Thursday, October 09, 2025

  • Thursday, October 09, 2025
  • Elder of Ziyon

From the Daily Mail:

A staff member at one of Australia's most prestigious universities has been suspended after allegedly attacking a group of students celebrating a Jewish holiday.

In the video, the woman approaches several students and asks if they are 'Zionists,' before harassing them as they repeatedly ask her to move on.

The students, who were celebrating the Jewish holiday of Sukkot, explained that they were not making any political statements or staging a protest, and simply wanted to be left alone.

However, the woman continued her tirade, getting right up in the face of one young woman and telling her: 'A Zionist is the lowest form of rubbish.'

'Zionists are the most disgusting thing that has ever walked this earth,' she yelled.

She described herself as an 'Indigenous Palestinian' before calling the group 'baby killers' and telling one member she was a 'f***ing filthy Zionist.'

A security guard attempted to intervene, but the woman ignored him and continued her rant against the students, who did not appear to be bothering anyone.

'Look at this rubbish, look at these parasites,' the woman told them.

The group repeatedly asked the woman to leave and walk away before she walked off and yelled: 'Go f**k yourself you disgusting Zionist. A Zionist is the lowest form of humanity.'
I can't find the name of the staffer yet, or what her position is. But she definitely deserves to become famous. 

I can't help but wonder if the university would have suspended her if the students had built  a Sukkah with an Israeli flag. Because it would not make her any less disgusting. 



Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

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

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

From Ian:

America's Debt to Israel
Two years after Hamas's Oct. 7 atrocities, the U.S. should be grateful to Israel. The Jewish state has begun to degrade America's enemies one by one. Hamas, an Iran-allied Islamist outfit dedicated to killing Jews, no longer exists as a military force. The Israel Defense Forces and Mossad took apart Hizbullah, the most lethal of Iran's terrorist proxies, which has killed many Americans including 241 in the 1983 Beirut bombings.

The Sunni-slaughtering, drug-running Assad dynasty in Damascus - robbed of Hizbullah's help as well as Iranian and Russian troops - collapsed. And in a stunning 12-day aerial duel, Israel badly damaged the Islamic Republic's nuclear program, killing scores of its generals and atomic scientists. Israel's success convinced President Trump to send the B-2 bombers that ensured that Iran's most deeply buried uranium-enrichment site went offline.

Will Washington have the understanding and intestinal fortitude to stand by an ally that has repeatedly enhanced America's influence throughout the Middle East and beyond?

Reuel Marc Gerecht, a former Iranian-targets officer in the CIA, is a resident scholar at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies. Ray Takeyh is a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations.
How Disgraceful Anti-Israel NGOs Set UN Agenda
A full-page ad in the Sept. 27 issue of the Globe and Mail, sponsored by the NGO Medecins sans Frontieres/Doctors without Borders (MSF), tots up the many calamities Gazans have endured in the two-year Hamas-Israel war. The ad speaks of civilian hunger, but not of plentiful aid stolen by Hamas. It does not mention Hamas at all - or the hostages taken, or any other cause of the war.

And hanging overall the false accusation that it is Israel that is committing genocide. Genocide requires intent, demonstrably not the case in Israel's defensive war, but which perfectly describes the motivation behind Hamas's rabid pogrom on October 7. Those reading the ad won't register the absence of objectivity of today's MSF as a politicized, biased and untrustworthy source of information.

MSF has not only lied about proven Hamas entrenchment in Gaza hospitals ("we have seen no evidence that the hospital buildings or the compounds are being used by Hamas as a military base") but admitted - following Oct. 7, mind - giving funding to the Hamas-run Gaza Ministry of Health.

"Non-governmental organizations" are supposed to be made up of altruistic civic-minded groups that provide expertise independent of the narrow self-interest of political bodies. It is on that ground that they are invited to participate in UN activities. But now retired, anti-democratic Marxist activists have executed the equivalent of a corporate hostile takeover of now corrupted NGOs like MSF, Human Rights Watch and Amnesty.

The superpower NGOs are accountable to nobody, yet in large part they are setting the UN's agenda on Israel. Then, when the UN executes the agenda they have promoted, they endorse it as if it were a coincidence.
The Hamas death cult has taken over campus
Ever keen to remind us of their moral bankruptcy, the keffiyeh cult’s student wing was out en masse yesterday. In the UK and beyond, hundreds of thousands of ‘pro-Palestine’ students walked out of lecture halls and flooded the streets, marking the two-year anniversary of the 7 October pogrom. Not to mourn it, of course, but to demand more death and destruction, by calling for the annihilation of Israel.

Around a dozen British universities held Palestine rallies to coincide with 7 October – often despite the pleas of university administrators to reschedule. Several of London’s top institutions, including King’s College London, LSE, UCL and SOAS, marched through the city centre with flags and placards. Further north, students in Sheffield, Manchester, Edinburgh, Glasgow and Strathclyde were also on the march. In Glasgow, protesters cosplayed as jihadists. Outside Edinburgh’s student library, the crowds yelled ‘shame’ – a quality painfully lacking among their own ranks. The supposed aim of these demos, as organisers for the Manchester University protest explained on Instagram, was to protest two years of ‘genocide, forced starvation, murder, ethnic cleansing, imprisonment, torture and settler colonialism’.

It is impossible to underestimate the cruelty of staging this spectacle on 7 October. Two years ago yesterday, a tsunami of armed men surged over Israel’s southern border to enact an hours-long campaign of slaughter, sexual violence and ritualistic humiliation. There are 365 days in a year, yet the pro-Palestine sect deliberately chose to beat their drums on this particular day, the day most painful to Jews. Worse, these students have made clear, they see this genocidal pogrom not as a tragedy, but as a valiant act of resistance. ‘Honour our resistance. Honour our martyrs’, read an Instagram post from the Glasgow University Justice for Palestine Society. It invited students to ‘celebrate the glorious Al-Aqsa flood’ – the name given by Hamas to the 7 October massacre. To dismiss this as well-meaning ignorance would be far too generous now.

‘I think freedom will be achieved when the Israelis go back to where they were born’, said a Muslim student in London in an interview on LBC, sounding almost nonchalant. When asked if she understood ‘why Jewish students might feel uncomfortable’ with that view, she was nonplussed. ‘I mean, I understand… but I don’t think that their feelings are valid.’

How emboldened must a young person be to say these things on camera, with her university lanyard hanging around her neck? What does it say about the climate on our campuses? These are the same students who are told constantly to watch their words, that campus is a safe space for minorities and the marginalised. Every minority, it seems, except Jews.

