08-02-2014, 10:25 AM
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#1522
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Franchise Player
Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: Calgary
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Rerun
Is the UN counting bodies? Or do they get the figure from what Hamas reports to them?
This is the same UN that allows rockets to be stored in their schools, and their schools and hospitals to be used as military posts/launch sites by Hamas?
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Quote:
Consider the media obsession with the body count. According to a daily tally in the New York Times, as of July 27 the war in Gaza had claimed 1,023 Palestinian lives as against 46 Israelis. How does the Times keep such an accurate count of Palestinian deaths? A footnote discloses "Palestinian death tallies are provided by the Palestinian Health Ministry and the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs."
OK. So who runs the Palestinian Health Ministry in Gaza? Hamas does. As for the U.N., it gets its data mainly from two Palestinian agitprop NGOs, one of which, the Palestinian Center for Human Rights, offers the remarkably precise statistic that, as of July 27, exactly 82% of deaths in Gaza have been civilians. Curiously, during the 2008-09 Gaza war, the center also reported an 82% civilian casualty rate.
When minutely exact statistics are provided in chaotic circumstances, it suggests the statistics are garbage. When a news organization relies—without clarification—on data provided by a bureaucratic organ of a terrorist organization, there's something wrong there, too.
But let's assume for argument's sake that the numbers are accurate. Does this mean the Palestinians are the chief victims, and Israelis the main victimizers, in the conflict? By this dull logic we might want to rethink the moral equities of World War II, in which over one million German civilians perished at Allied hands compared with just 67,000 British and 12,000 American civilians.
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Unfortunately this is behind a paywall.... I can't help that but I'll try to find the other sources. WSJ is calling bull on some of the numbers provided by the UN. Unfortunately its very chaotic on the ground and the third party verification is flaky at best.
Source
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