Showing posts with label NYT. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NYT. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 22, 2025



The New York Times today published two letters that perfectly capture the incoherence at the heart of our free speech debates. One lawyer argued that campus speech disruptions matter less than government crackdowns on dissent. Another writer pointed out that protecting white supremacist Richard Spencer at the University of Florida cost over $600,000 in security—roughly equivalent to a year's tuition for one hundred students, and free speech does not justify this expense.

Meanwhile, another Times article today profiled pro-Palestinian activists who feel chastened after intense backlash to campus protests. Some wear masks to demonstrations, worried about job prospects. One Palestinian-American student said simply: "I am scared to talk about Palestine and I'm Palestinian."

Everyone claims their speech rights are under assault, yet somehow everyone also seems to be silencing everyone else. Campus speakers require small armies for protection. Protesters face professional blacklisting. Students fear expressing their identities. Administrators cave to political pressure from all sides.

We have lost the ability to distinguish between protecting speech and protecting speakers, between civil disobedience and coercion, between the right to protest and the right to silence others. This is not a free speech crisis. It is an ethics crisis. 

I am writing a book that argues that a secularized form of Jewish ethics is exactly what the world needs today. These are exactly the types of thorny questions that a cohesive ethics framework can help answer, and where today's existing ethics frameworks fall woefully short.

Consider how the Times article on anti-Israel protests systematically conflates different categories of action. Some students participated in peaceful protests. Others occupied buildings, blocked access to classes, and harassed Jewish students. The article treats these as points on a single spectrum of "protest activity" and "civil disobedience" rather than fundamentally different kinds of acts. But the ethical obligations around speech are not identical to the obligations around physical obstruction and intimidation. You may have the right to express unpopular views. You do not have the right to prevent others from accessing their workplace, attending their classes, or moving freely through public spaces.

When activists shut down bridges and train stations, they were not engaging in speech. They were using their bodies as weapons to coerce compliance. The same applies to occupying campus buildings or blocking access to facilities. These are forms of power assertion, not discourse. The article quotes Tyler Coward of the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression expressing concern about threats "both from the government and from within the university itself that are really damaging the climate for open debate." But notice what is missing: any discussion of threats from protesters themselves to open debate and free inquiry. When students chant slogans that make Jewish peers feel unsafe, occupy buildings, disrupt classes, and prevent normal university operations, they are exercising power to silence others. Calling it "resistance" does not change its nature.

The article quotes activists with wistfulness: "We spent a year thinking about what went wrong. We thought we'd all get arrested, and then everyone would rise up and stop the United States from aiding Israel." This is remarkably revealing. These activists did not think they were participating in conversation. They thought they were sparking revolution. They believed disrupting normal university operations would force others to see the world as they did and join their cause. This is not the mindset of people engaged in persuasion. It is the mindset of people engaged in coercion.

Civil disobedience in the tradition of Martin Luther King Jr. involved accepting punishment as part of bearing moral witness. Modern campus protesters seem shocked their actions carried consequences. They occupied buildings and blocked access, then expressed outrage that universities suspended them or withheld degrees. They engaged in tactics designed to impose costs on others, then claimed victim status when they themselves faced costs. There is a coherent ethical framework for protest that crosses legal boundaries: accepting responsibility for the breach, making the moral case so compelling that the punishment itself becomes persuasive, and maintaining nonviolent discipline. What we saw on many campuses was different: attempts to impose costs without bearing them, to disrupt others' lives while claiming immunity, to silence opposing views while demanding protection for one's own. That is not about exercising rights. It is about weaponizing rights.

The proper response to these thorny questions is not whataboutism. If politicians or campus administrators go too far to penalize valid protests, then that should be called out as unethical as well. The underlying error is treating ethical evaluation as comparative rather than categorical. An act is either ethical or not based on its own merits, not based on whether something worse exists elsewhere. The whataboutism defense reveals how thoroughly rights language has corrupted our moral reasoning. We cannot acknowledge that our side might have done something wrong without feeling we have conceded the entire argument. We have lost the ability to say: "Yes, what we did was problematic, but it does not rise to the level of what they did, and both can be true simultaneously."

Then there are competing obligations that transcend simple questions of free speech rights. 