Haya Adam, the president of the SOAS’s Palestine Society (who was expelled back in August following a harassment claim), said she thought yesterday’s actions ‘went brilliantly’, and that ‘anyone with any ounce of humanity’ should have joined in. One wonders if Adam saw the same displays of ugliness that the rest of us did. Her appeal to ‘humanity’ is particularly baffling, given that these rallies not only took place on 7 October, but less than a week after two British Jews were killed during an Islamist terror attack.
From Ian:

Seth Mandel: Fighting for Peace in the Middle East
The European leaders’ approach to “peace” was, essentially: Please stop fighting for a few minutes so I can get reelected. The shame of France’s Emmanuel Macron, of the UK’s Keir Starmer, of Spain’s Pedro Sanchez and others cannot be understated.

But that is not all of Europe. German Chancellor Friedrich Merz has walked a difficult diplomatic tightrope but has done it well, never throwing Israel’s existence under the bus of European populism. He is surrounded by European leaders with little regard for freedom and democracy, however, and those leaders need to see Israeli victory.

Starmer, Macron, and others who fetishize weakness insisted that “peace” meant giving in to terrorists’ demands. Their version of peace was to recognize a state of Palestine that doesn’t yet exist and half of which is in the hands of Hamas. They believe that peace comes through laziness, through empty declarations, through magical thinking, through kissing the feet of one’s pursuer.

In fact, peace requires hard work. In this case, it required an Israeli and American military alliance willing to neutralize threats emanating from Iran. It required American support for Israeli actions in Yemen, Lebanon, and Syria. And it required the mobilization of U.S. military assets in the Gulf region.

Peace is possible at this point only because the president of the United States ignored the isolationists chirping in his ear that the days of American strength were over. Whatever happens now, we are at least closer to ending the conflict than we have been, and that was made possible by military action.

Canada joined the Europeans who weren’t willing to work for peace. But the United States resisted the pull of laziness, of managed decline, of wishful thinking and decadent weakness. And so there is a chance for peace.

Will this lesson be learned? Not as widely as it should be. But the lesson has been demonstrated, and that is what is most important.
Seth Mandel: To Hell and Back
The efforts to bring home captives are part of Israel’s social compact. As I wrote for the March 2024 issue of COMMENTARY:

“There is also a pragmatic reason for Israel’s commitment to redeeming captives. It is a source of legitimacy for the IDF. As a nation with full conscription, the basic deal Israelis make with their government is this: We give you our sons and daughters, and then you give them back. The common expression in Israel is that its soldiers are ‘everyone’s children.’ This is more than a mere sentimental point; it is a crucial source of military and social cohesion.”

The world has gotten more than a glimpse of this phenomenon over the past two years, unfortunately. But this has also perhaps opened the world’s eyes to how deeply wounding it is for Israelis to be locked in conflict with terrorist groups who have molded their entire forever-war strategy around hostage-taking.

Even Israelis, however, have been forced into new territory by the scale of Hamas’s atrocities. In April, the New York Times wrote a story titled: “A New Medical Discipline in Israel: How to Receive Hostages.” It is, as the headline suggests, a new frontier in physical and mental health: “There were few precedents to learn from, officials said, especially as the captives ranged in age from infants to octogenarians.”

Indeed, in his memoir of his time in Hamas captivity, Eli Sharabi recounts a brief conversation he had with a Hamas official, nicknamed Tippy, overseeing Sharabi’s release. The conversation took place after Tippy showed Sharabi a laptop screen with the faces of dozens of hostages:

“I look at their faces. It’s an emotionally charged moment. There are young women I don’t recognize, some very elderly people, a young woman with a little ginger toddler and a little ginger baby girl. I think it’s a girl. I point at the baby immediately and ask Tippy: ‘What’s that? Did you kidnap a baby?’

“‘No,’ he says. ‘The baby was born in captivity.’

“I stare at him. ‘You kidnapped a pregnant woman?’

“I get no answer.”

They did, in fact, kidnap a baby. Surely Sharabi was seeing a picture of Kfir Bibas, along with his slightly older brother and mother. All three were murdered in captivity. Hamas’s atrocities on and after October 7 stretched the bounds of worldly evil. Even the Hamas commander wouldn’t admit it to Sharabi’s face. No one wanted to believe an entity this evil existed—even, at times, the entity itself.

And the survivors of that unimaginable evil are returning to earth from hell. Once again Israelis’ resilience and recovery will pave a path for the rest of the world, all because of the unique hatred to which they are subjected. As one Welfare Ministry official told the Times in April, “We are now writing the theory.”
The Challenges of the Trump Plan
In his approach to negotiating the release of all hostages held in Gaza, President Trump has thwarted French diplomacy and inflicted a severe snub on President Macron, who wanted to precipitate events by first offering a state to the Palestinians, without obtaining any concessions.

Unlike Macron's plan, the 20 points of the Trump plan were written in concert with Israel. The American plan was carefully and skillfully developed by seasoned experts and diplomats, with the aim of isolating Hamas from the outset and gaining the approval of the Arab-Muslim world. While only a first draft, it is a noble work for future relations between Israel and all the countries of the Middle East.

The plan outlines a roadmap, a framework agreement that sets solid milestones to enable stakeholders to clearly monitor the plan's progress. It has the great merit of being able to achieve those Israeli demands that we have been seeking since the end of the Six-Day War in 1967. For the first time, an American president is boldly proposing a different vision for resolving the Palestinian question.

He is taking seriously all the factors supported by the overwhelming majority of Israelis: the historical rights of the Jewish people to their land, no withdrawal to the 1949 armistice lines, secure and defensible borders, Jerusalem indivisible under Israeli sovereignty, the Golan Heights under Israeli sovereignty, Hamas and all "resistance" movements against the Jewish state are now terrorist organizations, no to recognition of a Palestinian state before final status negotiations.
Amb. Michael Oren: Hamas Still Wants to Win the War
President Trump's peace plan did indeed promise to achieve all of Israel's goals: the release of the hostages and the end of Hamas's rule in Gaza. The president declared that Hamas had accepted the plan and was prepared for peace. He ordered the IDF to stop firing in Gaza City to facilitate the safe release of the hostages.

Once relieved of Israeli military pressure, Hamas will try to drag the U.S. into protracted negotiations and obtain approval to remain in Gaza and keep its "defensive weapons." In short, in exchange for the release of the hostages, Hamas wants to win the war.

Our goal, therefore, must be to uphold Trump's original plan and not allow Hamas to water it down. We must secure the unconditional release of all the hostages, without allowing Hamas to keep its weapons or take part in a postwar Gaza government.
Gaza Deal Is Not a Total Victory
It may well be that the deal Israel is preparing to sign with Hamas is unavoidable. But it is far from a "total victory." Israel is to release from prison 250 terrorists convicted of multiple murders. Israel rightly sanctifies the lives of its hostages, but at the same time mortgages the lives of its citizens. More than 85% of terrorists released in past decades have returned to terrorism, to attack or kill Israelis again. We are releasing ticking time bombs.

Israel has achieved significant accomplishments: large parts of Gaza have been flattened; we've established a perimeter, eliminated tens of thousands of terrorists, destroyed miles of underground infrastructure, and taken control of the Philadelphi Route along the border with Egypt. But we've also sent a clear message that the way to secure the release of killers is through more abductions.

