Friday, July 03, 2026

  • Friday, July 03, 2026
  • Elder of Ziyon


The Free Beacon reports:
The internal chaos roiling the Committee to Protect Journalists deepened late Wednesday, when the embattled advocacy group’s board of directors—under fire for the anti-Israel bias of several members, including the vice chair—voted to affirm that "organizations affiliated with militant groups" meet the criteria of a legitimate journalistic outlet "provided they are not engaging in combat or inciting violence in a manner likely to have imminent effect."

The CPJ’s board voted 17 to 1 in favor of keeping this contentious definition, according to one person familiar with the situation, with Fox News’s representative casting the lone no vote. The CPJ’s influential list of "Journalist Casualties in the Israel-Gaza War," which has been used by news organizations to discredit Israel’s war effort, contains dozens of names of military operatives for Hamas and other terror groups.
This sounds principled — do not presume a journalist is acting as a combatant unless they are holding a gun. But it betrays an ignorance of how war works.

A spotter is a person whose entire job is to watch enemy positions and movements and relay what he sees to the fighters who will act on it. The  ICRC's Interpretive Guidance on Direct Participation in Hostilities treats that activity as combat. Section V.2.(c) lists "the identification and marking of targets, the analysis and transmission of tactical intelligence to attacking forces" among the acts that constitute direct participation in hostilities, stripping civilian protection. The Guidance's own worked example, in footnote 103, is a civilian who repeatedly peeks into a building where enemy troops have taken cover in order to indicate their location to attacking forces; the ICRC concludes she has directly participated in hostilities, because what mattered was the importance of the transmitted information to the execution of a concrete military operation. A person whose only observable act is watch-and-report loses protection under the framework built to protect civilians.

That is for a civilian. All the more so does this apply to a member of a militant organization who reports to a media outlet that is also part of the military. It would be naive in the extreme to presume that a person whose entire salary is paid by, and whose allegiance is entirely to, a terrorist group is only observing enemy positions rather than relaying them. It is even more naive to think that the militant news outlet is not relaying information to their own bosses who are holding the guns. Journalists who belong to Hamas use even more effective tools of combat than a traditional spotter - they can openly operate with a camera (with a telephoto lens) that displays, in real time, video of the enemy position over the Internet directly to Hamas leaders.

The United States DoD Law of War Manual (§5.8.3.1) names the spotter as a paradigm case of direct participation, alongside relaying target intelligence and guiding forces to a target, and no one can plausibly accuse the DoD Manual of violating international humanitarian law — it is the codified practice of the world's most-scrutinized military and it lands in the same place the ICRC does. Two frameworks built from opposite starting points, the humanitarian and the operational, agree that transmitting tactical observation to a fighting force is combat.

The CPJ just handed Hamas and every terrorist organization a gift. Terrorists need only issue every spotter a 'Press' jacket, and CPJ will protect them  by policy. The global journalism apparatus that follows CPJ standards has made itself an accessory.




Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

Reclaiming the Covenant on America's 250th (May 2026)

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

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   

 

 

  • Friday, July 03, 2026
  • Elder of Ziyon

In September 1654 a French frigate put twenty-three Jewish refugees ashore at New Amsterdam, and a few weeks earlier a handful of Jewish traders had arrived from Amsterdam on their own account. These were the first Jews in what would become the United States.

Holland was the most liberal nation in Europe towards its Jews. Sephardic Jews owned houses among the wealthiest Amsterdam merchants, worshipped openly, and held a real if deliberately limited form of city citizenship. For most of the medieval centuries a Jew in Christian Europe could not own land, making the Jew a licensed guest rather than a rooted member of any place. Amsterdam was where that rule had bent. The Jews who sailed for Manhattan already knew what a measure of equality felt like, and they meant to keep it.

On Manhattan they met a governor determined to take it away.

Most Americans who know the name Peter Stuyvesant at all know him as a peg-legged Dutch official from a Washington Irving story. What the record shows is a man who tried to keep the Jews out of the colony entirely and, failing that, spent years working to make their lives there untenable, and who was candid about why. When the refugees landed he wrote to his employers in Amsterdam for permission to expel them, calling the Jews a “deceitful race” and “hateful enemies and blasphemers of the name of Christ” who should be required “in a friendly way to depart” before they could “infect and trouble this new colony.”

New Netherland was a commercial venture of the Dutch West India Company, whose directors in Amsterdam answered to profit and to their own shareholders, a number of whom were Jews. When Stuyvesant asked to expel the refugees, the directors refused him, citing the “considerable loss” the Jews had suffered in the fall of Dutch Brazil and the “large amount of capital” that Jews still held in Company stock. They ordered him to let the Jews “travel,” “trade,” “live and remain” in the colony. This handed the small Jewish community two things a royal colony never would have: an appellate authority above their local tormentor that could be moved by commercial interest, and a written grant of rights they could hold the colony to. Every fight that followed, they fought on that ground.

And fight they did. Stuyvesant would move against them, the community would appeal over his head to the same directors, and the community would win. When he forbade them to trade at Fort Orange and on the Delaware, confining their commerce to Manhattan, they cited the Company’s own grant that they might trade “like other inhabitants,” and the directors reversed him again. Having failed to expel them, he had tried to fence in their livelihood, and that failed too. This was a community that knew its rights and pressed them forcefully.

In the fall of 1655, with the colony ordered to arm against the Swedes on the Delaware, the council ruled that Jews would not stand guard alongside the other townsmen, citing the “disinclination and unwillingness” of the Christian militia to share a guardhouse with “the aforesaid nation.” In place of service the Jews would pay a special monthly tax, sixty-five stivers a man. It was a tax laid on Jews alone, dressed as an exemption from a duty they had been forbidden to perform. 

Asser Levy, a butcher who had only recently arrived, refused to pay, along with Jacob Barsimson. He petitioned instead to be allowed to stand guard like everyone else, or else be released from a tax charged only to Jews for an exclusion they did not ask for. The council held its line and told the two men they were free to leave the colony if the arrangement displeased them. Levy did not leave, and within a year and a half the record shows him standing guard like any other burgher.

The colony still refused to let Jews own real property, blocking Salvador d’Andrada’s purchase of a house he had won at public auction, and here the community pressed the point they had already won. In a March 1656 petition the Jews noted that if they were taxed and burdened like other burghers, they should “enjoy the same liberty allowed to other burghers,” to trade and to own land. Obligation and right were two halves of one thing, and a government that wanted the first could not forever withhold the second. That is the moral logic of citizenship, argued from the floor of a Dutch trading post more than a century before Jefferson wrote a word of it.

Levy again was in the forefront. In April 1657, when the city made burgher status a precondition for trade, he appeared in court two days later to demand it, resting his claim on the very guard duty the colony had first tried to deny him. He kept watch and ward like any burgher, he said, and held a burgher’s certificate from Amsterdam besides. The court, taken aback that he would ask, refused him and referred the matter up to Stuyvesant and the council, who reversed it: Jews would be admitted as burghers of New Amsterdam.

Levy went on winning. When the city licensed him as a sworn butcher in 1660, the oath of the office required slaughtering hogs; Levy asked to be excused on religious grounds, and the magistrates agreed.

In 1662 Levy became the first Jewish landowner in North America, with a house on Stone Street in what became New York City.

By 1664, when the wealthiest inhabitants were called on to lend the city money against the English threat, Levy was the only Jew among them, and he lent his hundred florins with the rest.

In 1673, he sued the City Weigher, Dietloffson, for “affronts” — probably antisemitic remarks. The court decided in Levy’s favor. That’s a Jew in colonial New York suing a city official for what was likely an antisemitic insult and winning.

What the Dutch records show most of all is Levy in court, again and again, arguing his own cases and mostly winning them. His tireless fighting for Jewish rights earned him respect among the Christians. Property in dispute was placed in his keeping. Christian merchants named him executor of their wills. When a Jew ran into trouble with the authorities in Connecticut, Levy intervened and got the fine remitted, and the court recorded that it did so “as a token of its respect to the said Mr. Asser Levy.” A man who had refused to accept second-class terms, and who forced colonial courts to treat him as an equal, ended up trusted rather than despised. The fighting was what earned the respect.

We’ve discussed the importance of Washington’s letter to the Jewish congregation in Newport, where he said "to bigotry no sanction, to persecution no assistance.” But the Jews were not granted those rights in pre-Revolutionary America. They earned them. And Asser Levy was one of the leaders in that fight.

