The Balfour Declaration is a monument to humanity in this dark age of anti-Semitism
The revival of anti-Semitism has shown in a way no Zionist arguments ever could, the need for a state with a Jewish majority where Jews can live without fear.The illusion of Palestinian peace
The Balfour Declaration contained an important proviso – “that nothing shall be done which may prejudice the civil and religious rights of existing non-Jewish communities in Palestine”. It did not mention the national rights of Arabs, since at that time many believed that such rights were reserved for those of European origin.
All the same, “the civil and religious rights” of Arabs are better protected in Israel than in the murderous regimes and failed states which constitute much of the rest of today’s Middle East.
The early Zionists hoped for Arab acceptance. But a brief period of amity soon gave rise, inevitably no doubt, to a persistent and often violent conflict between two national claims, each backed by religion.
Balfour would not have been surprised. As chief secretary for Ireland in the 1880s, he had been accused of being unjust to Irish nationalists. “Justice” he mused, “there is not enough to go round”. And indeed in the Middle East there isn’t.
Nevertheless, Israel has become an insurance mechanism for Jews against anti-Semitism; and sadly no one can predict when or where that mechanism will be needed.
And that is why, as the diplomatic historian, Tom Otte, has argued, the Balfour Declaration stands as “one of the few monuments to humanity in the 20th century”.
The “ecstasy” of jihad was visible on Oct. 7, in videos of young men calling their parents to boast about killing Jews with their own hands, and in the mobs cheering as kidnapped Israeli girls were paraded through Gaza’s streets.Hamas again hands over remains that don’t belong to hostages
Even academics in the West, such as Cornell’s Russell Rickford, revealed the same moral sickness when he called the massacre “exhilarating.”
Arab–Palestinian wars have always followed this script: an initial eruption of homicidal and suicidal ecstasy, followed by crushing defeat—the War of Independence (1948), the Six Day War (1967), the Intifadas, and now the war of Oct. 7. Yet from each failure, what remains in memory is the thrill of violence, not the price of it.
This mindset—rooted in the dream of expanding Dar al-Islam (the land of Islam) by erasing Dar al-Harb (the land of war)—turns every peace proposal into betrayal, and every act of terror into redemption.
Meanwhile, international institutions like the United Nations invert morality by cloaking this death cult in the language of “human rights.” The result is what the Arab intellectual Fouad Ajami called “a palace of dreams” turned into a trap of death.
The much-discussed “deradicalization” needed for a peace process is nowhere in sight. As this survey makes clear, the obstacle is not Israel’s settlements or borders—it is the culture of hatred itself.
Until that changes, peace will remain a Western illusion.
Hamas transferred to Israel the remains of three individuals that do not belong to any of the 11 slain hostages still held by terrorist in Gaza, Israel’s broadcaster Channel 13 reported on Saturday.
The remains, which Red Cross intermediaries handed over to Israel overnight Friday, were examined by the National Institute of Forensic Medicine in Tel Aviv’s Abu Kabir neighborhood.
The Israel Defense Forces says that at least two bodies of deceased captives can be recovered immediately by the terrorist organization, while Hamas may truly not know the whereabouts of three to five others.
“We ruled out the possibility that the remains returned last night are linked to any Israeli hostage,” an Israeli official told Ynet on Saturday.
“Specifically, this incident does not constitute a violation, since from the outset we assessed with low probability that the remains belonged to hostages. We prefer that Hamas hand over findings so we can verify them. That said, Hamas continues its fundamental violation—the failure to return the bodies of the fallen,” the official added.
According to the ceasefire terms, in cases of uncertainty, remains should be transferred to Israel for verification.
However, Jerusalem believes that Hamas is deliberately slow-walking the return of the deceased hostages to avoid its disarmament, which is set to take place in the second phase of the ceasefire deal with a deployment of an international force in the Gaza Strip.
Instead, the Islamist group is buying time to reassert its control over territory from which the IDF has withdrawn, so it will have greater bargaining power in future talks regarding Gaza’s reconstruction.
Bereaved families, freed hostages demand state inquiry and return of 11 dead captives
Several rallies were held on Saturday evening calling for the return of the bodies of the 11 deceased hostages still held in Gaza amid the ongoing ceasefire-hostage deal, as well as urging the establishment of a state commission of inquiry into the failures surrounding Hamas’s October 7, 2023, onslaught that started the war.In first visit to Hostages Square, Omri Miran says supporters ‘rose up’ out of trauma
Speaking at Hostages Square in Tel Aviv, Eitan Horn, one of the final 20 living hostages released last month, said that for 738 days in Hamas captivity, “even when it was very difficult and frustrating, even when I was starved, even when bombs fell right next to me, I believed that I would return to my brothers, my family, my nation — you.”
Flanked by his brothers Amos and Iair — the latter of whom was freed in February as part of a previous ceasefire — Eitan Horn said it is “not yet time to sum things up.”
“I’m unwilling to go back to day-to-day life as long as 11 of my brothers are not brought back home,” he said. “A funeral and a grave are not a privilege, and we can’t wait any longer. We must bring them all back now.”
“I stand here today as a symbol of the abandonment and destruction of October 7,” he told the crowd after two years of weekly demonstrations for the hostages’ release. “I am also standing here as a symbol of your crazy power and the success of a civil struggle, maybe one of the most important in history. A struggle that will shape the future of our country.”
