025.07.25-160839/https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/24/world/middleeast/gaza-starvation.html

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  4. Per the Las Vegas booking sites, the over/ under on Republicans who don't support child rape is one.
    Take the under.

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  5. Hmmmm.

    Nothing is working.

    There is no distracting or deflecting from the Epstein/Trump issue.

    Somerby today even tries to distract you with a sudden interest in the genocide of the Palestinians, better late than never, but no, this will not end the obsession with Epstein, an obsession mostly seen with right wingers.

    No, Epstein was a horrible sex trafficker and sexual predator, and Trump joined many other White wealthy and powerful men in using Epstein's services, men like Dershowitz, RFK Jr, Pinker, Gates, etc.

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    1. Is the Epstein story that important? Do you really think that anyone will glean any new information about Trump. And even if there is some new information, will it make a goddamn bit of a difference? Certainly not to the starving popullation of Gaza.

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    2. Trump needs to go. How does that happen without talking about everything?

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    3. Trump is obsessed with Epstein, as is MAGA. MAGA obsessed over it for years, and it was highly important to them. Trump is obsessed because he knows he is implicated. You can do two things at once, Ilya: hold Trump’s feet to the fire over his past AND care about the Palestinians, who he is screwing over.

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    4. How can the media discuss Trump’s psychosis or sociopathy or what have you (according to Somerby) without discussing his close friendship with Epstein and his unsavory perhaps abusive and potentially illegal behavior? It’s an important and revealing part of his psyche. Bit Somerby is here to tell us it’s a distraction. Criminy.

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  6. Somerby dumbly writes this: "For ourselves, we don't know why the food aid system has failed to work."

    And then quotes an article:

    "More than 100 aid agencies and rights groups warned this past week of “mass starvation” and implored Israel to lift restrictions on humanitarian assistance."

    "Israel moved in May toward replacing the U.N.-led aid system that had been in place for most of the 21-month Gaza war, opting instead to back a private, American-run operation guarded by armed U.S. contractors in areas controlled by Israeli military forces."

    "The new system has proved to be much deadlier for Palestinians trying to obtain food handouts. According to the Gaza Health Ministry, almost 1,100 people have been killed by gunfire on their way to get food handouts under the new system, in many cases by Israeli soldiers who opened fired on hungry crowds."

    Gee, you think any if that might have a played a role?

    Somerby is such a moronic asshole.

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  7. In a deposition, Epstein answered questions, but there was a notable instance where he had no comment:

    (paraphrasing)

    Prosecutor: Did you socialize with Trump?

    Epstein: Yes

    Prosecutor: Did you ever socialize with Trump with UNDERAGE GIRLS?

    Epstein: uh, ahem, well, uh.....I plead the Fifth!




    It is nearly a laugh, but it is really a cry.

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  8. “ Few of us do as much as we could!”

    For example, many of us aren’t following Somerby’s lead and feeling sympathy and pity for poor Donald.

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  9. “Few of us do as much as we could! It might be worth keeping such thoughts in mind before we unload on the others.”

    Those of us who don’t do enough shouldn’t unload on those who do nothing.

    Also: those of us who don’t do enough shouldn’t unload on those who do the wrong things.

    Is that about the size of it?

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    1. This an example of how you help jagoff?

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    2. Help what? I stood up for the Palestinians and was called an anti semite.

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    3. Epstein: “No, Judge.”

      Is that better for Epstein, Einstein?

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  10. The Palestinians and Hamas could end the famine by simply agreeing to a cease fire, but they rejected every cease fire proposal, including one just a few days ago. Their strategy seems to be encouraging the starvation because they know that Israel will be blamed.

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    1. Israel shares a good deal of the blame. DiC. Admitting that would make you seem wiser.

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    2. https://www.nbcnews.com/world/middle-east/gaza-food-starvation-aid-distribution-israel-rcna221225

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    3. Israel shares a good deal of the blame. DiC. Admitting that would make you seem wiser.
      As well as more human. Neither of these qualities is exactly apparent from that comment. Israel bears most of the blame.