Louis Marshall saw this clearly when he wrote about Levy for the Buffalo Jewish Review at America’s sesquicentennial in 1926. He said that the records of Levy’s civic victories were “more potent in their consequences than those won on the bloody fields of battle.” He was right: a battlefield victory secures a country while a courtroom victory of Levy’s kind defines what kind of country it will be. Equality in America was not handed to the Jews as a gift of the founding. Some of it was already theirs before the founding, because men like Asser Levy had walked into court and fought for it.

Drawn from Louis Marshall’s “The Ascent of American Israel” (Buffalo Jewish Review, July 30, 1926) and Samuel Oppenheim’s “The Early History of the Jews in New York, 1654–1664” in the Publications of the American Jewish Historical Society. Stuyvesant’s 1654 letter to the Amsterdam Chamber and the Company’s 1655 reply survive in the Dutch colonial records; the Asser Levy entry draws on Leon Hühner’s biography.



Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

Reclaiming the Covenant on America's 250th (May 2026)

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

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   

 

 

From Ian:

Ben Cohen: The UN’s crusade against Israel is fueling the pro-Hamas left
A smirk laid bare the United Nations’ unremitting hostility toward the state of Israel and its people.

Last week UN Special Rapporteur Reem Alsalem sat stone-faced and silent as she reluctantly listened to wrenching testimony from Ilana Gritzewsky, a young Israeli woman abducted and viciously raped by Hamas during its Oct. 7 atrocities.

“Even now, the feeling of being violated and powerless still lingers,” Gritzewsky said, her voice breaking.

The Jordanian diplomat — whose mandate is to prevent “violence against women and girls” — let out an exasperated sigh in response.

Moments later, Gritzewsky pleaded with her: “Will you look at me?”

And Alsalem finally did so, a smirk playing on her lips.

Her chilling cruelty can be interpreted in only two ways.

Either she believes Gritzewsky was lying, in keeping with the rapporteur’s claim last November that “no independent investigation found that rape took place on the 7th of October.”

Or she believes that Gritzewsky and the other Israeli women subjected to grotesque sexual violence and mutilation by those Hamas terrorists got what they deserved.

Whatever the answer, Alsalem’s callous demeanor encapsulated the loathing with which UN appointees regard Israel, and their embrace of the wildest assertions made by Palestinian propagandists.

Because the problem isn’t Alsalem’s alone: It is institutional and structural.

And its impact is not limited to the UN, as the current surge of far-left anti-Zionists in US domestic politics demonstrates.

In the last month, the UN’s human rights bureaucracy has stepped up its crusade to convict Israel of the crime of genocide.

On June 16 Vanessa Frazier, the Secretary-General’s Special Representative for Children and Armed Conflict, placed the Israel Defense Forces on a blacklist of armed forces that abuse children.

That list also includes the Russian Army and ISIS — but not Turkey, despite the horrors inflicted on the Kurds, including children, by its armed forces.

Tellingly, none of the other state armed forces on that list were ever compelled, as the IDF was after Oct. 7, to engage in a war sparked by a massacre of their own civilians.

But such nuances never trouble the UN when it comes to Israel.

Indeed, when Danny Danon, Israel’s UN ambassador, voiced his objection to Israel’s inclusion on the list, Frazier dispensed with diplomatic protocol and attempted to shout him down.
The Military Danger of the Congressional Anti-Israel Obsession
An effort by Rep. Ro Khanna (D., Calif.) to strip a provision on U.S.-Israel cooperation from the 2027 National Defense Authorization Act was ruled out of order on Monday.

The provision isn't about the West Bank. It would expand U.S.-Israel cooperation in missile and drone defense, anti-tunneling, cyber warfare and AI.

"We need to compete with China," says Bradley Bowman of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies.

"That requires learning from beleaguered democracies like Ukraine, Taiwan and also Israel, which is the best in the world in some areas of defense tech."

Israel excels at going from concept to fully funded combat capability - a U.S. weakness. Bowman rues the seven years the Pentagon took to adopt Israel's Trophy system to defend U.S. tanks.

The rising anti-Israel obsession is a gift to U.S. adversaries.
Two mayors, one hatred
Karl Lueger, mayor of Vienna from 1897 to 1910, used antisemitism to win popularity, making detestation of Jews a key plank of Austria’s Christian Social Party. Adolf Hitler lived in Lueger’s Vienna and would praise him in Mein Kampf, although, for the most part, the mayor did not back up his anti-Jewish rhetoric with policies.

Jew-haters and those who, like Lueger, used Jew-hatred for political purposes, coined the term “antisemitism” in 1870s Germany to make their bigotry sound modern and scientific rather than ancient and religious. Today, those obsessed with Jews and the State of Israel as ultimate sources of evil do the same with “Zionism.” It makes antisemitism sound “progressive.”

Zionism is the national liberation movement of the Jewish people. Pogroms in the 19th century and the Holocaust in the 20th century taught Jews the inherent vulnerability of living at the sufferance of others. Zionists understood that only a sovereign Jewish state could ensure Jewish equality.

Today, resurgent antisemitism uses anti-Zionism as a gateway drug. The abuse took root in 1975, when the U.N. General Assembly passed the infamous Soviet-inspired, Arab League-promoted “Zionism-is-racism” resolution. The resolution was Moscow’s revenge for Israel’s defeat of its Egyptian and Syrian clients in the 1973 Yom Kippur War.

Zohran Mamdani, New York City’s new mayor, belongs to the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA). The party’s economic and social views mark it as neo-Marxist. Two of the three successful Democratic Party insurgents Mamdani endorsed in the city’s June 23 congressional primaries are also DSA members. The third is a former member. All three followed the mayor in accusing Israel of committing genocide in the Gaza Strip.

They do so because the “racist Israel” libel has not quite done the trick. Not when Israeli Arabs are the freest Arabs in the Middle East, and Israel rescued tens of thousands of endangered black Ethiopian Jews.

“Genocide” has replaced “racist” as the ultimate anti-Israel malediction. But the indictment is false. In Israel’s war in Gaza against Hamas, Palestinian Islamic Jihad and other perpetrators of the Oct. 7, 2023 pogrom, the ratio of noncombatant-to-combatant deaths among Gazans has been lower than in Iraq and Afghanistan when U.S. and British troops battled Islamic fanatics.
From Ian:

Military Victory Is Not Enough
Israel has demonstrated extraordinary military capability in confronting the Iranian-led axis. Together with the U.S., it has significantly degraded Iran's ballistic missile and nuclear infrastructure while weakening Tehran's network of terrorist proxies. Yet the decisive contest increasingly centers on influence, legitimacy, and public perception. It is a war fought through political warfare, psychological operations, legal campaigns, media narratives, and disinformation.

The Oct. 7 massacre demonstrated that terrorism today operates simultaneously on the informational battlefield. While Hamas carried out unprecedented acts of mass murder, the accompanying global narrative rapidly shifted from documenting the atrocities to portraying Israel as the primary aggressor. International institutions, human rights organizations, university campuses, and social media platforms became arenas where Israel's legitimacy itself was placed on trial.

The objective extends beyond criticism of Israeli policy. It seeks to isolate Israel diplomatically, weaken its alliance with the U.S., divide Israel from Jewish communities abroad, and erode Western public support for its security. Recent polling illustrates the challenge. Fewer than half of Americans identify Iran as an enemy of the U.S., while substantial portions of the public fail to recognize the ideological connection between radical political Islam and attacks such as Sept. 11. Such knowledge gaps create fertile ground for hostile disinformation campaigns and ideological manipulation.

The expectation that terrorist organizations could be fundamentally moderated through political processes proved misplaced. Rather than abandoning their long-term objectives, organizations such as Hamas continued pursuing Israel's destruction while simultaneously benefiting from enhanced international legitimacy.

The military campaign against Iran and its proxies has demonstrated Israel's operational superiority. Whether those achievements translate into lasting strategic gains will depend increasingly on success beyond the battlefield. The struggle over legitimacy has become Israel's eighth front.

Military victories cannot by themselves prevent the erosion of political support, diplomatic standing, or international credibility. Information warfare is one of the principal theaters in this conflict. Israel must become as effective at defending the truth as it has proven at defending its borders.
What "Defensible Borders" Means for Israel after the War
True security comes from anticipating threats before they emerge and sustaining the moral and material strength needed to deter aggression and protect the nation's survival. The phrase "defensible borders" has been used in Israel for many years to explain why Israel could not accept the 1967 lines as defensible, mainly with regard to Jordan and Syria.

