Seth Mandel: The Media’s War on the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation
Last month, the Washington Post ran a sensational accusation against the Israel Defense Forces, posting on social media that Israeli troops killed over 30 people by shooting into a crowd of Palestinians lining up to get food aid.How Humanitarians Help Warlords and Prolong Bloodshed
The Post had no way to verify this before reporting it. The accusation was worded in a way that obscured that the information came from Hamas, and the wording also indicated that the Post had at least confirmed the report. In fact, what the Post had printed was literal terrorist propaganda disguised as reporting.
This came less than two weeks after a pro-Palestinian activist murdered two young people at the Capital Jewish Museum, an act of violence spurred on by nearly two years of meritless accusations of Israeli crimes.
Two days later, the paper retracted its post drawing attention to the story and admitted that it didn’t know for sure whether the IDF shot anybody. Meanwhile, Hamas continues to maim and murder Palestinians who try to collect aid.
To say the Washington Post’s behavior was unethical and grossly irresponsible is to put it far too generously. Yet rather than serve as a cautionary tale for reporters, the story was an example of the new norm of media coverage of one organization in particular: the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation.
GHF is the America- and Israel-backed humanitarian distribution firm that feeds Gazan civilians but doesn’t funnel its supplies through Hamas. This way, there is no secondhand market that enriches and entrenches Hamas’s rule.
The launch of the GHF should have been treated as a major step toward ending the war and prioritizing the wellbeing of Gazans over that of Hamas. Instead, the fact that GHF excluded Hamas was treated as a drawback.
Even still, the backlash against a humanitarian organization feeding Gazans was deranged—pro-Hamas NGOs and the anti-Israel media went to war against the humanitarians. The Washington Post article was one example. There would be more.
Last week, the Associated Press published a poorly sourced “investigation” into violence at GHF distribution points. It “found”—according to unverified sources—that GHF contractors were shooting at or near crowds of Palestinians approaching aid sites. The AP published this despite the fact that there was no visual evidence of the alleged abuses, even though Palestinians have been videorecording everything they can. The AP used the sound of gunfire on videos as its proof.
GHF reviewed the available footage and found that—surprise!—“at no point were civilians under fire at a GHF distribution site. The gunfire heard in the video was confirmed to have originated from the IDF, who was outside the immediate vicinity of the GHF distribution site. It was not directed at individuals, and no one was shot or injured.”
As Omari suggests, the hardest part of the task now before Israel is removing Hamas from power. In order to do so, Jerusalem has taken steps to end Hamas’s control over humanitarian aid. These efforts have recently generated much controversy in the international press, within Israel, and even in the Israeli cabinet. Netta Barak-Corren and Jonathan Boxman explain how humanitarian aid became a weapon in Hamas’s arsenal in the first place—part of a phenomenon that Shany Mor calls the “constitution” of Gaza.
From Syria to Somalia, Yemen to Gaza, aid diversion is now routine—and too often enabled by the very institutions tasked with preventing it. UN agencies and the World Food Program (WFP), in particular, have tolerated systematic abuse of aid pipelines. Worse still, they have consistently downplayed or concealed the extent of the problem, even when their own internal reports document extensive diversion, fraud, and abuse.
These are not accidental lapses. They are part of a systemic pattern in which oppressive regimes, armed militias, and terrorist organizations use aid strategically—and are quietly accommodated by humanitarian organizations, rather than confronted.
This reflects a deeper contradiction in the humanitarian model itself. The principle of “humanity”—delivering aid no matter what—often overrides the principles of neutrality, independence, and impartiality. But aid is a resource like any other, and in war zones, resources mean leverage, power, and control. The more desperate the population, the more valuable the aid becomes to local power brokers.
In reality, most humanitarian operations now maintain covert accommodations with these power brokers. The question is no longer whether diversion exists, but whom it benefits. All too often, the answer is: those perpetuating the conflict.
With hostage talks stuck on dispute over IDF withdrawal, US urges moving on to other issues
No significant progress has been made in the ongoing hostage negotiations in Doha since Wednesday, an Arab diplomat and a second source familiar with the negotiations tells The Times of Israel.
While Israel agreed to ease some of its demands regarding the redeployment of its troops during the 60-day truce under discussion following US pressure, the new series of maps depicting the partial withdrawal of IDF troops was not sufficient to satisfy Hamas, the two sources say.
The new maps still envision Israel maintaining control of roughly one-third of Gaza’s territory, including a three-kilometer (1.86-mile) buffer zone in Rafah where it aims to create a controversial “humanitarian city” to which Gaza’s entire population will be herded, checked for weapons and be barred from leaving as Israel will seek to encourage their emigration outside of the Strip.
