"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024) PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022) |
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"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024) PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022) |
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ICRC spokesperson Hisham Mhanna states that the ICRC’s “top priority” in Gaza is to secure the release of Palestinian prisoners from Israeli jails. Mhanna’s statement indicates that the return of Israeli hostages from captivity is a lower priority (if at all), as is the safety of Israelis from terror attacks.
Surouq Hijawi, who holds the position of “security official” for the ICRC, praised terrorism against Israelis on Facebook. Specifically, on July 20, 2023 Hiawi posted a photo of several Palestinian terrorists who had died while carrying out attacks against Israelis, along with the caption, “May God have mercy on the martyrs #Congratulations on your martyrdom in heaven.”
"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024) PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022) |
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Saudi Arabia and Lebanon on Tuesday underscored the importance of strengthening Arab cooperation and coordinating positions on key regional and international issues, according to the Saudi Press Agency. They also reaffirmed their commitment to the full implementation of the Taif Agreement, the enforcement of relevant international resolutions, the extension of state sovereignty across all Lebanese territory, and the exclusive possession of weapons by the Lebanese state.
“We also say that weapons should be exclusive to the internal security forces and the army in Lebanon, and we reject the logic of the militias,” Sheikh Qassem said. “Therefore, we have nothing to do with this matter. We are a resistance that considers Israel a threat to Lebanon, and there is no objection to the army and the state defending Lebanon. The resistance has the right to continue to protect Lebanon,” he added. “Therefore, we do not consider the President’s words about the exclusivity of weapons to be directed at us,” he said, noting that “all wars were started by the Israeli enemy, so if they [the army] were able to prevent Israel from waging wars, this would be a good thing.”
He added, “If some believe that the president’s remarks are targeted against us, we do not consider them as so.”
“Yes, we are in a new phase, but the principles do not change. Rather, the methods may change, but the resistance work does not cease and cannot, because Lebanon will cease to exist. What is happening in Syria is the best evidence of that. The resistance deterred the enemy and prevented it from advancing and remaining in our land. Even in the areas it occupies, the time for resistance will come. Today, we are patient.” He called on “the people to calm down and be reassured, because their leadership and youth have the ability, mind, and faith, and they will act in the appropriate manner and at the appropriate time.” He stressed that "the resistance today, and with it the people, is more heroic than when we were fighting, because we are patient, and no one thinks that it is a defeat, but rather it is a decision, because our presence is there and our capabilities are with us, and the people are present. Even if some people think that Hezbollah is acting pragmatically, this is a positive thing."
Although a new-appointed government has said the state should from now on be the sole bearer of arms after a 13-months-long war between Hezbollah and Israel, Deputy Prime Minister Tarek Mitri said the government would in no way disarm Hezbollah by force."It is not the time to take reckless risks that might take Lebanon backward, to many years ago," Metri said Monday in a televised interview.
"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024) PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022) |
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"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024) PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022) |
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For 29-year-old Elizabeth Pipko, Donald Trump has been much more than a boss. In her incredible life story, the American president constitutes a defining event, no less.Daniel Pipes: Review: The Only Jew in the Room Searching for Understanding in an Arab Islamic College
A person who changed the course of her life from the moment she became aware of his political work. An almost divine factor who taught her no less than any rabbi she met in the synagogues she attended. A mentor, a spiritual teacher.
“Trump completely changed my life,” she says. “So, my entire life has focused around Donald Trump for about eight years, a little bit longer. So, I don’t think my brain has realized yet what it means to not be in a campaign and not be fighting for Donald Trump, because that’s all we know.
“My husband [Darren Centinello, who was the campaign’s digital director] and I used to joke that we’d get divorced after the election was over because we didn’t know if we had anything else to talk about. After all, all we talked about was Donald Trump. … I met my husband through the campaign.”
Considering that joining his team was the moment that helped Pipko emerge from the lowest point of her life, it’s understandable.
Today, she is one of the women closest to the president’s ear. After working with him for eight years, and being a spokesperson for the Republican Party, coordinating campaign fundraising and helping him reach the White House twice, Pipko is one of Donald’s confidantes, and to a large extent, this involves explaining the Jewish and Israeli views to him on the current war in Gaza.
