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Are these the journalists that Israel hasn't murdered both them and their families?

Until independent journalists are allowed entry and protected in Gaza from targeted murder by Israel there is no other issue to discuss on this topic.


The same vice president under investigation for putting rather odd religious considerations before legal ones: https://www.icj.org/icj-communication-to-the-international-c...


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"I don't like the decision of the court, so I'll promote dissenters positions"


did you also raised objections when president of ICJ on cases of Israel had 2 decade history of anti-Israel statement and it seemed like he biased and has conflict of interest ?

did you also raised objections when ICJ disregarded it own evidence rules and used twitter posts by NGO as evidence that it used to underpin it rulings ?

did you even bother to read dissenters positions to see how court ignores actual evidence in order to come to conclusion ?


The article clearly cites the findings, including breaches of the Geneva convention.


article title is already misleading. icj doesn't order israel to do anything


Cites what findings? They don't quote the opinion at all, except for one vague observation. You can read the opinion yourself here [1].

Reminding Israel about its obligations is not a finding of breach. It's more like that ICJ language from a prior opinion reminding Israel about its obligations under the genocide convention [2]. That obviously doesn't constitute a finding that Israel breached those obligations, though that didn't stop the various anti-Israel disinformation outlets from misrepresenting it as such.

[1] https://www.icj-cij.org/sites/default/files/case-related/196...

[2] "Israel shall, in accordance with its obligations under the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, in relation to Palestinians in Gaza, take all measures within its power to prevent the commission ..."


https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44947788 provides some insight on this.


Thanks for that. I hadn't seen it. But, now that I have, I'm puzzled by the moderator reasoning given that essentially every Israel/Gaza post violates all the guidelines.


You are welcome.

Is interpreting guidelines literally or narrowly worth it? The word itself suggests that might be a mistake.

Engagement (or not) is the ultimate judge here I'd suggest. I regularly view the "new" category and see countless examples there that could be considered off topic. Quite often this is true for those that make it to the front page. Hulk Hogan's death being a recent prime example.

I personally believe the Israel/Gaza subject is important enough and on topic enough, but can understand the opposite perspective too.


There are already forums in which engagement is the key metric. The reason this place is valuable is because it has guidelines that prevent it from becoming that. I used to think that that was also the aspiration of the moderators - that they were happy to sacrifice "engagement" for encouraging the audience to which they wanted to appeal. This certainly seems to be their revealed preference when admonishing commenters not to be snarky or mean. Unfortunately, though they see these specks of sawdust clearly, they have no real explanation why the log of divisive, political posts are not dead at submission. Behold the triumph of tone over substance.

Maybe my memory is faulty or maybe I was less interested in the off-topic posts, but I thought that, in the past, there used to less bending the knee to the mob and more appealing to the stated guidelines.

It is not a community-enhancing action to publish guidelines and make exceptions because it's what a mob wants. That's not what moderating is. If the overriding guideline is engagement, then fine; say that and eliminate the other superfluous ones. It will save a lot of space on the Guidelines page and people coming here will understand that it is r/hn.

So: 1. Disallowing posts like these is worth it in order to promote the goals often expressed by the moderators for this site and 2. It does not require a narrow interpretation of the guidelines to conclude that posts similar to these violate all the guidelines. Let's see what happens with this one: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45681400


I was just looking for a recent comment of yours to let you know I've belatedly replied to your last comment here: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45688082.

And it turns out your latest comments are on the same topic, which is fine, I'm happy to keep responding.

On this:

- “there used to less bending the knee to the mob”

- “make exceptions because it's what a mob wants”

"Mobs" have nothing to do with it.

The answer is in your root comment: "unless they're evidence of some interesting new phenomenon". When a politics story makes the front page, it's because it contains "significant new information". That's literally the acid test we think about, that we use internally when discussing it and that we often use in comments explaining our reasoning.

When we think about these stories we're not thinking about engagement at all. That's never a consideration. And we're not thinking about appealing to the "lowest common denominator", which is what the term "mob" implies.

All we're thinking about is:

- does this story contain “significant new information”?

- will many of the most positive contributors to HN think that this is an important topic to discuss here?

If it's yes to both then we'll turn off flags and spend the day trying to keep the thread healthy. If not then we'll let it disappear.


Search 'Trump' and you'll see plenty of submissions that should be removed according to your interpretation of the guidelines.

Seeing something and objecting to its presence doesn't mean it has suddenly appeared, nothing has changed other than your sensitivity for whatever particular reason. It's how you are applying your perspective that is the difference I would suggest.


Fine. All this stuff should be removed notwithstanding your enthusiasm for it. Whether or not I previously noticed it or objected to it is beside the point. Either the guidelines mean something or they don't. This isn't a subtle issue.


Just replied to you here https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45688082 and https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45688885.

