“We’ve had three wars and so many escalations using weapons and bombs, and we aren’t in any place different than we were in 2008. Has anything changed? Maybe it’s time to do something different," said Adele Raemer, a school teacher and resident of Kibbutz Nirim.

At 9 a.m. on Wednesday morning, I got into my car in Gush Etzion, near Jerusalem to head down to communities along the Gaza envelope in order to learn firsthand from residents what they were going through in this latest round of rocket barrages being carried out by various terror organizations in Gaza, including Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad.

According to the Israel Defense Forces, more than 1,300 rockets had been fired at Israeli communities as far north as Tel Aviv and its suburbs as of late Wednesday.

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The first thing I noticed driving south was the lack of cars on the road. It almost felt as if Israel were still in the midst of one of its coronavirus pandemic lockdowns. A reporter on Army Radio noted that for the first time since the pandemic, he had no reports of traffic jams anywhere in Israel, which is unheard of on regular weekday morning.

At 10 a.m., I reached a kibbutz less than a kilometer from the northern end of the Gaza border that is serving as a staging area for soldiers guarding communities in the vicinity. As I arrived, the soldiers were gearing up and preparing to move out as an intelligence warning indicated a terrorist or group of terrorists from Gaza might have infiltrated into Israel in an attempt to launch an attack on an area community. At the same time, all civilian residents within four kilometers of the border were ordered indoors. Read more at JNS