Our commitment to redeeming captives and to mutual responsibility has now proven to be our weakness, leading to the emptying of our prisons of those who murdered, and who are almost certain to murder again or orchestrate more killings.

The terrorists freed in the 1985 Jibril deal became the backbone of the First Intifada, in which 165 Israelis were murdered. Half of the terrorists released under the Oslo Accords joined the Palestinian terror apparatus, with many playing key roles in the Second Intifada, which killed 1,178 Israelis. Those released in the 2011 Gilad Shalit deal went on to bring about the Oct. 7 massacre.
  • Thursday, October 09, 2025
  • Elder of Ziyon


The Sorites paradox goes like this: If you have a heap of sand and remove one grain, you still have a heap. Remove another grain - still a heap. But keep going and eventually you're left with a single grain, which clearly isn't a heap. So when exactly did it stop being a heap? Which single grain made the difference?

Philosophers have proposed elaborate solutions for thousands of years: fuzzy logic, contextualism, epistemicism (the view that there is a precise boundary but we can't know it). They've written thousands of pages analyzing vagueness, tolerance principles, and semantic indeterminacy.

But I think they're all solving the wrong problem.

The idea of a "heap" was never a precise concept to begin with.

It's not that "heap" is a vague version of something precise. It's not that we lack the tools to determine the exact boundary. It's that "heap" is a man-made linguistic convenience that was never meant to have sharp boundaries. It's a casual descriptor, like "nearby" or "tallish" or "a bunch."

Even God doesn't know the answer to when a pile becomes a heap - not because God lacks knowledge, but because there's no fact of the matter to know. The question is malformed. It's like asking "What is the exact wavelength of the color 'reddish'?" The imprecision is intrinsic to the concept itself.

The Sorites paradox commits a category error: it treats "heap" as if it belongs to the same category as "52 centimeters high" or "exactly 1,000 grains." One is a measurement; the other is a rough descriptor. They're not the same kind of thing, and demanding that "heap" have the precision of a measurement is simply confused.

This got me thinking about what seems like a similar question in Jewish law: When does nightfall occur? When is Shabbat over?

The traditional criterion is "when you can see three medium stars." But this isn't well-formed either—different people have different eyesight, humidity affects visibility, light pollution interferes. So isn't this just another Sorites paradox, where a continuous function must be defined with precision?

No. And the difference is profound.

The rabbis using the "three stars" criterion aren't claiming that to be the definition of nightfall. They know there is a precise moment when day becomes night - a split second where one side is day and the other is night. God knows that moment exactly. The rabbis are simply trying to approximate it with the best human tools available, erring on the side of caution. (Nowadays, when we have clocks, they say "X number of minutes after sunset," but the idea is the same.)

They're not saying "nightfall is when we see three stars." They're saying "we use three stars as our best human estimate for something God knows with absolute precision."

The "three stars" criterion openly acknowledges its own status as an approximation. It's epistemically humble.

And this, I believe, reveals something fundamental about the difference between Greek and Jewish philosophical traditions.

Greek philosophy often assumes humans can achieve perfect knowledge through reason. When faced with "heap," instead of saying "this is a casual descriptor that doesn't need precision," Greek philosophy assumes there must be a precise answer and tortures itself trying to find it.

This is hubris disguised as intellectual rigor.

Jewish philosophy, by contrast, has humility baked into its architecture. Concepts like safek (doubt), teiku (leaving questions unresolved until Messianic times), and lo bashamayim hee (it's up to fallible humans to apply Torah rules) all encode the assumption that human knowledge is always incomplete.

The Talmud is filled with stories of great rabbis learning wisdom from their wives, children, slaves, and non-Jews. Pirkei Avot asks: "Who is wise? One who learns from all people." Moses was the greatest prophet precisely because he was the most humble.

As I've written before, rabbinic humility isn't about low self-esteem - it's about accurate self-location in a world inhabited by infinite divine intelligence. The rabbis were humble because they had constant awareness that compared to God, the difference between their own intelligence and that of a shoemaker is infinitesimal.

Secular philosophers, on the other hand, keep thinking that reason will answer everything and that they are on the cusp of finally understanding the world fully. They have been on this cusp for centuries, and new riddles keep arising. Yet their misplaced confidence remains.

The very act of treating "heap" as something that should have a precise definition reflects intellectual hubris. It assumes that:

  1. Human language should map perfectly onto reality
  2. Precision is always achievable and desirable
  3. We can and should resolve all ambiguity
  4. Every concept must have sharp boundaries

But why? Who said "heap" needs to be precise? It serves its communicative purpose perfectly well as a fuzzy descriptor. The only reason it becomes problematic is when philosophers insist it must mean something precise, then tie themselves in knots when they can't make it work.

The paradox is self-inflicted.

Some of history's worst moral wrongs came not from ethical confusion, but from ethical certainty without humility. Communism is confident that it had figured out the laws of history. Eugenics is certain about human improvement. Each assumed it had achieved complete understanding when in fact it had made fundamental errors. 

Without humility, theory and practice are identical. If you believe you have certain knowledge of definitions and categories, you can simply apply them mechanically.

With humility, theory and practice diverge dramatically. When you acknowledge you're working with approximations, you must constantly test, adapt, remain open to being wrong, and build in safeguards for uncertainty. This is the essence of practice.

Greek philosophy is often about achieving theoretical perfection. Jewish philosophy is about navigating practical reality while acknowledging our profound limitations.

The Sorites paradox reveals philosophers who have mislocated themselves -assuming they have the capacity and obligation to make every concept precise, when sometimes the appropriate response is simply: "This word serves its purpose without precision, and that's fine."

Philosophy has spent two millennia on the Sorites paradox because it refuses to accept that some of our words are just... casual descriptors. That not everything needs to be made precise. That sometimes "close enough" isn't a philosophical failure -it's the appropriate level of specification.

Jewish ethics has this humility built in. Don't throw out an answer with absolute confidence -there can always be additional factors we're unaware of. The architecture of Jewish reasoning includes epistemic humility as a load-bearing beam, not decorative trim.

The assumption that human reason should be able to make all concepts precise is itself a kind of hubris. And recognizing its limits isn't intellectual defeat.

It's wisdom.




Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

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

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

  • Thursday, October 09, 2025
  • Elder of Ziyon



Two years after Hamas’s October 7 massacre, the Online Hate Prevention Institute’s new report, Social Media and the Normalisation of Hate, shows that antisemitism hasn’t merely surged online: it’s evolving, metastasizing, and embedding itself into the fabric of digital culture.

Drawing on nearly 11,000 antisemitic posts collected from ten major platforms—including X (Twitter), TikTok, Reddit, and Telegram—the report shows an average 833% jump in antisemitic content in the months following October 7, 2023. Even as 2024 saw a partial decline, hate levels never returned to baseline. By mid-2025, antisemitism was rising again almost everywhere.