Israel remains a small country with a population of 8 million Jews compared with 400 million people in the Arab League countries. At the UN, Israel faces 21 Arab states and 57 Muslim-majority states. The broad asymmetry facing Israel means it cannot remake the region into liberal democracies or significantly reduce hatred of Israel, no matter how many wars Israel wins. Therefore, after every war, however successful, Israel must begin preparing for the next one.

Israel's survival is not guaranteed by diplomatic agreements, but rather by objective strength and how that strength is perceived by enemies and rivals. National-security decisions must not rest on assuming deterrence exists. Whether it has been achieved is unknowable.

One of the main lessons of the war concerns Israel's ability to defend its borders in future defensive battles. It is crucial to prevent the formation of a large threat close to the borders even in periods of quiet. Israel must adopt an active worldview that regards preemptive operations aimed at preventing the construction of a significant threat as an essential tool of defense. The importance lies in preventing the adversary's ability to create a border threat in the first place.
An American Commander's Case for Israeli Strategic Depth after Oct. 7
Hamas's massacre in Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, settled an old strategic argument. Israel, about the size of Maryland, is bordered almost entirely by adversaries intent on its destruction. Defending Israel requires strategic depth. The country lacked buffers in Gaza, southern Lebanon, and on the Syrian Golan front.

A familiar argument says precision rockets, cruise missiles, and one-way attack drones make terrain obsolete. But while rockets and drones are lethal, they are not war-winning. Hizbullah, Hamas, and the Iranian regime do not aim to harass Israel - they seek its elimination. That requires a ground invasion like Hamas executed. Buffer zones, demilitarized areas, and topographical control prevent such invasions.

The recent record of American military operations reinforces the same conclusion. The Taliban were defeated in five weeks in 2001; Saddam Hussein's regular forces collapsed in three in 2003. The American error in both theaters was the assumption that follow-on political reconstruction could remake those societies in a Western democratic image. It could not. The applicable lesson for Israel is: defeat the adversary's capability to threaten and to invade, do not attempt to remake his worldview, and return to dismantle the capability whenever it begins to reconstitute.

Oct. 7 showed what happens when geography is left undefended and threats are allowed to grow. Defensible borders are the minimum required for a small state's survival in a hostile neighborhood, and the precondition for any lasting peace.

Thursday, July 02, 2026

 Our weekly column from the humor site PreOccupied Territory.

Check out their Facebook  and  Substack pages.



New York, July 2 - The city's mayor fired his deputy chief of staff Thursday after the aide had the audacity to propose that city resources focus on New York City rather than the Palestinian cause, in a move progressive activists haled as a principled stand against localism.

The disgraced staffer, identified as career civil servant Rachel Katz, reportedly circulated a memo suggesting the administration tackle subway delays, migrant shelter overflows, and street crime before allocating more municipal staff time to Nakba commemorations and virtual Gaza solidarity hours. Sources say Mamdani read the document, turned pale with ideological fury, and immediately summoned the traitor for a closed-door re-education session that ended with security escorting her from City Hall.

“Betrayal like this has no place in my administration,” Mamdani told reporters afterward, flanked by aides waving keffiyehs. “For too long, narrow-minded New Yorkers have hoarded dignity and infrastructure for themselves. Every single one of us committed to dignity in Brooklyn must be committed to dignity in Rafah. Suggesting otherwise is unacceptable.”

According to TikTok clips from the 45-minute tirade, Mamdani demanded to know how Katz could sleep at night while “genocide unfolded before our eyes” and the BDS movement needed city contracts reviewed. “You want to fix the F train? What about fixing the occupation?” the mayor allegedly shouted, citing his long history of placing Palestine at the core of his identity since his student days co-founding a campus SJP chapter.

Insiders described the firing as “long-overdue housecleaning.” Mamdani’s inner circle, heavy with alumni of anti-Zionist organizations, had grown concerned that some holdovers from previous administrations still suffered from “progressive except for Palestine” syndrome. One senior adviser called Katz's memo “textbook settler-colonial thinking” that ignored how every pothole filled in Queens represents stolen resources from Gaza.

The mayor’s office moved swiftly to replace Katz with a new hire fresh from a Columbia encampment alumni network. The appointee’s first act: drafting an executive order requiring all city departments to open meetings with a land acknowledgment for both Lenape territory and historic Palestine.

Reaction from New Yorkers has so far proved mixed. Queens residents dealing with another round of migrant arrivals expressed mild confusion. “I voted for affordability,” said one bodega owner. “Not for my tax dollars to fund more protest permits while rats run the streets.” Progressive groups, however, celebrated. Jewish Voice for Peace called the termination “a necessary step toward decolonizing City Hall budgeting.”



Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

Reclaiming the Covenant on America's 250th (May 2026)

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

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   

 

 

By Daled Amos

As America turns 250 this July 4th, our thoughts turn to celebration. Eldad Tzioni, writing under his website name, Elder of Ziyon, argues that the day calls for something else: rededication and renewal. That requires understanding the Jewish roots beneath the Founding Fathers' vision of government. In his new book, Reclaiming the Covenant: America's Remarkable 250 Years and Assuring It Continues, Tzioni argues that the anniversary means nothing unless Americans grasp what the founding of America is all about—and that requires a Jewish lens. What sets America apart, he argues, is that it's not a nation defined by blood, soil, or religion, but by covenant: by what you accept, not what you are. That idea, he writes, traces back not to Locke or Montesquieu, but to Mount Sinai.

In the Preface to the book, Tzioni states three goals: to understand what makes America great, to identify what threatens that greatness today, and to lay out what faithfulness to the Founding Fathers' vision demands of us today.

What Makes America Great

The book's central argument rests on one concept: covenant.

Covenant is the specific kind of agreement that defines membership by what you accept rather than what you are. [p. 4]

America was the first nation to make acceptance of the covenant itself the explicit basis of national membership—open to anyone willing to accept its terms, regardless of race, religion, or origin. Other 18th-century nations worked differently: in France, emancipation was granted by the majority; in England, Jews held civil liberties but not full citizenship and could not hold public office); across Europe generally, the "Jewish Question" consumed public debate.

This makes accepting the covenant of US citizenship comparable to the covenant at Mount Sinai, which created Jewish identity. In both cases, identity flows from acceptance — meaning that leaving the covenant means losing the identity that was gained by joining it. Tellingly, when the Founders used the word "federal" to describe the new system of government, they drew it from the Latin foedus—covenant.

Tzioni is careful to note that this doesn't mean the Founders simply transplanted a Hebrew political model. They drew from many sources, including classical republicanism, common-law constitutionalism, and Lockean liberalism. The Hebrew political tradition contributed something more specific:

[T]he Hebrew political tradition gives you the structure by which a diverse people becomes something together that none of them was individually—bound not by shared identity but by shared obligation... [p. 24]

These shared obligations are embodied in the Constitution, the Bill of Rights, and the subsequent amendments.

What Threatens America's Greatness Today

Like the covenant at Mount Sinai, America's covenant immediately raises a difficult question: 

How much uniformity does a covenant require, and how much difference can it tolerate?" [p. 17] 

One measure of a society's health is how it handles its inevitable disputes—and not all disputes are alike. Tzioni introduces the Jewish legal tradition that distinguishes between machloket l'shem shamayim—argument for the sake of heaven—and sinat chinam—baseless hatred. In the former, the dispute is in pursuit of truth, with each side recognizing the other's legitimacy. In the latter, the opponent isn't someone you're arguing with—he is unworthy of participation. Healthy disputes, Tzioni writes, "treat disagreement as disagreement rather than as evidence of bad faith or malign intent." [p. 22]

Participants in an honest disagreement are willing to revise their views when the evidence contradicts them. They recognize that even settled certainties are provisional — and that you can't claim the covenant's protections, such as free speech, for yourself, while denying them to others.

Today, Tzioni argues, a clear example of sinat chinam is the refusal to accept being wrong—something especially prevalent in identity-based politics, where a position is rooted in who you are rather than what you think. Under those conditions, political defeat is perceived as an existential threat. The resulting hatred and divisiveness are visible throughout social media and public life.

This polarization extends to disputes over the covenant itself when it fails to deliver on its promises. A classic case arose in the 1960s:

The civil rights movement did not say America's founding was a lie and must be replaced. It said America's founding was real, its terms are binding and you are in breach of them. That is the most powerful form of moral argument available within a covenantal framework—and it is only available if the covenant is real. [p. 11]

Done properly, civil disobedience within the covenantal framework doesn't reject legal authority altogether — it breaks one specific law to challenge one specific injustice, then accepts the legal consequences. That act of acceptance itself acknowledges the framework's authority, even as it challenges it. It appeals to the covenant's terms and holds it to its own standards.

