Tuesday, June 30, 2026

  • Tuesday, June 30, 2026
  • Elder of Ziyon

I have been spending time on a simple idea that seems obvious once stated and is almost never actually used. Every claim rests on load-bearing assumptions — many of them implicit, never written down, doing their work in silence — and if even one of those assumptions is false, the claim cannot stand.  That is what load-bearing means: an assumption whose failure brings the whole thing down. By definition, an argument can be no more secure than the shakiest assumption holding it up.

The trick is that extracting those assumptions is an acquired skill. The explicit ones are easy; anyone can list what a paper openly claims. The load-bearing ones are often the assumptions the author never noticed making — the things that had to be true for the argument to even get started, sitting so far underneath the visible claims that neither the author nor the reviewers nor the readers think to check them. Learning to surface those is most of the work. I've written AI GPTs to help me and while they are enormously helpful they still miss some assumptions because assumptions themselves are often layered and it is hard for anyone, man or AI, to see all the layers. 

Here is a case study. 

On June 16 a paper appeared in Culture and Religion, a peer-reviewed Routledge journal, by Nadim Rouhana, who holds a chair at the Fletcher School at Tufts. The title is "A State Founded by a Book": Zionism's Sacralized Politics and the Road to the Gaza Genocide. Here is the entire abstract, in the author's own words:

This paper examines how Zionism's sacralized politics – the framing and legitimation of Israel's policies toward Palestine and the Palestinians through appeal to religious texts – helped lay the groundwork for Israel's publicly supported and often eagerly enacted genocide in Gaza. It explores how sacralized politics became a key site of convergence between mainstream secular Zionism and national-religious Zionism, ultimately culminating in a shared genocidal policy. The paper first considers why secular Zionism increasingly harnessed and incorporated sacralized politics, particularly in relation to the systematic extension of the Zionist settler-colonial enterprise into the Palestinian territories occupied in 1967, with its attendant land dispossession, massive and ongoing structural and direct violence, and systematic disregard for international law. It argues that choosing Palestine as the site for the Zionist project entrapped Zionism in sacralized politics to justify its settler colonial policies while at the same time conversing with significant Western currents and undercurrents. It then analyzes how mainstream secular and national-religious Zionism complemented one another in the violent project of overtaking Palestine and how this complementarity sanctioned the strategies that enabled Zionism's shift from a century-long eliminatory campaign with genocidal features, but short of genocide, to its actual implementation. The paper argues that the convergence of strategic goals and ideological visions between secular and religious Zionism helps explain the widespread support – and, at times, open enthusiasm – within Israeli society for the live-streamed genocide. While the primary focus is on intra-Zionist dynamics, the paper also briefly addresses the interaction with additional enabling factors: official Western complicity, the vast power asymmetry between Israel and the Palestinians, and the persistence of Palestinian resistance to elimination.

Before reading on, the exercise is worth trying yourself: what does this argument need to be true? Not "is it persuasive," but "what has to hold up for the conclusion to follow." Find those, and you have found where the paper can be broken.

A particularly fragile kind of support

Most arguments rest on several load-bearing assumptions standing side by side, each holding up a different part of the structure — like the columns under a building's pediment. Each one is individually fatal; that is what makes it load-bearing rather than decorative. Pull any column and the roof comes down.

A causal chain is a different kind of column. Much of Rouhana's thesis is not a set of independent supports but a sequence: sacralized politics drew secular and religious Zionism together, the convergence produced a shared genocidal policy, the policy culminated in genocide, and the same convergence explains the public's enthusiasm for it. That is one load-bearing column like the others — but it is built from segments stacked one atop the next, and every segment is load-bearing for the segment above it. Remove a block from the middle and everything resting on it falls; the conclusion at the top had nothing under it but that block.

This makes the causal chain the most fragile kind of load-bearing structure, and the reason is worth stating precisely. Its failure is no more total than any column's — all load-bearing failures are total. What the chain offers is more places to start the failure. A plain column gives a critic one target. A chain of six claims gives him six, each independently sufficient to drop the whole column, and through it the building. The author gains explanatory richness with every link he adds and pays for it in exposure: each link is one more thing that has to hold, and not one of them is allowed to fail. A thesis shaped as "the road to the genocide" is a column pre-segmented into exactly the independent targets its author needed all to survive. You do not refute it whole. You find the one block that will not bear weight.

So let me walk the segments. For each, here is an alternative at least as plausible as the paper's — and in some cases simply true.

"Zionism is religious"

The paper's foundation is that Israeli policy runs on religious legitimation — it appeals to sacred texts, sacralized politics, a state "founded by a book." Most Israelis are secular. They are not voting, fighting, or supporting the war because of biblical land promises; their Zionism rests on peoplehood and the ordinary conviction that a people repeatedly targeted for destruction needs one place where it can defend itself. Even the Likud is mostly not a religious party — its base is secular and traditional Mizrahi and Russian-immigrant voters whose nationalism has nothing to do with sacralized politics. The genuinely religious parties sit in the coalition as junior partners, not as its engine.

If Israeli Zionism is primarily a secular project of collective survival rather than a sacralized one, then "sacralized politics" is not the site where everything converges. It is a feature of one wing, and the paper's central mechanism is gone. The column fails at its lowest block.

"Choosing Palestine made the sacralization inevitable"

The abstract makes a stronger claim than "Zionism used religious language." It says choosing Palestine entrapped Zionism in sacralized politics — that the location itself made religious justification structurally necessary, an inescapable consequence of where the project was sited. This is the boldest assumption in the paper, because it asserts inevitability rather than influence. A claim of necessity has to clear a far higher bar than a claim of mere correlation: it must show not that religion was used, but that nothing else could have done the work.

It cannot clear that bar, and the historical record runs the other way. When Herzl put British East Africa to the Sixth Zionist Congress in 1903 as a refuge from the pogroms, the delegates who fought hardest to keep Zionism bound to Palestine were the secular Russian Zionists led by Ussishkin and Weizmann; the religious Mizrachi faction under Rabbi Reines was the bloc willing to consider the Uganda plan, because their concern was the physical survival of the Jewish people and their faith left them untroubled about a temporary refuge elsewhere. At the one moment the movement actually voted on whether Palestine was negotiable, the seculars were the immovable ones and the religious contingent was flexible. The sacralization-entrapment story has the roles exactly reversed, and Rouhana is wrong on one of his most basic assertions.

