Americans’ moral break with endless war

Author

Dr. Ramzy Baroud

April 13, 2026

Ordinary Americans are becoming active participants in shaping a more morally conscious political reality (AFP)
Ordinary Americans are becoming active participants in shaping a more morally conscious political reality (AFP)

In the Middle East, the perception of ordinary Americans has long followed a familiar script: detached, uninformed, inward-looking and politically shallow — a society of “gas guzzlers” with little grasp of global realities beyond their immediate geography.

This perception did not emerge from thin air. It was cultivated — reinforced, even — by American political and media institutions. Politicians claimed to speak on behalf of “the American people,” while the mainstream media shaped what those people knew and, crucially, what they did not.

For decades, Americans overwhelmingly aligned with Israel. This was not merely ideological, it was instructional. The public was told — repeatedly — that Israel reflected so-called American values, such as democracy, civility and modernity. Palestinians and Arabs, by contrast, were framed as perpetual antagonists, initiators of violence and obstacles to peace.

Some Americans embraced this framing on religious or ideological grounds. But for the majority, the pro-Israel position became a default — an inherited conclusion rooted in limited access to alternative information. Israel was “good,” Arabs were “bad.” The narrative was simple, binary and rarely challenged.

With the mainstream media as the primary source of information, this perception hardened over time. Support for Palestine, and for broader Arab causes, remained confined to academic spaces and activist circles — often informed by anticolonial and anti-imperialist frameworks but numerically marginal and politically contained.

For decades, Americans overwhelmingly aligned with Israel. This was not merely ideological, it was instructional

Dr. Ramzy Baroud

The mainstream remained locked in place. But that lock has been broken.

The shift did not happen overnight. Among Democrats, cracks began to appear as early as the mid-2010s. In 2016, Gallup data still showed Democrats sympathizing more with Israelis than Palestinians. By 2018, that gap had narrowed significantly. By 2021, parity had nearly been reached. And, by 2024-2025, a majority of Democrats — especially younger voters — expressed sympathy for Palestinians, with some polls showing support exceeding 50 percent among those under 35.

This transformation was driven in part by grassroots activism, particularly within progressive circles, where Palestine became a central moral and political issue. But it was also driven by something far more consequential: the collapse of narrative control.

The Israeli genocide in Gaza accelerated this shift dramatically. Not only because of the scale of violence in the besieged Strip but because, for the first time, the realities of war were not broadcast solely through the filters of the corporate media. Independent journalism, social media and direct visual evidence disrupted decades of curated narratives. The informational balance — long skewed — began to tip.

At the same time, American trust in the mainstream media reached historic lows. According to a 2025 Gallup poll, only about 31 percent of Americans expressed trust in the mass media to report news “fully, accurately and fairly,” with trust among the young even lower.

Up to this point, one could still argue that the shift remained politically contained: Democrats moving toward Palestine, while Republicans remained firmly aligned with Israel. But then came a rupture.

On Feb. 27, Gallup released a survey showing that, for the first time in modern polling history, more Americans sympathized with Palestinians than with Israelis — 41 percent to 36 percent. This was not a marginal fluctuation. It was a structural break.

That moment should have been seismic. But it was not treated as such. The mainstream media largely buried the story. And, within days, the political conversation shifted to a new crisis: the war with Iran.

In the weeks that followed, polling attention moved rapidly to American attitudes toward military escalation. Across multiple surveys, the outcome was consistent: Americans rejected war and an even greater number rejected the idea of a prolonged military entanglement.

Independent journalism, social media and direct visual evidence disrupted decades of curated narratives

Dr. Ramzy Baroud

Yet mainstream commentaries generally refused to connect the dots. Palestine was treated as one issue, Iran as another. Venezuela, interventionism and global militarism were separate, disconnected phenomena. Each was analyzed in isolation, stripped of its broader political and moral context.

Instead of recognizing a pattern, commentators fragmented the evidence. Opposition to conflict was framed as war fatigue, economic anxiety or partisan resistance to President Donald Trump. The focus was placed on gas prices, electoral calculations and political polarization — not on the possibility that Americans were making moral judgments independent of elite narratives.

But the pattern is there. And it is unmistakable.

True, Americans are still told what matters — Israel, Iran, energy security, the Strait of Hormuz, etc. The agenda remains largely intact. But the conclusions no longer follow automatically. The chain between attention and consent has been broken.

This is not simply a political shift, it is cognitive and moral. Economic concerns and partisan affiliations still shape public opinion, as they always have, but they no longer fully determine it.

Increasingly, Americans are evaluating global events through a moral lens — one that prioritizes the minimization of civilian suffering, questions power asymmetries and challenges the legitimacy of endless war.

This is not speculation. It is confirmed by data — most clearly in the case of Palestine, which has emerged as a moral compass for a wider transformation in American public consciousness. The shift in sympathy toward Palestinians is not an isolated anomaly but a signal of a deeper rethinking of power, justice and resistance. And it is likely to be irreversible.

The mainstream media will continue to set the agenda for the foreseeable future. But it has lost something far more important: its ability to manufacture consensus at scale.

That signals possibility. And perhaps, for the first time in generations, a reason for cautious — yet unmistakable — optimism: that ordinary Americans are no longer passive recipients of power but active participants in shaping a more morally conscious political reality.

  • Dr. Ramzy Baroud is a journalist, author and the editor of The Palestine Chronicle. His latest book, “Before the Flood,” was published by Seven Stories Press. His website is ramzybaroud.net. X: @RamzyBaroud

Disclaimer: Views expressed by writers in this section are their own and do not necessarily reflect Arab News’ point of view

source https://www.arabnews.com/node/2639763

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