Idxomer
Full Member
- Joined
- Aug 3, 2014
- Messages
- 16,965
The article makes some good points and there are a few decent arguments there, certainly some things that can be disputed about numbers, etc.
The problem is that the author uses these points to reach a conclusion that is quite obviously stupid.
This calls into question whether the author is not just doing his own form of misleading via numbers.
These pro-Zionist lot really are shameless.Here have a read
No evidence of inflated mortality reporting from the Gaza Ministry of Health
Published december 06, 2023
https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(23)02713-7/fulltext
People who have spent the last five months telling you that massive numbers of civilian casualties are unavoidable because Hamas uses human shields, hides within the civilian population, and builds tunnels below every heavily-populated civilian building, are now turning around and telling you "we avoided it."These pro-Zionist lot really are shameless.
What were his sources?
Here have a read
No evidence of inflated mortality reporting from the Gaza Ministry of Health
Published december 06, 2023
https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(23)02713-7/fulltext
This is an awful point to make. There's been approximately 15,000 kids killed, and approximately 11,000 women. As another poster states, these are people that have been verified with IDs and permits issues by the occupation. How is that justified in any type of ratio? It's a nonsensical point to make.3) What I think the total number is
Honestly, I have not got a clue. Could be 25'000, 30'000 or 50'000. I would however say that what's important about this article is not what the total number, but rather the ratio between civilian and combatant loss. Let me do a few quick examples. Let's assume that the Total number of casualties is 24'000 for sake of easy maths:
If 6'000 out of 24'000 are Hamas fighters (which are the Hamas numbers according to the article) that gives you a ratio of 1:4
If 12'000 out of 24'000 are Hamas fighters (which is the number according to the IDF) that gives you a ratio of 1:2.
The author claims that the ratio is even closer to 1:1, because he claims that total casualties are not that high to begin with. Whatever the ratio is, it is at least in my view an important indicator to judge to what extent Israeli action can be considered genocidal or not. For this reason both sides, obviously have incentive to manipulate the numbers in their favour.
I think the journalists inside Gaza would be able to give a clearer picture of the number of people killed by the terrorist idf.
...if they weren't also killed by the terrorist idf that is.
I think the journalists inside Gaza would be able to give a clearer picture of the number of people killed by the terrorist idf.
...if they weren't also killed by the terrorist idf that is.
This is an awful point to make. There's been approximately 15,000 kids killed, and approximately 11,000 women. As another poster states, these are people that have been verified with IDs and permits issues by the occupation. How is that justified in any type of ratio? It's a nonsensical point to make.
Hamas killed IDF reservists and personnel on Oct 7th. Is the number of women and innocent civilians they killed justified because they managed to kill some IDF members?
(Neither does Wyner apart from the accusations against UNRWA).
The ICJ has said it is a plausible genocide.Morally, it is difficult to disagree with you. Obviously, every single life lost is a tragedy. But, at least in my view, any accusation of genocide should be supported by evidence, which is why it is such a difficult thing to prove. Genocide is not simply about killing lots of people. It's killing lots of people with the goal of wiping out a "genus" i.e. a group of people. How do you prove that? It's very difficult, unless you have some documentation, which was for example key evidence after WWII. Nazi Germany had kept thousands of pages of official records about the "Judenfrage" and the "Endlösung" and what happened in the concentration camps
So this ratio (even if I'd agree that it's very morbid) can be very important as a higher ratio would imply a recklessness on behalf of the IDF and could be used as evidence for genocidal intent.
These are the signs of the genocidal process in Israel's war in Gaza:
Together, these actions demonstrate intent to commit genocide, the intentional destruction in part of the Palestinian people of Gaza.
