Tuesday, May 05, 2026

  • Tuesday, May 05, 2026
  • Elder of Ziyon


Ask most Americans what the Bill of Rights is and they will tell you it is a list of things the government must protect — free speech, due process, protection against unreasonable searches. Ask them what obligations the Constitution places on citizens and the list seems thin: paying taxes, jury duty, the draft when it existed. If there is a covenant, there must be obligations on both sides. So what are Americans supposed to do to hold up their end?


The Constitution does ask Americans for things, though not explicitly — the obligations are implied by the architecture rather than enumerated in the text. At the epistemic level, the Constitution presupposes a citizenry capable of self-governance, which is not a natural condition but one achieved by study and participation. Jefferson understood this clearly: “If a nation expects to be ignorant and free, in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be.” The ignorance he was warning against was the civic ignorance of people who have inherited the covenant’s protections without understanding what the covenant requires of them in return.

Americans are expected to vote — but to do that meaningfully they must be informed enough to engage in the associational life that Tocqueville identified as the actual machinery of self-governance.

The Declaration and the Constitution assume that every person has dignity and must be treated as such, and that obligation falls on citizens as well as governments. “Endowed by the Creator” means the rights precede the state — which means the people must treat each other as bearers of those rights, not only demand that the government do so. That requires engaging in good faith with people who disagree, subjecting your own positions to genuine scrutiny, and treating the argument process as something that constrains you rather than something you are trying to win.

And at the deepest level sit constitutive obligations — the ones the covenant member owes not to any particular institution but to the framework itself: maintaining the conditions under which other citizens can fulfill their obligations, ensuring that the covenant’s promise of genuine membership is real for everyone who has accepted its terms, holding the covenant to its stated standards even when that is personally and politically costly.

Most of the current damage to American civic life is happening at the epistemic and constitutive levels — in the domains no law can reach, in the space between the legal floor and the ceiling of full covenant membership, where the law was never supposed to go and cannot repair what is breaking. We have forgotten what we owe.


There is a structural reason why the obligation side of citizenship has atrophied while the rights side has grown. Democratic politics has a built-in incentive asymmetry: demanding rights wins votes, demanding obligations loses them. The politician who promises to expand what citizens receive will reliably outperform the politician who reminds citizens what they owe. The incentive corrupts the political class’s communication before anyone consciously decides to be dishonest — rights-language is rewarded, obligation-language is punished. Over decades, the vocabulary of citizenship contracts to the language of entitlement, and the vocabulary of obligation quietly disappears.

There are exceptions worth naming. Kennedy’s 1961 Inaugural Address was striking not only for what he demanded but for his clarity that people should expect no concrete benefit in return: “Ask not what your country can do for you — ask what you can do for your country….With a good conscience our only sure reward, with history the final judge of our deeds, let us go forth to lead the land we love.” Roosevelt’s Fireside Chats tried to unite Americans to cooperate through both the Depression and a world war. Both understood that the covenant requires something from citizens that cannot be purchased or legislated. That understanding is largely absent from contemporary political leadership.

Civics education was supposed to resist this atrophy. At its best it was the formal mechanism by which each generation of native-born citizens was introduced to the covenant they had inherited — not just its protections but its demands, not just what it gave them but what it expected in return. It has all but disappeared due to a convergence of failures from opposite directions. Standardized testing squeezed it out by rewarding only what could be measured in math and English scores; civics value shows up in behavior years later, not in next semester’s results. The political left found the traditional civics narrative — America’s founding, its greatness, its heroes — uncomfortable and politically inconvenient, and rather than reform it to incorporate honest accounting of the covenant’s failures, delegitimized the narrative entirely. The political right found honest accounting of those failures threatening to its preferred story, and replaced civics with pageantry — celebration without examination, patriotism without obligation. Both destroyed civics from different directions; neither transmitted the covenant.

The result is a citizenry that relates to its government the way a consumer relates to a service provider. The government delivers, the citizen receives, and the only question worth asking is whether the delivery is satisfactory. Obligations feel like interruptions. Jury duty is resented. Voting is optional. Writing to a representative is something other people do. The covenant’s demands, which always depended on civic culture rather than legal compulsion for their transmission, have simply ceased to be transmitted.


