Tuesday, February 18, 2025

  • Tuesday, February 18, 2025
  • Elder of Ziyon
The New York Post reports:

GOP Rep. Nancy Mace is blasting supermodel Bella Hadid as “disgusting” for sharing an old photo of herself promoting a map that portrays all of the land in Israel as Palestine.

The photo appears to have been taken during Hadid’s 2022 visit to the Qatar National Library, an event in which the 28-year-old nepo-baby cat-walker posed with the map, titled “Western Palestine.”

“Bella Hadid is a disgusting human being,” Mace, a staunch Israel supporter, (R-SC) sniped Sunday on X with a screenshot of the supermodel’s post.
Here's the photo:


Why does this map say "Western Palestine" and not, you know, "Palestine"?

Doesn't this map imply there is also an "Eastern Palestine?"

And if Western Palestine's eastern boundary goes to the Jordan River, doesn't that mean that Eastern Palestine is in...Jordan?

And doesn't that mean that Jordan is indeed "Palestine?"

The map shown comes from the Palestine Exploration Fund's Survey of Western Palestine. They also started a Survey of Eastern Palestine; it was abandoned but not before they issued a map of what they called a portion of Eastern Palestine, in the area around the north part of the Dead Sea in Transjordan.



Let's take a closer look at the northern border of the map Hadid is studying so carefully:


It goes well into Lebanon, past Tyre. 

Hadid is pretending to be standing in front of a map of historic Palestine - but every map of Palestine before 1920 or so included much of Jordan and much of Lebanon, as the PEF maps did.



Is Hadid claiming that Lebanon and Jordan are Palestine? I think that the Lebanese and Jordanians might not be happy with her if they knew that!

Palestinians love to say that they want to return to "historic Palestine." But unless your version of history starts with the San Remo Conference, historic Palestine has always been congruent with what Jews call Eretz Yisrael - the Land of Israel. Until 1948, the word Palestine was widely understood to be essentially the Latin language translation of the Holy Land - the land of the Twelve Tribes, as this 16th century German/Latin map shows. (This Arabic site admits that the few Ottoman maps that mention "Palestine" are copying the idea from European maps, meaning they also include the land of the 12 tribes.)


The reason Palestinian Arabs don't claim the entire area of what had been known as Palestine for centuries is because they don't want to create a state. They want to destroy one. Just as in 1964 they didn't claim any ownership over the West Bank and Gaza - since there were no Jews there - today they don't claim any ties to southern Lebanon and western Jordan. 

Hadid didn't mean to do this, but if you follow her map, you can see that the entire modern Palestinian national movement is a giant cover-up of the fact that the only lands Palestinians ever demanded were the lands that were controlled by Jews. 





Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

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

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

  • Tuesday, February 18, 2025
  • Elder of Ziyon
Last week I noted that Australian Muslim groups were silent as the larger Australian community expressed outrage at the video of Muslim healthcare workers claiming to kill Israelis and promising to kill more.

Now we know why. They were outraged at the reaction, not the video itself. The nurses who were laughing at the idea of killing patients were "clearly emotional." They may have technically breached some ethical standards, but look how "Zionist lobby groups" orchestrated a huge reaction!  That's the real crime here!

Here is the entire statement from a group of fifty (!) Australian Muslim organizations, so no one can accuse me of taking anything out of context. (Emphasis mine.)


On Wednesday, 12 February 2025, Israeli content creator Max Veifer posted an edited snippet of a video conversation with two nurses from Bankstown Hospital.

This incident has since sparked “outrage,” largely amplified by a coordinated media campaign and inflammatory commentary across shock-jock platforms. It has since emerged that Veifer is a recently serving member of the IOF and was thus involved in the genocide of the people of Gaza.

As representatives of the Muslim Community in Australia, we affirm that all forms of discrimination based on race and religion are unacceptable and that healthcare should be provided justly to all. However, this statement addresses the selective outrage and political motivations surrounding the recent controversy involving two nurses from Bankstown Hospital.

We emphasise the following key points.

1. Selective Outrage and Political Convenience
The most revealing aspect of the reaction to the nurses' video is not the video itself—but the speed, intensity, and uniformity of response from certain political leaders and media outlets.

The Prime Minister weighed in. The NSW Health Minister declared it the most “vile” thing he had ever seen. Journalists and commentators mobilised to express their collective “horror.” Yet these same voices have provided active diplomatic and journalistic cover for ongoing crimes by the Zionists—as blatantly demonstrated this week with The Daily Telegraph's shocking attempt to fabricate an "anti-Semitic incident" at a local café.

This is more than hypocrisy. It is calculated, politically motivated outrage. It is not a failure of consistency; it is the deliberate engineering of public morality.

Outrage is manufactured when it serves a political narrative, with silence strategically deployed when the truth might expose the complicity of those in power.

2. The Weaponisation of “Anti-Semitism”
The labeling of this video as "anti-Semitic" follows a well-documented pattern of gaslighting by Zionist lobby groups and their friends within government and media circles.

We are unequivocal: Israel is committing genocide against the Palestinian people. The frustration and anger directed at Israel is a direct response to its violent and inhumane policies—not an expression of hatred toward Jewish people.

Attempts to weaponise accusations of anti-Semitism to silence dissent are not only intellectually dishonest but also dangerous.

3. The Sanctity of Healthcare
We recognise the importance of professionalism and ethical responsibility within healthcare and that the nurses' actions breached the codes of conduct for health professionals. The statements made by the nurses regarding "killing Israelis" were clearly emotional and hyperbolic, as supported by subsequent investigations.

Healthcare professionals are bound by their duty to treat and care for all individuals. This principle is most powerfully exemplified by healthcare workers in Gaza who, even as their hospitals are bombed and their colleagues targeted and killed, continue to provide life-saving care to all who need it.

We urge the Australian public to see through this manufactured moral panic and recognise the deeply political nature of this response.

We call on our leaders and media institutions to apply their professed moral standards consistently—not only when it is politically convenient but when doing so requires confronting uncomfortable truths.
Selective outrage? As far as I can tell, not one of these organizations condemned Hamas' pogrom on October 7 but within days they called Israel's response "genocide." 