On Gab, BitChute, Reddit, Instagram, and TikTok, antisemitic content has reached record highs. Even mainstream platforms like X and Facebook show a steady upward trajectory. LinkedIn is the lone exception—holding roughly steady—but even there, antisemitic narratives persist.

The researchers identify 27 categories of antisemitic content, grouped into “traditional,” “Holocaust-related,” “incitement,” and “anti-Israel” forms. The most common narratives are:

  1. Traditional antisemitism—blood libels, “Jews killed Jesus,” and slurs—remains the most prevalent (36% of all antisemitic content).

  2. Jewish world conspiracy theories have rebounded, especially on far-right platforms.

  3. Israel reframed through antisemitic tropes—the “Zionist blood libel” has become the new mainstream.

  4. Control narratives (Jews or Israel manipulating media, finance, or government) dominate fringe networks but leak into mainstream comment threads.

  5. Dehumanization, portraying Jews as “rats,” “snakes,” or “parasites,” remains endemic.

  6. Denial of Jewish self-determination—“Zionism is racism”—has resurfaced in academic and activist spaces.

  7. Holocaust glorification and “Hitler was right” rhetoric circulate openly on TikTok and X.

  8. Incitement to violence, often couched as “resistance,” is now routine.

  9. Comparisons of Israel to Nazi Germany—a form of Holocaust inversion—persist across platforms.

October 7 also reshaped online hate:

  • October 7 denial and “false flag” claims mirror Holocaust denial, dismissing or mocking reports of sexual violence and civilian massacres.

  • Glorification of Hamas: graffiti, memes, and posts proclaiming “October 7: Do it again” spreads both on- and offline.

  • Racist Anti-Zionism, a mutation of far-left “anti-colonial” rhetoric, now justifies violence against Jews as “anti-racism.”

  • Nazi Glorification has reemerged, fueled by the mainstreaming of antisemitic discourse.

  • Iranian disinformation networks amplify all of it, through Telegram, fake “anti-hate” channels, and propaganda blending anti-Israel and sectarian messaging.

The report highlights chilling Australian case studies: the 2024–2025 Melbourne synagogue arsons, traced to Iranian funding, triggered a wave of online denial and victim-blaming. Posts called the attacks “false flags,” mocked Jewish grief, and even suggested the victims torched their own buildings for “insurance money.” Such reactions illustrate how digital hate desensitizes real-world violence.

The report’s message is clear: the platforms are not just hosting antisemitism: they are shaping it. TikTok’s virality, X’s chaos, and Telegram’s opacity each incubate distinct strains of hate, while moderation systems lag far behind. The authors urge continuous monitoring, public accountability, and renewed civic vigilance, warning that the normalization of hate is eroding the social immune system against violence.

Two months ago, I created a social media policy - based on my recent work in ethics - that would respect both posters and readers on social media, keep freedom of speech but drastically reduce the spread of hate.  Any social media company should look at this policy as a way to use AI intelligently to flag potentially inflammatory posts and give the posters a chance to rewrite them or allow them to have their reach reduced, among other ideas. 

We need this policy more than ever.  Because the hate begets more hate.





Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

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

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

  • Thursday, October 09, 2025
  • Elder of Ziyon


CAIR-LA issued a press release:
The Greater Los Angeles Area office of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR-LA) today condemned the University of Southern California (USC)’s “disturbing” sale of human cadavers to the U.S. military for surgical training for the Israeli military, which has been engaging in the genocide of Palestinians in Gaza for nearly two years.
When you look at the details, you find out that for years, USC has hosted the Navy Trauma Training Center (NTTC), where the US Navy sends medical professionals to learn how to handle trauma cases. They use cadavers, often from homeless people or those who donate their bodies for this purpose, as this is the best way to learn the subject. 

The NTTC is primarily for the Navy, but it also offers its facilities and training for others. Just as in medical schools, cadavers are the best way to train. (Non-US medical students are not allowed to touch live patients in trauma centers under the current law.) This is all legal. 

Since Israel has a shortage of cadavers for training, the IDF avails itself of the NTTC, and pays to use their facilities and for the cadavers they can provide, two per course. There is nothing unethical about this, just as there is nothing unethical about the Navy or medical schools training on cadavers. Until someone figures out a way to build androids that have perfect replicas of organs and the circulatory system, this is the only way that doctors can learn (outside of using live bodies.) 

But when Jewish lives are the ones being saved, suddenly CAIR is most upset. It is "disturbing" that military medical personnel save the lives of their soldiers - but only in Israel. CAIR doesn't have a problem with the NTTC, but only with it working with the IDF, proving that its only "ethical" concern is in saving the lives of Israelis, not in using cadavers. 

CAIR, which brands itself as so moral, has not once condemned Hamas, and certainly not Hamas keeping bodies of Israelis as bargaining chips to allow Palestinian murderers to go free. 

Which all goes to prove that the only "ethics" that major Muslim advocacy organization cares about are the one that cause Israelis to die. 



Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

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

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

  • Thursday, October 09, 2025
  • Elder of Ziyon
I found a guide to media companies, social media and NGOs from the Palestine Institute for Public Diplomacy called Communicating Palestine that essentially tells news organizations to not take any real news photos - like pictures of Hamas, or any Palestinians who have not given specific permission to be staged and photographed.


In short, it pretends to enforce "ethical storytelling principles" but instructs the media and NGOs not to use any photographs that show Palestinian violence, and to only use photos where the Palestinians shown are aware that they are being photographed - meaning, only photos that are carefully staged to tell a specific narrative aligned with the PIPD's directives.

This is the exact opposite of real journalism.

How many media organizations - or photojournalist stringers for major media - follow these instructions? Because these are exactly what Hamas wants all news photos to look like as well. 




Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

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

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

Wednesday, October 08, 2025

From Ian:

Caroline Glick: What have we learned since Oct. 7?
Oct. 7, 2023, was the worst day in the history of the State of Israel and will be remembered as such for all time. But as New York Times columnist Bret Stephens noted in a column analyzing the lessons of that day and the war that followed, “For all its undoubted horrors, this war may ultimately be remembered as liberating.”

Israel responded to Hamas’s day of genocide by waging war to destroy the Iran axis of which Hamas was a member. Stephens explained how Israel’s war had liberated the peoples of the region.

In Lebanon, thanks to Israel’s decimation of Hezbollah, the people are free from Iran’s proxy for the first time in 20 years. Hezbollah’s decimation fomented the fall of Syrian dictator and Iranian proxy Bashar Assad, providing the people of Syria their first shot at freedom in living memory.

Living under the protection of the IDF, the Druze in southern Syria have an opportunity to navigate their future safely. Following Israel’s successful military operation campaign—joined by the United States— to prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons and amassing an arsenal of tens of thousands of ballistic missiles, the Iranian people have their best opportunity in 46 years to oust their regime of terror and build a future of freedom for themselves.