And notice the form of the claim. "Choosing Palestine inevitably entrapped Zionism" is a counterfactual about a road never taken — it asserts that an alternative secular path would have failed, while no such path can be run to check. An assumption that no observation could disconfirm cannot serve as a legitimate load-bearing one; it is doing rhetorical work in the costume of historical necessity, the kind of block that looks solid until you ask what would have to be true for it to fail.

"The war is ideology in action"

The abstract treats the Gaza war as the expression of a long ideological project — the moment a century-long "eliminatory campaign" finally tips into genocide because the ideology was always headed there. The war started on October 7, 2023, with the largest single-day massacre of Jews since the Holocaust. The plainer explanation fits the timeline: a country attacked, its citizens slaughtered and dragged into Gaza, responding with the aim of ensuring it cannot happen again.

That explanation accounts for the same facts without any of Rouhana's apparatus. You do not need sacralized politics, ideological convergence, or a century-long teleology to explain why a nation goes to war after that; you need a calendar. If the war is a response to an attack rather than the climax of an ideology, the entire causal story about why it happened is explaining something that was driven by something else.

Worse is the assumption Rouhana needs in order to reach his reading: that the religious-Zionist ideologues almost welcomed October 7 as the long-awaited pretext to fulfill a genocidal aspiration. That requires Jewish malice as the starting premise rather than a finding, and it explains nothing — least of all the inconvenient fact that Israel had already left Gaza. In 2005 Israel unilaterally uprooted all twenty-one of its settlements there and withdrew every soldier and civilian, over fierce objection from its own settler movement and with majority public support. A century-long eliminatory campaign converging toward genocide does not voluntarily demolish its own communities and hand the land to its enemy. The eliminatory-teleology block does not merely lack support; the central episode of recent Gaza history points the opposite way.

"It is a genocide"

This is the block the title hands you as settled. "Genocide" is a legal term whose hardest element is specific intent to destroy a group as such, not a strong word for a great deal of killing. The paper never argues this element is met. It opens with the genocide as fact and spends its energy explaining the ideological roots of an event it has assumed into existence.

Set the assumption next to Israel's actual conduct. A state intending to destroy the Palestinians of Gaza does not coordinate with humanitarian organizations to move food and medicine in, run a vaccination campaign against polio across the territory, or warn civilians out of areas before striking them. Those actions are what the absence of genocidal intent looks like. You can argue about whether the war was waged proportionately or competently, but the specific claim the paper needs — intent to destroy the group as such — is contradicted by the conduct it is supposed to describe.

If there is no genocide, there is no road to the genocide, and a paper titled "the road to the Gaza genocide" has no destination.

"Nations go to war because of ideology and public mood"

Underneath the visible claims sits a deeper assumption the paper never states and probably never noticed making: a theory of how a country decides to fight a war. Rouhana's drivers are ideology and public enthusiasm — sacralized politics shaping the national mood, the mood enabling the policy. That is how the abstract models a state going to war, as a feeling that becomes a campaign.

Real states do not work that way, and Israel in particular does not. A war cabinet weighs the imperative to bring hostages home and stop the rockets, the army's own legal review of every target, the munitions actually in the warehouse and the ones Washington is willing to resupply, the international pressure mounting by the week, and the strategic question of how to dismantle Hamas's military capacity so that October 7 cannot recur. These determine when Israel strikes, where, with what, and when it stops. A government does not consult the public's theological temperature; it consults its lawyers, its generals, its arms inventory, and its allies.

This assumption is the one most easily missed, because it hides in what the paper leaves out. Two distinct claims are buried here: that ideology is a primary driver of state policy at all, and that it outweighs the strategic constraints pulling against it. The first could be granted in the abstract — ideology is one input among many — and the argument would still fail on the second, because a primary input is not a dominant one. By treating ideology and public mood as the engine, Rouhana builds a model in which the entire apparatus of the decision can be left out without loss, and the left-out factors are the ones that explain the war's actual shape with no reference to sacralized politics. The charge is not that he ignored Israel's strategic situation; it is that his model is built so that excluding it changes nothing. How many governments on earth place ideology ahead of security and strategy in deciding whether to go to war? Iran, perhaps. The model that fits a revolutionary theocracy has been quietly fitted to a parliamentary democracy with a supreme court reviewing its targeting.

"Israeli society enthusiastically supports genocide"

The abstract needs the public, not just the government. Its claim is that ideological convergence explains the "widespread support – and, at times, open enthusiasm – within Israeli society for the live-streamed genocide." This rests on a relabeling that does the entire job in a single phrase, and the relabeling is libelous.

Of course Israelis broadly supported a war against Hamas after October 7.  But Rouhana claims they supported a genocide, which works only if the war and the genocide are the same object, and they are not.  Strip the relabeling and the polling shows something the paper cannot use: support for destroying the military force that murdered and abducted their neighbors, declining support for the war's continuation as it dragged on, and no measurable public appetite for destroying the Palestinian people as such. There is literally no support for the assertion that Israelis as a whole support genocide. 

There is a second assumption underneath the first: that public enthusiasm is causally significant — that the mood enabled the policy rather than forming around decisions leaders had already made. The abstract needs the public to be a cause, not a chorus. Whether opinion drove the cabinet or merely followed it is an empirical question the paper does not engage, and the conventional direction of causation in wartime runs the other way: governments decide, then publics rally. If the enthusiasm is a consequence of the war rather than a cause of it, it explains nothing about why the war happened, and this block carries no load at all.

"We cannot believe what Israelis say"

There is one more assumption, the one that licenses all the rest. To build this argument, Rouhana cannot take Israel's stated war aims at face value — destroy Hamas's military capacity, return the hostages, end the threat from Gaza. Those aims are strategic and defensive, and they fit the secular-survival reading rather than the sacralized-genocidal one. So they are set aside, and a different set of goals supplied in their place: the ones the ideology predicts.

