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Supporters of Israel have accused mainstream media outlets of bias and have contended that conservative outlets have provided fairer coverage of the Jewish state.
Dawn Johnson shared the article from a neo-Nazi website that includes a cartoon employing anti-Semitic tropes. The caricature’s caption reads: “Riggers, Jews ... Bad News!”
The Israeli prime minister uses the social-media platform to urge the public to follow his lead as the first in the country to receive the shot.
Border Police Commander Maj. Gen. Yaakov Shabtai nominated as police chief, Maj. Gen. Katy Perry to head Israel Prisons Service.
The Dec. 8 tweet featured a poster stating “where there is oppression, may there thrive resistance” and described the First Intifada as “a series of mass protests against Israeli settler-colonialism and occupation.”
The message appears to be in reference to the recent assassination of top Iranian nuclear scientist Mohsen Fakhrizadeh in an operation widely attributed to Israel.
Since taking office in January 2019, Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-Mich.) has been accused of peddling an anti-Israel and anti-Semitic agenda.
The network is on the frontlines of a multidimensional battlefield to fight delegitimization, misinformation, boycotts, legal challenges, propaganda and classic anti-Semitism.
Accounts on TikTok and Instagram posted “hateful messages, including references to false claims the Holocaust never happened, rape and homophobia,” wrote Redwood High School principal David Sondheim.
The rankings hail “The Memory Monster” by Yishai Sarid and “The Tunnel” by A.B. Yehoshua.
The social-media platform has emerged as a powerful alternative to larger platforms like Twitter and Facebook, which conservatives have criticized for censoring and flagging right-wing content.
“I should not have juxtaposed the two thoughts. Hitler and his evil stand alone, of course, in history. I regret any pain my statement may have caused,” says the veteran anchorwoman.