Tzioni contrasts this with today, where civil disobedience has deteriorated into outright defection, with claims of exemption from the process itself. Instead of arguing that a law violates the Constitution's own standards, we hear that the system itself is corrupt and is undeserving of allegiance.

On the other hand, the correct approach has a recurring precedent in Jewish history:

The Temple was rebuilt after the return from exile, and the covenant was renewed—at Moab before the entry into the land, at Shechem under Joshua, under Josiah when the forgotten Torah scroll was rediscovered, under Ezra and Nehemiah after the return from exile. Each renewal acknowledged breach. Each renewal restored rather than dissolved. [p. 21]

Violation of the covenant is inevitable. But that doesn't void it—it calls to renew it.

What Faithfulness to the Founders' Vision Demands of Us Today

To survive, a covenant must be transmitted to the next generation. Jews do this through study and ritual, but the clearest example is the Passover seder. The seder is more than a celebration or commemoration; it is an active renewal of the covenant: "In every generation, each person is obligated to see themselves as if they personally left Egypt."

America has no comparable rededication. There was a time when public readings of the Declaration of Independence on July 4 were common; not anymore. Today, the Fourth of July celebrates the past rather than renewing the obligations of the covenant.

Tzioni points out a key difference between America and Europe.  In Europe, citizens participated in the state through their representatives, paying taxes and, in return, receiving protections and services. --whose relationship to the state was largely mediated through government-- There, citizens participated in the state through their representatives, paying taxes and receiving protections and services in return. In the US, Lincoln's phrase "of the people, by the people, for the people" was taken literally. Americans took on social problems themselves—through churches, civic organizations, businesses,charities, and local communities, rather than waiting for government action.

The French philosopher and diplomat Alexis de Tocqueville noted this in 1835, in his two-volume Democracy in America. In France, he observed, citizens looked to the government when they had a problem; in England, to a lord; in America, to their neighbors. Americans formed associations and voluntary groups to build roads, found schools, run hospitals, and organize charities — solving problems collectively rather than waiting on government to act. That instinct still shows up in the numbers. A 2023 AmeriCorps survey found that 28% of Americans — more than 75 million people — volunteered through formal organizations to help their communities, while 54% helped their neighbors informally. The harder question is whether Americans will extend that same care to fellow citizens whom they will never meet, scattered across the country. That's where dedication to the covenant has broken down.

Rededication doesn't have to be complicated — it can be as simple as reading the Declaration of Independence or the Constitution, or getting involved in your community.

As Americans mark the nation's 250th birthday, Tzioni argues that fireworks and parades are not enough. Anniversaries matter only if they renew the commitments that made the occasion worth celebrating in the first place. America's covenant, like the covenant at Sinai, cannot survive on inherited sentiment alone. Each generation must consciously choose to accept it anew.

Whether or not readers accept every aspect of Tzioni's argument about the Jewish roots of the American experiment, Reclaiming the Covenant offers a fresh and thought-provoking way to understand both America's extraordinary success and its current divisions. At a time when many see only reasons to abandon the American project, Tzioni makes the case that the nation's founding principles are not exhausted, but neglected. The task before Americans is not to replace the covenant, but to recover it, renew it, and once again make it their own.





Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

Reclaiming the Covenant on America's 250th (May 2026)

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

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   

 

 

From Ian:

Argentina’s Milei urges Latin American countries to join Isaac Accords
Argentinian President Javier Milei on Monday urged Latin American countries to strengthen continental ties with Israel as envisioned in the Isaac Accords, saying it was an existential fight between good and evil.

The public exhortation comes amid a historic shift across Latin America, where a right-wing wave is reshaping alliances with the United States and Israel, and the political left is on the retreat.

“From my first day as president, I made the firm decision to place Argentina on the right side of history,” said Milei during an address to Latin American legislators affiliated with the Israel Allies Foundation. “What this region decides in the coming years will determine which side of history we end up on,” he continued.

The Isaac Accords, launched by Milei and Israeli leaders in Jerusalem earlier this year, are a diplomatic initiative aimed at improving relations between Israel and Latin American countries, modeled on the 2020 Abraham Accords brokered by the United States between Israel and four Arab nations.

He called the accords “a moral, diplomatic and cultural coalition” against antisemitism, terrorism and drug trafficking.

In a forceful and impassioned keynote address to the pro-Israel lawmakers from over a dozen countries, the Argentine leader argued that evil can only be defeated by organized good.

“Words without actions are just words, and the region already had too many speeches and too much inaction,” he said in a characteristically unsubtle rebuke of decades of anti-Israel policies on the continent by predominantly left-wing governments. “We have prayed, lit candles and held hands, and all the while terrorism continued.”

The unabashed philo-semite broke with decades of Argentinian foreign policy by both left-wing and right-wing Argentinian governments since entering office in December 2023 by forming an unprecedented alliance with both the United States and Israel, emerging as one of the most outspoken wartime supporters of the Jewish state.

The Argentine leader became the first non-Jewish head of state to receive the Genesis Prize last year in recognition of his staunch support for Israel. The Genesis Prize Foundation established American Friends of Isaac Accords to operationalize the vision of the Accords through public and private diplomacy.

‘Latin America can take a clear stand,” he said. “Neutrality is not an option just as it never has been in existential struggles.”
Abdul-Hussain: My journey from anti-Israel to pro-Israel is a model for the Arab world
At a launch event for his book, The Arab Case for Israel, on Tuesday, writer and researcher Hussain Abdul-Hussain argued that the path to peace in the Middle East begins with Arabs reexamining long-held assumptions about Israel, drawing on his own transformation from believing anti-Israel propaganda to an advocate for the Jewish state.

Speaking days after Israel and Lebanon signed a U.S.-brokered framework agreement, Abdul-Hussain said the Lebanese people can follow in his footsteps, as the country remains divided between a faction that promotes the Iranian narrative that Israel “only understands the language of war and force,” and those seeking to reclaim the country’s sovereignty.

“The Lebanese have had their share of sacrifices for big powers. This started back in the 1960s. The Lebanese will stand up for sovereignty and independence. They’ve been thrown under the bus time and time again and this makes them always wary and they try not to stick their neck out… this is what’s keeping them back,” Abdul-Hussain said.

The invitation-only event for the book, published in February, was hosted by Antoun Sehnaoui, businessman and philanthropist, and Morgan Ortagus, former deputy U.S. special envoy to the Middle East, at the Mark Hotel on Manhattan’s Upper East Side.

Abdul-Hussain, a Shia Muslim raised in Iraq and Lebanon where he said he was taught to hate Israel and the West, is now a Washington-based research fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies. The Arab Case for Israel chronicles his unusual journey away from holding anti-Israel views, detailing his argument for why all Arabs should do the same.

“My story is the story of an average person who was told something and when he dug up the story it turned out to be something else,” Abdul-Hussain told some 50 attendees — a mix of Jews, Christians and Muslims — at the event. “I was taught, like every other kid was taught, that Israel must disappear. And I believed it.”

“Over the course of my life, events pushed me to try to learn about Israel.” The biggest turning point, he recalled, was in 2000 while he was working as a reporter in Lebanon. “We covered the Israeli military pulling out of the south and that day I drove my car to the border, which at the time was just a flimsy wire so I could see Israelis,” said Abdul-Hussain. “I became really curious. At the time, I could get on the FM radio of the Israeli channels. If you were in Lebanon at the time, your sources on Israel were [staunch Israel critics] Edward Said, [Noam] Chomsky and [Norman] Finkelstein.”

After learning Hebrew, Abdul-Hussain said he “discovered everything they taught us about Jews — that they were scheming to kill every Arab Lebanese kid — was not true.
Boy George brands Roger Waters a ‘sanctimonious t***’ after Pink Floyd founder’s anti-Israel remarks
Boy George has called Roger Waters a “sanctimonious t***” after the Pink Floyd co-founder predicted that the state of Israel will soon cease to exist.

In a pre-recorded video address to an ‘antizionist’ event in Ireland this week, Waters said: “I think the awful experiment that is the state of Israel is coming to an end,” prompting cheers from the audience.

He added: “And there will be equal rights, civil, human, every kind of right for all our brothers and sisters living between the River Jordan and the Mediterranean Sea.”

A clip of the remarks was shared online.

In the replies, Culture Club singer Boy George responded to another video of Waters appearing on Piers Morgan Uncensored, writing: “Sanctimonious t***” Not you Piers!”

On Monday, Boy George responded to a July 2024 clip of Waters on Uncensored in which the singer-songwriter, who left the band in 1985, denied there was evidence that rapes had occurred during the October 7 attacks.

