Thursday, May 29, 2025

From Ian:

Brendan O'Neill: The West’s lies about Israel are falling apart
Will the media elites retract their defamations? Not likely. My guess is they’ll let this story fade. They’ll subtly memory-hole it. For it heaps shame on them. It exposes them as excuse-makers for one of the most barbarous outfits on Earth. As the Jewish nation struck at the Islamo-cult that visited such apocalyptic racial violence on its people, they effectively pushed the Hamas line. They falsely said this was another bloodlusting assault by deranged Zionists on the civilian infrastructure of Gaza. As Israel faced down the genocidal terrorists that dream of destroying the Jewish homeland, they insinuated that it’s Israel that’s genocidal.

That’s the thing: the media-elite handwringing over the strike on the European Hospital was more than misinformation – it was a complete inversion of truth. It was Hamas that was using the hospital for military purposes, yet they suggested it was Israel that was doing that. It was Hamas that endangered sick kids’ lives by turning their facility into an outpost in a raging war, yet they called Israel child-killers. It is Hamas that cares so little for Palestinian life that its fascist gunmen will happily hide behind patients in a hospital, using the ill and wounded as human shields – and yet it’s Israel, always, that is accused of devaluing the humanity of Gazans. Our cultural establishment falsely charges Israel with crimes that are actually committed by Hamas. These are Kafkaesque levels of deceit and blame-shifting.

This is what has been laid bare by the reported death of Sinwar in a tunnel under a hospital: the ruthless duplicity of Hamas and the staggering gullibility of the Western commentariat. This event threatens to drag the anti-Israel activist class off that moral highground they think they occupy. For 18 months they’ve been libelling Israel as a nation in the grip of such genocidal lunacy that it desires the destruction of every life-giving facility in Gaza. They overlook, or outright deny, the reams of evidence showing that Hamas hides in hospitals, stores weapons in hospitals, uses hospitals as bases in which to torture its opponents. Now we know it even has its highest level meetings under hospitals.

The cynicism and untruths of the anti-Israel set benefit no one but Hamas. In fact they’re the only thing Hamas has going for it right now. It might be losing the physical war with Israel, but at least it’s winning the propaganda war among the deluded faux-virtuous of the Western world. What these people call Israel’s genocidal destruction of the Palestinian people is in truth a war against anti-Semitic terrorism in which thousands of militants have been killed and their leaders taken out. We should be celebrating this dismantling of neo-fascism, not turning truth on its head by calling the nation responsible for it ‘fascists’.
Arsen Ostrovsky: Why the UK must demand Karim Khan’s resignation
The grave allegations against Khan create irreparable harm to the very foundations of the ICC, established in 2002 as a “court of last resort” to end impunity for the perpetrators of the most heinous of crimes, including war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide - not the Orwellian circumstances of arresting Israeli leaders for responding to the pogrom of October 7.

Moreover, Khan’s actions represent not only an assault on Israel’s inalienable right to self-defence against the jihadists of Hamas, but a national security threat to the UK and every democracy fighting terror, by exposing them to spurious and unfounded charges based purely on political considerations, instead of adherence to the rule of law.

Now, the ICC’s own Appeals Chamber took the unprecedented step of reopening the question of jurisdiction regarding “Palestine”, admitting serious flaws in the original rationale that allowed the case to proceed. In addition to Israel not even being a signatory to the Rome Statute, which governs the functioning of the ICC, it is patently clear that “Palestine” fails to meet the most basic of criteria for statehood under international law that is necessary to bring proceedings, or can even legally defer criminal jurisdiction to the ICC under the Oslo Accords.

The UK, a founding architect of the post-WWII legal order, should be alarmed that, rather than upholding the principles of justice, the Court has unleashed a great injustice, morphing into a tool of lawfare – used to politically delegitimise Israel while offering impunity to true violators of international law, like Hamas and their Iranian and Qatari sponsors.

The UK cannot afford to stay on the sidelines, as the very legal order it fought to create and maintain, is being so mercilessly torn apart. If the UK truly believes in the rule of law, due process, and justice for victims of sexual violence, it cannot look the other way. To do so would be a gross abdication of moral – and legal – responsibility.

This is about more than Israel. It is about defending the integrity of the international legal system itself. To salvage it, the UK must demand Karim Khan’s resignation and reject these deeply flawed, politicised warrants.
UNICEF Has Crossed a Line! – Cut All Funding NOW
UNICEF’s latest statement accusing Israel of a “ruthless war on children” is not just disgraceful – it is malicious, dangerous, and dripping with the oldest blood libel. By peddling unverified figures, recycling already-debunked claims, and without even mentioning Hamas, UNICEF has revealed itself as nothing more than a propaganda arm of terrorist apologists.

Let’s be crystal clear: UNICEF is not speaking for children. It is speaking for terrorists.

Their so-called “statement” is riddled with lies and intentional distortions. The numbers they push – 50,000 children killed or injured – have no source, most likely comes straight from Hamas with zero transparency or independent verification. But truth clearly doesn’t matter to UNICEF – only narrative. And what is that narrative? The same one that has haunted Jews for centuries: the slanderous, vile lie that Jews kill children. This is not humanitarian advocacy. This is antisemitic incitement masquerading as concern.

The al-Najjar family report, heavily promoted by pro-Hamas sources and amplified by the UN without a shred of independent verification, is full of glaring inconsistencies. Images allegedly showing the aftermath have been exposed as either AI-generated or recycled from unrelated incidents, with some of the children pictured previously reported dead in entirely different contexts months ago. The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) have categorically denied any involvement in the alleged strike, and so far, not one piece of credible evidence has emerged to support the claim. Yet the narrative continues to be blindly echoed by the UN, despite its clear fabrication.

Similarly, the video of a child supposedly trapped in a burning school in Gaza City is riddled with inconsistencies. The child is seen calmly walking through flames, with no sign of panic or injury—behavior completely inconsistent with the narrative being pushed. Even more damning, the same child was later seen alive and unharmed in footage posted just minutes after the fire, casting serious doubt on the entire story. These are not mere errors—they are deliberate deceptions, and the UN’s willingness to spread such disinformation plays directly into the hands of Hamas propaganda.

Hamas released a new fatality list on May 11th. The new list revealed how 72% of combatant age deaths and 65% of teens who have died are male. Confirming the use of child combatants by Hamas and contradicting claims of indiscriminate attacks.

