Monday, January 26, 2026

From Ian:

NYPost Editorial: What the final Israeli hostage’s return really means
Israel soon responded in a campaign to rescue the captives and ensure Hamas could never do this again, ideally by wiping out the barbarians, root and branch.

Every sane nation should’ve cheered that mission — yet many instead compounded the pain, turning on Israel as antisemitism surged around the globe.

Yet ending Hamas’ existence should still be the guiding principle as Trump and his Board of Peace work to secure a true, long-term end to hostilities in Gaza, and maybe beyond.

At the least, the terrorists must lose their arms and any political or administrative power.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Trump agreed to give Hamas until March to lay down its weapons, with the prez threatening “hell to pay” if it didn’t.

Yet several of its leaders have vowed never to disarm, and the group has been jockeying for some continued political role in Gaza.

What do you think? Post a comment.

Gvili’s return ends a chapter, but clearly the full story of the Oct. 7 massacre won’t truly be over until, as Bibi has put it, Gaza can never again threaten Israel.

Pray that day comes soon.
David Horovitz: With Ran Gvili’s return, Israel’s leadership fulfills sacred obligation to the nation it failed on Oct. 7
Formally, the recovery of Gvili’s body completes the first phase of US President Donald Trump’s broader peace plan for Gaza, and ushers in the next phases, under which Hamas is supposed to relinquish its weapons, the Strip is to be demilitarized, the IDF is to gradually withdraw, and a new, non-threatening Gaza is to be eventually constructed.

Most imminently, Ali Shaath, the former Palestinian Authority deputy minister appointed to head the National Committee for the Administration of Gaza, announced on Thursday that the Rafah Crossing between Gaza and Egypt would open within days in both directions. And Netanyahu, who is deeply wary that any such concession will be abused by the still potent Hamas, reluctantly went along, to the fury of his far-right coalition partners. His office on Sunday night conditioned reopening the crossing on the completion of the search for Gvili’s body — a condition now successfully met.

Hamas, it should not require stressing, has not wavered from its goal of eliminating Israel. Rather, it evidently concluded that releasing, first, all 20 remaining living hostages and now, finally, the last of the 28 deceased hostages, has paved the best path to avoiding ongoing, potentially intensified US-backed Israeli military pressure. Still controlling almost half of Gaza, it believes it is creating conditions under which it will be able to fudge the issue of what exactly becomes of its arms, rebuild its personnel and resources, continue to benefit from the support of a world full of Israel-haters and fools, await more conducive US leadership, and resume its “resistance” to the Jewish state.

Israel had two clear goals for a war it had no choice but to fight against Gaza’s terrorist government in the terrible aftermath of October 7: destroy Hamas, and get all the hostages back.

The first goal is not completed; the war in its current form is over, but Hamas is not destroyed.

But the second, mercifully, has now been accomplished. Israel’s political and military leadership has cleared a critical hurdle in rebuilding its relationship with the citizenry it so catastrophically failed to protect 843 days ago. The hostages have been returned. To the very last one.


IDF recovers remains of final hostage Ran Gvili after covert operations in northern Gaza
The IDF found the remains of the last Israeli hostage from the October 7 invasion, St.-Sgt.-Maj. Ran Gvili, on Monday at around 2:00 p.m. at al-Batesh cemetery in the Shejaia-Daraj-Tuffah part of northern Gaza. His funeral will be held on Wednesday in his hometown of Meitar.

The Shin Bet (Israel Security Agency) on Monday night revealed that the major intelligence development that led to the breakthrough was the capture of a specific Islamic Jihad terrorist with knowledge of Gvili’s remains’ whereabouts around a month ago.

This terrorist also divulged, under Shin Bet interrogation, the identities and locations of additional Islamic Jihad operatives who had been involved in moving Gvili’s body numerous times.

All of this information strengthened the determination that Gvili had been buried at al-Batesh cemetery.

The IDF had checked around 250 Palestinian bodies in the cemetery before finding Gvili. Over 20 dentists worked for the last 24 hours in conjunction with the army to quickly identify the teeth of the 250 bodies exhumed.

