A billboard in Tel Aviv displays portraits of Hamas leaders Ismail Haniyeh (left), killed in Iran on July 31, and Mohammed Deif, killed last month in the Gaza Strip, with the word “assassinated” in Hebrew, Aug. 2, 2024. Photo by Oren Ziv/AFP via Getty Images.
  • Words count:
    1784 words
  • Type of content:
    COLUMN
  • Byline:
  • Publication Date:
    Aug. 2, 2024
Headline
Israel shouldn’t ‘help’ Biden-Harris appease Iran
Intro
The administration is angry at Jerusalem for fighting back against Tehran and its proxies, making it appear weak. But that’s Washington’s fault, not Netanyahu’s doing.
text

Who were the parties most damaged by a series of brilliant operations carried out by Israel against its terrorist enemies? At the top of the list are the terrorists and their sponsors. By killing Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran, Hamas military commander Mohammed Deif in Gaza and Hezbollah chief of staff Fuad Shukr in Beirut, the Jewish state not only exacted retribution for the rivers of Jewish blood this trio had shed over the years. It also dealt powerful blows to the collective terrorist organizations’ ability to operate, and most of all, undermined the power and image of their chief sponsor and instigators: the Islamist regime of Iran.

Their discomfort ought to be a cause for rejoicing among Israel’s friends and allies, as well as the governments and peoples of the West, against whom these Islamist killers are also waging war. But it isn’t. Or at least that isn’t the reaction of the Biden-Harris administration and its leading press cheerleaders. On the contrary, Washington is acting as if it was the chief victim of the slaying of terrorists who were, at least in theory, among those designated by the U.S. government as wanted men.

Their discomfort goes beyond fears initially voiced in the aftermath of the Israeli strikes about an all-out war being ignited between Israel and Iran, and its proxies. To listen to and read the statements coming out of the administration, it’s clear that their anguish is about something more fundamental than the understandable uncertainty about what might happen next.

The subtext to all of their comments centers on two clear concerns.

Embarrassing those in the White House

One is that Israel’s actions are interfering with Washington’s desire to end the current conflicts with Hamas in Gaza and Hezbollah in Lebanon as soon as possible and on terms that will not unduly discomfort Iran. When asked to comment on the killings of these terrorists, all President Joe Biden could muster in response was to say, in a rare live comment, that “it has not helped” his push for a ceasefire in Gaza that would save Hamas.

The other is that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is embarrassing the Americans.

His willingness to move decisively in this manner is not merely shining a light on the administration’s weakness when dealing on the international stage. It’s also having the effect of highlighting the fact that the United States is currently led by a person whose physical and mental fitness is very much in question, causing both friends and foes to wonder who, if anyone, is truly in charge in Washington right now?

This is causing much consternation among the foreign-policy establishment with its leading mouthpieces, like New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman, lamenting that Netanyahu isn’t prioritizing the administration’s interests. But even in his latest broadside against Netanyahu, Friedman acknowledged that the United States is being forced to choose what to do about an Iran that has, thanks to the appeasement policies of Biden and former President Barack Obama, not only become a threshold nuclear power. It’s also now an “imperial power” in the Middle East that is dominating the region and forcing conflicts with Israel that most Arabs want no part of.

This goes beyond the “daylight” between Israel and the United States that Obama sought and that has also been a key element of the relationship between the two countries under Biden. Simply put, while Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris never tire of saying that they support Israel’s right to defend itself, what they really mean by this is that they want Jerusalem to do as little as possible to stop its enemies from killing its people.

An Israeli policy that aims at decisively defeating Hamas in Gaza, forcing Hezbollah to stop firing on northern Israel, and, above all, making it clear to Iran that the price of their war to eliminate the Jewish state is one they cannot pay would seem to completely align with American interests. But not with those of Biden and Harris.

What they want from Netanyahu is peace and quiet. And an end to the war on Hamas on virtually any terms—and the ones that Harris sketched out last week that call for a complete Israeli retreat from Gaza would essentially hand a victory to the group that committed the mass murder of 1,200 people on Oct. 7—would largely stifle the complaints of the left-wing of the Democratic Party about their being insufficiently hostile to Israel. That, as well as the dubious claim that this would be a triumph for American diplomacy, would help her to defeat former President Donald Trump in November.

A power vacuum

When Biden spoke of Israel not being helpful, he wasn’t so much speaking about the claim that an Israeli surrender of its interests would free the more than 100 hostages still being held by Hamas. Rather, he was referring to the administration’s ongoing efforts to pose as a decisive actor on the global stage when, in fact, it is anything but that.

According to the new conventional wisdom of the day being peddled by the U.S. foreign-policy establishment, Netanyahu is playing the role of an American foe seeking to take advantage of the chaos at the White House. With Biden’s condition and status uncertain in the wake of the coup that was executed against him by his party’s leaders, including Obama—and now Harris seeking—with the eager assistance of a compliant liberal corporate mainstream media to transform her image from one of a colossal failure to that of a great leader, the talk of a power vacuum in Washington is not metaphorical.

That is why ardent Israel-bashers like Johns Hopkins professor Vali Nasr are being quoted in the Times claiming that Netanyahu is the moral equivalent of “Vladimir Putin or Xi Jinping or Kim Jong-un” for having the temerity to kill terrorists. In the same piece, J Street co-founder Daniel Levy argued that Israel was “humiliating” Iran in a manner that was “another crossing of multiple lines” and was, by extension, hurting Biden and Harris’s efforts to improve their relationship with Tehran.

The argument is that doing this is making it seem as if, in Nasr’s words, “America is not in control.” But that formulation has it backwards. The whole point of the Middle East policies pursued first by Obama—then Biden and now by U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken or Harris—is that it is Iran that is in control, not the United States.

It is true that there is widespread doubt about American leadership right now. But that has nothing to do with what Netanyahu does or doesn’t do. With a president so feeble that he was forced to end his re-election campaign weeks before his party was about to renominate him and an equally weak-willed replacement like Harris now standing in for him, it’s little wonder that the international community cannot trust or rely on the United States to play a coherent, let alone a decisive, role on the world stage.

That didn’t begin with Biden’s obvious decline in the last year. From the moment he took office in January 2021, his foreign policy was one that inspired contempt among America’s foes and concern on the part of its allies. His feckless pursuit of another round of appeasement of Iran, and then the disastrous retreat from Afghanistan, marked his presidency as one whose hallmark was defeat and disgrace—something that directly led to the Russian invasion of Ukraine, and ultimately, to Hamas’s Oct. 7 assault on Israel.

