@AkomoCombine I was just about to ask about this because I read 2 million with half of them being children.
I wondered if numbers were inflated and I wondered why they wouldn’t get their children out of there when warned if safety is only 20 miles away.
This is an info graph from the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), updated September 2023.
There are 2.2 million, give or take. This info graph focuses on poverty & mobility. Other UN data measures the population as 40% under 15, around 50% under 19.
Video & on-the-ground reports show civilians terrified because they don't know if IDF can be trusted. There *are* civilians hit while evacuating. None of this is as easy as it looks.
@MLClark @AkomoCombine thanks for clarification. I understand being terrified. I just know if it were me, I’d walk the six hours, if I had to. They had to have known this was coming, given what happened on the 7th. But you raise important points about not trusting the IDF. I imagine there is also shock and difficulty getting people who are elderly and disabled out. How much time was there between the attack and the warning? And how much time was there to leave? And what agencies help?
In one of my recent pieces, I wrote about fundamental attribution error: it is *very* normal for human beings, when witnessing suffering go on for a long time, to turn from sympathy for the suffering to anger at them for how uncomfortable their suffering makes us feel. We start to blame them for their suffering instead.
This is human.
We want an explanation that alleviates our pain & eases our discomfort for not being able to more.
But all of this is just... grief. 🫂
@MLClark you are reminding me of my “a-ha” moment about Psychology (Social Psychology specifically). Initially I had “Why” questions. And it dawned on me, “why” is a a bottomless pit that lends itself to subjective interpretation. The better question is “what” as in “what do people tend to do”, “what can be predicted based on studies”, or “what is effective in changing opinions for better outcomes”. @Museek @AkomoCombine
@MLClark @Museek @AkomoCombine
This explains a lot and is something to think about.
@MLClark
yes, the stages of grief include anger.