Weaponization of antisemitism? Perhaps the Muslim community is unaware of how the huge increase of attacks on Jews and attacks on Israel in Australia have been done by the same people, like this synagogue graffiti last month that says "Hitler on top," "Allah hu Akbar" and "Free Palestine" with a swastika. 


Sometimes the attackers enjoy making the connection themselves.


The sanctity of healthcare? You mean like the doctors and nurses who openly support a murderous terror group? Are they talking about the number of Jewish medical professionals worldwide who are reporting being intimidated on the job skyrocketing since October 7?  Perhaps the doctors who attempted to explode car bombs in the UK in 2007?

This press release is a rehash of a well-known method of terror apologists, an attempts to change the subject and claim that "The real problem is..." whatever they want to misdirect people to. 

They are saying that the problem isn't that everyone has to worry that their "pro-Palestine" Muslim healthcare workers might physically harm patients whose political views disagree with their own. They say the problem is publicizing that inconvenient fact.

It's an argument that only an antisemite could love.



Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

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

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

  • Tuesday, February 18, 2025
  • Elder of Ziyon


On the opening night of the annual Italian Sanremo music festival, a video of the Pope was shown where he said "music is an instrument of peace and it must remain so." This was followed by Israeli singers Mira Awad and Noa.

Here is how their performance was described in L'Orient Today by self-described cultural journalist Karl Richa:
On a stage illuminated by blue neon lights, Noa and Mira Awad are holding hands. Performers on the festival's first night, Feb. 11, the two Israeli artists bewilder the audience as they recite, in Arabic and Hebrew, Lennon's hit song [Imagine], almost chaotically. This moment, intended to be symbolic in light of the devastating conflict in the Middle East, does not achieve the desired effect. "Did the pope give his blessing to these Israeli women to sing in our language?" Amir*, a professional hairdresser of Tunisian origin in the middle blow drying a clients hair, jokes.   
Naturally, I looked for the video so I could see this "chaotic performance" and the "bewildered audience." Here it is:


I see nothing in common between the Richa's description of the performance and the actual event. The format of the song was described ahead of time; within the song the performers described in Italian their messages of peace. The audience gave a standing ovation to the two Israelis, who of course Richa doesn't mention are an Arab and Jewish duo that has been touring together recently. He also doesn't mention that Mira Awad, the Arab, sang in Hebrew and Noa, the Jew, sang in Arabic.

So what performance did Richa see? And why would he choose a Tunisian hairdresser as symbolizing the audience reaction? (That quote was the headline of the French version of the article.)

For my tastes, these sorts of performances are saccharine and contrived. Nevertheless, they show a reality that the world doesn't want to see: an Arab singer is popular among Jews in Israel and the two big Israeli stars are performing together to promote peace between the peoples. Richa doesn't want the world to see any coexistence in Israel between Arabs and Jews. It is not hard to guess why.

This is how bias plays out. Journalists take on the job of describing reality, but they put their own spin that ends up describing the warped glasses they view the events through. The subliminal message here is that "We Are The World"-type anthems are heartfelt and genuine calls for world peace, but two Israeli citizens showing a coexistence between Arab and Jews that is rare to see in enlightened Western Europe are just Zionist propagandists who must be exposed.

You can call it anti-Zionism. You can consider this antisemitism. But describing an event that didn't happen  is certainly not journalism. 




Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

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

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

Monday, February 17, 2025

From Ian:

A letter to my anti-Zionist Jewish friend
My sense is that you are struggling with something akin to white saviour complex and I am sorry. I am sorry because of the way you describe your blissful teenage years in a Zionist youth movement which now make you feel ashamed. That is so sad.

I do not feel torn or anguished with where I stand. I will stand with the only country that will keep me and family safe if the world turns against us. I will criticise what it does but I do not have a vote in Israel so moaning from the sidelines achieves little. We all want peace and security but I don’t believe you would accept living next door to neighbours who repeatedly commit to murdering your family if you give them the chance. You don’t mention the multiple offers of a Palestinian state turned down time and again. Instead, you blame Israel – victim blaming. There is a word for this too. It breaks my heart that so many educated liberals are leaving Israel and I only pray that they will return one day.

When you list the voices you have been influenced by, I understand how you have got to this point. Tareq Baconi – a man who clearly believes not that the time for two states is over, but “that it never should have existed in the first place because Israel is and always has been illegitimate”. Does he say any other countries should be dismantled? Not that I can see. Pankaj Mishra who says the Holocaust has been “perverted to enable mass murder” and give Israel impunity. I appreciate that you have been trying to educate yourself but take a step back and ask yourself whether you have been infected by their rhetoric.

You say you don’t want Israel to cease to exist. Your words suggest otherwise. To double down in your criticism of Israel at a time like this – well, it must be hard being you. I think this is what I find so obscene – the doubling down, now, after a massacre. If you want to be “that anti-Zionist Jew”, please understand why friends like us don’t want to be around you. We are exhausted just living right now, we don’t have the bandwidth to argue with our own. Your colleagues hide behind a thin veil of anti-Zionism. I just can’t quite believe that you have joined them.

Without doubt, if the world does turn on us, you will be queuing up with your family to get on that El Al flight. You’ll be OK with the women in hair wraps then.

Ending with a Golda Meir quote “we have no place else to go”.
Fear forces Berlin Jews to hide their identity in community paper
Growing security concerns have prompted the Jewish community in Berlin to implement a protective measure: publishing only the first letter of community members’ surnames, rather than their full family names, in birthday announcements in the community newspaper, Bild reported on Friday.

The community’s monthly journal, Jewish Berlin, traditionally includes a “Mazel tov” section for good wishes to those over age 65, as well as to print birth and children’s bar/bat mitzvah celebration announcements.

The publication recently added an explanatory note to the section: “Dear community members, in light of current anti-Israel and antisemitic incidents, we are now printing only birthday and bar/bat mitzvah names with abbreviated surnames as a precautionary security measure.”

Speaking with Bild, Ilan Kiesling, spokesman for the Jewish community in Berlin, explained that this decision was implemented shortly after the Hamas-led massacre in southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, stemming from heightened security concerns for community members.