That move requires a particular and rarely-defended assumption — that Israeli statements are not evidence of Israeli intent but a screen to be seen through, and that the analyst holds the interpretive key to the real meaning behind the words. Distinguishing stated aims from actual ones is a legitimate tool; political scientists use it constantly, and governments do sometimes lie about why they fight. The problem is what Rouhana does with the license once he claims it. Every official denial becomes confirmation, every humanitarian measure becomes a cover story, every stated defensive aim becomes the mask over the genocidal one. The theory is built so that nothing Israel says or does can count against it, because saying and doing the opposite is simply what a sophisticated génocidaire would do. This is a conspiracy theory and wishful thinking mind-reading dressed up as analysis.

A framework that cannot be contradicted by its subject's words or its subject's deeds is interpreting a text it wrote in advance, not analyzing evidence. And it rests on a claim about the author's own access to hidden meaning that he never has to justify, because his readers grant it before they open the paper.

The circularity underneath

In each case the contested thing is a premise the paper starts from, not a finding it reaches. The genocide is assumed, the ideology is offered to explain it, and then the depth of the ideological roots is treated as confirmation that the genocide was real. The conclusion props up the premise that produced it; the load-bearing claim is holding itself up.

This is the genre's signature. A legal or moral conclusion walks in dressed as a historical premise, and once it is inside the argument, no one asks it to show its papers again.

Why nobody checks

Pulling these threads required no archive, no Hebrew, no special expertise, and no position on the war. It required reading the abstract as a structure instead of a story — asking what must be true for the conclusion to follow, then asking which of those things the author shows rather than assumes.

The hardest assumptions to surface are the ones that never appear as sentences. A tool can catch the claims a paper makes; it struggles with the claims a paper relies on without making — that nations decide by ideology rather than strategy, that a subject's own words are a screen. Those live below the visible argument, in the choice of what to model and what to omit, and you find them by asking why the obvious explanation is missing. 

The procedure works on essentially any paper in this literature, and it is almost never run, because the people reviewing and citing and assigning these papers already share the premises. When everyone in the room agrees that Gaza is a genocide and Zionism is settler colonialism, no one in the room is positioned to see that those are the load-bearing assumptions rather than the results. A field that agrees on its starting points stops seeing them as starting points. 

There is a structural accomplice, too: Culture and Religion is a religion-studies journal, and its reviewers are equipped to assess whether sacralized politics is characterized coherently, not to test a genocide classification imported from international law or a model of military decision-making imported from security studies. The contested claims cross the disciplinary border and shed their burden of proof on the way, arriving as settled background in a field with no standing to challenge them.

So the journal is real, the peer review happened, and the author has the title and the chair. None of that is evidence the argument is sound. It is evidence that the argument was built and approved by people who start with assumptions that are not supported. 

A thesis shaped as a causal chain hands its critics the one gift a careful argument never should: a row of independent blocks, every one of them load-bearing, not one of them allowed to fail. The secular character of Israeli Zionism, the inevitability that supposedly trapped it in scripture, the date the war began, a single shipment of vaccines, the war cabinet's actual deliberations, Israel's own stated aims taken at their word — any one of them is enough, and the column was only ever as sound as its weakest block.

This paper does not just have one collapsed column, but nearly all of them. 




Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

Reclaiming the Covenant on America's 250th (May 2026)

"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024)

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   

 

 

  • Tuesday, June 30, 2026
  • Elder of Ziyon
Over on my Substack, I wrote an article going into detail of the major criticisms hurled by anti-Zionists at the IHRA Working Definition of Antisemitism and how the actual text says none of the things they accuse it of saying.

I also made a chart with the highlights of the discussion, suitable for social media.






Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

Reclaiming the Covenant on America's 250th (May 2026)

"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024)

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   

 

 

From Ian:

Mark Goldfeder and John Spencer: Without Evidence The U.N. Accuses Israel Of Genocide – Another Day That Ends In ‘Y’
Its working rule is even simpler: any target Hamas hides among civilians becomes untouchable, and any civilian who dies beside it becomes proof of murder. The deeper Hamas burrows into homes and schools and hospitals, the safer it gets and the guiltier Israel looks, which inverts the very law that forbids using civilians as shields. The West Bank makes the inversion even plainer: the Commission counts 213 dead minors, tells readers that 206 were boys, and from that ratio divines a “policy of targeting boys” as “future terrorists.” A war on children does not kill boys at 97%. That statistic instead raises the obvious question: many of those “boys” were actively participating in hostilities.

Of course, the Commission never asks the question. Under U.N. definitions, every person under 18 is counted as a child, whether a 10-year-old in a classroom or a 17-year-old carrying an assault rifle. Hamas, meanwhile, has long recruited, trained, and used minors, including teenagers and younger children, a practice the Commission acknowledges has been reported but expressly declines to investigate. By collapsing all persons under 18 into a single category while omitting the role of child soldiers, the report invites readers to equate every “child” casualty with a civilian who was not participating in hostilities. That omission is central to its narrative.

This is how a libel becomes a fact. The body counts originate with the Hamas-run health ministry and are relayed to the world under a U.N. logo. Human rights groups, several funded by the anti-Israel governments that demanded the inquiry, refer to it as settled. Reporters cite the groups without reading the report; policymakers cite the resulting “consensus”; and within 48 hours, the media print “deliberately targeted” as if it is an established fact. It is the same machine that once blamed Israel for the Al-Ahli hospital blast that American, British, and Canadian intelligence traced to a misfired Palestinian rocket. Anti-Israel bias does not need evidence, only an audience that has already convicted Israel.

The messenger does matter, and here it is the Human Rights Council’s only open-ended commission of inquiry, aimed permanently at a single country, on a council where roughly half of all country-specific condemnations name Israel. The world still calls it the Pillay Commission, after the previous chair who famously pronounced Israel guilty of war crimes before she was appointed to judge it. When Washington, D.C., sanctioned the council’s Palestinian rapporteur last year, the commissioners themselves resigned and promised to “reconstitute.” They did not, however, reform it, so the remedy is simple.

A bipartisan group in Congress already drafted the Commission of Inquiry Elimination Act, which would cut U.S. dollars from a permanent mandate that runs on $4 million a year and has dropped even the pretense of fairness or due process. The United States already refuses to fund discriminatory U.N. conduct, and this qualifies by any measure. The Commission titled its report “The essence of childhood has been destroyed,” but it chose the wrong noun. What this report destroys is the essence of evidence, the rule that an accusation of murder must be proven and not merely felt. After 94 pages, it still identifies no soldier, no order, no forensic proof, no battlefield investigation establishing intent, and no evidence capable of sustaining the accusation it makes.

