Reposted Review: AirGradient Open Air Outdoor Air Quality Kit by David Shanske (Gadget Wisdom)

In my previous post, Finding The Right Outdoor Air Quality Monitor, I laid out my decision making process for purchasing the AirGradient Open Air outdoor air quality monitor kit.

Posted pictures of my new air quality sensor construction over at the tech site I contribute to. Excitedly hoping it doesn’t fail like the previous one.
Reposted https://twitter.com/SpencerGuard/status/1746725914312847646 by John Spencer (Twitter)

One of the biggest mistakes of critics of Israel’s war against Hamas in Gaza is attempting to compare the war to a past modern war (post WWII) or battle that is not what Israel is conducting in Gaza. 🧵 pic.twitter.com/StGeCgcLra

This is probably the best analysis of why the situation in Gaza is often misconstrued by the international community that I’ve seen. I’ve tried to repost it below, with appropriate attribution, as it was sent out as a series of X/Twitter posts.

The Author is John Spencer, who according to his bio is an expert on Urban Warfare and the Chair of Urban Warfare Studies at the Modern Warfare Institute at West Point. Sounds like a man with the credentials to speak with authority on the subject.

One of the biggest mistakes of critics of Israel’s war against Hamas in Gaza is attempting to compare the war to a past modern war (post WWII) or battle that is not what Israel is conducting in Gaza.

Israel is not conducting a counterinsurgency, counter-terror campaign (it may later) in a semi-permissive environment with host nation support, or fighting a single battle against a small terror force that has temporarily seized an urban area.

Initially I too tried to explain that the closest comparison of Israel’s initial attack of Gaza City was the 2016-2017 Battle of Mosul. As in a city attack of an enemy held city where the defenders were using human shields & had prepared a complex defense. But, even Mosul fails on multiple levels to compare in context to Israel’s war against Hamas in Gaza. None of the battles of Raqqa, Aleppo, Marawi, Mosul, or Fallujah are comparable to Israel’s operations for many reasons.

Again, Israel is not trying to find a few terrorists embedded in an urban environment where they have host-nation support and 90% of the civilians are not combatants or are not present such as 2004 Fallujah with 3,000 enemy fighters in a single city or the 2016-2017 Mosul with 5,000 ISIS fighters in a single city.

The IDF is fighting a full-scale war against a terrorist military of over 30,000 fighters with a massive arsenal of rockets, who has spent decades & millions of dollars digging an underground world of hundreds of miles of tunnels woven into the civilian society & with the design to reverse engineer the current laws of war (lawfare) to achieve their strategic goals.

Unlike other battles, the Hamas strategic goals are not to hold terrain or defeat Israel’s military but to sacrifice their civilians (so not human shields, but human sacrifices) to cause the international community to force Israel to stop their counter-attack.

No modern military has faced 13,000 plus rockets being launched over their heads at their homes while conducting their war/battle/operation.

Nor since World War II has a military fought in a situation where hundreds (now 136) of their own citizens (to include babies, women, elderly) are being illegally held hostage inside the combat area and a strategic factor in their timeline of the war.

Israel is not fighting in one city. It is fighting in five major cities. It is fighting a real and definable existential threat to the survival of their citizens and nation.

IMO, the fact is that Israel has followed the laws of war, has implemented civilian harm mitigation steps that no military has implemented in modern urban battles and people still attempt a moral equivalence with out of context battles.

Watched Golda from imdb.com

Focuses on the intensely dramatic and high-stakes responsibilities and decisions that Golda Meir, also known as the 'Iron Lady of Israel,' faced during the Yom Kippur War.

⭐⭐⭐

While appeared to be somewhat historically accurate, the movie did not hit the emotional highs I would expect them to try for. It came across dry, despite the excellent cinematography and performance by Helen Mirren.

They did succeed in recreating the panic of the 1973 attack, and the crisis, however, and the recreations of the sounds of war are haunting.

Despite it being produced before October of this year, the parallels between the 1973 attack by Egypt and Syria on Israel on Yom Kippur and the 2023 attack, 50 years later are distinct because Hamas picked the day for a reason.