Cyber madness: Fake-news war
Is possible that the IDF bombed the hospital to take out the Hamas.

Right now about half of the information on the Israeli-Hamas war that we read in both social and traditional media is fake news. It is poisoning the minds of readers, telling them to hate based on falsehood. The momentum is intensifying. The fake news makers are having a field day. There is an intensifying fake news war.
The end result is — violence everywhere. The Israeli-Hamas war has spilled over to the streets of America, Europe and Asia through cyberspace hate campaigns. It is a global phenomenon. Fake news is feeding the hatred everywhere. Global anarchy is being spawned by a cyberspace gone haywire. The fake news frenzy is unstoppable.
To this day, we do not know if the bombing of the hospital in Gaza was done by Israelis or Palestinians, both of whom came up with convincing conflicting blow-by-blow accounts of how it happened.
Readers believe one or the other, fake or true, according to their biases. India has banned TikTok, which it claims is a major source of pro-Palestinian fake news. But pro-Israel fake news is equally all over Tiktok.
Israel believes that Hamas has built its underground headquarters beneath hospitals in Gaza. If it is true that they are using hospitals and patients as human shields, is it possible that the IDF bombed the hospital to take out the Hamas headquarters beneath the hospital?
Everything is pure speculation at this point for either side.
Case No. 1. There was a video of angels hovering in the sky seen by Israeli civilians. Was this staged? The angels floating at a far distance could have easily been a video trick, with the civilians in the background heard weeping and crying out, "Oh Jesus, thank you, Jesus, hallelujah."
The majority of Jews do not believe Jesus is the Messiah. Could this be a trick video to show that God is on the side of the Israelis, a warning that God will defeat their enemies, that Israel is justified in its vendetta — the ongoing Gaza genocide? If you are pro-Israel, you would believe the angel video instantly without thinking.
Case No. 2. There was a video showing Hamas killing Gaza citizens trying to flee the city. We do not know if this was real or staged. It would have been actually easy to stage. Just get people to lie down looking dead on a 200-meter stretch of highway after you drenched them in ketchup, for a nice cellphone camera shot from a moving motorcycle. However, it was also possibly true. That is the dilemma.