Where is the mention of Israeli children kidnapped, burned alive, murdered in cold blood, and ripped from their families on October 7? Where is the outrage for the babies kidnapped and murdered in Hamas tunnels? Where is the condemnation of Hamas for launching this war, for hiding behind civilians, for using schools and hospitals as military bases?
Our weekly column from the humor site PreOccupied Territory.

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Washington, May 29 - Jew-hating opponents of the sitting US President have found themselves facing a dilemma over the last several weeks, activists acknowledged today, now that the chief executive has chosen as a target the film industry, a bastion symbolic to them of the very people they purport to exert malignant control over that industry, placing those Jew-haters on the same side of an issue as the hated president.

Advocates of conspiracy theories that allege Jewish domination of Hollywood who also despise Donald Trump must now decide which of those enemies they see as more dangerous: whether to seize the opportunity to speak up in defense of an industry that actually pushes the progressive agenda effectively, or to exploit Trump's criticism to score points against the Jews.

The activists gave token acknowledgement to the existence of a third possibility: to say nothing. Staying quiet, however, has never represented a serious course of action in their behavior.

"Structurally, it's a familiar dilemma for anyone who dislikes Trump," explained Whoopi Goldberg, who by her own admission changed her birth name Caryn Elaine Johnson to sound more Jewish as a way to, she thought, give her better entrée in the entertainment industry. "He often gets us on the left to reflexively yell our opposition to whatever he's pushing, and that's gotten us in to some uncomfortable places: defending criminals, rapists, and violent thugs just because Trump doesn't like them. Voters see that, and we're unable to take advantage of his unpopularity because our reactions make us look like the crazy ones."

"Well, I'm not so sure about what to do now," Goldberg continued. "On one hand, it looks like there's a rising tide of legitimacy for opposition to Jews, which doesn't happen every decade in America. On the other, we've talked up the existential fascist threat of Trump so much that to suddenly agree with him seems not only jarringly out of character; it makes us look like hypocrites. I mean, that's par for the course in our line of work, but it's just more glaring this time."

The challenge, explained podcaster Hasan Piker, lies in the pattern: Trump has a knack for zeroing in on "eighty-twenty" issues, issues firmly in the American electorate's consensus, and taking a proud stance on the side of the eighty percent - and the Democrats and Democratic Party allies follow their knee-jerk reaction: characterizing as evil and destructive whatever the hated Trump supports, establishing them by default in the minority and keeping their poll numbers even lower than Trump's abysmal ratings.

"It's the Jews' fault this is happening, obviously," realized Piker.



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

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Jewish particularism is often accused of being parochial or exclusionary. But in a world obsessed with universalism, maybe particularism is what we need most.

Many thinkers have noted how Judaism is a particularistic belief system, which is in tension with the universalistic thinking of most popular ethical systems. This is probably one reason why Jewish ethics does not receive the same amount of attention in the academy: universalism is considered so obviously superior because it treats all people equally, and Jewish style parochialism - where only Jews have a covenantal relationship with God - is considered gauche. 

In my project to come up with a secularized Jewish ethical system - a universal, testable and open  system that can handle any situation with alacrity - I have to deal with this concept: how do you secularize Jewish-style particularism?

I believe the answer is that it is not only possible, but it is a necessary counterweight to what I would call "naive universalism," the "Imagine"-type ideal of one world where there is no religion, no possessions, and "the world can live as one." 

One problem with universalistic ethics is that Jews are a glaring violator of their rules. They have their own rules, their own identity, their own state, and their own sense of ethics that precede and outperform universalistic ethics. Whether they admit it or not, this can fuel antisemitism since Jews don't "fit" in their idealized world. 

The key to making particularism universal is the Jewish concept of kiddush Hashem, translated as "sanctifying the Name of God." In vernacular, this means always acting in an exemplary manner in front of non-Jews. Jews know, better than anyone, how people tend to stereotype based on how one or very few members of a group behave. If we act nobly, we are a kiddush Hashem, if we act badly, it is a "chilul Hashem."

This idea can easily be extended to any defined group of people. Black people know very well that how they act individually affects how they are perceived as a group. The same goes other minorities, women, and even disabled people. If you are identifiable, like it or not, you are a symbol.

This reality is not generally accepted in universalist ethics. Since everyone should treat everyone equally, when they don't it is only a problem for the bigot, not for the victim. Unfortunately, that doesn't reflect real life.

Jewish ethics reflects the world as it is, not as John Lennon wants it to be. 

When you extend the concept of "kiddush Hashem" to all groups, you are dealing with reality. Being a member of a defined group brings additional responsibilities, whether we like it or not. So there is an additional moral responsibility for every member to act as nobly as possible, especially in public, and avoid shaming their group. 

This is the beginning of universalizing particularism - or, as I would call it, true pluralism. It is recognizing that not everyone is the same, that there are lots of groups that people belong to, and that this membership brings both the benefits (of community) and responsibilities. 

Responsibilities are the key. It isn't only that the Jews consider themselves the "chosen people" - it is that they cannot be un-chosen. They are morally obligated to hold themselves to a higher standard. I can list many Jewish values that also apply to the world, but there are hundreds of commandments that Jews are expected to fulfill that non-Jews are not. 

And this is how to truly universalize the concept. 

Other groups can - and should - feel like they have something unique to teach the world. Every group has admirable values - as a group -  that they emphasize more than other groups. Arabs are unparalleled in how well they treat their guests. The Japanese are known for how respectful they are. Germans are precise and punctual, Americans are innovative. These are admirable cultural and moral traits and they can be object lessons in improving ourselves. 

In short, everyone can be a "light unto the nations."  This is part of the responsibility of being a member of a group: to increase respect for your group with your own particular emphases of morality and culture. 

There are practical benefits, that again universalism would deny -0 or prefer not to - exist. It is that people naturally feel closer to their own people than to others', they will tend to prioritize helping out their own before the rest of the world. This is not an immoral violation of universal principles, it is a quite moral obligation of building community and heling out those closest to you before everyone else in the world. 

If you universalize particularism, you end up with a much richer world than that of naive universalism.

We can even go beyond this. People in the majority culture will gravitate towards being members of groups too. Some of them are because they live in a certain place, some because they share interests, some because they were in the same place at the same time like school or the army. And some will make up their own groups like Daughters of the American Revolution or Rotary Club. 

Kurt Vonnegut scornfully called some of the more arbitrary groups "granfalloons" because they created commonalities when there really is none - "Hoosiers," for example. But he is wrong: a community is whatever people want it to be.

The question is - do they want it to be a force for good, besides the benefits of comradeship? The Kiwanis Club helps children;  there is no reason that Boston Red Sox fans cannot also visit nursing homes - and therefore make a "kiddush Hashem" for all Red Sox fans.