Channel 12 reports that Hamas has agreed to expand the buffer zone Israel wants to create along much of the Gaza perimeter from 700 meters to one kilometer, but Israel is still demanding that it be expanded to as much as two kilometers.
Amid the apparent stalemate on the issue, the US is urging Hamas to move on to discuss other remaining issues — something the terror group has refused to do until disagreements regarding Israel’s partial withdrawal from Gaza are solved.
Hamas agreed to expand the buffer zone along the border between the Gaza Strip and Israel, where the IDF will maintain a presence, from 700m - 1KM.
— Open Source Intel (@Osint613) July 11, 2025
Israel still demands a buffer zone 2-3 kilometers wide in the Rafah area and 1-2 kilometers in other border areas with Gaza https://t.co/naOFU0kFzG
Douglas Murray on Hamas, Iran, and the Collapse of the Two-State Solution
Drawing from intensive on-the-ground reporting in Israel, Gaza, and Lebanon, Douglas Murray places the latest violence in its proper historical context. He takes listeners on a harrowing journey through the aftermath of the October 7 massacre, piecing together the exclusive accounts from victims, survivors, and even the terrorists responsible for the atrocities.
Douglas Murray is a bestselling author and journalist. His books include the Sunday Times number-one bestsellers The War on the West: How to Prevail in the Age of Unreason; The Strange Death of Europe: Immigration, Identity and Islam; and The Madness of Crowds: Gender, Race and Identity. He has been Associate Editor and regular writer at The Spectator since 2012, and contributes to other publications, including the Wall Street Journal, The Times, the Sunday Times, the Sun, the Mail on Sunday and the New York Post. A regular guest on broadcast news channels, he has also spoken at numerous universities, parliaments, and the White House. His new book is On Democracies and Death Cults.
French-Saudi UN confab on two-state solution said rescheduled for July 28-29
An international conference meant to revive work on a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict has been rescheduled for July 28-29 following its postponement due to the Israel-Iran war last month, diplomatic sources told AFP Friday.
The sources could not provide details on any changes to the agenda or level of attending representatives. Heads of state and government had been expected to attend the jointly French- and Saudi-chaired conference at the UN General Assembly in June.
Originally set for mid-June, the conference, set to take place at the UN headquarters in New York, was postponed on June 13 after Israel launched a surprise military campaign targeting Iran’s nuclear program, missile production and military leadership.
Iran retaliated against Israel’s strikes with deadly ballistic missile strikes that caused heavy damage to Israeli cities. The war lasted 12 days, until June 24, when it ended with a US-brokered ceasefire.
On Thursday, French President Emmanuel Macron called during his UK state visit for joint recognition by France and Britain of a Palestinian state, saying such moves are “the only hope for peace” in the region.
Diplomats say French recognition of Palestinian statehood could lend greater weight to a movement hitherto dominated by smaller nations generally more critical of Israel. Britain’s Prime Minister Keir Starm
The NYT just published a gigantic piece arguing that Netanyahu is deliberately prolonging the war with Hamas to stay in power.
— Eitan Fischberger (@EFischberger) July 11, 2025
But they themselves acknowledge the story doesn’t really hold up.
Buried in the middle of the article, the authors write that it’s “impossible to say”… https://t.co/Q6so9GCNzF pic.twitter.com/WxsCmiHmQo
NYT news desk comes out in favor of letting Hamas rule Gaza.
— Jason Hicks (@JasonMHicks) July 11, 2025
The article dance around the core issue:
A ceasefire without defeating Hamas incentivizes Hamas and other groups to kidnap Jews around the world as bargaining chips.
“Netanyahu refused Lapid’s demand. He knew that… https://t.co/2mi01ZgRKi
This is the first time Times of Israel has directly shared a NYT piece — instead of just covering it.
— Eitan Fischberger (@EFischberger) July 11, 2025
I don’t like Netanyahu. But if you truly think he’s keeping hostages in Hamas tunnels just to stay in power, your hatred of him has warped your judgment https://t.co/Q6so9GDlpd pic.twitter.com/C8Fv8X6eRR
🚨 Prime Minister Netanyahu attacks the New York Times' “investigation” by the lefty-biased reporter @ronenbergman, which he says repeats "false and invalid claims by political activists, which have already been refuted in the past." His office's statement said that Netanyahu…
— Raylan Givens (@JewishWarrior13) July 11, 2025
🚨 Iran's supreme leader Khamenei is making threats against the US again pic.twitter.com/RHRatdghlX
— Raylan Givens (@JewishWarrior13) July 11, 2025
Lebanese president says Beirut currently seeks peace, not normalization, with Israel
Lebanese President Joseph Aoun said Friday that his country currently has no plans to normalize ties with Israel, but that Beirut wants peaceful relations with its southern neighbor, which maintains some troop presence in Lebanon’s south following last year’s war against Hezbollah.