She regularly appears in studios and gives interviews, makes regular television appearances, and defends Israel passionately. She condemns progressive nonsense, points out woke hypocrisy, and raises awareness of problematic-to-outrageous statements by people in positions of power in higher education institutions in the U.S.
After 24 years in the Israel Defense Forces, much of it focused on the West Bank and Gaza, Lt. Col. (ret.) Avi Shalev, a Jew, made the unique decision in his late 40s to devote two-day weekends for the next 1½ years to acquiring a graduate-level teaching certificate from the Al-Qasimi Academic College of Education in the Israeli Muslim-majority town of Baqa al-Gharbiya. Founded in 1989 with a distinctly Islamic orientation, the college offers B.A.s and M.A.s. The Only Jew builds on his real-time notes to present a sometimes boisterous, sometimes anguished account of his unusual experience.Fake plan to attack Australia synagogue fabricated by organized crime, police say
Shalev keeps it personal and stays away from politics but he always remains aware of the topsy-turvy situation whereby he, a former member of Israel's power elite, voluntarily subjects himself to linguistic, religious, and social marginality at Al-Qasimi.
The Only Jew contains many observations of value. On Jerusalem: "In Arab and Islamic public consciousness there has never been a Jewish Temple in Jerusalem." When he disagreed with this consensus, he met with frank disbelief: "A Jewish temple in Jerusalem? Come on, ya Avi. Who told you this lie? There was always a mosque there, it's a well-known fact."
A wave of serious arson and vandalism attacks against Jewish New South Wales (NSW) targets, including the Dural caravan faux terrorism plot, was part of an organized crime ring’s plan to distract law enforcement and obtain reduced prison sentences in exchange for aiding in the police’s investigation, Australian Federal Police (AFP) National Security Deputy Commissioner Krissy Barrett and Deputy Police Commissioner for the state of New South Wales David Hudson said Monday in a joint press briefing – following the mass arrest of 11 suspects.
Organized domestic and foreign criminal elements, some of them indicated by Barrett to be in prison, were hiring petty criminals to target the Sydney area Jewish community.
Hudson said that there were many motivations for the crime, but as of yet, the investigations had not uncovered any antisemitic animus. Instead, it appeared that organized crime had decided to exploit escalating antisemitism in Australia since October 7, which included a wave of lesser anti-Jewish criminal acts, to sow confusion and disorder with fourteen different attacks in addition to the Dural incident.
Criminals had been submitting false terrorism tips ever since the Dural ruse in which a caravan laden with mining explosives was discovered in a rural property with a note indicating that a synagogue was a target.
In the Dural case, the plan was to divert law enforcement resources so that criminals could carry out other actions, but more so, Hudson and Barrett explained that the mastermind behind the scheme hoped to provide information about fake plots in return for reduced sentences and other benefits.
In one example given by Barrett, criminals fabricated a terrorist plot involving obtaining high-powered firearms, which a criminal offered to provide information for in exchange for reduced drug trafficking charges.
“Too many criminals are accused of paying others to carry out antisemitic or terrorism incidents to get our attention or divert our resources,” said Barrett. “And too many offenders working in the criminal gig economy are accepting these tasks for money.”
On March 2, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced that Israel would halt the entry of all goods and supplies to Gaza. This decision came after Hamas rejected a framework proposed by U.S. Special Envoy to the Middle East Steve Witkoff intended to continue the hostage-ceasefire talks—a framework Israel had already agreed to.Seth Mandel (Jan 2025): Hamas’s War on Gaza’s Electric Grid
Of course, it was not long until the usual politicians, pundits and armchair quarterbacks playing lawyer started accusing Israel of the war crime of starvation. And, as usual, they did so with vague references to unspecified provisions of "international law."
For the record, international law is very clear on this point: Israel is not obligated to provide aid that will be used by an enemy in a time of war, and anyone who argues differently is either illiterate or willfully ignorant.
British Prime Minister Winston Churchill and President Franklin D. Roosevelt certainly were not expected to provide aid to Nazi Germany during WWII, yet there is a systematic double standard and misapplication of the law against the Jewish state.