When you prioritize duties over rights, as Jewish ethics does, then your communities do the same. And that enriches everyone. 

To be sure, there is a difference between groups you voluntarily join and those you are born into.  But even when identity is imposed, there remains a real, if hard-won, choice: how to respond, what to do with the cards you’re dealt.

The Jewish story, after all, is one of centuries of persecution against their particularism - being marked, excluded, and defined from the outside. But the response wasn’t just to endure; it was to turn even an imposed identity into an opportunity for purpose, ethical action, and kiddush Hashem.

That’s a lesson available to anyone, in any group. Even if you aren't one of the "chosen people" you can still choose how to represent your people in a positive way.

When you look at our response to being a member of your community as a choice, then perhaps you can see that anyone - minority or not - can choose to build their communities as centers of kindness and charity and moral actions. We cannot always choose to be members of groups but we cn sure choose how to make the best of that community.

 Old-school nationalism does the same for majority or “historic” status. But Jewish tradition - and, potentially, any group that rises to the challenge - says: Don’t rest on your identity. Do something to make it honorable and noble. 

This is where naive universalism falls apart. Naive universalism pretends everyone is (or should be) the same, that group identities are ultimately obstacles to peace, or that difference is only valuable when erased. Today’s progressivism often sanctifies minority status as inherently virtuous no matter what their actions. 

I'm proposing true pluralism. not only recognizing differences. Jewish particularism is based on the idea of a covenant between Jews and God that govern their relationship. What if every group had a tacit covenantal agreement with each member: every member is expected to act in ways that reflect well on the group as a whole.  Every group, if it wants to matter, should not only embrace its particularism but also turn it into an engine for ethical action, self-critique, and blessing for others. Not “all groups are good because they exist,” but “all groups can be good if they rise to the moral challenge of being a responsible group.”

Groups exist whether we like it or not. Prejudice exists and it isn't going away. Extending the Jewish ethical model, based on kiddush Hashem as well as other responsibilities to the community ("All Israel is responsible for one another,") is a way to turn what has been seen as a necessary evil into a positive model for every group to be proud.

When you recognize the world as it is, you can start to map the way to get to the world you want it to be.



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

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

  • Thursday, May 29, 2025
  • Elder of Ziyon

The Israel-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation distributed 1.6 million meals to Gazans - today alone.

Its ramping up of providing aid from zero to this number in only three days is nothing short of remarkable. It shows that private organizations can do a far better job than established NGOs and the UN.

Yet the "humanitarians'  are very upset, throwing ridiculous accusations at GHF. Instead of rejoicing that millions of Gazans are getting food, they are repeating Hamas lies and making up their own. 

Here's a perfect example reported by Wafa:

The UN Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food, Michael Fakhri, said that Israel has brought Gaza to the "most dangerous stage of starvation," and that the effects will last for generations. He emphasized that what is happening in the Gaza Strip constitutes "genocide, starvation, a crime against humanity, and a gross violation of human rights."

Fakhri added in a press statement on Thursday that what he has witnessed during the past months of war clearly reveals Israel's plan for the Gaza Strip.

He continued: "Israel's plan has always been to inflict the greatest possible damage and destruction, and to inflict the highest possible death toll, in order to achieve its primary goal: to occupy and annex all of Gaza."

The UN rapporteur said that a small amount of aid has recently entered the Gaza Strip, as Israel has allowed a very small number of aid trucks into Gaza, "but they do not meet the needs of the population."

He stressed, "The most important thing to remember is that the numbers we have now are always far lower than the reality, because international journalists are not allowed in, and a very limited number of aid workers are allowed to work there. So we know that the reality is much worse than we can imagine."

He added, "Everyone knows that what is happening is genocide."
Note the timing: he said this today. At the very moment that GHF and Israel are proving that they could do what the UN and other NGOs could not, Fakhri is doubling down on accusations of intentional starvation and genocide. 

It is clear that Fakhri doesn't give a damn about Gazans getting food. He only wants to accuse Israel of the worst war crimes, and when Israel's actions contradict his accusations - just double down.

And this is what the other "humanitarian" agencies are doing over the past week. They care more about politics, about their turf, about their reputations, and above all about demonizing Israel, than they do about helping Gazans. Israel invited them to partner with them and they refused, citing international laws that do not exist. 

Let us be crystal clear: Israel and the GHF have been successful in ramping up, from scratch, a program to feed Gazans. There is no reason to believe that it won't continue to grow, with more distribution sites and more efficiencies, in coming weeks. Yet every major international organization is criticizing an initiative to do what they claim is their highest priority. 

In a normal world, Fakhri would be dismissed  immediately. But since he says what people want to hear, there are  no consequences for his absurd slanders. 




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

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

Real life has overtaken parody a lot in recent years.
Ireland wants an expansion of the definition of genocide to bring home the enormity of what Israel is doing in Gaza, the Taoiseach has told the Dáil.

The Israeli Government, with its “far-right elements”, is "committing genocide in Gaza right now," Micheál Martin said.

Labour Party leader Ivana Bacik echoed: "It is genocide." 

The Taoiseach added: "We're hoping that we will broaden the criteria by which Genocide is judged by the Geneva Convention."
It's genocide - as long as you don't let the international law definition of genocide get in the way!

It might be hard to satirize this blatant antisemitism, but I have to try.







Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

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

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

  • Thursday, May 29, 2025
  • Elder of Ziyon
The anger over the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation shows, as clearly as can be, the double standards applied to Israel.

The Humanitarian Country Team yesterday said, "A new militarized distribution system has just been launched. As we have stated, it does not align with humanitarian principles, it puts people at risk, and it will not meet people’s needs, or dignity, across Gaza.."

The main problem, the critics say, is that Israel's military is in the distribution hubs, and  that violates "neutrality" in aid distribution.

Yet when Hamas gunmen pretend to "protect" the aid, for some reason the UN and other organizations haven't had a problm with "neutrality."

This is only the beginning of the hypocrisy and falsehoods from the critics.

From the beginning of the war, the UN and others say that Israel is responsible for feeding Gaza because it is still legally the occupying power, using a tortured logic that controlling the borders and airspace is considered  occupation under international law. The UN and Israel's critics say Gaza has been occupied by Israel since 1967, and even after the 2005 disengagement. This was a rule made up just for Israel and Gaza. 

And they know this as well.

Because when they say that Israel cannot use the military to help protect aid centers and corridors, that is the opposite of what international law says.