Yael Adar, whose son Tamir’s remains were returned by Hamas last week as part of the ceasefire — which has been billed as the “first stage” of US President Donald Trump’s Gaza peace plan — said Israel “must not proceed to the next phase of the agreement before the final hostage is returned.” Former hostage Eitan Horn speaks during a protest at Hostage Square in Tel Aviv, calling for the release of Israelis held by Hamas, November 1, 2025. (Miriam Alster/Flash90)
“That is the essence of not leaving anyone behind,” said Adar to the thousands of people gathered at Tel Aviv’s Hostages Square.
Freed hostage Omri Miran made his first visit to Hostages Square on Friday, nearly three weeks after he was freed from Hamas captivity, where he was held for two years after being kidnapped from his Nahal Oz home on October 7, 2023.
“I’m here, and I know that while my nightmare and my family’s nightmare have ended, there are still eleven families living in terrible uncertainty,” Miran said. “I’ve seen and heard how much strength you gave my family during the hardest times, and now I want to give that same strength to the families whose loved ones have not yet returned. Let’s continue until the last hostage comes home.”
He also asked those gathered to stand for a moment of silence in memory of the victims from Nahal Oz, saying, “All those murdered and fallen from the kibbutz on that cursed day are etched in my heart.”
“I’m at a loss for words to explain how moved I am,” he went on. “In the two and a half weeks since I’ve been here, I’ve heard only a fraction of all that has been done. How, out of pain, devastation, and trauma, you rose up and stood beside my family. For that, I thank you deeply.”
Expressing his love for those in attendance, Miran told the crowd, “You give me hope and the knowledge that things will be good, despite everything we’ve been through. Because when these are our values, and these are our people, things will be good.”
Miran, 48, was abducted from his home in the Gaza border community of Nahal Oz on October 7, 2023, when thousands of Hamas-led terrorists infiltrated southern Israel, killing some 1,200 people and taking 251 hostages, sparking the war against Hamas in Gaza.
An emotional message from Hamas captivity survivor Bar Kupershtein at Hostage Square in Tel Aviv, Israel. 🎗️ pic.twitter.com/td1KhaMH9r
— StandWithUs (@StandWithUs) November 1, 2025
Beyond Fentanyl: The War Venezuela Is Waging in the Americas
Venezuela as a Terror HubDan Burmawi: An Open Letter to the Vice President of the United States
Could Venezuela Crisis End Hezbollah's Presence There?
But the U.S. interests in Venezuela goes far beyond drugs. For over a decade, U.S. and regional intelligence agencies have documented Hezbollah and Iranian Revolutionary Guard (IRGC) operations inside Venezuela. Caracas has issued Venezuelan passports and IDs to individuals from Iran, Syria, and Lebanon, including some under U.S. or Interpol investigation for links to terror organizations. This gives Iran a base of operations within flight distance of Miami.
The IRGC and Hezbollah have used Venezuela to launder money, move weapons, and coordinate with Latin American criminal groups. Intelligence reports have pointed to Hezbollah-linked training camps operating in Venezuela’s remote regions, especially in Apure and Bolívar, offering instruction in explosives, communications, and guerrilla tactics. Reports by the Center for a Secure Free Society and congressional testimony confirm that the Maduro regime enables this cooperation in exchange for funds and weapons technology.
Iran also uses Venezuela to evade sanctions, trading oil, gold, and crypto-assets through shell companies tied to PDVSA. These transactions fund IRGC and Hezbollah operations while undermining U.S. sanctions policy, making Caracas a node in Tehran’s global shadow economy.
The Migration Pressure Valve
Between 2021 and 2025, encounters of Venezuelan migrants at the U.S. border rose from about 49,000 to over 400,000. Many arrive without verifiable identity documents. Intelligence agencies report that Caracas has issued passports to nationals from the Middle East, including individuals suspected of ties to Hezbollah and Iran.
From a security standpoint, mass migration enabled by a regime with known terror connections represents a risk of infiltration and border destabilization. The administration sees this as part of a broader strategy: exporting instability through migration.
Iran, Russia, and China: The Triangular Alliance
Triad of Disinformation: How Russia, Iran, & China Ally in a Messaging War against America – Alliance For Securing Democracy
Venezuela serves as a base for America’s top three adversaries.
- Iran supplies drone technology, intelligence support, and personnel through the IRGC and Hezbollah. Venezuela’s state arms manufacturer, CAVIM, produces drones based on Iranian designs, giving Tehran a Latin American production line. Iranian proxies have trained Venezuelan forces and militias in asymmetric warfare, explosives, and surveillance.
- Russia provides mercenaries, cyber specialists, and intelligence coordination. The Wagner Group and Russian advisers have trained Venezuelan units in counterintelligence and drone warfare, while Moscow supplies radar and air-defense systems.
- China has built Venezuela’s digital surveillance infrastructure. Huawei and CEIEC operate facial-recognition and data systems used for political control and potential espionage. Chinese investments in ports, mining, and communications link Venezuela to China’s Belt and Road network in Latin America.
Venezuela’s Chinese- and Russian-built digital systems also enable espionage and influence operations across regional communications networks, potentially allowing adversarial powers to monitor movements or disrupt logistics in a crisis.