And with Hamas crippled, Gazans have their first chance in 20 years to live a life free of the jihadist regime, if they choose to grasp it.

While his list was comprehensive, Stephens shied away from mentioning how Israel achieved this list of dazzling victories following the greatest disaster in its history.

On Oct. 8, when IDF forces were still fighting inside the kibbutzim that had been overrun by Hamas the previous day, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told his still stunned cabinet that Israel would recover from the savage carnage of the previous day and it would transform the Middle East.

At that same meeting, the top military commander told Netanyahu and his ministers that they must forget about seeing the 251 men, women and children who had been taken hostage the day before ever again.

Netanyahu rejected his claim and insisted that with the proper mix of massive force and negotiation, Israel would defeat Hamas and return all of the hostages. So far, Israel has returned 205 hostages, 148 alive and Hamas is on the verge of total destruction.

Thanks to U.S. President Donald Trump, Israel may see the return of the last 48 hostages within days.
Brendan O'Neill: 7 October: a war for the soul of the West
It was 2023 and they were burning Jews to death again. Once more, humanity found itself scouring the smoldering wreckage of a burnt-down building for some remnant of the Jews that once lived there. Those who call this day of barbarous racism an ‘attack’ have forfeited the right to be taken seriously. Those who call it ‘resistance’ have exposed to the world their own demented sympathy with Jew murder. As the German novelist Herta Müller said, even calling it ‘terrorism’ feels woefully insufficient. It was a ‘total derailment from civilisation’, she says. There was an ‘archaic horror in this bloodlust that I no longer thought possible in this day and age’.

This is what we should be commemorating today. Not an ‘attack’, not a ‘tragedy’ – an act of Nazi-like savagery. A genocidal burning of Jews. The violent intrusion of the crimes of history into our complacent century. The most fitting tribute we could pay to the grieving of 7 October on this second anniversary would be to give this atrocity its rightful place in the black pages of human history. To acknowledge, at last, that it was an epoch-defining crime against humanity, the raw heir to the era of the Holocaust. It compounds the grief of Israel to continue to deny this truth of 7 October.

Then we come to 8 October. That other dark day, two years ago, when mobs danced outside the Israeli Embassy in London in joy at the mass murder of Jews. When Islamists gathered at the Sydney Opera House to cry ‘Fuck the Jews’. When the righteous dusted down their Palestine flags and waved them with abandon, hours after women had been raped under that flag, hours after children had been murdered under it. When students in America cried ‘Glory to our martyrs’. When professors said they felt ‘exhilarated’ by what had happened. When leftists called it a ‘day of celebration’. When that suicidal alliance of genderfluid activists and Jew-hating Islamists took to the streets to call for further ‘jihad’ against the Jewish State. One pogrom was not enough. A thousand dead Jews was not enough. They wanted more.

This horror, this moral atrocity that followed the physical atrocity, continues to this day. On Saturday, a mere 48 hours after two Jews perished in an act of anti-Semitic terror in Manchester, the mob was back on the streets hollering ‘Long live the intifada’. We are not only in denial about the historic inhumanity of 7 October but also about the glee it ignited among those who call themselves ‘progressive’. We would remember if people had poured on to the streets of London to celebrate Kristallnacht – so we should remember that they did so for 7 October, a pogrom in which 10 times as many Jews were slaughtered.

7 October confirmed that Israel faces an existential threat on its borders. 8 October confirmed that the West faces an existential threat within its borders. From a cultural establishment, a liberal elite, a left and an Islamist mob who have turned their backs on the virtues of civilisation and fallen under the spell of barbarism. Israel is winning the war against the fascists that invaded its lands two years ago. We, alas, are not winning the war for the soul of the West. We struggle even to admit we are in such a war. Two years on, the good ship Israel has been steadied while the West still pitches on the high seas of counter-Enlightenment.

There’s one more thing I will recall today: the heroism of the young on 7 October. Alexander Lobanov, who helped evacuate people from the Nova music festival, leading to his capture and later his murder. Hersh Goldberg-Polin, who picked up the grenades that Hamas threw into a bomb shelter and threw them back out again, causing him to lose an arm. Almog Sarusi, who refused to leave his girlfriend’s side after she had been shot, leading to his own capture and his own murder. Shiri Bibas, who held her babies to her breast and comforted them as they were dragged into the hell of Hamas-ruled Gaza. And too many more to mention. There is an alternative universe, one where the West has not yet abandoned reason, where our young wear t-shirts with these people’s faces on them, and cry out their names, and agitate for the erection of statues to these valiant Jews who resisted fascist terror as best they could, just as their forebears in the ghettos did. Making that alternative universe a reality is the task of all of us two years on from 7 October.
October 7 showed Jewish people who their friends are
October 7 unleashed a torrent of antisemitism. Synagogues were firebombed, Jews doxxed, and vile threats were made by nurses, of all people.

Jews arrived in Australia with the First Fleet. Despite being so few, we have contributed mightily to this nation, giving it its greatest military leader, Sir John Monash, two governors-general, Supreme Court justices, scientists, businessmen, winners of the Nobel Prize and Olympic gold and so many of our philanthropists.

Many Australian Jews are now contemplating leaving or at least questioning their place here. Ironically, Israel which has endured two years of war is seen as a safer bet. I regularly get asked for advice on this issue and it’s hard to dismiss people’s safety concerns.

I counsel people that Australia is worth fighting for.

It’s true that October 7 exposed the antisemites in Australian society, and there are many, but it also showed us who our friends are. It’s been heartening to see support from so many ordinary Australians, mostly from the centre and right and often identifying as Christian.

Every other day our office gets a call from the Western Australia wheatbelt or an email from someone in far north Queensland to express support for the Jewish community and outrage at what the government has done.

The Jewish community discovered friends in the conservative media, in politics, from One Nation Leader Pauline Hanson to the entire Coalition. Again, none of this was a particular surprise to my organisation, as these were the people we had already worked with.

October 7 was also a wake-up call for many ordinary Australians. The attacks on Israel were an attack on the West. Anti-Israel actions here often explicitly targeted Australia. The battle against radical Islam and the Woke, is a fight we must all take up, or our country will be next.

Across the West, in countries like Britain and France, millions of patriotic people want to take their countries back. They are crowding the streets and the voting booths.

It’s been heartening to see ordinary Australians take up this battle for our future, with a rapidly growing movement of patriots.

It’s true that there is a loud but small group of neo-Nazis attempting to subvert the movement. Several current and former politicians on the right have also turned on the Jews, thinking that it will give them popularity. The sensible centre must disavow these extremists or risk losing credibility.