The proper response is not to treat this report as a serious finding. You cannot defend against insanity. But we can and should stop funding it.
Turkey’s Hypocrisy Exposed by Israeli Recognition of Armenian Genocide
Israel’s recognition of the Armenian Genocide affirms an essential historical truth. Acknowledging one of the twentieth century’s first genocides reinforces the principle that mass atrocities must be remembered honestly, regardless of political convenience.

Turkey’s genocide accusations against Israel are undermined by its own century-long denial of the Armenian Genocide. While insisting the destruction of over 1.5 million Armenians was merely a wartime tragedy without genocidal intent, Ankara simultaneously labels Israel’s war against Hamas a genocide.

History demonstrates that genocide denial carries consequences. Hitler’s infamous question, “Who, after all, speaks today of the annihilation of the Armenians?” serves as a reminder that erasing past atrocities can embolden future perpetrators.

Yesterday, the Israeli cabinet voted unanimously to recognize the Armenian Genocide. Announcing the decision in Hebrew, Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar declared: “It is never too late to do the right thing.”
Gadi Taub: Haaretz’s ideological mission: Dismantling the Jewish state
Less than three weeks before the Oct. 7 massacre, the Israeli daily Haaretz announced its break with the Zionist creed. Its editor-in-chief, Aluf Benn, penned a piece just before Yom Kippur eve, titled “Jewish and Democratic? It’s Time to Erase the Word Jewish.”

The paper’s regular Hebrew readers were probably not all that surprised. After all, many variations on this theme have appeared in the periodical’s opinion pages, and its aversion to nationalism and religion, as well as its infatuation with the local version of globalist ideology—the idea of a non-national, so-called “state of all its citizens”—were well known. But never before had the editor himself announced the paper’s desire to dismantle the Jewish state and put an end to the Zionist enterprise.

The editorial board must have thought that an international audience was not yet ready for the revelation, and so the English edition softened the title, cloaking Benn’s declaration in some warm Yiddishkeit. It read: “On Yom Kippur, Facing the Question: Where Is Israel Headed?”

Still, the confession in Hebrew was, in fact, long overdue. The paper has been working consistently and diligently to undermine Zionism’s moral legitimacy for many years, without admitting that this was what it was doing. It has disseminated some of the worst blood libels against settlers and Israel Defense Forces soldiers and given respectability to pundits who used its pages to argue that Israel is inherently evil.

This was never just an editorial insistence on high moral standards or constructive criticism designed to rectify wrongs. As media scholar Eli Avraham noted in his recently published book, From David to Goliath: Coverage of Israel in the International Media, Haaretz in general, and its English-language edition in particular, is not merely critical of this or that Israeli government or this or that Israeli policy. It is, rather, bent on demonizing the Jewish state as such and on legitimizing political parties, academics and organizations—both Israeli and foreign—which see Israel as “the epitome of world evil.” The paper also worked, Avraham pointed out, to erode Israeli solidarity by attacking every “positive and unifying myth.”

But it seems as though the paper also previously believed that declaring its anti-Zionist mission would be tactically unwise: that it would undermine its reputation for professional, balanced reporting and limit its ability to influence its largest target audience—liberals and especially liberal Zionists. It thus opted for an audacious strategy: It declared its supposed allegiance to Zionism. It also kept pretending to practice a form of “tough love” aimed at urging Israel to realize the so-called “two-state solution.”

For this purpose, it mostly took care to preserve for itself the possibility of plausible deniability: anti-Zionist writers, though ubiquitous in all sections of the paper—news, opinion, culture and leisure—were simply expressing their personal views. And when pushed, Haaretz could always portray its rejection of Zionism as no more than an objection to “the occupation,” to specific forms of discrimination or to the problem of church-and-state separation.
From Ian:

The UN’s toxic obsession with Israel lets the world’s worst regimes off scot-free
The Human Rights Council maintains a permanent agenda item devoted exclusively to Israel – a distinction enjoyed by no other country on earth, including North Korea, Iran and Russia. Even former Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon acknowledged the UN had produced a “disproportionate volume of resolutions, reports and conferences criticising Israel”.

I encountered this phenomenon during my own time at the United Nations. It was impossible for any Israeli to secure a senior appointment in the organisation, no matter how well qualified. Israel is the only country of its political and economic weight never to have held a position at Assistant Secretary-General level (roughly a two-star general equivalent) or above. I also encountered cases of UN staff and contractors self-censoring on issues related to Israel for fear of being accused of anti-Palestinian, anti-Muslim or anti-Arab bias, as damaging an accusation as one of racism.

But by far the worst example of this bias is embodied by UNRWA – the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East, some of whose staff have been accused of being directly involved in the Oct 7 attack on Israel.

As recently as 2024, the UK maintained a longstanding position of condemning the UN’s hostility towards the world’s only Jewish state. Successive British governments rejected the Commission of Inquiry’s open-ended mandate and criticised its obsessive focus on Israel. But that consensus has been overturned by a Labour government more ideologically and politically sympathetic to this excessive level of scrutiny, or more in hock to special interest groups as obsessively hostile to Israel as the UN is.

The tragedy is that, while the UN has rightly attracted condemnation from informed critics, it has somehow retained an almost sacrosanct halo among much of the wider public. To many, the UN remains the ultimate authority in international affairs. That reverence allows weak evidence, activist assumptions and ideological predispositions to be laundered into accepted wisdom.

The UN’s disproportionate focus on Israel has long ceased to be a curiosity of UN procedure. It has become a pathology that distorts priorities, consumes diplomatic bandwidth and allows some of the world’s worst regimes to escape meaningful scrutiny by sheltering in the comforting consensus of anti-Israel indignation. It has also become a cottage industry, with networks inside the UN acting in concert with well-organised bad actors like Qatar and Turkey to sustain a relentless momentum of anti-Israeli attacks.

Many casual observers may believe the Commission when it claims to be defending vulnerable children. In reality, by substituting ideology for evidence and prejudice for impartiality, it undermines the credibility of international law itself. And, in the process, demonises Israel, Israelis, and Jews at large as bloodthirsty child killers.