According to the IDF, in an earlier briefing on Sunday night, a series of clandestine operations started over the weekend to get closer to the potential location of Gvili. There were four locations where the IDF suspected Gvili might be buried.
US politicians, Jewish groups welcome liberation of final body from Gaza
American politicians and Jewish groups applauded the return of the body of Ran Gvili to Israel on Monday, marking the first time since 2014 that no Israeli hostages remain in Gaza.

U.S. President Donald Trump stated that “most thought of it as an impossible thing to do.”

“Just recovered the last hostage body in Gaza,” the president wrote. “Thus, got back all 20 of the living hostages, and all of the dead. Amazing job.”

Hamas abducted 251 Israelis and foreign nationals into Gaza during the terrorist group’s attacks in southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, 168 of whom returned alive.

Hamas agreed to release the final 20 living hostages and 28 bodies, including Gvili, in a ceasefire agreement with Israel that the Trump administration announced in September.

Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, who has been involved in those peace negotiations with Hamas, described how the administration secured the release of the remaining hostages.

“Under Trump’s leadership, special envoy Steve Witkoff and I worked closely with the Central Intelligence Agency, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his team, the Israel Defense Forces, Egypt’s General Intelligence Service, Turkey, Qatar and many cooperative Gazans to make possible this unthinkable outcome,” Kushner wrote.

“Coordination and trust were built between individuals and organizations where none previously existed. This produced tangible results,” he wrote.
Trump affirms Hamas disarmament next step in Gaza, welcomes return of final hostage
US President Donald Trump affirmed that Hamas must disarm as part of Phase II of the ceasefire in Gaza in an interview with Israeli Axios reporter Barak Ravid on Monday.

"Now we need to disarm Hamas, as they promised," Trump emphasized.

Trump praised the terror group for working "very hard" to return the remains of St.-Sgt.-Maj. Ran Gvili, whose remains were located and returned to Israel earlier on Monday.

"They worked very hard to get the body back. They were working with Israel on it. You can imagine how hard it was," he said, describing the search.

The identification process and search for Gvili's remains were "very difficult," he noted.

He also clarified that he was informed by his administration's special envoy, Steve Witkoff, and Jared Kushner that Gvili's remains had been located, before speaking to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who was "thrilled."

"This is bigger than people realize. Apart from the Gvili family and people in Israel, no one believed that we would bring back all the hostages. It was a big moment. Please tell the parents that I am very happy," he added.
PM after Gvili’s return: Next phase in Gaza is not reconstruction, it’s demilitarization
Following the return to Israel on Monday of the final slain hostage, Ran Gvili, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and US President Donald Trump both said in separate statements that the Gaza ceasefire’s next challenge would be the disarmament of Hamas.

Hamas’s disarmament, meant to take place under the second stage of the truce, is broadly seen as one of the most difficult pieces of the plan for postwar Gaza laid out by Trump last year. But on Monday, both leaders drew a comparison between the quest to bring back all of the hostages, which was once seen as improbable, and the effort to disarm Hamas.

There is widespread skepticism in Israel that Hamas will agree to give up its weapons. The terror group has previously rejected the idea.

“The next phase [in Gaza] is not reconstruction,” Netanyahu said, speaking at a special Knesset session honoring Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama. “The next phase is disarming Hamas and the demilitarization of the Gaza Strip.”

He added that it was in Israel’s interest “to advance this phase, and not to delay it.” Then, repeating a warning he has made before, the prime minister said, “It will happen the easy way or the hard way. But it will happen.”

Later, speaking to a gaggle of reporters in a Knesset corridor, he chastised the media for its negativity on the next phase, and said there had also been doubts that Israel could return all of the hostages.

“Always doubting, always scolding,” he said of the press, telling the reporters to have “a little faith. We mean it. We have other missions: to disarm Hamas, to demilitarize Gaza… I have a plan, we have missions, and we are executing them.”


‘Our pride is greater than our sorrow’: Family of Ran Gvili hail his heroism, Israel’s strength, as body comes home
Standing over the coffin of his son that has been draped in an Israeli flag, Itzik Gvili appeared at a loss for words.

For 843 days, since Ran Gvili left home on October 7, 2023, to fight Hamas terrorists before being killed and taken to Gaza, Itzik Gvili and his wife, Talik, had held out the slimmest of hopes that their boy was still alive — despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary.

Now, standing bereft over the coffin, the father lifted up his hand and raised his eyebrows. “What can I say?” he asked, sighing.