Meeting in Beirut with members of an Arab think tank, Aoun called for a full Israeli withdrawal from Lebanon, and said the decision to maintain a state monopoly on arms — a veiled threat against the heavily armed Iran-backed terror group Hezbollah — was “final.”
Addressing relations with Israel, Aoun “distinguished between peace and normalization,” according to a statement by his office.
“Peace is the lack of a state of war, and this is what matters to us in Lebanon at the moment. As for the issue of normalization, it is not currently part of Lebanese foreign policy,” Aoun was quoted as saying.
Aoun’s comments were Lebanon’s first official reaction to a statement last month by Israel’s Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar expressing interest in normalizing ties with Lebanon and Syria, which have both been in an official state of war with Israel since it was founded in 1948.
An Israeli official has said normalization with Lebanon could not proceed until Hezbollah is disarmed.
Aoun, whose election in January ended a two-year vacancy in the Lebanese presidency, has vowed to uphold a state monopoly on arms. Addressing the issue on Friday, he said “the decision to restrict arms is final and there is no turning back on it,” according to his office. A view from the IDF’s Margaliot Defender military post in southern Lebanon, on the outskirts of Markaba, April 2, 2025. (Emanuel Fabian/Times of Israel)
Aoun was also quoted praising Lebanon’s powerful parliament speaker, Hezbollah ally Nabih Berri, for his “contribution to… achieving the principle of restricting weapons.”
Hezbollah emerged weakened from the war with Israel, which ended with a November 27 ceasefire deal. Under the agreement, Hezbollah was required to vacate southern Lebanon. Israel was given 60 days to do so, to be replaced by the Lebanese army and international peacekeepers.
The IDF has since withdrawn from all but five points, which overlook the border. In his comments on Friday, Aoun said Israeli troops in Lebanon “obstruct the complete deployment of the army up to the internationally recognized borders,” according to Lebanese state broadcaster LBCI.
"While politicians, celebrities, and keyboard warriors cry crocodile tears about ending the war, their actions tell a very different story. The media runs headlines about “peace” and “ceasefires,” pretending they’re desperate for the bloodshed to stop. But if you look past the…
— Imtiaz Mahmood (@ImtiazMadmood) July 10, 2025
Sen. Chris Coons: "Hamas must give up any governance, any leadership of Gaza." pic.twitter.com/imD7ut1gNL
— The Post Millennial (@TPostMillennial) July 10, 2025
I told Fox News: Francesca Albanese is a dangerous nutcase and racist demagogue at the U.N. human rights council who hates America and openly promotes Hamas terrorism and antisemitism. Secretary Rubio did a great thing by imposing sanctions against her. pic.twitter.com/VOS8iQuYXT
— Hillel Neuer (@HillelNeuer) July 11, 2025
2/ Because I'm seeing a massive whitewash operation trying to turn a racist, terrorist-supporting demagogue into an innocent “human rights activist.”
— Hillel Neuer (@HillelNeuer) July 11, 2025
Following is just a partial list of governments, lawmakers, and others who have denounced Francesca Albanese's racism against…
4/ 🇫🇷 France again condemned Albanese for “hate speech and antisemitism,” and called on the UN Human Rights Council to “draw all consequences” from her “failure to respect the minimum rules of ethics and professional conduct of the United Nations system.” https://t.co/MijaT3B1yH
— Hillel Neuer (@HillelNeuer) July 11, 2025
6/ 🇨🇦 Canada's Special Envoy: “I am horrified to see a United Nations Special Rapporteur, Francesca Albanese, engage in Holocaust distortion and inversion.”https://t.co/liFTMvHMsZ
— Hillel Neuer (@HillelNeuer) July 11, 2025
8/ That any media would report on Francesca Albanese without informing readers of these unprecedented condemnations of a UN official by leading (and pro-UN) democracies is a striking breach of journalistic duty, and a betrayal of the public’s right to truth. Now let's continue...
— Hillel Neuer (@HillelNeuer) July 11, 2025
9/ For the first time in the history of the Netherlands, the Dutch government announced on March 26, 2025 that it opposed the reappointment of a UN human rights rapporteur.
— Hillel Neuer (@HillelNeuer) July 11, 2025
Letter from Dutch FM: https://t.co/I5UZI6aGQx
News report: https://t.co/gfdubQJkpb
The media is calling Francesca Albanese a "critic of Israel," but she's not.