A little reflection shows that obligations are not foreign to Americans — they simply operate closer to home. We are obligated to our families, to our friends, to our coworkers, to our local communities. We volunteer for charitable causes and neighborhood watches and emergency services and school PTOs. These are covenants operating at intimate scale: the unstated but very real agreement that if we expect to be helped when times get rough, we are also expected to help others when things are hard for them. Marriage is an explicit covenant. The neighborhood watch is an implicit one.


What this reveals is a set of concentric circles of obligation, outward from family to neighborhood to community — and the national covenant sits at the outermost ring, not qualitatively different from the others but more abstract, more demanding, and far easier to ignore.

Beyond the community sits the city or state covenant — the obligations that come with belonging to a specific place and its particular institutions. Further out sits the national covenant: the most abstract and the most easily deferred. These covenants differ in scale and specificity, not in kind. The obligations of family are highly specific, immediately legible, enforced by proximity and love and daily contact. The obligations of national covenant are abstract, enforced only by civic culture and the citizen’s own sense of what membership requires. This is why the national obligations are the most commonly neglected — they carry the least immediate consequence for the individual who ignores them while producing the greatest long-term damage to the covenant everyone depends on. If one person ignores the national covenant, there is no noticeable impact. When everyone shirks the responsibility, the national covenant can fail catastrophically.

Beneath all covenants, at the foundation rather than the outer ring, sits the dignity floor: what you owe persons prior to any covenant, the non-negotiable minimum that no covenant may breach. You do not need to be in a family covenant, a community covenant, or a national covenant to owe another person basic recognition of their inherent dignity. That obligation precedes every other; the covenants above it specify what more you owe within particular relationships without replacing or overriding the foundation.


Beneath the covenantal obligations — beneath the national, the civic, the communal — sits something the covenant cannot create and cannot replace: personal integrity. This is the capacity to be the same person in private that you present in public, to mean what you say when you say it in the presence of witnesses, to feel the weight of a commitment not because someone is watching but because you understand yourself to be someone who keeps commitments. The covenant presupposes this capacity. It cannot install it.


Washington understood the problem with uncomfortable clarity. Where, he asked in his Farewell Address, is the security for property, for reputation, for life, if the sense of religious obligation deserts the oaths that courts of justice depend on? He was asking what makes a person keep faith with a commitment when breaking it becomes convenient — and his answer was that religious obligation, the sense of a witness who cannot be deceived or evaded, was what reached that space. The problem is real. Washington was describing what happens when the person in front of you can calculate, coolly and correctly, that defection costs less than compliance.

No framework fully solves this. A person entirely without conscience will defect from a covenant as readily as they will lie under oath. The Quakers understood this better than Washington did: their refusal to swear oaths rested on the argument that a person of genuine integrity needs no special invocation, because their ordinary word is as binding as any sworn statement. The oath-to-God mechanism, on this view, is weaker than it appears — it creates a two-tier system of trustworthiness, implying that statements made without it are less reliable, rather than demanding that every statement carry the same weight.

What the covenant can do — what it does, at its best — is create the conditions under which integrity is more likely to develop and be maintained. The repeated public commitment; the community that witnesses and holds you to what you said; the constitutive act of entry that makes defection visible as self-contradiction rather than mere rule-breaking: these are not substitutes for integrity, but they are the environment in which integrity forms. This is why Washington’s concern, though genuine, pointed to a problem already present in covenantal structures millennia before the American founding. The Sinai covenant did not assume its members were already righteous. It assumed they were people in whom righteousness could be cultivated, given the right framework of obligation, community, and repeated public affirmation.

Integrity, then, is the unlegislatable prerequisite. It is not a covenant obligation in the sense of something you owe the framework from the outside; it is what makes you capable of having obligations at all. A citizenship built on rights and obligations, but populated by people who treat their commitments as costs to be minimized when no one is watching, is a citizenship that will collapse into the forms of the covenant without the substance — the correct words at the investiture, the ballot cast with no thought behind it, the hand over the heart during the anthem while calculating what can be extracted from the system before someone notices. Adams was right that the Constitution was made for a moral people. What he left implicit, and what Washington named, is that morality in this sense is not a policy position or a religious affiliation. It is the condition of meaning what you say.


