Monday, May 25, 2026

  • Monday, May 25, 2026
  • Elder of Ziyon


A Palestinian op-ed published yesterday by Shehab News Agency is titled "I Am Not Canaanite," and its argument is more revealing than its author intends. 

The writer scolds fellow Palestinians who claim descent from the ancient Canaanites as a way to trump the Jewish historical claim. His objection: that move concedes too much. If the Middle East belongs to Canaanites, Phoenicians, Assyrians, and Akkadians, then it belongs to a pre-Islamic, pre-Arab world — and Jews are simply one more ancient people with a legitimate claim. He prefers a different history, one that begins with the Islamic conquests and ends with Arab Muslims as the rightful and permanent owners of the land.

The irony writes itself. The author is perfectly willing to invoke Islamic conquest as the foundation of Arab title to the lands — the armies that swept out of the Arabian Peninsula in the 7th century and subjugated the entire region. Conquest, in his framework, is a legitimate way to claim land. 

But only when Arabs do it. 

The problem with Zionism, by this same logic, is simply that the wrong people won.

If military conquest confers title, Israel's claim is stronger than anyone's. Israel won its independence in 1948 against the combined armies of five Arab states that had just declared their intention to destroy the nascent state. It won the West Bank and Gaza in 1967 in a defensive war launched after Egypt blockaded Israeli shipping and massed troops on the border. The doctrine that military victory in defensive war creates illegitimate possession is a rule that appeared, conveniently, the moment Jews started winning.

This is the same logic exposed in the Palestine Papers, the leaked PLO negotiation documents from 2011. Palestinian negotiators refused to acknowledge the existence of the Jewish people as a people. They didn't have any historic proofs or any real academic theory of ethnogenesis. The "moderate" PLO negotiators stated their reasons explicitly: acknowledging Jewish peoplehood would immediately generate Jewish claims to self-determination and historical connection to the land. The conclusion had to be reached first; the history was reverse-engineered to support it.

The pattern is consistent enough to function as a rule: whatever historical framework makes Jews look like they don't belong, adopt it. If Khazar theory serves the purpose, use it. If denying Jewish peoplehood serves the purpose, use that. If Canaanite ancestry seems useful, claim it — until someone points out that it validates pre-Islamic identities across the whole region, at which point write an op-ed explaining why you were never Canaanite after all. A few decades ago Palestinians claimed to be descended from Philistines until they realized that argument didn't work well in the West where the word is a epithet; they then switched to pretend to be Jebusites, a tribe that no one has any record of outside of Jewish scripture - but if the Jebusites controlled Jerusalem before Jews, then Palestinians must be them. 

The author of the piece freely admits that his roots might lie in Iraq, the Arabian Peninsula, Egypt, or North Africa — that Palestinians are "results of Islamic history that extended from the land of Sind to the land of Andalusia."  This is the most honest paragraph in the piece. He is describing an empire built by conquest, whose legacy he is happy to claim when it suits him and to discard when it doesn't. He is saying what every honest historian and most Palestinian families say about themselves — they are proudly descended from elsewhere. 

But they never say this in English.

Against this selective history, the Jewish case rests on three independent foundations, each sufficient on its own. The historical claim is one of the oldest continuous documented connections any living people has to any territory on earth — archaeological, linguistic, genetic, and literary, running unbroken from the Bronze Age through the present. The legal claim derives from the League of Nations Mandate, which incorporated the Balfour Declaration and made the establishment of a Jewish national home a binding obligation of international law — the same international legal order that created Syria, Lebanon, Iraq, and Jordan. The military claim is the record of wars fought and won in self-defense against opponents whose stated goal was annihilation.

The Shehab author is right that history matters. He and other Palestinians just want people to choose a retrograde history that fit their political aims at the moment.   




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:

Elliot Kaufman: Ruth Wisse Warns Now of 'the Organization of Politics against the Jews.'
The anti-Israel obsession has metastasized into what Ms. Wisse calls "the organization of politics against the Jews."

That's her definition for the tendency that called itself antisemitism in Germany and anti-Zionism in the Soviet Union. "It shifts blame, directs it against a specific target, and it is the greatest coalition-builder," Ms. Wisse says. See Iran and the old Arab League for evidence-or see many U.S. colleges, where ritual denunciation of Israel has for years been an organizing principle of campus politics. What happens on campus doesn't stay on campus.

Ms. Wisse says "the combination of the Jews' small size and inflated image" has long made them the ideal scapegoat. Exploitation of that combination is now ubiquitous on social media, soaking into the new youth culture. "Demagogues recognize the opportunity," she says.

In the face of anti-Israel propaganda, Ms. Wisse detects a liberal Jewish yearning for powerlessness and the moral purity that comes with it. "It's a loss of moral confidence." She worries more, however, about a similar yearning and loss of confidence among Americans writ large.
Jewish leader calls on Hochul to send in National Guard for NYC Israel Day Parade
A prominent pro-Israel activist is calling on Gov. Kathy Hochul to dispatch the National Guard to the Big Apple to help protect marchers at the upcoming Israel Day Parade in the wake of a troubling increase in antisemitic incidents.