Since then, the American policy has been to slow-walk aid to Israel in such a manner as to force it to give up its justified quest to remove Hamas from control of Gaza. While the administration is willing to help defend Israel against attacks from Iran, the price it wants Israel to pay for that assistance is to do little or nothing to pre-empt future assaults. Were Netanyahu to comply—both by agreeing to the humiliating ceasefire terms outlined by Harris and by ending all efforts to substantially harm the terrorist groups by killing the criminals that lead them—it would make life easier for Washington and, no doubt, aid Harris’s election campaign. But it would also substantially damage Israel's security while also enhancing Iran’s quest to gain regional hegemony. And that’s not even taking into account the fact that, to Jerusalem’s consternation, the administration has essentially conceded that it will not prevent Tehran from achieving its nuclear ambitions—something that is an existential threat to Israel as well as a terrible blow to U.S. and Western interests.

Doing America’s dirty work

There is genuine uncertainty about what will happen in the coming days, weeks and months until November, and then the inauguration of a new American president next January. Still, the assumption that an assertion of Israeli strength and a demonstration of Iran’s inability to protect its terrorist minions will make the world more dangerous is misguided. The more the Islamist foes of the West and Israel fear for their lives, the more likely it is that they will be deterred from further mayhem, allowing both Israelis and Americans to be safer. By killing Fukr, Deif and Haniyeh—and giving the mullahs in Tehran reason to worry about their own security—Israel was defending its people against Islamist murderers and doing a job that Americans needed done, whether or not it served the political and policy interests of Biden or Harris.

While Israeli leaders must always seek to stay as close as they can to their American counterparts, that is an impossible task for Netanyahu right now and one that could harm his own country’s security. As long as American policy is dedicated to appeasing the mullahs in Tehran and propping up their terrorist allies, coupled with a leadership vacuum in Washington, Israel cannot just sit back and watch as its enemies grow more powerful and bolder in their efforts to kill Jews.

It isn’t Netanyahu’s job to bolster an American administration that is determined to project weakness rather than strength. If America now appears weak or not in control, the blame rests on Biden, Harris and their Washington cheerleaders. Rather than attacking Netanyahu for doing his job, Americans who care about their country’s security should be cheering Israel for doing their country's dirty work for it twhat a failed administration either won’t or cannot do.

Jonathan S. Tobin is editor-in-chief of JNS (Jewish News Syndicate). Follow him @jonathans_tobin.

(function(i,s,o,g,r,a,m){i['GoogleAnalyticsObject']=r;i[r]=i[r]||function(){ (i[r].q=i[r].q||[]).push(arguments)},i[r].l=1*new Date();a=s.createElement(o), m=s.getElementsByTagName(o)[0];a.async=1;a.src=g;m.parentNode.insertBefore(a,m) })(window,document,'script','https://www.google-analytics.com/analytics.js','ga'); ga('create', 'UA-37052883-1', 'auto'); ga('send', 'pageview'); var script = document.createElement('script'); script.src = 'https://www.googletagmanager.com/gtag/js?id=G-K6H02W22XT'; document.head.appendChild(script); script.onload = function () { window.dataLayer = window.dataLayer || []; function gtag(){dataLayer.push(arguments);} gtag('js', new Date()); gtag('config', 'G-K6H02W22XT'); gtag('event', 'page_view', { 'Topics': 'middle-east,iran,iran-nuclear-program,appeasement,assassination,terrorism,hamas,hezbollah,israel-iran-tensions,u-s-iran-tensions', 'Writers': 'jonathan-s-tobin', 'publication_date': '24/8/2', 'article_type': 'Article', }); }
More From Press+
  • Words count:
    621 words
  • Type of content:
    News
  • Byline:
  • Publication Date:
    March 24, 2025
  • Media:
    1 file

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu commended Contraction and Housing Minister Yitzhak Goldknopf for disavowing a song against IDF military service that was played at his nephew's wedding on Sunday night.

"Minister Goldknopf did well to distance himself from the song that was played at the event he attended and even expressed regret about it," the Prime Minister's Office stated after video footage surfaced of the ultra-Orthodox minister dancing to lyrics of "We'd rather die than enlist."

In the viral video clip, Goldknopf can be seen in the middle of a circle of young haredi men singing that they "don't believe in the government of infidels" and "will not show up at their [military] recruitment offices."

Netanyahu stated, "There is no place for songs against IDF service. This is the time to unite our forces against our external enemies."

https://twitter.com/kann_news/status/1903899265274946014

In an initial apology, Goldknopf, who heads the United Torah Judaism Party, said that "during dancing, the music changed to a song with which, to put it mildly, I am not comfortable. In order not to offend the groom and his family, I remained in place." He added, "There are those who have exploited this to incite, as if I agree with the song's content.

"So here it is: I renounce and condemn," he said.

Amid mounting criticism from fellow coalition lawmakers, Goldknopf issued a second apology, writing in a statement posted to social media that "in the heat of the dance and the music, I failed to set boundaries.

"As someone who helps [IDF] reservists, who is concerned for the safety of the troops and who prays for their success, I apologize. I had a responsibility to silence the band, and I will act accordingly in the future," he said. "I deeply understand those who have been pained and apologize."

The UTJ leader's public mea culpa came after Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich (Religious Zionism Party) urged Netanyahu to "summon him for clarification this evening, set a red line for and put an end to his disgraceful conduct.

"We can no longer remain silent amid the indifference, disrespect and ingratitude of Minister Goldknopf toward the State of Israel and the brave IDF soldiers," said the Religious Zionism chief in a statement.

Fellow Religious Zionism lawmakers Ohad Tal and Ofir Sofer had called for Goldknopf's immediate dismissal, with the latter saying that "anyone who is unable to clearly condemn such a disgraceful act cannot be part of the leadership of the nation during its most difficult time."

United Torah Judaism provides a total of seven Knesset seats out of Netanyahu's 68-member coalition government.

Late last week, Amichai Chikli, Israel's minister for Diaspora affairs and combating antisemitism, slammed Goldknopf over comments in which he seemed to boast about repurposing new housing projects near Jerusalem intended for the general public to his ultra-Orthodox voter base.

"What they thought would go to the general public, we found some way to allocate to the haredi public instead. But not everything can be talked about in the open," Goldknopf said during a conference on March 19.

Chikli commented, "It is impossible to justify continued partnership with a housing minister who is indifferent to Israeli citizens, who does not care about reservists. I say to the prime minister ... that Goldknopf cannot continue in his position after making such a statement."

Israeli governments have worked to integrate the haredi community into public life, including into the Israel Defense Forces.

Much of Israel's haredi populace frowns on military service, considering it a distraction from Torah study and a threat to their distinct way of life. However, Oct. 7, 2023, has heightened the demands of the larger public that the ultra-Orthodox contribute their share to the defense of the nation.