Rights and obligations flow in opposite directions through this structure, and the difference matters for understanding what the covenant asks of citizens at each level.


Rights flow downward. The Declaration establishes the moral premises at the highest level of abstraction — all men are created equal, endowed with unalienable rights, government exists to secure these rights and derives its just powers from the consent of the governed. The Bill of Rights translates those premises into specific, enforceable, constitutive commitments at the federal level. State law then builds specific rules and implementations above that federal floor, and the individual receives, at the end of this chain, specific protections that constrain what any level of government may do to them. The further down the chain you go, the more specific and legally enforceable the protection becomes — the federal level is moral and principled, the state and local level legal and specific.

Obligations flow outward. The individual bears the most concrete and immediately legible obligations at the family level, where the covenant is intimate and the consequences of breach are felt immediately by people whose faces you know. Moving outward through community, city, state, and nation, the obligations become progressively more abstract, harder to fulfill through daily action, and easier to defer. The national obligations — accepting electoral outcomes, supporting the institutions that constrain all parties including your own, maintaining the framework even when it produces results you oppose — are the hardest to hold because no one is there to notice when you drop them, and the ones that matter most for whether the covenant survives.

Kennedy understood this asymmetry and named it directly. His Inaugural Address asked Americans to act without expectation of personal reward — not because sacrifice is intrinsically noble but because the national covenant’s obligations are too abstract to carry their own enforcement. Only citizens who understand what they owe and choose to honor it anyway can sustain what no law can compel. No president since has stated this as plainly.


At this moment, covenantal civic behavior — the daily, unglamorous practice of honoring obligations that no one can compel — is degrading, not disastrously and not irreversibly, but measurably. Each generation that fails to transmit the covenant’s obligations makes the following generation’s transmission harder. Each breach that goes unaddressed normalizes the next.


The rest of this essay is available to subscribers on Substack and will be seen in my forthcoming book. 



Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

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

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

  • Tuesday, May 05, 2026
  • Elder of Ziyon

I have never seen an article like this in Arabic before. 

In fact, it is not even conceivable that the Washington Post, New York Times, Time magazine, Reuters  or CNN would ever write this.

From LebanonOn, platforming an article originally published in the anti-Hezbollah Nidaa al-Watan:

Why is the number of Christians increasing in Israel despite their decline in the Middle East?


"We protect and we build" is not merely a slogan; it is presented as a defining characteristic of a segment of Christians in Israel, who are recognized as active members of society through service, education, and civic engagement. While the Christian presence in the Middle East is experiencing a significant decline due to emigration and unrest, Israel enjoys relative stability and growth in its Christian population. Educational institutions affiliated with Christian denominations operate within a global educational system that has contributed to the emergence of successive generations of highly educated graduates.

Christianity is the third largest religion in Israel, with approximately 185,000 Christians by the end of 2022, representing 1.9% of the population. They are primarily concentrated in the north of the country. Israel recognizes ten Christian churches within its denominational system, granting them authority over personal status matters such as marriage and divorce. Data confirms that freedom of religious practice is guaranteed without restrictions for all denominations.

 Data indicates a growing Christian presence in Israeli society, both in the civilian and military spheres. The number of Christian recruits in the Israeli army tripled in 2025 compared to previous years, with hundreds already serving. Lieutenant Colonel Ihab Shleian, the highest-ranking Christian officer in the army in 2021, was quoted as saying that Christians are "at the forefront of defending Israel, alongside Jews and Druze."

In the field of education, Christian schools achieve high results, with a high school graduation rate of 84% among their students in 2022, exceeding the national average. Graduates of these schools also achieve top scores on national examinations. Data shows that more than half of Christians in Israel have a higher education, with a significant percentage holding advanced degrees.

 Christians in Israel enjoy religious freedom, including the freedom to worship, proselytize, and manage religious and educational institutions, as well as to publicly celebrate their faith. The 1967 Law for the Protection of Holy Places criminalizes the desecration of religious sites or obstructing access to them. Despite this legal framework guaranteeing religious freedom, there has been a recent increase in anti-Christian incidents. These include the arrest of two soldiers for spitting on an Armenian archbishop and pilgrims, the vandalism of a Maronite center during Christmas, and the writing of racist graffiti on buildings in the Armenian Quarter. Israeli authorities have investigated all of these incidents, and the perpetrators have been held accountable.

