I'm not. The last 30 years have seen multiple clashes between Israelis and Palestinians, and in all of them, Israelis have killed way more Palestinians. This latest war is far from the first one where Israel has been accused of using excessive force and disregarding civilian safety.
There is a pattern of disregard for Palestinian civilians from the IDF.
Which decade do you want? Because the examples are too many to list.
Police targeted Palestinians with mass arrests, used unlawful force against peaceful protesters, and subjected detainees to torture
www.amnesty.org
Israel should know that journalists have a right to work, and people have a right to demonstrate peacefully, without being shot.
www.nytimes.com
You wouldn't know it from the media coverage, but peaceful protests are nothing new for Palestinians. But if they are to succeed this time, the…
foreignpolicy.com
The targeting of unarmed demonstrators by snipers using high-velocity weapons was methodical, precise, and lethal.
www.thenation.com
Israeli forces fired tank shells into a peaceful Palestinian protest during the ongoing assault on Rafah refugee camp yesterday, killing at least 10 people - mostly children - and critically wounding many others.
www.theguardian.com
Matan Cohen told <i>Haaretz</i> officers fired rubber bullet at him during anti-fence protest in the the West Bank.
www.haaretz.com
You're trying to attach to the definition of genocide constraints like the velocity of the act (months or years) or the territorial extent of it, which are only relevant to nations that want to avoid the geopolitical consequences of supporting a nation committing genocidal acts.
The point is, Israel is not interested in annexing a West Bank or a Gaza strip full of Palestinians, and they have to go somewhere. Problem is,
Gazans can't go anywhere, and the Israeli government is willing to let them die by preventing help from going to the civilian population.
You're not being serious right now.
If a nation's wartime strategy is to trap and subject the civilian population of the enemy to starvation and environmental conditions favorable to mass civilian casualties (like cutting off power to hospitals and access to potable water), as Israel has done during the first few weeks of the conflict, you can't say there isn't an intent to commit genocide. When the Israeli
government turns a blind eye to Israeli settlers poisoning Palestinian water wells, you can't say that there is no intent to harm the population at large.
What doesn't matter here is the amount of people killed or the method by which they die as the result of those actions. What matters is the intent to destroy the targeted population, and it's there.