Media
Senior consultant to the Community Media Advocacy Centre Laith Marouf has a history of hate-filled social-media posts, including: “I have a motto: Life is too short for shoes with laces or for entertaining Jewish white supremacists with anything but a bullet to the head.”
The Missouri attorney general’s announcement follows a JNS report of meetings between multiple state officials and pro-Israel groups on the subject.
There are currently four women serving in the agency’s senior command, known as the Forum of Branch Heads.
It documents hundreds of examples of anti-Semitism in the past 18 months involving film and television studios, celebrities, musicians, influencers, sports figures and social-media platforms.
“This ancient hatred has grown, moving from fringe groups and obscure chatrooms to the mainstream, both online and on the streets of communities across the country,” says the cable-TV news outlet.
JNS tested the chatbot and received controversial, incorrect, contradictory and often incomprehensible answers from the bot.
The paper reportedly severed ties with Fady Hanona after a pro-Israel advocacy and media watchdog uncovered his anti-Semitic social-media posts.
JNS has learned that a growing list of state agencies are exploring whether the investment firm is practicing a de facto boycott of Israel through the skewed rating system of its subsidiary.
The season could have been a few episodes shorter. The problem lies not in the actors but in the writing and pacing.
Some facsimiles of shows make will make you smile, while others will crash and burn. But it’s mid-summer, with plenty of time to binge.
“This rhetoric is unacceptable—not to mention dangerous—especially from a head of state.” It must cease,” tweeted the U.S. Special Envoy to Monitor and Combat Antisemitism.
“It does not represent who we are as Democrats or thoughtful, caring, compassionate members of society. We are much better than this,” said Chris Savage, chairman of the Washtenaw County Democratic Party.