(function(i,s,o,g,r,a,m){i['GoogleAnalyticsObject']=r;i[r]=i[r]||function(){ (i[r].q=i[r].q||[]).push(arguments)},i[r].l=1*new Date();a=s.createElement(o), m=s.getElementsByTagName(o)[0];a.async=1;a.src=g;m.parentNode.insertBefore(a,m) })(window,document,'script','https://www.google-analytics.com/analytics.js','ga'); ga('create', 'UA-37052883-1', 'auto'); ga('send', 'pageview'); var script = document.createElement('script'); script.src = 'https://www.googletagmanager.com/gtag/js?id=G-K6H02W22XT'; document.head.appendChild(script); script.onload = function () { window.dataLayer = window.dataLayer || []; function gtag(){dataLayer.push(arguments);} gtag('js', new Date()); gtag('config', 'G-K6H02W22XT'); gtag('event', 'page_view', { 'Topics': 'middle-east,iran,iran-nuclear-program,appeasement,assassination,terrorism,hamas,hezbollah,israel-iran-tensions,u-s-iran-tensions', 'Writers': 'jonathan-s-tobin', 'publication_date': '24/8/2', 'article_type': 'Article', }); }
  • Words count:
    812 words
  • Type of content:
    Opinion
  • Byline:
  • Publication Date:
    March 24, 2025

Sometimes you just have to marvel at how politics can lead to absurd outcomes. A perfect example involves library officials in Northbrook, Ill. To avoid controversy, they violated the First Amendment rights of one group and created a more problematic situation.

The facts are pretty simple. Controversial, some might say fringe, groups Jewish Voice for Peace, IfNotNow and the Chicago Jewish Labor Bund arranged to screen the documentary “Israelism” at Northbrook Public Library near Chicago. The film charges that the Jewish “establishment,” including many Jewish educational institutions, are indoctrinating Jewish youth to be uncritically supportive of Israel and to silence Palestinians. It has been praised by Qatar’s Al-Jazeera, a propaganda outlet run by a hereditary monarch, still its supporters have been successful in getting it screened on many college campuses.

The film has been harshly criticized by many Jewish organizations who claim it is untrue, lacking in context and nuance, and essentially just propaganda. Many people have objected to the screenings of the film and pushed back, which is what the Chicago Jewish Alliance did in advance of a planned showing at Northbrook library.

CJA, however, never pushed for a “ban” on the film. It can be viewed online and is even offered for free in places. Nor did CJA call for the event to be canceled. Instead, in an email to library officials, CJA decried the library’s lack of due diligence, as it seems library officials were unaware of the content of the film or its backing by Jewish Voice for Peace, which the Anti-Defamation League says is “radical” and “does not represent the mainstream Jewish community.”

CJA pointed out that the application for the event did not disclose fundamental facts about the nature and content of the film, violating library policies. The group also pointed out that showing the film would directly violate the library’s code of conduct because it features “behavior or language that is threatening or insulting” to a person’s ethnicity or religion.

Despite all this, the only remedy CJA requested was to voice their concerns directly to library officials and a review of the procedures by which films are granted public screenings. When the library planned to go ahead with the screening without the requested consultation, CJA said they would be attending and would ask pointed questions during the question-and-answer session.

This is where things became problematic.

According to The Chicago Sun-Times, the library requested a $3,000 dollar security and insurance deposit from the organizers of the film screening to have the event go forward. A quick Google search would have told library officials that this idea was problematic. In Forsyth County v. Nationalist Movement, the U.S. Supreme Court held that “[s]peech cannot be financially burdened, any more than it can be punished or banned, simply because it might offend a hostile mob,” and that any fees must be consistently applied to all groups, not solely levied when speech becomes unpopular.

Nonetheless, that’s just what the library did, raising the ire of the American Civil Liberties Union. According to the ACLU of Illinois, “Due to angry reaction to the film’s ideas, the library imposed a fee that ultimately prevented the film from being shown.”

The ACLU was correct, and that’s the problem. If JVP and their partners had broken neutrally applied library policies, the library could have taken legal action. If no policies were broken, the library could have gone ahead with the screening and allowed representatives from CJA to ask their questions. What the library ultimately chose to do was worse than either of those options.

In the middle of this controversy, the library’s trustees adopted a new policy giving the library “unbridled discretion” to require fees or proof of insurance. In essence, they were backing up the library’s decision supposedly to address safety concerns.

That raises the question, what safety concerns? Presumably, Jewish Voice for Peace wasn’t going to cause a safety crisis at their own event, although their affiliates have repeatedly justified violence, and they have partnered with Students for Justice in Palestine, a group that the  Anti-Defamation League says has been linked to violence toward those with whom it disagrees.

The Chicago Jewish Alliance was founded in large part to object to violence, vandalism and intimidation aimed at Jews. There is no history of CJA perpetrating violence nor disrupting any events. Despite this, it seems that the library and the ACLU think that CJA is a safety threat. JVP explicitly said that their event was canceled due to “threats of harassment and violence by CJA,” which they said uses “right-wing tactics.” Neither the library nor the ACLU nor JVP have provided any evidence to support this theory.

The library, the ACLU and JVP have slandered CJA with no justification. They owe it an apology and a promise to do better next time.

(function(i,s,o,g,r,a,m){i['GoogleAnalyticsObject']=r;i[r]=i[r]||function(){ (i[r].q=i[r].q||[]).push(arguments)},i[r].l=1*new Date();a=s.createElement(o), m=s.getElementsByTagName(o)[0];a.async=1;a.src=g;m.parentNode.insertBefore(a,m) })(window,document,'script','https://www.google-analytics.com/analytics.js','ga'); ga('create', 'UA-37052883-1', 'auto'); ga('send', 'pageview'); var script = document.createElement('script'); script.src = 'https://www.googletagmanager.com/gtag/js?id=G-K6H02W22XT'; document.head.appendChild(script); script.onload = function () { window.dataLayer = window.dataLayer || []; function gtag(){dataLayer.push(arguments);} gtag('js', new Date()); gtag('config', 'G-K6H02W22XT'); gtag('event', 'page_view', { 'Topics': 'middle-east,iran,iran-nuclear-program,appeasement,assassination,terrorism,hamas,hezbollah,israel-iran-tensions,u-s-iran-tensions', 'Writers': 'jonathan-s-tobin', 'publication_date': '24/8/2', 'article_type': 'Article', }); }
  • Words count:
    2368 words
  • Type of content:
    Magazine/Feature
  • Byline:
  • Publication Date:
    March 24, 2025
  • Media:
    3 files

While Israel’s Swords of Iron War has absorbed the nation’s attention for the last eighteen months, several institutions of higher learning are focusing their attention on moving forward by finding innovative ways to train the next generations of students.