- Israel's leaders persist in conflating all Palestinian people with Hamas. [classification];
- Israel’s leaders incite genocide against Palestinians by dehumanizing Palestinians as “human animals” and by summoning Biblical justification for genocide [dehumanization, polarization];
- Israel collectively punishes all Gazans for the actions of Hamas. Israel’s leaders deny that there are any innocent civilians in Gaza. This falsehood denies any duty to obey the laws of war, which require avoidance of attacks on civilians. [dehumanization, polarization];
- This collective punishment is used to justify the bombing and killing of tens of thousands of Palestinian women, children, and noncombatants, including at least 85 journalists [persecution, extermination];
- Israel has forcibly displaced 1.7 million Gazans from their homes into tent cities [persecution];
- Israel bombs and assaults hospitals where wounded civilians seek medical care and shelter [persecution, extermination];
- Israel bombs Palestinian refugee camps in Gaza [persecution, extermination];
- Israel bombs and attacks areas in Gaza to which it has directed civilians for their “safety” [persecution, extermination];
- Israel bombs “escape routes” it has designated for Palestinians fleeing Israeli attacks [persecution, extermination];
- Israel's blockade and siege of Gaza is producing widespread famine [persecution, extermination].
Until the Israeli invasion of Gaza ends with a permanent ceasefire, Israel will continue to commit four of the acts of genocide enumerated in Article 2 of the Genocide Convention:
There is a growing consensus among international lawyers that Israel is perpetrating a genocide against the Palestinians of Gaza. A United Nations panel held by the Committee on the Exercise of the Inalienable Rights of the Palestinian People (CEIRPP) recently concluded with a determination that Israel’s war against Gaza is genocidal by intent.
- Israel's carpet bombing of Gaza, including of so-called "escape corridors," and "safe areas" to which it has directed Gazans, is intentionally killing members of the Palestinian ethnic and national group.
- Israel's displacement of 1.7 million Gazans and its blockade of food, water, fuel, and healthcare is causing serious bodily and mental harm to members of the Palestinian ethnic and national group.
- Israel's blockade of food, water, and fuel, its destruction of eighty percent of Gaza's homes, and its destruction of all but seven of Gaza's hospitals is deliberately inflicting on the Palestinian group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part.
- Israel's bombing has destroyed most of the hospitals of Gaza where Palestinian mothers could safely give birth to their babies, thus imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group.
Just his own observation, I presume. He is a well-respected journalist who has been to most war sites in the last 20, 30 years. Let me also address some of your remarks regarding the article.
1) THE UNRWA 190/13'000 thing:
I agree with you here, this is an odd thing to include and doesn't help the article at all in my opinion. Which is a shame, because there are some interesting nuggets in there.
2) The Daily Total
If you look at Figure 1. in the article, you can see what he means. From a statistical perspective, it's just not very likely that a phenomenon in the natural world behaves this regularly. You'd just expect more outliers. For example, there should be days where an Israeli offensive is particularly devastating and others where they are far less effective. I'd also be curious where you get your numbers from (196 and 341 as min/max) as I cannot see them in the article.
3) What I think the total number is
Honestly, I have not got a clue. Could be 25'000, 30'000 or 50'000. I would however say that what's important about this article is not what the total number, but rather the ratio between civilian and combatant loss. Let me do a few quick examples. Let's assume that the Total number of casualties is 24'000 for sake of easy maths:
If 6'000 out of 24'000 are Hamas fighters (which are the Hamas numbers according to the article) that gives you a ratio of 1:4
If 12'000 out of 24'000 are Hamas fighters (which is the number according to the IDF) that gives you a ratio of 1:2.
The author claims that the ratio is even closer to 1:1, because he claims that total casualties are not that high to begin with. Whatever the ratio is, it is at least in my view an important indicator to judge to what extent Israeli action can be considered genocidal or not. For this reason both sides, obviously have incentive to manipulate the numbers in their favour.
The data used in the article can be found here, with thanks to Salo Aizenberg who helped check and correct these numbers.
Just his own observation, I presume. He is a well-respected journalist who has been to most war sites in the last 20, 30 years. Let me also address some of your remarks regarding the article.
1) THE UNRWA 190/13'000 thing:
I agree with you here, this is an odd thing to include and doesn't help the article at all in my opinion. Which is a shame, because there are some interesting nuggets in there.