Kiesling emphasized that this precautionary step aims to “minimize the potential for hostile actions against our community members,” citing specific concerns about Hamas supporter demonstrations in Berlin’s streets and the dramatic increase in antisemitic attacks following Oct. 7.
Does New Zealand's foreign policy betray Western values?
New Zealand’s role in international forums such as the United Nations offers a revealing window into this divide.

In 2016, New Zealand co-sponsored a UNSC resolution alongside Venezuela, Malaysia, and Senegal that denied Jewish indigeneity in Israel, and more recently, it abstained from voting on a resolution allowing condemnation of Hamas, for the first time ever. These actions, viewed by many as hostile to Israel, highlight a growing divergence between New Zealand’s foreign policy and that of its traditional Western allies.

In fact, New Zealand’s record on Israel at the UN mirrors the positions of more authoritarian regimes, like Iran, rather than Western democracies. It was only after October 7, 2023 – when Israel faced an unprecedented attack by Hamas – that New Zealand belatedly designated Hamas and Hezbollah as terrorist organizations, joining other members of the Five Eyes intelligence alliance.

New Zealand’s refusal to establish an embassy in Israel, while maintaining one in Iran, speaks volumes about its foreign policy priorities.

Additionally, the country’s recent lobbying for a premature ceasefire in the Israel-Hamas conflict raises questions about its commitment to Israel’s right to self-defense. Prime Minister Christopher Luxon’s recent statement that he would arrest Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu over an International Criminal Court warrant further signals a growing divergence between New Zealand and the US

New Zealand’s voting record on the disproportionate number of resolutions at the UN is more aligned with Iran than with the US, according to UN Watch.
From Ian:

Seth Mandel: A Watershed Moment in American Jewish History
Jon Ossoff is Georgia’s first Jewish senator. And the Jews of the Peach State are doing something remarkable: refusing to be taken for granted.

Though this drama is playing out behind the scenes, it represents a watershed in American Jewish politics.

The New York Times has obtained a letter sent privately in December to Gov. Brian Kemp, a Republican, urging him to run for Senate against Ossoff. The twist: The signatories of the letter included prominent Jewish Democrats.

“I took great pride to see a young Jewish man find the successes that he has,” Isaac Frank, one of the signatories, told the Times. “I just feel like he’s somewhat disconnected from where our community is, given post-Oct. 7.”

The letter to Kemp, as quoted by the Times, says: “As a bipartisan group of leaders in the metropolitan Atlanta Jewish community, we humbly ask you to consider running for the United States Senate in 2026… Should you decide to run in the 2026 election, you would find no better friends, more loyal allies or stronger supporters than us and our community.”

The signatories, especially the Jewish Democrats among them, have done their community a great act of service by insisting that being Jewish does not chain one to either party, that a vote has to be earned, and that a last name alone does not amount to true representation.

What’s their beef with Ossoff? The senator’s vote to withhold U.S. weapons transfers to Israel seems to have been the trigger. This was made worse by watching Ossoff preen on the Senate floor in an eight-minute rekindling of ugly Hamas propaganda in support of withholding those weapons.

Ossoff started off with an ahistorical—but popular—comparison to when President Reagan’s relationship with Prime Minister Menachem Begin was strained by the 1982 war in Lebanon. Contra Ossoff, the moral of that story, when viewed in context, was that Reagan’s anger was based on false reporting and Begin corrected the record with the president. Reagan’s open-minded response to Begin’s insistence that he was being fed a false picture of the conflict contrasts with the Biden administration’s refusal to correct its own misinterpretation of the reality on the ground. Ossoff, too, falls into this category: Unlike Reagan, Ossoff believes the worst conspiracy theories pushed by Hamas and its supporters about the Jewish state and closes his ears to Israel’s counterarguments.

Ossoff spends the first couple minutes of his speech attacking straw men, lazily swatting away nonexistent arguments rather than engaging the actual criticism of his words and actions, both of which were based on false information.

But eventually Ossoff lets loose on the Jewish state. He accuses Israel of “policies that are gratuitously brutal.” Then he jumps into the child-killer blood libel with both feet: “The American people are rightly horrified by the lack of sufficient concern for innocent Palestinian life, that has left so many children unnecessarily dead in Gaza, without limbs or riddled with shrapnel.”

He returned again to the child-killer narrative: “We are talking about precious, innocent children and other innocent civilians who might otherwise be alive or without grievous wounds today.”

He called Israel’s war conduct “horrific” and then, with a false mawkishness unworthy of the United States Senate, implored Israel to “have mercy for the innocent.”

Ossoff’s speech was in November, and it was an agonizingly grotesque spectacle. It was delivered amidst a shocking rise in anti-Semitism, displaying Ossoff’s penchant for rumormongering at a time of genuine danger for American Jews.
How America’s Jews Became America’s ‘New Blacks’
Raise the specter of anti-Semitic racism and you are immediately challenged by those who want to highlight Islamophobia or racism against Arabs. The two are simply not comparable. The response in America to the radical Islamists’ attacks of 9/11 was a culture-wide defense of Islam and the rights of Muslims, and great care was taken to ensure they were protected from mobs.

Nearly a quarter century later, those early efforts have become institutionalized and tenured. Unlike Jews today, Arabs and Muslims are not being systematically excluded from cultural events or academic panels, nor are Muslims prevented from entering schools or workplaces by violent protesters taking advantage of their First Amendment protections.

Muslim student groups have not been picketed like the myriad Hillel chapters on campuses across the nation—including, in late November, at Columbia, where protesters demanded Hillel be shut down. And unlike the calls to divest from Israeli companies, there have been few, if any, student-led divestment demands against Arab or Islamic financial and cultural institutions, despite the billions donated over the past decade by Gulf States to universities—and despite the clear role that wealthy nations like Qatar have played in harboring terrorists.

Indeed, the post–October 7 period has seen a strengthening of cultural and institutional support for Muslim and Arab causes just as such support has eroded for Jews. Last February’s “uncommitted” campaign during Michigan’s Democratic primary, for instance, not only resulted in more than 100,000 voters withholding their ballots for President Biden; it placed Arab and Muslim grievances at the center of the entire presidential race in ways that far exceeded Muslim population numbers. No, racism against so-called Semites (the category was invented by 18th-century German racialist thinkers to include Jews as well as Muslims, since Hebrew and Arabic are both considered “Semitic” languages) isn’t about Muslims and Arabs. It’s all about Jews and Israel.