Boy George wrote: “Go to the Nova Exhibition you t***!”

Wednesday, July 01, 2026

From Ian:

My cousin gave the world the word ‘genocide’ – don’t let anyone profit from it
My family’s name was never meant to become a marketing asset. Yet that is what it has become, and the only people who can stop it are reading this with the power to act and, so far, the patience to wait.

Raphael Lemkin was my cousin. He was a Polish Jewish lawyer who watched the Nazis murder dozens of our relatives and, instead of surrendering to despair, sat down and invented a word for the crime he could not otherwise name. He called it genocide. He spent the rest of his short life, often alone and often broke, persuading the world to turn that word into law.

The 1948 Genocide Convention exists because one man refused to let the slaughter of his people pass without a name. He died in 1959 with almost nothing to his own name except the one he had given to history.

That name now appears on the letterhead of an organization my family never authorized: the Lemkin Institute for Genocide Prevention. We did not consent. We were not asked. And for years we have watched it raise money, build a public profile, and borrow the moral authority of a man it never knew, using a name that belongs to his family and to his victims.

I am a lawyer. I do not make accusations lightly, and I am not asking anyone to take my word for what the law requires. I am asking the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania to enforce its own.

This week, together with the European Jewish Association, my family sent 100 letters to the officials who can act. We wrote to Governor Josh Shapiro. We wrote to Attorney-General Dave Sunday, whose Charitable Trusts and Organizations Section has plain authority to investigate a charity that solicits donations under a name it has no right to use.

We wrote to the leaders of the General Assembly, to Pennsylvania’s congressional delegation, to the Justice Department’s task force on antisemitism, and to the IRS division that oversees tax-exempt organizations. Every letter was verified. Every recipient was named. We did the work so that no one could claim the case was too complicated to understand.

It is not complicated. Pennsylvania law protects donors from charities that mislead them. It protects names from commercial exploitation. A complaint is already pending before the Department of State (Case 26-98-001879). A statement signed by 112 scholars is on file.
Jake Wallis Simons: Israel has outfoxed Iran (and Donald Trump)
Two weeks ago, it looked like Iran had placed the American-Israeli alliance in checkmate. With a flourish of a felt-tip pen, Donald Trump signed a “memorandum of understanding” that freed Tehran from American hostilities, promised it hundreds of billions of dollars, and allowed the nuclear can to be kicked down the road.

As if that was not enough, Israel was obliged to cease operations against Hezbollah in Lebanon, tying its own hands while the jihadist group rained rockets and drones upon its northern towns.

This remarkable Iranian military and diplomatic coup, aided greatly by the Islamist regimes in Doha and Ankara, drove a wedge between Washington and Jerusalem, making Trump look like a weakling and a fool.

The beauty of the deal – from the Iranian point of view – was that the more the president criticised his ally Benjamin Netanyahu, berating him as “f---ing crazy” and having “no f---ing judgment”, the weaker and more foolish he looked.

Well, Trump may still look weak and foolish, but the same cannot be said of Netanyahu. With an election approaching in September or October, he is not just fighting for the lives of his people but his political life, too; that is just the sort of thing that has always focused his mind. Israel has responded with a military and diplomatic coup of its own, in the form of a deal with Lebanon.

For the first time in 44 years, Jerusalem and Beirut have agreed to a framework that recognises each other’s sovereignty and commits to dismantling Hezbollah along Israel’s northern border.

Reportedly, the process begins with the establishment of two pilot zones in which the Lebanese army will relieve Israeli troops and take over the repression of the jihadists. Importantly, the IDF is permitted to remain in Lebanon for as long as it takes to neutralise the Hezbollah threat.

The proof of the falafel, of course, is in the hummus. As difficult as this pact was to confirm, its implementation will be immeasurably more so. Hezbollah has long been the most glittering jewel in Iran’s poisonous crown; Tehran will not allow it to go down without a dreadful fight.
NY woman arrested for funding PIJ, wished 'every day was October 7'
A 37-year-old New York woman named Catherine Beth Washburn was arrested and charged with attempting to provide funding to the Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ), the US Justice Department stated on Tuesday.

According to the criminal complaint, Washburn is a leader of the Direct Action Movement for Palestinian Liberation (DAMPL), an extremist organization founded after the October 7 massacre. DAMPL has committed acts of sabotage and property destruction in support of Palestine and against entities that it associates with Israel, rejecting the idea of peaceful protest.

Washburn herself celebrated acts of terror against Israel and praised the bravery of PIJ terrorists. In messages recovered by the FBI’s Joint Terrorism Task Force (JTTF) in February and March, Washburn and an individual who identified himself as a PIJ member and who claimed to have engaged in PIJ attacks against Israel discussed purported PIJ attacks on Israel, weapons, and ammunition.

An image shared by the DOJ also appears to show Washburn posing with grenades and a Hamas flag in the background.

Washburn also told the individual that she hated Jews “very much” and that she wished Israel “would disappear.”

“I wish every day were October 7th,” Washburn stated in one message.

“I feel excited every time I see news of the killing of an occupation soldier,” read another. Washburn sends money to terror organizations

According to the DOJ, Washburn made approximately 80 cryptocurrency transfers totaling about $30,116 to an account used by the alleged PIJ member.

“As alleged in the complaint, this defendant, fueled by her self-described hate of Israel and Jewish people, went to great lengths to attempt to provide financial support to terrorist organizations that use violence to further their agendas, including the Palestine Islamic Jihad,” said US Attorney Michael DiGiacomo for the Western District of New York.
  • Wednesday, July 01, 2026
  • Elder of Ziyon

When IMPACT-SE released its May 2026 review of the Jordanian national curriculum, the findings were familiar: antisemitic tropes presented as fact, the textbooks glorify jihad and martyrdom, Israel is erased from maps, the Holocaust is all but ignored, and homosexuality labeled a threat to mankind. 

A former Jordanian education minister, Dr. Izzat Jaradat, published a rebuttal headlined as a refutation of the "fabrications." The funny thing is that his "refutations" confirm every single accusation.

Jaradat claims that there is no such thing as antisemitism in the Arab world, claiming the concept arrived in the Middle East through Jewish historians Bernard Lewis and Mark Cohen — an illegitimate yardstick for Arab-Islamic education. And then he justifies hatred for Jews:  Jewish hostility to Islam is, he writes, a historical and doctrinal fact. Jewish "economic extortion" in European societies is what produced "the Jewish question." Jews practiced deception and covenant-breaking in Arab-Islamic societies, and that too is history. The textbook teaches that treachery is an inherent trait of the Jews; Jaradat's reply is, yes, why does that bother you?

 On the maps that erase Israel, he asks "which Israel?" — 1948, 1967, 1973, or Netanyahu's dreams — and notes that Israeli textbooks name no borders either. It isn't true, but it is an admittance.

On jihad and martyrdom in Jordanian poetry, he answers that celebrating sacrifice is the office of poetry among all nations, and brings as proof Shimon Peres; 1970 book on the founding of Israel's armed forces as his proof.  I don't think Peres wrote anything quite like this:

The honorable Sunnah of the Prophet mentioned a number of the virtues of the martyrs and their status with God Almighty. For instance, the Messenger of God explained a number of the martyrs' qualities, of which he mentioned: "[The martyr] is forgiven from the first drop of his blood that is shed; he is shown his place in Paradise; he is spared the torment of the grave; he is kept safe from the Great Fright; he is adorned with a garment of faith; he is married to (wives) from among the wide-eyed houris; and he is permitted to intercede for seventy of his relatives."  


As far as the Holocaust is concerned, he explains that it is a Jewish-European matter grafted onto the Western mind, not an Arab concern, and points to a UNESCO survey showing European interest has faded; the Holocaust is absent because, in his account, it belongs to someone else. 

On homosexuality as a threat to mankind, he says this is consistent with Jordanian educational philosophy and human dignity.

So there is no refutation — this is only defense of everything IMPACT-SE found.

Jordan maintains a peace treaty with Israel, promotes the Amman Message to the world as a charter of moderation, and presents itself as the region's reliable moderate. Its former education minister was handed a report documenting that its schools teach the opposite, and his answer was to defend the textbooks. 

That's moderation, Jordanian-style. 




Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

Reclaiming the Covenant on America's 250th (May 2026)

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

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   

 

 

From Ian:

David Collier: The PFLP Was There on Oct 7. The Archbishop Should Not Have Met Its Supporters
I will keep this as brief as possible. Following my article on the Archbishop of Canterbury meeting with two women with a history of PFLP affiliation, several people contacted me with a variation of the same response: “So what?”