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    4. Heartless sick nazi fck, what else is there to say?

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    5. The Palestinians are starving themselves and their children in order to make Israel look bad, Apparently, you have no idea how stupid that argument is, DiC.

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  11. It is disheartening how much oxygen the Epstein story -- actually, a non-story -- has sucked out. Apparently, reveling in the details of the super wealthy behaving badly is much easier to digest that suffering and death of millions.
    I have written to Wyden and I will write again. At the very least, there should be a conversation about death and destruction that Israel is wreaking on Gaza.

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    1. At the end of the day, after days of illegal collaboration with his personal attorney, just appointed to USAAG; with no recording, with no victim input, and no due process they will release Maxwell's updated list of PEDO DEMS for the media to sniff, and them to prosecute, while Rome burns. I wrote this script ten years ago but rejected as too fanciful.

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  12. “ It can also be a difficult thing to see, especially so if the starving person is, in fact, a child.”

    Why does Somerby add the gratuitous “in fact”? Does he think these are not children?

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    1. A starving child is worth 10 points if a girl, 8 points if a boy. Starving moms are only 2 points. Starving dads are worth "0" points, unless Muslin, then they are worth -10 points.

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  13. Somerby's cutesy "name withheld" device is annoying. No one refers to unnamed people that way. It makes me suspect that no one else is involved but this is another way for Somerby to introduce an accusation without taking responsibility for it.

    The main character in the Pawnbroker has not come to think of people as scum because of his own mistreatment. He has come to wonder how human beings can treat each other with such cruelty and he has decided that humanity has no redeeming characteristics. He isn't treating his mostly black customers as scum because they are black and he despises the way they live (as most bigots do), but because he doesn't find anyone worthy of respect, including himself. There was considerable discussion when the film came out about its use of stereotypes for black people and for Jews (cheating others to make more money) and whether the film defied them by examining characters in depth or was perpetuating them.

    Somerby is attracted to the idea that past suffering justifies bad behavior, and he has referred to Trump, Tucker Carlson, JD Vance and others as lost boys because of events in their childhoods. But the extreme trauma of the Holocaust, portrayed in The Pawnbroker, bears no resemblance to the events experienced by any of the men Somerby regularly tries to excuse. None of Somerby's lost boys can be said to have PTSD and the comparison of divorce to Holocaust atrocities is insulting to survivors and to the film.

    https://offscreen.com/view/the-representation-of-trauma-and-memory-in-the-pawnbroker-sidney-lumet-1965

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    1. Somerby may be hinting that the atrocities that Israel has experienced may have created monsters (like the Pawnbroker) due to trauma. I do not believe that Israel's history has anything to do with Netanyahu's desire to use war to keep his position of power in Israel. Netanyahu is as extreme and crazy as Trump. It should be no surprise that with such a man in power, it is difficult for Israel to resolve its crises and aid those who are suffering. And Trump supports him. Just as Trump cares nothing about political ideology or democracy or our nation and its people, Netanyahu cares nothing about Israel or Gaza or resolving the conflicts that are damaging for all concerned.

      Yes, the damage is bad, just as it is in the US under Trump. But we need to get these guys out of office, not pretend there are larger issues that excuse what is happening.

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    2. “Somerby is attracted to the idea that past suffering justifies bad behavior.”

      This is pure bullshit. Somerby believes that past suffering may tend to cause bad behavior, but then that’s something we all believe. He has never suggested that suffering justifies bad behavior. And your failure to understand this distinction forms the basis of most of your persistent Somerby-hatred.

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  14. Watching old movies is no substitute for a real understanding of the modern Middle East.

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  15. https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2025/7/26/2335037/-Why-are-Republicans-so-obsessed-with-pedophilia

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    1. TLDR: MAGATS are sick puppies.