Each of these educational bodies serves diverse populations and regions although there is a strong thread of their leadership recognizing significant gaps—and genuine need—and turning their attention to fill them.

While the University of Haifa has cemented itself as a dynamic institution across multiple academic fields, at the beginning of the next academic year in the fall of 2025 it will accept the first cohort at its new Herta and Paul Amir School of Medicine.

Prof. Haim Bitterman. Photo: Roi Harmoni/University of Haifa.

Prof. Haim Bitterman will lead the school. When asked why he agreed to do so, he replied coyly, “Because they made me an offer I couldn’t refuse!” He quickly added: “I’m sure I can lead the team that can bring a partial solution. I thought it seemed a most important and rewarding exercise.” 

Bitterman has experience running hospitals and in 2015 he was appointed director-general of Assuta Ashdod Medical Center. “My grandchildren tell me that I’m a builder,” he told JNS. “Life brought me opportunities to build stuff and it’s great fun to know you can gather forces to build something new.”

The six-year program will start with some 64 students in the initial intake, with teaching conducted in groups of eight students. Both Bitterman and Gideon Herscher, vice president for Transformational Philanthropy and Global Resource Development, acknowledged that the school would likely need to grow later, and also require the addition of another school, slated for completion by the end of the decade. 

There were a large number of applications—in fact, it was massively oversubscribed, highlighting the potential that resides in Haifa and its environs. “We’re about two decades too late,” lamented Herscher, “but I think it’s serendipitous the opportunity surfaced, as we’ve been pursuing this for more than a decade. The north is more ready than ever to receive medical care.”

It would be trite to suggest the timing of the medical school’s opening is propitious because it’s clear that a great deal of thought and preparation have gone into identifying trends—both in terms of medical practitioners—and the nature and age of the patients they treat.

Bitterman made an interesting observation, namely that the young doctors and medical professionals who emigrated from the Former Soviet Union in the great wave of aliyah in the late 1980s and 1990s are now rapidly approaching retirement age.

This, among other issues—such as the Ministry of Health's not recognizing (correctly, in Bitterman’s opinion) accreditation from a number of medical schools abroad—means there is a dire shortage of qualified doctors in Israel. The situation, according to Bitterman, is particularly acute in the country’s north. 

While the first cohort of medical students is in the process of finalization, both Bitterman and Herscher were aware and sensitive to how prospective medical practitioners of the future could be attracted to the University of Haifa Medical School. 

“The state of the art building—designed by renowned architect Moshe Safdi—will be a wonderfully pleasant place to learn,” Bitterman enthused. “Also, scholarships are a tangible incentive, and we are actively fundraising for the students’ entire six-year program to be underwritten.” 

Herscher said it would cost about $1.5 million to provide full scholarships for the school’s first 64 students to complete six years of study. To put this into context, he said, a similar arrangement at a mid-level U.S. medical school with intra-state students would cost approximately 100 times that amount.

“Fortunately, tuition is cheap in this country,” Herscher quipped. “And the Haifa area is relatively inexpensive as far as lodging is concerned.”

The demands of Swords of Iron have succeeded in ramming home a number of lessons for what this means, particularly for those in the north, where tens of thousands of people have yet to return to their homes.

“This is part of our commitment to not only help with reintegration of tens of thousands of residents to the north but keep them there,” Herscher said. “The evacuation has brought a heavy price to the north and there are those who are not rushing back. We have developed a quiet and tender strategy to give them what they need to remain in the area.”

While he admitted it would take a number of years, there was a pressing need to begin the process of trying to heal as quickly as possible. “Something has to start,” he stated matter-of-factly. 

To that end, Herscher said there were more than 30 initiatives being implemented to help people in the north deal with the trauma of the last year-and-a-half.

“I’ve discovered some hidden gems at the University of Haifa; it is not only a research university, we’re also bringing the ivory tower to the communities," he said. "Wisdom that emanates from laboratories is being utilized to help those who are coming home and also those who need extra assistance to return home—where a family can be stabilized and healed."

Herscher concluded: "If we have expertise in trauma care or nurses to detect the early signs of depression or help elderly people grapple more effectively with loneliness, the Medical School can be a flagship example of the impact we can have not only in Haifa but across the north.”

Bringing STEM to south Tel Aviv

Tel Aviv’s Afeka College of Engineering, through its president Prof. Ami Moyal, is also focused on identifying areas that are lacking and seeking a structured, methodical and planned way to fill them with highly motivated and skilled practitioners. Moyal has led the college since 2014 but it is in the last seven or so years that he identified a shift in the job market and began to tailor its curriculum to meet a new kind of demand.

“The model has changed from some 200 years ago—which was prevalent in K-12, as well as lifelong learning—and it moved away from being knowledge-based to competency-based,” he told JNS. “Educational processes brought knowledge, however the advent of Artificial Intelligence has shifted the emphasis to skills."

"We implemented a major change by defining the ideal graduate profile and skills—changing the pedagogy to integrate them into the course," he added. “We also realized students needed to be given time to work together to produce a specific outcome, emphasizing the need for collaboration.”

One of the starkest developments as a result of the shift of learning emphasis and changing the entire educational continuum, was that the physical layers of the campus also needed to adapt to keep pace. “We understood we must introduce a change; the new generation of students cannot sit for eight hours in a classroom,” Moyal said.

He conceded that they didn’t get everything right and there were things the college’s leadership didn’t quite understand at the time. “Either you sit and wait for someone to develop a theory or you move forward," he said. “We developed a methodology and we started. It was trial and error, but what we’re doing represents an ongoing multi-year institutional change.”

As a result of this change, and the fact the student body has grown some 50% in the last few years, the college is moving to purpose-built premises in the south of Tel Aviv—migrating to the south-east of the city from its current north Tel Aviv home. This too was a deliberate and considered choice, and was taken in close cooperation with Tel Aviv Mayor Ron Huldai. 

“It is an area [of the city] from which many fewer teenagers go to college; we hope and expect that shifting the academic institution to a lower socio-economic area will assist in developing the whole urban surroundings,” Moyal said.

He argued that it would be “good” if there was a highly-regarded engineering school in the south part of Tel Aviv.

“The young population will see students like them on a daily basis, learning engineering—and becoming active role models. It will build motivation. In addition, we want to develop the ecosystem with all local high schools in Tel Aviv, and crucially, we’ll have enough space to host high-school pupils and see how they get on in our labs. 

Moyal emphasized this was a three-tiered attempt at developing the local, national, and social needs. “Initially, we want the area to flourish. On a national level we simply need to increase the number of engineers, and socially, we want to give access to higher education to as many people as possible, especially for those who might have expected it was out of reach.”

