A view of makeshift tent camp as civilians trying to survive face major difficulties in accessing basic needs such as food, clean water, and healthcare in severely overcrowded tent camps amid a severe humanitarian crisis caused by the conflict, in Gaza City, Gaza, Palestine, on June 19, 2026. [Saeed M. M. T. Jaras - Anadolu Agency]
People can be consciously aware of atrocities without experiencing the moral outrage those horrors warrant. This emotional detachment is particularly pronounced when atrocities target “those who are different,” occur in seemingly “remote” lands, or repeat so frequently that they dissolve into a familiar, predictable monotony. Psychological frameworks explain this affective insularity through cognitive biases like the “just-world fallacy,” which blocks empathy in otherwise deserving cases to protect one’s own psychological comfort. Alternatively, it manifests as victim-blaming to rationalize aligning with the oppressor, or as compliance with propaganda narratives designed to dehumanize victims and render them unworthy of concern. The rendering of atrocities into something ordinary through repetitive exposure systematically erodes the human capacity for a fittingly shocked response. This was […]

This article was sourced from Middle East Monitor.

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