The UN should pay attention. This is the kind of abuse that has drawn the ire of the US, which is withholding its UN dues and has sent the organisation spiralling towards budgetary collapse. Unless the UN gets its house in order and brings these rogue agencies and commissions to heel, António Guterres may not have much left to hand over to his successor at the end of this year.
Israel is America's 'only true Western ally,' Florida's GOP House hopeful tells 'Post'
US AFFAIRS: Florida Republican David Burck discusses Israel, Iran, campus antisemitism, and why he believes Washington must deepen its alliance with Jerusalem.

The US and Israel are the only two pillars of Western civilization still standing, according to Burck.

“Throughout the course of human history, we’ve objectively never had it so good,” he said. “We’re at an existential kind of point in the West as a whole as we go away from the ideas that have made us great, and we see it in Europe, and we’ve seen it here bubbling domestically in the United States,” he went on to say.

“I just feel like if I didn’t do my part to try to stem that tide in any way, shape or form, I’d be failing my son, the future generations out of the West, and America specifically,” Burck maintained.

“I think it’s high time for us to definitely codify our relationship even more with Israel; we need it. Europe is a rump of itself, it’s a husk, and it’s not going to get any better. And really, the only true Western ally that we have left is Israel,” he said.

While he had not yet had the privilege of visiting Israel, Burck said, he was looking forward to the situation calming down enough that he could cross it off his bucket list and visit along with his wife and 14-month-old son.

“I need to go look as a believer in Christ. I want to get out there, and I’ve heard so many great things,” he said.

“We need to keep this relationship thriving. I think that we’re going to work through this. I can understand why the people of Israel feel betrayed right now, but you know, Donald Trump’s done so many fantastic things for Israel, and I don’t think that he would do anything that would put Israel at a disadvantage,” the statesman said.

“Personally, I don’t believe so. I think this is just a part of the process of negotiating with the terrorist regime and the largest state sponsor of terrorism. I feel like Israel and the United States are just kind of like the two last vestiges of the best of the West.”
The CPJ Is Finally Acknowledging That It Called Gazan Terrorists ‘Journalists’
The CPJ announced on Thursday that it is undertaking a review of its own list of casualties of Gazan journalists.

The timing is not coincidental. In the past several weeks, Hamas and Islamic Jihad have been publishing obituaries identifying their dead fighters, many of whom have been living double lives. The most prominent of these double lives are terrorists posing as journalists.

However, none of this information is new. Since the CPJ started recording journalists killed in Gaza, HonestReporting has similarly been tracking the many cases in which these journalists were directly affiliated with terrorist organizations.

As of June 23, 2026, more than half of the journalists listed by the CPJ as being killed in Gaza were either members or affiliates of an anti-Israel terrorist group.

Most recently, Ahmad Washah, a Hamas sniper who also worked for Al Jazeera, was killed in a targeted air strike in Gaza. CPJ quickly came to his defense, expressing “alarm” at his death.

This has been a pattern at the CPJ, particularly with terrorists affiliated with Al Jazeera. The Qatar-backed outlet has consistently aligned itself with Hamas, frequently publishing the terrorist organizaiton’s talking points. Still, on four other occasions, the CPJ has expressed concern or condemned the deaths of Al Jazeera journalists, even when there is overwhelming evidence of their affiliation with Hamas.

The CPJ has exerted great effort to suggest that the IDF has been purposefully targeting journalists throughout the war. This effort has led the organization to include in its casualty list the names of any media workers killed in a war zone.

The CPJ’s own criteria state that it excludes journalists who were “directly participating as combatants in armed conflict at the time of their deaths.” Yet the organization has on countless occasions done exactly that, and thus redefined international law to paint an inflammatory and false accusation against Israel.

For the past two years, the CPJ has found that Israel has been responsible for the majority of the killed media workers.

In both 2024 and 2025, when the data was broken down, an entirely different story emerged, revealing that Israel was not targeting journalists, but rather terrorists who posed a threat to national security and hid under the guise of a press vest.

Israel has been releasing evidence of terrorists posing as journalists for the past two and a half years. Why did it take terrorist organizations publishing their own obituaries for the CPJ to recognize what has been public information all along?

CPJ expects the full review of journalists to be done in July. HonestReporting will be ready to remind them, once again, that shielding terrorists from scrutiny for more than two years is not an oversight – it is a moral failure.

Monday, June 29, 2026

  • Monday, June 29, 2026
  • Elder of Ziyon
The guy who harassed Scott Wiener at the Pride event in San Francisco is named Jesus “Frisco Lens” Coba. His Instagram is filled with the usual progressive hate, obsessed with ICE, cops (pigs)  and "Zionists." 


Who are "Zionists"? Well, he posted a clip from Pix11 news in New York about deed theft in New York City,  where unscrupulous people forge deeds and steal property. It is a known and real phenomenon. 

But according to Coba, the people doing the stealing are "zionists in Manhattan."



Now, who could he possibly mean by "Zionists"? 

In fact, there is no evidence that the criminals are disproportionately Jewish at all. But a lot of them are unscrupulous lawyers, and that is all one needs to call them "Zionists."

Intelligent progressive antisemites learn how to hide their bigotry better. The morons reveal themselves a lot more easily.



Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

Reclaiming the Covenant on America's 250th (May 2026)

"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024)

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   

 

 

  • Monday, June 29, 2026
  • Elder of Ziyon

Manufacturing a Modern Blood Libel is a booklet published by the Israeli Embassy in Washington (May 2026), with a foreword by Ambassador Yechiel Leiter. Its central claim is structural: the accusations of genocide, starvation, and ethnic cleansing leveled against Israel during the Gaza war are not the product of honest reporting gone wrong but a modern iteration of the blood libel—an old antisemitic mechanism in which an accusation requires only repetition and institutional endorsement, not truth, to become lethal.

Leiter's foreword anchors the argument in a November 2025 meeting with the New York Times editorial board, where an editor protested that "everyone can't be getting the story all wrong." His answer, and the booklet's thesis, is that the story traveled through a coordinated ecosystem: Hamas manufactures data, UN agencies launder it into authoritative-sounding citations, media amplify it as independent fact, and academics supply the moral vocabulary—each layer lending borrowed credibility to the one below. This is an argument I've been making since 2023.

The report divides into two main parts.