When the University of Florida hosted Spencer in 2017, security cost over $600,000. Spencer's organization paid about $10,000 to rent space. The university paid the rest. One Times op-ed argues universities should "proudly pay for as much security as is necessary" to protect free speech. But this misses the fundamental question: is spending the equivalent of one hundred students' annual tuition to protect one speaker a sound allocation of university resources?

This is not primarily a free speech question. It is an institutional ethics question. Universities have finite resources and multiple obligations: educating students, supporting research, maintaining facilities, providing financial aid. The reflex to frame every campus controversy as a free speech issue prevents us from asking whether universities should be required to host any speaker regardless of cost.

But there is a deeper problem. If people understood the line between speech and coercion, we should never reach the point where threats to peace are so dangerous that half a million dollars in security becomes necessary. Police are needed to protect against violence, not against nonviolent protest. When security costs reach this level, something has gone catastrophically wrong with our civic culture.

The massive security requirement reveals one of two ethical failures. Either the anticipated protesters do not understand that disrupting an event through force or intimidation crosses from protest into coercion—in which case our educational institutions have failed to teach basic civic ethics—or the speaker's own words constitute incitement that predictably provokes violence. If Spencer's rhetoric itself incites violence or constitutes threats, then he has disqualified himself as a legitimate campus speaker regardless of First Amendment protections. Universities are not required to provide platforms for speech that crosses from persuasion into incitement. The question is not whether Spencer has a legal right to speak somewhere, but whether a university or other institution has an ethical obligation to facilitate it.

The problem is that we have lost the conceptual framework to make these distinctions clearly. Instead of asking "Does this speech serve truth-seeking or does it incite harm?" we ask only "Is this legally protected speech?" These are different questions requiring different kinds of reasoning—ethical versus legal—and conflating them leaves us unable to resolve the dilemma.

Perhaps the most complex issue involves career penalties. Should students face professional consequences for political activism? The Times profiles students "worried the blowback has been so severe that the American belief in civil disobedience to achieve political ends has been eroded." Jewish ethics offers more nuance than rights language allows. Human dignity suggests people should not face professional ruin for expressing political views, particularly on matters of conscience. But truth-seeking and institutional integrity suggest organizations have legitimate interests in evaluating whether prospective employees' publicly expressed views are compatible with the organization's mission.

The distinction matters. If a student participated in peaceful protest, wrote opinion pieces, or engaged in lawful advocacy, punishing them professionally seems vindictive and wrong. But if they participated in tactics that violated others' rights, engaged in harassment or intimidation, or celebrated violence, then organizations are justified in considering that behavior relevant to employment. This is not about punishing political views. It is about evaluating character and judgment. The article mentions federal judges declaring they would not hire law clerks from Columbia because of how it handled demonstrations. This seems like collective punishment, penalizing students who had no control over administrative decisions. But business figures discouraging employers from hiring specific activists who crossed ethical lines are making individual judgments about specific conduct. That is categorically different. The principle is not "never let politics affect employment decisions." It is "distinguish between lawful political expression and conduct that violates ethical obligations toward others."

The Times article notes that "some states have tried to put new restrictions on campus speech that are testing the limits of the First Amendment. Last week, a judge blocked a Texas law that would forbid protest activity at public universities during nighttime hours and would limit noise, among other restrictions." But noise ordinances are not a free speech issue. Every municipality has noise ordinances restricting how loudly you can play music or set off fireworks, particularly at night. No one considers this a grave threat to liberty. We accept that your right to make noise ends where it creates unreasonable burdens on others' ability to sleep, study, or enjoy their property.

Why should protest be different? To say that protests can violate others' rights while late night wedding receptions cannot is to twist free speech in ways that make it run roughshod over other rights. The entire idea of competing rights muddies the waters of what is permissible or not. The Bill of Rights allows owning guns, that does not mean one can practice shooting at 2 AM. Rallies with megaphones are no different. The ethical principle is proportionality. Your right to express political views does not override others' right to access their workplace, attend their classes, or move through public spaces. When protest tactics impose costs on people who are not the targets and who have no power to address the protesters' grievances, those tactics cross ethical lines.

All of this confusion reveals the bankruptcy of rights-based frameworks for resolving complex social conflicts. When everyone claims absolute rights and no one acknowledges competing obligations, we get paralysis punctuated by power struggles. What we need is a coherent ethical framework that acknowledges multiple legitimate interests and provides principled ways to balance them. Start with core values: truth, dignity, mutual responsibility, preventing harm. These are not competing rights that cancel each other out. They are complementary obligations that create conditions for human flourishing.