 In contrast, Christians in a number of Middle Eastern countries face significant challenges, ranging from legal restrictions to acts of violence. In Yemen, only a few thousand Christians remain, and they cannot practice their rituals openly, facing threats of violence and arbitrary arrest. In Turkey, there have been reports of the deportation of hundreds of peaceful Christians under the pretext of "national security," restrictions are imposed on the training of clergy, obstacles are placed in the way of building places of worship, and the rights of Protestants to bury their dead are not protected, while Hagia Sophia and the Chora Church have been converted into mosques.

 Other countries in the region have also witnessed the destruction of historical Christian sites, as happened in Iraq and Syria at the hands of ISIS, as part of targeting the Christian presence, while Christians in Syria continue to face violence, and in Egypt, Coptic churches have been subjected to bloody attacks.
It mentions the recent incident of IDF soldiers desecrating the statue of Jesus and on eother, noted that the IDF held the soldiers accountable, and added: 
 
 Israeli Chief of Staff Eyal Zamir said in a speech during a conference for senior army officers that "the immoral incidents we have witnessed are the result of a long and complex period, but they do not justify them," stressing that "we must not compromise our values, and that the erosion of standards may be as dangerous as operational threats," addressing the attendees by saying: "Is this the army you want? This is a rebellion against the values ​​of the Israeli army."

Zamir stated that "the phenomenon of looting and breaking religious symbols, if it exists, is shameful and may tarnish the reputation of the entire Israeli army, and if such incidents occur, we will investigate them."

 The existence of an article like this shows how anti-Israel the mainstream media is. There is nothing inaccurate, it keeps everything in context - and therefore no editor of major news organizations would approve it. 






Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

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

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

From Ian:

Mourner in Zion Dara Horn reviews Rachel Goldberg-Polin’s new memoir.
I have never met Rachel Goldberg-Polin—though saying this feels somehow false, since at this point, every English-speaking Jew on earth is in a parasocial relationship with her. We have seen her at rallies fighting for her then still-living son; we have heard her voice on podcasts weeping for her executed child; we have seen her on television, her fight and her pain always on public display. And since Jews are a global family, I have, inevitably, also had some indirect contact with her. A mutual acquaintance told me that, remarking on the title of my book People Love Dead Jews, she suggested that the next one should be called People Hate Live Jews (ultimately I chose something even worse). This second-hand comment has stayed with me because it felt like more than a dark joke. It hinted at something that the public Goldberg-Polin, despite her enormous emotional exposure, rarely if ever expresses: rage.

Part of the galvanizing appeal of the cause of the hostages for worldwide audiences was that the hostages fit into the category of the kind of Jews that non-Jewish (and Jewish diaspora) audiences are more comfortable with: Jews who are powerless. This is one of the reasons for the broad acceptance of Holocaust memorialization, a history in which Jews are generally presented as powerless and pitiable victims. Goldberg-Polin is a woman of unfathomable energy and courage, but this unexamined and unconscious attitude toward Jews was part of what made it possible to share her public grief on mainstream American media outlets like 60 Minutes. It would be inconceivable, for instance, for the mother of a fallen IDF soldier to do so.

In Israel, in contrast, young Jews who have been killed fighting in Gaza are mourned alongside the civilians murdered or kidnapped on October 7. Everyone understands they are in the same fight for their lives, against an enemy that makes no distinction between soldiers and civilians. In her book, Goldberg-Polin dramatizes this equivalence with a moving personal story. She describes her fellow synagogue congregant Oshrat’s son Yuval, who constantly yelled Hersh’s name as he fought in Gaza, hoping to find his friend. At the end of Goldberg-Polin’s shiva, Oshrat was the one who recited the ritual statement “Get up from your mourning” and “took my broken paw in her cool, confident hand, and pulled me up into my New World.” A few months later, when Yuval was killed in Gaza, “it would be my hand to put into Oshrat’s broken paw, pulling her up into The New World where we both now live.”

