This:
Motion of the Council of Allegheny County urging the United States
Federal Government to work cooperatively towards an immediate
de-escalation and cease-fire in Israel and Palestine as well as the
release of all hostages.
Whereas, all human life is precious, and the targeting of civilians, no matter
their faith or ethnicity, is a violation of international humanitarian
law; and
Whereas, on October 26th, the United Nations General Assembly, in a near unanimous
vote, called for an immediate and sustained humanitarian ceasefire;
and
Whereas, hundreds of thousands of lives are at imminent risk if a ceasefire is not achieved, and humanitarian aid is not delivered without delay; and
Whereas, the Federal Government holds immense diplomatic and appropriations powers
to save Palestinian and Israeli lives;
The Council of the County of Allegheny therefore hereby moves as
follows:
The Allegheny County Council calls upon our US Congressional delegation,
both in the Senate and House of Representatives, to join us in urging the
Biden administration to:
1. Immediately call for and facilitate de-escalation and a ceasefire to
urgently end the current violence,
2. Immediately call for and facilitate a release of all hostages held in
Palestine and Israel, and,
3. Promptly send and facilitate the entry of humanitarian assistance, at the
scale needed, into Gaza.
Furthermore, the Allegheny County Council moves that, upon its passing,
the bodies’ staff shall forward copies of this resolution to the President
of the United States and our Congressional delegation.
As I said, they voted this down.
From The Trib:
Allegheny County Councilman Nicholas Futules summed up about five
hours of public comment Tuesday night about the ongoing conflict between
Israel and Hamas in Gaza.
“This world sucks,” he said.
The comment was made shortly before the 14 county council
representatives in attendance voted 3-9-2 not to pass a resolution
encouraging a ceasefire in the region.
Resolution sponsors Bethany Hallam, Anita Prizio and Dan Grzybek voted in favor of passage.
But dissenting were Futules, council President Patrick Cetena, Vice
President John Palmiere, Jack Betkowski, Sam DeMarco, Robert Macey, Paul
Klein, Robert Palmosina and Suzanne Filiaggi.
Council members Michelle Naccarati-Chapkis and David Bonaroti abstained. Councilman DeWitt Walton was absent.
(Side note: Sam DeMarco was one of Trump's "fake electors" and he's STILL on Allegheny County Council - just sayin')
Meanwhile, Reuters is reporting:
The
United States on Tuesday revised language in a draft United Nations
Security Council resolution to back "an immediate ceasefire of roughly
six-weeks in Gaza together with the release of all hostages," according
to the text seen by Reuters.
The third revision of the text -
first proposed by the U.S. two weeks ago - now reflects
blunt remarks by Vice President Kamala Harris. The initial U.S. draft had shown support for "a temporary ceasefire" in the
Israel-Hamas war.
The
U.S. wants any Security Council support for a ceasefire to be linked to
the release of hostages held by Hamas in Gaza. Hamas attacked Israel on
Oct. 7, killing 1,200 people and taking 253 hostages, according to
Israeli tallies.
And from The NYTimes, there's this about VP Harris' remarks:
Vice President Kamala Harris on Sunday
called for an “immediate cease-fire” in Gaza, saying that Hamas should
agree to the six-week pause currently on the table and that Israel
should increase the flow of aid into the besieged enclave amid a
humanitarian crisis.
Ms. Harris’s
remarks, delivered in Selma, Ala., bolstered a recent push by President
Joe Biden for an agreement and came a day before she was to meet with a
top Israeli cabinet official involved in war planning, Benny Gantz. Her
tone echoed a sharper and more urgent tone coming from the White House
as its frustration with Israel grows. Last month, the president called
Israel’s response to the Oct. 7 Hamas-led attack “over the top.”
Ms.
Harris assailed the dire conditions in Gaza, calling the situation a
“humanitarian catastrophe.” It was her most forceful assessment to date
of the Middle East conflict, which has killed more than 30,000
Palestinians, according to Gazan health authorities, and put the enclave
on the brink of famine.
“What we are
seeing every day in Gaza is devastating,” Ms. Harris said. “We have seen
reports of families eating leaves or animal feed. Women giving birth to
malnourished babies with little or no medical care. And children dying
from malnutrition and dehydration. As I have said many times, too many
innocent Palestinians have been killed.”
Cease fire. Too many innocents have been killed.
But the County Council voted it down.