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  16. The Palestinians started this war with inconceivably barbaric behavior. They violated a cease fire to make an unprovoked attack on a thousand innocent civilians. They raped, tortured and murdered and kidnapped these innocent people. They continue to hold kidnaped victims in hellacious conditions. They refuse to agree to a temporary cease fire that would allow food to be brought to their own people. They use their own people as human shields.

    Yet, I don't see a word of criticism of their behavior among the contents here on this site. Is it not heartless to just ignore these atrocities?

    P.S. It's easy to criticize all the killing that Israel is doing. But, what is the alternative? What should Israel do?

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    1. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whataboutism

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    2. https://archive.is/2025.03.22-230125/https://www.haaretz.com/opinion/editorial/2025-03-19/ty-article-opinion/.premium/israel-not-hamas-is-derailing-the-gaza-cease-fire-and-preventing-the-hostages-return/00000195-ab07-d0f1-a59f-ef7773020000

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    3. Witkoff, who was there, says Hamas is the party rejecting the current cease fire proposals.

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    4. Witkoff is a billionaire real estate developer appointee of D. Trump. Expecting an unbiased view of the ongoing genocide in Gaza from Steve Witkoff is a joke.

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    5. Quaker in a BasementJuly 27, 2025 at 10:22 AM

      "What should Israel do?"

      Aw, heck, David! I don't know. Maybe they could NOT starve little children?

      Just throwin' that out there.

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    6. Why try discourse with a sick fuck who only sees war crimes on us, and never on them?

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    7. Da fck'n joos have been stealing the fck'n mooslim land for a long time DiChead. The "war" started around 1946, not 10/7.

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    8. Quaker -- Would you be satisfied if Israel agreed to a cease fire, stopped attacking Gaza, left the Palestinians alone, and freely allowed any amount of aid--food, money, etc. into Gaza? That sounds idyllic, but it's exactly what Israel did for 20 years. Their reward was the rape, torture, kidnapping and murder of 1000 innocent civilians. Should Israel just repeat a policy that failed so disastrously? Of course not. But, then, what should Israel do?

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    9. David, you left out the part about the 'Israeli settlers' murdering Palestinians in the West Bank and stealing their land and water. I know you'd want to include that in your precis.

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    10. Settlers need to go home and let native people come back, rebuild their villages, and live their lives in peace. It's that simple.

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    11. @1:56 - Yes. And, I left out the several attacks on Israel by Arabs trying to destroy the entire country. I left out the suicide bombings on busses. But, that's all water of the dam.

      One could go back in history and try to assign points as to which side was more culpable. But, those past atrocities supposedly were settled by the cease fire. Except that the Palestinians didn't keep their end of the bargain. So, where does Israel go from here?

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    12. @3:03 - For 20 years, in Gaza, Israel did exactly what you suggest. It didn't work, did it?

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    13. Gaza is a death camp. The settlers occupying Palestine need to go home. All of them. If your great-grandparents weren't born in Palestine, you're out. You had your chance to get along with the natives, but you fucked it up. Out.

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  17. WSJ: The Democratic Party’s image has eroded to its lowest point in over three decades, according to a new WSJ poll, with voters seeing the GOP as the better option on most issues that decide elections.

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    1. Is this the same WSJ Trump is pretending he'll sue because they reported about his connection child rapists? Maybe Trump will threaten to sue the WSJ for their polling, too.

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  18. A fanny-burp then flew out of the bottom with record speed, causing the cheeks to flap violently - visible to many in the room, actually.

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    1. My BIL almost died of sepsis and now he fanny burps into a pouch taped to his belly. The bag swells up, but doesn't bounce. Like i said, it is taped down. Fortunately, it has a carbon filter. We are very glad he is alive. Thank you science. (And $500,000 from Medicare). Fuck The Felon for destroying both.

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  19. We will not allow windmills to be built in the United States. They are killing us

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