Melanie Phillips: The war of moral inversion being waged through the western mind
If the west really wants to stop the war it would start putting pressure on the aggressor, Hamas, by supporting its victim, Israel, in its demand that Hamas surrenders.Andrew Fox: This Is What Civilisational Decay Looks Like
If the west really wants to stop the war it should end its utterly perverse indulgence of Qatar as an honest broker in this conflict, an attitude that has made all ceasefire negotiations a lethal farce that has significantly contributed to the hostages’ continued incarceration and the length of this war. It should instead call out Qatar as a sponsor and protector of Hamas and as a Muslim Brotherhood Islamist front. It should require the issue of arrest warrants for the Hamas leaders living lives of luxury in Doha. And it should demand that Qatar force Hamas to release all the hostages immediately on pain of losing its US airbase and all influence in the west.
If the west really wants to stop the war, it should acknowledge the malignant role of the Hamas-loving, Israel-demonising UN which the US should defund and kick out of New York City as an affront to civilised values.
But of course, the west doesn’t want to stop the war. It wants to stop Israel. And it is now being consumed by Jew-hatred on a scale larger than anything seen since the Holocaust.
We are witnessing a confluence of Nazi-Islamist ideology with a Soviet-style inversion of reality that has taken over huge swathes of the west that are no longer able to think at all. The total repudiation of reason that’s created this terrifying, looking-glass world has resulted from decades of cultural attrition waged by elites determined to destroy western identity and values.
With the unspeakable rebranding of atrocities as conscience in the west, we are living through a war of moral inversion being waged not through bombs or missiles but through the minds of millions.
When pictures of the Belsen death camp were published after the end of the Second World War, people in the west were deeply shocked by the revelation of the Nazis’ psychopathic barbarism. Today, as it casts scarcely a glance at the pictures of the Israeli hostages that echo those shattering images of 70 years ago, the west is empowering the Nazis’ heirs.
We have forsaken the fundamental contract of citizenship—the notion that governments are responsible for protecting borders, maintaining order, and upholding shared values. Instead, we have offered rainbow flags, decolonisation seminars, and activist judges.Niall Ferguson: Accusing Israel of genocide in Gaza is a luxury belief— and utterly divorced from reality when there’s a real one happening in Ukraine
Then came social media, which has been the accelerant on the bonfire. The enemy no longer needed to smuggle in agents or spread propaganda by leaflet: now all they need is a smartphone and a network. They weaponised our freedoms against us, knowing we would defend their right to do so even as they used those rights to destroy us.
TikTok has become the frontline of information warfare. Instagram reels have replaced sermons. Hamas and its proxies now trend more easily than democratic leaders. Western teenagers, raised on cultural self-loathing and algorithmic radicalization, march in lockstep with genocidal theocrats and believe they are fighting for justice.
The Mask Falls
Then came Gaza. The mask was torn away. Civilizational rift revealed. Overnight, Western streets flooded with hatred. Synagogues attacked. Jewish citizens were threatened and assaulted. Political leaders hesitated. Media outlets repeated propaganda. Universities turned into centres of open antisemitism. Much of the public just shrugged, numb from decades of ideological confusion.
The Gaza war did not cause this. It exposed it. It was the decisive blow that drove the spike into the Western heart.
We are not merely witnessing protest. We are watching the product of years of infiltration and decay: in demography, in economics, in politics, in media, in education, in culture. This is what a society looks like when it can no longer distinguish friend from foe, right from wrong, civilisation from barbarism. Is it too late? Possibly.
The boiling point has been reached. The water is scalding. The frog is done for. Reversing this will take more than a change of government. It will require cultural rebirth. Moral courage. Strategic clarity. A willingness to endure pain to rebuild what we have lost.
The question is: do we still have the will, or has the long sabotage already done its work?
This is what makes French, British and Canadian talk of recognising a Palestinian state such a perfect example of a luxury belief. For nothing remotely resembling a Palestinian state exists today. Nor is one likely to exist at any point in the foreseeable future.
Thirty years ago, under the Oslo Accords, Israel agreed with the Palestine Liberation Organisation on the beginnings of Palestinian self-government — “a separate Palestinian entity short of a state”, in the words of the Israeli prime minister Yitzhak Rabin. One of his successors, Ehud Barak, went even further at Camp David in 2000. But then PLO leader Yasser Arafat walked away from the table.
Have the Palestinians strengthened the case for statehood in the subsequent years? No. The Palestinian Authority (PA) is an oxymoron; Palestinians despise it, and it has no authority. Hamas continues to enjoy significant support in both Gaza and (some polls suggest even more) the West Bank. True, satisfaction with Hamas in Gaza was down from 64 per cent a year ago to 43 per cent in May, according to the Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research, but that was still higher than satisfaction with their rivals Fatah or the PA.
Asked if they supported or opposed the disarmament of Hamas in order to stop the war, 64 per cent of Gazans said they were opposed. Yet the true nature of Hamas was laid bare on October 7, 2023, which should be regarded — and is regarded by most Israelis I know — as an event disqualifying the Palestinians from self-government, not entitling them to it. Nine out of ten Palestinians simply deny the October 7 atrocities took place.
A defining feature of with luxuries is that they are expensive. The same is true of luxury beliefs. The belief that Israel is perpetrating genocide in Gaza, like the belief that a Palestinian state can be wished into existence by western leaders, is a Hermès handbag of an idea. It is on a par with the belief that peace can somehow be brokered between Ukraine and Russia without the application of meaningful economic and military pressure on Moscow, an idea that is more of a Patek Philippe watch.
Expend energy on such luxury beliefs and you will not notice the help you are giving the axis of authoritarians to bring about the defeat of the West. Nor will you notice the help they are giving you — through the social media channels they know so well how to manipulate — to be the useful idiot you are.