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2024 SEP 19 NOA TISHBY Ok so here’s what’s happening Hamas, Hezbollah, Iran is only one BEEP-BEEP away for Israel

NEVER-AGAIN: Israel is going to end the terror alliance of Hamas, Hezbollah, Iran.

without prejudice
OPINIONS

Next Level Hi-Tech Warfare emerges.

Editorial by NOA TISHBY: Pagers and Two-way Radios used by Hezbollah terrorists to communicate and coordinate attacks on Israelis have been exploding.

Ok so here’s what’s happening. For the past few days, pagers and radios used by Hezbollah terrorists to communicate and coordinate attacks on Israelis have been exploding.

This is a major development in a war that began nearly a year ago, when Hezbollah, in coordination with Hamas, joined the attacks on Israel.

On October 7 Hamas invaded Israel, murdering thousands of Israeli civilians and kidnapping hundreds more. The very next day on October 8th Hezbollah joined the war.

Both, of these terrorist groups are backed trained and funded by the Islamic Republic of Iran, the world’s largest sponsor of terrorism.

And for the past 11 months, Hezbollah has fired over 8,500 rockets and drones at Israel, that’s almost 1000 attacks each month, forcing nearly 100,000 Israelis away from their homes. Dozens of Israeli civilians have been killed. Including, horrifically the 12 children who were playing soccer in Majdal Shams when an Iranian-made rocket, launched by Hezbollah, struck the playground and killed them.

And this week, Hezbollah suffered a significant blow.

Every single person who was carrying one of these devices was part of Hezbollah’s terrorist operation. If you had them, you are a part of Iran’s terrorist occupation of the Middle East and you are a part of Iran’s ring of fire that’s trying to take Israel down.

While Israel has consistently shown restraint and made countless attempts to reach a ceasefire, Hezbollah has continued attacking Israel.

It’s time for the international community to recognize the serious threat posed by Hezbollah and the rest of Iran’s jihadi terrorist armies in the Middle East. Allowing this aggression on Israel’s borders to become the status quo threatens global security and empowers extremists worldwide. Israel did not want this war and did not start this war with Hamas, Hezbollah or Iran but will have to defend itself and win this war.

TERRORISM:

Pure Inherent Evil Acts of:
Weaponized Violence on Civilian Population for the sole purpose of military victory.

DEFINED1

Terrorism proper is thus the calculated use of violence to generate fear, and thereby to achieve political goals, when direct military victory is not possible. 

In, order to attract and maintain the publicity necessary to generate widespread fear, terrorists must engage in increasingly dramatic, violent, and high-profile attacks.

These have included hijackings, hostage takings, kidnappings, mass shootings, car bombings, and, frequently, suicide bombings. Although apparently random, the victims and locations of terrorist attacks often are carefully selected for their shock value.

Schools, shopping centres, bus and train stations, and restaurants and nightclubs have been targeted both because they attract large crowds and because they are places with which members of the civilian population are familiar and in which they feel at ease.

The goal of terrorism generally is to destroy the public’s sense of security in the places most familiar to them.  

THE MEANS DOES NOT JUSTIFY THE ENDS EVER!

Since the 20th century, ideology and political opportunism have led a number of countries to engage in international terrorism, often under the guise of supporting movements of national liberation.

THE LIE TO SANCTIFY EVIL:
“One man’s terrorist is another man’s freedom fighter.”

The distinction between terrorism and other forms of political violence became blurred—particularly as many guerrilla groups often employed terrorist tactics—and issues of jurisdiction and legality were similarly obscured.

These problems have led some social scientists to adopt a definition of terrorism based not on criminality but on the fact that the victims of terrorist violence are most often innocent civilians.

Even this definition is flexible, however, and on occasion it has been expanded to include various other factors, such as that terrorist acts are clandestine or surreptitious and that terrorist acts are intended to create an overwhelming sense of fear.

All attempts of “Justification and Sanitization” of Reigns of Terror
are repugnant to a civilized Human-Beings

HISTORY2

Terror has been practiced by state and nonstate actors throughout history and throughout the world. The ancient Greek historian Xenophon (c. 431–c. 350 bce) wrote of the effectiveness of psychological warfare against enemy populations.

Roman emperors such as Tiberius (reigned 14–37 ce) and Caligula (reigned 37–41 ce) used banishment, expropriation of property, and execution as means to discourage opposition to their rule.

The most commonly cited example of early terror, however, is the activity of the Jewish Zealots, often known as the Sicarii (Hebrew: “Daggers”), who engaged in frequent violent attacks on fellow Hebrews suspected of collusion with the Roman authorities.

Likewise, the use of terror was openly advocated by Robespierre during the French Revolution, and the Spanish Inquisition used arbitrary arrest, torture, and execution to punish what it viewed as religious heresy.

After the American Civil War (1861–65), defiant Southerners formed the Ku Klux Klan to intimidate supporters of Reconstruction (1865–77) and the newly freed former slaves.

In the latter half of the 19th century, terror was adopted in western Europe, Russia, and the United States by adherents of anarchism, who believed that the best way to effect revolutionary political and social change was to assassinate persons in positions of power.

From 1865 to 1905 a, number of kings, presidents, prime ministers, and other government officials were killed by anarchists’ guns or bombs.

The 20th century witnessed great changes in the use and practice of terror. It became the hallmark of a number of political movements stretching from the extreme right to the extreme left of the political spectrum.

Technological advances, such as automatic weapons and compact, electrically detonated explosives, gave terrorists a new mobility and lethality, and the growth of air travel provided new methods and opportunities.

Terrorism was virtually an official policy in totalitarian states such as those of Nazi Germany under Adolf Hitler and the Soviet Union under Stalin.

In these states arrest, imprisonment, torture, and execution were carried out without legal guidance or restraints to create a climate of fear and to encourage adherence to the national ideology and the declared economic, social, and political goals of the state.

Terror has been used by one or both sides in anticolonial conflicts (e.g., those between Ireland and the United Kingdom, between Algeria and France, and between Vietnam and France and the United States), in disputes between different national groups over possession of a contested homeland (e.g., that between Palestinians and Israelis), in conflicts between different religious denominations (e.g., that between Roman Catholics and Protestants in Northern Ireland), and in internal conflicts between revolutionary forces and established governments (e.g., those within the successor states of the former Yugoslavia, Indonesia, the Philippines, Nicaragua, El Salvador, and Peru).

In the late 20th and early 21st centuries some of the most extreme and destructive organizations that engaged in terrorism possessed a fundamentalist religious ideology (e.g., Hamas and al-Qaeda).

Some groups, including the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam and Hamas, adopted the tactic of suicide bombing, in which perpetrators would attempt to destroy an important economic, military, political, or symbolic target by detonating a bomb on their person.

In the latter half of the 20th century the most prominent groups using terrorist tactics were the Red Army Faction, the Japanese Red Army, the Red Brigades, the Puerto Rican FALN, Fatah and other groups related to the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), the Shining Path, and the Liberation Tigers.

The most prominent groups in the early 21st century, were al-Qaeda, the Taliban insurgency in Afghanistan, and ISIL.


Acknowledgements Original Source

 Credit to: britannica.com Types-of-terrorism

Credit to Noa Tishby | Clip: Ok so here’s what’s happening | 𝕏-user @noatishby | 𝕏-clip (1836600095548068322) | Published 2024 SEP 19


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