This old picture has the writing "Easter eggs for Hitler" on the bombs. I think the use case makes the biggest difference for whether writing a message is perceived as sinister. A bomb which is being sent to someone who has been confirmed to regularily attack civilian targets is not great.
I wonder what the earliest example is of someone writing messages on outbound projectile weapons, or if there are any examples of messages being received, in other words, like if a bomb with a message on it turn out to be a dud and landed in the general's kitchen or something.
Probsbly some good material would come to you. You ever write jokes?
I'm never going to be on the side of Hamas, but there's no need to make a mockery of something that will surely involves civilian casualties. Shame on her.
Yeah, lots of people did similar things for Ukrainian bombs and shells. Even though they were much more likely to hit combatants, it still felt really weird to write memes on stuff that likely will kill someone (yes even a Russian war criminal). It just felt inhumane.
Reported as a duplicate, and, yeah, it is, but from a different source. Technically should be removed but the additional engagement makes it keep-worthy.
Nobody wants to see those kids die more than Hamas. It is pan-Islamism's strongest weapon against the world's western democracies. These kids are victims of a religious cult that put them in harm's way on purpose. The bomb is actually for Hamas, not the kids.
Notice how the manufacturer's writing on the bomb is in Hebrew.
See, Israel has their own bombs to drop on Gaza. And when they do drop American bombs and Gaza, it's the old shit that they already have, which they have to either use or decommission, before long.