— HonestReporting (@HonestReporting) July 11, 2025
She's an antisemite, a terror apologist, and a fraud.🧵 @unwatch @hillelneuer pic.twitter.com/uwpU2FU2z1
She accepted thousands of dollars from pro-Hamas groups for trips to Australia and New Zealand...and then lied about it. pic.twitter.com/KI5bdTeLXw
— HonestReporting (@HonestReporting) July 11, 2025
She repeatedly spread antisemitism while hiding behind a “human rights” label. pic.twitter.com/U49RQWGCc1
— HonestReporting (@HonestReporting) July 11, 2025
She's not a "critic" or a "human rights expert." She's a terror apologist, an antisemite, and a fraud. pic.twitter.com/xl56gIekpX
— HonestReporting (@HonestReporting) July 11, 2025
Throwback to when Hillel Neuer slandered me by going on TV and mischaracterizing my relationship with Francesca Albanese. pic.twitter.com/YJVbLGQp5j
— Rabbi Linda Goldstein (🇵🇸🍉I/P Commentary) (@realrabbilinda) July 11, 2025
Hamas—the genocidal terrorist group that murdered, gang raped, and tortured innocent Jews while live streaming the slaughter on Facebook—is defending Francesca Albanese.
— The Persian Jewess (@persianjewess) July 11, 2025
That tells you everything you need to know about Francesca Albanese. pic.twitter.com/zVYEDnavwA
Soldier KIA in Gaza, bringing IDF wartime toll to 890
An Israel Defense Forces soldier was killed in action in Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip, the military announced on Friday morning.
The slain infantry officer was named as Capt. Reei Biran, 21, a squad commander in the Golani Brigade’s reconnaissance unit, from Shorashim in the Lower Galilee.
Biran was reportedly killed when mines intended to demolish buildings used by Hamas terrorists were detonated, apparently accidentally. The IDF said the incident is under investigation.
On Wednesday, the military announced the death in Gaza of Master Sgt. (res.) Abraham Azulay, 25, a heavy engineering vehicle operator in the Southern Command, from Yitzhar in Samaria.
According to an initial IDF investigation, the incident occurred when Palestinian terrorists emerged from a tunnel and opened fire on Israeli troops in Khan Yunis. The attackers attempted to abduct Azulay, who resisted and was shot and killed during the struggle.
An IDF officer was killed in an apparent accident in the southern Gaza Strip yesterday, the military announces.
— Emanuel (Mannie) Fabian (@manniefabian) July 11, 2025
The slain soldier is named as Cpt. Reei Biran, 21, a team commander in the Golani Brigade’s reconnaissance unit, from Shorashim.
According to an IDF probe, the… pic.twitter.com/AS9FqmVG6G
IDF Press Release:
— Open Source Intel (@Osint613) July 11, 2025
IDF troops are operating with five divisions across the Gaza Strip, eliminating terrorists and locating and dismantling weapons caches and terror infrastructure both above and below ground.
This is @inside_IL_intel taking over Jay for next few hours! pic.twitter.com/Ko2fZjTIbH
Six senior Hamas naval commanders, responsible for sea-borne attacks and involved in planning the October 7 attacks, were killed in recent Israeli operations in Gaza, starting mid-May.
— Open Source Intel (@Osint613) July 11, 2025
The operations were led by the Israeli Navy, Intelligence Directorate, Southern Command, and… pic.twitter.com/VqLKlpBFBi
🔴ELIMINATED: 6 senior terrorists from Hamas’ naval commando unit were eliminated by the IDF & ISA.
— Israel Defense Forces (@IDF) July 11, 2025
The terrorists had planned terror activities at sea against Israeli civilians and security forces during the “Swords of Iron” War. Several of the eliminated terrorists were… pic.twitter.com/IcDvYJ3vEn
The military releases footage showing a recent drone strike on what it says is a cell of terror operatives in southern Gaza's Khan Younis.
— Emanuel (Mannie) Fabian (@manniefabian) July 11, 2025
The IDF says the armed cell was spotted approaching forces of the 188th Armored Brigade during operations in the area in recent days.
In… pic.twitter.com/d3vOFs30o2
🚨Khan Yunis, Gaza today pic.twitter.com/k2yHpdbvR9
— Raylan Givens (@JewishWarrior13) July 11, 2025
Overview of Israel’s Rising Lion operation targeting Iran pic.twitter.com/hhWrwjPE7y
— Open Source Intel (@Osint613) July 11, 2025
John Spencer: Warning Shots Are a Tactical Risk with Strategic Consequences
Arguably, no modern army is more familiar with the brutal reality of high-intensity, contested, dense urban warfare and fighting ‘small wars’ than the Israel Defense Forces (IDF). In Gaza, the enemy is embedded in hundreds of miles of tunnels, inside a labyrinth of concrete and steel, narrow streets and alleys, with improvised explosives hidden in walls, rooms, and roads. They use civilians as shields and civilian infrastructure as cover. And now, as the operation has evolved, the IDF is increasingly facing situations where its forces are operating near large groups of civilians. These include humanitarian zones specifically designed to facilitate the delivery of aid directly to civilians rather than that aid having to go through Hamas. While some IDF soldiers provide perimeter security in these zones, other soldiers—often only hundreds of meters away—are forced to make decisions under fire, under pressure, and under constant global scrutiny.