Americans Against Antisemitism founder Dov Hikind said he’s a supporter of the NYPD but thinks local cops could use a boost — not just along the parade route in Manhattan but in the general vicinity of the march, as people carrying Israel flags or wearing pro-Israel gear could become targets of violence.

“We need to make sure bad things don’t happen,” said Hikind, a former state Assembly member who represented heavily orthodox Jewish neighborhoods in Brooklyn. “We want to make sure there is safety for the Jewish community. I’m calling on Governor Hochul to bring in the National Guard to help the New York City Police Department.”

Hochul has periodically dispatched the National Guard soldiers to man major transit hubs to assist in crime prevention.

But the head of the Jewish Community Relations Council of New York, which hosts the 61st Israel Day Parade, said it is working closely with the NYPD and is not requesting Hochul to send in the National Guard.

“I have full faith and confidence in the greatest police department in the world, the NYPD, under the exceptional leadership of Commissioner Jessica Tisch, who has done a tremendous job ensuring the safety and success of major events and parades across New York City, including the Israel Day on Fifth parade in recent years,” JCRC CEO Mark Treyger told The Post.

“Commissioner Tisch, the NYPD, and all of our law enforcement partners have left no stone unturned in preparing for next Sunday’s parade.”
Brendan O'Neill: Anatomy of a blood libel
The rude intrusion of such medieval imagery into our supposedly modern societies feels disquieting in the extreme. In the past two months alone, we’ve seen the rise and rise of the Judenhund libel; we’ve seen a 23-feet tall effigy of Benjamin Netanyahu, stuffed with 14kg of gunpowder, being set alight in a Judas-burning in Spain; we’ve seen a Jewish girl have her hair violently yanked by a seething mob yelling ‘Bitch!’ outside a synagogue in Brooklyn; and we’ve seen a Jew in England being allegedly assaulted by a man calling him a ‘baby killer’. Animal-themed libels, Jew-head burnings, Jewish women being subjected to the ritualistic humiliation of hair-pulling, as if it were the 1930s again – isn’t it remarkable how much ‘criticism of Israel’ looks, feels and smells like hatred for Jews?

And yet, horrified as we should be by the resuscitation of the zombie monster of medieval Jew hate, we also need to clock what is new; what is distinct about anti-Zionism. It is so clear now that anti-Zionism is not just some iffy ideology that occasionally crosses the line into anti-Semitism. It is not simply the mask Jew hatred wears, to try to doll up its low-IQ loathings as virtuous politics. No, anti-Zionism is its own ideology of hatred, and one that poses a very real threat not only to the physical health of Jews but also to the spiritual health of Western civilisation itself.

The dog-rape story might echo the Judensau mocking, but it is very much a libel of the modern, anti-Zionist era. It has joined the feverish accusations of genocide and settler-colonialism as one of the key means through which the Jewish nation is delegitimised and treated as a criminal entity deserving of erasure. Where medieval mockery and libels were motored by a religious animus that treated the Jew as a sickly pox in Christian Europe, anti-Zionist libels are underpinned by a dystopic vision of the Jews as a swaggering, violent people whose demented devotion to their ancient sovereign rights is harming not only Palestinians but world peace itself.

The Jew was once hated for being weak – now he is hated for being strong. He was once hated for supposedly being hunched and ashen-faced – now he is hated for being upright and armed. He was once hated for not being European – now he is libelled as a European settler of Arab lands. He was once laughed at as non-white – now he is branded as the ‘hyper-white’ thief of other people’s territory. He was once mocked for fucking pigs – now he is mocked for making other people fuck dogs. He was once told he did not belong in Europe – now he is told he doesn’t belong in Israel. The very elites whose ancestors expelled Jews from our nations now cry for the erasure of the Jewish nation, all the way ‘from the river to the sea’. And when they have nowhere to go – not here, not there – they’ll be branded a cosmopolitan menace whose very landlessness is a threat to human normalcy. It is the sheer cruelty of Jew hatred, the trickery of it, that alarms those of us who are clinging for dear life to our moral faculties.

‘One of the marks of anti-Semitism is an ability to believe stories that could not possibly be true’, wrote Orwell. We are back there again. In fact, there is something dispiriting even in the sight of Jews and their allies – spiked included – having to point out the mechanical impossibility of dogs being commanded to rape humans. ‘Never believe that anti-Semites are completely unaware of the absurdity of their replies’, wrote Sartre. ‘They know that their remarks are frivolous, open to challenge. But they are amusing themselves, for it is their adversary who is obliged to use words responsibly, since he believes in words.’ This, right here, is the moment we are in. The anti-Semites are revelling in the vision of Jews and their friends being compelled to discuss dog penises and human anuses. This in itself is a victory for the scum. They are amusing themselves. They are enjoying this. It is obscene.

Sunday, May 24, 2026

  • Sunday, May 24, 2026
  • Elder of Ziyon

There was once a major European Jewish community that lived under a regime where the local authorities spent twenty-five years systematically dismantling traditional Jewish life.