Here is one suggested framework applied to campus controversies. 

On controversial speakers: Universities should protect unpopular views but are not obligated to subsidize unlimited security costs. Rescheduling for safety is not censorship. Refusing to spend $600,000 on security for one speaker is reasonable resource allocation.

On speaker obligations: Anyone invited to speak should be willing to engage in dialogue, not just broadcast monologues. Speakers who refuse to take questions are not participating in the academic enterprise. They are using campus facilities as platforms for propaganda.

On protest tactics: Peaceful protest, including walkouts and symbolic demonstrations, should be protected even when offensive. But tactics that prevent others from hearing speakers, accessing buildings, or conducting normal business cross ethical lines. The test is not whether the cause is just but whether the tactics respect others' equal standing as moral agents.

On professional consequences: Students should not face career penalties for lawful political expression, even when unpopular. But organizations are justified in considering whether students' publicly expressed views or actions suggest poor judgment or unwillingness to respect others. The distinction is between penalizing political identity and evaluating character.

On institutional obligations: Universities must protect students from harassment regardless of political content. When protests create environments where Jewish students fear attending class, the university has failed. When administrators suspend students for peaceful sit-ins while ignoring harassment of minorities, they have abdicated responsibility. The standard is not ideological neutrality but functional integrity: can all students pursue education without fear?

On the difference between speech and incitement: Calling for illegitimate violence, even in coded language, is never acceptable. Chanting "Globalize the Intifada" or "By any means necessary" are calls to violence that cross the line from free speech into incitement.

This framework will not eliminate controversy. Hard cases remain hard. But it provides structure for reasoning through conflicts that honors multiple legitimate concerns rather than treating every issue as a battle between absolute rights.

The real free speech crisis is not that controversial speakers face protests. It is that we have lost the ability to distinguish between speech and conduct, between discourse and coercion, between protecting expression and subsidizing disruption. A university committed to truth would say: we welcome vigorous disagreement, but we insist on intellectual honesty. We protect speech, but we do not subsidize security circuses. We honor protest, but we prohibit coercion. We evaluate ideas based on their correspondence to reality, not their political valence. We hold everyone to the same standards of ethical conduct.

That is not censorship. That is integrity. And it is exactly what our universities, and our society, desperately need.




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Monday, September 01, 2025

  • Monday, September 01, 2025
  • Elder of Ziyon
Yesterday I highlighted how incredible the Israeli raid on Yemen last week was.

The New York times was not impressed. It sniffed:
The Houthi militia of Yemen has vowed to strike back after an Israeli attack killed senior members of the group’s government but appeared to leave its military leadership largely untouched.
See? It was no big deal!

In fact, the only possible thing Israel accomplished was radicalizing the Houthis further: As their "expert" Farea al-Muslimi, a Yemeni research fellow at Chatham House, said:
The death of the Yemeni officials, among them pragmatists tied to Yemen’s former leadership rather than Houthi ideologues, could result in more hawkishness and extremism going forward, Mr. al-Muslimi said.
Hmmm. The Houthi flag already says "Death to Israel" and "Curse the Jews." 


How, exactly, are they going to get more "hawkish"?

Another "expert" told us something completely new:
“Abdul-Malik found his match in Netanyahu,” said Mohammed al-Basha, a U.S.-based analyst focused on Yemen. “They’re both stubborn. They both have religious fervor and ideology that’s very strong.”
Yes, Netanyahu has religious fervor. Who knew?

The New York Times sure knows how to pick their experts. 



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Tuesday, August 05, 2025




The New York Times writes:
Many Jewish Voters Back Mamdani. And Many Agree With Him on Gaza.
Zohran Mamdani won over Jewish voters in New York City who were energized by his economic agenda and unbothered by — or sympathetic to — his views on Israel and Gaza.
Reading the article, you’d walk away with the clear impression that many Jewish voters supported him, and those who didn’t are either scared, confused, or comparing him to Nazis.

That framing isn't just misleading - it’s manipulative. And it follows a playbook that, once you see it, you can’t unsee.