To begin, those who ignorantly claim that all blockades are automatically a war crime, are simply wrong. Blockades, which are a lawful military tactic in the course of war, are regulated by international humanitarian law, but are not prohibited by it, as long as it is not used to intentionally starve the local civilian population. To that end, siege law does have humanitarian aspects, namely the requirement of facilitating the passage of food and medicine by third parties, which is governed by Article 23 of the 4th Geneva Convention.
Article 23 is very explicit in outlining that a High Contracting Party, such as Israel, shall allow the free passage of humanitarian supplies, but that is if, and only if, there are no serious reasons to believe these supplies are being diverted from their destination or used for military purposes.
Nor are these points controversial; for example, both the U.S. Defense Department Law of War Manual and the UK Joint Service Manual of the Law of Armed Conflict reiterate and mirror Article 23 of 4th Geneva Convention. So where does that leave Israel?
There has been indisputable and overwhelming evidence that Hamas systematically steals the aid, and uses it to advance their military goals, including the ongoing captivity of hostages. Everyone from The New York Times to the Palestinian Authority and the United Nations has reported on this fact for years. And if that's not enough, even Hamas themselves has admitted it.
It is also imperative to dismiss the libelous charge that by halting the aid, Israel is committing the war crime of starving the civilian population of Gaza, which is patently untrue here.
Here’s how the electricity in Gaza works. Israel provides 50 percent of the enclave’s power—and I do mean “provides.” Technically, Israel is selling electricity to Gaza, and the Palestinian Authority is supposed to pick up the tab. But they very often don’t, and certainly Hamas doesn’t pay, and every so often Israel threatens to cut off electricity for lack of payment—the debt is usually somewhere in the neighborhood of half a billion dollars. But Israel always backs down or accepts low partial payments.Seth Mandel: Like a Boehler in a China Shop
How much does Hamas value that electricity? Well, it is not uncommon for their own rockets to hit the power lines and cut off parts of the grid. Usually, Israel just fixes the lines when Hamas destroys them. (Israel is terrible at doing genocide.) But on Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas knocked down more than half of their own power lines and Israel did not fix them; it had, if you remember, a few other priorities.
The other half of Gaza’s electricity is split into two main categories: 25 percent comes from Gaza’s diesel-run power plant and the other 25 percent comes from the sun. Gaza has a high concentration of solar cells, because there are lots and lots of roofs and lots of sun. Some of the solar power comes from Israeli companies, much of it from EU and UN projects (meaning, in part, the American taxpayer).
Some Gazans with solar-power systems sell electricity to their neighbors. Some who have their own diesel generators do the same. And the hospitals have been known to set up diesel generators in their bottom floors for public use.
What this means is that about a quarter of Gazan power doesn’t, in general, require the main grid. There’s a problem, however: in addition to Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad rockets knocking down power lines, the fact that these groups operate from private homes means that the return fire from Israel knocks out solar roof panels. Hamas fires from civilian homes with the intent of getting those civilians killed, but doing so also kills the lights. Hamas is indescribably evil.
It should go without saying that Hamas does not have much trouble accessing electricity. Hundreds of miles of tunnels used only by Hamas are outfitted with electrical and communication wires. Which means the terror group simply built a second Gaza and sabotaged the first Gaza’s power grid—the one used by civilians.
Everyone could have power in Gaza, and it would not be particularly difficult, as Hamas has proved. In fact, the money spent on the Hamas tunnels just shows the wide range of services that everyone in Gaza could have access to, if Hamas wanted them to. For over 15 years, Hamas has governed the strip with an iron fist and built absolutely nothing for ordinary Gazans while destroying nearly everything for ordinary Gazans.
When one realizes all that Hamas is preventing, one should be furious at them—so long as one actually cares about Palestinian life.
The Trump administration has gone from carrot-and-stick diplomacy to selfie-stick diplomacy.
A heretofore unknown envoy named Adam Boehler has been conducting back-channel talks with Hamas on behalf of the White House, and his inexperience is on full display. Boehler spent the weekend doing TV interviews, and in each one he sounds like an overexcited tourist who thinks the past few weeks in his life have been just so cool. It isn’t entirely clear why Boehler is even here, given the previous inexperienced envoy Steve Witkoff’s very public role in the first month of the administration as Washington’s man at the table.