Teaching Torah to children was an indictable offense, punished by a fifty-florin civil fine. Religious teachers were banished from the city, and any caught attempting to instruct young Jews in Hebrew Bible or Talmud were hunted down — teachers and students hid in lofts, the hiding-places were discovered, and those who provided the means for these studies were prosecuted. The mikveh had been ordered sealed shut by official decree. A 50,000-florin bequest specifically intended for Jewish education was confiscated and suppressed. Two abandoned synagogues fell into ruin after a group of two hundred traditional Jews was denied permission to renovate them at their own expense.

Was this Christian Europe after the Black Plague? Spain after 1492? Germany when Martin Luther published On the Jews and Their Lies in 1543? Or perhaps in a Russian town during the pogroms?

No. This was Frankfurt am Main between roughly 1818 and 1843 — Frankfurt when it was the financial capital of central Europe, soon to host the 1848 National Assembly that would draft Germany’s first liberal constitution, one of the most progressive and cosmopolitan cities on the continent. Frankfurt prided itself on being at the leading edge of European Enlightenment.

And the people who created these antisemitic laws were not fanatical Christians. They were…Reform Jews.

The campaign was conducted by the Jewish Community Council of Frankfurt, which had passed under the control of Reform-aligned leadership and was using its civil authority — granted by German law over the internal affairs of every Jew in the city — to make traditional Jewish practice illegal. From 1817 through the 1830s, the Council was dominated by members of a Reform-oriented Masonic lodge. Whoever controlled the Council controlled everything that a Jew in Frankfurt could not opt out of: synagogues, schools, cemeteries, ritual slaughter, the mikveh, communal taxation, religious education. The Council used that authority, for a quarter-century, to do what no gentile authority in Frankfurt had attempted in living memory: criminalize traditional Jewish life in the city.

The documentation is extensive. Robert Liberles’s Religious Conflict in Social Context (Greenwood Press for the Leo Baeck Institute, 1985) is the standard academic monograph. Jacob Katz, the founding historian of modern Orthodoxy as a scholarly field, treats the Frankfurt period as the methodologically central case in A House Divided (1995 Hebrew, 1998 English). Rabbi Samson Raphael Hirsch published his own contemporary account in his 1854 pamphlet Die Religion im Bunde mit dem Fortschritt. The details have been in the standard literature for over a century.

We know what Christian anti-Jewish campaigns looked like. In some ways, this Jewish anti-Jewish campaign was worse.

The Council, in its official report to the Senate in 1838, declared in writing that the value of the Hebrew Bible was “doubtful.” Christians would not have said that.

The Council ruled that any Jew who continued to wear tefillin was ineligible for communal office. Tefillin had no role in Christian polemic; Christians had no stake in who served on a Jewish communal board.

A voluntary group of Jews, the “Tzitzith Society,” had gathered for many years on Shabbat afternoons in a private home to read Tanach and the Prophets together. The Council made this an indictable offense. A Christian regime would have applauded Jews studying the Old Testament.

The Council ordered the mikveh sealed. Mikveh use was unobjectionable from a Christian point of view because it did not compete with Christian sacraments. The Council went out of its way to invest institutional energy in preventing Jewish women from performing a ritual that affected no one outside the Jewish community. The mikveh did not threaten Reform principles. Reform women were not being compelled to use it. Its continued operation threatened nothing the Reformers needed. They sealed it anyway, because the existence of women using the mikveh contradicted their own framework.

The Council’s hostility to traditional practice was a premeditated ideological commitment.

A movement confident in its own framework does not need to suppress the alternatives. If the Reformers had genuinely believed they represented the inevitable, rational, modern future of Judaism, they could have left the traditional community alone and let it dissolve on its own through demonstration and example. The Orthodox were not a threat to Reform if Reform was correct; the Orthodox were a threat to Reform precisely because Reform was not correct, and on some level the Reformers knew it. Every Jewish woman using the mikveh, every child learning Talmud in a Frankfurt loft, every member of the Tzitzith Society reading the Prophets aloud in a private home was a piece of empirical evidence falsifying the Reform claim that the modern Jew had outgrown these practices. The Reformers didn’t want “emancipation” from religion for themselves — they regarded traditional Judaism as a threat to their very existence and philosophy.

This is the structural signature of antisemitism in every form it has taken from medieval Christian antisemitism through today. The very existence of Jews, or Judaism, or a Jewish state is seen as a threat to their philosophies. The framework varies. The mechanism does not.

This pattern does not stop at the Jewish-gentile border. Jews who adopt a universalist framework as their primary moral identity inherit the framework’s structural intolerance of Jewish particularity. They cannot tolerate Jews who remain particularist any more than gentile universalists can, and for the same structural reason. The continued existence of particularist Jews is a falsification of the framework they have made their identity around, and the framework demands the falsification’s elimination.

The Frankfurt Reformers were Jews who had adopted Enlightenment-era universalism as their primary moral framework. The contemporary version is Jews who have adopted postcolonial and anti-racist universalism as theirs. The parallels are eerie. The energy invested by Jews to suppress the opinions and even existence of other Jews shows how much the framework needs the falsifying evidence to disappear.

