If they didn't kill civilians, they would not be terrorists. Your comparison to the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising isn't a good comparison because (to my knowledge) the escapees that participated in the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising did not target German civilians or do otherwise terrorist activities. They were purely a militia group, unlike Hamas.
while i dont rly get the value of "debating about hamas" (the palestinian resistance, hamas or otherwise, def does not gaf what euroamerikan "opinions" are posted online about them, if u are planning to travel to gaza then u def shouldnt be talking abt hamas bc surveillance and if u arent then wtf does it matter what u "think about hamas") and will not engage in that, i do think that the question that was brought up here and in a few other adjacent posts is important to address.
most indigenous rebellions throughout history did not "adhere to the standards of international law." for those in the "us", the slave rebellion credited to Nat Turner tended to treat any white person in the community as a 'valid' target, and killed/'murdered' around 60 white people in this process; basically whatever white people were 'in their path'. the first person killed in the rebellion at harpers ferry associated with John Brown was actually a free black person, who tried to intervene not knowing what was happening. obv i am less knowledgeable about history elsewhere but, eg in the haitian revolution, while undoubtedly the most vicious (and genocidal) massacres were carried out by the french in retaliation as collective punishment against all black people in haiti for daring to rebel, the anti-colonial resistance was not "sunshine and rainbows" and certainly included some actions that would not fall within today's "international law." tbc obv there is no "equating" genocidal collective punishment by french settlers and slaveowners or the military that then came to back them up, and tactics of the resistance that were viewed as necessary to defeat an enemy that obviously had no limits in the violence it had committed and was willing to further commit to preserve race slavery in (what we now know as) haiti.
as far as i know the warsaw ghetto uprising did not include attacks on 'civilian' members of the nazi party, but this is just a reflection of circumstance due to the structure of those ghettos; there were no nazi civilians in/around the warsaw ghetto bc it was segregated, and it was ofc secured by pigs not civilians. speaking as someone who grew up in a family (on one side) of descendants of sho'ah survivors, i certainly never had the impression that either my grandma who was a survivor or anyone else in her/my family felt that nazi civilians in any way 'deserved' to be spared. anyone who stayed in germany and was not a part of the resistance was essentially considered a collaborator.
here is one example of norman finklestein discussing the experiences and feelings of his parents living in the warsaw ghetto and living with the knowledge that the nazi party was in process of sending them to their deaths. (obv i dont rly share his politics in general, i think he can be v economic-reductionist for example, but i dont feel such disagreements are of relevance here.) he recalls his memory of his mother saying to him: "if we were going to die, we were going to take some of them with us."
'frontier raids' target colonizers who are nearby, bc that is who they are able to target. many colonial genocides present similar historical patterns of 'frontier raids' attempting at a small scale to violently resist colonialism and a brutal explicitly genocidal collective-punishment retaliation by the colonizers that the colonized would dare to attack them. see eg,
here an academic comparative analysis of these patterns across various colonial genocides.
as btw finklestein notes in the above video, none of us know the internal assessment(s) of hamas or any other palestinian resistance organization of the october 7 prisonbreak. (ofc any potential self criticisms or regrets would not primarily be because of ~euroamerikan humanist panic over a couple hundred israeli settlers, but in terms of the material conditions of the 2 million palestinians in gaza as well as the genocidal escalations in the west bank, against palestinians within '48-palestine, and now lebanon.) i rly dont think it is our place to be "debating" the "morality" of the october 7 rebellion, but i do think it is important to be honest about the history of slave rebellions and other decolonization struggles, instead of whitewashing them, or revising their histories into a "dinner party" as 'leftists' of certain ideological leanings might say lol. again to quote fanon from
The Wretched of the Earth, "National liberation, national renaissance, the restoration of nationhood to the people, commonwealth: whatever may be the headings used or the new formulas introduced, decolonization is always a violent phenomenon."
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as an aside, i agree with donphan fan that it would be fine for this thread to be community moderated / collectively self-moderated. after all, after all smogon moderators do not necessarily have any particular or specialized "expertise" on politics, they can make mistakes just as any of us can. while the option to ban certain users or delete certain posts is def useful to have here sometimes (tho there are downsides too esp in the case of 'controversial' bans on users), i dont think that it is a ~necessity for the thread to be functional. boo was around and slandering people and such for quite a while before they finally got threadbanned, we found ways to deal with it (calling them out every time they posted lies about someone, etc.)
i cant imagine that smogon will even consider allowing this (or any) forum thread to be explicitly unmoderated, so idt this is an actual option on the table, but if im wrong and it is an option then i def would be open to it on my end. (ofc i cant speak for others)