And, of course, Zionism.

Anti-Semites love to explain away their bigotry due to a justified animosity—an animosity not toward Judaism, but toward Israel. If anything, they believe, it is Zionism that is racist—as codified by the UN’s odious General Assembly Resolution 3379 of 1975, which “Determines that Zionism is a form of racism and racial discrimination.”

Resolution 3379 will mark its 50th anniversary this November, a milestone (despite its revocation in 1991) bound to be exploited by the enemies of Israel to maximum effect—arriving, as it will, so close to the second anniversary of the October 7 massacre. By then—two years into America’s anti-Semitic deluge—both the consequences of anti-Semitic racism and Zionism’s role in its contours will be even more fully defined.

As I think about the ways in which American Jews have become the focus of the nation’s new racist tide, I can’t help thinking about my own sons, who via unexpected twists of genetics are far lighter-skinned than myself. They’re unlikely ever to experience the type of racism I’ve known my entire life—including from Jews. Nor might they face the risk of violent (if not deadly) police encounters that have led most African-American families to have “the talk” with their children about how to comport themselves around law enforcement.

Perhaps because my mother is white—or maybe because I was just preternaturally obedient as a teen—we never had that conversation in my home, and I’ve managed to reach far into adulthood without ever tussling with the cops. Still, I am certain I will sit down soon with my boys for our own type of “talk.” That talk will not be about how to handle themselves around police officers. Rather it will center on how to emerge unscathed from the equally dangerous encounters that many American Jews will now inevitably endure as they face anti-Semitic racists.

I’m certain I will be among many Jewish parents having such talks with their kids—the first generation of American whites who will begin to understand much of what it feels like to be black. The first generation of American Jews to have unexpectedly become America’s new blacks.
At Yad Vashem, Rubio says antisemitism is embedded in ‘international organizations’
In remarks during his visit to Jerusalem’s Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial museum, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio says the “ancient poison” of antisemitism “hides behind geopolitics and embeds itself in international organizations, and in the curriculums of our colleges and universities.”

The accusation is one of the most far-reaching lobbed by a Trump official to date.

“We stand here today reminded why it can never be ignored, why it always starts with what some believe as the wild ideas of a random person with no power and no influence; but left unchecked and unchallenged, it can turn into the tragedy that is commemorated here in this building today,” Rubio says.
  • Monday, February 17, 2025
  • Elder of Ziyon
Guest post

Jewish education is at a crossroad. It is being challenged, like never before, by college professors, grade-school teachers, hostile journalists, biased historians, unhinged social media influencers, human rights organizations, and other wealthy domestic and foreign Non-Governmental Organizations. Making matters worse (if you can imagine such a thing) there is, at best, a chaotic conversation within the Jewish community about defining a Jewish curriculum. There was a time when the curriculum was exclusively taught in yeshivas, based upon classical texts. That is no longer the dominant model. Most Jewish congregations create ad hoc curricula that reflect the political views of the local community and are influenced by news media and other non-Jewish sources. 

Further muddying the waters, there are several websites that try to shape the Jewish curriculum from a highly politicized perspective. One such website is Jewish Unpacked. It is tailored to a high school/college target audience. It addresses the challenges of being a Jewish minority in a hostile environment. On a superficial level, it seems to provide counter-narratives that Jewish students can use in their own defense. It fails for several reasons. The website seems to endlessly repeat, and thus promote, the worst stereotypes about Jews and Israel, all while making muddled and weak efforts to counter those stereotypes. The counter arguments rely too heavily upon survey data, which is easily manipulated and misinterpreted. They sometimes include harmful subliminal messaging, which contradicts the purpose of the counter arguments.

As just one example, consider the UnPacked podcast "Wondering Jews with Mijal and Noam"

As Spotify describes it:
"Mijal Bitton and Noam Weissman are two of the most dynamic, interesting, and thought-provoking Jewish leaders today. Two seasoned educators who love to talk, listen, laugh, challenge, and grow, Mijal and Noam are the Wondering Jews, leading us through thought-provoking discussions that are as serious as they are entertaining.
Whether you're a seasoned scholar or just curious about Jewish culture, this show offers a refreshing perspective that's both enlightening and enjoyable. It's not just a podcast; it's a thoughtful conversation that invites everyone to wonder about the rich tapestry of Jewish ideas in the context of our daily lives. Brought to you by Unpacked, a division of OpenDor Media."

Dr. Noam Weissman has sterling credentials. He is the Founder and Director of LaHaV, as well as the Senior Vice President of Education for "Jerusalem U," an online content creator. Prior to that, Noam was the Principal of Shalhevet High School in Los Angeles. Jerusalem U was created by Raphael Shore, and has been renamed OpenDor Media, based in Hollywood, Florida. Dr. Weissman is currently Executive Vice President at OpenDor Media. Dr. Weissman is also the Executive Vice President and Head of Education at ConnectED. He is a Civil Society Fellow at the Aspen Institute. From his biography at Tikvah.org, we learn that his doctoral "dissertation, entitled 'Approaching Israel Education,' argues for a new vision in learning about the modern State of

Israel, focusing on Zionist identity development, narrative formation, and the ability to have a mature and loving relationship with Israel without sacrificing empathy." With a biography like that, why should anyone criticize Dr. Weissman?

Let's jump to the latest episode, S3, E1, "Is 'Zionism' dead?: Redefining identity in 2025."

The podcasters spend 44 minutes essentially making the point that the label "Zionist" means different things to different people. They also drive home the warning that identifying as a Zionist will make one unpopular. I could have said the same in 10 seconds, but I would not broadcast such a warning in the first place. The question should be "What can we do about it?" Instead, the podcasters just wallow in the mud of anti-Zionism, and apparently soak in some of the negativity. The final result borders on anti-Zionist gaslighting.

Here are a few quotes that illustrate the anti-Zionist biases in this supposedly Jewish podcast:

  "Are we past Zionism? Did Zionism happen? It came, it went, it conquered..."

