this post was submitted on 30 May 2025
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This is a bit better, but it's still coming from Haaretz and the person they referenced most, Professor Orna Sasson-Levy, is the same person Al Jazeera interviewed in 2009 so it's still fairly self referential. It's the same people saying the same thing over and over again.
This article does provide pictures of drawings and a picture of a shirt being worn, but it hardly makes a firm connection to soldiers.
The article also says, "As Danny Kaplan of the Gender Studies program at Bar-Ilan University sees it, the regular appearance in recent years of the crude T-shirts has raised doubts about the fitness of the army to rein in the phenomenon." If this is such a regular occurrence why is it so hard to provide pictures of people wearing them and associating it to the IDF?
To make things even more weird the article says, "The sexist shirts also turn up in unexpected places. “What’s amazing is that you see them on the street on foreign workers and even on Palestinians,” says Ofer Nordheimer Nur of the Women’s and Gender Studies program at Tel Aviv University. “You see all kinds of shirts with slogans such as ‘I’m in Golani’ or with semi-amusing slogans, which may have been bought at a second-hand shop or just picked up off the street. Even in Gaza, you can see shirts like these.”"
So apparently these shirts are so common place that Palestinians in Gaza are wearing them, but they're definitely coming from soldiers custom ordering them?
Applying some critical thinking some questions have to be asked. Why is it the same media outlet that is generating this and no one else? Why are the commenters the same people even 8 years later? Why is it that we can get pictures of the drawings but barely any of people wearing the shirts? How is it that the shirts are custom ordered, but also so common that they are everywhere? Why is it that Palestinians in Gaza have them? Does this not raise questions for you?
Never heard "JAQing off" before, that's good