When We See You Again is a deliberately apolitical book, almost stridently so, and, almost certainly, necessarily so. Beyond some important (and tragically not obvious) statements about mourning civilians on both sides, Goldberg-Polin makes no comments at all about the military or other choices of the Israeli government, which hostage families in Israel often vocally opposed. There was an inescapable—and for Hamas, intentional—tension in the official dual war aims of returning the hostages and defeating Hamas. The cause of freeing the hostages rightly became a near-universal obsession in Israel and the wider Jewish world, both because of the long Jewish tradition of ransoming captives and because of the sheer human horror of elderly people and children, even babies, being kidnapped, and innocents of all ages being shackled, beaten, starved, tortured, and in many cases sexually assaulted. But this meant negotiating with people who are “not like us,” people who regard murder, kidnapping, rape, and torture as legitimate, and it meant accepting their ever-more-outrageous demands, most consequentially the release of hundreds of convicted terrorists, many of them murderers. In 2011, Yahya Sinwar, the architect of October 7, was, of course, returned to Gaza, along with a thousand other convicted terrorists in exchange for Gilad Shalit. The recent hostage horror show threatened to turn Jewish existence into a sickening real-life Trolley problem, in which “Bring Them Home Now” might be a track toward generating even more bereaved mothers in the future.

In discussing Hersh’s death, Goldberg-Polin invokes an ancient folktale retold by Victor Frankl as “Death in Tehran,” though it is more popularly known under Somerset Maugham’s title “Appointment in Samarra.” The point of the story is that no one can escape their predestined appointment with death. But, as she knows better than anyone, her son’s murder was not a natural disaster or force majeure; it was the result of human perpetrators making monstrous choices in “lands where we should not go,” including not only Gaza but also Qatar and Iran. Perhaps this is what drew her to a story called “Death in Tehran.”

Goldberg-Polin’s memoir is about her terrifying immersion in personal grief, not a confrontation with the political evil that produced it. But as she guides her readers through that gutting grief with all her luminous goodness and courage on display, it is easy to imagine her finding her why, in her (and our) horrific new world, where we all desperately need more goodness and courage like hers.

The prophet Jeremiah also gave us the divine response to the original mother Rachel’s wail from Ramah: “Restrain your voice from weeping, your eyes from shedding tears. For there is a reward for your labor… and there is hope for your future.” There is.
Seth Mandel: The Chilling Truth Behind the New School’s War on Hillel
Buried in a 2007 decision by Israel’s high court is the key to understanding an important part of the Arab-Israeli conflict that has migrated to America and the rest of the West.

The case illuminates recent events at the New School and elsewhere.

A Palestinian connected to the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, a terrorist organization, was petitioning the Israeli courts to nullify a decision that would stop him from being able to travel abroad. Officials argued that he’d be a security threat. His attorneys argued that he was also running a “humanitarian” NGO, al-Haq, and thus had a right to continue that work abroad.

The infamously left-wing court agreed, through gritted teeth, that the security officials had presented a convincing case that the man was a threat: “Nevertheless, the current petitioner is apparently acting as a manner of Doctor Jekyll and Mister Hyde, acting some of the time as the CEO of a human rights organization, and at other times as an activist in a terror organization which has not shied away from murder and attempted murder, which have nothing to do with rights; rather, they violate the most basic right of them all, the most fundamental right that without which there are no other rights—the right to life.”

That description of al-Haq and its director—terror operatives masquerading as NGO directors and using their “human rights” group as a free pass to kill Jews—is a Rosetta Stone for our age. And why would an NGO director be the perfect job for a terror operative? The Israeli high court revealed this, too:

“A director of a human rights group has a special status similar to that of journalists or humanitarian workers; the security concerns must be concrete to justify hindering his freedom of movement.”

Today we are plagued by these “special status” holders.

Last week in New York, the student senate of the New School, a private university, voted to stop all funding of the local chapter of Hillel, the campus Jewish center. Though framed as some sort of stand against Israeli aggression, this move was obviously and undeniably anti-Semitic. Terror groups and their American public-relations pets tried to claim that Hillel was guilty of funding war crimes because it supports the IDF.