Then, in the presence of police officers and soldiers accompanying Ran Gvili on his final journey home, Itzik spoke to his son.

“You dummy, you had every chance to stay at home,” he said, a soft smile playing on his lips. “But you said, ‘Dad.’ What did you tell me? ‘I won’t leave my friends to fight alone.'”

He continued, “You should see the respect that you’re getting here, everyone who brought you. The whole police force is with you, the whole army is with you, the whole nation is with you.”

As his hand patted the coffin, he added, “I’m proud of you, my son.”

Then he bent down and kissed the coffin.

The coffin was then taken to Tel Aviv’s National Institute of Forensic Medicine, for a more robust identification process. Gvili was set to be given a proper Jewish burial on Wednesday.

Itzik Gvili’s words were a striking moment in an evening full of emotion for Israel, as the return of Ran’s body marked the end of the more than two-year-long ordeal of the hostages and their families.

“I want to thank everyone who stood by us for the last two years,” Talik said outside the family’s home on Monday night. “We’re very proud to get to this place, especially because we know that those who took Rani out of that cursed place were IDF soldiers.”


JPost Editorial: Phase II runaway train: Gaza peace plan moves ahead, but Israel is being left behind - editorial
The Board of Peace includes Qatar and Turkey, both of which Netanyahu insisted could not be part of the forces that are expected to disarm Hamas. But because he and his government failed to present their own “day after” plan for Gaza throughout the two-year war and during the subsequent ceasefire, the result is much worse than it could have been.

Israel’s insistence that the Palestinian Authority was off the table has resulted in Hamas supporters being put in charge of disarming the terrorists. We know how that is going to play out.

Just as critical, at the Board of Peace signing ceremony last week, it was announced that the Rafah border crossing into Gaza would be reopened this week for Gazans entering from Egypt. Although it was part of Trump’s 20-point plan, Israel has been insistent that until Gvili’s body is returned and Hamas is disarmed, Rafah would only be open for Gazans wanting to leave the area for Egypt, but not both ways.

According to reports in Hebrew media outlets, Israel was informed about the decision to announce the two-way opening of the crossing but was not consulted. The Prime Minister’s Office refused to confirm that the crossing would be opened and issued a bland statement that the security cabinet would discuss the issue at the beginning of the week.

Under international pressure, Israel will, of course, have to comply. Even if reports that the government plans to conduct significant oversight of the crossing bear fruit, it’s still not how Israel wanted the reopening of Rafah to play out.

Israel wants to restrict the number of Palestinians entering Gaza through the border crossing with Egypt to ensure that more are allowed out than in, Reuters reported Friday. It didn’t explain how it planned to enforce limits on the number of Palestinians entering Gaza from Egypt or what ratio of exits to entries it aimed to achieve, the report said.

That concept will surely butt up against the aims of the Board of Peace.

Former MK Einat Wilf, an Israel advocate, posted over the weekend a proposal saying, “If Gazans want to return to Gaza, it means they are thereby saying that Gaza is their home.” If they want to enter, they would need to give up their UNRWA “refugee” certificate and sign a declaration that they have no right of return to Israel.

That’s wishful thinking and would be a silver lining to a developing process by which Israel is being railroaded into accepting decisions that compromise its security.

Netanyahu and his government should have devised a “day after” proposal that made Israel an integral partner, instead of kowtowing to Trump’s whims and the Board of Peace’s dictates, ensuring Hamas’s exclusion from Gaza’s rebuilding.

The government failed to do that, and now it appears to be powerless to stop the runaway train from bearing down and enabling Qatar and Turkey to rebuild Gaza with their natural partner, Hamas.
'Handing Gaza to the PA': Israeli officials slam partially opening Rafah Border Crossing
Israel has agreed to a limited reopening of Gaza’s Rafah Crossing for pedestrian traffic only, under a full Israeli monitoring mechanism, the Prime Minister’s Office said in a formal statement on Sunday night.

The move, aligned with President Donald Trump’s “20-point plan,” was contingent on Hamas returning all hostages, living and deceased, and on what the PMO described as a “100% effort” by Hamas to locate and return the remains of all fallen captives.

The statement and political reactions came before Israel confirmed the identification of St.-Sgt.-Maj. Ran Gvili's remains on Monday.