The move to the new campus, which is expected to be completed by the opening of the 2027 academic year, will also be a vehicle for creating additional engineering programs, which Moyal hopes will attract students from across the country—including the periphery—as well as all sectors, including Arab and ultra-Orthodox students. Moyal is also sensitive to the ratio of men-to-women studying different disciplines of engineering.

“With regard to the STEM subjects,” Moyal explained, referring to science, technology, engineering and mathematics, “we’ve reached a relatively okay point where women make up some 30% of the student population. However, with regard to electrical and mechanical engineering it’s only hovering around 15%. We want to give prospective students the opportunity to see the labs, and from there build motivation and confidence; if they want it, they can do it. But they need to want it. The courses are not easy.”

JCT Vice President Stuart Hershkowitz (left) with Jerusalem Mayor Moshe Lion and former Minister of Jerusalem Affairs Ze'ev Elkin at the inauguration of a JCT campus dorm. Photo courtesy of Michael Erenburg. 

New horizons for Haredi women

Speaking of women—especially ultra-Orthodox women—the Jerusalem College of Technology is “the only game in town” with regard to their specific social and educational needs, according to Vice President Stuart Hershkowitz.

JCT is also in the process of building its new Tal Campus for women, after some 15 years of bureaucracy and red tape held up the development. “It was clear some 20 years ago we’d have to move,” Hershkowitz said.

“The [Jerusalem] Municipality wanted to put us in Pisgat Ze’ev, then thought about Gilo, and then near to the Ramada Hotel close to the entrance to the city. It was about 2010 on Yom Yerushalayim [Jerusalem Day]—when the national government gives a gift every year to the city of Jerusalem—we got our campus. The land is in the valley underneath where the men’s college is today. We believe in sex separation; we felt having two campuses side-by-side is something we and our students could live with.”

The college’s emphasis on providing knowledge and skills to a largely haredi student body only grows in significance as the potential for an increasingly fractious national debate over the role of the ultra-Orthodox in the life of the country develops. 

Hershkowitz pointed out that at the men’s campus, Haredi students learn alongside national-religious men wearing army uniforms. They sit together in class and there hasn’t been any friction or tension because of that.

"Many of our national religious students have been in military service for the last 18 months, but people come here to study to get their degree," He said. "It’s not like U.S. college life. We don’t teach liberal arts, and our students work hard to develop the skills to work in a profession. It’s very much part of the college’s outlook.”

For ultra-Orthodox women, being able to study and more importantly still, subsequently work in professions, which suit their lifestyle, is one of JCT’s key selling points. “Accounting firms were the first ones who understood the potential of the female Haredi community,” Hershkowitz explained, “all of our courses are geared to women who know they can go out into the world, and do things which are haredi-friendly.” 

Computer science is another subject considered haredi-friendly, with a lot of hi-tech places accommodating them – with some working from home, while others work from offices where they are not put into the same cubicles as men, although they might be on the same team as a non-religious man.”

He recounted one story where he was doing an evening round of the college when he recognized a woman from a computer science course who was doing her homework assignment in a classroom. It turned out she was not permitted to take her computer home, highlighting how their needs are different from the norm.

The Tal Women’s Campus will consist of four main buildings— aggregating to some 25,000 sq.m. (30,000 sq. yd.) of real estate. One of the buildings will be the Helmsley Foundation Faculty of Health and Life Sciences, named for New York real estate mogul Harry Helmsley.

To date, the trustees of the Helmsley Charitable Trust have disbursed some half a billion dollars to projects in Israel, much of it to hospitals. This building will house the nursing school, bio-informatics, health informatics, and nurse practitioners, including a simulation floor, where students can practice treating patients on $20-30,000 lifelike dolls. 

“We want to make it a world-class lab, in which there will be an AI component,” Hershkowitz said, adding that the college was already in contact with Shaare Zedek Medical Center as well as HMOs (Kupot Cholim), with a view to serving the whole of Jerusalem.

It was an opportune time to speak to Hershkowitz as he was recently announced as the recipient of the Yakir Yerushalayim (Worthy Citizen of Jerusalem) award.

“I came to Israel when I was 16 and fell in love with Jerusalem. I always wanted to live here; it was a childhood dream," he told JNS. "On the one hand you have the privilege to live here, but it comes with a responsibility. We’ve been given the opportunity again to live in our homeland; it’s a historical moment and we have to make the best of it.”

(function(i,s,o,g,r,a,m){i['GoogleAnalyticsObject']=r;i[r]=i[r]||function(){ (i[r].q=i[r].q||[]).push(arguments)},i[r].l=1*new Date();a=s.createElement(o), m=s.getElementsByTagName(o)[0];a.async=1;a.src=g;m.parentNode.insertBefore(a,m) })(window,document,'script','https://www.google-analytics.com/analytics.js','ga'); ga('create', 'UA-37052883-1', 'auto'); ga('send', 'pageview'); var script = document.createElement('script'); script.src = 'https://www.googletagmanager.com/gtag/js?id=G-K6H02W22XT'; document.head.appendChild(script); script.onload = function () { window.dataLayer = window.dataLayer || []; function gtag(){dataLayer.push(arguments);} gtag('js', new Date()); gtag('config', 'G-K6H02W22XT'); gtag('event', 'page_view', { 'Topics': 'middle-east,iran,iran-nuclear-program,appeasement,assassination,terrorism,hamas,hezbollah,israel-iran-tensions,u-s-iran-tensions', 'Writers': 'jonathan-s-tobin', 'publication_date': '24/8/2', 'article_type': 'Article', }); }
  • Words count:
    270 words
  • Type of content:
    Update Desk
  • Byline:
  • Publication Date:
    March 24, 2025

Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee visited the grave of the late Lubavitcher Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson in New York on Sunday, just days before the confirmation hearings for his appointment as U.S. Ambassador to Israel.

Hucakbee, a staunch supporter of Israel, visited the site in Queens together with his wife, Janet. The Huckabees were escorted by Dr. Joseph Frager and his wife Karen of the New York-based Israel Heritage Foundation, who also hosted the Huckabees for a reception after the visit.

U.S. Senate hearings on Huckabee’s nomination for U.S. envoy to Israel are scheduled to take place on Tuesday on Capitol Hill.

The 69-year-old conservative evangelical pastor, TV host and two-time Republican presidential candidate has visited the Holy Land scores of times and led thousands of participants on solidarity tours over the past half-century since his first trip to Israel right out of high school, just before the 1973 Yom Kippur war.

A long-time champion of Israel’s cause, he has been a staunch supporter of Israel's rights to the biblical heartland of Judea and Samaria, the relocation of the U.S. embassy to Jerusalem, and has worked to fight the BDS movement.