One of the sources of information for this claim? The Hind Rajab Foundation, a Hezbollah-linked Mr. Hyde dressed up as humanitarian Dr. Jekyll.
How Europe's classrooms are being turned into factories of antisemitism
What are Irish, Spanish, and Norwegian children learning about Israel and the Jewish people? What happens when a teacher shows a classroom of children photographs of Palestinian children from the Nakba alongside photographs of Holocaust survivors liberated from a death camp? When do textbooks describe Auschwitz as a "camp for prisoners of war"? When does an education system teach that Jews promote violence? When do new curricula present the war in Gaza as "genocide"?

Across Europe, a slow but dangerous shift is underway. A one-sided narrative is seeping into classrooms – sometimes officially, more often as the personal views of teachers shaped by the society around them. The result is a generation that may grow up with a distorted image of Israel, Judaism, and history.

Three countries illustrate the problem with particular sharpness: Ireland, Spain, and Norway. In Ireland, a near-total public consensus against Israel has taken hold, expressed across the entire political spectrum and throughout the media. In Spain, where 82% of the public believes Israel is committing genocide in Gaza, even news outlets that are supposed to be objective use the term in their reporting.

The anti-Israel line taken by the media and by a government that leans on the radical left – reinforced by Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez's own claim that Israel is committing genocide – has created a public atmosphere in which Israel is seen as a malevolent and murderous actor.

Norway presents a similar picture. 88% of members of the country's largest trade union – which includes Norway's largest teachers' association – voted in favor of a boycott of Israel.

Here, too, power lies with a left-wing government that depends on the radical left. The discourse around "the genocide Israel is committing" has been ongoing since early 2024, and most of the media takes a pronounced anti-Israel line.

Ireland: when an error becomes policy
Orly Degani, a board member of the Jewish Community Council of Ireland, has been closely monitoring what is being taught in Irish schools. The picture that emerges from the textbooks, she said, is alarming. "Auschwitz is described in them as a 'prisoner of war camp' rather than an extermination camp. Judaism is presented as a religion that believes the only way to achieve justice is through violence.

"Another book, intended for children aged 4–5, puts forward the narrative that Jews did not like Jesus – classic antisemitism passed down from generation to generation." According to Degani, the problem is not necessarily malicious intent on the part of teachers, but a lack of knowledge and oversight. The Irish education system allows a wide range of bodies to publish textbooks, as long as they cover the subjects set by the government – but there is no meaningful oversight of the content.

"The government decides on the subject areas, and then any educational body that wants to can go and print a textbook. When we explained to the Ministry of Education that this produces problematic content, they said it was not within their control and that it was the publisher's responsibility."

The examples Degani cites are not theoretical. An official examination by the State Examinations Commission listed Palestine as a place where there are "many Jews." "The exam went through checks," Degani said. "It was approved by educational authorities, and it went out to every school. What does a child think when they receive that page?"

Monday, May 04, 2026

From Ian:

The Violence They Wanted By Abe Greenwald
Via Commentary Newsletter, sign up here. Israel, overall, is thriving. Its terrorist enemies are on life support and their main patron is paralyzed and destitute. At the same time, it’s never enjoyed closer ties with a multitude of Arab neighbors, some of whom it’s providing with defense assets. The Israeli stock market and birth-replacement rate both keep breaking records.

You’d think that if a movement had failed as conclusively as the supposed free-Palestine crowd, it would either rethink its approach or begin to fall apart. But it’s done the opposite. With this record of failure on its stated aims, the movement is now becoming bolder and, sadly, more accepted by important figures outside its ranks.

What, then, keeps it going? Why are unapologetic Hamas supporters now driving through the gates of the Democratic and liberal establishment to stake their claim at its heart?

Because, while Gazans are miserable and Israel is flourishing, the “anti-Israel” thugs have succeeded in one powerful way. Around the world, they’ve unleashed an unprecedented storm of hateful violence. In synagogues and schools, at religious celebrations, and on campuses and the streets of Jewish neighborhoods, they’re getting Jews killed for being Jews.

It’s what sustains them because it’s what they wanted from the start. And history shows that cowards bow before those who embrace uncompromising violence. The beasts are attacking, and the cowards are bowing.