So let’s back up: Last week it was revealed that Boehler, on behalf of the Trump administration, has been negotiating for the return of the one living American hostage remaining in Gaza and the bodies of other American hostages who were killed by Hamas in captivity. Boehler appears to have offered Hamas a pathway to remaining in Gaza after the war without releasing the remaining Israeli hostages…though he insists that isn’t his goal.
Still, whatever Boehler thinks he might have done is irrelevant because what he has actually done is offer Hamas the option of restoring the pre-October 7 status quo with minor adjustments. Or at least, he has given Hamas reason to believe that option is on the table. In so doing, this Donald Trump “apprentice” has already done damage to the cause of bringing the hostages home as soon as is humanly possible. He would have been the first one fired at the end of the first episode of his season of The Apprentice for what he’s done.
Let’s examine what Boehler said during his disastrous Sunday talk show tour. Hamas, he said, offered a hostage exchange “and a five-year to ten-year truce where Hamas would lay down all weapons and where the US, as well as other countries, would ensure that there are no tunnels, there’s nothing taken on the military side, and that Hamas is not involved in politics going forward.” This, said Boehler, was “not a bad first offer.”
Sorry, first offer? Talks have been ongoing since well before Boehler got in the game. Indeed, the first hostage release was negotiated in November 2023, nearly 16 months ago. Apparently Boehler was busy at the time with his Nashville investment firm and wasn’t reading the newspaper.
And: It is a bad offer. The hudna play, in which Hamas offers a temporary truce so it can draw up an Oct. 7-style truce-breaking extravaganza, is quite literally the oldest trick in Hamas’s playbook. It’s the Mideast version of a strange man rolling up in a windowless van and offering a lollipop. That’s not an opening bid; it’s the opening scene to a paint-by-numbers horror flick.
Asked about the experience of negotiating with bloodthirsty monsters, Boehler said that rather than focus on how evil Hamas is, it’s better “to realize that every piece of a person is a human and to identify with the human elements of those people and then build from there.” Just what we needed: Barney the Dinosaur negotiating with modern-day Nazis.
Policy Proposal: A UAE-Led Peace & Development Initiative for Gaza
Objective: To establish a UAE-backed governance and economic development model in Gaza, gradually transitioning it into a de facto protectorate under UAE influence through humanitarian aid, infrastructure development, and economic incentives. This approach bypasses immediate political confrontation and offers a long-term stabilization strategy that turns Gaza into a thriving hub rather than merely a managed crisis zone.
The UAE to launch a $10-15 billion humanitarian investment plan, focusing on essential services like housing, healthcare, water supply, and education.
UAE-backed NGOs and businesses to deliver aid directly to Gaza’s population, avoiding Hamas-controlled distribution networks.
Diplomatic coordination with Israel and Egypt to ensure uninterrupted access to construction materials and medical supplies.
Establish secure worker villages for Gazan laborers engaged in rebuilding efforts.
These villages will feature:
Modern housing and utilities
UAE-trained security personnel to ensure safety and prevent militant infiltration
Schools, hospitals, and commercial hubs to create self-sustaining communities
Workers must be vetted for non-affiliation with terrorist organizations to ensure a moderate, productive workforce.
UAE investors to create industrial and trade zones, providing stable employment.
Gazan businesses to be integrated into Gulf-based trade networks, reducing economic reliance on Hamas.
UAE security forces to oversee SEZ logistics and protection.
As UAE villages flourish, more Gazans will seek to relocate for better living conditions.
Expansion of UAE-managed towns, gradually covering a large segment of Gaza’s population.
Introduction of Emirati-style governance, including local councils funded and trained by the UAE.
UAE security personnel to protect UAE projects and prevent interference from Hamas.
Recruitment of vetted private security, with potential for adding moderate Palestinian officers and local forces to form a UAE-trained and run Gaza security division.
Coordination with Egypt and (quietly with) Israel on border security and counterterrorism efforts.