It is hard to believe that, after October 7, there are still people with so little understanding of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), what it stands for, and the central role it plays within the Palestinian “resistance” camp.

Some naively imagine that October 7 was a Hamas operation with a supporting role played by Palestinian Islamic Jihad. Others assume that because the PFLP is a Marxist-Leninist organisation, it must somehow stand apart from the Islamist groups.

That fundamentally misunderstands the Palestinian armed factions and the reality of the alliances that developed first through violent opposition to the Oslo peace process and later under Palestinian rule after 2006. Whatever their ideological differences, when it comes to fighting Israel and killing Jews, the PFLP and Hamas are brothers in arms.

Nor has the PFLP ever been shy about its position. It openly announced its mobilisation on October 7 and participated in the atrocities that followed. This is the official statement (translated) published on the PFLP website at 10:25am on October 7, 2023.
Dems’ destructive agenda has turned them into a Jew-hating cult
The rise of the Socialist left in New York is a bad omen for obvious reasons.

The radical agenda is uniformly anti-police, pro-criminal, favors wildly expanded government powers over private property and demands punishing taxes on businesses and high-income families to fund its redistribution schemes.

If that were all, it would still be a destructive and dangerous movement.

But the post-election analysis from last week’s New York primary races finds another driving force among the winning candidates.

Namely, the hatred of all things Israel, and those who dare support the Jewish state.

It hardly needs to be said that the pied piper of this sickening eruption is Mayor Mamdani.

He started it and continues to fan the flames of antisemitism.

And now New Yorkers have made the added mistake of electing a cadre of clones.

As Jay Jacobs, the state leader of the beleaguered Democratic Party’s state leader, told The Post, the pro-Palesinian, anti-Israel furor “was a more important issue” in luring voters to races that otherwise had very low turnouts.

Overall, only abut 17% of registered Dems voted in the districts where the Socialist candidates beatprevailed over other Dems, some of them incumbents.
California Democrats divided over calling harassment of Scott Wiener antisemitic
Sen. Adam Schiff (D-CA) told Jewish Insider in a statement that Wiener was targeted for being Jewish.

“It is sincerely disturbing to see Jewish lawmakers, including Senator Wiener, face deliberate and ugly attacks,” Schiff said. “Dissent and discourse should be expected during a campaign, but this is something totally different, and not within the bounds of what’s appropriate in a liberal democracy. When lawmakers are being targeted and harassed because they are Jewish, and viewpoints are being ascribed to them based on little more than their religious affiliation, that is a problem.”

Sen. Alex Padilla (D-CA) said in a statement that the actions against Wiener were “unacceptable” and “crossed a line.”

“We’ve seen a deeply troubling rise in antisemitism, violence and hate of all forms directed at people in public life, and we have a responsibility to push back strongly against it,” Padilla said.

San Francisco Supervisor Connie Chan, Wiener’s competitor in the congressional race who is running to his left, said in a statement that she stands “firm against threats of violence and hate speech. There is no place for hate and violence in our city.”

Asked whether Chan believed the incident targeting Wiener to be hate speech, a spokesperson for Chan declined to say.

“In this moment, what matters is how State Senator Scott Wiener felt and feels about the interactions. We must stand in solidarity against hate whenever someone tells us they are experiencing hate,” said Julie Edwards, the spokesperson.

Pelosi, who endorsed Chan in the race, said in a statement that the harassment against Wiener “went too far, and I condemn all forms of threats and intimidation which have no place in American political debate.” Rep. Ro Khanna said in a post on X that what happened to Wiener “was simply wrong,” but used his condemnation to promote an amendment by Rep. Thomas Massie (R-KY) to cut all U.S. aid to Israel.

Outgoing Gov. Gavin Newsom did not respond to requests for comment.
Respectability for Radicals By Abe Greenwald
Via Commentary Newsletter, sign up here.
But for my money, Ro Khanna, the U.S. representative from California's 17th district, is worse. My reasoning is related to a famous line of Martin Luther King Jr.’s. “The ultimate tragedy is not the oppression and cruelty by the bad people,” he said, “but the silence over that by the good people.” Don’t worry, I know the idea needs some tinkering in this case because Khanna is neither silent nor good. He facilitates the oppression and cruelty by translating the florid war cries of radicals into establishment shorthand. Here’s what he posted on X in response to the trans activists who ganged up on Scott Wiener on Friday for being a Jew:

There is no place for harrasment or physical violence in our democracy. I am a strong supporter of protest, dissent, & free expression. But not of intimidation. What happened to @Scott_Wiener was simply wrong. Let's focus on passing @RepThomasMassie amendment to zero aid to Israel. Hold elected officials accountable. But do so in the spirit of building a politics of conviction and dignity, not insult and aggression.

In other words, if you want to go after the Jews, don’t waste your time with a bunch of ranting freaks. Invest in me. I may not know how to spell harassment, but I know how to take down the Jews using the power of the federal government.

Khanna is no socialist—he’s worth hundreds of millions of dollars. And there was a time, not long ago, when he claimed to support Zionism. I don’t know whether he’s been asked about that lately, but he should be. Because once it became clear that anti-Semitism was gaining unprecedented traction in our politics, he decided to go all in—shamelessly. He now rushes to support Jew-haters left and right.

Khanna is worse than the outspoken and earnestly revolutionary Jew-haters because he—along with others—handed them the keys to the kingdom. Raging anti-Semites were always out there, mostly on the fringes. They’re actually not the ones who represent a new and frightening phenomenon. It’s humdrum opportunists like Ro Khanna who are now doing something both novel and ruinous. They’re hoping to trade away the country’s defining virtues for a shot at continued relevance. Khanna has discovered an uncharted depth of political prostitution, and his success threatens to drag us all down there with him.
From Ian:

One-year jail term for professor who killed pro-Israel demonstrator in Los Angeles
A Moorpark resident has received his punishment after entering a guilty plea regarding the death of a 69-year-old Jewish rally attendee who sustained fatal cranial trauma during a 2023 clash between opposing Middle East war demonstrations in Thousand Oaks.

Loay Abdel Fattah Alnaji, a 53-year-old educator at Moorpark College, was handed a one-year incarceration term at the Ventura County Jail alongside two years of felony probation for the 2023 death of retired pro-Israel activist Paul Kessler, KTLA-TV reported on Tuesday, citing an announcement from the Ventura County District Attorney's Office.

The sentencing follows Alnaji's legal decision in May of this year to plead guilty to charges of felony involuntary manslaughter and felony battery resulting in serious bodily harm.

According to state prosecutors, Alnaji transformed a heated verbal shouting match into an active physical assault against the victim on November 5, 2023, while opposing groups gathered at the intersection of Thousand Oaks Boulevard and Westlake Boulevard.

The district attorney's team established that Alnaji hit Kessler in the head utilizing a megaphone, a blow that forced the victim backward onto the asphalt where he struck his head on the hard pavement.

Eyewitness recordings captured from the immediate aftermath showed Kessler immobilized on the ground while multiple bystanders, including at least one individual from the pro-Palestinian Arab demonstration, rushed over to administer first aid.

Following the physical encounter, Alnaji remained at the intersection, placed a call to emergency services via 911, and provided a formal statement to arriving police detectives.

Kessler succumbed to the extensive internal injuries caused by the confrontation one day later. Law enforcement officers subsequently tracked down Alnaji several days after the incident, placing him under arrest for causing the fatality.

The Ventura County District Attorney’s Office formally noted that its prosecution team lobbied heavily for a state prison commitment, registering an official objection when the presiding judge chose instead to grant the more lenient combination of a county jail stay and probation.

“Mr. Kessler lost his life in a violent attack that took him from his family and his wife of 43 years," said District Attorney Erik Nasarenko, as quoted by KTLA. “Given the circumstances of this case and the death that resulted, we believe a state prison commitment was the appropriate and just sentence."
Groups condemn ‘slap on the wrist’ sentence for man who killed Jewish protester near Los Angeles
Jewish leaders and Jewish advocacy groups criticized the sentencing.

“We are deeply disappointed by the lenient sentence handed down to Paul Kessler’s killer,” Burt told JNS. The sentence “is little more than a slap on the wrist and not in proportion with the enormity of this crime.”

Burt said the court spent much of the sentencing hearing “expressing dismay” with letters submitted by members of the Jewish community and asking the district attorney’s office to “make a statement correcting the perceptions of the 132 community members who felt compelled to express how this woefully inadequate sentence would impact them.”

