Genocide (noun): acts committed with intent to partially or
wholly destroy a national, ethnic, racial, or religious group
Merriam-Webster
WARNING: This article contains graphic images of a morbid and horrible nature. Kinda like this:

Well, it's not good news. But the recent death of Aaron Bushnell outside the Israeli embassy in Washington D.C. does illustrate the flammable nature of human sanctimony, and how quickly an attitude of self-righteousness can turn a person into a pile of charcoal, given the opportunity.
In this uncensored video on Bitchute, since marked NSFL, or "Not Safe For Life," our recently-deceased cautionary tale tells the viewer that he's about to engage in "an extreme act of protest," because he "will no longer be complicit in genocide." He also declares from his short-lived, highly-flammable pedestal of self-righteousness that "compared to what people in Palestine have been experiencing at the hands of their colonizers, it's not extreme at all."
In order to believe that sending yourself to hell for all eternity isn't extreme, and that to do so is an act of beneficent solidarity on your own part, it is not only necessary to believe oneself to be genuinely righteous and therefore incapable of going to hell (a place self-righteous people tend to disbelieve in, as though it matters what anyone "believes"), it is also necessary to believe that Hamas is not a genocidal group that does not believe in a genocidal religion founded by a pedophile and self-proclaimed prophet who never prophesied anything.
A view which is perhaps itself extreme. As in,
extremely wrong.
For your viewing displeasure, I have compiled the images of Aaron Bushnell's unfortunate, cautionary descent from sanctimony to hell. Like hell itself, the images are graphic, and not suitable for life. As the Bitchute warning indicates.
Not safe for life, indeed.
Let's filter these images through a special thought lens, and see the progression of our would-be hero's mindset as he descends into the abyss prescribed by an attitude of unrepentant self-righteousness.
As you can see, he doesn't care about Palestine anymore. Like the unfortunate souls who have listened to their father the devil before him, our cautionary tale has gone on to his reward.
It is a brutal, joyless observation, but one that needs to be made. The descent of the recently-deceased cautionary tale from sanctimony to mortal terror is very similar to that of Boris Balkan in The Ninth Gate. Like Balkan, he starts out proclaiming his power and might, but within seconds is screaming in horror and pain. Then he collapses into a pile of lifeless rubble that doesn't care about power, politics, or money... anymore at all.
The footage in the restricted Bitchute video is harrowing indeed. The screenshots are bad enough. They are an advertisement for hell itself. A 3-minute trailer for the feature-length eternity of horror, pain, and suffering that awaits the unrepentant sinner. It's horrific, as it should be. It scares me just to write about it. God forbid I am in any way self-deceived, and on a similar trajectory myself. God in Heaven, PLEASE, make me as a dog, before You let me go down a road like that. I'm begging You. Please.
Have mercy on me Jesus.
“For to him that is joined to all the living there is hope:
for a living dog is better than a dead lion.”
Ecclesiastes 9:4
I saw a video today in which Ben Shapiro mentioned that some people who believe Israel is engaged in genocide have been saying that Aaron Bushnell's heart was in the right place, but that he took it too far. That his time would perhaps have been better spent haranguing Jerry Seinfeld, or moving to Yemen.
I disagree. Aaron Bushnell took his radical ideas to their natural conclusion. He took the express lane, but he made it to the only end his ideology was ever going to take him. If that end is indeed "too far," perhaps it's time to rethink your ideology.
Thanks for listening.