The grave of the late Lubavitcher Rabbi has become a popular spiritual and political pilgrimage site.

Last year, U.S. President Donald Trump visited the site during the last month of his presidential campaign on the one-year anniversary of the October 7, 2023 Hamas-led massacre in southern Israel.

Argentinian President Javier Milei, who studied with a rabbi who he later appointed as his ambassador to Israel, has also visited the site several times since his election.

(function(i,s,o,g,r,a,m){i['GoogleAnalyticsObject']=r;i[r]=i[r]||function(){ (i[r].q=i[r].q||[]).push(arguments)},i[r].l=1*new Date();a=s.createElement(o), m=s.getElementsByTagName(o)[0];a.async=1;a.src=g;m.parentNode.insertBefore(a,m) })(window,document,'script','https://www.google-analytics.com/analytics.js','ga'); ga('create', 'UA-37052883-1', 'auto'); ga('send', 'pageview'); var script = document.createElement('script'); script.src = 'https://www.googletagmanager.com/gtag/js?id=G-K6H02W22XT'; document.head.appendChild(script); script.onload = function () { window.dataLayer = window.dataLayer || []; function gtag(){dataLayer.push(arguments);} gtag('js', new Date()); gtag('config', 'G-K6H02W22XT'); gtag('event', 'page_view', { 'Topics': 'middle-east,iran,iran-nuclear-program,appeasement,assassination,terrorism,hamas,hezbollah,israel-iran-tensions,u-s-iran-tensions', 'Writers': 'jonathan-s-tobin', 'publication_date': '24/8/2', 'article_type': 'Article', }); }

The Knesset Constitution, Law and Justice Committee is set to convene on April 8 to choose a lawmaker to serve on the public panel that will advise on the dismissal of Attorney-General Gali Baharav-Miara.

The election of Knesset and government delegates to the committee for appointing and dismissing the attorney general marks the next step toward a final Cabinet vote on Baharav-Miara's removal.

On Sunday, Israel's Cabinet voted unanimously to back a motion of "no confidence" in the attorney general, setting in motion the process of her firing.

In Israel, the attorney general does not work for the prime minister, as opposed to in the U.S., where the the holder of the office is an agent of the executive branch.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and other ministers have often clashed with Baharav-Miara, who was appointed to the position in 2022 by the "government of change" led by Yair Lapid and Naftali Bennett, who stitched together the coalition that led Israel in 2021 and 2022.

"When your lawyer tells you each and every day that you cannot do things rather than telling you what is the right way to implement your policy, you cannot work for the citizens," Avichai Boaron, a lawmaker for Netanyahu's ruling Likud Party, told JNS on Sunday.

"For the last two years, the government's hands have been tied and the government and the ministers cannot do their job as their voters expect," he explained. "It's true to say that the attorney general's appointment was made by the government of Yair Lapid, and her personal policy and personal ideology do not fit this conservative government."

Boaron added, "They do not see eye to eye and after two years of frustration of the government and lots of issues where they found themselves looking in different directions, the government said it cannot work with her anymore and started the process of firing her."

Ongoing and essential disagreements

There are four grounds that under which an attorney general may be dismissed; one is ongoing and essential disagreements between the government and the attorney general that prevent effective cooperation—the justification cited in Sunday’s motion of no-confidence.

“There is no way to restore the trust—the legal adviser must do what any person of integrity would do and resign immediately,” Justice Minister Yariv Levin said in his first public statement following Sunday's vote.

Baharav-Miara’s “continued tenure amid the current situation severely damages the government’s ability to implement its policy, harms the citizens of Israel and undermines the standing of the institution of the legal adviser to the government,” he said, using her official title.

The statement said the justice minister would soon approach the public committee headed by former Israeli Supreme Court President Asher Grunis “for consultation regarding the termination of her tenure.”

Boaron said, "It’s a very complicated process, but we have to start it and the process says that the government has to ask a special committee to make its suggestion on whether there is cause for firing her or not."

Israeli law stipulates that an affirmative recommendation by the committee is not required, and that the attorney general has the right to a hearing before the committee and government representatives.

"After this special committee recommends to the government what to do, the government will decide on whether she will stay or leave," said the Likud Party lawmaker.

"The process just began, and I think in the current circumstances, it is very legitimate. Given the current level of disagreement between the government and the attorney general, we have to address this conflict, we cannot ignore it because it’s not fair to the citizens," Boaron told JNS.

(function(i,s,o,g,r,a,m){i['GoogleAnalyticsObject']=r;i[r]=i[r]||function(){ (i[r].q=i[r].q||[]).push(arguments)},i[r].l=1*new Date();a=s.createElement(o), m=s.getElementsByTagName(o)[0];a.async=1;a.src=g;m.parentNode.insertBefore(a,m) })(window,document,'script','https://www.google-analytics.com/analytics.js','ga'); ga('create', 'UA-37052883-1', 'auto'); ga('send', 'pageview'); var script = document.createElement('script'); script.src = 'https://www.googletagmanager.com/gtag/js?id=G-K6H02W22XT'; document.head.appendChild(script); script.onload = function () { window.dataLayer = window.dataLayer || []; function gtag(){dataLayer.push(arguments);} gtag('js', new Date()); gtag('config', 'G-K6H02W22XT'); gtag('event', 'page_view', { 'Topics': 'middle-east,iran,iran-nuclear-program,appeasement,assassination,terrorism,hamas,hezbollah,israel-iran-tensions,u-s-iran-tensions', 'Writers': 'jonathan-s-tobin', 'publication_date': '24/8/2', 'article_type': 'Article', }); }
  • Words count:
    3 words
  • Type of content:
    COLUMN
  • Byline:
  • Publication Date:
    March 24, 2025

Heed the rules.

(function(i,s,o,g,r,a,m){i['GoogleAnalyticsObject']=r;i[r]=i[r]||function(){ (i[r].q=i[r].q||[]).push(arguments)},i[r].l=1*new Date();a=s.createElement(o), m=s.getElementsByTagName(o)[0];a.async=1;a.src=g;m.parentNode.insertBefore(a,m) })(window,document,'script','https://www.google-analytics.com/analytics.js','ga'); ga('create', 'UA-37052883-1', 'auto'); ga('send', 'pageview'); var script = document.createElement('script'); script.src = 'https://www.googletagmanager.com/gtag/js?id=G-K6H02W22XT'; document.head.appendChild(script); script.onload = function () { window.dataLayer = window.dataLayer || []; function gtag(){dataLayer.push(arguments);} gtag('js', new Date()); gtag('config', 'G-K6H02W22XT'); gtag('event', 'page_view', { 'Topics': 'middle-east,iran,iran-nuclear-program,appeasement,assassination,terrorism,hamas,hezbollah,israel-iran-tensions,u-s-iran-tensions', 'Writers': 'jonathan-s-tobin', 'publication_date': '24/8/2', 'article_type': 'Article', }); }
  • Words count:
    425 words
  • Type of content:
    News
  • Byline:
  • Publication Date:
    March 24, 2025
  • Media:
    1 file

The morning's terrorist attack in the Lower Galilee carried out by an Arab Israeli is a result of the ongoing incitement of the Palestinian Authority and the doublespeak of its leader Mahmoud Abbas, Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar said on Monday.

