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March 7th, 2026

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Hamas' terror also holds a warning for the US

 Francis Wilkinson

By Francis Wilkinson

Published October 16, 2023

Hamas' terror also holds a warning for the US

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We become depraved by degrees. Germans did not become Jew killers in a day. It took years of conditioning, via propaganda, and then steady practice, via party and state brutality, to shed their humanity and become a nation of functional sociopaths. The Hamas terrorists who murdered babies in their cribs last week weren't stamped with pathological hatred at birth. It was an acquired habit, the result of a process of moral dulling and rage sharpening. No doubt some foes of Hamas will now rejoice at the sight of Palestinian babies blown to smithereens in retaliation. It's not a terribly long distance from eye for an eye to baby for a baby.

If you look around American politics, you can see the early stages — and in select cases not so early — of the kind of moral, social and intellectual deterioration that first imagines, and later gleefully invites, atrocity. At New York magazine, Eric Levitz has an excellent survey of moral idiocy on the left. The terrorist attack on Israel was an opportunity for those averse to moral complexity to let their freak flags fly. Many didn't wait for the facts to filter in before seizing it. Levitz wrote:

"It is not hyperbole to say that many left-wing supporters of Palestine celebrated Hamas's atrocities. The national leadership of Students for Justice in Palestine declared the weekend's events a "historic win for the Palestinian resistance," touting Hamas's success in "catching the enemy completely by surprise." The Connecticut chapter of the Democratic Socialists of America applauded the Palestinian resistance's "unprecedented anti-colonial struggle," pledged its solidarity to that struggle, and vowed, "No peace on stolen land!" At a rally co-sponsored by socialist organizations in New York City, one speaker spoke approvingly of the mass murder of Israeli teenagers, saying, "There was some sort of rave or desert party where they were having a great time, until the resistance came in electrified hang gliders and took at least several dozen hipsters."

Such comments are reminiscent of the low point of the American left, when self-styled radicals circa 1970 rationalized mindless political violence, leaving a trail of dead and injured, from police officers to physics researchers, in their deluded, self-righteous and utterly self-defeating wake.

The horror of Hamas terrorist attack will reverberate in the weeks ahead. Israel, in the course of retaliating, as any viable nation must, may compound the horror through overreaction. Calibration of force is never easy. It's especially difficult when the desire for vengeance accompanies a powerful need for deterrence.

But as most of us recoil from the depravity of the Hamas attack, and from the further death and destruction that will ensue from Israel's response, we should pause to consider the unsteady landscape of American politics. Depravity has an increasingly solid foothold here. We can't pretend we don't know where it leads.

Francis Wilkinson
Bloomberg
(TNS)

Previously:
02/10/23 Harris' biggest problem is her boss
11/15/22 Dems in array? It's hard to deny after the midterms
12/10/29 AOC's old-fashioned machine politics
08/05/15 Jeb Bush can run as his party's grown-up
07/02/15 Liberal triumphs may pave way to abortion ban

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