October 7 showed Jews who our friends are. It showed us who our enemies are. It showed all Australians what we must fight for if we want to save our country.
Jake Wallis Simons: Israel has never been stronger. For Europe, it may already be too late
Militarily, Israel has probably not been in such a powerful position since 1967. Culturally, it is a nation that understands how to hold a strong sense of peoplehood within the norms and freedoms of a secular democracy.

Economically, it is robust. Its birth rate is one of the highest in the developed world. Its crime rate is remarkably low. Its people are unified and doughty. OK, so the politics and international reputation aren’t so great, but an election will take place within the year. With a fair wind, this could be Israel’s century.

The same cannot be said of the West. After the Second World War, the vow taken by the civilised world could be summed up in two words: never again. But the meaning of this pledge was evidently profoundly different for Jews and others in the democracies.

In Britain and across Europe, a consensus developed that the nation-state was the source of fascism and had to be downplayed or dismantled. For Jews, however, “never again” meant that the nation-state was crucial and had to be defended.

From this single fork in the road, our fates developed differently. While Israel advanced along the path of strength and confidence, meeting challenge after challenge with resilience, the West slipped down the route of self-undoing...

Monday, October 06, 2025

From Ian:

Memoirs of a Mossad Mastermind
REVIEW: ‘The Sword of Freedom: Israel, Mossad, and the Secret War’ by Yossi Cohen
"People with no fantasy," the late Israeli politician Shimon Peres once observed, "cannot create the extraordinary." The Mossad, Israel’s foreign intelligence service, has become legendary for its extraordinary feats, some of which could be pulled from a James Bond novel. But as Yossi Cohen reveals in his new book, The Sword of Freedom: Israel, Mossad, and the Secret War, the agency’s stunning capabilities are the result of Israel’s unique place in the world.

The Mossad is uniquely capable because it has to be, Cohen notes. "We have the ultimate incentive to prevail, because our struggle is existential," he writes. And Cohen knows of which he speaks—he had a front row seat for events that shaped the region.

After a stint in the Israel Defense Forces, Cohen spent decades as a Mossad operative before he was chosen by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to serve as his national security adviser. In 2016, Cohen was appointed to lead the Mossad. During his nearly five-year tenure, Cohen oversaw the agency’s operation to steal Iran’s nuclear archive and served as one of the chief negotiators for the Abraham Accords.

Memoirs written by former spies—especially top spies—are seldom revealing. In fact, they shouldn’t be. Readers looking for a "tell all" book, divulging precious secrets and tradecraft, should look elsewhere. No former public servant worth his salt would write one anyways. Accordingly, Cohen is exceedingly careful in recounting his exploits and experience. He also largely refrains from partisan sniping and score-settling—no small feat in today’s hyper-partisan age, let alone in the maelstrom that is Israeli politics.

Yet this isn’t a dull book. Far from it.

Cohen’s account of the operation to retrieve Iran’s so-called nuclear archive is worth the price of admission alone. For decades, the Islamic Republic had been developing a nuclear weapons program. In 2015, the United States and others agreed to the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), better known as the Iran Deal, which sought to curtail Tehran’s nuclear ambitions. Jerusalem suspected perfidy but required proof. Enter the Mossad.
Campus feminists have rebranded rape as ‘resistance’
A glance at the Feminist Library’s ‘statements’ page reveals that it rather likes making them. Its social-justice catalogue is not just limited to support for ‘Palestinian resistance’ – it also includes the entire range of middle-class left causes, from transgenderism to immigration. It remains rather silent on anti-Semitism, however – which is curious considering Goldsmiths admits it has an anti-Semitism problem, for which it has apologised. Due to the pro-Palestine ‘occupation’ of campus last academic year, members of Goldsmiths’ Jewish Society were too afraid to hold any events and effectively had to disband the society. With graffiti across campus featuring swastikas and the phrase ‘gas the Jews’, it’s not difficult to see why. An independent inquiry into anti-Semitism at Goldsmiths published in May provides a damning indictment of the prevalent campus culture.

Goldsmiths is not the only university whose best and brightest will this week don their keffiyehs on the anniversary of the deadliest attack on Jews since the Holocaust. Not a week after the Yom Kippur terror attack on a Manchester synagogue, students from Queen Mary, King’s College London, Strathclyde and Sheffield will partake in pro-Palestine rallies, marches and lectures.

It seems we are now seeing the culmination of years of ideological capture – and the results are sick-making. Students now issue calls to ‘globalise the intifada’, celebrate ‘Palestinian resistance’ on the anniversary of Hamas’s atrocities in Israel, and suggest that rape is sometimes, in some places, just a teensy bit justified.

In a statement issued after the Southport stabbings last year, the Feminist Library claimed that ‘we understand how fascists use faux concern for the “safety of women and girls” as cover for white-supremacist violence’. Perhaps it’s this faux anti-fascism that salves the conscience of these putative feminists as they turn a blind eye to the hundreds of women who, on 7 October 2023, were hunted, tortured and sexually humiliated, before being thrown into the backs of vans like cattle. One victim was raped by a Hamas militant who then passed her on to a friend. Together they sliced off her breast, threw it into the street and played with it. Another militant then raped her again, shooting her in the head as he ejaculated. This is the ‘resistance’ the Feminist Library and others will be proudly ‘remembering’ tomorrow.

Of course, It’s not just these student pseudo-radicals refusing to look barbarism in the face. It took the United Nations almost two years to concede, in the face of overwhelming evidence, that extensive sexual violence took place on 7 October. In the meantime, UN Women – supposedly the leading global body for ‘women’s empowerment’ – focussed all of its energies on pandering to Western men with pronoun confusion.

It was Maya Angelou who said ‘when someone shows you who they are, believe them the first time’. How many times, I wonder, can feminists excuse the rape of Israeli women before they cease to be feminists? How many times do our compatriots have to dance on Jewish graves before we believe they mean it?
It’s time to hold the media to account
The public has a right and a need to know that a dangerous fraud is being perpetrated upon it. Just as the government has required tobacco and alcohol companies to place warning labels regarding the potential harm their products may cause, the public should be informed about the dangers of misinformation from news sources that claim to be trustworthy but that have chosen to present jihadi propaganda as facts.

Consumers have a right to know what product they are purchasing, and when a product is misrepresented, consumers in a democracy have recourse through government entities like the Consumer Protection Agency or Better Business Bureau. They can also turn to the courts for redress. This, however, is no ordinary consumer matter. Issues of free speech play heavily against government intervention here. Who’s to say what’s propaganda and not just an alternative narrative? Who’s to prioritize “factual” over “narrative” journalism? Given the partisan ferocity currently prevalent, surely not the government.

On the other hand, this issue is unprecedented in the history of democracies and their foundational free press: the Fourth Estate. Our current “free press” consistently purveys the war propaganda of a movement profoundly hostile to any form of press freedom and joins them in their attack on the only participant in this regional conflict with a free press. Who could imagine that our news media would align their narrative with a jihadi propaganda campaign promoting a political culture that has eliminated any trace of a free press?