Dear Mr. Vice President,Tucker Carlson’s new crusade against Christian Zionists
Last week, Archbishop Atallah Hanna of the Greek Orthodox Patriarchate in Jerusalem sent you an open letter, claiming to speak in “the language of love, faith, and humanity.” In truth, his letter was filled with distortion, resentment, and theological hypocrisy. It had little to do with the love of the One who conquered death by His resurrection, and everything to do with the political fear that has long governed dhimmi Christianity in the Islamic world.
As someone who left Islam and served Christ across the Middle East for fifteen years, I must respond.
In 2008, after leaving Islam, I tried to contact a church in my hometown, Amman, Jordan. The first church I reached out to was the Greek Orthodox Church in Abdali, the very same institution under Archbishop Hanna’s jurisdiction. One hour before I arrived, Jordanian intelligence warned me not to approach any church. But I went anyway, longing to meet brothers and sisters in Christ, to feel that I was finally home. Instead, the priest publicly expelled me. He had been ordered by authorities not to welcome converts. That was my first encounter with the fearful, state-controlled Christianity that the Archbishop represents, a Christianity that bends its knees to tyranny instead of to Christ.
The Archbishop began his letter saying, “You will visit the Church of the Resurrection tomorrow and you will see doors open.”
But he failed to tell you that those doors are closed almost everywhere across the Islamic world, except in Israel. It is precisely because of Israel that Christians still have open churches, protected shrines, and access to the holy places of our faith, it is good to think of Aya Sophia as you read his letter.
That is why this new anti-Israel rhetoric is not just a bad opinion. It is a direct attack on Christian faith. Carlson and his allies are telling millions of Christians that loyalty to the Bible means turning their backs on the descendants of the people who wrote it. They are trying to turn faith into ideology and ideology into idolatry.
And for what? To build a coalition around resentment. These people are guided by anger — anger at global elites, at the media, at “neocons,” and now at Jews. Every failed movement needs a scapegoat, and once again, they have chosen the Jewish people.
The tragedy is that many Christians don’t recognize what’s happening. They think they’re hearing a critique of foreign aid or of Israeli policy. They’re not. They’re hearing the oldest lie in the world, the one that says the Jews are the problem and that peace will come when they are put in their place.
The Christian world has heard that lie before, and it led to the worst crimes in history. That is why Christians and Jews must stand together now. We don’t have to agree on every policy in Israel or every verse of theology. But we do have to defend the basic truth that God’s covenant still stands and that our civilizations rise or fall on whether we honor it.
Carlson’s attempt to divide Christians from Jews won’t succeed if we name it for what it is. The antidote to antisemitism is not more debate but moral clarity. Christians should say clearly that the movement taking shape around Tucker Carlson and Curt Mills is not a “new right.” It is an old hatred in a new suit.
I’ve spent my life working to build understanding between Christians and Jews, and I can tell you this: that work has never been more urgent. There are people who want to burn that bridge for clicks and applause. We can’t let them. The alliance between Christians and Jews is one of the few things still holding our moral world together. It is the reason we still talk about justice, covenant, and the sanctity of life. It’s the foundation of our belief that human beings are made in the image of God.
So when Tucker Carlson sneers at Christian Zionists and calls their faith a disease, don’t take the bait. He’s telling you who he is. He’s not defending Christianity. He’s redefining it into something unrecognizable — a nationalism without love, a religion without Israel, a faith without Jews. That is not Christianity.
This is the line. If standing with Israel makes us heretics in Tucker Carlson’s world, then so be it. I’ll stand with the Bible, not with those who have so clearly never read it.
“Support for Israel is highest among Trump base.”
— Steve Deace (@SteveDeaceShow) November 1, 2025
Bit of a disconnect between what’s happening here/our podcaster world, and what is happening on the ground within our base. And that is also the base that will dominate among GOP 2028 primary voters.
The trend-line of Israel… https://t.co/70Cy83jNtz
If you want to be antisemitic, we already have one political party that features that. Our side can’t tolerate that. We cannot put up with that in our Republican Party. All of us must condemn it in the loudest way possible.
— Rick Scott (@ScottforFlorida) November 1, 2025
Thank you, @RJC, for having me tonight, and for your… pic.twitter.com/eOlBRDEBz8
“I like the idea that being anti-Hitler remains mainstream”
— Aviva Klompas (@AvivaKlompas) November 1, 2025
Preach @DouglasKMurray pic.twitter.com/aDjL37bejf
Valid question from @DouglasKMurray ➡️ "Since when did students going up to Princeton have the hots for Hamas?" pic.twitter.com/Cboz5FehX5
— Aviva Klompas (@AvivaKlompas) November 1, 2025
The amazing @ScottJenningsKY at the @RJC conference
— Raylan Givens (@JewishWarrior13) November 2, 2025
pic.twitter.com/oh0D5pQ5ZE
🚨The great one @marklevinshow : "You don't get to claim you're MAGA and America first when you're lining up with the Marxists and the Islamists and Hamas and the terrorists. That's not America first. That's sick!
— Raylan Givens (@JewishWarrior13) November 2, 2025
pic.twitter.com/0pyqsnNV47
This is accurate and good, but Fine also should have emphasized that Carlson—who hates President Trump—promotes every single left-wing, pro-CCP, third worldist, anti-American globalist that he can find.
— Max 📟 (@MaxNordau) November 1, 2025
Douglas Macgregor, Jeffrey Sachs, Tony Aguilar, Glenn Greenwald, Ana… https://t.co/1dS2a34cQa
Christian support for Israel is not heresy. It is faith in action, anchored in the Word of God, aligned with the heart of God, and consistent with the promises of God. Promises to Israel and to all who believe.
