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Fantasizing genocide committers: 'Israeli' women wish their men served in Gaza

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Published :  
2 hours ago|

A viral social media video tracking a bizarre dating deception has re-ignited a fierce online debate, illustrating how deeply the 'Israel'-Gaza conflict continues to permeate everyday digital spaces, relationships, and pop culture.

The video, which has circulated widely across platforms under various titles, such as, "THEY GLORIFY IT. They would LOVE for their man to go to Gaza. Juxtaposes a lighthearted podcast anecdote with severe political analysis, drawing starkly polarized interpretations from viewers worldwide.

The first half of the footage features a clip from the podcast Talking Unfiltered, where a woman shares her exasperating experience navigating the local dating pool.

In the recording, she describes her initial relief at thinking she had finally escaped the notoriously difficult Tel Aviv dating scene after connecting with a man she believed was a long-term partner.

However, the relationship took an unexpected turn when she discovered the elaborate fabrication he used to break off contact.

According to the speaker, the man "fully lied about going into Milu'im [military reserves] in Gaza" simply to exit the relationship.

The revelation that an active, high-stakes conflict zone would be used as a casual mechanism to "ghost" someone was met with visible shock and gasps from the podcast's co-hosts.

The second half of the viral video features a critical pivot.

An online content creator added a video overlay, shifting the conversation entirely from a strange modern dating horror story to a sweeping structural critique of 'Israeli' society.

The commentator argues that the incident should not be viewed merely as an isolated, toxic relationship lie.

Instead, he asserts that the man's choice of fabrication was designed to "impress her about going to commit genocide." From his perspective, the underlying issue was a broader cultural normalization where military deployment is "wildly celebrated" and integrated into dating dynamics.

Expanding the critique to a systemic level, the creator claims that political figures like Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu are reflections of a democratically elected mindset rather than anomalies.

He argues that casual anecdotes like the podcast clip reveal how the broader population has normalized ongoing violence through media, entertainment, and everyday social interactions.