Genocide. The booklet argues that the casualty figures underpinning the charge come from Hamas-run bodies (the Gaza Ministry of Health and Government Media Office) that present all deaths as civilian and Israeli-caused, omitting combatants, natural deaths, and Hamas's own misfires and executions. It walks through statistician Abraham Wyner's analysis of implausibly uniform daily totals and demographically impossible correlations, the eventual quiet removal of thousands of "validated" names, and the Al-Ahli hospital case as a template for fabrication. From there it builds toward a combatant-to-noncombatant ratio of roughly 1:1.2 to 1:1.4—lower, it argues, than U.S. operations in Iraq or Mosul, and historically low for urban warfare against an enemy embedded in civilian infrastructure. A section on "institutional propagandists" examines figures like Francesca Albanese and the Pillay Commission, and a striking subsection documents academics (Bartov, Ophir) who reportedly conceded the term "genocide" doesn't fit the legal definition yet kept using it for rhetorical effect.

Starvation. The second half assembles the aid record—roughly 2.2 million tons of aid, including 1.7 million tons of food, working out to far above the 2,100-kcal wartime minimum—and contrasts it with the famine narrative. It documents a reporting gap of tens of thousands of trucks between Israeli (COGAT) and UN (OCHA) figures, dissects the "500-truck" threshold as a shifting double standard, challenges the August 2025 IPC famine declaration on methodological grounds, and catalogs the now-familiar "starvation" photographs whose subjects turned out to have preexisting medical conditions. It closes on Hamas's diversion of aid (estimates up to 90%, generating roughly $500 million in a year) and its campaign against the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation.

The conclusion ties it together: when institutions abandon methodological rigor, journalists outsource verification to a terrorist organization, and grave legal terms are emptied of meaning for political effect, the damage extends past Israel to the human-rights framework itself.

I uploaded the report to Scribd so anyone can more easily find it, read it and download it. 

There was some coverage in Jewish and Israeli media outlets when the report was released. Of course, given that much of the material is critical of the mainstream media, they ignored it completely. 



Manufacturing of a Blood Libel by Eldad Tzioni




Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

Reclaiming the Covenant on America's 250th (May 2026)

"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024)

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   

 

 

From Ian:

Michael Oren: America's Founders Fought a Middle East War Centuries Ago. We Could Learn a Lot from Them
George Washington believed it "the highest disgrace" that Americans paid monetary "tribute" to the Barbary pirates of North Africa who preyed on American merchant ships in the Mediterranean, enslaving their crews and endangering the nascent republic's economy. The practice sparked a visceral debate between John Adams, who favored giving in to extortion over using force, and Thomas Jefferson, who preferred to "raise ships and men to fight the pirates into reason [rather] than money to bribe them."

Today, the U.S. is grappling with many of the same questions. To what degree should Americans defend the freedom of navigation through a vital international waterway? Should they stand up to or pay off a Middle East power threatening it? The ayatollahs' worldview is almost identical to the pirates'. In a 1786 meeting with Jefferson and Adams in London, Tripoli's ambassador Sidi Haji Abdul Rahman Adja insisted that Barbary was sovereign in the Mediterranean and that no nation could traverse it without paying a massive toll.

He further explained "that all nations who should not have acknowledged their authority were sinners, that it was their [the Muslims'] right and duty to make war upon them wherever they could be found, and to make slaves of all they could take as prisoners." Any Muslim killed in battle "was sure to go to Paradise."

Jefferson concluded that peace with Barbary was only attainable "through the medium of war," but the newly independent America lacked a navy. After adopting the Constitution in 1789, which enabled a single federal government to raise taxes to build a navy, the U.S. authorized the construction of six frigates especially designed to fight close to Barbary's shallow shores. What ensued was America's first foreign war, lasting until 1815. Only then was Barbary decisively defeated, and American merchantmen guaranteed safe passage through the Mediterranean.

The victory was a source of immense national pride. The country erected its first war monument, to the triumphant Barbary War, on the campus of the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis. 17 American cities were named for the hero of that campaign, Commodore Stephen Decatur. And the Marines still sing of their landing "on the shores of Tripoli."

These testaments serve to remind Americans of the ways in which the Founders faced the threats to free navigation posed by an extremist Middle Eastern regime.
Netanyahu: ‘No room’ for Palestinian state between Mediterranean Sea and Jordan River
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Saturday that there is “no room for two states” between the Mediterranean Sea and the Jordan River, arguing the war created broad public consensus against creating a Palestinian state.

“Before the war, the public was divided: although in my opinion most of the public was against it, a significant portion was in favor. I think that has changed,” Netanyahu told reporters, answering a question at a press conference in Jerusalem on Saturday night.

“That is a basis for agreement,” added the premier. “In my opinion, there is much more unity among the public than you see in the Knesset.”

Netanyahu was responding to a question from Israel Hayom about the principles on which he would seek to form his next government if he wins another term in the general election this fall.

Before the Oct. 7, 2023, massacre that sparked the current multi-front war, 69% of Israelis opposed the establishment of another Palestinian state beyond the one in Gaza. This opposition surged to 79% in the aftermath of the attacks, according to polling data published by the Jerusalem Center for Security and Foreign Affairs in May.
Israeli government votes to recognize Armenian Genocide
The Israeli Cabinet on Sunday voted to recognize the genocide carried out against the Armenians, Assyrians and Greeks by Ottoman Turkey in the early 20th century.

“The government of Israel unanimously approved Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar’s proposal to recognize the Armenian Genocide,” Sa’ar’s office announced following the weekly Cabinet meeting in Jerusalem.

“It is never too late to do the right thing,” he said in the statement.

Sa’ar announced on Thursday night that he would submit the resolution to the Cabinet, tweeting: “Recognizing the genocide perpetrated against the Armenian people in the final years of the Ottoman Empire is both a moral and historical duty.

“We must also firmly condemn any denial, minimization or distortion of the historical truth,” he added. “The resolution will subsequently be brought before the Knesset for a vote.”

To date, 34 countries, including the United States and Greece, have recognized the Armenian Genocide. Israel would be the 35th.

In August 2025, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for the first time publicly recognized the Armenian Genocide.

Asked by American podcaster Patrick Bet-David why Jerusalem has yet to recognize the genocide, Netanyahu said, “In fact, I think we have. I think the Knesset passed a resolution to that effect.”