The Fourth Geneva Convention says, "To the fullest extent of the means available to it, the Occupying Power has the duty of ensuring the food and medical supplies of the population; it should, in particular, bring in the necessary foodstuffs, medical stores and other articles if the resources of the occupied territory are inadequate."

The 1958 ICRC Commentary says, "It should be noted that the Convention does not lay down the method by which this is to be done. The occupying authorities retain complete freedom of action in regard to this, and are thus in a position to take the circumstances of the moment into account."

Which makes sense in a case of real occupation, because all the functions of a government fall to the occupiers. It makes no sense when Israel has no areas under its direct control. 

Of course a real occupier can use the military to expedite aid delivery. If Israel was really occupying Gaza, then it would be legally obligated to directly provide aid or to oversee NGOs in providing aid under whatever constrains the IDF deem necessary for security and to avoid aid going to Gaza. The only way their argument against "militarized distribution" makes sense is if Israel is not occupying Gaza!

The UN and other critics want to consider Gaza occupied when it is in Hamas' favor but they do not consider it occupied if it helps Israel's desire to cut out Hamas.

The occupation paradigm has changed in the past few months. Up until recently, even though Israel invaded Gaza, it didn't hold much territory. That is changing. And any territory it physically holds is, under the legal definition, occupied.

Since now Israel has said it intends to re-occupy parts of Gaza, this means under international humanitarian law (IHL) it must provide aid. According to real international law, not the one made up just for Israel, "occupation" extends to where the occupier has real control, i.e., boots on the ground.  These humanitarian zones are set up and built by Israel, inside Gaza - meaning that at least those areas are, legally, occupied - and Israel is obligated to provide aid in those areas.

There is no problem in international law for the occupier to hire a private contractor to help distribute aid.  It might be a problem only if Israel is not the occupier of any part of Gaza.

So Israel is doing everything international law demands of it - and its critics are whining about it because they simply do not want Israel to win the war against Hamas. That is the only consistency I can see as to when they say aid distribution is not neutral and when it is, when Gaza is considered occupied and when it isn't, when refugees are encouraged to flee war zones for other countries and when they are not, emphasizing glitches on the first day of GHF food delivery while ignoring Gazans being shot dead while taking flour from a Hamas warehouse - the only pattern is that they are always choosing the position to make it more difficult for Israel to win the war. 

In respect to aid, I cannot find a single example where Israel has violated international law. In fact, that applies to the entire war in Gaza. The way that the IDF built these humanitarian distribution hubs is a perfect example of how Israel wants aid to be delivered to the innocent and not hijacked by Hamas. It is utterly inconsistent with "using starvation as a weapon of war" or "genocide." 

Why has no news media noticed this pattern? Why does it repeat the UN lies? Why is it so hard to look up the Geneva Conventions themselves? 



Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

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

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   
 

 

Wednesday, May 28, 2025

From Ian:

Seth Mandel: On Holocaust Envy
Holocaust envy, then, is a demented inversion of the current conflict’s modern origin story, a way for some Palestinians to wipe the slate of guilt clean and claim a false moral equivalence with their would-be victims.

For Europe, it’s even simpler. The Holocaust is not Europe’s only modern legacy, of course. But it is the continent’s ever-present demon. Some in Europe choose to attempt to dispel this demon by denying it ever happened. Others do so by erasing the level of evil attached to the great crime of the 20th century: If the Jews are capable of perpetrating such atrocities too, then nothing more is owed them.

Both of these explanations rely on the belief that the Holocaust was not unique.

But what if it was unique? What accounts for Holocaust envy in that case? One answer is that the Holocaust becomes a trump card; for the anti-Semites whose self-perception is based on their victimhood, the Holocaust inspires literal jealousy. For Europeans, if the Holocaust is unique then it can only be mitigated by the unique evil of its descendants. Thus, we come full circle and the Jews are back to being a problem the world has to deal with.

There is another angle to this. The Polish philosopher Stanislaw Krajewski last year proposed a brilliant theory on Holocaust envy and the role that its perceived uniqueness plays in the minds of those who would appropriate Jewish suffering for their own ends.

Krajewski points out that many people believe that the ability to attribute a death to a Holocaust-level act “somehow ennobles them… it is not just any death.” The killings of the Holocaust were not themselves noble deaths, however, he notes: they were intentionally humiliating.

Instead, one must think of the Holocaust as a holy war against the Jews: “let us recall that the great murder actions often began on Jewish holidays.… What is more, such acts as public desecration of Torah scrolls were also a favorite way to show who was superior. Apparently, the task was not only to kill Jews, but also to humiliate and destroy the Jewish religion. In a world without Jews—and this was Hitler’s dream—Judaism would have disappeared anyway, but by choosing such dates and introducing such behaviors, it was possible to immediately show the superiority of the German order over everything Jewish. And above all, it was possible to demonstrate to Jews, as well as everyone else, that the Jewish tradition, its most sacred moments, its sacred objects would be of no help.”

The Nazis, then, took the Bible very seriously. And the Bible’s main theme is the “election of the Jews.” The Holocaust was a revolt against God’s having chosen the Jewish people. To be the victims of the Holocaust, therefore, meant first being the one and only chosen nation. And that is both unique and ennobling—and the source of a poisoned global public discourse about Israel.
If you hate Israel, you hate Jews. Own it
I knew it in my guts to be true, long before 7 October. Now the Chief Rabbi’s gone and said it. Out loud. In public. Good on him. If you are anti-Zionist, then yes, you are anti-Jewish. And not just a bit anti-Jewish, either. You hate – for whatever sinister motive – not just the idea of a Jewish state but Judaism itself.

The anti-Zionist movement that’s metastasised like mould across the left and much of the Muslim world is not some noble stand against colonialism. It’s grubby pound-shop Jew hate.

Being a campaigning anti-Zionist – that is, opposing Israel’s right to exist ‘From the river to the sea’ – is not a political stand like campaigning for lower taxes and a better-funded NHS. It’s loaded, venomous, visceral and oozes from a very dark place.

Where does this darkness often start? In vast swathes of the Middle East and campuses worldwide, anti-Zionism isn’t a reasoned evidence-based judgment. It’s baked in. Inculcated. Handed down. In textbooks, in sermons. On BBC Arabic. A steady drip-feed from childhood casting Jews as horned demons, blood drinkers and well poisoners. It’s a horror show.

Children deserve formative years, not deformative years. Then we wonder why some of those same communities here in Britain call for a global intifada on Oxford Street.