2) The Daily Total
If you look at Figure 1. in the article, you can see what he means. From a statistical perspective, it's just not very likely that a phenomenon in the natural world behaves this regularly. You'd just expect more outliers. For example, there should be days where an Israeli offensive is particularly devastating and others where they are far less effective. I'd also be curious where you get your numbers from (196 and 341 as min/max) as I cannot see them in the article.
3) What I think the total number is
Honestly, I have not got a clue. Could be 25'000, 30'000 or 50'000. I would however say that what's important about this article is not what the total number, but rather the ratio between civilian and combatant loss. Let me do a few quick examples. Let's assume that the Total number of casualties is 24'000 for sake of easy maths:
If 6'000 out of 24'000 are Hamas fighters (which are the Hamas numbers according to the article) that gives you a ratio of 1:4
If 12'000 out of 24'000 are Hamas fighters (which is the number according to the IDF) that gives you a ratio of 1:2.
The author claims that the ratio is even closer to 1:1, because he claims that total casualties are not that high to begin with. Whatever the ratio is, it is at least in my view an important indicator to judge to what extent Israeli action can be considered genocidal or not. For this reason both sides, obviously have incentive to manipulate the numbers in their favour.
2. I've looked at figure 1. I initially wrote that its a shame he didn't provide his source. Then I realised that at the very bottom, just above the box in red writing about his title, he does provide a link in italics, to the data he himself is using, with the following:
There he provides the table form of the raw data he is using. I'm struggling to make sense of how the data he's provided in that table matches with the graph he's produced in chart 1? Could you help with this?
Morally, it is difficult to disagree with you. Obviously, every single life lost is a tragedy. But, at least in my view, any accusation of genocide should be supported by evidence, which is why it is such a difficult thing to prove. Genocide is not simply about killing lots of people. It's killing lots of people with the goal of wiping out a "genus" i.e. a group of people. How do you prove that? It's very difficult, unless you have some documentation, which was for example key evidence after WWII. Nazi Germany had kept thousands of pages of official records about the "Judenfrage" and the "Endlösung" and what happened in the concentration camps
So this ratio (even if I'd agree that it's very morbid) can be very important as a higher ratio would imply a recklessness on behalf of the IDF and could be used as evidence for genocidal intent.
Thank you for the data. That's interesting. On first glance, I would agree with you that the 270 +- 15% is not accurate. It's probably closer to 270 +-30%. Again, it's an odd mistake to make as it's not only quite easy to disprove, it also doesn't really change his argument about chance variability. We would expect to see a day with maybe 800 victims and another day with "only" 50 victims.
Also it's important to stress that this does not conclusively proof that the data is fake. But it does make this scenario more likely. The same is true for Wyner's other arguments. Is it theoretically possible that male and female deaths are this strongly negatively correlated? I guess so, but it seems very unlikely given the nature of war. It would imply that the IDF would chose to kill primarily men on day x and women on day y, which I cannot get my head around why and how they would do that to be honest.
I absolutely agree with you. It's not about numbers . But the thing is: Intent is extremely difficult to prove in a legal context. You'd have to look "inside the head" of the accused party to actually know. In most cases we can only assume/imply that intent was there.Genocide has nothing to do with the number of those who have been killed, it is merely an intent question.
Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide
Article II
In the present Convention, genocide means any of the following acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group, as such:
- Killing members of the group;
- Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group;
- Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part;
- Imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group;
- Forcibly transferring children of the group to another group.
and this was South Africa's case, Just look at Gaza and read specifically point B and C
Interesting, Thank you. To be fair to Wyner he addresses this in his article, where he says:
"One group of researchers at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health compared Hamas reports to data on UNRWA workers. They argued that because the death rates were approximately similar, Hamas’ numbers must not be inflated. But their argument relied on a crucial and unverified assumption: that UNRWA workers are not disproportionately more likely to be killed than the general population."
Now, Wyner seems to think this assumption does not hold, whereas Huynh, Chin and Spiegel seem to think that it does, but they don't seem to be able to provide any evidence for that (Neither does Wyner apart from the accusations against UNRWA).