Sunday, June 28, 2026

  • Sunday, June 28, 2026
  • Elder of Ziyon

On June 1, 2025, Mohamed Sabry Soliman attacked a group of Jews demonstrating in Boulder for the release of the Hamas hostages, using a makeshift flamethrower and Molotov cocktails. As he burned them he yelled "End Zionists!" and "Free Palestine!" Karen Diamond, 82 years old, died of her injuries; dozens were hurt.

Everyone understood this was an antisemitic hate crime. The City of Boulder and the DOJ said so. In custody, Soliman told investigators his goal was to kill "all Zionist people" — and since people demonstrating for hostages are Zionists, they qualified for death.

Melat Kiros, the democratic socialist now favored to unseat Diana DeGette in Colorado's 1st District, will not say it. "I don't know what was in the heart of the perpetrator," she told 9News. She concedes it was a hate crime, yet cannot determine which group it was a hate crime against. It is quite a mystery: a confessed hate crime whose target nobody can identify. All Kiros knows is that it might not have been the Jews.

Here's the interview, where she also says she can understand 9/11, that Israel is guilty of genocide both in Gaza and in Lebanon, and where she says the US shouldn't even sell defensive weapons to Israel. 



Here is where the "anti-Zionist" crowd ties itself in knots. Kiros is an anti-Zionist, and like others who insist anti-Zionism has nothing to do with antisemitism, she has reached the point where a killer screaming "End Zionists" while setting Jews on fire becomes evidence that the Jews were not the target. The slogan that names the victims is repurposed as the alibi.

Perhaps the deeper reason Kiros will not call it antisemitic is that even she is not as extreme as some some of her potential voters. Students for Justice in Palestine at Boulder publicly demanded Soliman's release, honoring his murder of an 82-year-old woman as a "decisive act of resistance" and "the only sane response available to a rational human being."

You cannot alienate the constituents who celebrate the murder of Jews. Anti-Zionism is a big tent, from criticizing Netanyahu to wanting to see all Jews dead. They can't afford to alienate any of them.




Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

Reclaiming the Covenant on America's 250th (May 2026)

"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024)

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   

 

 

  • Sunday, June 28, 2026
  • Elder of Ziyon

I wrote an op-ed for JNS about America at 250, based on my book "Reclaiming the Covenant."

You can buy my book on Amazon or order it from anywhere. (ISBN 9798985708486)
From Ian:

Lyn Julius: There is no distinction between Jews and Zionists - ask Jews from Arab countries
It has been six months since 15 people were gunned down on Bondi Beach in Sydney, Australia, prompting the establishment by a shocked government of a Royal Commission on Antisemitism and Social Cohesion.

The Commission has received over 16,000 submissions, and a block of hearings is slated to begin at the end of June.

My organization Harif – the UK Association of Jews from the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) – was asked to make a submission on behalf of the 10 to 20% of Australian Jews who are Sephardi or Mizrahi (easterners), i.e., hailing from the Middle East and North Africa.

They may be a minority within the Jewish minority, but their experience of living in Arab and Muslim countries and fleeing from these lands can bring an essential perspective to understanding the causes of antisemitism sweeping through the West today.

The Commission might be able to learn useful insights from them, the first being that almost a million Jews were ethnically cleansed from the MENA, even though they had no part to play in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Almost no Jews live in the Arab world today because Arab governments conflated Jews with Zionists. Jews were victimized as potential spies for Israel.

Whatever their political leanings and however spurious the pretext, Jews could be arrested, tried, and even executed for the crime of Zionism.

The second insight is that one cannot perceive a distinction between Jews and Zionists in Western antisemitism. Today, supporters of the Palestinian cause say they are against Zionism, not Jews.

When 'Zionism' becomes the cover
They point to the small number of Jews who join their protests.

However, it doesn’t take much to see that “legitimate criticism of the Israeli government” takes the form of verbal and physical abuse of Jews, firebombings, arson, and shootings at Jewish schools and synagogues, and ultimately, the murder of Jews simply for being Jews.

Left-wing Jews attempt to deflect by claiming that antisemitism is a problem for the Right. They claim that curbs on incitement proposed by the Commission are in reality limitations on free speech.

But the two gunmen who slaughtered Jews celebrating Hanukkah on Bondi Beach never asked what their victims’ views on Israel were.

Mizrahi Jews who are now resettled in the West are experiencing a sense of déjà vu, reliving the trauma they experienced in their birth countries. The bullying and harassment they thought they had escaped are back with a vengeance.

The slogans chanted in every anti-Jewish riot in Arab countries never did distinguish between Jews and Zionists.
Between Jakarta and Jerusalem
Conclusion: The dawn of functional normalisation
Ultimately, Indonesia’s calculated steps toward the Gaza post-war architecture reveal a sophisticated paradox. President Prabowo’s conciliatory rhetoric and his willingness to engage with the Board of Peace demonstrate a level of pragmatic goodwill that would have been unthinkable under previous administrations. The strategic benefits of the move – currying favour with Washington, positioning Indonesia as a responsible global middle power and securing a seat at the table in Middle Eastern affairs – are simply too lucrative for Jakarta to ignore.

However, Western observers must avoid the illusion of an imminent, warm normalisation. The path to formal diplomatic ties remains firmly blocked by the domestic Palestinian veto and is entirely contingent upon a prior breakthrough between Israel and Saudi Arabia.

What we are witnessing instead is the birth of “Functional Normalisation”. The massive logistical realities of a potential Indonesian deployment, combined with daily operational coordination within the Board of Peace, will force Israeli and Indonesian defence, intelligence and diplomatic officials into unprecedented direct contact.

A stark preview of this reality occurred recently with the interception of the Global Sumud Flotilla, where the detention of Indonesian activists forced Foreign Minister Sugiono to utilise the Board of Peace as a direct de-escalation channel with Jerusalem. This crisis proved that while institutional ambiguity can be “quicksand”, the operational imperatives of crisis management create an unavoidable, functional dialogue.

For Israel, securing the active involvement of the world’s largest Muslim nation in securing its post-war periphery is an extraordinary geopolitical achievement. For Indonesia, it is a high-risk domestic tightrope walk. Therefore, functional, quiet and deeply cautious coordination is the maximum the current geopolitical architecture can bear, and even that is only feasible if the ISF mandate remains strictly defined and a Saudi catalyst remains on the horizon.