UAE-backed banks and businesses to facilitate direct payments to workers and vendors.
Emirati financial institutions to provide loans and investment capital for Gazan entrepreneurs.
UAE to lobby for reduction of Israeli trade restrictions on Gazan goods, further integrating Gaza into the regional economy.
With superior living conditions under UAE governance, Gazans will increasingly rely on UAE services.
UAE can offer residency permits, work opportunities in the Gulf, and economic incentives to Gazans aligned with the new system.
UAE-aligned governance structures will gradually replace Hamas-controlled institutions.
UAE to negotiate with Israel, Egypt, the U.S., and the Arab League for formal recognition of its governance role.
Israel and Egypt to endorse UAE-led security arrangements, ensuring regional stability.
UN involvement to legitimize UAE’s role as a peacekeeping and development partner.
By providing a superior alternative, UAE governance will undercut Hamas’s legitimacy.
UAE-aligned forces will gain local support, marginalizing Hamas’s armed factions.
Diplomatic pressure on Qatar and Turkey to halt financial and military aid to Hamas.
A Port on the Mediterranean: Access to a Mediterranean trade hub, increasing Gulf connectivity with Europe.
Access to Natural Gas & Fossil Fuels: The UAE could benefit from offshore gas reserves, ensuring energy diversification.
Overland Trade Routes: Direct overland shipping routes connecting the Gulf to the Mediterranean, facilitating imports and exports.
A Gaza-Based Airport: Establishing an air bridge would enhance trade and tourism and solidify UAE regional influence.
Increased Influence in the Region: Solidifies the UAE’s role as a power broker in Middle Eastern politics.
Gaza as a Tourist & Business Hub: The UAE could transform Gaza into a coastal tourist destination and a conference center for European and Arab leaders.
Access to an Educated Arab Workforce: Gaza’s young, educated population could replace South Asian laborers in the UAE, fostering regional Arab economic integration.
Achieves long-term security without direct military involvement.
Reduces the threat of rocket attacks and militant activity.
Encourages economic stability in Gaza, reducing incentives for extremism.
Prevents Gaza from becoming a regional security threat.
Boosts economic ties with the UAE through cross-border trade.
Strengthens its role as a mediator in Middle Eastern affairs.
Provides stable jobs, better living conditions, and improved security.
Reduces dependence on militant organizations for governance.
Opens pathways for regional integration and future statehood.
Unlike past plans, which have focused only on minimizing Gaza’s problems, this initiative is about transforming Gaza into a success story. By offering positive incentives to all key players—except Hamas and its allies in Qatar and Turkey—this plan ensures broad regional support. Gaza would shift from a conflict zone to a thriving economic hub, paving the way for long-term peace and stability.
This initiative offers a realistic, phased approach to resolving the Gaza conflict by leveraging economic incentives and soft power rather than military force.
"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024) PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022) |
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To be eligible to vote in the U.S. election to the 39th World Zionist Congress, you must:Be Jewish (and not subscribe to another religion)Be 18 years or older by June 30, 2025Be a U.S. citizen or a legal permanent resident in the U.S.Maintain your primary residence in the U.S.Accept the Jerusalem Program (the Zionist movement platform)Have not voted in the November 2022 Knesset election (and will not vote in any future Knesset election which may be held prior to July 28, 2025)Registration and voting will open on March 10, 2025, Voting will be online and paper ballots will be available on request. The fee to register and vote is $5, which goes to cover the operating costs of the election.
"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024) PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022) |
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(B)Terrorist activities(i)In generalAny alien who—(IV)is a representative (as defined in clause (v)) of—(bb)a political, social, or other group that endorses or espouses terrorist activity;
"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024) PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022) |
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Israeli security forces approved and secured the pilgrimage of hundreds of ultra-Orthodox hassidic Jews to the tomb of Rav Ashi, located along the northern Lebanese border, Army Radio and the Lebanese National News Agency reported on Friday morning.The pilgrims were reportedly escorted by IDF soldiers early on Friday morning to hold the Shacharit prayer at the site of the tomb, located along the Blue Line.
Arab media is aghast at this supposed encroachment of Lebanese land. Lebanon24 report headline says, "Visiting Rabbi Ashi's grave is a religious pretext that leads extremists to enter the Lebanese interior."