Thank you for the data. That's interesting. On first glance, I would agree with you that the 270 +- 15% is not accurate. It's probably closer to 270 +-30%. Again, it's an odd mistake to make as it's not only quite easy to disprove, it also doesn't really change his argument about chance variability. We would expect to see a day with maybe 800 victims and another day with "only" 50 victims.
Also it's important to stress that this does not conclusively proof that the data is fake. But it does make this scenario more likely. The same is true for Wyner's other arguments. Is it theoretically possible that male and female deaths are this strongly negatively correlated? I guess so, but it seems very unlikely given the nature of war. It would imply that the IDF would chose to kill primarily men on day x and women on day y, which I cannot get my head around why and how they would do that to be honest.
Saying something is not an empty gesture is not the same as saying someone has no current influence. They're totally separate things. Those Israeli protestors also have no influence on Netanyahu or the cabinet. But what they're trying to do is still admirable and, as I said, they're trying to do it in an environment far more hostile to what they're trying to do than the one basically all of us are operating in. It seemed wrong to me to be sitting there on a keyboard criticising those who are trying to affect more of a practical change, rather than just smashing them on an almost echo chamber thread. It would regardless be equally nonsensical to say that those protestors have the blood of babies on their hands or that they have the influence to stop Netanyahu.
The issue becomes therefore that I find it difficult to take any of the rest of his conclusions and data seriously. If he's telling me that all of the casualties fall within a 270 average +/-15% (which seem to be demonstrably wrong from the data he himself has put up), why should I trust the data he has put forward about the daily casualties for men and women, which I cannot check?
Considering this is directed towards me. You don't know the person you're talking to or where they're from and whether smashing on a keyboard is all they do. It's something I have zero interest in talking about here, which is why I ignored your first reply about marching.
Regarding the aid convoy, my words came out wrong calling it out an empty gesture but it was more of a comment about the practicality of it all which is where I disagree with you. I don't think it was, they probably would agree too. If their goal was to show the difference in treatment between them and the ones blocking the aid then it's a job well done.
Your (sadly rare) posts are a breath of fresh air in any thread.The "daily deaths" isn't meant to be a count of how many died that particular day, but how many were documented. If 500 are killed one day, and 100 the next, but they document 300 the first day and the rest the second, then the daily count will be 2x300.
The negative correlation between the deaths of men and women is largely explained by how the count is updated: the total death toll and the composition doesn't happen at the same time. As you see on the list, adult men isn't getting counted, it's the remaining value after the amount of women and children are subtracted from the total. As you see on 10/29/2023 you have negative 26 daily adult men deaths. This wasn't a ressurrection, it was an update on the amount of dead women and children that adjusted the amount of dead men down. On other days they didn't update the amount of dead women, so they're all counted as men by this list. This guarantees the sort of negative correlation we're seeing, it's not a surprise.
The more difficult thing is proving intent on a bigger scale. And in this case I'd argue that the ratio of civilian to combatant loss can be an useful tool to make a case for genocidal intent.
I didn't say smashing on a keyboard, I was talking about smashing (ie criticising) the protestors. Which just seemed to me a really odd target of ire, considering the circumstances.
You've said since you meant it in a different way than how it came across, its fine and we moved on. It just came up in a different thread in a context that I felt to be totally different from the main point.
Yeah, I agree with this. Sorry about the misunderstanding.
I think, I agree with you on your second point. It's clearly been too long since my last statistics class. I am curious what do you make of the lack of correlation between female and child deaths? I guess it could be a case of families being increasingly separated or a process issue (i.e. counting female bodies on day x and the "correlating" child bodies on day x+1)The "daily deaths" isn't meant to be a count of how many died that particular day, but how many were documented. If 500 are killed one day, and 100 the next, but they document 300 the first day and the rest the second, then the daily count will be 2x300.