This is a direct slur against the very foundation of Zionism. Early Zionists never spoke of conquering land. The League of Nations Mandate For Palestine said nothing about conquering land. It was the Ottoman Empire that conquered Palestine along with the entire Levant and more, and occupied this empire for 400 years. The British liberated the land in World War One, with the help of the Egyptian army and other Arab legions. The League of Nations mandates assigned the liberated land to the natives of the region, which included both Jews and Arabs. The Arabs never complained about taking control of Ottoman colonies. The mandates had the full support of local Arabs. Prince Faisal, who led the Arab delegation to the Paris Peace Conference, had also agreed to the creation of a Jewish country. He signed an agreement with Chaim Weizmann. The Arab League only complained about recognizing a small sliver of Jewish land as a neighbor after the mandates had been assigned. The mandates were never defined as colonies, but rather, as trusteeships. There were also mandates proposed for the creation of Kurdish and Armenian states, but Turkey refused to sign the Treaty of Sevres. Apparently, Turkey did not reject the creation of the Jewish state.

  "Zionism happened, and it’s a term, it’s a term, by the way, that’s been utilized and viewed negatively by so many people who don’t identify as Zionists across the spectrum, meaning if you’re an ultra-orthodox Jew, the term Zionist has been a negative. In the late 19th, early 20th century, to be called a Zionist was in some ways to be called an insult, from religious Jewry. And now to be called a Zionist is in many contexts is viewed as a pejorative."

Zionism is not simply "a term," nor is it a pejorative. It is the political movement that created the country of my birth. In an underhanded way, Noam Weissman is erasing my identity. Sorry Noam, but you deserve a little push-back for that dig. As for the orthodox Jewish view of Zionism, it is not monolithic. Noam is himself a graduate of Yeshiva University, so he should know better. The overwhelming majority of Orthodox Jews support Israel. The religious argument stems from the predictions of the messianic age, when a Jewish Kingdom will emerge. So-called "Ultra-Orthodox Jews" (there is no such branch of Judaism) are not opposed to a Jewish state, they only distinguish it from the biblical kingdom of prophesy. They are also citizens of the current State of Israel. Real anti-Zionists, such as the SJP activists with the megaphones who shout their hateful screed on college campuses, seek to violently dismantle the existing Jewish state, and never let it reorganize, ever again. Noam Weissman is being intellectually dishonest by conflating two distinctly different narratives.

  "...the term Zionism actually has like a really, really bad, I would say like a PR or marketing problem that it’s just come to mean some like really, really bad things for different people."

The marketing of anti-Zionism is funded by some of the wealthiest oil exporting nations in the world. That is the reason we find ourselves in a defensive position. We are being attacked by dishonest libel, and it is not due to anything we have done. The answer is not to throw up our hands, or distance ourselves from Zionism. We should not fall for the gaslighting of false narratives. Noam and Mijal seem to argue that we should just go with the flow.

  "...a Gallup poll that came out a few years ago that said that 95% of American Jews have favorable views of Israel. And based on that, they said 95% of American Jews are Zionists"

That is not what they said.

  "...according to Pew, the one that came out in 2021, reflecting attitudes from 2020, eight out of 10, so roughly 80% of American Jews feel somewhat or very connected to Israel"

  "...a study that the Cohen Center ran in Los Angeles in 2021, only 42% of respondents described themselves as Zionist"

Comparing two different surveys that use differently worded questions in different sample populations is dishonest. The only conclusion one could make is that the wording of the questions can make a dramatic difference in the results. A properly designed survey would ask identical questions to a stable population over time, in order to measure trends in opinions.

Why the obsession with surveys? As the podcasters admit, labels mean different things to different people. A poorly worded survey question has little value in measuring attitudes. Imagine if a survey was conducted asking people if they identified as "egalitarian." Some might think it refers to fans of the Philadelphia Eagles. Swifties would respond "I used to be, but I converted to being a "Chieftain." Others who don't understand the question would likely respond "no." Few would be assertive enough to ask for the definition. If the positive response rate was low, can the survey conclude that most people reject egalitarianism? It would be dishonest to do so.

Another problem with relying on surveys is that they accomplish nothing. They do not teach, nor change opinions. They do not offer meaningful information about the shortcomings of the educational system, the one we all assume teaches the importance of Zionism.

  "...so I’m gonna just share fact number one, or at least data point number one, is that there’s often a gap between those who say they are connected to Israel and those who self-identify as Zionists."

The point Mijal Bitton is driving home is that not all "survey Jews" identify strongly as Jewish defenders. If someone is merely connected to Israel, that might mean they have a relative in Israel, or just a friend who lives there. One would not expect such a tangential connection to Israel to translate into a devotion to the IDF. Ms Bitton's point is moot, and only serves to weaken the defense of Israel. Furthermore, the surveys Mijal quotes do not ask the general public about their support of Israel's defense. That is the central US policy question that has any practical meaning. The American public does not need to declare devotion to "Zionism" in order to continue selling weapons to Israel. The simple fact that Israel is a liberal democracy surrounded by anarchy and violent despots should be reason enough for most Americans to continue supporting the country.

  "So Matt decided to do a cognitive test of these questions. So he wanted to test four things. So the four questions that he tested was: (1) How emotionally attached are you to Israel? Then he wanted to test questions around (2) criticizing Israel’s government, (3) describing oneself as a Zionist, and (4) Israel as an apartheid state, okay?"

Did you catch the subliminal messaging there? Mijal Bitton uses a supposedly scientific study to challenge the emotional attachment to Israel, to validate criticism of the Israeli government (for what purpose?), to stigmatize the Zionist identity, and to validate the "apartheid state" slander and libel.

As for the title of the podcast, "Is 'Zionism' dead?: Redefining identity in 2025," it is implied from the transcript that the podcasters are projecting their desires. They apparently want Zionism to die. They certainly don't make any effort to defend it. They want to redefine Jewish identity, so that Zionism no longer has a role. In effect, they are comfortable with stateless Jews, who simply assimilate into their host countries. Is this their solution to a "PR or marketing problem?" Is that what Yeshiva University teaches these days? How would Natan Sharansky describe Jewish life in the Soviet Union? I believe the best PR is based on telling the truth.