The IDF carried out a focused operation to locate and recover Gvili’s remains in northern Gaza near the yellow line.

Now that the operation has been completed, and in line with understandings with the United States, Israel expects to open the crossing to people only, with Israeli inspection in place, the PMO said.

Several senior ministers opposed the move during the cabinet discussion, arguing it conflicts with wartime objectives, foremost the destruction of Hamas, and could shape future sovereignty arrangements in Gaza.

National Missions Minister Orit Strock said, “We are handing Gaza to the Palestinian Authority with the blood of our children… then what will we tell our soldiers?”

Transportation Minister Miri Regev said Israel must ensure that “the rule in Gaza is neither Hamas nor the PA.” Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich warned that reopening Rafah without full Israeli control would mean “we will get a Palestinian state.”
Khaled Abu Toameh: 'Gaza's Colonization Council': Hamas's Actual Position on Disarmament, Trump's Board of Peace
Hamas is clearly unfazed by Trump's repeated threats that it must give up its weapons. The terror organization maintains that Israel is the one that needs to be disarmed. Hamas has become used to Trump's recurring threats over the past year -- especially with Qatar, Turkey, Pakistan and Saudi Arabia on Trump's new Board of Peace to make sure that Hamas is left untouched. Hamas is apparently convinced that Trump's threats are just a means of scaring the terror group.

Trump seems to regard the Gaza Strip as a real estate enterprise that can be managed by earnest investors, politicians and technocrats, and not as a terror hub for Hamas and other Islamist Jihadists committed to destroying Israel and replacing it with an Islamist state.

These countries will undoubtedly serve as Hamas's representatives on the Board of Peace and make sure that the terror group preserves its political and military presence not only in the Gaza Strip, but in the Palestinian arena as well. The assumption that Qatar, Turkey, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia or other Arab and Islamic countries would participate in any effort forcibly to disarm or demote Hamas and the other Palestinian terror groups is nothing but a starry-eyed make believe.

"The composition of the Gaza administration committee is also flawed, as all its members are loyal to the Palestinian Authority, masquerading as technocrats and professionals." — Yassin Ezzedine, Palestinian political analyst, felesteen.news, January 18, 2026.

Palestinian poet and journalist Ali Jahiz described the Board of Peace as "a major catastrophe... a peace board for the occupation of Gaza and the disarmament of the resistance. It is headed by the criminal Trump, and consists of bodies led by Zionists, with nominal participation from regional countries. In short: A dangerous occupation with multiple fronts."

Another important fact that Trump and his advisors need to pay attention to: Hamas is threatening to attack members of the proposed International Stabilization Force in the Gaza Strip.

Hamas's refusal to disarm, its opposition to the Board of Peace, and threats to kill members of the International Stabilization Force signal that the terror group and its supporters have total contempt for Trump or anyone who seeks a better life for the Palestinians in the Gaza Strip. For the Islamist terrorists, the Jihad to destroy Israel takes precedence over reconstruction, economic prosperity, everything.


Tikvah Podcast: Johnnie Moore and Meir Soloveichik on Jews, Evangelicals, and Israel
Tikvah has campus chapters at many colleges and universities throughout the United States, and earlier this week we welcomed over 100 delegates from over 40 chapters to our annual college conference, the Redstone Leadership Forum. The closing session at that conference brought Reverend Johnnie Moore together with Rabbi Meir Soloveichik to discuss evangelical Christians, Israel, and the Jews. Moderating their discussion was Jonathan Silver, the editor of Mosaic. A recording of that live conversation is our broadcast this week.
Episode 83: From ideology to narcotics, Hezbollah's business model, with Matt Levitt
The fall 2024 Israeli operations that decimated Hezbollah’s missile arsenal and leadership structure marked a pivotal turning point for the Middle East. To understand the wreckage left behind and the organization's resilient global web that is already hard at work helping it to recover, I am joined by Matthew Levitt, one of the world’s leading experts on counterterrorism. Levitt pulls back the curtain on Hezbollah’s "Golden Rule"—the less you know, the better—and explains how a group traditionally viewed through the lens of regional militancy has transformed into a sophisticated, multi-continental criminal syndicate.

