Labeling Gaza’s militant rulers as “Hamas” conveniently severs Palestinian identity from its political and moral consequences. This distinction grants innocence—or at least plausible deniability—to the broader population who once cast ballots for their governance, sustain them with moral or logistical support and share a distinct national identity separate from other Arabs. Just as early American colonists were collectively judged by the acts of their political choices—even if not every settler personally rallied behind the Sons of Liberty—the entire Palestinian populace in Gaza must be held to the standard that their representatives, or at the very least their cohabitants, have set.
Hamas did not descend upon Gaza as a foreign entity. They emerged from the local populace, earned electoral legitimacy in 2006, and have entrenched themselves through both political maneuvering and force. By continuing to call the perpetrators of violence “Hamas,” we shield the surrounding community from their share of responsibility. If Hamas is a U.S.- and EU-designated terrorist organization, how did these “outsiders” seize power unless the very people they govern had a hand in legitimizing or protecting them? Much as colonial Americans could not disclaim the overreach of the Continental Congress without disowning their own revolutionary identity, Gazans cannot simply partition “the militants” from “the populace” when the two are inextricably intertwined. (RELATED: Terror Leaders Gone In Explosive Military Operation)
Thomas Jefferson famously wrote about the people’s sovereignty and the reciprocal obligations of government and governed. If we apply this principle to Gaza, it means that if the people are sovereign, they are responsible for what their government does—be it dispensing charity or launching rockets. The label “Hamas” is a rhetorical fig leaf, giving the impression that a violent faction is the only culprit while the wider population remains conveniently offstage. At worst, this fosters the notion of a morally neutral “bystander majority” that is neither morally nor politically accountable. But in a society where families often live mere blocks from rocket sites, where tunnels are dug under neighborhoods, and where widespread celebrations sometimes follow violent attacks, the lines blur. Those lines should be erased entirely.

This erasure is not merely theoretical—it is visible in the streets. When Israeli and American hostages were released over the past two months, jubilant crowds of Palestinians took to the streets, not in sorrow for the suffering endured by these captives, but in grotesque displays of mockery. These were not Hamas militants alone but ordinary Palestinian men, women and children taunting and humiliating the hostages, an act not of coercion but of communal participation. There were massive parades, widespread cheers, and chants of defiance. The sheer scale of these celebrations leaves no room for the fiction that Hamas is an occupying force lording over an unwilling people. They are not its captives; they are its willing chorus.
Limiting our language to “Hamas” alone inadvertently excuses the rank-and-file population that voted for those leaders and, in many cases, still provides them cover. One recalls James Madison’s admonition that democracy and liberty rest upon an informed and responsible citizenry. If a society’s citizens fail their civic duty by electing or tolerating violent, oppressive governance, then language should reflect that complicity. How deeply do the “civilians” object to their rulers? If hostility reigns unchecked, that is in part a reflection of popular will or, at the very least, popular acquiescence. The name “Palestinian” thus becomes the rightful, unadorned term to describe those who either facilitate or do not effectively oppose these militant acts. (RELATED: Outrage In Australia: Muslim Health Care Workers Say They Will Kill Israeli Patients)
Furthermore, designating Hamas alone as the villain distorts how the broader conflict is understood—akin to labeling every British atrocity during the Revolutionary War as the fault of “the Redcoats” and sparing the entire British populace the blame for supporting those uniforms through their tax coffers or imperial cheerleading. The same logic must apply to Gaza: the community, the electorate and the fighters form one national fabric called “Palestinians,” and it is a moral evasion to talk around that collective responsibility.

Some might argue that Palestinians within Gaza oppose Hamas, just as some British subjects supported American independence, but this hardly changes the moral ledger. When an overarching identity actively sustains the group in power—through shelter, silence or direct endorsement—that identity ought to be named. If indeed an overwhelming number objected, then overthrow, sabotage or mass civil protest would be more visible. The relative absence of such large-scale resistance is evidence that the entire population, or at least the dominant majority, remains in step with, or resigned to, Hamas’ rule.
The false dichotomy between “bad militants” and “innocent residents” must be abandoned. Instead of speaking of “Hamas,” a term that absolves anyone not wearing the official insignia, we must be candid about holding the broader Palestinian identity to account. After all, every member of Hamas is, by definition, Palestinian. By insisting on naming the collective, we deny the rhetorical sleight of hand that permits a population to step aside and deny authorship of its leaders’ actions. If people are sovereign, then they bear sovereign responsibility, no matter what banner their militants fly.
Writers, journalists and commentators must recognize this reality in their language. The inhabitants of Gaza are not hostages of Hamas—they are its lifeblood. The global conversation must reflect this truth. Referring to them simply as “Palestinians” rather than allowing the false partition of “Hamas” grants moral clarity. It is time to end the linguistic evasion that excuses collective accountability and instead call this conflict what it is: a war waged by a nation, not just a faction.
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Hamas= Palestinians then
This is one the most relevant articles I have seen in a long time. This has always been my take on citizens of countries, including ours. If a country has the ability to vote, who and what gets elected represents the will of the people. So then, calling civilians of a warring country innocent bystanders becomes a misnomer. Keeping in mind the killing of people at all is a horrible thing and to be avoided, too much attention to preventing civilian casualties in warfare where, as in today’s middle east wars as an example, large numbers of “civilians” are intermixed with soldiers on location, leads to hampering full-scale offensive which likely leads to prolonged conflict resulting in greater death and devastation. IMO, if it is found that using “innocent civilians” as shields is ineffective and does not work, the practice will stop, and will get back to more military against military. War is terrible and should be avoided with all effort, but when it becomes necessary, needs to be fought to win in the shortest timeframe possible removing the ability of the transgressor to wage war in the future, as was the case with Germany and Japan after WWII, and should be the case with the Palestinians. This has been the way of the world since the beginning, and will likely be to the end, as both good and evil will continue to exist in the world.
Look hamas, blm, hezbala, gangs, other terrorist all need wiped out and those that back them erased from civilization, we can never have a good chance at peace until these criminals vile criminals are dealt with permanently, and putting them in prison doesn’t work, we all know this and same with drug dealers, human trafficking, same thing erased, permanently
Palestinians are as dangerous as the terrorist, they hid them protecting them and No other Arab Countries will take them in so quit trying to shove these vile people down everyone throat, the u.n. Can take them in Not here in America look at what these people are doing to our schools, get them out of here, and anyone that will take them God Save you, the Arab Nation tried several times had to throw them out they are destructive people not acceptable to decent places, they are unfit for America, the Arabs, Israel, send to Africa maybe they can live there,
Taken to its proper place we would say the same about ALL MUZSLIME, IZSLIME IS THE ENEMY!!!!!