— Tony Perkins (@tperkins) October 31, 2025
My thoughts. pic.twitter.com/fV7XIaZg3m
Tucker Carlson says that he hates Chrsitian Zionists "the most." His dad, Amb. Dick Carlson -- whom I adored -- was a Christian Zionist.
— Joel Mowbray (@joelmowbray) October 31, 2025
Watch how he discusses "people use the word Zionist a lot," re those who attacked his then-employer (and mine), @FDD. pic.twitter.com/P9ibnz17na
Top Michigan Dems Headline Fundraiser for Arab-American PAC Whose Leader Wants Jews Sent ‘Back to Poland’
Democratic candidates in Michigan who reject American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) donations over the Israel-Hamas war spoke at a fundraiser this week for an Arab-American PAC whose leader praises Hamas and called for Israeli Jews to be sent "back to Poland."
Lieutenant governor Garlin Gilchrist, running for Michigan governor, Senate candidate Abdul El-Sayed, and Dearborn mayor Abdullah Hammoud headlined the event, hosted by the Arab American Political Action Committee (AAPAC) in Dearborn on Wednesday.
The PAC is led by Osama Siblani, a prominent Arab-American community leader who owns the Arab American News. Siblani cofounded the AAPAC in 1998 with a mission to elect Arab-American candidates and "lobby on behalf of the Arab American political causes which are of concern to the majority of the community as approved by the members of the organization."
In recent years, those causes included the demonization of Israel and support for terrorist organizations like Hamas and Hezbollah. Siblani has praised the terrorist groups as "freedom fighters." At a rally last September alongside Hammoud, Siblani called late Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah a "hero." Siblani, whose speech was interrupted by chants of "death to Israel," called for Israeli Jews to be sent "back to Poland."
Siblani’s anti-Israel rhetoric has alarmed Jewish groups and some Democratic lawmakers, though others, like Gilchrist and El-Sayed, have cozied up to him over the years thanks to Siblani’s influence in Michigan’s sizable Arab and Muslim communities.
The Anti-Defamation League condemned the Biden administration last year after White House officials met with Siblani in Dearborn to discuss the Israel-Hamas war. Rep. Haley Stevens (D., Mich.), who is running against El-Sayed for Senate, condemned Siblani’s statements last year and said she would refuse to meet with him.
"I will not condone or associate with this kind of relationship," said Stevens. "A grown man should not be saying, 'All Jews should go back to Poland.'"
"Israel exercises its dominion as a vehicle for US imperialist policy. The US is not a loyal ally unless we want to live as vassals". The special rapporteur and now geopolitical expert, Francesca Albanese.
— Leslie Kajomovitz (@kikas6652) November 1, 2025
I guess pretending to be a "lawyer" isn’t working out for her anymore? https://t.co/pQMRu6F37y
South African Health Professions Council: “The Committee RESOLVED that there is evidence of unprofessional conduct on the part of Dr Mofokeng... and to impose as a penalty a fine of R10,000 for bringing the profession into disrepute for using inappropriate language.” pic.twitter.com/6JzhVY6qvb
— Hillel Neuer (@HillelNeuer) November 1, 2025
Should be noted that UNESCO's incoming Secretary General is an Egyptian who was heavily backed by Qatar https://t.co/dWldTgR0LK
— Eitan Fischberger (@EFischberger) November 1, 2025
Secondly, would you mind clarifying when Israel's response to October 7th crossed the threshold into "genocide" territory?
— Eitan Fischberger (@EFischberger) November 1, 2025
Was it October 17th, or prior to then?
Thanks in advance! pic.twitter.com/nYkujLrnO6
US envoy: Lebanon a ‘failed state,’ is unlikely to be able to forcibly disarm Hezbollah
US Ambassador Tom Barrack had blunt words for Lebanon on Saturday, repeatedly calling the country a “failed state,” dubbing its leaders “dinosaurs” and saying that it probably won’t be able to comply with the central US demand that it disarm Hezbollah.
Barrack, who serves as the US envoy for Syria and the ambassador to Turkey, while also handling some diplomacy with Beirut, made the remarks in an appearance at the International Institute for Strategic Studies Manama Dialogue, a diplomatic and security conference in Bahrain.
He also repeatedly urged Lebanon and Syria to forge accords with Israel as part of what he called a greater regional “realignment.” But tensions between Israel and Lebanon have risen as Hezbollah appears to be rearming, and Israel continues to carry out strikes in southern Lebanon, targeting what it says are ceasefire violations by the terror group.
“Lebanon is a failed state,” Barrack said near the beginning of a question-and-answer session, proceeding to enumerate problems in Lebanon’s banking sector and basic infrastructure. Near the end of the appearance, he added, “You’ve had abject chaos and war for 40 years. You’ve had four failed governments… And you’ve had six wars in the time that anybody can remember. So I’m not sure what the state is.”
“So what’s the state?” he said near the beginning of the session. “The state is Hezbollah. You go south, Hezbollah gives you water. It gives you an education, gives you a stipend, has 40,000 soldiers. The LAF, Lebanese Armed Forces, has 60,000 soldiers. The only problem is that Hezbollah soldiers make $2,200 a month. The LAF soldiers make $275 a month.”
