الأنباط -
Dr Ayoub Abu Dayyeh
I asked this question to Gtp and he answered as folllows:
The Gaza genocide is likely to leave deep generational trauma, mass displacement, and a shattered society, but also fuel lasting resistance and global outrage.
Its political outcome may mirror other historic atrocities—short-term oppression, but eventual shifts against the aggressor as legitimacy erodes.
Again, I asked the same question to
Deepseek, it answers:
After thought for 18 seconds, Iam
Predicting the specific outcome of the conflict in Gaza is impossible due to its extreme complexity and fluidity, but continued catastrophic humanitarian suffering, regional instability, and a deepening cycle of violence are tragically certain without a drastic shift towards political solutions, which currently remain distant.
The path forward depends entirely on unpredictable factors like international pressure, potential ceasefire breakthroughs, leadership changes, and whether genuine negotiations for Palestinian self-determination alongside Israeli security can finally gain traction, replacing military action with diplomacy.
As for the oppression against Palestinians, the Surest Seed of Retaliation
History leaves no doubt: when nations are humiliated, stripped of dignity, and denied self-determination, the result is not obedience but rage.
DEEPSeek gives examples: Versailles’ crushing terms after World War I turned Germany into a breeding ground for Hitler. European colonialism’s exploitation of Africa and Asia ignited the violent struggles of Algeria, India, and dozens more. In Palestine, decades of displacement and occupation have sustained a cycle of resistance across generations.
Apartheid South Africa, Iraq and Afganistan after 2001, 2003, and countless others show the same pattern: repression hardens identities, unites the oppressed, and convinces them that resistance—even at great cost—is the only path to dignity. Collective punishment and cultural erasure do not pacify; they ferment hatred that survives long after the oppressor’s power wanes.
The lesson is blunt and universal: peace cannot be built on humiliation. Justice and equality are not idealistic luxuries—they are the only foundations strong enough to hold back the flood of vengeance that history has shown, again and again, will come.
I cannot agree with them more with both perspective.