Saturday, June 27, 2026

  • Saturday, June 27, 2026
  • Elder of Ziyon


Yesterday I wrote that the burden of proof is always placed differently on the Jew: the rabbi who must clear himself from "supporting genocide" before renting a house in France, the army whose seized weapons are presumed staged, the citizens of revolutionary France told to prove a loyalty no Catholic was asked to swear. The structure is built so the burden cannot be met. Compliance and defiance, denial and proof, all resolve to the same verdict, because the only admissible evidence is the defendant's Jewishness, entered as a guilty plea before the proceedings began.

A day later, Scott Wiener walked into Dolores Park.

Wiener is the front-runner for Nancy Pelosi's congressional seat, a California state senator who has attended the San Francisco Trans March for 22 years. He is also a Jew who, after sustained pressure, paid every cent the purity test demanded. He had once declined to call Israel's war in Gaza a genocide; in January he reversed himself after the mob went after hum and said plainly that he believes Israel committed genocide. He met the price. And on Friday a crowd surrounded him, screamed obscenities, flipped him off, made it impossible for him to safely remain, and drove him from the park for the first time in more than two decades.

This is the proof of what I argued in Friday, delivered faster than I could have arranged it. Wiener gave the mob the confession it wanted, and the confession didn't silence them - it emboldened them. The man who recorded the encounter told him he had been "wonderful for trans people" and "terrible on Gaza" — yet Wiener had already conceded Gaza. The grievance survived the concession. One heckler supplied the tell: Wiener "stopped being queer the moment he started supporting Israel." Past tense, after the recantation. Every policy reason to be angry at him had evaporated, and the anger remained, which means the anger was never about policy. The one variable that did not go away is the one nobody will name: he is a Jew who has not yet agreed that the Jewish state should cease to exist.

Wiener's own statement catalogs the abuse carefully — the crowd that surrounded him, the man who cornered him and his young women staffers at a Mission bar earlier in the week, the same man who in December 2023 stalked him on a plane and in an airport "shouting at me about my 'tainted bloodline.'" A tainted bloodline is a blood-purity slur, the oldest racial antisemitism there is, and Wiener quotes it in his own defense without appearing to register what it is. Then he draws his line in precisely the wrong place. He has "no objection whatsoever" to people disagreeing with him, but this isn't disagreement — it is hate, hate that wouldn't exist if Wiener wasn't Jewish, and anyone who watches the video can see it plainly. 

What happened to Wiener is structurally identical to what I described six years ago about corporations and BDS. When a company gives the anti-Israel movement any concession, the campaign against it intensifies rather than subsides. CEMEX sold its West Bank quarry holding and remained a priority target. SodaStream relocated its entire operation inside the Green Line and the boycott leadership announced it would remain subject to boycott anyway. Veolia exited the Israeli market completely and was met with demands for "reparations." The capitulation is read as weakness, and weakness is read as an invitation to push harder.

The one public figure who refused to cave is the one walking around untouched. Jerry Seinfeld has been handed this loyalty test more times than Wiener has, and he has refused it every single time. Outside Madison Square Garden this month, a streamer shoved a microphone at him and demanded he say "Free Palestine." Seinfeld laughed and said, "It doesn't exist," and walked off. At Duke's commencement roughly a hundred students walked out and he told the rest, "A lot of you are thinking, 'I can't believe they invited this guy.' Too late." In Australia a heckler tried to chant him down and he answered, "We have a genius, ladies and gentlemen. He solved the Middle East," then watched the man dragged out. He has even stated the principle outright: "Free Palestine," he told a Duke audience, just means you are free to say you don't like Jews.

Seinfeld has principles and those principles is what allows him to walk in New York City without fear. He knows what he believes and when you know your own position, you aren't afraid of a mob screaming at you. Wiener showed that when it comes to Israel he has no principles and he caves to the mob. And now he cannot walk anywhere among the people he tried so hard to please. 

The bully tests for softness. A wall ends the test, and a flinch begins the auction.

Wiener has a way out, and it is counterintuitive for a politician. The instinct is to continue to say how genocidal Israel is — a position Wiener doesn't really believe or he would have said it before January.

The strongest thing a person can do is admit he was wrong. Most politicians read a public reversal as weakness; it is the opposite. The man who cannot say "I was wrong" is the one controlled by everyone whose opinion he fears. The man who can say it owns himself again. Wiener spent the last several months controlled by a mob that despises him no matter what he says. He can take himself back in an afternoon.

He could say he is sorry he showed weakness to a mob that supports Hamas and denies the Jewish people the right of self-determination that it grants to every other people on earth. He could apologize to his fellow Jews for lending his name and his platform to the blood libel of the age. He could withdraw the genocide accusation clearly and forcefully — and on the evidence, I can hand him everything he needs to do it, because the accusation collapses the moment anyone examines the controlling legal standard against the actual conduct of the war. And he could say the thing that would end the auction for good: that his integrity matters more to him than any election, that he surrendered it for a while and regrets it, and that he would rather stand tall and lose the election than win as the coward he allowed himself to become.

That is strength. That would earn respect. He will not get the mob's approval by saying any of this. He wasn't going to get it no matter what he says. The difference is that the first path costs him his self-respect and buys nothing, and the second buys back the only thing the purity test was ever able to take from him.



Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

Reclaiming the Covenant on America's 250th (May 2026)

"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024)

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   

 

 

AddToAny

Printfriendly

EoZTV Podcast

Podcast URL

Subscribe in podnovaSubscribe with FeedlyAdd to netvibes
addtomyyahoo4Subscribe with SubToMe

search eoz

comments

Speaking

translate

E-Book

For $18 donation








Sample Text

EoZ's Most Popular Posts in recent years

Search2

Hasbys!

Elder of Ziyon - حـكـيـم صـهـيـون



This blog may be a labor of love for me, but it takes a lot of effort, time and money. For 20 years and 40,000 articles I have been providing accurate, original news that would have remained unnoticed. I've written hundreds of scoops and sometimes my reporting ends up making a real difference. I appreciate any donations you can give to keep this blog going.

Donate!

Donate to fight for Israel!

Monthly subscription:
Payment options


One time donation:

Follow EoZ on Twitter!

Interesting Blogs

Blog Archive