He went on to say that Hezbollah, a terror group that effectively controlled southern Lebanon for decades before being decimated in a 2023-2024 war with Israel, still holds some 15,000 to 20,000 rockets and missiles that threaten Israel. The United States has pressed the Lebanese government to disarm Hezbollah, and the government has committed to doing so, but Barrack said the goal was unrealistic.
For those unaware, here’s a recap:
— Emily Schrader - אמילי שריידר امیلی شریدر (@emilykschrader) November 1, 2025
pic.twitter.com/ivvBWlyEvG
The four terrorists eliminated in tonight’s precision vehicle strike in Lebanon have been identified as Jawad Jabir, Hadi Hamid, Abdullah Kahil, and Muhammad Kahil. https://t.co/kP596JhBRR pic.twitter.com/Ug0mIyW4aZ
— Open Source Intel (@Osint613) November 1, 2025
Turkey went along because their asset, Hamas, was two or theee weeks from being utterly obliterated by the IDF. And because they also knew, after Israel’s strike on Hamas leadership in Doha, that Israel will go anywhere to bring the terror masters to justice, even Turkey.
— David Wurmser (@Wurmserscribit) November 1, 2025
So… https://t.co/xO2zfhKzju
CENTCOM posts footage of Hamas terrorists looting aid truck
Hamas in Gaza attacked an aid truck driver, stole the supplies and placed the driver on the side of the road, the American military’s Central Command (CENTCOM) said Saturday on X, posting footage of the incident.
“The U.S.-led Civil-Military Coordination Center (CMCC) observed suspected Hamas operatives looting an aid truck traveling as part of a humanitarian convoy delivering needed assistance from international partners to Gazans in northern Khan Younis,” CENTCOM tweeted.
The Command’s coordination center in the Israeli city of Kiryat Gat, established in October to help monitor the ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, saw the incident via a U.S. MQ-9 Reaper drone flying overhead, the U.S. military said.
The driver’s current status is unknown, it added.
“Over the past week, international partners have delivered more than 600 trucks of commercial goods and aid into Gaza daily. This incident undermines these efforts,” the American military stressed.
Hamas continues to deprive the people of Gaza of the humanitarian aid they desperately need. This theft undermines international efforts in support of President Trump’s 20 Point Plan to deliver critical assistance to innocent civilians.
— Secretary Marco Rubio (@SecRubio) November 1, 2025
Hamas is the impediment. They must lay… https://t.co/ilTnDiV5Vi
Only Muslim soldiers to be allowed to serve as Gaza peacekeepers
The soldiers deployed to Gaza as part of a peacekeeping force will be exclusively Muslim, the Telegraph reported on Friday, citing diplomatic sources.
While the current ceasefire agreement was orchestrated by US President Donald Trump, regional countries will police the Palestinian territory and ensure adherence to the agreement.
The role of the stabilization force is still in discussion, according to the report. It is unclear if the force will be responsible for the disarmament of Hamas or simply policing Gaza once the terror group has relinquished its control.
Which countries will police Gaza?
Jordan’s King Abdullah said earlier this week that he anticipated Amman being one of several Muslim and or Arab countries to play a role in Gaza, though he did not answer whether Jordanian forces would disarm Hamas.
Israeli leadership has also flat-out rejected some nations from playing a role in Gaza, namely Turkey and Qatar, which have diplomatic ties to Hamas. Israel has argued that both Ankara and Doha were founded on the principles of the Muslim Brotherhood, the same Islamist extremist roots as Hamas.
Foreign ministers of some Muslim countries will meet in Istanbul on Monday to discuss the Gaza ceasefire and next steps there, Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan said on Friday, voicing concern over whether the ceasefire will continue.
This is @RTErdogan’s chief advisor, in case anyone needed another reason Turkey shouldn't be allowed to play a role in post-war Gaza. pic.twitter.com/cdqlzwwiF3
— Israel War Room (@IsraelWarRoom) November 2, 2025
"These weapons Hamas is parading around are so they can keep ruling us. I pray to God: if they want to stay here, let Israel come instead."
— Center for Peace Communications (@PeaceComCenter) November 1, 2025
A brave Gazan civilian demands Hamas disarm and leave the coastal strip.
WATCH: pic.twitter.com/EbgViuxVMH
IDF Troops Continue Clearing the Area Around the Yellow Line in the Gaza Strip
— Israel War Room (@IsraelWarRoom) November 1, 2025
The Nahal Brigade, under the command of the Gaza Division, is operating east of the Yellow Line in the Rafah area in accordance with the ceasefire agreement and the directives of the political… pic.twitter.com/stwq6dGU79
Link to the report: https://t.co/aUiaowmLzx
— Joe Truzman (@JoeTruzman) November 1, 2025
This is what happens when uninformed reporters - here, @John_Hudson - attempt to cover int'l law in armed conflict.
— Dr. Brian L. Cox (@BrianCox_RLTW) October 31, 2025
The entire premise is that 🇺🇸 isn't taking allegations 🇮🇱 has potentially committed "human rights violations" in #Gaza seriously. This would mean Leahy Law isn't… https://t.co/bK4StlgnzT pic.twitter.com/dAufFAzmjq
"The US interpretation of the relationship between the law of armed conflict and human rights law, known as the 'lex specialis' principle, means the Leahy Law does not apply to the conduct of armed hostilities, including to @Israel's conduct in Gaza."