Urban Combat and the IDF’s Dual Role in Gaza
The IDF has a long history of operating around civilians in Judea and Samaria, including during the First and Second Intifadas, and in southern Lebanon. In Gaza, the current Israeli approach is to isolate civilians in designated humanitarian zones while destroying Hamas in other areas. This is a strategy that attempts to separate the civilian population from enemy forces. This strategy also includes distributing aid directly to the people in four designated distribution sites. The IDF, however, does not distribute the food. Rather, they provide security, almost like police at a major sporting event, so that aid workers can ration the food.
But soldiers are not police. This has put the IDF in the difficult but necessary transition of being asked to conduct combat operations to locate and destroy Hamas in one zone while securing humanitarian centers in another.
These are not hypothetical dilemmas. They are real complexities militaries try to avoid.
The Limits of Military Roles in Humanitarian Zones
The IDF’s challenge is similar to the U.S. Army’s experience in Iraq throughout much of Operation Iraqi Freedom. A common feature of the U.S. Army’s urban missions would often shift quickly from clearing buildings and destroying enemy formations to handing out food and water, setting up checkpoints, and holding perimeters during aid delivery or medical services. All of this often occurred without the doctrine, tools, or public understanding to support the complexity of the mission.
IDF Intl. Spox. @LTC_Shoshani sets the record straight regarding the humanitarian aid situation in Gaza.
— Israel Defense Forces (@IDF) July 11, 2025
Watch to hear the truth. pic.twitter.com/YsGLWTGW7t
Another day, another cleverly worded @UN pronouncement designed to intentionally mislead the public about what’s really happening with aid distribution in Gaza. Once again, the media falls for it hook, line, and sinker. Let’s break it down.
— Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (@GHFUpdates) July 11, 2025
This morning, the UN issued a… https://t.co/Ij6N1PMvnD
That's not actually what the @UN said in its statement.
— Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (@GHFUpdates) July 11, 2025
Here are the facts:
- The UN statement condemns the “killings of people at aid distribution sites.”
- While the UN statement relies on unverified Hamas figures which are well-known to be inflated, they themselves admit… https://t.co/DtSZacWRDY
AI translation. It stops working at the end. But hey, it's better than nothing. pic.twitter.com/ztQTKbO5pH
— Joe Truzman (@JoeTruzman) July 11, 2025
Does anyone on earth really believe that Boston Consulting Group’s work in Gaza was “unauthorized”? It seems BCG had other Gaza projects too, but their work to support GHF was clear, acknowledged, and in direct support of our mission to feed people.
— Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (@GHFUpdates) July 11, 2025
Now, they’re scrambling to… https://t.co/jgOGmOsTMJ
According to IPC, Phase 5 famine means 2/10,000 dying daily. Phase 4 Emergency, 1/10,000 daily. That would mean well over 70,000 starvation deaths by now in Gaza. After 21 months, the number is under 100. The data doesn’t support famine. It exposes the lies & propaganda. 2/ pic.twitter.com/6N2BnRf1Ij
— Aizenberg (@Aizenberg55) July 11, 2025
Commentary Podcast: Slandering Bibi and Dems Who Want Blood
Today's podcast takes on the huge and outrageous New York Times piece about how Prime Minister Netanyahu has allowed the Gaza war to go on too long to help himself domestically. And we do a deep dive into the Democratic Party's troubles as it struggles with its own innate pessimism and the hunger for literal blood among the party's radical base.Tikvah Podcast: Robert Satloff on Revitalizing Middle East Studies: A new graduate program promises to restore scholarly integrity to a debased field
October 7th exposed to everyone what many in and around the academy have known for years: American universities—not all, but many—are failing catastrophically to educate the next generation about the history, cultures, and politics of the Middle East. Instead of producing students versed in the region’s complexities, these institutions have become factories for ideological activism. And nowhere is this truer than in the case of Israel and its history: Zionism in the modern university classroom is rarely examined as a movement of national liberation but instead as a caricature of colonialism, racism, repression, and occupation. And outside of the classroom, we’ve seen the most prestigious campuses in the United States transform into nodes of anti-Israel activism and Jew hatred.travelingisrael.com: FREE PALESTINE? No Thanks! – Responding to the Toughest Comments
These are immense and long-standing problems. But instead of just diagnosing their sources and discussing their perils, today we’re going to talk to someone who’s actually done something about it.
