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Gilead Ini

Gilead Ini is a senior research analyst at CAMERA. His commentary has appeared in numerous publications, including The Jerusalem Post, The Christian Science Monitor, Columbia Journalism Review and National Review.

Anti-Semitism has always festered on the right and left fringes. The Mapping Project, however, has been promoted by influential political activists with connections to various Massachusetts politicians.
The core premise of Rozina Ali’s hagiography of the Michigan congresswoman is the nobility of extreme anti-Israel positions.
A look at just one of the lies the collection of falsehoods, decontextualized anecdotes and cynical interpretations that, in the judgement of the anti-Israel activists running Amnesty, constitutes “apartheid.”
The paper’s hagiography of Gaza professor Refaat Alareer is touching, unexpected—and a complete fabrication.
The paper’s distortions on Israel are so extreme as to qualify as humor, but the joke is ultimately on the readers.
Why did Bloomberg bungle cause and effect both for Hamas’s suicide bombings and for Israel’s blockade of Gaza—each in a way that erases Hamas extremism and implies Israeli fault?
Will editors admit to echoing anti-Semitic tropes about Jewish power used against good, and apologize?
“The New York Times” columnist is practically begging Americans not to imagine how they might react if indiscriminate rockets were rained on their cities and towns.
The opinion editors should examine their role in cultivating an atmosphere in which attacks on innocent Israeli and innocent American Jews are viewed as justified.
Architecture critic Michael Kimmelman took aim at the planned cable-car line, but that was just the hook; his real problem relates to Jews and their rich history.
The newspaper outdid itself, with Jerusalem bureau chief David Halbfinger rationalizing Hamas’s rocket attacks on Israeli civilians as a reaction from a group that “can express its impatience with weapons.”
Clearly, “The New York Times” is intent on framing concerns about anti-Israel bias as a conservative position.