The measure received 14 votes in favour, with the US the sole member to reject it. However, because the US is a permanent member of the council, it has the ability to veto any resolution brought forward

Unlike several previous resolutions regarding a ceasefire in Gaza, Wednesday’s measure was brought forward by all 10 elected members of the Security Council.

The US has vetoed four previous attempts at calling for a ceasefire in Gaza, on most occasions being the lone vote against the measures.

    • NatakuNox@lemmy.world
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      Shows he and the Democratic leaders never intended to end the genicide. Just another sign the democrats no longer support anyone but the oligarchy. Yes the Republicans are worse by alot but people that are anti genicide, anti oligarchy, anti fascism, anti authoritarianism, etc don’t have a party to vote for. Only the level of oppression they will see in the next 4 years.

        • Saleh@feddit.org
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          As long as you keep voting limb cutters, they have no motivation to stop cutting limbs. Not voting for limb cutters is the only way to make non limb cutting get on the ballot

            • WanderingVentra@lemm.ee
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              Now imagine next election one person is threatening to kill 4 children and the other team 6. Well obviously we should save 4! Then next election, we have to kill 6, so we don’t vote for the person killing 8. And so on. That’s how we got in this predicament.

            • NoneOfUrBusiness@fedia.io
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              That is a valid position if you intend to use that time to make it so that children don’t need to burn every election.

            • Saleh@feddit.org
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              You do realize that there is more than one election? Like every four years there is an election. Treating every election like it is the only one and never looking past the immediate effects for the next year is what brought this mess in the first place.

              This is also why this comparison is bad. You can not only loose at this election, but the next one and the one after that amd the one after that. In fact one could argue Americans have been loosong every election to the neoliberals since a few decades. And why? Because you never made a point of getting one party to stop being neoliberals.

              • rknx@lemmy.world
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                This election made me realize that political affiliation in the states for a lot of people is like being in a cult. Rather than accepting that your side has issues and needs a change, people just try to justify it by pointing how bad the other side can be worse. Like 90% of lemmy democrats don’t get that I’m not motivated to vote for being waist-deep in shit vs chest-deep in shit. Yes, one is worse than another, but I prefer to vote so I don’t have to be in shit at all. But all they will say back is hurr durr trump bad.

                • Keeponstalin@lemmy.worldOP
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                  I feel like we need to normalize that demanding more from representatives is OK and necessary for a functioning democracy. The party needs to respond to the demands of those they are supposed to represent. This election made it clear that they only care about the demands of the donors and that needs to change

                • octopus_ink@lemmy.ml
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                  Like 90% of lemmy democrats don’t get that I’m not motivated to vote for being waist-deep in shit vs chest-deep in shit. Yes, one is worse than another, but I prefer to vote so I don’t have to be in shit at all.

                  The reason people keep trying to say the same thing over and over is because your vote to “not be in shit at all” results in all of us being chest-deep. I want the Dems to change too but it isn’t going to happen as a result of folks withholding their votes while we’re in a two party system with FPTP voting. So since I would rather be knee deep than chest deep, I voted knee deep.

                  I’m not going to shame anyone for their voting choices, but let’s not try to deny - not voting results in chest deep shit, not no shit, and we’ll all get an object lesson in this every single day for about (at least) four years starting in January.

                  If you are going to proudly stand by your principled choice (which I support), at least be honest about the effects.

              • would_be_appreciated@lemmy.ml
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                You have this perspective that “we can show them” if we just let the Republicans win, but there’s no evidence to support that. Every time the Republicans have won, the Democrats have moved to the right, not the left.

                If you want a third party to emerge, you can advocate for that, but a truly leftist third party isn’t possible if we lose all our limbs.

                • octopus_ink@lemmy.ml
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                  EVEN NOW they are blaming progressives, not her nonsensical attempt to woo Republicans while moving right so fast it left vapor trails behind her after announcing her candidacy.

                  I thought this was going to be a great article. The title made me think it was going to be all about getting tough with Republicans and actually fighting.

                  https://www.salon.com/2024/11/19/how-democrats-can-move-past-low-dominance-messaging/

                  SURELY, Salon of all places will rightly criticize her for deciding to run as a Republican. BUT NO:

                  Harris also failed to bear down on her hard-edged prosecutor-versus-felon narrative, which figured prominently during the early, effective stages of her campaign. Maybe she yielded to the far left, which admonished her for stigmatizing felons. That’s what she did in her bid for the Democratic nomination in 2019-2020, which helps explain why her first campaign folded before she could even get it off the ground.