“Despite the court’s pointed statements about the Jewish community, the judge never once expressed dismay at the defendant who took Paul Kessler’s life,” Burt told JNS. “The judge merely asked the defendant to stay late to sign some paperwork.”

“Our system of justice needed to send a strong message here,” he said. “Instead, the message being sent is that you can get away with attacking someone in broad daylight because you disagree with their opinions, especially if it involves feelings about Israel.”

He added that the verdict comes as the Jewish community faces an “unprecedented surge in antisemitism,” including more than 800 antisemitic incidents in California in 2025 alone.

“This verdict does little to restore our faith in the justice system and its ability to protect us,” Burt said.

Alyza Lewin, president of U.S. affairs at the Combat Antisemitism Movement, told JNS that “as antisemitic protests turn increasingly violent, a dangerous trend closely monitored by CAM since Oct. 7, 2023, it’s essential for our legal system to deter, not embolden, unlawful conduct targeting Jews.”

“The disturbingly lenient sentence for Loay Abdel Fattah Alnaji does just the opposite,” she said. “Rather than serving as a warning to potential assailants, making clear that assaults which lead to death will be punished severely, this sentence emboldens would-be perpetrators of antisemitic aggression.”

“I fear it is only a matter of time before more Jews like Paul Kessler pay the price,” Lewin said.

Gerard Filitti, senior counsel at the Lawfare Project, told JNS that “to call this sentence an outrage doesn’t do it justice.”

“It exposes major flaws in the criminal justice system that need to be addressed—from the prosecutor declining to charge this as the hate crime it was and undercharging conduct that should have carried a mandatory term, to a judge whose slap-on-the-wrist sentencing is taken by many to devalue Jewish life,” he said. “It is hard to see this as justice for Paul Kessler’s family, let alone for a Jewish community under constant siege.”

Tuesday, June 30, 2026

  • Tuesday, June 30, 2026
  • Elder of Ziyon

I have been spending time on a simple idea that seems obvious once stated and is almost never actually used. Every claim rests on load-bearing assumptions — many of them implicit, never written down, doing their work in silence — and if even one of those assumptions is false, the claim cannot stand.  That is what load-bearing means: an assumption whose failure brings the whole thing down. By definition, an argument can be no more secure than the shakiest assumption holding it up.

The trick is that extracting those assumptions is an acquired skill. The explicit ones are easy; anyone can list what a paper openly claims. The load-bearing ones are often the assumptions the author never noticed making — the things that had to be true for the argument to even get started, sitting so far underneath the visible claims that neither the author nor the reviewers nor the readers think to check them. Learning to surface those is most of the work. I've written AI GPTs to help me and while they are enormously helpful they still miss some assumptions because assumptions themselves are often layered and it is hard for anyone, man or AI, to see all the layers. 

Here is a case study. 

On June 16 a paper appeared in Culture and Religion, a peer-reviewed Routledge journal, by Nadim Rouhana, who holds a chair at the Fletcher School at Tufts. The title is "A State Founded by a Book": Zionism's Sacralized Politics and the Road to the Gaza Genocide. Here is the entire abstract, in the author's own words:

This paper examines how Zionism's sacralized politics – the framing and legitimation of Israel's policies toward Palestine and the Palestinians through appeal to religious texts – helped lay the groundwork for Israel's publicly supported and often eagerly enacted genocide in Gaza. It explores how sacralized politics became a key site of convergence between mainstream secular Zionism and national-religious Zionism, ultimately culminating in a shared genocidal policy. The paper first considers why secular Zionism increasingly harnessed and incorporated sacralized politics, particularly in relation to the systematic extension of the Zionist settler-colonial enterprise into the Palestinian territories occupied in 1967, with its attendant land dispossession, massive and ongoing structural and direct violence, and systematic disregard for international law. It argues that choosing Palestine as the site for the Zionist project entrapped Zionism in sacralized politics to justify its settler colonial policies while at the same time conversing with significant Western currents and undercurrents. It then analyzes how mainstream secular and national-religious Zionism complemented one another in the violent project of overtaking Palestine and how this complementarity sanctioned the strategies that enabled Zionism's shift from a century-long eliminatory campaign with genocidal features, but short of genocide, to its actual implementation. The paper argues that the convergence of strategic goals and ideological visions between secular and religious Zionism helps explain the widespread support – and, at times, open enthusiasm – within Israeli society for the live-streamed genocide. While the primary focus is on intra-Zionist dynamics, the paper also briefly addresses the interaction with additional enabling factors: official Western complicity, the vast power asymmetry between Israel and the Palestinians, and the persistence of Palestinian resistance to elimination.

Before reading on, the exercise is worth trying yourself: what does this argument need to be true? Not "is it persuasive," but "what has to hold up for the conclusion to follow." Find those, and you have found where the paper can be broken.

A particularly fragile kind of support

Most arguments rest on several load-bearing assumptions standing side by side, each holding up a different part of the structure — like the columns under a building's pediment. Each one is individually fatal; that is what makes it load-bearing rather than decorative. Pull any column and the roof comes down.

A causal chain is a different kind of column. Much of Rouhana's thesis is not a set of independent supports but a sequence: sacralized politics drew secular and religious Zionism together, the convergence produced a shared genocidal policy, the policy culminated in genocide, and the same convergence explains the public's enthusiasm for it. That is one load-bearing column like the others — but it is built from segments stacked one atop the next, and every segment is load-bearing for the segment above it. Remove a block from the middle and everything resting on it falls; the conclusion at the top had nothing under it but that block.

This makes the causal chain the most fragile kind of load-bearing structure, and the reason is worth stating precisely. Its failure is no more total than any column's — all load-bearing failures are total. What the chain offers is more places to start the failure. A plain column gives a critic one target. A chain of six claims gives him six, each independently sufficient to drop the whole column, and through it the building. The author gains explanatory richness with every link he adds and pays for it in exposure: each link is one more thing that has to hold, and not one of them is allowed to fail. A thesis shaped as "the road to the genocide" is a column pre-segmented into exactly the independent targets its author needed all to survive. You do not refute it whole. You find the one block that will not bear weight.

So let me walk the segments. For each, here is an alternative at least as plausible as the paper's — and in some cases simply true.

"Zionism is religious"

The paper's foundation is that Israeli policy runs on religious legitimation — it appeals to sacred texts, sacralized politics, a state "founded by a book." Most Israelis are secular. They are not voting, fighting, or supporting the war because of biblical land promises; their Zionism rests on peoplehood and the ordinary conviction that a people repeatedly targeted for destruction needs one place where it can defend itself. Even the Likud is mostly not a religious party — its base is secular and traditional Mizrahi and Russian-immigrant voters whose nationalism has nothing to do with sacralized politics. The genuinely religious parties sit in the coalition as junior partners, not as its engine.

If Israeli Zionism is primarily a secular project of collective survival rather than a sacralized one, then "sacralized politics" is not the site where everything converges. It is a feature of one wing, and the paper's central mechanism is gone. The column fails at its lowest block.

"Choosing Palestine made the sacralization inevitable"

The abstract makes a stronger claim than "Zionism used religious language." It says choosing Palestine entrapped Zionism in sacralized politics — that the location itself made religious justification structurally necessary, an inescapable consequence of where the project was sited. This is the boldest assumption in the paper, because it asserts inevitability rather than influence. A claim of necessity has to clear a far higher bar than a claim of mere correlation: it must show not that religion was used, but that nothing else could have done the work.

It cannot clear that bar, and the historical record runs the other way. When Herzl put British East Africa to the Sixth Zionist Congress in 1903 as a refuge from the pogroms, the delegates who fought hardest to keep Zionism bound to Palestine were the secular Russian Zionists led by Ussishkin and Weizmann; the religious Mizrachi faction under Rabbi Reines was the bloc willing to consider the Uganda plan, because their concern was the physical survival of the Jewish people and their faith left them untroubled about a temporary refuge elsewhere. At the one moment the movement actually voted on whether Palestine was negotiable, the seculars were the immovable ones and the religious contingent was flexible. The sacralization-entrapment story has the roles exactly reversed, and Rouhana is wrong on one of his most basic assertions.

And notice the form of the claim. "Choosing Palestine inevitably entrapped Zionism" is a counterfactual about a road never taken — it asserts that an alternative secular path would have failed, while no such path can be run to check. An assumption that no observation could disconfirm cannot serve as a legitimate load-bearing one; it is doing rhetorical work in the costume of historical necessity, the kind of block that looks solid until you ask what would have to be true for it to fail.