You still think it’s just about Gaza? Grow up.
Because Words Matter and Lies Kill: Julius Streicher, The Man Who Was Hanged for His Words
On October 16, 1946, Julius Streicher stood on the gallows in Nuremberg. He was not a general. He never commanded an army. He didn’t sign deportation orders or operate gas chambers. But he was hanged for crimes against humanity.

His weapon was not a gun. It was a pen and ink.

As the publisher of the virulently antisemitic newspaper Der Stürmer, Streicher relentlessly dehumanized Jews. His cartoons depicted grotesque caricatures. His headlines screamed conspiracies. His editorials encouraged hatred. And though he did not kill with his own hands, the Nuremberg Tribunal made clear: the lies he told fueled the murder machine. His incitement, they said, paved the way to the Holocaust.

He was convicted not for what he did, but for what he made others believe.

Because today, we are once again witnessing a barrage of lies. Not from Nazi presses, but from podiums at the United Nations. From op-ed pages of major newspapers and media organizations. From university lecture halls and international NGOs.

Israel, the world's only Jewish state, fighting an existential war after the worse terror attack in modern history, is portrayed not merely as flawed, but as demonic. A regime of pure evil. Accused of genocide, apartheid, ethnic cleansing—terms that carry moral weight but are tossed like stones, untethered from facts. We are told that the IDF targets children, that Zionism is racism, that the Jewish right to self-determination is colonialism in disguise.

Four years ago today, the United Nations launched what would become one of the most brazenly biased initiatives in its history: the so-called Commission of Inquiry led by Navi Pillay. Billed as an “independent” investigation, it has functioned as a permanent inquisition against the world’s only Jewish state—without precedent, without balance, and without end in sight. No other nation has been subjected to such an open-ended mandate of scrutiny and condemnation. This is not accountability; it is persecution masquerading as principle. Like Streicher’s Stürmer, the commission cloaks its obsession in the language of justice, but its purpose is clear: to isolate, delegitimize, and ultimately dismantle Israel through the steady drip of falsehoods dressed as findings. The hate is institutional now—and history is watching.
From Ian:

Seth Mandel: U.S.-Led Gaza Aid Efforts Are About Much More Than Food
The concerted effort to undermine the new U.S.-administered Gaza aid program should force us to reconsider the funding and cooperation the U.S. gives to the wider United Nations “humanitarian” network. In that sense, yesterday’s launch of this new system, sans UN and celebrity chefs, made clear who does and does not actually want to see this problem solved.

And what we learned was this: The UN’s self-declared guiding “principles” require it not only to let Gazans starve but to actively abet their starvation.

The key principle at issue is one of so-called neutrality. The controversy heated up when the U.S. and Israel sought ways to deliver humanitarian aid to Gazan civilians without enabling Hamas to commandeer that aid. The UN claimed this plan violated the required neutrality from humanitarian groups because it was not neutral between parties in the conflict (i.e. it was biased against Hamas). Yet the UN routinely employs members of Hamas, and therefore no UN-connected agency is neutral either. The lesson is that the UN does not favor neutrality at all. It favors Hamas.

This is the reason a new aid-delivery mechanism was sought in the first place. Both Israel and the United States insist on distinguishing between Gazan civilians and Hamas (and other armed terror groups). Existing “humanitarian” groups refuse to do so and thus organized a boycott and a media-demonization campaign against anyone considering joining an aid effort that excluded Hamas. This campaign further delayed the establishment of a new aid mechanism and delayed the delivery of food and medicine to Gazans.

That new aid distribution began yesterday, led by an organization called the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation. The results bode well for this particular model of aid delivery.

The lead-up to the GHF’s launch was fraught and threatened to derail the project entirely. A New York Times story that damaged the organization and resulted in the resignation of its leader just days before its launch painted its backstory in as sinister a light as possible. The piece began by warning of the project’s “obscure histories and unknown financial backers.” In an attempt to discredit the project as irredeemably biased, the Times describes it as “an Israeli brainchild.”

Yet even the Times’ own reporting makes it out to be the product of a working brain, at the least: “The plan was designed to undermine Hamas’s control of Gaza, prevent food from falling into militants’ hands or the black market, and bypass the United Nations, which Israeli officials do not trust and have accused of anti-Israeli bias. Israeli officials argued, too, that their plan would move distribution out of chaotic and lawless areas into zones under Israeli military control.”
Israel’s U.S. Ambassador Is Punished for Defending His Government
One might think that an ambassador would be expected to defend his own homeland’s elected leaders against vicious accusations during a media appearance in the country where he serves. In Israel, it seems that he is expected not to. This is what Yechiel Leiter, Jerusalem’s envoy to Washington, discovered after he was interviewed by the American podcaster Marissa Streit. Ruthie Blum writes:

The Foreign Ministry announced on Sunday that its director general, Eden Bar Tal, was summoning . . . Leiter for a hearing, in accordance with “the directive of the senior director of the disciplinary division at the Civil Service Commission.” . . . Leiter committed what the Foreign Ministry considers a diplomatic faux pas.

This consisted of his spending six out of the 66-minute tête-à-tête defending Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu against demonization. . . . Perhaps he should have known better than to delve into internal Israeli issues. Maybe he should have answered Streit’s query with a boilerplate statement about the country’s healthy, robust debates and left it at that.

But it’s hard not to scoff at the double standard applied to any government appointee whose views don’t jibe with the anti-Netanyahu line. Indeed, Leiter’s real “blooper” was revealing his loyalty to Bibi—and by telling the truth.
Foreign Secretary accused of wrongly translating Netanyahu comments to Parliament
The Foreign Secretary has been condemned by the Conservatives for “mislead[ing] Parliament”, after he was accused of misquoting Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s comments on food aid to Gaza.

Speaking to a crowded House of Commons chamber last week, Lammy described the IDF’s new offensive in Gaza, stating: “Prime Minister Netanyahu says that they are going to take control of the Strip, letting only minimal amounts of food reach Gazans. Madam Deputy Speaker, I quote Mr Netanyahu – he says ‘just enough to prevent hunger’”.

However, the original video of Netanyahu speaking shows the Israeli Prime Minister saying something different, numerous native Hebrew speakers have told the Jewish News. They say that in the video Netanyahu describes how, until a new aid distribution system to bypass Hamas has been established, the current UN system would be used, stating that “we need to give some minimum, basic support so that there will be no hunger” – and they say that there is no ambiguity in Netanyahu’s remarks.

