i am going to address your post in two parts.
1) the topic of adequate access to Al Aqsa Mosque during Ramadan.
2) the problem with how these threads discussing the Israeli-Palestine conflict are being framed.
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restricting access to a holy site during the month of Ramadan would only escalate tensions across the region. it is also a violation of a person's civil liberties.
there's a reason why support for restrictions on the holy site is backed only by disgusting far right extremists like Ben Gvir, who have no regard for both Israelis and Palestinians.
you mention Palestinians using it as an opportunity to launch attacks in Israel, when the only attacks that happen in and around Al Aqsa are by extreme Israeli settlers storming the holy site and causing havoc, the same ones that also want the mosque to be destroyed and replaced with a Jewish temple. not to mention IDF raids over the years, attacking worshippers.
thus, allowing access to the holy site during Ramadan is for the benefit of both Israelis and Palestinians. what we need is to reduce tensions, not fuel them. what restricting access would do is escalate the situation and protect no one.
finally, i want to address this fact that you presented below.
the way that the article has framed this is harmful because it misrepresents what the polls actually found, and doing so functions to vilify and "other" an entire population of people.
the surveys conducted by the PCPSR in both the West Bank and Gaza during the truce in December found that more than
70% of Palestinians believe that Hamas's decision to launch attacks on Israel on October 7th were "correct".
the problem is that both you and the article have misconstrued this as support for the atrocities committed by Hamas. it's important to point out that Palestinians do not believe that diplomacy and negotations are legitimate options (rightfully so) and instead believe that only violence and armed struggle are the means to fight occupation and end the decades long seige over Gaza.
this is further highlighted by the follow-up questions that were part of surveys conducted during the truce, which the article conveniently leaves out, which isn't surprising considering it has pro-Israel bias.
nonetheless, the survey also found that 80% of respondents believe that killing women and children in their homes is a war crime. 85% of respondents had also not seen videos of Hamas atrocities that were shown on international outlets, which is why only 10% of respondents in that exact survey believe Hamas had committed war crimes on October 7th.
https://amp.cnn.com/cnn/2023/12/21/middleeast/palestinians-back-hamas-survey-intl-cmd/index.html
it's also important to acknowledge the context for much of these numbers. the support for armed struggle in both Gaza and especially the West Bank had been growing for years, which is due to the continued illegal expansion of settlements, the egregious actions of Israel's far right coalition, and the ineffectiveness of the Palestinian Authority, fuelling support for Hamas and other resistance movements.
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finally, the point of my entire response is to also encourage you to be more mindful with how you frame these threads. it is a sensitive topic, and often times, some of these posts come off as disparaging an entire group of people.
take for example these statistics below.
83% of Jewish Israelis support the voluntary emigration of Palestinians from Gaza, while
57.5% believe the Israeli army is using "too little firepower". in addition,
87% support the war in Gaza and
75% rejected the Biden administration's calls to change the IDF's strategy to one that "reduces the heavy bombing of densely populated areas."
now, imagine if i created a thread and used these numbers to allude to the Israeli population as people that support the plausible genocide and killing of men, women, and children in Gaza.
that would NOT be tolerated. the way this assertion is presented as an undeniable fact makes it close-ended, which wouldn't leave room for any healthy discussion, and would only result in arguments.
it's one thing to present the numbers and leave the discussion open-ended, so it allows for a productive conversation. however, regardless of where you stand on the matter, we must be wary about how we choose to frame these arguments because again, threads like this that come off as collectively responsibilizing a population of people do more harm than good.
its crucial to emphasize that all of what i've said above applies to both discussions around Israeli's AND Palestinians. this isn't the first thread i've seen "othering" a group of people. it has also happened concerning Jewish Israelis when discussing the conflict.
at the same time, i understand that this is the nature of the politics sub forum. it will always be controversial, can get messy, and is much harder to control when it is a big topic like the Israeli-Palestine conflict.
nonetheless, there should be zero tolerance for posts that are framed in this manner. it's important that we try to improve on how we discuss both Israeli's and Palestinian people, ensuring that both groups are spoken on with respect.