Do you believe that leaving was anywhere near as dangerous as staying? Obviously the biggest threat to those leaving was Hamas, since, again, they urged civilians to stay to act as human shields whereas it was in Israel's best interest to clear the area of non-combatants. But still, you can do some quick math and easily see that keeping your children there was still indefensible. This isn't even an argument as far as I can tell. It's at best a fucking footnote on how terrible a human being you have to be to keep your children there.
The claim that Gazans are responsible for their own deaths because they “should have left” reflects a misunderstanding of forced displacement so elementary that most first-year history students grow out of it. Anyone who has actually studied how state power controls movement — rather than just reciting timelines — knows that civilians cannot meaningfully “choose” to evacuate when the borders, the routes, and the conditions of escape are fully controlled by the same military force conducting the assault. For nearly twenty years, UN officials and human rights observers have described Gaza as “the world’s largest open-air prison.” There’s a reason for that: unlike normal borders, Gaza’s crossings are sealed, militarized, and technologically monitored. There is no open frontier, no neutral territory, no spontaneous exit. You cannot blame people for not leaving a place they are literally enclosed within.
If you want a real-world contrast: there is no wall between the United States and Canada. People cross that border on foot, by car, by ferry, by accident, without even realizing it in some places. But between Gaza and Israel, there isn’t a “border” in the conventional sense — there is an electrified perimeter, controlled gates, remote-operated guns, watchtowers, motion sensors, and armed forces. It is a cage. So when someone talks as if Gazans could simply “head north” the way a U.S. citizen could walk into Canada, they’re not making a historical argument; they’re demonstrating they don’t understand the basic physical reality.
And when we examine what happened during the evacuation orders themselves, the argument collapses further. In Khan Younis, civilians walking along officially designated evacuation routes were killed by tank fire and airstrikes. In al-Mawasi — a “humanitarian safe area” Israel itself designated — multiple strikes hit civilians who had complied with every instruction. The UN repeatedly warned that Palestinians were being targeted in the exact corridors they were ordered to take. This is textbook forced displacement under constrained movement: the evacuating power controls the roads and makes them lethal. You’re speaking with the confidence of someone who’s never actually analyzed displacement logistics, border control regimes, or evacuation bottlenecks in historical case studies.
History already teaches us how this logic works. During the westward displacement of Native Americans, U.S. authorities claimed tribes “should leave for their own safety.” But whether they stayed or left, they died, because the military controlled the timing, the routes, the rations, and the checkpoints. The Cherokee followed every removal order and still lost thousands on the Trail of Tears. The Navajo complied and starved at Bosque Redondo. In every major case of coerced relocation, historians agree that when the dominant power controls the exit conditions, “choice” becomes an illusion — and blaming the victims for not escaping is historically illiterate.
So when someone insists that Gazan civilians are at fault for “staying,” they’re not presenting a tough-minded military analysis or historical insight. They’re just recycling a debunked narrative that collapses the moment you study a single case of forced displacement. If staying is deadly, and leaving is deadly, and the controlling power seals the exits and strikes the escape routes, then the civilians never had a choice at all. And blaming people trapped behind a cage for not escaping it is not history — it’s excuse-making dressed up as confidence.