                  YIELDED to the far left? With Cheneys on stage at the DNC, more talk about her glock than about climate, no movement on palestine, and not even a willingness to let a pro-Palestine speaker have 30 secs of podium time at the event?

                  In what fucking way did she “Yield” to the far left with a campaign very clearly and transparently designed to woo Republicans into voting Democrat?

                  M. Steven Fish is a professor of political science at the University of California, Berkeley.

                  I have to question your grip on reality, Professor Steven Fish of UC Berkeley, if you think what you saw in recent months was Kamala “yielding” a damn thing to the left.

            • njm1314@lemmy.world
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              Not for nothing, but where is this two limb option? All I see is four limb options except one is grinning and clapping the other is just wearing a false look of commiseration.

        • NatakuNox@lemmy.world
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          Me: why orphan crushing machine?

          You: because other orphan crushing machine driven by Nazies.

          Me: but why don’t we destroy orphan crushing machine?

          You: because orphan crushing machine go burrrrrrrrr

          Me:…

          • Strykker@programming.dev
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            Come back when there is an option that actually destroys the orphan crushing machines. Otherwise your just pouring more fuel into it and making it work faster.

    • maplebar@lemmy.world
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      The right thing is to enact a ceasefire in exchange for the immediate release of all Isreali hostages.

      The US was right to veto this unenforceable, performative UN bullshit on the grounds that it didn’t call for the immediate release of the hostages.

        • maplebar@lemmy.world
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          sort the hostages after.

          “Sort” the hostages “after” what?

          So in your imagination Israel unilaterally stops fighting against Hamas while (a) Hamas continues to hold civilians hostage, doing all manners of physical and psychological torture to people who only happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time and (b) Hamas, Hezbollah, Iran and tribal gangs continue to wage attacks against Israel? And then (and only then), Israel comes back to the negotiating table with Hamas once again for yet another round of negotiations to try to free the hostages, only for Hamas to decide to move the goalposts?

          Is this really the type of illogical nonsense people here believe in?

          No wonder this shit has been going on for decades… Y’all have lost your damn minds if you think that the world works this way.

          • acargitz@lemmy.ca
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            Stop the genocide. Stop the killing of innocent civilians. Now.

            Then, reach a deal for the hostages, like the ones Netanyahu has repeatedly shot down.

            Then, end the occupation: get Israel the fuck out of Gaza, the fuck out of the West Bank, the fuck out of East Jerusalem, back to their 1967 borders.

            Or, if you don’t think this is realistic (and it isn’t because with almost a million settlers, the Israeli right has destroyed the material conditions required for the 2 state solution) prefer cleaner solutions, end Jewish supremacy in Greater Israel (Israel+West Bank+Gaza+Golan+Shebaa). One state, one democracy, equal rights for everyone.

            Persecute all war criminals, Israeli and Palestinian. Then run a truth and reconciliation process, with reparations.

            Justice, right? Crazy, I know. Illogical shit.

            Here’s the catch: without justice there will be no peace. Enjoy your endless cycle of violence.

            • maplebar@lemmy.world
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              There is no “justice” in any circumstances in which the hostages are not immediately returned.

              Then, reach a deal for the hostages, like the ones Netanyahu has repeatedly shot down.

              So you’re literally just confirming this:

              So in your imagination Israel unilaterally stops fighting against Hamas while (a) Hamas continues to hold civilians hostage, doing all manners of physical and psychological torture to people who only happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time and (b) Hamas, Hezbollah, Iran and tribal gangs continue to wage attacks against Israel? And then (and only then), Israel comes back to the negotiating table with Hamas once again for yet another round of negotiations to try to free the hostages, only for Hamas to decide to move the goalposts?

              You must have read “Art of the Deal”.

                • maplebar@lemmy.world
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                  If you could argue against what I said you wouldn’t resort to putting words in my mouth, mate.

                  And if you could read you would know that both Israelies and Palestinians are the “local population” with somewhat dubious historic claims over the land spanning back >3000 years.

                  Need I remind you that it was the British that drew the maps that have lead us to where we are today?

              • acargitz@lemmy.ca
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                Explain why Israeli lives matter more than Palestinian lives. Like, be precise.

                • maplebar@lemmy.world
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                  Who said they are? Only you so far.

                  You should be more precise with your weird, non sequitur questions.

      • Sir_Kevin@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        I hate to break it to you but any hostages are most likely dead. Probably killed by the IDF themselves. The people of Gaza are also starving to death. You think POW’s are getting first dibs? They won’t agree to release them because there aren’t any alive.

        I could be wrong but there’s my 2 cents.