As we have painfully learned over the last 250 years of democracy, rights come with responsibilities. In order to claim the mantle of professional journalism, our “free” press needs to observe professional standards of scrutiny that their current approach systemically violates. At no time in the history of modern journalism has this happened on such a scale and for so long.

We have witnessed a devolution from professional war journalism to wildly unprofessional own-goal war journalism—from providing an honest check on the three branches of government to running enemy war propaganda as news, and from Fourth Estate to Fifth Column. How do we bring this startling inversion of the profession and the news it produces to the fore? How do we assess the danger to a free press that their advocacy constitutes? How do we counter so perverse a trend?

Congress not only has a role to play; it has a responsibility to bring this dangerous and shocking scandal to the attention of the American public. It is time to hold congressional hearings and hold the purveyors of this hateful propaganda to account. Let consumers see how often our journalists take staged footage, and edit and crop it to make it more believable. Let them see things the pack media won’t cover, like the shocking genocidal hate speech that pervades the Palestinian public sphere. And then let the heads of our news agencies explain why they consider these items unfit to print while simultaneously reporting Hamas lies.

We are calling for accountability—for light to be shed on a suicidal brand of journalism that any sane audience, exposed to their folly, can and will reject of their own volition. Let this suicidal, advocacy news media be exposed for their impersonation of journalism. And let the viewing public—the American consumer—choose whether they wish to ingest the poisonous and deeply unprofessional fare our current news media have to offer, or look for other, more honest and accurate sources to understand our current troubling times.
From Ian:

Israel’s Forgotten Army
A full, honest accounting of the post-Oct. 7 period would highlight the extraordinary accomplishments of the modern Israeli security forces as well as critiquing its failures and weaknesses. The dismantling of Iran’s regional proxy network, including Hezbollah, as well as the crippling of Tehran’s nuclear program both relied on the application of long-term deception plans and strategic power projection that would have made Ben-Gurion proud. In Gaza, the fusion of tactical early warning systems and advanced intelligence capabilities has accomplished a targeting and maneuver capability not seen before in modern wars.

Yet, despite the sacrifices and devastation of the past two years, the IDF has not yet achieved the total victory that Prime Minister Netanyahu has promised since the start of the war. Nor has it managed to fully evict Hamas as a ruling power in Gaza. Many IDF commanders have displayed the characteristic aversion to territorial control, routinely spending blood to conquer areas of Gaza only to relinquish them weeks or months later, dooming soldiers to repeat costly clearing operations.

Moreover, the IDF has not yet demonstrated the capacity, nor the will, to fully sustain its own operations. Instead, it continues to rely on the network of volunteer groups that it can neither fully deputize nor live without.

This in turn enables what has become a toxic relationship between the U.S. and Israel. Aryeh Leib Shapiro, a milluimnik born in the U.S. and a member of an Israeli organization called the Vision Movement, dedicated to what it calls the cause of Jewish liberation, spoke with me about how American Jews influence Israeli security. “The way that many American Jews want to contribute to the IDF’s success is by remaking them in their image. Just like in general Israeli politics, the Reform movement wants Israeli religious law and immigration law to reflect American Jewish sensibilities.The IDF is no different, except that these diaspora Jewish orgs no longer have much influence over the Knesset anymore so they’ve been putting more funding into education and the army.”

Much of that influence is exerted through what appears to be philanthropy. The way it works, said Shapiro, is “by sending our top and most promising commanders in the IDF to learn what it means to be a Jewish leader in the 21st century from the Wexner Foundation or at the Harvard Kennedy School.”

The IDF, greatly influenced by fashionable but disastrously misguided ideas that have been popular among the American ruling class, has turned its official partner in the American diaspora into a piggy bank to subsidize those ideas. The shiniest monument of this failed two-way konceptsia is the FIDF. The organization gives American Jews an illusion of helping that actually handicaps Israel.

The best scenario for Israel would be one in which it acts like an independent and sovereign nation by taking full responsibility for its military supply needs. Instead of relying on logistical backup from unregulated volunteers, it could then funnel diaspora support into less sensitive areas. That will require wisely analyzing the current political and security situation in its own region and at large, separate from the interests of its patrons. Having done so, Israel can then make plans that are founded on a realistic vision of the future, which would be one that does not assume that land will no longer be important in warfare or rest on other similarly dangerous hallucinations.
How Hamas’s hostage tactic checkmated Israel’s war strategy
Whatever happens now, there is one element that Israel and other Western states can learn from this stalemate, and that is to apply a set of preventive measures to make it less likely that any terror organization or rogue state (think Iran/Turkey/Yemen/Libya or others) will try to emulate the actions of Hamas in the future.

It is actually quite surprising that Israeli legislators have not yet found the time to address this burning issue. To be successful in preventing future strategic hostage-taking by its enemies, Israel needs to revise legal, military, political, and diplomatic practices. And it shouldn’t be doing it alone, since it is likely that other Western countries and their civilian population will be targeted by jihadi abductors as well.

Needless to say, yet difficult to achieve perfectly, Israeli security organizations must adjust intel collection, combat operations, and responses to prevent their enemies from abducting Israelis in Israel or abroad. This is mostly a matter of priorities within existing capabilities.

Legally, Israel needs to make it illegal and impossible for elected officials with executive power to fulfill the demands of terrorists in order to release hostages. Israel also needs to declare to its current enemies, neighbors, and detractors that the abduction of its civilians is an act of aggression that will be met with disproportionate and punitive measures that will extend well beyond the combatants who actually abducted Israelis. Anything and anyone that supports or facilitates the abduction or incarceration of Israeli hostages will be a legitimate military target.

A future Israeli government with better international standing should focus on building a global coalition to deprive terrorists of the benefits reaped from hostage-taking, which includes severe punitive measures against any state that supports such crimes.

Lastly, and perhaps most importantly, Israeli leaders and institutions need to adapt to the reality that this and the next war will be fought and won primarily on the cognitive battlefield, where local, enemy, and international media, including and increasingly more on social media, is where reality is forged and decided.

Israel may be able to maintain its qualitative military advantage over its many enemies, but without monumental improvements in all facets of soft power, Israel will find it increasingly challenging to exist, thrive, and enjoy its past military victories.
Jonathan Conricus: Is Egypt on a collision path with Israel?
‘Just rhetoric?’
Wasserman Lande told JNS that the cessation of operations by the U.S.-led international force in the Sinai Peninsula is a great cause for concern.

According to Israel Hayom, the Multinational Force and Observers (MFO), the body entrusted with overseeing the terms of the Israel-Egypt peace deal, has stopped carrying out reconnaissance flights over Sinai or inspecting the contents of the tunnels in the peninsula ever since the Oct. 7, 2023, attack.

Wasserman Lande said that to prevent the situation from deteriorating further, the Americans, as guarantors of the peace treaty, must reinstate the mechanism of the MFO effective immediately. Moreover, Israel must insist that military presence in Sinai that exceeds the 1979 terms be dispersed, she added.