The part of the guidelines that says "unless they're evidence of some interesting new phenomenon" is as important as any other.


and how exactly this post is "evidence of some interesting new phenomenon" ?

what you have here is article with misleading title that is contradicted in second paragraph of the article.

also, in general, you can broadly apply "they're evidence of some interesting new phenomenon" to any given article

here, https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45659046, you have "new phenomenon" . why won't you unflag it?


> and how exactly this post is "evidence of some interesting new phenomenon" ?

We haven't said it is. In fact, we haven't really looked at the article. This submission got effectively no attention or engagement on HN. It spent zero time on the front page, and most of the discussion is this meta subthread. So, there's no aberration from the guidelines in the case of this item.

> here, https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45659046, you have "new phenomenon" . why won't you unflag it?

We also haven't seen that one. It also spent no time on the front page and had little discussion. Nobody has contacted us asking us to unflag it and making a case for it containing "significant new information".

> also, in general, you can broadly apply "they're evidence of some interesting new phenomenon" to any given article

That's false and is the most important point to recognise about HN. Most of what is in the mainstream news is not "new". It's mostly the same story with different details (i.e., most day-to-day political drama, celebrity news, crime stories, etc). Or they're notable for being unusual (e.g., person who wins the lottery three times) but not any kind of interesting new phenomenon.

Sometimes a mainstream news item really is about an interesting new phenomenon, and that's when it qualifies for HN.


>So, there's no aberration from the guidelines in the case of this item.

as other guy wrote, this article essentially violates all rules. and there is no "new phenomenon" described in it. Why it's not flagged/killed by you ?

There were dozens of times when articles about Israel were unflagged by mod team. Articles that violate all guidelines. Articles that are not even news but speculations. Articles with quality of sourcing that will be typically laughed out of the room here. Articles that 100% of time turn into circlejerk about Israel in which all dissenting opinions and facts (backed with links) are flagged away in order to suppress them (how does it goes with "important topic to discuss here")

quoting you

>- does this story contain “significant new information”?

>- will many of the most positive contributors to HN think that this is an important topic to discuss here?

>If it's yes to both then we'll turn off flags and spend the day trying to keep >the thread healthy. If not then we'll let it disappear.

This is laughable

And i won't say that this forum becomes reddit. it worst than reddit. at reddit mods of subreddits are honest enough with putting in guidelines "no zionists are allowed here". you hide behind "significant new information" and "important to discuss"


> as other guy wrote, this article essentially violates all rules. and there is no "new phenomenon" described in it. Why it's not flagged/killed by you ?

We don’t ever kill things unilaterally unless it’s blatant spam or troll content. We rely on community flags. That’s the case regardless of the topic.

What I’m saying about this post isn’t on our radar as it had barely any votes or discussion and no front page time. It effectively doesn’t exist except for people using it to prosecute this meta-debate about past threads.

> There were dozens of times when articles about Israel were unflagged by mod team

Please list the “dozens of times”. There have been a small number of times when major breaking stories about Israel/Palestine have been discussed here. They got into our radar because they were already large numbers of upvotes and comments, and also significant numbers of flags, but based on what we saw in the story and discussion, it seemed to have enough gravity to warrant turning off the flags so the topic could be discussed.

> Articles that 100% of time turn into circlejerk about Israel in which all dissenting opinions and facts (backed with links) are flagged away in order to suppress them

In those threads I personally unkilled and preserved plenty of comments that were making the pro-Israel case, even in the face of complaints about those users via email. I also flagged (helping to kill) plenty of comments that were attacking the Israel position in ways that broke the guidelines.

My hope with topic like these is that, if they are major stories in the media that are being talked about globally, due to having something “new” about them, then HN should be the best place to discuss them, because unlike a subreddit dedicated to a topic, we’re not talking about it daily or weekly; we can save our time and resources for when it really matters.

As moderators, we can’t determine in advance if a story is “true”, or if something like a U.N. committee’s declaration is fair; that’s what the discussion is for - to get into the details and let the truth emerge and the best arguments prevail. I learn much from seeing arguments put by either side in these discussions. That’s the entire purpose of vigorous debate - to understand both sides of a topic in detail so you can make the most informed judgement about it.

HN is not the reason these stories are major topics in the world; they’re major topics in the world before they make it to HN, and as much as we sometimes wish we could be an isolated cocoon that is quarantined from what is going on elsewhere, we’ve learned we can’t be that; we can’t always act as though these events and topics don’t exist.

What we can do is make HN a place where everyone who cares about the topic can present the facts as they understand them and present the arguments they believe in, and let the most sound arguments win out, and that’s what HN’s ethos and guidelines exist to facilitate.

What you and mhb seem to be advocating is that we should make an upfront judgment that a story is false or a U.N. committee’s declaration is unfair, and overrule the community’s (and world’s) feeling that it’s an important topic to discuss. In our experience, that kind of pre-judgment and unilateral action is the fastest way to destroy community trust, and community trust is the only thing that keeps us going.


I emailed as you suggested, and that's fine, but I thought I'd add a comment from the email since it seems relevant.

The phrasing of the guidelines led me to believe that the "significant new information" was intended as a secondary or clarifying guideline. Otherwise why not just list it as one of the on-topic criteria?