        • maplebar@lemmy.world
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          Return the bodies then.

          Frankly I hope that they are dead, because the idea of living in a dungeon under Gaza being raped and tortured every day for 13 months is horrific.

          And if Hamas has lost track of even the hostages bodies then I don’t envy them, because it seems that they’ve lost what little bargaining position they once had. Uh oh for them.

      • AliSaket@mander.xyz
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        The second paragraph reads:

        The draft resolution was aimed at calling for an “immediate, unconditional, and permanent ceasefire” in Gaza and the release of all hostages held by Palestinian groups in the enclave.

  • SlippiHUD@lemmy.world
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    What absolute pieces of shit. Can’t even bother to do the right thing when it doesn’t even matter anymore.

    • maplebar@lemmy.world
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      Why is it wrong to call for the immediate release of the Israeli hostages in Gaza in exchange for a ceasefire? How does the prolonged suffering of the hostages and their families help the people of Gaza in any way? Is a unilateral ceasefire that doesn’t guarantee the immediate return of the hostages “doing the right thing” to you?

      Not that it never mattered anyway. The UN doesn’t control whether a ceasefire happens or not, only the Israelis and Palestinians can decide when to lay down their weapons and release the hostages–and that should have happened a fucking year ago.

      • SlippiHUD@lemmy.world
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        Stop putting words in other people’s mouths.

        The ceasefire is about widescale collective punishment of a population that is half children resulting in famine and genocide. My point is the Biden administration could do the right thing for once instead of enabling it until the bitter end.

        • maplebar@lemmy.world
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          I’m not putting words in your mouth…

          The US’s stated reason for rejecting the [toothless, unenforceable, bureaucratic, performative] UN ceasefire proposal was that it did not call for the “immediate release of Israeli hostages from Gaza”.

          To that end, you said that they “can’t even bother to do the right thing when it doesn’t even matter anymore”, which to me very clearly shows that you believe that it is wrong (or, not right) to reject an agreement that fails to call for the immediate release of the hostages.

          In my view, the right thing to do is very, very simple–as simple as it has been for over 13 months: agree to a ceasefire in exchange for the immediate release of all Israeli hostages in Gaza (dead or alive). A unilateral ceasefire that doesn’t guarantee the immediate return of hostages doesn’t make any sense to me, how about you?

          It was also “collective punishment” for Hamas to go on a rampage on October 6th, 2023, raping, murdering and kidnapping innocent Israeli civilians, including men, women, children and seniors. Some of these hostages, if they are even still alive, have been held in what kind of horrific conditions for more than a year… Kept in a dungeon, repeatedly tortured, never having seen the light of day for over a fucking year… Something tells me you wouldn’t be so quick to agree to a unilateral ceasefire if someone you loved was held captive for 13 months, now would you?

          The US was right to reject this performative political UN bullshit.

          • SlippiHUD@lemmy.world
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            You’re so right, a terrorist organization kidnapped civilians after launching a single day invasion via hang glider.

            Better not hold the nation state with jet powered aircraft and tanks waging a 400 day invasion to a higher standard than the common terrorist.

            • maplebar@lemmy.world
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              Now who’s putting words in other people’s mouths? 😂

              If you had a leg to stand on in this discussion you wouldn’t resort to pathetic non sequitur.

              Hamas was [supposedly] the legitimately elected government of the Gaza Strip. To think that they could go on a murderous rampage (in which they killed more people in a single day than the Israelis have in any day since then, by the way), take hostages back into Gaza, hide behind innocent women and children like the worthless pathetic Islamist terrorist cowards that they are, and not face the direct consequences of their actions, is a joke.

              I guess when you worship a pedophile who spread his ideology through violent genocide (including in historical Gaza), logic and consequence isn’t your strong point.

              Still, I don’t understand why you are so dramatically opposed to the idea of releasing the hostages? What’s in it for you that these people are needlessly tortured? Do you think it helps offset the harm against the innocent Gazans?

              • SlippiHUD@lemmy.world
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                I’m not opposed to the release of hostages, I think it’s a stupid reason to veto a ceasefire meant to end famine.

          • AliSaket@mander.xyz
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            The second paragraph in the article:

            The draft resolution was aimed at calling for an “immediate, unconditional, and permanent ceasefire” in Gaza and the release of all hostages held by Palestinian groups in the enclave.

      • crusa187@lemmy.ml
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        Braindead take right here. The US has blocked UN peacekeeping forces from curtailing Israeli war crimes since this conflict began.