Let’s start with the basics. Mamdani is a polarizing figure because of his aggressive criticism of Israel, including using terms like “apartheid” and “genocide.” That’s a third-rail issue in a city with America’s largest Jewish population. It is a fair journalistic question to ask how he won and what Jews think of him.

But instead of digging into the demographic complexity of New York’s Jewish voters - who range from Orthodox to unaffiliated, politically diverse, and often divided on Israel - the article builds a story around a very specific slice: activist Jews who already support Mamdani and align with his politics.

We hear from a bike mechanic canvasser, a philanthropy exec, a mother at a bus-themed Shabbat event—all Jewish, all pro-Mamdani, all used to build the narrative that Jewish support for Mamdani is meaningful and growing.

What we don’t hear is this: A poll conducted before the election showed Mamdani pulling around 20% of the Jewish vote. That’s not insignificant, but it’s far from the groundswell the article implies. And without that number, phrases like “many Jews supported him” or “double-digit support” are meaningless, designed to feel persuasive, not inform.

The number of words quoted from pro-Mamdani Jews outnumber criticism of Mamdani 435-165. That 2.6-to-1 imbalance portrays the opposite of reality: Most Jews do not support Mamdani and many are frightened about what his election would mean to their day to day lives in New York City. Those voices are minimized or ignored. 

I asked a couple of AIs, based only on this article,  what their impression of the percentage of Jewish  voters appear to support Mamdani. Google Gemini estimated in the 40-50% range, Claude said 30-50%, ChatGPT said 40-60%.  Has his support really tripled among Jews since the election, or are we being manipulated?

Then comes the “balance”: a rabbi who compares Mamdani’s win to the rise of the Nazi party in Austria. That’s not a counterargument; that’s a rhetorical trap. By choosing an extreme critic, the article defuses legitimate concerns and makes Mamdani’s Jewish critics look hysterical or out of touch.

This is manipulation of the reader on multiple levels. It is propaganda disguised as news reporting. 

I previously looked at who the 20% of Jews who voted for Mamdani likely are. I noted a 2023 poll of New York City Jews:
  • 16% said being Jewish was not important to them
  • 27% said having Jewish grandchildren was not important to them 
  • 15% had no connection to the Jewish community 
  • 22% did not observe Yom Kippur 
  • 48% never participate in any Jewish programs 
  • 32% of those who give charity never give to Jewish organizations 
Notice how these numbers all cluster around 20-25%.

In other words, the Jews who support Mamdani are the Jews who have already largely abandoned Judaism. They don’t represent the Jewish community: they represent very liberal New Yorkers who, by chance of birth, happen to be Jewish.

The article never defines what it means by “Jewish.” Are we talking about religiously observant Jews? Ethnic Jews? People of Jewish birth who enjoy bagels and lox? Or, in this case, the "as-a-Jews" - activists who only invoke their Jewishness when it’s time to defend anti-Israel positions?

This definitional slipperiness lets anyone with a Jewish identity - no matter how disconnected from Jewish communal life - serve as moral cover. That’s not representation. It’s exploitation.

It matters. This kind of reporting shapes how the public interprets Jewish opinion, antisemitism, and what counts as “mainstream.” When you stack the deck with cherry-picked voices and bury the demographic reality, you’re not just telling a story. You’re building a false moral consensus. 

Worse, you are positioning New York Jews with legitimate fears of a Mamdani administration as irrational at best.  The reality is that the Jewish majority who care about their people, their religion and Israel are overwhelmingly against Mamdani. Where are the articles about them?

Journalism like this isn’t just biased. It’s structurally deceptive. 

And calling that out isn’t about partisanship. It’s about intellectual honesty.



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Wednesday, July 17, 2024

The New York Times reports:

When Marvel Studios announced two years ago that it had cast the Israeli actress Shira Haas to play Sabra, a superhero Mossad agent, in its next “Captain America” film, the news was cheered by Israelis and denounced by Palestinians.

The studio said at the time that the makers of the film, “Captain America: Brave New World,” would be “taking a new approach to the character,” but did not elaborate.

The contours of that reimagined character became clearer on Friday when Marvel released a trailer of the upcoming film. The accompanying announcement made no mention of Sabra as an agent of Mossad, the Israeli intelligence service, as she is depicted in comic books, but described her as “a high-ranking U.S. government official.” 
Remember how upset people get when actors are cast who don't fit the racial or genetic profile of their characters? This may be the first time that an actor was chosen to fit the role, and then they change the role so that the actor's national origin no longer matters.