The Jews, in the face of threat and despite the reality of death, stand upright—in Israel and the Diaspora. We must because no one else will, because the threat isn’t going away on its own, and because it is only courage that defeats depravity.
Jay Solomon: The Iranian Terror Group Targeting Europe’s Jews
Counterterrorist experts tracking HAYI believe most of its recruitment is happening online, rather than by the IRGC activating local cells or dispatching terrorists into Europe. These experts said HAYI is using Telegram, in particular, due to its high engagement rate and relative anonymity.

In one recent Telegram chat, an anonymous recruiter asked a potential operative in the UK: “What expertise and abilities do you have?” The potential operative replied: “Open to hearing what you need, depending on what I would get in return.”

“Print out a photo of Trump and Netanyahu, set it on fire in one of London’s famous streets, and send a video of it,” the recruiter then wrote. “This is the first step to building trust, and I will pay for it,” the recruiter continues. The payments would be made in cryptocurrency, according to the Telegram messages, which were viewed by The Free Press.

U.S., European, and Israeli officials are particularly alarmed by HAYI’s use of teenagers and criminal gangs, many of whom appear to display no loyalty to Iran or the IRGC. And those arrested often aren’t Muslim.

The foiled March 28 attack on Bank of America’s headquarters in Paris offers a case in point. French police arrested four men, aged 16 to 21, while they attempted to ignite a large pyrotechnic device at the bank’s entranceway in the city’s eighth arrondissement. Police investigators learned that the eldest man recruited the teenagers by offering them between 500 and 1,000 euros to carry out the operation.

HAYI’s apparent use of amateurs in Paris likely diminished the effectiveness of its operations. But that doesn’t mean they lacked ambition, according to Parisian police authorities. France’s Le Monde, citing forensic experts at the Paris Police Prefecture, said the device planted by the HAYI team was “very high power” and could have generated a “fireball several meters in diameter.”

HAYI’s terrorism and social-media operations are intertwined to maximize their propaganda value, counterterrorism experts said. The recent attacks on Jewish targets in the Netherlands, including a synagogue and religious school, were followed minutes later by online posts of videos and comments. “The close proximity of these channels to Iranian-aligned networks, combined with the near-immediate reporting and access to attack footage, suggests that they were informed of the incidents almost in real time, either directly by the perpetrators or via intermediaries,” Julian Lanchès of the International Center for Counter-Terrorism in The Hague wrote last month.

U.S. officials said there has been no evidence that HAYI has sought to conduct operations inside the U.S. But there is mounting concern about that possibility now that the U.S.-Iran war has entered its third month.

Tehran has shown a growing willingness to operate inside the U.S. in recent years, often using proxies and criminal gangs. Last year, two members of an Eastern European criminal syndicate were convicted of trying to assassinate Masih Alinejad, an Iranian American journalist who lives in New York, on the orders of the Iranian government. And in 2022, a Lebanese American man named Hadi Matar stabbed and nearly killed novelist Salman Rushdie at a cultural festival in upstate New York. Matar is facing charges of providing material support for Hezbollah. In March, another Lebanese-American man allegedly rammed his car into a Michigan synagogue in a terror attack that the FBI says was “Hezbollah-inspired.”

The surge in anti-Israel activism on U.S. college campuses also could provide an organization like HAYI with a rich environment to draw recruits to its cause, counterterrorism officials told me. “Could it translate across to the U.S.?” asked Roger Macmillan, a London-based counterterrorism expert who has closely tracked HAYI’s emergence over the past two months. “Of course it could.”
Palestinian Authority's 'Reforms': Incitement in Classrooms, Empty Promises to the West
[T]he European Parliament has condemned Palestinian Authority textbooks for the seventh year in a row, citing the ongoing defamation of Jews, incitement to violence, and the promotion of jihad (holy war) as well as "martyrdom." Members of European Parliament also called for future PA funding to be strictly conditional, based on genuine reform. Demanding conditions and accountability is overdue but extremely welcome.

"[T]he PA [Palestinian Authority] has repeatedly and explicitly rejected calls to reform its curriculum. In public statements... senior PA officials—including the Prime Minister, Minister of Education, and curriculum directors—have all affirmed their unwillingness to make even minor changes to school textbooks." — Impact-se, November 2025.

