This is a regular feature for paid subscribers wherein I write a little bit about what I’ve been reading and/or watching. If you’re not yet a paid subscriber but regularly read, enjoy, or share Unpopular Front, please consider signing up. This newsletter is completely reader-supported and represents my primary source of income. At 5 dollars a month, it’s less than most things at Starbucks, and it’s still less than the “recession special” at Gray’s Papaya — $7.50 for two hot dogs and a drink. You can buy “When the Clock Broke,“ now available in paperback wherever books are sold. If you live in the UK, it’s also available there. First of all, I’m very eager to read the brand new Equator magazine. It’s the product of several brilliant minds, including Pankaj Mishra, Mohsin Hamid, Nesrine Malik, Samanth Subramanian, and Suzy Hansen, with editing by former Guardian long reads creator Jonathan Shainin. Here is a portion of the journal’s opening manifesto:
As an American, I hope they are wrong that our civilization belongs entirely to the past, but I’m very interested to see what they will have to say. The world breathes a sigh of relief and then holds its breath again as the ceasefire takes hold in Gaza. All people of conscience sincerely hope this is the end of one of the greatest catastrophes of our lifetimes. It is also only the beginning: Israel has left so much of Gaza virtually uninhabitable, and rebuilding will be arduous; Hamas is apparently trying to reassert control among the rubble. The intense moment of war and massacre may have passed, but the suffering of the Palestinian people in Gaza and on the West Bank is not over. One thing I feel fairly certain of is that Israel’s standing in the world, including its perception among Americans, will never be the same: its image is forever stained. I also regret to say that antisemitism has likely returned as a major political force in world affairs. I think we will look back at this chapter of human history and note that the really dark times began with October 7th and the destruction of Gaza: It has broken something in the world. We are still learning about the circumstances in which the ceasefire was negotiated, but one report from NBC cites the Israeli strikes on Qatar as the turning point for the Trump administration. No one seems to have remarked on how perverse this is. The IDF could massacre and starve Palestinian civilians every day for two years, but that was never a red line. Only when the interests of this fat little Gulf ally, who, by the way, is quite generous in Washington DC, came into question, did it finally end. At the point when the strikes on Qatar came, they looked like just another Israeli outrage, another piece of unhinged aggression from a country gone mad. But attempting to kill Hamas’s leadership, without inflicting massive suffering on civilians, was actually the more moral course the war could have taken. The assassination of prominent Hamas officials who planned or had knowledge of the October 7th attacks does not seem unjust to me. Revoking the de facto legitimacy of Hamas seems like part of a reasonable response to October 7th. But that’s not what Israel did; by slaughtering countless Palestinians and then negotiating with Hamas, they accepted and, in fact, cemented Hamas’s status as legitimate leaders of the Palestinian people. Imagine if Israel had taken a more limited and restrained campaign? But it wasn’t possible considering what Israeli society has become. It was clear what this war would be from the moment it started. The only consolation is that it fell short of my worst fears, which involved the wholesale ethnic cleansing of the strip. ... Continue reading this post for free in the Substack app |