Anyway, this part of the article is bizarre:
It was not clear whether Sabra — alter ego: Ruth Bat-Seraph — still has Israeli origins in the movie, as her superhero name suggests. “Sabra” is a Hebrew word for a local cactus bush that doubles as an affectionate term for native Israelis. It also the name of a refugee camp in Lebanon where Palestinians were massacred in 1982 by a Christian militia while Israeli troops stood by, though the superhero predated that event. 
"Sabra" is the name of a brand of condiments. It used to be the name of a Japanese men's magazine.  It is a name of a genus of moths. It is also the name of several towns as well as a church in Sweden.




Except for the hummus, none of them have any relationship with the word Sabra used in the comics. And neither does the refugee camp in Lebanon. 

The only reason that the Sabra refugee camp was mentioned is to gratuitously blame Israel for the massacre, which has nothing at all to do with the Sabra character. 

Many idiotic Israel haters claimed that the character was named after the massacre. The New York Times wanted to give the readers that same impression, before discounting it. 







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Thursday, September 28, 2023



In a long New York Times Magazine profile of Benjamin Netanyahu by Ruth Margalit, we see this:

Admirers credit Netanyahu with “changing the paradigm” around the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, Boaz Bismuth, a Likud lawmaker, told me. Netanyahu did so by effectively bypassing the Palestinians and signing normalization agreements with other Arab countries in the region. But those agreements, known as the Abraham Accords, are the diplomatic end result of an arms deal in which Israel would provide nearly all signatories with licenses to its powerful cybersurveillance technology Pegasus, as an investigation in this magazine revealed last year. “He made use of knowledge and technologies to get closer to dictators,” a former senior defense official told me.   
According to this article, the Abraham Accords are just a cover for a cyber-arms deal that enriched a private Israeli firm.

This is an insane perspective. Even though written by a Tel Aviv based Jewish writer, it plays into classic antisemitic tropes. After all, she is saying that the most consequential peace deal in the region in four decades is really about Jewish greed and disregard for human rights.

The Abraham Accords deal resulted in the US selling $23 billion of arms to the UAE. Can you imagine the New York Times claiming that the US only brokered the deal our of greed to enrich US defense contractors?

Every negotiation involves give and take in an attempt to find results that benefit both parties. The Obama-brokered Iran nuclear deal gave Iran the ability to refine uranium after a time period in exchange for short-term pause (that they ignored anyway)  If there is a Saudi peace agreement, the US would be giving the Saudis access to nuclear technology which is just as dual-use as spyware is, but on a quite larger scale. The downsides in both cases are merely nuclear weapons in the hands of Islamic fundamentalists facilitated by the US. 

And every Western, democratic country makes compromises to their own human rights standards in order to maintain relationships with countries whose own human rights records are less than stellar. 

But only for Israel are negotiations viewed through such a bizarre lens of how Israeli greed and disregard for human rights is what drives its desire to reach peace agreements with other Middle Eastern countries - countries that all happen to be repressive Muslim and Arab dictatorships to begin with.

And there are more articles in the media against Israel for allowing cyberweapons to be sold than against the regimes that abuse them. 

Pegasus is a tool, like a hammer. It has legitimate uses but it also can be abused to attack dissidents, just like bullets or surveillance drones. The New York Times, though, seems to regard spyware as an exclusively Israeli, magical tool. As I noted earlier this week, when similar spyware tools to Pegasus were misused by Greece and Egypt, the New York Times didn't mention that newly blacklisted spyware developers came out of  Greece, Hungary, Ireland and North Macedonia - but highlighted that two of them were headed by a former Israeli general. 

The hypocrisy doesn't end there. When Israel does put restrictions on dual-use items to be transferred - meaning, when it stops items at the Gaza border that could be used to build missiles and other weapons  aimed at Israeli civilians - Israel is blamed by the NYT for unfairly hurting Palestinians for no good reason.

There are no limits to the double standards Israel is subjected to by the New York Times. 

(h/t Yisrael Medad)





Buy the EoZ book, PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism  today at Amazon!