The negative correlation between the deaths of men and women is largely explained by how the count is updated: the total death toll and the composition doesn't happen at the same time. As you see on the list, adult men isn't getting counted, it's the remaining value after the amount of women and children are subtracted from the total. As you see on 10/29/2023 you have negative 26 daily adult men deaths. This wasn't a ressurrection, it was an update on the amount of dead women and children that adjusted the amount of dead men down. On other days they didn't update the amount of dead women, so they're all counted as men by this list. This guarantees the sort of negative correlation we're seeing, it's not a surprise.
I think, I agree with you on your second point. It's clearly been too long since my last statistics class. I am curious what do you make of the lack of correlation between female and child deaths? I guess it could be a case of families being increasingly separated or a process issue (i.e. counting female bodies on day x and the "correlating" child bodies on day x+1)
2) The Daily Total
If you look at Figure 1. in the article, you can see what he means. From a statistical perspective, it's just not very likely that a phenomenon in the natural world behaves this regularly. You'd just expect more outliers. For example, there should be days where an Israeli offensive is particularly devastating and others where they are far less effective. I'd also be curious where you get your numbers from (196 and 341 as min/max) as I cannot see them in the article.
Feck me. Just stop. Justifying genocide with propaganda makes you almost as bad as those carrying out the genocide.Just his own observation, I presume. He is a well-respected journalist who has been to most war sites in the last 20, 30 years. Let me also address some of your remarks regarding the article.
1) THE UNRWA 190/13'000 thing:
I agree with you here, this is an odd thing to include and doesn't help the article at all in my opinion. Which is a shame, because there are some interesting nuggets in there.
2) The Daily Total
If you look at Figure 1. in the article, you can see what he means. From a statistical perspective, it's just not very likely that a phenomenon in the natural world behaves this regularly. You'd just expect more outliers. For example, there should be days where an Israeli offensive is particularly devastating and others where they are far less effective. I'd also be curious where you get your numbers from (196 and 341 as min/max) as I cannot see them in the article.
3) What I think the total number is
Honestly, I have not got a clue. Could be 25'000, 30'000 or 50'000. I would however say that what's important about this article is not what the total number, but rather the ratio between civilian and combatant loss. Let me do a few quick examples. Let's assume that the Total number of casualties is 24'000 for sake of easy maths:
If 6'000 out of 24'000 are Hamas fighters (which are the Hamas numbers according to the article) that gives you a ratio of 1:4
If 12'000 out of 24'000 are Hamas fighters (which is the number according to the IDF) that gives you a ratio of 1:2.
The author claims that the ratio is even closer to 1:1, because he claims that total casualties are not that high to begin with. Whatever the ratio is, it is at least in my view an important indicator to judge to what extent Israeli action can be considered genocidal or not. For this reason both sides, obviously have incentive to manipulate the numbers in their favour.
I absolutely agree with you. It's not about numbers . But the thing is: Intent is extremely difficult to prove in a legal context. You'd have to look "inside the head" of the accused party to actually know. In most cases we can only assume/imply that intent was there.
So do we do this? The easiest case is the one I already outlined with Nazi Germany. In that case the documentation recovered by the allied forces was overwhelmingly clear. In most other cases we need some sort of alternative proof. Now, I am sure many will say that the statements made by some Israeli officials show genocidal intent and I would in some cases agree with that. I think some of things said by Ben Gvir for example are repulsive. The more difficult thing is proving intent on a bigger scale. And in this case I'd argue that the ratio of civilian to combatant loss can be an useful tool to make a case for genocidal intent.
Feck me. Just stop. Justifying genocide with propaganda makes you almost as bad as those carrying out the genocide.
That isn't how intent is interpreted in most cases. Usually if an action or set of actions can be forseen to have an outcome and they're still committed that's intent.
Given the genocide definition shared and the actions committed by Israel it's very hard to argue they didn't intend those consequences. They'd need to successfully argue they didn't forsee the deaths and harm caused which seems ludicrous.
That isn't how intent is interpreted in most cases. Usually if an action or set of actions can be forseen to have an outcome and they're still committed that's intent.
Given the genocide definition shared and the actions committed by Israel it's very hard to argue they didn't intend those consequences. They'd need to successfully argue they didn't forsee the deaths and harm caused which seems ludicrous.