This clarification of the exception is relevant: "If they'd cover it on TV news, it's probably off-topic." If I watched TV news, I'd expect to see many of the posts we're discussing on it.

"New information" is an essentially tautological fig leaf that could justify the inclusion of anything that shows up in the eponymous news. If I need to, I can find numerous examples of flame wars incited by posts that violate all the guidelines except, possibly, this one about significant new information. Which seems to make this into a discussion about what is "significant". I think a community-trust enhancing action would be to eliminate this criterion.

Some examples of posts which violate all the guidelines except, perhaps, being new information and also, perhaps, significant. Although, arguably, if they are new and significant would be covered by TV news.

‘No Other Land’ consultant Awdah Hathaleen killed by Israeli settler (latimes.com) https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44731958

How Israeli actions caused famine in Gaza, visualized https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45447699

IDF officers ordered to fire at unarmed crowds near Gaza food distribution sites (haaretz.com) https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44402896

Israel, Hamas reach ceasefire deal to end 15 months of war in Gaza (reuters.com) https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42716440


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Few posts on this subject gain any traction.



Civilian: a person who is not a member of the armed forces.


Can you provide a citation for that? I can't find any record of that claim.


I thought I read it as a quote from Trump in a local ( my country wide newspaper ) media article - my recollection with in the last about 2 weeks. I latched on to it because I thought Trump would be getting high level briefing about this stuff , and he let this number slip .... I've searched for it , but can not find the quote ... If I find it I will post a link.


Ok,so unverified. Which given this is the most quoted person on the planet I'd suggest you've likely mistakenly misinterpreted something else and shouldn't rely on its use for now.


Trump may not have been exaggerating when he indicated on Truth Social on Oct. 3 that Hamas had lost 25,000 fighters.

A very significant part of the claimed number of deaths in my opinion


Adding more and more people is often the thing to avoid.

I'm not going to say it can be avoided in all cases but modularity, team structure and architecture both system and organisational can avoid this in a lot of cases.


What laws were broken by Thunberg?


https://iihl.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/SAN-REMO-MANUAL-...

The San Remo Manual on International Law Applicable to Armed Conflicts. Specifically paragraph 98:

98. Merchant vessels believed on reasonable grounds to be breaching a blockade may be captured. Merchant vessels which, after prior warning, clearly resist capture may be attacked.


Not really, here is the legal opinions on the last time the ITF barged into freedom floatilla. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legal_assessments_of_the_2010_...

There are much more credible arguments that deems Israel illegally stopped them than against it.

You have to give it to Hasbara though, they will always spin it as it is legal and as if Israel checks law books before hand. In reality ITF does whatever it wants. Then Hasbara tells lies and half truths. They don't care if it is even believable, but always have something to say, and say it as if it was the only truth.

Here is the Spokesperson telling that a calendar in a hospital as a guard duty card. As I said, tell lies and tell it with conviction. https://www.france24.com/en/tv-shows/truth-or-fake/20231116-...


From your own link it says that the UN concluded that the blockade is legal (“Israel was justified in stopping vessels even outside its territorial waters”), only that excessive force was used. That was 15 years ago, now no excessive force was used so everything was legal right?

And regarding your second link, which has nothing to do with this matter, but it’s easy to pick and choose one small mistake when you ignore that Israel killed Hamas leader which was literally hiding under a hospital: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2025_Gaza_European_Hospital_st...


It is contested but the general consensue is that the actions are illegal.

The interception of the Gaza-bound flotilla is illegal because it occurred in international waters against civilian vessels carrying humanitarian aid, because the underlying blockade of Gaza itself is widely considered unlawful under international law.

A blockade that causes severe deprivation to civilians, through actions such as restricting food, medicine, and essential supplies violates the prohibition on collective punishment in the Fourth Geneva Convention. Since the blockade has this effect, enforcing it through the seizure of peaceful ships breaches international humanitarian and maritime law.

The interception also infringes on freedom of navigation and fails the tests of necessity and proportionality, making the action likely inconsistent with accepted legal standards.

The arguments put forward for it being legal are really just cover/propoganda for punitive actions by Israel to aid in its continued genocide.


If you decide that a law is unlawful you can’t act on it, you need to go to courts, which have been tried and dismissed since laws are not a matter of popular opinion, but a matter of informed and professional opinion.

You can get 2 billion people to say that the blockade is illegal but it doesn’t make it so.


Likewise Israel saying it is legal doesn't make it so.

Given the number of international laws it has broken and that it refuses to abide by, or deliberately avoids, decisions by international courts it's slightly more complicated than going to court


No, the fact that the UN has acknowledged it as legal makes it legal.


In 2010 under specific circumstances, which have clearly changed.

I've outlined the rationale above. So I wouldn't agree with your conclusion.


If the situation has changed, why won’t anyone try to challenge the decision in court?


Is this not Trumps fiscal policy? These are the conditions the US administration is trying to create are they not?


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