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The abuse was done mostly on Twitter and included tweets that said, “Hitler forgot about this one” and “Don’t vote for a Jew.”
Israelis have been tweeting photos at weddings, restaurants, the beach, bars and concerts, dancing in bomb shelters, on hikes—with the satirical hashtag #SadSadIsrael.
Fadah Jassem, a London-based former television producer and editor, is being criticized for supporting Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan and leaving out the flag of Israel in an introductory tweet.
Is it OK to do bad things to achieve good ends? A new animated documentary covers the most extreme of examples.
“Fate/Grand Order THE MOVIE Divine Realm of the Round Table: Camelot Wandering; Agateram” takes place in the year 1273, when an evil king threatens to destroy the holy city and turn it into a desert.
During Communication Minister Yoaz Hendel’s meeting with U.S. Senator Ben Ray Luján (D-NM), chairman of the Senate Subcommittee on Communications, Media, and Broadband, he discussed the need for cooperation between regulators to effectively regulate social networks.
Twelve of the filmmakers touted by the streaming giant signed an open letter calling for international action against Israeli “apartheid” and “crime[s] against humanity,” according to Israeli NGO Im Tirtzu.
Co-CEO Ted Sarandos said the streaming giant does not allow titles “designed to incite hate or violence, and we don’t believe ‘The Closer’ crosses that line.”
And if they were, former Mossad director Yossi Cohen asserted that Israel must stop it on its own.
The French-language show’s new description now refers to the falsely accused Alfred Dreyfus as someone “arrested for spying.”
Her Instagram page was flooded with messages that consisted of Palestinian flags and “other Palestine solidarity-themed comments.”
The 1931 anti-fascist short film “Europa” was featured as part of the British Film Institute’s London Film Festival.