“We are now fighting the war of the free world. Iran, Houthis, Hamas and Hezbollah attack us because we are nearby,” Sa’ar said at a press conference with his European Union counterpart Kaja Kallas in Jerusalem. “But make no mistake, the war is against Western civilization. Against its values and its ways of life.”

He spoke hours after a 85-year-old Israeli man, earlier said to be 75 years old, was killed and a soldier in his 20s was seriously wounded in the attack near the northern Israeli city of Yokneam. The terrorist, who was later identified as an Arab citizen of Israel, was shot dead at the scene.

"We saw this morning the barbaric attack ... which cost the life of a 75-year-old man. This is the result of the ongoing incitement of the P.A.," Sa'ar said, noting that Abbas says one thing in English and another in Arabic.

Sa'ar said it is “only natural” for Israel to expect the European Union’s support in the ongoing conflict against Islamic terrorism, and he again urged the E.U. to designate Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps as a terrorist organization, a move that is expected this year.

He argued that such radical ideologies can be defeated.

"If terrorism and extremism are eradicated in the Middle East, it will make Europe safer. And if not the opposite will be the case."

Kallas, a former prime minister of Estonia, has worked to put relations back on track since replacing Josep Borrell, one of Israel's biggest critics in Europe, in December.

"Our neighbors' problems today are our problems tomorrow," she said, adding that Israel has the right to defend itself and its security is important to Europe.

At the same time, Kallas stuck with E.U. policy, calling for the resumption of negotiations on the war in Gaza, arguing that a continuation of combat against Hamas is a lose-lose for both sides.

"My message in Israel today: in a new war both sides lose," she wrote on X. "Hamas must release all hostages and Israel must fully reinstate humanitarian aid into Gaza."

After their joint remarks, the two diplomats toured the Yad Vashem Holocaust Museum.

"Israel is the most attacked country in the world," Sa'ar said. "The attempt to deny our right to defend ourself is horrific."

(function(i,s,o,g,r,a,m){i['GoogleAnalyticsObject']=r;i[r]=i[r]||function(){ (i[r].q=i[r].q||[]).push(arguments)},i[r].l=1*new Date();a=s.createElement(o), m=s.getElementsByTagName(o)[0];a.async=1;a.src=g;m.parentNode.insertBefore(a,m) })(window,document,'script','https://www.google-analytics.com/analytics.js','ga'); ga('create', 'UA-37052883-1', 'auto'); ga('send', 'pageview'); var script = document.createElement('script'); script.src = 'https://www.googletagmanager.com/gtag/js?id=G-K6H02W22XT'; document.head.appendChild(script); script.onload = function () { window.dataLayer = window.dataLayer || []; function gtag(){dataLayer.push(arguments);} gtag('js', new Date()); gtag('config', 'G-K6H02W22XT'); gtag('event', 'page_view', { 'Topics': 'middle-east,iran,iran-nuclear-program,appeasement,assassination,terrorism,hamas,hezbollah,israel-iran-tensions,u-s-iran-tensions', 'Writers': 'jonathan-s-tobin', 'publication_date': '24/8/2', 'article_type': 'Article', }); }
  • Words count:
    625 words
  • Type of content:
    News
  • Byline:
  • Publication Date:
    March 24, 2025
  • Media:
    1 file

National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir called on Monday for Israel Security Agency (Shin Bet) head Ronen Bar to be prosecuted following reports that he ordered a secret probe against the minister.

"Yesterday, Shin Bet Director Ronen Bar was exposed as someone who ordered the collection of information on public officials in a democratic country," said Ben-Gvir ahead of a faction meeting of his Otzma Yehudit Party at the Knesset in Jerusalem.

Accusing Bar of working together with Attorney-General Gali Baharav-Miara to thwart Ben-Gvir's police appointments, the minister said the Shin Bet head "acted against the will of the voters who elected me.

"He didn’t want these appointments. Ronen Bar didn’t just target me; he targeted everyone who voted for me," said Ben-Gvir. "It's no longer a question of dismissal; Ronen Bar should sit in prison."

On Thursday, the Israeli Cabinet unanimously approved Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's proposal to fire Bar. His dismissal has since been temporarily frozen pending legal challenges before the High Court of Justice.

Earlier on Monday, the Shin Bet denied media reports that it has conducted an investigation against the Israel Police and Ben-Gvir since September.

In a letter to his staff dated Sept. 26, Bar wrote that the spread of Kahanism, an ideology based on the views of the late Rabbi Meir Kahane, "into law enforcement institutions" was "a dangerous phenomenon." Identifying such influences was part of the Shin Bet's mission, he continued.

"We must continue to gather evidence and testimonies of the involvement of the political echelon in the security echelon's actions, in the direction of the use of force in a manner that is contrary to the law, and come up with some findings," the letter continued, according to Channel 12 News, which broke the story.

'You are a criminal

According to Channel 12, when Ben-Gvir saw the report in the course of a security meeting, he castigated Bar, saying, "You are a criminal who should sit in prison."

Ben-Gvir also confronted Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who denied any knowledge of the investigation.

The Prime Minister's Office issued a statement about the matter on Monday: "The claim that the prime minister authorized Shin Bet chief Ronen Bar to collect evidence against Ben-Gvir is yet another lie that has been shattered.

"The published document—which shows an explicit instruction by the head of the Shin Bet to gather evidence against the political echelon—is reminiscent of dark regimes, undermines the foundations of democracy and aims to topple a right-wing government," it continued.

The prime minister was not informed about any investigation into the political echelon by the head of the Shin Bet, according to the PMO.

The statement noted that at a June 19, 2024, meeting, Bar raised the possibility of Kahanist elements infiltrating the police. In response, Netanyahu demanded evidence to support the claim, and also that it be brought to the immediate attention of Ben-Gvir as head of the police.

"The head of the Shin Bet promised the prime minister he would do so, but did not fulfill his commitment," according to the statement.

According to the Israel Police, Commissioner Danny Levi has demanded immediate clarification from Bar regarding the investigation.