In an interview with Anouk Lorie, on her "RAW" podcast at Reichman University, Dr. Weissman states
  "Young people have been saying for a long time 'stop asking us to close our eyes. We're not going to listen to you. Don't do the Myths And Facts thing about Israel. It's not real, it's not real.'"

I disagree with Dr. Weissman. Having read Mitchell Bard's "Myths And Facts," I have gained a confident educational foundation, which has strengthened my ability to defend my country's creation and legitimacy.

In the same interview, Dr. Weissman says he has no interest in wasting time on "bad faith actors" who criticize Israel. I disagree with Dr. Weissman, once again. I believe these bad faith actors need to exposed, before they recruit even more activists and comrades in arms.

While I share Dr. Weissman's goal of having a loving relationship with Israel without sacrificing empathy, I also refuse to close my eyes. While Dr. Weissman refuses to acknowledge the brutal truth documented by Palestinian Media Watch, MEMRI, UN Watch, and Corrie Gil-Shuster's street interviews, I recognize this part of the truth. Antisemitism is endemic in many Arab cultures. I have no empathy for that, and I certainly won't ignore it. I invite Dr. Weissman to do the same.



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

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By Daled Amos

On February 4th, Trump held a joint press conference with Netanyahu:
We have an opportunity to do something that could be phenomenal. And I don't want to be cute. I don't want to be a wise guy. But the Riviera of the Middle East, this could be something that could be so...This could be so magnificent. But more importantly than that is the people that have been absolutely destroyed that live there now can live in peace in a much better situation because they are living in hell. And those people will now be able to live in peace. We'll make sure that it's done world class.
Trump has not supplied much detail on how he plans to bring this transformation about or what it might look like, but mention of the Riviera does conjure up a certain image:

French Riviera


But Trump is the only one to have come up with a plan. Last year, Netanyahu introduced his own plan for Gaza. Netanyahu called his plan -- Gaza 2035. It has 3 stages:
Stage 1: Humanitarian aid. Israel will create safe areas free of Hamas control. This step is planned to take 12 months to complete. A coalition of Arab countries, consisting of Saudi Arabia, UAE, Egypt, Bahrain, Jordan, and Morocco will supervise humanitarian aid in the safe areas, which would be run by Gazan Palestinians 

Stage 2: Israeli security responsibility would be moved to Israel, while the Arab coalition mentioned in Stage 1 would creat the Gaza Rehabilitation Authority (GRA) to oversee reconstruction and and manage Gaza's finances. This would be coordinated with a "Marshall Plan" and a deradicalization program.

Stage 3: Self-governance. Israel would retain the right to act against security threats. Authority would slowly be transferred either to a local Gaza government or a unified Palestinian government, which would include the West Bank. It would be contingent on Gaza being successfully deradicalized and demilitarized and subject to agreement by all parties. The final step would be for the Palestinian Arabs to fully manage Gaza independently and join the Abraham Accords.
In addition to governance and security, the plan also covers ways to ramp up the Gazan economy. These include various plans for connecting with the Saudi NEOM mega-project, creating massive free-trade zones, creating solar energy fields, and turning Gaza into a hub for electric vehicle manufacturing.

AI-generated image of Gaza found in the PMO's plan for a post-war Gaza, May 3, 2024.

But talking about turning Gaza into a Riviera might remind us of a time when Gaza--and the West Bank--had an economy whose potential for growth rivaled, and even surpassed, some formidable economies at the time.

In the July/August 2002 edition of Commentary Magazine, Efraim Karsh wrote an article, What Occupation? He describes Gaza and the West Bank following the Six Day War, when those areas came under Israeli control.

Efraim Karsh writes about how severe the situation of the Palestinian Arabs was before the start of Israeli control following the 1967 War:
The larger part, still untold in all its detail, is of the astounding social and economic progress made by the Palestinian Arabs under Israeli "oppression." At the inception of the occupation, conditions in the territories were quite dire. Life expectancy was low; malnutrition, infectious diseases, and child mortality were rife; and the level of education was very poor. Prior to the 1967 war, fewer than 60 percent of all male adults had been employed, with unemployment among refugees running as high as 83 percent. Within a brief period after the war, Israeli occupation had led to dramatic improvements in general well-being, placing the population of the territories ahead of most of their Arab neighbors.
Compare that with the the development of Gaza just during the 1970's:
During the 1970's, the West Bank and Gaza constituted the fourth fastest-growing economy in the world-ahead of such "wonders" as Singapore, Hong Kong, and Korea, and substantially ahead of Israel itself.

The World Bank report, published in 1993, bears this out. 


Page 10 of the report discusses the crisis in 1993 resulting from the First Intifada and compares that to the economic situation of both Gaza and the West Bank during the 1970's:


The charts below from page 13 support Karsh's conclusion. The growth of the economies of the West Bank and Gaza outpaced Singapore, Hong Kong, and Korea, and was substantially ahead of Israel:


The intifada's and the border closings necessary for security reasons did not do the Palestinian Arabs any favors. 

But that did not stop Israel from making another offer to help turn the Gazan economy around. In March 1995, the Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs offered to see to it that Soon The Gaza Strip Will Be Competing with Singapore, thanks to
industrial parks which the leadership of the [Israeli] Foreign, Industry and Finance Ministries is planning at this very moment, under total secrecy. The goal: to establish between 8 to 11 such parks on the cease-fire line between Israel and the autonomous areas, which the Palestinian Authority will control within the next few months.

Foreign Minister Shimon Peres is the one who envisioned all this, and those close to him say with pride: We are getting closer to Singapore, Taiwan and Hong-Kong, in huge steps.

And then, after the vision arrives to develop the cities Gaza, Dir Al- Balah, Ofakim and Sderot it will be copied in the cease-fire line between Afula and Jenin, to Mt. Hebron and Tul-Karm, and will reach the entrance of Kochav Yair.

Each industrial park will be established for about 10,000 employees, and will sit on 2,000 dunam of land, with considerable financial assistance from foreign investors and also governmental subsidies. The Palestinians will run them, and be its workers, for the most part.
Gazan cooperation was not forthcoming, so neither was the rejuvenation of the Palestinian Arab economy.

