Media
The Israeli army posted a fake video message to its official Twitter account, assuring Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah that it did not forget his birthday.
The post under fire “was sarcastic criticism of the alt-right’s conspiracy theories and anti-Semitic positions.”
Ash Sarkar expressed “solidarity” with those who spray-painted “free Gaza and Palestine, liberate all ghettos” on one of the last remaining parts of the Warsaw Ghetto wall.
Blue and White leader Benny Gantz issues a statement saying there’s no room for politics when Israel is under attack; Yair Lapid rips into the prime minister for Hezbollah’s aggression against the Jewish state.
According to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, the station’s crime reporter, Guy Peleg, has intentionally misquoted transcripts to harm him, calling the outlet a “propaganda channel.”
Research contains examples from content shared by jihadi groups that are using and fundraising with cryptocurrencies.
“Our Israel activists are more emboldened and outspoken than ever. People understand they are on the right side of history and the truth. They will not be intimidated,” said Aviva Rosenschein, international campus director for CAMERA, which recently hosted students from over 80 universities to respond to the upsurge in campus anti-Semitism and anti-Israel activism.
Israeli EMS has “one of the most impressive programs I’ve ever seen,” says the chief operating officer of Facebook. “I’m in awe of ... all of the United Hatzalah volunteers, who race toward people when they need help most.”
“I have deleted tweets from a decade ago that are offensive. I am deeply sorry,” posted politics editor Tom Wright-Piersanti on his Twitter page, which is currently private.
He has been charged with posting a video on social media firing a semi-automatic rifle as the background features screams and sirens.
ADL CEO Jonathan Greenblatt: Reps. Tlaib and Omar shouldn’t have “lifted up” the work of a cartoonist who “mocks the Holocaust and traffics in #antiSemitic tropes.”
The cartoon by Brazilian-Lebanese artist Carlos Latuff depicts Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu covering Tlaib’s mouth with his hand, while U.S. President Donald Trump does the same with Omar.