— Dr. Brian L. Cox (@BrianCox_RLTW) November 1, 2025
- Important context missing… https://t.co/W0rJknTRPj pic.twitter.com/GCL0A89NiE
First off, Palestinian detainees are not "hostages." Look up the definition & you'll see why.
— Dr. Brian L. Cox (@BrianCox_RLTW) November 1, 2025
Palestinian DETAINEES are not entitled to be visited by the Red Cross. Look up Common Article 3 to the 1949 Geneva Conventions & you'll see why.
Journalists are prevented from entering… https://t.co/6vUkwlRWYB
New York deserves a mayor who unites, not divides
This pattern is not new. It is the world’s oldest prejudice, and each generation of Jew-haters wraps it in new slogans and ideologies. Today’s attacks on Zionism and Jewish identity repeat the same falsehood that Jews alone must justify our existence. Attacks on Israel’s legitimacy mirror older attacks on Jewish identity because the right of Jews to self-determination in our ancestral homeland lies at the heart of Jewish peoplehood. When leaders refuse to acknowledge Israel’s right to exist and confront that lie, hatred grows, and history is rewritten with tragic consequences.Obama calls Mamdani, praises campaign ahead of November 4 NYC mayoral election
The lesson endures: Given the real and active threats facing Jewish New Yorkers, candidates and officials must strengthen law enforcement and direct resources to protect synagogues, schools and community institutions. They must treat the defense of Jewish life as a moral duty and ensure that city agencies prosecute anti-Jewish crime so every Jewish New Yorker feels secure.
Beyond moral clarity, leadership demands competence. New York cannot afford on-the-job training.
Even The New York Times concluded that Mamdani is unfit to govern a city of this scale and complexity. The next mayor must protect every New Yorker equally. That role demands clarity, conviction and the humility to listen, as well as the courage to act. True leadership must unite, not divide. Those who inflame tension or target one community fracture the civic fabric that holds this city together and forfeit the public’s trust.
Those who aspire to lead must take responsibility for their words, reject association with anyone who traffics in hatred or glorifies terror, and confront those who spread lies about Jews. They must make their values unmistakable through action, not performance. Silence in the face of incitement signals complicity. Voters deserve leaders who rise to the moral demands of the moment.
Even in moments of isolation, we affirm life, build bridges and strengthen the shared future of New York City. Those who seek to lead must choose unity over division and responsibility over rhetoric. Political debate must never become a license for prejudice or hate.
Former Democratic president Barack Obama called New York mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani Saturday and offered to be a “sounding board” if the 34-year-old frontrunner wins the election. He also praised Mamdani's campaign.
The call, first reported by the New York Times, was confirmed by Mamdani’s spokesperson.
"Zohran Mamdani appreciated President Obama’s words of support and their conversation on the importance of bringing a new kind of politics to our city,” said Mamdani spokesperson Dora Pekec.
Mamdani, a Uganda-born state assembly member, has polled well ahead of his main rival, former New York state governor Andrew Cuomo, ahead of the November 4 general election.
Cuomo is running as an independent after losing to Mamdani in the Democratic primary. Guardian Angels founder Curtis Sliwa is the Republican nominee.
Soros tried to kill this story. The @DailyMail did not back down. They published anyway.
— Sam E. Antar (@SamAntar) October 31, 2025
$40M+ documented flows through 9 channels. 6 organizations coordinated operations—all endorsed same candidate, mobilized ground operations. Admitted publicly, denied on federal forms.
My…
A "smear campaign".
— habibi (@habibi_uk) November 1, 2025
Sami Hamdi smeared himself with his own verbal ordure. He was ecstatic when Hamas carried out the worst massacre of Jews since the Holocaust.
Spare us. pic.twitter.com/mt9inoGL82
The @australian nails a virtue signalling super fund for hurting members interests to appease a union and the "chant-monkeys who do their marches and sit-ins on Collins Street every weekend" 🤣https://t.co/AQF8cNQkEV pic.twitter.com/LR3ZwzygAW
— Daniel (@VoteLewko) November 1, 2025
UK's TfL supervisor refuses to remove pro-Palestinian graffiti, says there should be 'more'
A Transport for London (TfL) supervisor refused to remove pro-Palestinian graffiti and said there should be "more of it" following a complaint about the vandalism, according to a Friday statement by UK Lawyers for Israel (UKLFI).
The pro-Israel organization said that the incident took place in August of this year, and that the passenger, after seeing that a “Service Information” board was covered with the words "Free Palestine," attempted to report the vandalism at Bank Station, but didn't find any staff members present.
The passenger decided to report the vandalism at Liverpool Street Station via a friend who had gone there. There, the friend was met by a TfL supervisor and another staff member, who greeted her with “hostile and confrontational” behavior. The former reportedly wore a “Palestine Solidarity” badge featuring the Palestinian flag, according to the UKLFI statement.
UKLFI added that the supervisor declined to take any action to remove the graffiti and instead said that there should be more like it.
The lawyer's group later reported the incident to TfL, noting that the supervisor's conduct was "intentionally behaved in an inappropriate, rude, insulting and hateful manner to a customer."
Orthodox Jewish man racially abused days prior
The incident with the TfL supervisor came a few days after a bus driver in London was suspended after racially abusing an Orthodox Jewish man before locking him inside the vehicle.
The victim of the abuse, David Abraham, was on his way home from synagogue in Stamford Hill, he told The Jewish Chronicle, adding that his bus card slipped from his hand and fell into the driver's cabin, with the driver refusing to return it and saying, "I don't want to see a Mossad agent in my face... I don't like Jewish people.”