The conversation dives deep into the surprising reality of Hezbollah’s diversified portfolio, including illicit operations in Latin America and Africa. As financial support from Iran has fluctuated, Levitt details how the group has used ethical justifications to lean into organized crime to sustain its activities. We explore the implications of these global networks for regional stability the precarious future of Lebanon.

Chapters
00:00 Introduction to Hezbollah and Matthew Levitt
03:43 Understanding Hezbollah's Golden Rule
06:10 Hezbollah's Drug Trafficking Operations
11:06 Financial Pressures and Illicit Activities
21:28 The Future of Hezbollah in Lebanon


IDF Podcast: Debunking: The Gap Between Headlines and Reality
🎙️LTC Nadav Shoshani breaks down the facts about the aid that enters Gaza, operational updates across all fronts, and explains how the term “gaslighting” finds its way into the conversation.
Australia cancels visa of Israeli critic of Islam
The Australian government canceled the visa of a British-Israeli activist and critic of Islam shortly before he was scheduled to fly Down Under to speak before Jewish audiences.

“As in other cases, they wait until the last minute,” the Australian Jewish Association, which invited the activist known as Sammy Yahood to speak, said on X, noting that the visa was yanked three hours before Yahood’s flight was scheduled to take off.

Yahood, who uses that name (it means “Jews” in Arabic) for safety reasons, grew up in the United Kingdom and recently moved to Israel, was due to run a series of self-defense workshops and launch his “peace through strength” campaign.

“Another Jewish visitor has had his visa canceled. Sammy Yahood is a British and Israeli citizen. He is Jewish,” the AJA wrote.

The visa’s cancellation coincided with a new policy meant to keep out threats to the Jewish community, AJA said. “Parliament just voted to increase the powers of Toby Burke to cancel visas as an apparent response to support the Jewish community following the Bondi massacre,” AJA said, referencing the murder of 15 people at a Chanukah party in Sydney on Dec. 14.

Robert Gregory, the CEO of AJA, said in a statement that the cancellation of Yahood’s visa was part of a “misuse of Interior Minister Tony Burke’s ministerial powers” under new hate speech laws.

Yahood, who has called on Diaspora Jews to move to Israel and said that most of their communities were doomed, was scheduled to speak at major synagogues in Sydney and Melbourne and to participate in a series of events with Jewish organizations.

“He now joins a growing list of Jewish visitors whose visas have been revoked by Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke, including former Israeli Justice Minister Ayelet Shaked, American technology entrepreneur Hillel Fuld, and Knesset member Simcha Rothman,” Gregory noted.

“The persistent targeting of Jewish visitors” by the government of Prime Minister Anthony Albanese “has contributed to the rise of antisemitism in Australia. This reinforces deep concerns within the Jewish community that, despite the horror of the Bondi massacre and the government’s belated apology, the Albanese government hasn’t changed and was never genuine,” Gregory added.

One of the events in Sydney was due to be attended by survivors of the Bondi massacre.


Mamdani ‘Economic Justice’ Appointee Blamed Israel for Oct 7 Attack and Defended ‘From the River to the Sea’ Slogan in Since-Deleted Posts
New York City mayor Zohran Mamdani (D.) has hired an anti-Israel activist who blamed Israel for Oct. 7 and defended slogans calling for the elimination of the Jewish state in since-deleted posts on X. He will serve as Mamdani's deputy communications director for economic justice.

Waleed Shahid—who advised far-left politicians like Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D., N.Y.) and former congressman Jamaal Bowman (D., N.Y.) before joining Mamdani’s administration—called Hamas’s attack "a byproduct of Israel’s violent policies of occupation and the second-class status of Palestinians" on Oct. 7, the Jerusalem Post reported.

Soon after, he defended Rep. Rashida Tlaib’s (D., Mich.) use of the phrase, "From the River to the Sea, Palestine will be free" in the weeks after Hamas’s Oct. 7, 2023, attack.

Shahid wrote the post just before the House of Representatives censured Tlaib for using the slogan, which is commonly heard among supporters of terrorist groups like Hamas and which calls for the replacement of Israel with a Palestinian state between the two bodies of water.

Shahid also falsely accused Israel of bombing Al-Ahli Arab Hospital in Gaza after the Jewish state published evidence showing that the blast at the medical facility was caused by a misfired Palestinian Islamic Jihad rocket rather than the Israel Defense Forces.

