There's a small country surrounded by deserts that can teach everyone a lesson: how to manage water, how to reuse it, how to clean it, how to get it. Scarcity makes us virtuous, from shortage to industry, from scarcity to cooking, the technologies that make this small country heard from scarcity. They have the largest water recycling facilities in the world, adequate irrigation systems, desalination, air transformation technology in water... They also have plenty of water to sell, therefore, to those who live by their side without water (and the rest of the world in the bottled Eden paradises). Like any country in the first world, Israel has its green strategies, like any other country in the West, because it has a third world of exploitation. Maybe too close. On that limit where green becomes red.
I don't know where you remember how much plastic, what cows, what cotton I'm going to drink. I'm sure that I'm leaving less and less the country that uses its water to make my things, less and less, because it's less. In 1993 we agreed in Oslo that for a while Israel would be 80% of the shared water (jokes start immediately) and for the Palestinians 20%. It would therefore be legal for Israel to leave the Palestinians with 20% of the water during all these years: they have obviously not. They have left them less.
The Palestinians, like us, want, unlike us, that we also have to decide, when they say “listen, look here”, Israel has not only killed thousands of people, but has cut off their water (the little they have), and it is ridiculous to see Borrell angry, “the interruption of water goes against international law.” Once this gap is over, the Palestinians will continue to lack infrastructure to get water, seeing how the crumbs are destroyed, buying water for those who have stolen the water... We will continue to have water, we will continue to invest in Israel’s green accounts, we will continue to invest in Europe, far from borders, without seeing the green, and we will be afraid to say boycott, genocide ... We are afraid to say what needs to be said. Somebody's more than that. And if it's Israel, maybe ...