In the most part I don't think we differ in opinion greatly, but I do think your framing of the situation is very wrong. You don't know why people feel or say the things they say, and trying to state what everyone feels weakens your argument. Especially when you assume everyone is virtue signalling.
I know i will never be in a situation where I can impact the situation in the middle East. It doesn't mean I don't feel for the situation and wish things were different, and me taking a private decision not to attend the game and not watch them doesn't impact anyone else but me, but i'd personally feel like i'm supporting the situation by normalising it, if I chose to do anything differently.
Others will attend the game and protest there, others may be more extreme in their actions, I hope no one goes too far but ultimately that is their decisions. What I can say for everyone is this, their actions do not matter less or more because they donated to the right cause.
Like do you need to have been on one of the aid flotilla's or a doctor in gaza before you "care enough". The Dunnes Stores workers protesting apartheid South Africa were more than likely scoffed at the same way back in those protests. But its all routed in the same belief, we are just saying "this isn't normal and we aren't letting you believe it is".
I'd love to think the game doesn't happen, but it will, i'd love to think no one will turn up, but they will, i'd love to think we as a nation can say "no not this time", but it likely won't happen. But I hope enough people protest in the right way that it starts something bigger



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