TfL said that the driver's conduct was "unacceptable" and that the Metropolitan Police said the incident was reported as a hate crime, the BBC reported.
For a deeper dive into this topic, check out the discussions of the DSA and PYM right here. And be sure to read my article in @CityJournal where I explore it in full detail. https://t.co/K0l1E3GbMf
— Stu Smith (@thestustustudio) November 1, 2025
Anika Zahir was charged with disrupting Gal Gadot’s film sets in London. She’s one of the nastiest pro-Pals. A normal court process is that your name and area of residence is published. She’s now claiming there’s a conspiracy and her life is in danger. These ppl need help. pic.twitter.com/ienN8yACXF
— Heidi Bachram 🎗️ (@HeidiBachram) November 1, 2025
Hollie Mildenhall urging people to attack the defence industry at a "Palestine Solidarity Campaign" hatred rally in Newcastle. Go on, be a criminal to "fight Zionism"! Now! "Whoo!"
— habibi (@habibi_uk) November 1, 2025
Surely the Green Party needs to select her as a candidate for Parliament. https://t.co/XSv6psBhbP pic.twitter.com/YVRPMcfFQL
Looks like a Leeds pro-Pal set fire to a police van today and jumped on top waving a Quran around. Is that enough violence to get these marches banned? Or are we waiting for more.@habibi_uk pic.twitter.com/wf1SfmkxGd
— Heidi Bachram 🎗️ (@HeidiBachram) November 1, 2025
'Yallah Yallah Intifada'
— Australian Jewish Association (@AustralianJA) November 1, 2025
The indoctrination of children is happening before our eyes pic.twitter.com/45NTnbnyd6
Activists are calling for Rose Nakad to be reinstated by the University of Sydney after her unhinged attacks on Jewish students. An anonymous petition describes her as "a lecturer adored for her innovative and committed approach to teaching and mentorship."
— Daniel (@VoteLewko) November 1, 2025
Nakad is not a… https://t.co/SQbzfwC4Yt
🟥UPDATE: Huda Beauty just cut ties with Huda from its campaign for racism.
— dahlia kurtz ✡︎ דליה קורץ (@DahliaKurtz) November 1, 2025
Surprisingly, no, it wasn't racist Huda Khattan. It was another racist. Huda Mustafa.
And Huda Beauty remains in @Sephora. https://t.co/jOjolbIcRE
It’s a common pattern I’ve seen more than once: incriminating details tend to surface around death anniversaries, during Ramadan, or in post-war/ceasefire periods.
— Middle East Buka (@MiddleEastBuka) November 1, 2025
In this case, it took exactly 2 years after his death for the cousin to mourn the journalist as a combatant publicly… https://t.co/AQmt0vp6D8
Thailandy Restaurant, Gaza City.
— Imshin (@imshin) November 1, 2025
Instagram timestamp: 1 day ago#TheGazaYouDontSee
Link to original Instagram post in 1st comment https://t.co/7vm2IBoQSP pic.twitter.com/MrdcaH3ttf
Ibrahim's brother Abood goes to Thailandy Restaurant, Gaza City, for chicken and rice takeout. He inaccurately writes that it cost $50, but he also shows the receipt, which says 120 shekels, meaning $36.86.
— Imshin (@imshin) November 1, 2025
Timestamp: 4 hours ago#TheGazaYouDontSee
Link in 1st comment pic.twitter.com/Ugoh2UwrBW
Taj Restaurant on Yarmouk St. Gaza City is reopening soon. Owner Abu Bassir shows us some if the cheesy favorites on the menu.
— Imshin (@imshin) November 1, 2025
Timestamps: 20 + 9 hours ago#TheGazaYouDontSee
Links in 1st comment pic.twitter.com/2mPpgJOJVN
Imported cheeses available today at al-Danaf Hyper Mall, Nuseirat, Central Gaza Strip, according to their Instagram Stories.#TheGazaYouDontSee
— Imshin (@imshin) November 1, 2025
Link in 1st comment https://t.co/WAeEhnxyy2 pic.twitter.com/ZGHtaOwEQo
Yemen: UN staff face possible death penalty for alleged Israel cooperation
A few dozen United Nations staff detained by Yemen’s Houthis will face trial over alleged ties to the Israeli airstrikes in August that decapitated the political leadership of the terrorist group, Reuters reported on Friday.Iran says won’t dismantle missiles, ready for war with Israel
“The steps taken by the security agencies were carried out under full judicial supervision. The public prosecution was kept informed step by step with every action taken,” acting Foreign Minister Abdulwahid Abu Ras said in an interview with the news agency.
“Therefore, as long as the prosecution is informed, it is certain that this process is moving toward its conclusion, leading to trials and the issuance of judicial rulings,” he said.
Thirty-six U.N. staff members were arrested after Israel’s attack, though it is unclear how many will stand trial, Reuters reported. At least 59 are currently detained by the Houthis.
According to Emirati state-owned daily The National, 43 U.N. personal are facing trial, most of whom are Yemeni.
The Houthi foreign minister moreover accused the U.N.’s World Food Program of involvement in Israel’s Aug. 28 attack, an accusation that the international body denies.
If found guilty, the U.N. staffers could be executed.
