• kerrigan778@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    That’s because anyone who has been paying attention to geopolitics over the last two years knows why the US is bombing Yemen…

  • answersplease77@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Kids were killed but the chat leak was funny and that’s what has been the people talk about instead.

    Imagine being the poor family, who is stuck living in Yemen because they cannot afford to relocate, whose kid has died by Trump’s bombing. Then all you see in the news about how they joked with emojis in chat killing your kid. “Oh your kid was killed in that emoji airstrike.” Tell me why the fuck you would grow up anything but radicalized.

  • electric_nan@lemmy.ml
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    2 days ago

    Houthis are the only international actor acting in open military opposition to the genocide in Gaza. They are doing their best to enforce a shipping blockade pending a cessation of Israeli war crimes. The US obviously wants the genocide to continue, as well as all shipping trade through the area.

  • Literocola@lemmy.ca
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    2 days ago

    They’re bombing the Houthi’s in Yemen because the Houthis have been launching Iranian missiles at ships in the Red Sea since 2023? Including the US navy (don’t touch the boats) and Israel. The houthis are currently holding hostage a number of crews of merchant ships

  • FauxLiving@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    Yeah, just to be clear. One of the targets hit was a residential high rise building. Local authorities are reporting over 50 people killed.

    The target was one, alleged, terrorist and the building, according to the Houthi PC small group message log, was the building of the target’s girlfriend.

    So, the US just killed at least 50 civilians in order to kill a single target. Just to give you a rough idea of the kind of ‘collateral damage’ that is acceptable.

  • Korhaka@sopuli.xyz
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    3 days ago

    No one is surprised by America indiscriminately bombing and leaving 150 casualties.

  • Washedupcynic@lemm.ee
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    2 days ago

    The Houthis, is a Zaydi Shia Islamist political and military organization that emerged from Yemen in the 1990s. It is predominantly made up of Zaydi Shias, with their namesake leadership being drawn largely from the Houthi tribe. The group has been a central player in Yemen’s civil war, drawing widespread international condemnation for its human rights abuses, including targeting civilians and using child soldiers. The Houthis are backed by Iran. The Houthis emerged as an opposition movement to Yemen president Ali Abdullah Saleh, whom they accused of corruption and being backed by Saudi Arabia and the United States.

  • Fontasia@feddit.nl
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    2 days ago

    The MAGA movement have no care about what the administration does, especially when it comes to non-americans in a country literally none of them coudl identify on a map. But if you show them “look how poorly this bombing was planned and carried out” then maybe they will listen.

  • Cryophilia@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    My dude this war in Yemen has been going on for like 10 years. If the idea of bombing Yemen sounds out of left field to you, then you are woefully uninformed.

    • confusedpuppy@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      3 days ago

      I had the opportunity to live in Berlin for a year. I made friends with a group of Yemen students. All of these people had friends, family or relatives bombed to death. Over the course of 2 weeks, one person lost 3 relatives to the bombings…

      These people were sent to Germany to study and be as far away as possible from the horrors at home. Away from friends, family, everyone.

      I was told that after flying to somewhere near Yemen, it would have taken another 16 hours to travel by road to get home. Their parents refused them coming to visit because it was just too dangerous.

      I don’t know how they managed to hold their shit together and carry on even as their families were getting bombed back home.

      It broke my heart and I felt powerless to even attempt to comfort them. I’m sure they felt a sense of powerlessness that’s beyond anything I could understand at that time.

      • ivanafterall ☑️@lemmy.world
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        3 days ago

        It’s crazy when you realize, “oh, shit, they’re just people.” I don’t mean it in an insulting way. I had that experience, too. Travel certainly helps. It’s not even necessarily that you don’t believe that before, just maybe that you didn’t know or hadn’t even thought about it, because who can know everything. But then what was previously vague/unfamiliar words in sporadic headlines in the background is suddenly very real and personal, standing in front of you. It’s a gut punch.

    • finitebanjo@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      Sounds par for the course in the USA.

      People are literally surprised when somebody reads out actual policy which was signed into law and who voted for it.

      • RedditRefugee69@lemmynsfw.com
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        3 days ago

        Because our entire election cycle isn’t spent on policy, but character attacks.

        To be fair, there’s plenty of material to attack, so I guess they get distracted.

        • finitebanjo@lemmy.world
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          3 days ago

          Yeah I blame the citizens over the candidates at this point. Everybody should be educated on what they’re voting for, not whom.

