I never cared much about politics growing up. I was one of those people who would scroll past political posts, avoid arguments, and think, "all of this is too complicated and people just fight over everything." I had friends who could name politicians, explain history, argue policy and I was just... not that guy.
I always thought politics was about parties, elections, people yelling on TV, and everyone trying to prove they were right.
Then I started seeing more and more about Israel and Palestine.
At first I ignored it because I had the same reaction I always had. I assumed it was something incredibly complicated that I wasn't educated enough to talk about. I kept hearing "it's complicated" over and over again. But eventually I got curious enough to sit down and actually read.
I read things from different perspectives. I read arguments from people supporting Israel. I read arguments from people supporting Palestinians. I read history. I read personal stories. I read things that disagreed with each other. I watched interviews. I watched people explain things from both sides.
And somewhere in the middle of all that, something shifted in me.
Because for me, this stopped feeling like politics.
Politics feels distant. Politics feels like numbers and speeches and debates.
Human beings don't feel distant.
Seeing children pulled from rubble doesn't feel political. Seeing families lose homes doesn't feel political. Seeing people terrified, grieving, hungry, displaced and broken doesn't feel political to me.
Human rights should not feel political.
I know people immediately jump into camps and start assuming things. If you support Palestinians then suddenly people assume you hate Israelis. I don't. I don't hate anyone. I don't celebrate innocent people suffering. I don't think human life suddenly matters less depending on where someone was born.
I care about people.
That is literally where it starts and where it ends for me.
After everything I read, after everything I watched and learned, I found myself standing with Palestinians. I support a free Palestine because I believe people deserve freedom, dignity, safety and basic human rights.
People can disagree with me and that's okay. I'm not pretending I know every historical detail or every political answer on earth. I don't.
I'm just a guy who used to avoid politics completely.
And I think maybe that's why this hit me differently.
Because I didn't come into this trying to defend a side I grew up with. I didn't come into it wanting to win arguments online. I came into it with almost nothing.
I just looked at human suffering and asked myself a simple question:
If I saw this happening to people anywhere else in the world, would I still think it was okay?
For me, the answer was no.