“We call for the immediate release of all of our U.N. colleagues who have been detained arbitrarily, as well as those from NGOs and international diplomatic missions,” U.N. spokesman Stéphane Dujarric told reporters in New York, according to The National.
“We will continue engaging with the Houthis, with the de facto authorities in Sana’a, as well as Member States and partners, to continue to push for the release of our colleagues,” the report added.
The U.N. distributes humanitarian aid in the war-torn country, which about 70% of the population is reliant upon, The National reported.
Iran said on Saturday that although it is prepared to engage in talks about its nuclear ambitions, its missile program is not up for discussion.
“We are ready to talk to address concerns about our nuclear program. We emphasize the peaceful nature of our nuclear program. It is possible to reach a fair agreement, but Washington has set impossible and unacceptable preconditions,” Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi told Al Jazeera.
He added, “There will be no negotiations on our missile program. It would be foolish if one hands over his weapons.”
The top diplomat moreover stated that his country is “prepared for any scenario” in the wake of its 12-day war with Israel in June. Tehran expects “hostile behavior from the Zionist regime. We are at the apex of preparedness at all levels. Israel will suffer another defeat in any future war,” he said.
“We have gained a lot of experience from the recent war and tested our missiles in a real battle,” Araghchi continued. “If the Zionist regime launches an attack, it will come with dire consequences for it.”
The 10-year nuclear deal between Iran and world powers expired on Oct. 18, with Tehran announcing it is no longer bound by the 2015 agreement.
🔥Mohammad Bagheri, an Iranian MP, criticized state media today, saying:
— GAZAWOOD - the PALLYWOOD saga (@GAZAWOOD1) November 1, 2025
> “no F-35 was shot down; no pilot was arrested; no drone factory was discovered - all of this was a lie. The state broadcaster (IRIB) should never have aired these falsehoods.” pic.twitter.com/xTXVjZpwXa
Pennsylvania Catholic diocese ‘appalled’ by ‘Arbeit macht frei’ ref on its Halloween parade float
Timothy Senior, the Catholic bishop of Harrisburg, Pa., apologized on Friday for a “notorious symbol of hate” that was part of one of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Harrisburg’s floats at a local Halloween parade.
“I was shocked and appalled to learn that the Halloween parade float from Saint Joseph Catholic school in Hanover included a replica of the Auschwitz concentration camp gate, bearing the words ‘Arbeit macht frei,’” the bishop stated.
“The inclusion of this image, one that represents the horrific suffering and murder of millions of innocent people, including six million Jews during the Holocaust, is profoundly offensive and unacceptable,” he stated. “While the original, approved design for this float did not contain this imagery, it does not change the fact that this highly recognizable symbol of hate was included.”
Video footage of the parade in the state capital city, which is about 100 miles west of Philadelphia and 75 miles north of Baltimore, showed a float pulled by a truck that appeared to have ghosts on a swing, a jukebox and the replica of the concentration camp gate overlooking a cemetery with gravestones.
“On behalf of the Diocese of Harrisburg, I express my sincere apology to our Jewish brothers and sisters and to all who were hurt or offended by this display. I strongly condemn the inclusion of this symbol on the float,” the bishop said.
A Catholic grade school in PA included the gates of Auschwitz in its Halloween parade. We can all agree that Auschwitz is an epitome of horror. Can we not agree that it is WILDLY INAPPROPRIATE to make it part of an ooga-booga scary parade? Local bishop apologized. pic.twitter.com/gthH0qHfNm
— Rod Dreher (@roddreher) November 1, 2025
'I hope you leave Melbourne soon': Woman denied job in Australia for being Israeli
A young Israeli woman was denied a job at a local business in Melbourne, Australia, due to her nationality, with the owner accusing her of being complicit in genocide, N12 News reported on Saturday.
“Unfortunately, the position has been filled by someone who has a semblance of humanity and who cares for plants, animals, and the environment. Good luck on your journey and I hope you leave Melbourne soon!” the message from the owner, Brett Dahan, read.
He then went on to accuse her of supporting genocide and ended the message with "Free Palestine."
The unnamed 24-year-old woman told N12 that she was frustrated by the incident.
“I’m just frustrated that they’re so unaware of reality and allow all their knowledge to be based on trends, and that’s where this disgraceful behavior comes from,” she said.
'GARDEN OF EDEN' NURSERY BUSINESS LAUNCHES UGLY ATTACK ON JEWISH GIRL
— Australian Jewish Association (@AustralianJA) November 1, 2025
A young Jewish girl from Israel applied for a job at the Garden of Eden nursery in Albert Park.
The co-owner Brett Dahan launched an ugly attack on the girl's background according to the Herald Sun.
This… pic.twitter.com/grbIFEs9hC
Hey Ben, challenge accepted.
— Embassy of Israel to the USA (@IsraelinUSA) October 31, 2025
Our flavor: Am Yisrael Chai - tastes like strength, unity, and standing your ground. Not everyone can handle it. 😏🇮🇱 pic.twitter.com/xgpRctbcMr
Middle Eastern Minorities Unite in Tel Aviv, Call for Alliance with Israel
— ME24 - Middle East 24 (@MiddleEast_24) October 31, 2025
A unique conference in Tel Aviv, reported by Israel’s Channel 14, brought together representatives of Kurds, Druze, Alawites, Yazidis, and Assyrians to express a shared message: “We want an alliance with… pic.twitter.com/gvi6VSOF4C
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"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024) PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022) |
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