Jewish anti-Zionists today insist that they, as Jews, represent the real Judaism — prophetic, ethical, progressive — and that Zionist Jews are beyond the pale, complicit in genocide, unfit for inclusion in progressive Jewish spaces. They lobby to criminalize Zionism as a form of racism through “anti-Palestinian racism” frameworks designed to function as civil rights categories. They organize disruption of Jewish institutions. They sign open letters demanding that synagogues, federations, and Hillels renounce Zionism. They harass Jewish students on campuses, ally with movements that endanger fellow Jews, and frame all of this as moral seriousness against the embarrassing reactionary Zionism of the rest of Jewry. They created an entire philosophy fetishizing the Diaspora because they cannot square actual Judaism with their anti-Zionism.

The most direct parallel between the anti-Zionists of today and the malicious Reformers of Frankfurt is how they deal with the prayerbook itself. The German Reform program, formalized at the 1845 Frankfurt Rabbinical Conference and pushed to its endpoint in Holdheim's 1848 Berlin Reformgemeinde siddur, surgically removed every reference to Jewish peoplehood and national restoration from the liturgy, turning the central Amidah prayer into a parody of itself. Prayers for the return to Zion were deleted or rewritten as abstract spiritual aspirations. The petition to gather the exiles from the four corners of the earth was struck because the Reformers did not consider themselves exiles. References to Eretz Yisrael as the inheritance of the Jewish people were removed or recontextualized as spiritual rather than territorial. The Davidic messiah who would restore Jewish sovereignty was replaced with an abstract "messianic age" of universal human brotherhood with nothing specifically Jewish about it. The Tisha B'Av liturgy mourning the loss of Jewish sovereignty was softened or eliminated; Holdheim abolished the fast day entirely.

Here’s a bowdlerized Grace After Meals section of an 1845 Reform German prayerbook that removes three paragraphs of standard text about return to Zion and rebuilding Jerusalem.

The contemporary anti-Zionist Jewish movement is running the same playbook on the same liturgy with the same goal. Anti-Zionist haggadot remove "Next Year in Jerusalem" and replace it with universalist liberation language. Prayers for the State of Israel are stripped from progressive siddurim. Tisha B'Av observances are reframed around the “Nakba” rather than the destruction of the Temple, mourning a different framework's preferred catastrophe instead of the Jewish one. References to Eretz Yisrael as the Jewish homeland are excised or recontextualized. The mechanism is identical because the structural problem is identical. Two thousand years of liturgy point in one direction. The framework requires the other. When the textual evidence contradicts the framework, the textual evidence has to be edited.

A movement confident in its own framework would not need to suppress the alternatives. If the anti-Zionist Jews genuinely believed they represented the real Judaism and that Zionism was a regrettable detour, they could leave Zionist Jews alone and let the framework demonstrate its truth through example. They do not do this. They cannot do this. Zionist Jews are not a threat to anti-Zionism if anti-Zionism is correct; Zionist Jews are a threat to anti-Zionism precisely because anti-Zionism is not correct, and on some level the anti-Zionists know it. The continued existence of a Jewish state and the continued attachment of most Jews worldwide to Jewish peoplehood and Jewish sovereignty is a piece of empirical evidence that the framework cannot absorb. So the evidence has to be eliminated, by whatever institutional power is available.

The Frankfurt Council had German civil law and police enforcement. Contemporary anti-Zionists have university administrations, professional associations, social media platforms, progressive Jewish institutions, and the soft power of social and reputational coercion. The toolset has modernized. The project is the same.

Samson Raphael Hirsch arrived in Frankfurt in 1851, twenty years into the suppression campaign, at the invitation of eleven men — the remnant of the city’s traditional Jewish community, organized as the Israelitische Religionsgesellschaft. He spent the next twenty-five years building parallel Jewish institutional infrastructure that the captured Council could not destroy: a separate community, a school, a synagogue, a publishing program, and most importantly an intellectual framework (Torah im Derech Eretz) that could defend traditional practice on its own terms against Reform critique. He did not try to reform the Council from within. He understood that institutional capture cannot be reversed from inside when the captors are committed to the framework that requires the suppression. Reasoning with them would not work, because their framework was definitionally anti-Jewish.

Just like today’s anti-Zionists, the Frankfurt Reformers presented themselves as the modern, enlightened, progressive Jews and depicted traditional Jews as the embarrassing past. They told anyone who would listen that they were on the right side of history. But people truly on the right side of history are not threatened by the people they believe are wrong - they let history take care of them.

Their direct ideological descendants are doing the same work today against Zionist Jews, for the same structural reasons, with the same self-presentation, with the same gap between their claimed confidence and the energy they invest in suppression. The framework-holders cannot be reasoned out of their framework, because the framework is constitutive of their identity. Institutional capture cannot be reversed from within, because the captors are committed to using available power against the Jews they oppose. The response that has worked, historically, is the Hirschian one: build parallel institutions that the captured ones cannot suppress, and fight for the legal and social conditions that let those institutions sustain themselves. Hirsch did it in Frankfurt. Zionism did it on the national scale. The Orthodox infrastructure, the day school system, the pro-Israel media ecosystem, and the alternative platforms that can carry Jewish voices outside captured legacy institutions are doing it now.

