Hamas terrorists just released shocking videos showing Israeli hostages starving in Gaza tunnels. The footage shows 24-year-old Evyatar David, abducted at a music festival, so thin his bones stick out. He’s digging what he says is his own grave, with captors forcing him to survive on canned beans warfare. Political commentator Glenn Beck compared the scenes to Auschwitz concentration camps, a chilling reminder of evil regimes.
This isn’t accidental starvation—it’s intentional horror. Hamas feeds their own fighters while barely giving hostages water. One video shows Rom Braslavski, 22, writhing in pain and unable to move. Prisoners tell how they’re denied sunlight, basic hygiene, and enough food to stay alive. Families of the 20 remaining hostages plead for the war to end to save their loved ones.
You’d think these videos would dominate global news, but mainstream media stays strangely quiet. Where’s the outrage over terrorist starvation? The same outlets screaming about “human rights” in Gaza ignore this suffering. It’s selective morality—blaming Israel while shielding Hamas brutality. This silence is complicity.
Conservative voices like Beck won’t let America forget. “We’re seeing systematic starvation as propaganda,” Beck warns. “Hamas treats hostages like pawns in their sick game.” The videos reveal the true face of terrorism: not freedom fighters, but monsters using starving hostages for PR.
Meanwhile, a story of hope emerged. An East Jerusalem resident found ways to send food and medicines directly to Gazans, bypassing Hamas and greedy middlemen. This brave citizen knows the truth: aid gets stolen when given through corrupt networks. Private efforts often succeed where bureaucracies fail.
The Gaza crisis isn’t about shortages—it’s about Hamas controlling supplies. While Gaza’s tunnels have air-conditioned terrorist bunkers and stolen aid stocks, hostages starve nearby. This isn’t negligence; it’s a deliberate strategy to use hunger as a weapon.
Western leaders like Israel’s Netanyahu face pressure to expand military actions. Families of hostages chant, “Bring them home!” outside government buildings. The videos Hochamt demands swift action against Hamas’ war crimes.
This isn’t just a conflict—it’s a moral test. Will we stand for hostage starvation, or demand accountability for terrorists? Americans must support Israel, share the truth about Hamas, and back efforts to stop this humanitarian crisis. The fight against evil requires courage—not silence.