Google Maps seems to place the entire site on the Israeli side.
Does the Blue Line really cross the street, bisect the building and then return to the road? Apparently, according to the story.
At any rate, there is no indication that the Hasidim crossed the Blue Line. If they did, it is the most minor infraction one can imagine. No one can seriously call this a land grab.
The history is a little more interesting. As far as I can tell, no one claimed that this was the site of Rav Ashi's grave until at least the 17th or 18th centuries.
Rav Ashi lived his whole life in Babylonia, near Sura, where he was the head of a venerated academy. The Sura academy was a center of learning from 225 to 1033 CE. That's about as long as Cambridge University has existed.
Other heads of the Sura academy are assumed to have been buried in Babylonia, today's southern Iraq. There was no tradition I can find at the time to transport even major rabbi's bodies from Babylonia to the Land of Israel, which would be a lengthy process at odds with Jewish tradition to bury people immediately. Sura is about 850 kilometers from the site in a straight line.
There is no source for Rav Ashi's re-internment. It is unclear where the Breslovers got this tradition from.
However, centuries of prayer at a place gives it some level of sanctity, due to the prayers themselves. The emotional attachment to the place is quite real even if it is found to be incorrect.
"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024) PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022) |
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In July 2023, former IDF intelligence analysis chief Yossi Kuperwasser called to invade Gaza and said Hamas was being given far too much space to threaten Israel.The Israeli Disillusionment with Palestinians
Nearly the entire defense establishment believed that Hamas was deterred, and many viewed Kuperwasser as an alarmist, a warmonger, or as detached from the far more limited practical security options under consideration.
It turns out that Kuperwasser was one of the only officials who saw Gaza and Hamas clear through the fog, with all of the military probes essentially acknowledging that he was right (though they did not mention him by name). In recent weeks, he took over as head of the Jerusalem Institute for Strategy and Security (JISS).
Given that he got so many things right on issues that many other smart intelligence officers wildly missed, how would he assess the current challenges relating to Gaza and Iran?
Regarding Gaza, he told The Jerusalem Post on Sunday that his starting point would be: “We want to get the hostages back without paying too large a price.Enlrage image
“It is hard to deal with the challenges, but we can use our achievements and assets, given that we have weakened Hamas, to try to obtain the new reality we want,” he argued, saying that Israel has five new advantages.
“It is hard to deal with the challenges, but we can use our achievements and assets, given that we have weakened Hamas, to try to obtain the new reality we want.” Israel has five new advantages, he said.
“We have many cards to play and they only have the hostages. Reality has changed. There were so many parties in the Middle East who tried to help Hamas to demand a large price and to stay in control of Gaza,” he said.
“Now, most parties are not actively standing up for Hamas. Not Iran, not Hezbollah, not Iraq, not the Palestinians in the West Bank, and not Israeli-Arabs,” he said.
In the three decades since the Oslo process began, Jewish-Israeli society has undergone a disillusionment regarding Palestinians. Disillusionment began in the early 2000s with the outbreak of the Second Intifada, when it became clear that the Oslo process had not brought hoped-for peace. The Palestinian refusal at the Camp David summit to accept Israeli proposals that promised Palestinians a state in almost all areas of the West Bank and Gaza, and the outbreak of the violent campaign that Palestinians launched against the Jewish state, made it clear to Jewish society in Israel that peace would not come.American Jewry's Moment of Reckoning and Renewal
Following the Oct. 7, 2023, massacre, it became clear to the Jewish public in Israel that the conflict with the Palestinians could no longer be managed and that they could not be allowed to establish a semi-state terrorist entity. As of late 2024, only 35% of Jews in Israel express support for a diplomatic process with the PA, while 88% do not believe negotiations will lead to a peace agreement. Only 25% support the two-state idea.