          • jaaake@lemmy.world
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            3 days ago

            Agreed that everybody SHOULD be educated. It’s definitely POSSIBLE to become informed, but holy fuck man, it shouldn’t take this much effort.

            Blaming the citizens is insane. If you think that a large enough percentage of the voting population is capable of even FINDING digestible unbiased information… I don’t know what to tell you. I’m more informed than the general public and I didn’t even have a reliable source. I want something that doesn’t just explain the contents of every piece of legislation, but also the impact, knock-on effects, and true underlying motivation. Getting a full picture that I trust involves cobbling together multiple sources and attempting to filter out biases and conspiracy theories.

            Who has that kind of time? Most of us out here are trying to keep our head above water and not spiral into unrecoverable debt. There are centuries of people in power molding their constituents into complacency through systemic oppression to ensure this is the case. The average person has a government sponsored education and is religious. They’ve been indoctrinated with a pledge of allegiance and a set of values that everyone around them seems to follow. Few folks have the disposable income or the desire to travel outside their bubble of comfort and develop empathy for someone unlike them. People who are informed know that the root cause is capitalism, which has been peaking in the last few decades with lobbyists and citizens united. The average person wants to ignore politics, if they do vote, they vote like the people in their community. For them, a vote isn’t something that’s done to better the country, it’s something that prevents them from being ostracized.

            • finitebanjo@lemmy.world
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              3 days ago

              Congress has every bill ever introduced and its current status, every roll call, all of the contents of it all, etc listed online for all to see.

              Wikipedia has summaries of every major political event in the last 3 centuries in great detail and citations to their sources documented.

              Finding information is as easy as taking a simple look. Literally everybody can be educated about medical care, citizens united, immigration statistics, election fraud statistics, etc. They’re not trying.

              • frostysauce@lemmy.world
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                3 days ago

                Oh, yeah, let me just read entire fucking hundreds or thousands of pages long pieces of legislation in my free time so that I may be an informed voter… smh

                • finitebanjo@lemmy.world
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                  3 days ago

                  You just need to look at a few important ones. Hypothetically, a rural american might be incredibly distressed by Republican economic and healthcare policy. An urban third party voter might be flabbergasted that the things they fight for all these years were actually core DNC platforms constantly called to vote and filibustered by the GOP. Etc.

          • RedditRefugee69@lemmynsfw.com
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            3 days ago

            It’s a problem that was fixable 40 years ago. I think it’s too late. We’re too stupid and too drama thirsty to care about boring things such as public policy.

            Anyway, I hear Jane Kardashian has a new bracelet! Did you see it?

      • explodicle@sh.itjust.works
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        3 days ago

        Because they “didn’t vote for that”. They voted for lesser evil, which includes bombing Yemen for a decade. The spoiler effect is obvious to fellow voters, but incomprehensively arcane to lawyers.

        • finitebanjo@lemmy.world
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          3 days ago

          God I fucking wish we voted for the lesser evil.

          For the record, in 2014 Yemen began a civil war and the Obama administration backed the GCC intervention into Yemen, fighting against the Houthi revolutionaries, in 2015 alongside the UN Security Council issuing an Arms Embargo on the Houthis. The US support was logistical and intelligence. This has unfortunately continued to this day, although the previous Biden Administration did publicly announce a withdrawal of that support, but continues sale of armaments to Saudi Arabia who leads the GCC due to condemnation of their strikes on civilians. (The Houthis also strike civilians, mind you).

          TBH I think maybe a more forceful approach, a direct intervention to establish a governance complete with minimal casualties and to provide welfare, to the situation at the end of Obama’s term or the start of the Trump term might have been better than just pussyfooting around and letting Saudi’s commit the warcrimes instead. Either that or doing nothing at all and allowing them to kill each other all on their lonesome so as to keep our own hands clean.

          Another thing I’m not taking into account with this retelling is the whole proxy-war angle wherein Houthis and Saudis gaining support from various outside influences impacts their own allegiances in economic policy and that by not participating it would leave a gap for another world power to establish a different governance in the region that explicitly supports said world power. The whole region is an important economic position for oil and gas as well as shipping between Europe and Asia.

          • RowRowRowYourBot@sh.itjust.works
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            2 days ago

            Specifically the war stats when The Houthi Militia pulls out of a coalition government and attacks the capital.

            The Houthi Militia are not the innocents in this war. They started it.

            • finitebanjo@lemmy.world
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              2 days ago

              Also, the Houthis are being armed by Iran who is financially supported by China in exchange for oil, and I hate China so that’s another negative in my book.