The kiss was a crack in the glass, a quiet mutiny against the machinery of erasure. It was not just an act, but an undoing—of the script, of the roles assigned, of the carefully engineered illusion that some lives are worth grieving while others deserve to dissolve into statistics.
The regime was not prepared for the rupture, for the image that slipped through its ironclad narrative and exposed, in a single moment, the fragility of its lies. It was not Omer Shem Tov who was humiliated—it was Israel itself, its carefully manufactured image shattering in real-time.
But this isn’t about a kiss. It’s about control—of perception, of language, of the architecture of reality itself. Propaganda does not merely manipulate the truth; it creates a new one. It dictates who suffers with dignity and who perishes in silence. And for decades, Israel has wielded this machinery with ruthless precision. But there comes a moment when the narrative can no longer hold, when a single unscripted act exposes the fault lines beneath. This was one of those moments.
It was an unarmed act of war against the machine of dehumanization, a glitch in the algorithm of propaganda, a trembling disruption in the cold calculus of who is allowed to be seen as human and who must remain the ungrievable dead. The question is not whether Omer Shem Tov pressed his lips to the forehead of a Hamas fighter out of gratitude or coercion—such questions are convenient distractions, designed to keep us debating the choreography of the image rather than confronting the rupture it represents.
Israel’s Prime Minister’s Office just announced that Israel will delay the release of Palestinian prisoners “until the release of the next hostages is guaranteed.” In a brief statement, the office claimed the decision was made “in light of the repeated violations by Hamas – including rituals that humiliate the dignity of our prisoners and the cynical political use of them for propaganda.”
Because this is what the kiss did: it cut through decades of narrative engineering, years of careful curation by those who need you to believe that Palestinians are subhuman, that their resistance is barbaric, that the land from which they are being erased was never truly theirs to begin with. The kiss did not fit the script. The hostage was meant to be cowering, not embracing. He was meant to be in the hands of monsters, not men. And so, the machine sputtered.
For Israel, the kiss was unbearable not because of what it showed but because of what it revealed—its own doctrine of existence, one that justifies the oppression of others in the name of its own survival. A doctrine that demands dehumanization as a prerequisite for security. The propaganda that once masked this contradiction is beginning to fray, and Israel is being forced to confront its own reflection. The question is whether it can survive the truth it has spent decades trying to suppress.
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The article is very good! Wanted to recommended to you, folks!
well the counter propaganda for this kind of thing is usually the “he was brainwashed” argument and some people will believe it