He called for a "ceasefire" between Israel and Hamas before Israel launched its major Gaza operation and condemned Israeli "atrocities" against Gazans less than two weeks after Oct. 7. He also described Israel as "a state that systematically deprives Palestinians of basic rights and a state of their own" in another deleted post on X.

Mamdani’s move to hire Shahid comes after the mayor appointed several anti-Israel and anti-Semitic advisers to his cabinet and transition team. His director of appointments, Catherine Almonte Da Costa, resigned after old social media posts—including one in which she bemoaned "Money hungry Jews"—came to light. A top adviser on Mamdani’s transition team, Hassaan Chaudhary, used the word "Jew" as a slur and praised former Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad for saying Israel is a "cancer which will be eliminated very soon."


Kanye West apologises to Jews for his antisemitic behaviour – again
Kanye West has taken out a full-page advertisement in the Wall Street Journal, saying “I am not a Nazi or antisemite. I love Jewish people” and attributing his behaviour in early 2025 to bipolar disorder.

In the ad, West said that “In early 2025, I fell into a four-month long manic episode of psychotic, paranoid and impulsive behaviour that destroyed my life.”

The best-selling rapper and producer also said: “I regret and am deeply mortified by my actions in that state, and am committed to accountability, treatment, and meaningful change. It does not excuse what I did though.”

West described how “In that fractured state, I gravitated toward the most destructive symbol I could find, the swastika, and even sold T-shirts bearing it.” He did not mention other examples of the behaviour he engaged in last year, which included regular online rants targeting Jewish people, as well as releasing a song called “Heil Hitler”. Nor did he mention that his antisemitic behaviour predated 2025, with similar outbursts having taken place in late 2022, at which time he associated with far right white supremacist, Nick Fuentes. In 2023 West published a similar apology to the Jewish community, saying he was “committed to making amends and promoting unity.”

In his latest apology, West linked his behaviour to a car accident he had been in 25 years ago, which he wrote “caused injury to the right frontal lobe” of his brain, but which he said was not properly diagnosed at the time, causing serious damage to his mental health.

In November 2025 West was videoed meeting with Rabbi Yoshiyahu Yosef Pinto, a strictly orthodox rabbi in New York, where the music creator expressed “profound remorse” for his past actions.


Man arrested over alleged antisemitic remarks made at Australia Day rally
A man has been arrested after allegedly making antisemitic remarks at an Australia Day rally in Sydney.

Police stopped the 31-year-old man on Bourke Street at Surry Hills after he allegedly made inciteful comments during a speech at a protest at Moore Park.

He was taken to Surry Hills Police Station and charged with publicly incite hatred on ground of race causing fear, a NSW Police spokesperson said.

He was refused bail and is set to appear in court on Tuesday, police said.

The man is alleged to have said that recently passed hate speech laws were “pushed by the Jewish lobby groups in Australia”.

“They were behind it all,” the man allegedly said.

He then allegedly told the crowd that Jewish people were the “greatest enemy to this nation”.

“They’re an enemy to Western civilisation, and for thousands of years Christians and Anglos, the white man, has known that the Jew is our greatest enemy,” he allegedly said.

The man also allegedly yelled "heil Thomas Sewell”, referring to the notorious neo-Nazi.

It comes as after a number of March for Australia and Invasion Day protests were held across major Australian cities on Monday.






Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

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

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 



AddToAny

Printfriendly

EoZTV Podcast

Podcast URL

Subscribe in podnovaSubscribe with FeedlyAdd to netvibes
addtomyyahoo4Subscribe with SubToMe

search eoz

comments

Speaking

translate

E-Book

For $18 donation








Sample Text

EoZ's Most Popular Posts in recent years

Search2

Hasbys!

Elder of Ziyon - حـكـيـم صـهـيـون



This blog may be a labor of love for me, but it takes a lot of effort, time and money. For 20 years and 40,000 articles I have been providing accurate, original news that would have remained unnoticed. I've written hundreds of scoops and sometimes my reporting ends up making a real difference. I appreciate any donations you can give to keep this blog going.

Donate!

Donate to fight for Israel!

Monthly subscription:
Payment options


One time donation:

Follow EoZ on Twitter!

Interesting Blogs

Blog Archive