【メディアセンター破壊は自殺行為】ハマスを倒すためと言っても世界から見放される】

ミサイルがここまて、街をビルを破壊するのは、久しぶりに見た。

メディアセンター破壊したら、
海外から断然、孤立してしまう。
つけば大きい。

因みに、通常平均でも劣化ウランを使うので、被爆することらしい。

21世紀にこんな戦争するかな。
ユダヤ人も賢いわけだから、
中国(良いとは言えないが) 

儲けながら、緩やかにやれば良いのにね。
宗教戦争は、永遠に終わらない。

「法」で支配しなければならない。

国連が待たれます。って、
中国とロシアが笑ってるんじゃないかな。

どっちに、武器売ったるかと。
そこも、一帯一路ですが!みたいな。

まあ、ニューヨークタイムズも報じるはな。
od morning. We’re covering the ongoing fighting in Gaza, global pandemic inequality and China’s successful trip to Mars.
A bomb hit the al-Jalaa tower, which housed media outlets, during an Israeli airstrike in Gaza City on May 15.Hosam Salem for The New York Times
Deadly attacks on Gaza
At least 33 people died in Gaza on Sunday after Israel’s single deadliest airstrike in a weeklong bombing campaign that has killed at least 192 people — most of them civilians, including 58 children — according to Palestinian officials.
Earlier this weekend, Israel demolished a building that housed offices for The Associated Press and Al Jazeera. Meanwhile, Hamas has fired almost 3,000 rockets at Israel from the Gaza Strip, killing at least 10 people. Both sides are violating the laws of war, experts said, as civilians pay an especially high price. Here’s the latest.
The U.N. Security Council met to discuss the conflict in public for the first time on Sunday. The violence shows no signs of stopping.
“We’ll do whatever it takes to restore order and quiet,” Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel said on CBS’ “Face The Nation” on Sunday. “It will take some time.”
Why now? A little-noticed police action may have set off the violence, our Jerusalem bureau chief explains. Political shifts on both sides fanned the flames.
Context: Saturday was Nakba Day, a commemoration of the displacement of hundreds of thousands of Palestinians in 1948. Protesters gathered in the West Bank, marched from Jordan toward the Israeli border, and walked from the Washington Monument to the U.S. Capitol. Read our analysis of the holiday.
Eyes on Biden: For years, support for Palestine has been an off-limits conversation in Washington. Now, divisions between the leadership of the Democratic Party and the activist wing have burst into public view, as President Biden walks a fine line.

The pandemic’s disparities have never been this stark.
The pandemic splits in two
A few months ago, while outbreaks were exploding across major Western cities, India’s leaders boasted that they had triumphed over the coronavirus.
Now, that pattern has flipped.
As vaccines roll out, the pandemic has become a global tale of haves and have-nots. Many wealthy cities are making significant progress, thanks to the doses they’ve stockpiled. But outbreaks are devastating developing nations where there aren’t enough available.
Vaccines are not the only defense — governments across Asia and Oceania have kept cases low despite low vaccination rates. And in cities with high rates, restrictions were also critical in bringing case numbers down. But this year, no factor has had a greater impact on a nation’s path out of the pandemic than the number of shots it can buy.
Haves: In New York City, London and Tel Aviv, nearly half of residents have received a first dose. The cities are preparing to welcome tourists and ease restrictions.
Have-nots: Just 10 percent of India’s 1.4 billion people have received at least one dose. The pace of vaccinations has slowed dramatically, despite donated vaccines and limits on exports. Now India’s outbreak, along with a potentially more contagious variant, appears to be spreading to neighboring countries.
Here are the latest updates and maps of the pandemic.

中山章彦公式

日常に起きた様々な事柄。日本国内や海外で起きているの様々な出来事、ニュースについて語ります。そこから湧いてくる「素朴な疑問」についてイのニュース、ドキュメンタリー番組、関連する映画、YouTube等の動画のメディアを通して考察していくサイトです。

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