Every universalist framework that has tried to eliminate Jewish particularism has failed. The Jewish people have outlasted Christianity’s supersessionist campaigns, Enlightenment universalism’s demand for dissolution, Marxism’s class reclassifications, Nazism’s racial reclassifications at the cost of six million lives, and the various intermediate iterations. We will outlast the current one. The framework is wrong about us, as every prior framework was wrong about us, for the same structural reason: Jewish particularism is empirical, real, and continuous, and frameworks built on its denial cannot survive contact with the evidence.

The Reform movement, both in Germany and worldwide, now looks at the early Reformers with more than a little embarrassment. Their leaders steadily rolled back most of the excesses of their German founders over the next 150 years. They recognize that the passionate hatred of the early Reform movement was not Judaism but a pathetic attempt to destroy Judaism in its name.

That is what Jewish anti-Zionists today are. In fifty years, they will likely be universally recognized as just as bigoted, hateful and antisemitic as their Frankfurt Reformer forebears were.



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, May 24, 2026
  • Elder of Ziyon

Andrew Gilligan wrote  a mostly good piece in The Spectator about the Green Party's antisemitism problem, giving details on what these candidates have actually said, like Saiqa Ali saying that Donald Trump is "owned by Jews" or Sabine Mairey saying that a terror attack on a synagogue was not antisemitism but "revenge" against Israel, or Rebecca Jones saying she is a "love-filled, vegan" doctor who also happens to post that she wants to "burn Zionism to the ground."

But buried in the otherwise sharp analysis we read this:
Some will say it’s pandering to the Muslim vote. But even for British Muslims, Gaza is not a priority. In a poll during the last election, while the slaughter was still underway, only 21 percent of them named it as their top issue. Only 44 percent of British Muslims even put it in their top five. The figures for non-Muslims were much lower. That’s not because people don’t care about the horror. It’s because they think, surely correctly, that there is little that any British government, let alone any local council, can do about it.

Gilligan writes about the Gaza "slaughter."  He means the war. But "slaughter" encodes a specific claim about intent — that Israel was killing civilians purposefully, for its own sake, the way one slaughters animals. That claim is precisely what is contested, and by accepting the vocabulary, Gilligan concedes the argument he probably never meant to make.

This is how layered propaganda works. A writer can consciously reject the outermost layer — the genocide accusation, the apartheid framing — while having already absorbed a deeper layer without noticing. The deeper layer doesn't announce itself as propaganda. It arrives as neutral description, embedded in the shared vocabulary of respectable discourse. "Slaughter" sounds like a strong word for a lot of deaths. It functions as a verdict on intent.

"Horror" — another word Gilligan uses for Gazan civilians' experience — is legitimate. Families living near Hamas infrastructure, not knowing why their neighborhood was targeted, experienced genuine horror. That describes their experience accurately. "Slaughter" describes Israel's supposed motivation — and gets it wrong.

The intelligence record makes the error concrete. Israel's operations in Lebanon and Iran demonstrated intelligence capability that most militaries can only dream about — striking specific leaders on specific floors of buildings, eliminating Nasrallah in his secret and very deep bunker, targeting Iranian leaders all over the country simultaneously.  An intelligence apparatus precise enough to kill a specific general in a specific room in Beirut is not simultaneously carpet-bombing Gaza at random. The two pictures cannot coexist.

Hamas's own martyr announcements close the case. When the IDF struck Al-Faluja School on October 13, 2024, media coverage and Airwars' database recorded it as a strike killing only civilians, with IDF claims about Hamas using the school as a command center dismissed as usual. Hamas has since confirmed on a affiliated Telegram channel that Rafat Mousa Sakb Muhna — a 42-year-old Beit Lahia Battalion commander — was killed in that strike, along with fighter Amir Majdi Wajih Muslim, age 19, whose memorial posts identify him explicitly as a mujahid. The August 4, 2024 strike on Hassan Salama School, reported at the time as killing 30 civilians, targeted Jaber Aziz, the Al-Furqan Battalion commander and October 7 planner. Hamas now confirms he died there — and that he was scrubbed from the Ministry of Health casualty list entirely.Hamas is doing this to honor its dead as martyrs. The effect is to validate Israeli targeting, strike by strike, from the adversary's own records. The "indiscriminate" narrative depends on Israel having no specific targets in mind. Hamas keeps naming the targets.

Israel cannot publicize its intelligence for each strike without burning sources and methods. That structural asymmetry — Israel silent, the other side's framing filling the vacuum — is why "slaughter" can feel like neutral description even to a writer who knows better. Gilligan almost certainly does know better. That's what makes the word worth examining: the ceaseless propaganda succeeded not only on a hostile mind but on a friendly one.


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:

Inside Israel’s secret operation to turn Hezbollah’s beepers into bombs
The whole world was shocked out of its wits on September 17-18, 2024, when the Mossad brought the mighty 150,000-rocket-wielding Hezbollah terror army to its knees in an instant with a “fleet” of exploding beepers. Or, rather, almost the whole world, excluding the Mossad operatives and defense officials who ran the operation, such as “Adam Feyn,” who recently published a book in Hebrew, Hoda’ah Goralit (Fateful Message), about the operation and gave his first English-language interview about it to The Jerusalem Post.