Eylon Levy, a former Israeli Government spokesperson, alleged that the “made-up quote” used by the Foreign Secretary had originated from “a BBC story which quotes a video from Netanyahu, explaining to his domestic audience why Israel was letting aid into Gaza again. So naturally, I went to the video…

“In a video, Netanyahu explained Israel was setting up a new aid distribution system to bypass Hamas, which is hijacking aid to fund its war. This will take time. So Israel will let in aid through the current mechanism ‘so that there will not be hunger’.

“Netanyahu never said Israel would let in ‘just enough [food] to prevent hunger.’ But David Lammy used that made-up quote to convince MPs to support his hostile foreign policy against Israel, which Hamas has praised.

“Lammy misled his fellow MPs. He misled Parliament.”

Levy continued by suggesting that perhaps “Lammy’s aides nicked the mistranslation from the BBC, instead of doing the professional thing and asking the British Embassy in Israel for a precise translation of Netanyahu’s remarks.”


The famed legal scholar discusses his magnum opus, The Preventive State, why he wrote it now, and why it may never reach the audience it deserves.

Alan Dershowitz calls The Preventive State his magnum opus—and for someone as prolific as he is, that’s saying something. Often referred to as “the world’s best-known lawyer,” Dershowitz has authored more than 50 books and over a thousand articles. But it’s clear why this latest work stands apart. In The Preventive State, he proposes a visionary jurisprudence designed not just to respond to harm, but to anticipate and avert it—be it something on the scale of World War II or the October 7 massacre.

At the heart of the book is an elegant and accessible framework: a four-quadrant matrix of true and false positives and negatives. With this structure, Dershowitz gives readers—experts and laypeople alike—a practical vocabulary for assessing risk and reimagining how the law might operate proactively rather than reactively. It’s a slim volume, yet it delivers a substantial punch, opening the door to a future where justice is not only fair but also preventative.

“You cannot prevent harm if you cannot predict it.” —Alan Dershowitz

Of course, any system that emphasizes prevention carries the risk of overreach—of stifling freedoms in the name of safety. The Preventive State doesn’t shy away from that danger. Instead, it makes the case for a jurisprudence that allows people to be both secure and free. But here’s the catch: the very person who authored this powerful and timely work has, to a large extent, been canceled.

As Dershowitz explains in the interview below, he doesn’t expect The Preventive State—his most important book to date—to receive a review in The New York Times. Why? Because the Times severed ties with him after he served on President Donald Trump’s legal team during the first impeachment trial in 2020. Since then, the once-reliable platform has ceased interviewing him and no longer covers his books.

“The New York Times will not review my most important book—because I defended Donald Trump.”

It’s a bitter irony: a book devoted to safeguarding democracy and civil liberties may be denied the public attention it deserves because its author remains unapologetically committed to due process—and to being, in his own words, an “outspoken Jewish Zionist.” That, perhaps more than anything, ensures his exclusion from today’s mainstream platforms.

More’s the pity.

***

Varda Epstein: Your book is titled The Preventive State, which to some might sound authoritarian. How do you define it—and how would you distinguish it from totalitarian systems?

Alan Dershowitz: Well, prevention is good and authoritarianism is bad, and there’s the risk that trying to prevent will create authoritarianism. There's no way of the state engaging in preventive actions without diminishing certain liberties. Benjamin Franklin said those who would give up essential liberties for a little security deserved neither. But every government has always given up some liberties to assure great security. If any of us could have prevented 9/11, or October 7th, by arresting some people, even if we made some mistakes, we would have done it. You know, we went much too far after the Second World War began when President Roosevelt confined 110,000 Americans in detention centers in order to prevent one or two acts of treason, and none of them occurred. So, it’s the question of balancing, but if the balance is struck improperly, there is the potential for authoritarianism, of course. That’s why I worry about the preventive state. On the other hand, we’re always going to try to prevent. We’re never going to wait until cataclysmic harm occurs. Every country has to confront those issues. Israel’s confronting it right now with Iran. Should Israel go and prevent, as they did Iraq and Syria, from developing weapons? And the United States probably has a different view on that. So these are always the kind of balancing decisions that we have to make.

Varda Epstein: You described Abraham as the first lawyer. He pleaded with God to spare the innocent. Why would he choose to plead for the innocent over eradicating evil?

Alan Dershowitz: Because I think he understood that God could easily have come back and said, look, Abraham, I’m God. I know who’s guilty and who’s innocent. I’ll kill only the guilty and not the innocent. But God said he was going to kill everybody because there were so many guilty people, and Abraham was the first one to challenge authority by saying, no, you can’t overdo it. If you can’t separate the innocent from the guilty, you have to spare everybody. And then God comes back and basically says, yeah, but it depends how many innocent there are. And then that’s when the negotiation begins—50, 40, 30, 20, 10, stops at 10. And that’s been the number that we focus on in Anglo-American jurisprudence also, better ten guilty go free than one innocent be wrongly confined. So, you know, there are various concepts in the Bible that are instrumental in the preventive state. Obviously, Abraham’s argument with God; the idea of punishing recalcitrant children to make sure they don’t become dangerous adults; taking people who have contagious diseases and putting them in isolation; the concept of exile goes back thousands of years, and that’s what we’re doing now with deportation. Deportation is simply a form of exile.

Varda Epstein: I’d argue that it’s just following the law. I mean, if people are somewhere illegally, shouldn’t they be deported?

Alan Dershowitz: No, not necessarily. Some of my relatives came into this country to escape Nazism, and had false affidavits in order to get in because they couldn’t get in lawfully. So sometimes you have to understand, it depends on the circumstances. If you’re escaping from absolute brutality, the way they were escaping from Castro, you have a different rule than if they’re trying to just get some economic benefits. So, you know, the Torah has said, “Tzedek tzedek tirdof,” “Justice, justice” and why two justices? Well, you know, one is justice with compassion, and you have to have a little bit of compassion. But there’s a big difference between people who sneak in in order to commit crimes or in order to evade justice and people who come to save their lives.

Varda Epstein: You spoke in your book about how Great Britain and France could have prevented World War II had they enforced the Versailles Treaty early on, but you posited that perhaps they feared being seen as warmongers. Do you think that’s the main reason they didn’t act?

Alan Dershowitz: Yeah. I think they . . . first, I’m not sure they believed that Hitler would actually do these things. So this was an example of a false negative where there was evidence and information; they didn’t believe it, and they made a horrible mistake. They could have saved 50 million lives. And, you know, we may be making the same mistake now with Iran. If we believe that Iran is trying to develop nuclear weapons . . .