"A central component of the PA curriculum's antisemitic narrative is that it categorically rejects Jewish presence in the region. Not only has content teaching Jewish history and the origin of the Jews been ejected entirely from PA textbooks since 2016, but the current curriculum explicitly refutes the very existence of a Jewish people.... The PA curriculum encourages students to believe that they share the same goal: of expelling the colonizing 'invaders,' the Jews, from the Palestinians' indigenous homeland, presumably to Europe, as they are presented as entirely foreign to the region." — Impact-se, November 2025.

In fact, the reverse is true. In 1977, senior Palestine Liberation Organization official Zuheir Mohsen openly admitted in an interview in the Dutch daily Trouw: "The Palestinian people does not exist. The creation of a Palestinian state is only a means for continuing our struggle against the state of Israel for our Arab unity. In reality, today there is no difference between Jordanians, Palestinians, Syrians and Lebanese. Only for political and tactical reasons do we speak today about the existence of a Palestinian people, since Arab national interests demand that we posit the existence of a distinct Palestinian people to oppose Zionism."

The Jews have lived in the area, such as Judea, continuously for nearly 4,000 years; they are the indigenous people as much as the Arabs are.

The PA's own Ministry of Education recently admitted that textbooks currently used in schools "have not been revised at all."

No one is asking the Palestinians to embrace Zionism. However, any society that aspires to statehood and peaceful coexistence -- also not at all certain -- must prepare its next generation for nonviolence, mutual recognition, and respect. So far, there is scant evidence that these results are even in the bottom quadrant of the Palestinian leaders' goals.

This systematic indoctrination has poisoned the minds of generations, making reconciliation far off, if possible at all.

The funding of terrorism must stop. Aid should not subsidize incitement. It should demand the total cessation of terrorism and the total cessation of terrorist funding.

Until such a time, the PA's promise of reform will continue to ring extremely hollow, and peace will be out of reach.
  • Monday, May 04, 2026
  • Elder of Ziyon

The Lebanese Ministry of Health's Own Numbers Undermine the Civilian Casualty Narrative

In April, based on the Lebanese Ministry of Health's numbers, I wrote that roughly 80% of Lebanese deaths in the current war were adult males — far above their approximately 37% share of the population. 

That by itself is improbable if Israel is bombing and destroying indiscriminately, the way the media likes to imply. 

But it turns out those incredible numbers are not even close to the reality.



Their latest infographic shows that there have been 2,679 deaths, of which 2,459 are adult males - which is 91.8%. 

Comparing the April 17 and May 3 numbers, we see the number of women killed and injured has gone down, not up, meaning that they ministry was classifying some people wrongly. 

91.8% males is very impressive. But even that is an undercount, for two reasons.

When we look at the small print in the infographic, we see this:


The Health Ministry, against all international standards, is counting 18 year olds as "children."

A back of the envelope calculation estimates that  between 50-100 of the "children" killed were really 18 years old. So the percentage of adult males may be in the 93-95% range.

But that's not even all of it. 

A Reuters investigation published May 3 — the same day as the ministry's latest dashboard — reports that Hezbollah's own sources say the ministry numbers are incomplete. Three sources, two of them Hezbollah officials, told Reuters that the ministry's figures do not include many of the group's casualties, and that several thousand fighters have been killed, though Hezbollah does not yet have the full picture. A Hezbollah commander told Reuters that scores of fighters went to the frontline towns of Bint Jbeil and Khiyam intending to fight to the death, and their bodies have yet to be recovered.

That means that there are plenty, maybe even over a thousand, terrorists not yet on the Ministry of Health lists.  

This is almost certainly unprecedented for modern warfare (since the days when armies only fought armies.)

The data does not prove that every adult male death is a Hezbollah fighter. It proves something narrower and more verifiable: that the casualty distribution is wildly inconsistent with indiscriminate fire, that Hezbollah's own sources confirm the ministry numbers are a significant undercount, and that the framing of this war as a campaign of civilian devastation rests on numbers that were never true and that even the ministry's own subsequent revisions have moved even further away from.




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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.

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