Anti-Israel Bias
Hesham Ayyad, 20, falsely claimed that he was the victim of a violent, anti-Palestinian hate crime.
“It is not that condemnations of gender-based violence by Hamas have been weak or insufficient—there have been none at all,” Israel’s first lady wrote.
The Canadian-Israeli philanthropist also blasted Trudeau and Obama for “playing both sides” in a conflict of “good vs. evil.”
“The antisemitism, hate and significant damage brought to Elbit America’s campus has no place in New Hampshire,” stated New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu.
Marvat Azzeh wrote on Facebook about a hostage: “It’s killing me. It’s a black comedy. The old woman looks happy, a bit of action before she dies.”
More than 100 academics across disciplines worry that efforts to counter Jew-hatred may threaten a core scholarly principle.
Archaeologists identified Liel Hetzroni’s remains.
Celebrities and social-media executives express concerns about hate online.
Anne Boyer was mocked widely on social media for her resignation, claiming that the “only profit” in Israel’s war on Hamas is “oil interests and weapon manufacturers.”
The paper’s editorial board claimed that Israel’s strike on Hamas is “non-surgical” and wrote that the “world cannot stand by to witness more slaughter of civilians.”
“It is sad to witness an international journalist organization ignoring a basic rule of journalism,” the news association said.
“Sunak has capitulated,” David Campbell Bannerman, a Tory party politician, said. “The Jewish people in Britain have been let down by this decision.”