  • NocturnalMorning@lemmy.world
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    Wtf is wrong with these people. I only voted for them bcz the alternative is a fascist piece of shit. I fucking hate this country.

    • maplebar@lemmy.world
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      Is it so wrong to demand the immediate release of Israeli hostages in Gaza in exchange for an immediate ceasefire?

      That seems like a reasonable agreement to me. The innocent people of Gaza have derived absolutely no benefit from having Israeli civilians being taken captive, maimed, raped and tortured for over 13 months. Release the damn hostages and end the bloodshed.

  • x00z@lemmy.world
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    Why are they even allowed to vote over their own war? Oh I meant Israel’s. My bad.

      • MellowYellow13@lemmy.world
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        She is literally vice president, and also had Q&As with the population saying she is in full support of Israel.

        • InputZero@lemmy.world
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          The Vice President does have a powerful voice, but except for very specific situations they don’t have any power. So while Harris may have more or less supported Israel’s war, as a Vice President she can’t do anything about it. She also won’t become the president so this whole discussion is mute.

  • arbitrary_sarcasm@lemmy.world
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    I’m not a US citizen, but I can understand why some people didn’t wanna vote this time.

    Even though Trump might be worse than Biden when it comes to this conflict, how can anyone vote for Kamala knowing that the death of more innocents will be on their conscience?

    • webpack@ani.social
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      it’s like the trolley problem. would you rather have more people die or a smaller but still sizable amount of people die? unfortunately in America there are only 2 viable candidates.

  • StraponStratos@lemmy.sdf.org
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    This is so odd, I was told only Trump was bad for Palestine, and that he would give Israel a free pass to do whatever it wants.

    • catloaf@lemm.ee
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      Nobody has said only Trump would be bad.

      The second part is true though.

      • StraponStratos@lemmy.sdf.org
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        No more true than the free pass the Dems are giving Israel already. Nothing changes for Palestinians when the Dems are just as complacent and enabling as shown here and many times previously.

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          I had some commentor reply to me saying Republicans would bring about “accelerated genocide” as the reasoning why Republicans are worse for Palestine than Democrats. It’s weird doublespeak that harkened back to Bush and his “enhanced interrogation” terminology. Apparently “genocide” is fine but “accelerated genocide” is something to fear. To the victims, I’m sure it all looks exactly the same.

    • WatDabney@fedia.io
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      Nobody ever told you that “only” Trump was bad for Palestine.

      If you need to lie to promote your viewpoint, then your viewpoint is shit.

    • atzanteol@sh.itjust.works
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      Nobody said that. But now we get Israel with more of a free pass (yes, it can get worse) and “Dr. Oz” running Medicare.

      Awesome right? Hope Democrats learned a lesson at least! Or something…

  • brucethemoose@lemmy.world
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    Is there any future where the Security Council is abolished?

    Like, where everyone gets tired of this shit from the U.S, Russia, and China, and Europe uses their weight to end it?

    • chiliedogg@lemmy.world
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      The thing about the UN generally, and the Security Council in particular, that people don’t understand it that its principal isn’t to end war globally, but to end global war.

      The Permanent 5 members of the security Council and their veto power are a huge part of why it’s been sucessful. The veto prevents the UN from engaging in military actions against the interests of a nation that can withstand an extended military conflict with the rest of the world.

      And it has worked remarkably well so far. While military conflict and imperialism are still around, the scale of conflicts have significantly decreased. The superpowers no longer engage in direct military conflicts that kill 50 million people, and when one gets uppity the rest of the world.engages in economic and diplomatic isolation instead of war.

      • xenomor@lemmy.world
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        The UN has had nothing to do with contributing to the trend you have described. As unpleasant as it is, that is almost entirely a result of nuclear deterrence.

  • maplebar@lemmy.world
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    The United States on Wednesday vetoed a U.N. Security Council resolution demanding an immediate cease-fire in the war in Gaza because it was not linked to an immediate release of hostages taken captive by Hamas militants in Israel in October 2023. [Source: https://apnews.com/article/un-gaza-resolution-veto-hamas-israel-hostages-b5281432fc2acdc1860adb3015392c0b]

    Despite the knee-jerk reaction from uninformed people here, they were absolutely right to veto it.

    Any ceasefire deal should obviously demand the immediate release of every remaining Israeli hostage.

    There is simply no justification for the withholding of these hostages who have been tortured and raped in Palestinian captivity for >13 months. The civilians of Gaza do NOT benefit from the continued torture of Israeli civilian hostages, so what is the rationale for not calling for their immediate release? Release the damn hostages, and only then can we have a meaningful path towards a ceasefire.