So here we are, once again, offering to reimagine Gaza.




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

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  • Monday, February 17, 2025
  • Elder of Ziyon

Jordanian media this weekend rediscovered a 32-year old fatwa that says that is it better for Palestinians die as martyrs than to leave their homes.

The Jordanian Fatwa Council in 1993 ruled that the people of Palestine are not permitted to emigrate and are not permitted to evacuate the Holy Land to the Jews.

"The people of Palestine remaining in their land is a jihad in the way of God, and they will have the reward of the mujahideen for it. Their opposition to the enemy is a jihad in the way of God, and they will have the reward of the mujahideen for it," it says. "Those who are killed in those clashes are living martyrs with their Lord, and they are provided for. All support for the steadfastness of the people of Palestine is support for the mujahideen and they are doing so in the way of Allah."

The cynicism of the fatwa, given by Jordanians to Palestinians, is obvious. It is easy to tell your political enemies - which in reality is what Palestinians are to Jordanians - that they must die, and then to justify it with religion. 

But that cynicism is being seen today, by the international community, just by substituting "human rights" for "religion." The world is insisting that Gazans do not have the right to emigrate to other Arab countries, even if they want to. 

This points to a major flaw with Donald Trump's insistence that the US should take over Gaza and remove the Gazans from the region.

It is almost certainly against international law. 

Moving people against their will - deportation, population transfers, what have you - is one of the primary evils in current international law. Yes, it was a standard practice before the Geneva Conventions, but that argument does not hold water today. The only way that it might be justified is to say that it is for their own safety, which is a reasonable argument given how many explosives and Hamas booby-traps are sprinkled throughout Gaza. But that cannot justify not allowing the Gazans to return.

In reality, international law is largely a myth. Powerful nations can and do violate international law with impunity with only token complaints from human rights groups. The double standards applied to Israel is proof positive that international law is just another political tool and is not applied equally to all. 

However, international law is still a powerful force, justly applied or not. 

And the right to emigrate to escape a dangerous situation is an equally powerful human rights and international law concept. 

Trump could have leveraged international humanitarian law in a simple way that would largely accomplish the same goals with the opponents looking like fools. And that would be to insist that Gazans who want to leave Gaza voluntarily and enter Arab and Muslim countries should be allowed to do so.

Throughout the past sixteen months, I have found only a single article by a human rights worker that said the simple truth that Gazans should be allowed to flee Gaza. Significantly, it was written by Bill Frelick, HRW's refugee rights director  worldwide. No Middle East HRW employee would dare say something like this because they are so staunchly anti-Israel. 

The article was barely mentioned by HRW and ignored by the world. Otherwise, the human rights community has been silent about a clear human rights issue.

Trump could have called out this hypocrisy. He could have noted that hundreds of thousands of Gazans would love to relocate elsewhere - one third said so before October 7. No one could have seriously argued then with his pressuring Egypt and Jordan and Turkey to take in refugees, just as they took in hundreds of thousands from Syria, Iraq, Sudan and elsewhere. 

Their hypocrisy in refusing to accept Palestinians and only Palestinians would have been clear to the world, and pressure would have ensured that they accept them. 

It is still possible that the threat of US withholding of aid to Jordan and Egypt will result in a token response. But it could have been done so much better. 

No sane Gazan would stay in a war zone if they can leave - except for Hamas members. Allowing Gazans to leave voluntarily would make the still necessary job of clearing out Hamas much easier and with fewer casualties. 

It was a missed opportunity. And it is a shame.



Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

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

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  • Monday, February 17, 2025
  • Elder of Ziyon
Palestinian site Safa reports:

 26 resistance operations continued in the West Bank and occupied Jerusalem during the past twenty-four hours against occupation soldiers and settlers.

The Palestine Information Center "Ma'ati" indicated that the resistance activities included a shooting operation, armed clashes, 6 explosive device detonations, damaging a military vehicle, confronting settlers' attacks, in addition to the outbreak of confrontations and stone-throwing in 17 locations.
It was not an unusual day.

The Ma'ati website counts an average of 15 attacks a day. For 2025 so far they count

107 Shootings
119 Explosive devices
3 Run-over operations
3 Stabbing operations
28 Damage and destruction
11 Molotov cocktail attacks




plus rock throwing, fireworks and other lower level attacks.

Even Israeli media downplays these attacks - and many aren't covered at all. Which means the mainstream media ignores all of these attacks unless they are fatal.

Nobody realizes how active the Palestinian Authority-controlled front is in this seven-front war.



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Sunday, February 16, 2025

From Ian:

Clifford D May: Trump’s question for Arab rulers
Though Trump is famously unpredictable, I wouldn’t be astonished – based on remarks he’s made over recent days—if he were to tell Sissi and King Abdullah something along these lines:

“You receive huge amounts of American aid along with vital security assistance. These are not entitlements.

“I’m trying to put an end to endless wars in the Middle East. That requires that Gazans not be ruled by Hamas, the Muslim Brotherhood, or the mullahs in Tehran.

“So, are you with me or against me? Are you an ally? Because I expect America’s allies to contribute to the collective security and give at least as much as they take. Is that you or not?

They should think hard before answering.
Ben-Dror Yemini: Western Countries Have Funded Palestinian Hostility toward Israel for Decades
Before we criticize Trump's Gaza Plan, we must also condemn Western countries which, for decades, have financed the Palestinian terrorists' ideology.

They have funded the Palestinian refugee agency UNRWA and supported Palestinian NGOs that promote the destruction of Israel through the "right of return."

For decades, the Western approach toward the Palestinians has been one of dangerous appeasement that only fuels radicalization and obstinacy.

The Palestinians have rejected every proposal unless it calls for the elimination of Israel - that is, the "right of return."

The two-state solution is irrelevant as long as it is clear, with high probability, that any Palestinian state will become an Iranian outpost or a Qatari branch of the Muslim Brotherhood.

Change is possible; it has already occurred in parts of the Arab world such as the UAE, Morocco, and Saudi Arabia.

There is a direct correlation between changes in textbooks in some Arab countries and an increased willingness to reconcile with Israel.