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Tuesday, September 26, 2023

Israeli medics at the scene of a fatal Palestinian car crash in 2017



From The New York Review of Books:

Heading Toward a Second Nakba
David Shulman
Nathan Thrall argues that the accident in which Abed Salama’s son died was a predictable, even inevitable, outcome of the Israeli occupation in its quotidian forms.

On a stormy winter day in February 2012, a Palestinian bus carrying schoolchildren on an outing collided with an Israeli trailer truck on the notoriously dangerous Jaba‘ Road near the West Bank village of A-Ram, not far from Ramallah. The bus burst into flames; six young children and one teacher were killed and others were seriously injured. Among the dead was Milad, the five-year-old son of Abed Salama, from the town of Anata. Nathan Thrall has made the story of that accident and that family the thread that binds together A Day in the Life of Abed Salama, a penetrating, wide-ranging, heart-wrenching exploration of life in Palestine under Israeli occupation. I know of no other writing on Israel and Palestine that reaches this depth of perception and understanding.

There is indeed something emblematic about the accident. The Jaba‘ Road is entirely within Area C, the 62 percent of the occupied West Bank that is under full Israeli control, where today there are close to two hundred settlements and settler outposts. Because of the nightmarish maze of roads in the Ramallah area—some of them closed altogether to Palestinians, others blocked by army checkpoints to keep Palestinians without special permits from entering Israel—rescuers were slow in reaching the site of the accident. They were also slow in evacuating the injured, many of them badly burned, to hospitals in Ramallah or inside Israel. Fire trucks, army medics, and ambulances were only a mile or two away in nearby Jewish settlements but failed to arrive quickly. Israeli ambulances coming from Jerusalem were held up for critical minutes at the checkpoints. Moreover, Palestinian neighborhoods in the vicinity of the Separation Barrier had (and some still have) almost no emergency or police services. As one of the Palestinian rescuers at the site of the accident later formulated what had happened: “If it had been two Palestinian children throwing stones on the road, the army would have been there in no time. When Jews are in danger, Israel sends helicopters. But a burning bus full of Palestinian children….”

...No one wanted to kill those children along with one of their teachers. Israeli rescuers and soldiers who finally reached the accident site did their best to save the injured. But the central point of Thrall’s narrative is that this disaster, like today’s ongoing violence in the Palestinian territories in general, was a predictable, even inevitable, outcome of the occupation system in its quotidian forms. It is a regime of state terror whose raison d’être is the theft of Palestinian land and, whenever possible, the expulsion of its Palestinian owners. I have seen this system in operation over the course of the past twenty-odd years.
I did not read the book, and probably won't. But this review already shows the incredible bias and the desire by Thrall to bend any evidence towards his foregone conclusion.

First of all, the driver of the Israeli truck was an Arab

An average of two to three Palestinian Arabs are killed every week in road accidents. In 2022, there were 144 fatalities in over 16,000 accidents. 

Palestinians acknowledge the epidemic of car accidents, and when they are not speaking to Westerners they blame themselves, not Israel, for these deaths. Ten reasons for Palestinian car crashes are listed in this article:

1- Narrow roads
2- Drivers who ignore traffic laws and basic safety, tailgating, passing vehicles on the opposite side of the road.
3- Not maintaining their cars.
4- Using a mobile phone while driving .
5- Low traffic awareness .
6- Young people and teenagers driving vehicles .
7- Drivers showing off.
8- Buildings being built right up to the roads.
9- Drug users who park their cars on the roads away from home.
10-  Vehicles from Israel, often that would not pass Israeli inspections, being sold or stolen and used.

Even in Israel, the majority of car accidents involve young Arab drivers. 

But what about the supposed delay of help for Milad and the other children? Wasn't that Israel's fault?

It doesn't seem to be true. News reports from the time say:

Following the accident, Palestinian health minister Fathi Abu Mughli accused Israeli rescue services of failing to provide timely assistance, resulting in more casualties. Ma’ariv reported that eyewitness report contradict Abu Mughli’s claim.

Israeli and Palestinian rescue teams transferred at least 30 casualties to hospitals in Ramallah, Petah Tikva and Jerusalem, Israel Police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said. Israel Radio reported that it took rescue forces seven minutes to reach the scene of the accident
Thrall believed the Palestinian health ministry, which has a track record of lying, over the Israeli authorities. Which tells you all you need to know about his interest in the facts. 