Robert Satloff saw this crisis clearly. Having published back in 2001 the eminent historian Martin Kramer’s short volume on the corruption of Middle East Studies, Ivory Towers on Sand, Satloff has spent decades watching the field drift toward anti-Israel political advocacy. As the executive director of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, he decided to stop complaining and found his own professional master’s program.
Working with Pepperdine University, the Washington Institute has established a completely new graduate program designed to train policy professionals with rigorous scholarship and historical accuracy, without anti-Israel bias. The program offers full scholarships, accepts no foreign funding, is fully accredited, and will convene its inaugural cohort in Washington, DC this fall.
In many of my videos I say: “Don’t agree with me? Prove me wrong.”
Today, I respond to the toughest comments on my video “Free Palestine? No Thanks.”
Let’s see if anyone actually managed to prove me wrong.
"We must create an additional non-contiguous Arab republic on behalf of a polity that by all available evidence doesn't want such a country to exist" has to be one of the weirdest obsessions of the American elite https://t.co/FX50wOW0Up
— Armin Rosen (@ArminRosen) July 11, 2025
Full report here:https://t.co/OSqC3DZSEI pic.twitter.com/FdwpUoIslm
— Eitan Fischberger (@EFischberger) July 11, 2025
The Economist, March 24
— Eitan Fischberger (@EFischberger) July 11, 2025
vs.
The Economist, July 2025 pic.twitter.com/YLrfaoHKpz
John Cusack: Israeli, American Flags Symbolize ‘Genocide’ to Many People
Actor John Cusack (Gross Pointe Blank) lamented that Israeli and American flags symbolize “genocide” for some people.
In a post on BlueSky, Cusack said that the “Israeli and American flags are the flags of genocide” for many people now.
“I believe in justice, human rights and dignity for all people, and I oppose hatred and bigotry toward any group based on their race, religion, identity or ethnicity. States & state flags represent many things to many people — to many now Israeli and American flags are the flags of genocide,” he wrote.
Cusack has become increasingly more extreme in his rhetoric during the the Trump era and was recently accused of sharing an antisemitic Nazi meme in his criticism of Israel. Per Breitbart News:
Radical left-wing actor John Cusack has posted a message so antisemitic that it was even criticized by the denizens of the left-wing bubble social media site BlueSky. Responding to the backlash, Cusack quickly deleted it.
In the deleted Cusack post, the actor linked Biden Secretary of State Antony Blinken to convicted sex offenders Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell all while calling the latter two “Mossad agents,” according to Deadline.
The claim that Epstein and Maxwell were secretly agents of the Israeli intelligence service is an unproven claim that has become popular with the extreme right.
He also recently called Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents Nazis doing the bidding of Trump.
So the name of this "refugee" is Maha Al-Masri.
— Kofy Time (@kofy_time) July 11, 2025
The name Al-Masri in Arabic, means Egyptian.
As a custom Arabs adopt family names after their place of origin. Most Gazans have this family name.
Which means that they are originally from Egypt and are not indigenous to Israel… https://t.co/2eWuPoIxl6
SBS discovers how to time travel
— Australian Jewish Association (@AustralianJA) July 10, 2025
In reporting about the detention of a Gazan in Australia after ASIO seemed her a security risk, SBS appears to claim that the woman was born near Tel Aviv and forced to flee in 1948.
The woman is aged 61 years.
SBS also refers to the woman… pic.twitter.com/7WBcvljm9E
WATCH: CNN’s Scott Jennings gets Democratic Rep. Ritchie Torres to admit that Zohran Mamdani’s supporters and allies are going after Torres because he’s pro-Israel.
— Washington Free Beacon (@FreeBeacon) July 11, 2025
“[Torres] has been courageous on this issue and he has stood up to the radicals and he deserves all the credit in… pic.twitter.com/0ETEXqRqLX
Ritchie Torres is a gay POC whose single mother raised him & his siblings in public housing. He dropped out of college and worked his way to become a Congressman. But none of that matters to leftists because he doesn't support the Palestinian Omnicause. pic.twitter.com/Hdah51tFuL
— daniela (@daniela__127) July 11, 2025
This man has been a leading apologist for Russia and he has the gall to say Israel are the Nazis. It’s moral illiteracy. https://t.co/AkKthYoIZQ
— Eli Lake (@EliLake) July 10, 2025
Here's the video, since I can't link directly to Glenn's masterful strawman. pic.twitter.com/mu7ADBiN4B
— Strxwmxn (@strxwmxn) July 11, 2025
— Nathan Livingstone (MilkBarTV) (@TheMilkBarTV) July 11, 2025
the world told surviving Jews to go live among the people who massacred them & held them in camps for refusing.