Varda Epstein: Do you think democratic leaders today still face this dilemma of being seen as warmongers, facing backlash for acting, so they hesitate, and they hesitate too long?

Alan Dershowitz: Well, I think some, it depends. You know, Israel would like to move preventively, as it has. Much of my book, The Preventive State, is based on what I call, or what has been called, the Begin Doctrine, that sometimes you just can’t wait to be attacked. You have to take preemptive and preventive action. Israel’s been a leader in that because it’s a tiny country; it’s very vulnerable; and it won’t kill innocent civilians needlessly; whereas other countries are less protective in their approach. So, I think there is the fear that the world would condemn them. There’s this idiotic International Criminal Court that selectively condemns only democracies, and I don’t think anybody should take seriously the International Criminal Court. I think it should be ignored and ended, but there are countries that, you know, England and France and others care about that.

Varda Epstein: At first after 9/11, Americans were pretty accepting of the extreme security measures that were taken, such as in airports with the creation of the TSA. You talked about society turning preventive to prevent terror, right? Then, as time goes on, the fear slips away, people forget, go back to normal, and no longer want these measures, resulting in pushback. Do you think October 7th produced a similar kind of shift among the Israeli left, rendering preventive measures more acceptable?

Alan Dershowitz: For a while, but many, many in the Israeli left have “BDS,” Bibi Derangement Syndrome. So, if Bibi’s doing it, it must be wrong, and many in the Israeli left are making terrible mistakes about how they deal with this issue. So, you know, the same thing is true in the United States with Trump Derangement Syndrome, and so there’s too much of personal issues involved, both in Israel and in the United States. Both have very controversial leaders, and the left can’t believe that they would do anything for positive reasons.

Varda Epstein: Yeah. I always think that the fact that American Jews voted for Kamala shows they hate Donald Trump more than they love Israel. That’s how I felt about that.

Alan Dershowitz: I would feel differently about that. I think they want to be more liberal than they want to be Jewish, and they’re willing to vote, not their Jewish values or their Jewish defense, but they want their friends to like them, and they want to be seen as progressive and liberal. And they vote against their own interests.

“They were killed because of Harvard. Because of Columbia. Because of the way antisemitism is taught.”

Varda Epstein: Let’s talk about the couple that was murdered last week, targeted because the attacker assumed they were Jewish. That’s antisemitic no matter their religion, right?

Alan Dershowitz: So, one was Jewish, the other was not. But it doesn’t matter. They were killed because, whether they were Jews or not, they were killed because they were Jews. And they were killed because of Harvard, and they were killed because of Columbia, and they were killed because of the way in which the Ivy League schools and many schools have been teaching, not just tolerating, but teaching antisemitism. When you teach intersectionality, when you teach DEI, when you teach critical race theory, you’re teaching antisemitism. And when you encourage people, the way Kamala Harris and Walz, the vice presidential candidate, encourage people to call for “Palestine will be free” and
“globalize the intifada,” you’re inciting murder. And so there’s a lot of blood on the hands of university administrators and politicians.

“I’m an outspoken Jewish Zionist, and that will never change.”

Varda Epstein: When should we limit speech? How far do we allow it to go? Do we allow them to say “from the river to the sea”? Do we punish it? Because maybe it would have prevented this?

Alan Dershowitz: No, in my book The Preventive State, I have a whole chapter on free speech and when it should be limited. I think the limitation has to be incitement towards speech. And when you stand in front of a large crowd and you yell, “Globalize the intifada,” that could be incitement. When you, however, just talk abstractly about Israel not existing, that’s hate speech, but it’s free speech. Hate speech is protected by the Constitution today. That may change. We may experience over the next years with this current Supreme Court, a cutting back a little bit of incitement and advocacy of violence. As we see more and more violence, look, I predicted in my writings, I predicted what happened in D.C. I predicted that, based on my experience in representing radical violent protesters back in the 1960s and 70s, and some of them went on to become terrorists. Kathy Boudin, who I helped represent, became a murderer and spent many years in prison. The Weathermen became murderers. They also became friends of Barack Obama. But these are people who Barack Obama befriended. These were people who were regarded as legitimate. But they turned into terrorists. And I think that’s going to happen here, too. I think supporters of Hamas, people who support Hamas and who advocate the end of Israel, which is what “from the river to the sea” and “globalize the intifada” means, there’s a risk that they may start killing Americans. You know, Jews are always the first, they’re the canary in the mine shaft, but as we see, it’s not always Jews that get killed, but there’s going to be more of that. I’ve had to redouble my own personal security.

Varda Epstein: Yeah. I saw you on Hannity.

Alan Dershowitz: It’s true. I’ve always had some threats on my life, so I’ve been concerned about security. But when I spoke just the other day at a college in Florida, I got an honorary doctorate, and they had to have armed guards around me. They had to have a whole process in place for what happens if somebody tried to attack me. They gave me instructions of how do I leave, and will there be bulletproof glass in front of me, and all of that. So, as a result of what happened in this group at Columbia, I’ve had to redouble my own personal security because I’m an outspoken Jewish Zionist, and that will never change.

Varda Epstein: I wanted to talk about the false positive that was your swatting incident that happened to you and your wife. It was a horrible thing, obviously traumatic, but you said it was the right thing. They made the right move.

Alan Dershowitz: Oh, of course. They got a call. They said that there was violence going on in my house. It was, you know, middle of the night, banging on the door, “If you don’t open the door, we’ll break it down.” And they came in with their guns drawn, and they could have easily shot somebody if I had made the wrong move. I was half asleep, I was getting up, and it was a very, very dangerous situation. It was quite deliberate, and we’re going to see more of that. We’re going to see much, much more violence. That, of course, is illegal, but you have to catch the person. And in my case, they haven’t caught the person who did this because it’s very easy to place an anonymous 911 call, and thankfully, the police respond to all these calls. Soon they’ll stop, because they’ll say they’re false alarms, and that will hurt the people who are really in trouble. I have a friend, a policeman who was killed in a domestic violence shootout, because he wouldn’t take the first shot to kill the person who was holding the woman hostage, because he was afraid he would kill her. And then he was shot and was killed. These kinds of situations, swats and everything, are very, very dangerous and have to be taken much more seriously than they’ve been taken.

Varda Epstein: And we need to make some kind of protocol according to your book. Okay, so on the other side of that, then, would be a false negative and preventable harm. So, what’s an example of one that stands out to you as a devastating false negative, what should have been caught?