"The war is ideology in action"

The abstract treats the Gaza war as the expression of a long ideological project — the moment a century-long "eliminatory campaign" finally tips into genocide because the ideology was always headed there. The war started on October 7, 2023, with the largest single-day massacre of Jews since the Holocaust. The plainer explanation fits the timeline: a country attacked, its citizens slaughtered and dragged into Gaza, responding with the aim of ensuring it cannot happen again.

That explanation accounts for the same facts without any of Rouhana's apparatus. You do not need sacralized politics, ideological convergence, or a century-long teleology to explain why a nation goes to war after that; you need a calendar. If the war is a response to an attack rather than the climax of an ideology, the entire causal story about why it happened is explaining something that was driven by something else.

Worse is the assumption Rouhana needs in order to reach his reading: that the religious-Zionist ideologues almost welcomed October 7 as the long-awaited pretext to fulfill a genocidal aspiration. That requires Jewish malice as the starting premise rather than a finding, and it explains nothing — least of all the inconvenient fact that Israel had already left Gaza. In 2005 Israel unilaterally uprooted all twenty-one of its settlements there and withdrew every soldier and civilian, over fierce objection from its own settler movement and with majority public support. A century-long eliminatory campaign converging toward genocide does not voluntarily demolish its own communities and hand the land to its enemy. The eliminatory-teleology block does not merely lack support; the central episode of recent Gaza history points the opposite way.

"It is a genocide"

This is the block the title hands you as settled. "Genocide" is a legal term whose hardest element is specific intent to destroy a group as such, not a strong word for a great deal of killing. The paper never argues this element is met. It opens with the genocide as fact and spends its energy explaining the ideological roots of an event it has assumed into existence.

Set the assumption next to Israel's actual conduct. A state intending to destroy the Palestinians of Gaza does not coordinate with humanitarian organizations to move food and medicine in, run a vaccination campaign against polio across the territory, or warn civilians out of areas before striking them. Those actions are what the absence of genocidal intent looks like. You can argue about whether the war was waged proportionately or competently, but the specific claim the paper needs — intent to destroy the group as such — is contradicted by the conduct it is supposed to describe.

If there is no genocide, there is no road to the genocide, and a paper titled "the road to the Gaza genocide" has no destination.

"Nations go to war because of ideology and public mood"

Underneath the visible claims sits a deeper assumption the paper never states and probably never noticed making: a theory of how a country decides to fight a war. Rouhana's drivers are ideology and public enthusiasm — sacralized politics shaping the national mood, the mood enabling the policy. That is how the abstract models a state going to war, as a feeling that becomes a campaign.

Real states do not work that way, and Israel in particular does not. A war cabinet weighs the imperative to bring hostages home and stop the rockets, the army's own legal review of every target, the munitions actually in the warehouse and the ones Washington is willing to resupply, the international pressure mounting by the week, and the strategic question of how to dismantle Hamas's military capacity so that October 7 cannot recur. These determine when Israel strikes, where, with what, and when it stops. A government does not consult the public's theological temperature; it consults its lawyers, its generals, its arms inventory, and its allies.

This assumption is the one most easily missed, because it hides in what the paper leaves out. Two distinct claims are buried here: that ideology is a primary driver of state policy at all, and that it outweighs the strategic constraints pulling against it. The first could be granted in the abstract — ideology is one input among many — and the argument would still fail on the second, because a primary input is not a dominant one. By treating ideology and public mood as the engine, Rouhana builds a model in which the entire apparatus of the decision can be left out without loss, and the left-out factors are the ones that explain the war's actual shape with no reference to sacralized politics. The charge is not that he ignored Israel's strategic situation; it is that his model is built so that excluding it changes nothing. How many governments on earth place ideology ahead of security and strategy in deciding whether to go to war? Iran, perhaps. The model that fits a revolutionary theocracy has been quietly fitted to a parliamentary democracy with a supreme court reviewing its targeting.

"Israeli society enthusiastically supports genocide"

The abstract needs the public, not just the government. Its claim is that ideological convergence explains the "widespread support – and, at times, open enthusiasm – within Israeli society for the live-streamed genocide." This rests on a relabeling that does the entire job in a single phrase, and the relabeling is libelous.

Of course Israelis broadly supported a war against Hamas after October 7.  But Rouhana claims they supported a genocide, which works only if the war and the genocide are the same object, and they are not.  Strip the relabeling and the polling shows something the paper cannot use: support for destroying the military force that murdered and abducted their neighbors, declining support for the war's continuation as it dragged on, and no measurable public appetite for destroying the Palestinian people as such. There is literally no support for the assertion that Israelis as a whole support genocide. 

There is a second assumption underneath the first: that public enthusiasm is causally significant — that the mood enabled the policy rather than forming around decisions leaders had already made. The abstract needs the public to be a cause, not a chorus. Whether opinion drove the cabinet or merely followed it is an empirical question the paper does not engage, and the conventional direction of causation in wartime runs the other way: governments decide, then publics rally. If the enthusiasm is a consequence of the war rather than a cause of it, it explains nothing about why the war happened, and this block carries no load at all.

"We cannot believe what Israelis say"

There is one more assumption, the one that licenses all the rest. To build this argument, Rouhana cannot take Israel's stated war aims at face value — destroy Hamas's military capacity, return the hostages, end the threat from Gaza. Those aims are strategic and defensive, and they fit the secular-survival reading rather than the sacralized-genocidal one. So they are set aside, and a different set of goals supplied in their place: the ones the ideology predicts.

That move requires a particular and rarely-defended assumption — that Israeli statements are not evidence of Israeli intent but a screen to be seen through, and that the analyst holds the interpretive key to the real meaning behind the words. Distinguishing stated aims from actual ones is a legitimate tool; political scientists use it constantly, and governments do sometimes lie about why they fight. The problem is what Rouhana does with the license once he claims it. Every official denial becomes confirmation, every humanitarian measure becomes a cover story, every stated defensive aim becomes the mask over the genocidal one. The theory is built so that nothing Israel says or does can count against it, because saying and doing the opposite is simply what a sophisticated génocidaire would do. This is a conspiracy theory and wishful thinking mind-reading dressed up as analysis.

A framework that cannot be contradicted by its subject's words or its subject's deeds is interpreting a text it wrote in advance, not analyzing evidence. And it rests on a claim about the author's own access to hidden meaning that he never has to justify, because his readers grant it before they open the paper.

The circularity underneath

In each case the contested thing is a premise the paper starts from, not a finding it reaches. The genocide is assumed, the ideology is offered to explain it, and then the depth of the ideological roots is treated as confirmation that the genocide was real. The conclusion props up the premise that produced it; the load-bearing claim is holding itself up.

This is the genre's signature. A legal or moral conclusion walks in dressed as a historical premise, and once it is inside the argument, no one asks it to show its papers again.

Why nobody checks

Pulling these threads required no archive, no Hebrew, no special expertise, and no position on the war. It required reading the abstract as a structure instead of a story — asking what must be true for the conclusion to follow, then asking which of those things the author shows rather than assumes.

The hardest assumptions to surface are the ones that never appear as sentences. A tool can catch the claims a paper makes; it struggles with the claims a paper relies on without making — that nations decide by ideology rather than strategy, that a subject's own words are a screen. Those live below the visible argument, in the choice of what to model and what to omit, and you find them by asking why the obvious explanation is missing. 

The procedure works on essentially any paper in this literature, and it is almost never run, because the people reviewing and citing and assigning these papers already share the premises. When everyone in the room agrees that Gaza is a genocide and Zionism is settler colonialism, no one in the room is positioned to see that those are the load-bearing assumptions rather than the results. A field that agrees on its starting points stops seeing them as starting points. 

There is a structural accomplice, too: Culture and Religion is a religion-studies journal, and its reviewers are equipped to assess whether sacralized politics is characterized coherently, not to test a genocide classification imported from international law or a model of military decision-making imported from security studies. The contested claims cross the disciplinary border and shed their burden of proof on the way, arriving as settled background in a field with no standing to challenge them.

So the journal is real, the peer review happened, and the author has the title and the chair. None of that is evidence the argument is sound. It is evidence that the argument was built and approved by people who start with assumptions that are not supported. 

A thesis shaped as a causal chain hands its critics the one gift a careful argument never should: a row of independent blocks, every one of them load-bearing, not one of them allowed to fail. The secular character of Israeli Zionism, the inevitability that supposedly trapped it in scripture, the date the war began, a single shipment of vaccines, the war cabinet's actual deliberations, Israel's own stated aims taken at their word — any one of them is enough, and the column was only ever as sound as its weakest block.

This paper does not just have one collapsed column, but nearly all of them. 




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