“I couldn’t dream in my worst nightmare something like this,” says Amir Ben Natan, an attendee of the Supernova Sukkot Gathering rave where hundreds died in Hamas attack

  • Khalic@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Not crazy, but you seem to be applying empathy selectively. The victims deserve being remembered and respected (I’m not specifying a side on purpose). Your comment, though factually correct, lacks basic human decency. You’re basically reacting with a “told you so” to the terrible description of a massacre of young people trying to feel alive.

    • TheFrirish@jlai.lu
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      1 year ago

      I think what’s worse is that that was a peace festival as well if I’m not mistaken. it’s a terrible situation for the people caught in between.

      • Khalic@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        Not directly a peace festival per se, but knowing the crowd at these psy-trance festivals and parties (I used to go to a lot of them), most of them were peace loving misfits forgetting the hardships of life with music and ugh… stuff that makes you happy. I can’t think too long about these poor kids experiencing hell just before they died. There’s no excuse for this, no matter the context

      • Cyclohexane@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        A peace festival held in outskirts of a concentration camp, where people are getting massacred daily. Where children get separated from their parents or families daily, if not murdered themselves or burned alive or raped. Where people are given just enough electricity, drinking water and food to experience slow death and suffer.

        Literally you have the entire world open, and if all the places to party and rave you choose that? It’s pretty ironic to call it a peace festival.