Not a single dollar should go to the Palestinian Authority as long as hate is being taught. Not a single dollar to NGOs that support BDS.

Anyone who wants peace must begin by fostering an atmosphere of reconciliation.
Amb. Alan Baker: The Moral Bankruptcy and Hypocrisy of the International Red Cross
The 1986 foundational Statutes of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) proclaim that it is "a worldwide humanitarian movement, whose mission is to prevent and alleviate human suffering wherever it may be found, to protect life and health and ensure respect for the human being, in particular in times of armed conflict."

For an organization whose sole purpose and mission is to help victims of wars and human rights violations, it is patently obvious that the ICRC has totally failed in its mission, as reflected in its mishandling of Israel's hostage crisis.

The ICRC failed in its most basic responsibilities to the more than 250 kidnap victims from some 20 nations taken hostage as part of Hamas's egregious invasion, mass murder, and rape. Moral and legal responsibility lies chiefly with the Swiss government under whose auspices the ICRC functions, together with the state's parties to the Geneva Conventions who finance its very existence and are in the position to monitor, direct, and influence the ICRC's functioning.

Why have they not impressed upon those elements influencing Hamas - chiefly Qatar, Egypt, the UN, and other Arab elements - that Israeli victims of terror and kidnapping are entitled to humane treatment?

How is it conceivable that the Swiss government and the ICRC have sat idly for more than 16 months while being openly manipulated and abused by the Hamas terror organization? Rather, they have passively accepted Hamas's refusal to allow the transfer of medications, and medical and humanitarian visits, to the sick and wounded and all illegally-held hostages.

Moreover, it challenges all semblance of logic and moral clarity that the ICRC can countenance images of armed, masked terrorists standing on ICRC vehicles displaying the Red Cross emblem and flag while such vehicles transport tortured, suffering, and ill Israeli hostages - and its representatives participating in "release ceremonies" with terrorist leaders.
  • Sunday, February 16, 2025
  • Elder of Ziyon
Plenty of people have already reviewed and savaged Ta-Nehisi Coates' book "The Message" section on Israel. I have not read the whole thing but I was looking at Benny Morris' scathing review and saw him mention something that prompted me to check out its context.

Coates describes his visit to the Temple Mount. Actually, he doesn't: he only describes waiting in line.

On my first full day in Jerusalem, I walked with a group of fellow writers, editors, and artists into the Old City of Jerusalem. ...There were about a dozen of us total, pulled from all over the world—South Africa, Kashmir, the U.K., and America—at the invitation of the Palestine Festival of Literature. ....Our group of companions walked to the brink of the Lion’s Gate, where we met the custodian of one of Islam’s holiest sites: the Haram al-Sharif complex, which includes the Al-Aqsa Mosque and the Dome of the Rock. This was the object of our visit, but it was made difficult by the phalanx of soldiers who examined our passports and then, for no discernible reason, made us wait.

The land of the Haram al-Sharif complex is holy to both Muslims and Jews.....The Old City is in East Jerusalem, and, for the moment, a Jordanian-funded Waqf exercises nominal control of Al-Aqsa. But the real control belongs to the occupying power, with predictable results: Israelis regularly tour Al-Aqsa, while Palestinians are barred from the Western Wall. 

We stood at the Lion’s Gate for the next forty-five minutes or so, talking amongst ourselves, unsure of what was happening or why we had been stopped. Was it that we had cameras? Was it that our guide was Jordanian? No justifications were given, no questions asked, no instructions offered. The soldiers just stood there with their enormous guns, blocking the way. I leaned against a nearby wall and watched as groups of tourists streamed in and out of the Gate, unmolested and unquestioned. But no one visibly Muslim passed through the Lion’s Gate in all the time we were made to wait. I could not quite put words to what I was seeing, but watching those soldiers stand there and steal our time, the sun glinting off their shades like Georgia sheriffs, I could feel the lens of my mind curving to refract the blur of new and strange events. 
None of this makes any sense - until you realize that Coates is not describing Lion's Gate but the Mughrabi (Moroccan) Gate. The Mughrabi Gate is the only gate to the Temple Mount that the Waqf allows non-Muslims to use for visiting the Temple Mount complex. (They hold the keys to all other gates.) 

There are about half a dozen accessible gates to the Temple Mount. For all of them but this one, Muslims enter and exit pretty freely. There are no lines to enter using those gates except during major holidays and perhaps Fridays when tens of thousands go there to pray.

That's the reason Coates saw no Muslims entering.  Those heavily armed guards were not there to prevent Muslim worshippers, who can stroll in through the other gates. Here's a Google Street View image of the entrance from the Cotton Merchants' Gate - no barriers, no turnstiles, no obvious metal detectors. 



The guards at Mughrabi Gate are there to protect the tourists who have very limited hours that they can visit. They are there to block Jews and Christians from bringing in religious or political objects like prayerbooks or flags. They protect the Mount itself from fanatics like Denis Michael Rohan, the Christian who set part of the mosque on fire in 1969. 

Those scary guards are there to make it difficult for non-Muslims, not Muslims.

Going to the Mount as a group of a dozen people, including professional photographers with equipment, including a Jordanian who would normally enter through another gate, would definitely require more scrutiny than the average tourist during visiting hours. 

In 2013, they stopped me - a quite identifiable Jew - from bringing in various pieces of video and sound equipment for the video tour I made. I had to leave most of it with the guards and retrieve it afterwards, recording my visit with a single camera.

Muslims don't have to jump through the hoops that Jews and Christians have to in order to visit. Coates' observation that there were no Muslims is not evidence of anti-Muslim apartheid - it is evidence of anti-Jewish and anti-Christian apartheid!

Also, Israeli Arabs and Palestinian residents of Jerusalem can visit the Western Wall any time with no issues. West Bank Palestinians need a permit, just as they do to go to the rest of Jerusalem and the Temple Mount. Coates makes an assumption based on his hate of Israel and doesn't bother to do the least amount of checking. 

Just this one section of the book shows that Ta-Nehisi Coates is an unreliable and sloppy reporter, looking for evidence that fits his biases and showing no interest in finding out the truth. 




Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

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

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

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

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