In his interview with the Post and in his book, Feyn made a series of stunning dramatic reveals about the operation.

These include how the Mossad lured a Hezbollah operative into an ambush to prevent him from exposing the beepers; the true story regarding how close Iran was to uncovering the plot; fleshing out how hard it was to get Hezbollah to lower its suspicions sufficiently for it to buy the beepers; showing how unwitting third parties were used by the Mossad to sell Hezbollah on the beepers; how the Mossad later tried to make good to such innocent third parties where it could; and how the Mossad’s gym and many other leisure areas were effectively converted into a beeper assembly line when the agency had to jump the pace of its production and had insufficient space to do so using its standard operations areas.

During the interview and in the book, Feyn also provided new insights into, and details of, key strategic moments when top Mossad or other Israeli officials gambled and took history in one direction instead of another, despite the “right” choice being covered in a haze of fog.

Feyn only recently retired from the defense establishment after decades in operations, including as one of the top managers with unique insider information about the beepers operation. He may still do other future work with the defense establishment, and so published the book under a fictional name to protect his identity. Another twist regarding the book is that Feyn wrote it as a partially fictional account, but which is meticulously based on the insider history of what actually happened, which only he and a small number of other top Mossad senior managers and defense officials know.

The best way to understand the breakdown of truth and fiction in the book is that the vast majority of the actions taken by the Mossad officials mentioned in the book, especially Mossad chief David Barnea (referred to only as the Mossad chief), actually happened, but sometimes in the book one character is a composite of multiple real agents to simplify the storytelling, which would otherwise become cumbersome and kill some of the pace. Such is the difference sometimes between Hollywood versions of intelligence operations and the real world. In both versions, the final result can be awesome and truly sweep readers or viewers off their feet. But in the real-life version, the culminating drama comes only after painstaking and agonizingly slow steps and meticulous spy tradecraft which laymen would never understand or tolerate.

The Mossad lured a Hezbollah operative into an ambush to prevent him from exposing the beepers
According to the book, around July 2024 the Mossad chief (Barnea in the real world) called the air force chief (Tomer Bar in the real world), who sent a senior air force operations colonel to a critical Mossad meeting, usually one not attended by outsiders (including the IDF). The Mossad officials at the meeting warned the colonel that a Hezbollah operative was getting too close to figuring out that the beepers were booby-trapped and requested that the air force kill him to save the operation. This was only around two months before the beepers were activated. In the book, the air force colonel responded to the Mossad officials by saying he needed the agency to trick the Hezbollah technology reviewer into leaving Beirut and also to give the air force his exact location when he left.

Next, the book said that Israeli defense and intelligence officials fooled the Hezbollah operative into traveling to southern Lebanon, where they bombed him. Questioned about such operations, Feyn told the Post, “it’s highly sensitive. The situation was problematic. There was more than one problematic situation that the Mossad had to deal with. Sometimes the problems went away on their own or more easily, and sometimes the Mossad had to act.” This operation did not end Hezbollah’s suspicions.
Major investigation: Intelligence failures let Akram family shooters enter terror hotspot prior to Bondi massacre while avoiding surveillance
Australia’s top spy agency’s assessment of the alleged Bondi attackers in 2019 demanded travel alerts be placed on them and their file revisited if they associated with extremists - but in a catastrophic failure, the men were able to move freely through known terror hotspots.

An investigation has uncovered a series of failures that meant that Sajid and Naveed Akram slipped through the cracks of law enforcement and security agencies prior to the Bondi terror attack on December 14, 2025.

In a critical lapse, the Australian Federal Police and Border Force, which sits within Home Affairs, were aware of the Akram’s travel to known terror hotspots but did not pass the intelligence onto ASIO or NSW Police, which issued the gun licenses.

It can be revealed that the Akrams travelled to Uzbekistan - a known gateway to terror hotspot Afghanistan - in late 2022 or early 2023.

The investigation, conducted for the upcoming book Bondi Terror, also discovered that ASIO’s travel alert was only placed on the Akrams' first port of call, rather than their final destination.

This is a matter that is likely to come under scrutiny by the Royal Commission this week.

ASIO conducted a thorough assessment of Naveed Akram in 2019, which included several interviews with his father Sajid.

The spy agency concluded that while Naveed was associating with dangerous individuals, neither were considered to be violent extremists themselves.

But it’s understood the ASIO assessment stated if the Akrams were found to be associating with ‘persons of interest’ again, the assessment would need to be revisited and the inquiry re-opened.

This never occurred in the subsequent years.

The 2019 assessment was signed off at a middle-ranking level and was not reviewed by senior officials.

ASIO also required that travel alerts be placed on the Akrams' movements.

However, the alerts placed on the Akrams were only for their first port of arrival, not their final destination.