Since Oct. 7, the Jewish people has faced an unprecedented reckoning. The barbaric attack by Hamas, which took the lives of 1,200 innocents and led to the kidnapping of more than 250 into Gaza, shook us to our core. The reverberations continue, along with a surge of antisemitism worldwide.When Documentaries Become Propaganda: The Case for Rescinding the ‘No Other Land’ Oscar
Yet, amid this darkness, extraordinary resilience has emerged. The Jewish people - across Israel and the Diaspora - has united in unprecedented ways. American Jewry stands unwavering in its commitment to Israel's security and sovereignty. The U.S. and Israel share a moral foundation built on democracy, freedom, and the pursuit of peace.
Today, the threats to Israel remain existential. The war in Gaza extends beyond Hamas; it seeks to ensure that Israel's children do not grow up under the constant threat of rocket fire. It aims to prevent Iran's proxies from tightening their stranglehold on the region. It reinforces the principle that no nation should be forced to tolerate the kind of terror inflicted on Israel on Oct. 7. When it comes to Israel's right to defend itself, there can be no equivocation.
This kind of selective storytelling isn’t just dishonest; it’s dangerous. By omitting key facts and context, the filmmakers have crossed the line from advocacy into outright deception and demonization. The Academy’s willingness to reward such a film raises a disturbing question: is the goal of the Best Documentary award to honor truth, or merely to signal political virtue?
The documentary branch of the Academy has faced scandals before—infamously awarding “Bowling for Columbine” despite clear evidence of manipulative editing and deceptive statistics. But this is different. This is not about a filmmaker stretching the truth to make a point; this is about outright fabrications being rewarded with the industry’s highest honor. If the Academy refuses to act, it sends a clear message: that as long as the politics are correct, the facts don’t matter.
For further evidence of the rot, look no further than the recent scandal of the BBC pulling “Gaza: How to Survive a War Zone” due to revelations that the film was rife with inaccuracies and unverified claims. Or the disgraceful Emmy handed to Bisan Owda for “reporting” that was little more than a mouthpiece for Hamas propaganda. That the Academy could watch “No Other Land”—a film that shares the same DNA of deception—and respond with applause rather than outrage is a scandal in itself.
Some might argue that rescinding an Oscar would set a dangerous precedent. Nonsense. If anything, it would set exactly the right precedent: that documentary filmmakers are not free to manufacture facts without consequence. The Academy has done it before, quietly revoking the Oscar for 1969’s “Young Americans” when it was discovered the film had been released in a previous year. This situation is far worse; it’s not a matter of timing but of truth. To do nothing now would not only call the Academy’s integrity into question but risk turning the Best Documentary award into a punchline.
The problem runs deeper than one film. By awarding an Oscar to “No Other Land,” the Academy has aligned itself with a growing trend of documentaries that present one-sided narratives as gospel truth, leveraging emotional manipulation and selective editing to push political agendas. The consequences of this are dire. Documentaries, once a vital tool for uncovering uncomfortable truths, are fast becoming instruments of propaganda, eroding public trust not just in the filmmakers but in the entire journalistic enterprise.
It is not too late for the Academy to do the right thing. A full investigation into the film’s claims and its eligibility under the Documentary Branch’s bylaws is the bare minimum required. If, as the evidence suggests, the film was indeed a grotesque distortion of reality, the Oscar should be revoked publicly and unapologetically.
This article is not meant to be a direct and detailed refutation of the documentary, though should the Academy launch such an investigation into the film’s veracity, we are available to provide evidence and documentation to back up these claims.
Failing to act would not only embolden more filmmakers to abandon journalistic standards in favor of propaganda but would make the Academy complicit, cementing its reputation as a partisan echo chamber. At a time when public trust in media is at an all-time low, that’s a risk they cannot afford to take.
There was a time when the Oscar for Best Documentary was more than a political statement; it was a recognition of the courage to tell uncomfortable truths. If the Academy wants to reclaim that legacy, it must start by sending a clear message: propaganda has no place at the Oscars, and those who indulge in it should not be rewarded but exposed.
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PROTOCOLS: EXPOSING MODERN ANTISEMITISM
If you want real peace, don't insist on a divided Jerusalem, @USAmbIsrael
The Apartheid charge, the Abraham Accords and the "right side of history"
With Palestinians, there is no need to exaggerate: they really support murdering random Jews
Great news for Yom HaShoah! There are no antisemites!