Bulldozers are not neutral machines. In Gaza, they flatten homes, mosques, schools β€” and the people still inside them. Israel calls it 'security'. The United States calls it 'stability'. The rest of the world sees rubble and corpses. But the Bulldozer Doctrine is bigger than demolition. It is the systematic erasure of witnesses. If no building stands, no survivor speaks, no journalist remains β€” then history itself is bulldozed. What is left is only the official lie. Rachel Corrie understood this. She was 23, an American activist, who stood in front of a Palestinian home in Rafah in 2003, trying to block the Israeli army’s Caterpillar D9 bulldozer. She was crushed deliberately. Her spine snapped, her skull shattered. U.S. officials called it a 'tragic accident'. Israel called it an 'unfortunate mistake'. But those who were there know: it was neither. It was a message. The message is clear: it does not matter if you are Palestinian, journalist, or even American. If you stand in the way, you will be erased. Bulldozed. This logic did not end with Rachel Corrie. Journalists in Gaza, Yemen, Iraq, Syria β€” too many to name β€” have been killed while doing their job. Some under bombs, some under collapsing towers, some under the legal equivalent of bulldozers: censorship orders, blacklists, social media bans. The U.S. perfects the model abroad and exports it as 'freedom'. What Israel and the U.S. share is the same colonial reflex: build new ground on top of the dead. In North America, it was Native nations. In Palestine, it is the people of Gaza and the West Bank. Bulldoze, rebuild, rename. Erase the blood beneath the concrete. But memory does not die as easily as bodies do. Every time they try to bury the truth, more voices rise. Truthloop exists for this reason: to unearth what bulldozers cannot kill β€” memory, testimony, and resistance.