Alan Dershowitz: The worst, of course, was World War II, the greatest example in history of a false negative. I would say after that, probably 9/11, October 7th, they could have been caught. October 7th was a disaster because Israel had a lot of the information that should have led them to take preventive actions. And because some of the information was provided to them by these women who were serving in the front line, some of them with emotional issues, the men who were in charge didn’t take these women seriously, and I think this was a situation where sexism contributed to this disaster.

Varda Epstein: Absolutely, absolutely, I’m with you on that.

Alan Dershowitz: By the way, let me add something. I met these women. I went there before this happened, and I sat with them, and they were absolutely incredible. They would be sitting with their television screens, and if they saw a rabbit, they would notice it, if they saw anything, they would notice it. And these were our front line defenses against terrorism, and the men in charge of the very macho Israeli army didn’t take them seriously, and that was kind of a disaster.

Varda Epstein: How do you see the role of AI playing in predicting or preventing harm, especially in legal or national security contexts?

Alan Dershowitz: It’s a double-edged sword. It can help prevent crime because it has this incredible predictive ability based on putting together enormous amounts of information to anticipate what might happen. But AI is itself a potential danger. It can intrude on people’s privacy, it can create its own problems. So I think, on balance, AI is helpful in preventing, but one has to constrain and control every scientific development, including AI.

Varda Epstein: You say that you’ve been thinking about prevention since the 1960s? So, why did you write The Preventive State, now?

Alan Dershowitz: Well, you know, I’ve written articles about it, and I never had, in my own mind, the answers. I had the questions, but I didn’t have the answers, and it took me a long time to think through how to create a jurisprudence. And finally, you know, at age 86, with the benefit of a lot of experience and a little bit of chutzpah, I decided to set out my answers, and so here it is, my magnum opus, my 57th book, for those of us old enough to remember Heinz 57 flavors. So, finally, I was ready, and I think this is my most important book, but of course, the New York Times will not review it because once I defended Donald Trump, they stopped reviewing my books, and they stopped interviewing me mostly. And then they tried to cancel me because they don’t like who my clients are, and so I hope people will read the book on Amazon and learn from it. Even though you can disagree with some of its conclusions, I think you can’t argue with the fact that we live in an increasingly preventive state, and so we have to deal with those issues in a moral and calculated and balanced way.

Varda Epstein: You have an appendix. But it’s the end of your book. Why did you end with a critique of rabbinic law?

Alan Dershowitz: Well it’s not a critique. It’s that rabbinic law goes too far, and so did much classic law, much of which was based on rabbinic law. Went too far, but it asks the right questions. I’m a big fan of rabbinic law, because almost every issue that I taught in my 50 years of teaching at Harvard, the questions had been raised by rabbis and by those who wrote the Torah. But they didn’t always get the answers right. And so I just thought it would be interesting to put in the book ancient sources that gave rise to some of the modern approaches. And I, you know, when I taught at Harvard, I would always introduce rabbinic law and Torah law into my classes, because almost every issue was addressed, which is amazing because they weren’t really in control of an active society. They were writing more in the abstract or for their own community, because, you know, until 1948, there was no country to which to apply Jewish law, that was just a community, but they did a remarkable job in raising these unbelievably complex problems and resolving them.

Varda Epstein: You own a letter from George Washington about urging smallpox inoculation. So, what drew you to that artifact?

Alan Dershowitz: Two things. One, I was writing about this issue, and I wanted to own a piece of history in which Washington not only urges everybody to get inoculated, but as commander-in-chief of the Revolutionary Armed Forces, he commands that, he says, basically, you have to do it, you have to do it quickly, otherwise we can lose the war based on smallpox. Second, the letter is fascinating because it’s signed by George Washington and dictated by George Washington, but the three pages are written by Alexander Hamilton, his secretary. So it has the three things in it. I love the writings of Alexander Hamilton, I’m a great admirer of George Washington, and the concept of prevention is in there, so it worked perfectly.

Varda Epstein: What’s next for Alan Dershowitz? Do you have any other momentous topics to write about?

Alan Dershowitz: Of course, I always do, you know, on the way to being buried, I will probably try to be dictating a final op-ed. I write every single day. I’m writing a book now tentatively entitled Trump to Harvard, Go Fund Yourself. It’s a cute title, and it tries to strike the appropriate balance. I don’t think that the government should be cutting off research funds or funds from scientific, medical, but they should be cutting off funds from the Divinity School, Public Health School, the Carr Center for Human Rights, all of which are incubators for antisemitism. So I want to see targeted defunding and targeted denial of visas. For example, in the 1930s, Harvard loved Nazis, the president of Harvard, Conant, was a Nazi lover, he loved Germany. He brought professors from Nazi Germany and students, and of course the United States said, no, we’re cutting off the visas. Many, many liberals would have applauded that, but they don’t applaud it now, and it’s too broad. We shouldn’t be cutting back on all the visas for all students, but only for the ones that are fomenting dangerous activities on campus and contributing to an atmosphere that led to the death of these two young, wonderful people.

***
📚 Book Information

Dershowitz, Alan. The Preventive State: Preempting Cataclysmic Harm while Preserving Fundamental Liberties. New York: Encounter Books, 2024. ISBN: 9781641774401.



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  • Wednesday, May 28, 2025
  • Elder of Ziyon


An EU press release says quotes press remarks by EU High Representative/Vice-President Kaja Kallas.

She said, "The situation in Gaza remains dire. Israel’s strikes in Gaza go beyond what is necessary to fight Hamas. Bypassing the UN in aid deliveries undermines humanitarian principles. And incidents challenging the special status of Jerusalem risk further escalating tensions. "

Beyond what is necessary to fight Hamas? What, exactly, does she think is necessary and what isn't? Should Israel go back to bombing empty warehouses after being hit with rockets?  Should it pretend October 7 didn't happen 600 days ago? 

Given that Israel's goal is to destroy Hamas, this implies that the EU thinks that is going too far. Terrorist groups must be allowed to do what they want as long as they use human shields. 

There is one other disgusting implication here: that Israel is not targeting Hamas alone. She seems to be saying that Israel is "going beyond" by not only targeting Hamas but also civilians. 

And her last sentence on Jerusalem is also perverted. The only incidents she could be referring to is allowing Jews to hold a march in Jerusalem and to visit the Temple Mount. The "special status of Jerusalem" she refers to was never implemented, not for one day. The only status is that it is fully part of Israel and Palestinians claim it as their own with no legal or historic justification. (Jordan could make a case, but it no longer claims rights there besides the Temple Mount Waqf.) 

(h/t Irene)



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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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