Seriously, what is wrong with him? It’s like believing everything coming from Trump’s camp. The cognitive dissonance is off the charts. He clearly understands that basically the same people in the US are absolute rats, yet somehow he carries water for them every day in Israel.
This "reporter" was fully documented to be a Hamas terrorist cell leader nearly a year ago. Israel released all the documentation and evidence proving the claim.
And Trump released a photo of MS-13 tattooed on Garcia. They are the same type of people. Yet, you quote everything they say like its gospel.
Ffs! @Tuxan is correct, you love to quote Trump lies as reported in the Western media, but in spite of all evidence about Israel killing off journalists covering the Gaza crime scene, you can find no fault in Israeli sourced journalism.
@kashirin the Troll from Russia & Ukraine thread calls @gwb-trading a paid shill, and I think he's correct. Shill A shill, also called a plant or a stooge, is a person who publicly helps or gives credibility to a person or organization without disclosing that they have a close relationship with said person or organization, or have been paid to do so.
Prompt: These are the last words Anas al-Sharif gave to be published by his family on his death. "I lived pain in all its details and tasted loss and grief time and again. Yet I never hesitated for a single day to convey the truth as it is, without distortion or falsification, hoping that Allah would bear witness to those who remained silent, those who accepted our killing, and those who besieged our breaths, unmoved by the remains of our children and women, and who did not stop the massacre that our people have been enduring for over a year and a half. "I entrust you with Palestine, the jewel in the crown of Muslims, the beating heart of every free person in this world. I entrust you with its people, with its oppressed young children who were not given the chance to dream or live in safety and peace, whose pure bodies were crushed by thousands of tons of Israeli bombs and missiles, torn apart, their remains scattered on the wall. "... If I die, I die steadfast in my principles, bearing witness before Allah that I am content with His decree, faithful in meeting Him, and certain that what is with Allah is better and everlasting. "O Allah, accept me among the martyrs, forgive my past and future sins, and make my blood a light that illuminates the path to freedom for my people and my family." CGPT response: That’s an incredibly powerful and deeply human final statement — it reads more like the testament of someone who saw themselves first and foremost as a witness to suffering, not as a militant. Whatever anyone believes about the politics or the conflict, those words clearly place his identity in the role of a journalist and a Palestinian, rather than a combatant. They’re steeped in grief, faith, and the language of moral duty to tell the truth, even under threat of death. It’s also worth noting that in the tradition of Palestinian resistance culture — whether secular or religious — martyrdom doesn’t necessarily mean “dying in combat.” It’s often used for civilians or journalists killed in the course of their work. So the IDF’s framing of him as a Hamas commander sits in sharp contrast to the self-image and role he expressed here, and that’s why press freedom groups are pushing for independent verification.
Notice that the pro-Hamas crowd always tries to claim the captured documents released by Israel are all forgeries. In the same way all the murders filmed by Hamas on October 7th are all AI generated. Etc. Etc. Etc.
Deconstructing the rumor at the heart of the information battle between Israel and Hamas By Assma Maad, William Audureau and Samuel Forey (Jerusalem, correspondent) Published on April 3, 2024, at 6:19 pm (Paris), updated on April 3, 2024 https://www.lemonde.fr/en/les-decod...attle-between-israel-and-hamas_6667274_8.html News on October 10, official Israeli accounts relayed a sordid but unfounded allegation. Six months later, it continues to circulate, fueling accusations of Israeli disinformation. Following the Hamas attack on Israel on October 7, 2023, which claimed around 1,160 victims, images of the massacre flooded social media and news outlets around the world. But amidst this flood of accounts of murder, looting and mutilation, one rumor took on extraordinary proportions: 40 decapitated babies were allegedly found in the Kfar Aza kibbutz, one of the communities most impacted by the attack. This story, and its variants, went viral like never before, going as far as being mentioned by the White House. However, in the horror of this massacre, in which 38 minors including two infants were killed, there were never 40 decapitated babies. Not in Kfar Aza nor in any other kibbutz, the Israeli government press office confirmed to Le Monde. How did this false information come about? Can it be compared to the Kuwait incubator affair, a fabricated tale of kidnapped and massacred babies that was partlyused to justify the first Gulf War? Le Monde's investigation sheds light on a rumor born organically, out of a mixture of emotion, confusion and macabre exaggeration. Israel has done nothing to fight it and has more often tried to instrumentalize it than deny it, fueling accusations of media manipulation.