"Moreover, to the extent that such serious suspicions have arisen, with dangerous consequences, their details must first and foremost be transferred to the head of the organization in order for him to deal with them," the police statement said.

The Shin Bet denied there had been any investigation against the police or politicians.

"There is no such Shin Bet investigation even now. The head of the Shin Bet spoke this evening with the police commissioner and clarified the matter to him. The two stressed the importance of cooperation between the organizations for the sake of national security," the agency said.

(function(i,s,o,g,r,a,m){i['GoogleAnalyticsObject']=r;i[r]=i[r]||function(){ (i[r].q=i[r].q||[]).push(arguments)},i[r].l=1*new Date();a=s.createElement(o), m=s.getElementsByTagName(o)[0];a.async=1;a.src=g;m.parentNode.insertBefore(a,m) })(window,document,'script','https://www.google-analytics.com/analytics.js','ga'); ga('create', 'UA-37052883-1', 'auto'); ga('send', 'pageview'); var script = document.createElement('script'); script.src = 'https://www.googletagmanager.com/gtag/js?id=G-K6H02W22XT'; document.head.appendChild(script); script.onload = function () { window.dataLayer = window.dataLayer || []; function gtag(){dataLayer.push(arguments);} gtag('js', new Date()); gtag('config', 'G-K6H02W22XT'); gtag('event', 'page_view', { 'Topics': 'middle-east,iran,iran-nuclear-program,appeasement,assassination,terrorism,hamas,hezbollah,israel-iran-tensions,u-s-iran-tensions', 'Writers': 'jonathan-s-tobin', 'publication_date': '24/8/2', 'article_type': 'Article', }); }
  • Words count:
    748 words
  • Type of content:
    Update Desk
  • Byline:
  • Publication Date:
    March 24, 2025
  • Media:
    1 file

A sewerage system worker in Britain was fired after condemning Hamas on the Oct. 7, 2023, massacre anniversary.

Damon Joshua was immediately suspended and later dismissed by the Severn Trent water company following a post he made on the company’s staff intranet website, The Telegraph reported on Sunday.

Joshua wrote, “One year ago our valued partners and friends, Israel, were horrifically attacked by a group of violent and disgusting terrorists. I can say with confidence today that the vast majority of STW’s employees stand in solidarity with our Jewish, Israeli and Zionist colleagues against the evil of Islamist terror,” while attaching an image of the flag of Israel to his post.

The post was taken down shortly afterward, following internal complaints that “the terminology being used includes very derogatory words” and “is very one-sided,” according to the report.

“The post reflects poorly on Severn Trent’s reputation as a diverse and inclusive company,” one complainant remarked, according to The Telegraph.

After a disciplinary hearing, his managers informed Joshua that “this offence is in relation to a protected characteristic, specifically religious belief” and dismissed him for gross misconduct.

He was further told that “the language used in the post caused offence to [three] employees with different perspectives, particularly those with Muslim or Palestinian backgrounds.”

Speaking to The Telegraph, Joshua remarked that there is a “big difference” between Islamist terrorism and Islam. “Not all followers of Islam are Islamists and the attack was perpetrated by Hamas who are an Islamist terror organization,” he added.

His managers said that “the wording in the post explicitly suggests support of a particular geopolitical stance,” while his claim that the majority of STW staff supported Israel “creates exclusion and assumptions of solidarity.”

A STW spokesman said, “This is a complex employee relations case and it’s important to be clear that this is not the whole story nor an isolated incident.”

He went on to say, “And whilst it’s not appropriate to discuss the detail of an individual case, this relates to ongoing misuse of an apolitical work forum and the expression of views on a range of emotive topics, despite having been previously informed that this was not the appropriate forum to do so.”

The Telegraph cited sources within STW as saying that Joshua’s post was part of a wider pattern of him expressing opposition to a number of company initiatives, such as South Asian heritage events, LGBT inclusion days, and diversity and inclusion workshops.

War on free speech

Joshua, who is a maintenance engineer, said that the incident has made him “think twice” before expressing his views in public.

“There is a whole war on free speech in this country at the moment. Lots of people know it but are too scared to stand up against it,” he was quoted as saying.

Speaking about the episode, Joshua related, “It happened in a matter of hours. I made the post at 7:50 [a.m.]. I got a call from my manager at 10 or 11 telling me that it had been taken down. At 1 p.m. I got called to a meeting room on the site that I was working on. My manager and her manager were there and I was suspended.”

Joshua, who has since found a job elsewhere, suggested a disparity between office-based staff and field workers. “I did frontline work in the production areas. It’s not a very nice job dealing with sewage. … There’s a massive difference between office and production. So I think they looked down on me.

“They’re slightly snobbish. They sit in their brand-new headquarters at their posh desk with their expensive office chairs. It’s different when you’re working on the actual site,” he said.

Ben Jones, director of case management at the Free Speech Union, which represented Joshua in his STW case, said: “We’ve dealt with 3,500 cases but the facts of Damon’s are particularly shocking. Sacking somebody for condemning Hamas is one of the most egregious cases of cancel culture we’ve seen,” The Telegraph reported.

Stephen O’Grady, a legal officer with the Free Speech Union, told JNS in December that legal interpretation of “racial or religious hatred” under the Public Order Act 1986 amendment, enacted in 2006 (RRHA), stirs a lot of debate in Britain.

Criticizing a religion is fair game under the law, he stressed, “but with regard to Islam or antisemitism, [how do you know] what is hatred against a race and what is criticism of a religion?”

(function(i,s,o,g,r,a,m){i['GoogleAnalyticsObject']=r;i[r]=i[r]||function(){ (i[r].q=i[r].q||[]).push(arguments)},i[r].l=1*new Date();a=s.createElement(o), m=s.getElementsByTagName(o)[0];a.async=1;a.src=g;m.parentNode.insertBefore(a,m) })(window,document,'script','https://www.google-analytics.com/analytics.js','ga'); ga('create', 'UA-37052883-1', 'auto'); ga('send', 'pageview'); var script = document.createElement('script'); script.src = 'https://www.googletagmanager.com/gtag/js?id=G-K6H02W22XT'; document.head.appendChild(script); script.onload = function () { window.dataLayer = window.dataLayer || []; function gtag(){dataLayer.push(arguments);} gtag('js', new Date()); gtag('config', 'G-K6H02W22XT'); gtag('event', 'page_view', { 'Topics': 'middle-east,iran,iran-nuclear-program,appeasement,assassination,terrorism,hamas,hezbollah,israel-iran-tensions,u-s-iran-tensions', 'Writers': 'jonathan-s-tobin', 'publication_date': '24/8/2', 'article_type': 'Article', }); }