Some senior figures have suggested this was inadequate.
Israeli soldier killed by Hezbollah drone near Lebanese border
An Israel Defense Forces soldier was killed in a Hezbollah explosive drone strike in Israeli territory near the Lebanese border while he was on operational activity in northern Israel, the military announced on Saturday night.

The fallen soldier was identified as Staff Sgt. Noam Hamburger, 23, a technology and maintenance specialist in the 9th Battalion of the 401st “Iron Tracks” Brigade.

Hamburger, from the northern Israeli coastal town of Atlit, was the ninth Israeli soldier killed since a U.S.-brokered ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon took effect on April 16, 2026.

In the same incident, another soldier was seriously wounded and a noncommissioned officer sustained light injuries, the IDF said. Both were evacuated to a hospital for medical treatment, and their families were notified, it added.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu conveyed his condolences to Hamburger’s family.

“My wife and I send our heartfelt condolences to the family of Staff Sgt. Noam Hamburger, of blessed memory, who fell near the northern border,” Netanyahu said. “Noam, of blessed memory, from the town of Atlit, fought heroically to defend our communities and citizens against the Hezbollah terrorist organization.”

The premier added that “on behalf of all citizens of Israel, we embrace Noam’s family and loved ones, and wish a speedy and full recovery to his comrades who were injured in this difficult incident.”

Ten IDF soldiers were wounded on Wednesday from direct hits by explosive drones in Southern Lebanon, two severely, the military said. They included the commander of the 401st Armored Brigade, Col. Meir Biderman, who was hospitalized in serious condition. His condition improved over the Shavuot holiday weekend, doctors said.

Friday, May 22, 2026

From Ian:

Bret Stephens: Hatred of Israel and the Degradation of the West
Good-faith criticism of Israeli leaders and policy has for years been giving way to something darker. It's a conviction that Israel, alone among the nations, was a mistake to begin with and has no right to exist now. The fashionable frenzy that is today's loathing of Israel is a sign of the degradation of the West.

Societies that value critical thinking and reasoned moral judgment do not make a fetish of demonizing one small country and its people while imagining that peace, justice and freedom would somehow be achieved if only the country and its people were made to disappear.

Israel has been living under the endless drizzle of orchestrated propaganda and media hostility over the course of its 78 years, while still managing to transform itself into a military, technological and economic powerhouse - as well as one of the happiest countries in the world.

Moral judgments should be made about Israel according to the same standards by which we judge other countries faced with similar circumstances. It's when Israel is demanded to be a saint - and then, as it invariably falls short, is damned as the worst sinner - that we lose our sense of perspective and proportion.
The Tiki Torch Has Been Passed By Abe Greenwald
Via Commentary Newsletter, sign up here.
The Dems are now the party of the forgotten Jew-hater. Leading Democrats today, unlike Trump, praise neo-Nazis and anti-Semites round the clock. How could they not? The anti-Semites are their supporters, candidates, and elected officials. There’s Mamdani, Platner, El-Sayed, and other colorful figures.

For example, there’s Texas Democratic congressional candidate Maureen Galindo, who pledged on social media last week to “turn Karnes ICE Detention Center into a prison for American Zionists and former ICE officers for human trafficking.” She added: “It will also be a castration processing center for pedophiles which will probably be most of the Zionists.”

If there’s still a quiet part that Dems are not supposed to say out loud, Galindo seems to have said it. Major Democrats have summoned herculean courage to condemn her remarks about imprisoning Jews and castrating them for pedophilia.

But everything else goes. So-called moderate party leaders and potential presidential candidates are denouncing AIPAC, Israel, “the Epstein class,” etc.

They’re also going out of their way to praise Jew-haters across the aisle. Yesterday, the career anti-Semite Thomas Massie lost a Republican congressional primary election in Kentucky. Just a week ago, Massie posed for a picture with a supporter who was wearing an “American Reich” sweatshirt complete with a Reichsadler-esque logo. Last night, after his defeat, Massie’s first public comment was “I would have come out sooner, but I had to call my opponent and concede, and it took a while to find Ed Gallrein in Tel Aviv.”

Democrat Ro Khanna, a 2028 presidential hopeful, couldn’t bear to see such a fine man go down. “My good friend @RepThomasMassie lost tonight,” he wrote on X. “He lost because he had the guts to stand up to the Epstein class and against the war.” Nor could Khanna miss the opportunity to hoover up Massie’s anti-Semitic base. “I say to this voters who feel rejected by Trump,” he went on. “We welcome you. Join our coalition to take on a rotten system and stand for the working class over the Epstein class.”

An hour later, perhaps realizing he forgot to mention AIPAC, Khanna posted: “The message is clear: if you take a stand against war, AIPAC, & the Epstein class, you have no place in the Trump coalition. But the future of the Democratic Party that is done with the establishment is yours to shape.”

The message is clear, alright: There are only good people on one side—on the other, there are Jews. When you blame an election loss on a rigged system, it’s a threat to our democracy. When you blame it on a system rigged by the Jews, it’s “guts.” And if you blame the pesky Jews for everything, you’ll find a home in the Democratic Party.