In other accidents involving Arabs in Area C, Israeli and "settler" ambulances rush to the scene to help, indicating who is telling the truth.. 

Earlier this year a 12-year old Palestinian Arab boy in the West Bank was internally decapitated when he was hit by an Arab car, and doctors in Israel performed an extremely rare and delicate surgery to save his life. 

A similar horrific accident as Milad's from 2017 where there was a 3-way collision between an armored Israeli bus, a Palestinian minibus and a Palestinian car saw a swarm of Magen David Adom ambulances and an IDF doctor on the scene within minutes trying to save lives. 

In 2017, in another fatal West Bank car accident, a nine month old Arab baby survived while his father was killed and his mother unconscious. The baby refused to drink from a bottle so the Israeli Jewish nurse volunteered to breastfeed him. She put out a call on Facebook asking for other volunteers and Jewish women from as far away as Haifa wanted to help.

The "Jewish supremacy" and "racism" that Thrall takes as a given is an anti-Israel paranoid fantasy. Jews, even "settlers," help Palestinian Arabs in trouble, all the time. 

In other words, the very basis of Nathan Thrall's book is built on lies. And that is how anti-Israel writers like Thrall and the reviewer work: not only will they only look at selected evidence that supports their thesis - they will twist counter-evidence to pretend it is evidence. 

This supposed microcosm of Israeli evil is anything but. The only malicious actors in this little drama are Nathan Thrall and David Shulman.



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Sunday, September 24, 2023

From AP:
BOSTON (AP) — A leading Egyptian opposition politician was targeted with spyware multiple times after announcing a presidential bid — including with malware that automatically infects smartphones, security researchers have found. They say Egyptian authorities were likely behind the attempted hacks.

Discovery of the malware last week by researchers at Citizen Lab and Google’s Threat Analysis Group prompted Apple to rush out operating system updates for iPhones, iPads, Mac computers and Apple Watches to patch the associated vulnerabilities.

Citizen Lab said in a blog post that attempts beginning in August to hack former Egpytian lawmaker Ahmed Altantawy involved configuring his phone’s connection to the Vodaphone Egypt mobile network to automatically infect it with Predator spyware if he visited certain websites not using the secure HTTPS protocol.

Prior to that, Citizen Lab said, attempts were made beginning in May to hack Altantawy’s phone with Predator via links in SMS and WhatsApp messages that he would have had to click on to become infected.

Once infected, the Predator spyware turns a smartphone into a remote eavesdropping device and lets the attacker siphon off data.

Given that Egypt is a known customer of Predator’s maker, Cytrox, and the spyware was delivered via network injection from Egyptian soil, Citizen Lab said it had “high confidence” Egypt’s government was behind the attack.
Notice anything missing?

Whenever the media reports on spyware from an Israeli company, they always prominently mention Israel. But when the spyware comes from a different country - in this case, North Macedonia and Hungary - no one says a word.

When Ken Roth was criticized for always mentioning Israel in connection to Pegasus spyware, when it is a private company, he justified that by saying that Israeli export laws allowed the spyware to be sold to countries that are less than paradigms of freedom and democracy. But when it comes to these other companies, the countries that allow them to sell their wares to places like Egypt are not even mentioned in the articles, or by Roth. 

Earlier this year, the US Department of Commerce announced they were blacklisting four spyware firms:

Today, the Commerce Department’s Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) added four entities, Intellexa S.A. in Greece, Cytrox Holdings Crt in Hungary, Intellexa Limited in Ireland, and Cytrox AD in North Macedonia to the Entity List for trafficking in cyber exploits used to gain access to information systems, threatening the privacy and security of individuals and organizations worldwide.
Where were all the anguished articles about how Greece and Hungary and Ireland and North Macedonia were peddling tools to repressive governments to target dissidents?

They were never written. But the New York Times did cover part of this story - by highlighting not the countries that allowed these exports, but the Israeli connection to two of the four companies.


If spyware doesn't come from Israel, or is not connected to Israel, the media's interest in the stories plummets to practically nothing.  

This is the textbook definition of media bias.





Buy the EoZ book, PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism  today at Amazon!

Or order from your favorite bookseller, using ISBN 9798985708424. 

Read all about it here!

 

 

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Elder of Ziyon - حـكـيـم صـهـيـون



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

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