— The Electronic Uprising (@uprising_1) July 11, 2025
80 years on and people are defending those who murder us and attacking us for not letting them kill us.
Thanks but we'll take charge of our own defence from now on.
American leftism is the smartest ideology in history pic.twitter.com/IFzY5c6Wk5
— Drew Pavlou 🇦🇺🇺🇸🇺🇦🇹🇼 (@DrewPavlou) July 11, 2025
UKLFI: Palestine Action defies proscription
Palestine Action is continuing to raise money from its website and co-ordinate its members from a Telegram account, despite its proscription on 14 July.Palestine Action protesters told to ‘go floppy’ if arrested
It is openly soliciting cryptocurrency donations, including the use of Monero—a privacy-focused coin often used to obscure financial trails—and Bitcoin. They provide instructions for anonymous donations and even link to a downloadable PDF guide detailing how to donate to their cause undetected.
Not only does this represent ongoing defiance of the law following their proscription, but it also provides a mechanism to fund terrorist-linked activities anonymously.
UK Lawyers for Israel (UKLFI) has reported the organisers of Palestine Action to the counter-terrorism police for potential breaches of Section 15 (1) of the Terrorism Act 2000 regarding fundraising which states that a person commits an offence if he (a) invites another to provide money or other property, and (b) intends that it should be used, or has reasonable cause to suspect that it may be used, for the purposes of terrorism.
The organisers of Palestine Action are also likely to be breaching Section 15 (2) of the Terrorism Act 2000 which states that a person commits an offence if he (a)receives money or other property, and (b)intends that it should be used, or has reasonable cause to suspect that it may be used, for the purposes of terrorism.
Anyone donating through this mechanism is also likely to commit an offence by breaching Section 15 (3) of the Terrorism Act 2000 which says that a person commits an offence if he (a) provides money or other property, and (b) knows or has reasonable cause to suspect that it will or may be used for the purposes of terrorism.
Activists are planning a series of protests in support of Palestine Action in which they should “go floppy” when arrested and use burner phones.Slovakia festival cancels Kanye gig over ‘Heil Hitler’ song
The Telegraph has seen a memo detailing plans for protests in support of the proscribed terror group over the next two weeks in cities including London, Manchester and Cardiff.
The document, called De-proscribe Palestine Action: Action Briefing Doc, advises protesters to bring a burner phone in case theirs gets seized by police, and a book to read while travelling to the protests or while in their cell if arrested.
It also tells demonstrators to consider “going floppy when arrested” because it “adds to the visual drama of the action and is a continuation of civil resistance”.
Palestine Action was made a proscribed terrorist group last month, meaning support for the group is now a criminal offence punishable by up to 14 years in prison. The group’s website has also been blocked in the UK.
Protesters including the Rev Sue Parfitt, 83, were arrested at a Palestine Action demonstration in Parliament Square the day the group was outlawed. Metropolitan Police officers speaking to 83-year-old Reverend Sue Parfitt during a protest in support of Palestine Action
A memo on the forthcoming action, coordinated by the campaign group Defend Our Juries, has been leaked to The Telegraph.
It advises protesters “there’s a substantial risk of arrest, and all taking part should be prepared for that”, but that “the indications from Saturday are that the stakes for action-takers are relatively low”.
It adds: “There can be safety and support in numbers ... but nobody owns resistance to oppression and unjust laws!”
Explaining the rationale for the action, it said: “The proscription of Palestine Action as ‘terrorists’ is a serious assault on democracy and civil liberties. We’ve got to push back. It’s the actions engaging the police that really expose the absurdity of the law.”
A major Slovakian music festival has canceled its upcoming event featuring Kanye West following public outrage over his latest release, a song titled “Heil Hitler.”Anti-Israel trio Kneecap banned from advertising on TfL
The Rubicon Hip Hop Festival in Bratislava, originally scheduled for July 18-20, was set to host the U.S. rapper in what would have been his only confirmed European performance of the year, AFP reported.
Festival organizers announced the cancellation late Wednesday in an Instagram statement, citing “media pressure and the withdrawal of several artists and partners” as key reasons for pulling the plug.
“This was not an easy decision,” the statement read, though it did not explicitly name West as the cause.
The decision came after widespread criticism of West’s May 8 track, released on the 80th anniversary of Germany’s defeat in World War II.
The song includes lyrics referencing West’s legal battles and ends with an excerpt of a speech by Adolf Hitler.
The release prompted sharp condemnation and renewed concerns over West’s pattern of antisemitic remarks and imagery.
A petition demanding West’s removal from the Rubicon lineup gathered thousands of signatures in the days following his appearance announcement.
Two Slovak groups behind the petition said the rapper was “repeatedly and openly adhering to symbols and ideology connected with the darkest period of modern global history.”