Let the word go forth from this time and place, to friend and foe alike, that the tiki torch has been passed to a new generation of Democrats.
Seth Mandel: The Doom Loop of UK Anti-Semitism
Today’s Telegraph continues on this theme with an extraordinary column by George Chesterton, whose wife and children are Jewish. (Memo to Keir Starmer: You should probably read the Telegraph, you might learn something.) Chesterton’s older daughter was bat mitzvahed in 2023; his younger daughter is currently taking lessons for her own upcoming celebration. In between the two events, Britain has changed for the worse—but the signs, Chesterton says, were there even before the Hamas attacks in October 2023.

That first bat mitzvah took place earlier in 2023, and when Chesterton’s daughter started talking about it, the Nazi taunts from her classmates immediately followed.

“Hearing that my daughter was having a bat mitzvah was the trigger—until then most of her school year had not even known she was Jewish,” he writes. “It’s a measure of how far our society has allowed hatred of Jews to spread that abuse in early 2023 seems almost innocent compared to today.”

We should pause a moment on that first line: “Hearing that my daughter was having a bat mitzvah was the trigger.” Anti-Semites like to claim that Jews are to blame for their own discrimination. This argument has been extremely common after October 7, when bigots and their apologists portray anti-Semitism as “just anti-Zionism” and a reaction to Israel’s own policies. Chesterton’s article is a reminder that such triggers are always a pretext: Are the Hitler taunts his daughter’s fault for having a bat mitzvah? Anything Jewish, whether related to Israel or not, is a trigger for anti-Semites. Western societies just happen to be at a place now where there’s always someone triggered by Jews being Jews.

Chesterton’s other daughter wasn’t spared either:

“Around the same time, my younger daughter, then aged 10 and in primary school, had been compelled to declare which ‘side’ she was on by fellow pupils, the clear implication being that the children asking her were on the side of Palestinians. As with her big sister, this was because they knew she was Jewish. It was a primary-school purity test. She came home one day and explained someone had scratched Israel out of the school atlases.”

Totally healthy society, where 10-year-olds are subject to anti-Jewish purity tests in school.

The adults experienced it too, of course. Chesterton talks about his and his wife’s friends being quick to signal their virtuous anger at Israel when the war started so that they would pass the same purity test. But the family’s experiences were never limited to conversations about Israel:

“One Sunday afternoon in the summer of 2024, my wife, who is a photographer, was trying to book a taxi to the Bevis Marks Synagogue in the City of London, where she was due to be taking pictures at an event. Eight times, a different driver picked up the fare then mysteriously dropped the job once they realized what the destination was. In the end, I drove her to work because nobody else would.”
George Orwell’s ‘Antisemitism in Britain’ has sadly aged very well
Afew weeks ago, as I looked at footage of a pro-Palestine demonstration – I forget which one, they’re all blurring into one – and noted the prevalence of the nice, genteel, middle-class protesters, a phrase popped unbidden into my head: “The stupid, suburban prejudice of antisemitism.”

The words were Ezra Pound’s, in conversation with Allen Ginsberg in 1967. During the war Pound had broadcast, from Italy, the vilest antisemitic propaganda; this was his way of apologising for it. Leaving aside the question of whether his contrition was genuine or not, the choice of the adjective “suburban” was telling. It suggests something tamed, polite even; not the wildness of the countryside or the jostle and bustle of the city, but something tree-lined, respectable.

I also thought of this when a friend sent me a link to George Orwell’s 1945 essay Antisemitism in Britain. For an 81-year-old, this essay is looking surprisingly youthful. (One surprise: it begins by saying that “There are about 400,000 known Jews in Britain”; the current figure is some 277,000.) A quote from it has been doing the rounds on social media lately: “One of the marks of antisemitism is an ability to believe stories that could not possibly be true.”

This is usually cited in opposition to the recent opinion piece in the New York Times about dogs being trained to rape; but it has, and will continue to have, other applications.

Orwell’s essay, though, also makes much of the respectability of those who make antisemitic comments: “Naturally the antisemite thinks of himself as a reasonable being. Whenever I have touched on this subject in a newspaper article, I have always had a considerable ‘come-back’, and invariably some of the letters are from well-balanced, middling people – doctors, for example – with no apparent economic grievance.”

I can believe it. There has always been this strain in British antisemitism, something of middle-class virtue; and I think of Dulwich, the suburb itself, as leafy as can possibly be imagined; and the famous school, the college, that sits within it, like a country house; and its (currently) most famous alumnus, Nigel Farage, who, it has been often alleged, spent much of his time there making hissing noises at fellow Jewish pupils, and racially abusing anyone with darker skin than him.

“A Jewish boy at a public school almost invariably had a bad time,” writes Orwell in the same essay.

“He could, of course, live down his Jewishness if he was exceptionally charming or athletic, but it was an initial disability comparable to a stammer or a birthmark.”

And I think of my own public school, Westminster, where two of the school’s intellectual elite, the Queen’s Scholars, asked me if I was Jewish, and when I said I wasn’t, replied: “Then you won’t mind saying, ‘Jews are the scum of the earth, and up with Adolf Hitler.’ They’re only words, go on, say them.” I demurred.

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