Additionally, to calm things down, the highest echelons in Israel must inform the Egyptians that Jerusalem has no interest in relocating Gazans to Egyptian territory. However, “it is an Israeli interest to have them potentially move via Egypt into third countries, with full Egyptian coordination and supervision that they don’t remain in Egypt,” the expert continued.

Lastly, “Israel must demand that the indoctrination of the Egyptian public [against Israel] ceases. This must be demanded by Israel without any concessions,” Wasserman Lande stressed.

Cohen enumerated five reasons why an Egyptian offensive is unlikely.

First, under the U.S. Arms Export Control Act, misuse of U.S.-delivered weapons can lead to suspensions and cancellations of further deliveries, which would harm systems requiring regular maintenance. Much of Egypt’s U.S.-made military equipment would be less effective if this were implemented.

Second, Egypt receives more than a billion dollars annually from the U.S. thanks to the 1979 peace deal. War would cut this revenue stream, to the detriment of debt-laden Egypt.

Third, the American role in the supervision of the peace deters Egypt from breaking it.

Fourth, war would further strain Egypt’s shattered economy.

An fifth, the Egyptian Armed Forces have not fought a real war since 1973. Despite its “propaganda videos,” Egyptian soldiers are largely inexperienced, Cohen said.

The orientalist stressed, however, that after Oct. 7, no one can be certain about the future. “Threats with words can lead to threats with guns,” he said.

Hassan noted that Israel had recently begun to take “practical steps” against the peace treaty violations. Decisionmakers in Jerusalem have brought up the topic with Washington, and the IDF has openly commented on the repeated drone incursions from Sinai into Israel, he said.

But, he warned, while “Israel is taking the threat seriously, it is not taking it seriously enough.” The defense establishment still seems to dismiss Egypt’s threats as “just rhetoric that won’t materialize.”

Israel’s top security personnel have built up an assumption that “Egypt will never go to war against Israel because it would mean that Egypt would be destroyed …, [so] they start dismissing actual threats, saying, ‘This will never happen, everything is OK,’” Hassan said—“which is very similar to the ‘conception’ Israel had before the Yom Kippur War.
  • Monday, October 06, 2025
  • Elder of Ziyon

See you on Wednesday night!





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  • Monday, October 06, 2025
  • Elder of Ziyon

Ahmed Al-Darini writes about an unsettling experience he had in the major Al Masry al-Youm Egyptian newspaper:

A Jewish rabbi began circling around where I sat at the dining table, chanting his hymns, swaying his body forward and backward, appearing to be immersed in something spiritual. As if he were fortifying the place or summoning the celestial angels whom Jews believe possess extraordinary power to do anything.

Naturally, I felt uncomfortable while eating my meal in a Chinese hotel restaurant in the historic city of Samarkand, while a Jewish rabbi wandered around the dining hall spreading his recitations, calling upon angels or summoning demons, or even pretending or imagining that he was doing so.

Perhaps my sensitivity to the situation stemmed from the difference and what it stirs in the human psyche of suspicion toward "the Other," and perhaps my disgust arose from the Jewish Zionist crimes in Gaza, and perhaps because eating requires some peace and tranquility—not having to eat cheese and bread while your eyes follow someone circling around you making suspicious gestures, whether to the angels of hell or to the waiter.

Later, I learned that there was a celebratory event for an Israeli company to be held in the hotel's vast garden in a few days, with the rabbi blessing it or securing it preemptively.

The last thing I expected to encounter in Samarkand—deeply rooted in Islamic history—was a Jewish rabbi circling around me with his murmurings and incantations!
Maybe we should all send Al Adrini some nonsense Hebrew and tell him it is a Kabbalistic incantation that was designed just for him. He'll clearly believe it.

(Because I couldn't resist, I looked up what Israeli company this might have been. It seems a travel agency called Asia Travel Israel has helped create a non-stop weekly flight between Tel Aviv and Samarkand last May and it held celebrations, so this seems likely.)




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  • Monday, October 06, 2025
  • Elder of Ziyon


Here is how Amnesty-UK responded to an arson attack on a mosque in the UK:

Amnesty UK condemns the horrific attack on the East Sussex Mosque this weekend. We offer solidarity to Muslim communities who will be shaken by this act of violence.

This follows months of increasing hostility to racialised and migrant communities in the UK – boosted by anti-migrant rhetoric across the political spectrum and in the media.

 According to @TellMamaUK there has been a significant rise in the number of Islamophobic hate cases in the United Kingdom between June and September 2025.

Not including the most recent horrific attack, there have been 17 reported cases that have involved attacks on mosques or Islamic institutions in this time period.

We are watching the real-life consequences of outpourings of hatred.

A year after the 2024 racist riots, there is an urgent need for a reset in our national debate.


The overall impression is outrage, and Amnesty blames the arson on increasing hostility to minorities by bigots. It ties it to increasing Islamophobia. It says that hatred leads to attacks like these.

Here is how the same group reacted to the deadly synagogue attack last week:

Amnesty International UK is deeply saddened by the news of this morning's attack at the Heaton Park Hebrew Congregation Synagogue in north Manchester. We condemn this horrific act of violence that has taken the lives of two innocent people and injured many more.

Our hearts are with the Jewish community and all those affected by this appalling attack on such an important and holy day in the Jewish calendar.

Acts of violence have no place in our society and only deepen division among communities. It is essential that politicians, leaders and the media ensure their actions in the following days do not stoke hatred and division further.

We must focus on the solidarity and humanity that connects us all. 

- Sacha Deshmukh, CE Amnesty International UK
In this case the emotion is sadness, not anger. 

Unlike the reaction to the mosque attack, Amnesty-UK doesn't blame anyone in particular. They don't mention rising antisemitism in the UK in recent years.  They don't consider that anti-Israel protests might contribute to antisemitism. 

Look carefully at who they are worried about stoking hatred: "politicians, leaders and the media." The word that is missing is "activists." This means that instead of warning about increased antisemitism - a word that is noticeably missing from the tweet - Amnesty's instinct upon hearing about an attack on Jews is to protect Muslims from backlash! 

The tweet was posted after the anti-Israel, pro-flotilla protests in England that day. But Amnesty didn't warn the protesters not to do anything that might be used as justification to attack Jews. On the contrary, Amnesty is all for protests, and incitement to violence in (left-wing) protests are (as far as I can tell) never condemned. On the contrary, they oppose any restrictions on protests - including, implicitly, incitement to violence against Jews like "globalize the intifada."

For both tweets, Amnesty sent out a message to protect the Muslim community from violence - and for neither did they call to protect the Jewish community from violence. For Muslims, the violence is preventable; for Jews, the violence is simply a sad part of life that they must learn to live with. 

Even when Amnesty tries mightily to sound like it is unbiased, the bias cannot be denied. 





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