Controversial Irish rap trio Kneecap has been banned from advertising its upcoming London show on the Tube network, after Transport for London (TfL) rejected a concert poster featuring a balaclava-style logo linked to Irish paramilitaries.
The decision came as the group posted a message online appearing to accuse the Israeli army of killing children. “Join the IOF, murder kids, fly to London and nothing happens – you’ll be welcomed and applauded,” they wrote on X, using the term “IOF” – a description for the Israel Defence Forces frequently used by anti-Israel campaigners.
TfL said the advert was “likely to cause widespread or serious offence to reasonable members of the public” and confirmed it would not appear across the London Underground. The rejected poster features Kneecap’s signature logo, based on balaclavas worn by Republican paramilitaries during the Troubles, alongside the words: “Kneecap. OVO Arena Wembley, London. Thursday 18 September ’25.”
In a separate post, the group accused authorities of censorship and political interference: “We’ve been banned from advertising on the London Tube. How petty can political policing and interference get… Speak out against genocide and they’ll use every single angle they can to silence you.”
TfL clarified that the decision related only to this specific advert, not a blanket ban on all Kneecap content. “All adverts submitted for display on our network are reviewed on a case-by-case basis,” said a spokesperson. “This advert was rejected as it was deemed that running it would likely cause widespread or serious offence.”
Tom Morello of Rage Against the Machine fame fanboying Kneecap is gross. He claims they’re speaking “truth to power”. How is supporting homophobic, misogynistic terrorists who murder civilians and oppress their own ppl a ‘good thing’? pic.twitter.com/uSZtdgxiVA
— Heidi Bachram 🎗️ (@HeidiBachram) July 11, 2025
Belgian music festival urged to drop Bob Vylan
The European Jewish Association, a Brussels-based umbrella organization representing more than 650 Jewish communities, has urged the organizer of a music festival in Belgium to cancel the appearance of Bob Vylan next week following the band’s statements at the Glastonbury Festival in England.
During the performance on June 28 of Bob Vylan, a group that combines punk rock with grime rap, the duo shouted cries such as “Death, death to the IDF!” “Free, free Palestine” and “From the river to the sea.” Behind them, political messaging referenced the supposed genocide.
The British government has requested explanations from the festival’s organizers and the BBC, which broadcast the concert. The British media regulator Ofcom is also demanding answers from the broadcaster.
British police have launched an investigation into the set. Glastonbury quickly distanced itself from the band, while the BBC condemned its performance as hate speech. They—singer/guitarist Bobby Vylan (real name—Pascal Robinson-Foster) and drummer Bobbie Vylan (real name Pascal Robinson-Foster)—have had their visas for a gig in the United States revoked and have been dropped by their talent agency. They have also been dropped from numerous concerts across Europe.
They are, however, still on the list of performers at next week’s Rock Herk, an annual alternative music festival in Herk-de-Stad, in the Belgian province of Limburg.
In a letter to Maarten Ruelens, the festival organizer, Rabbi Menachem Margolin, chairman of the European Jewish Association stressed that “this is not about silencing criticism of Israel, this is about silencing a proud and unbowed proponent of hate speech against Jews, in a very febrile and dangerous environment for Jewish communities across Europe.
“You do not have to support Israel. You can, even if you choose to do so, support the Palestinian cause. We live in a democracy. But hate speech is entirely different. What Bob Vylan is doing is calling for murder,” Margolin wrote.
One against all. Heroine.
— Eli Afriat 🇮🇱🎗 (@EliAfriatISR) July 10, 2025
UNTIL THE LAST HOSTAGE. pic.twitter.com/SXSfkwD1Xc
New levels of ridiculousness in the pro-palestine propaganda!
— Hamas Atrocities (@HamasAtrocities) July 11, 2025
Showing the Bahai Gardens of Haifa as "beautiful palestine"?
You mean the Bahai faith that, in the Middle East, can only be freely followed in Israel? pic.twitter.com/D6VPcO50Pa
Every accusation is a confession pic.twitter.com/n5bTPH3eFP
— Hamas Atrocities (@HamasAtrocities) July 11, 2025
There is a growing Nazi obsession among pro-Palestinians. pic.twitter.com/H1N8qLGi39
— Open Source Intel (@Osint613) July 10, 2025
🚨 Palestinian flags went up in flames in Northern Ireland last night
— Jews Fight Back 🇺🇸🇮🇱 (@JewsFightBack) July 11, 2025
People are sick of seeing that flag shoved in their faces every single day
Not everyone in Ireland is buying the fake narrative. Not everyone is clapping for Hamas
Patriotic Irish citizens are fighting back. pic.twitter.com/2iVxqBdOPC
"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024) PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022) |
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