Column
The problem with politics of hate is that hate is a hard habit to break.
You wonder why a Hamas rapist who gets what he deserves is reinvented as an innocent civilian murdered as part of a “genocide,” while Afghan women are transformed into chattels and slaves, and the world remains silent.
It wouldn’t cease to exist in two years, but a president and a Democratic Party that is in thrall to its intersectional left wing will have serious consequences for the Jewish state.
Partisan journalists may have subverted American democracy, but over Israel, they have blood on their hands.
The presidential debate, like the coverage of the war on Hamas in Gaza, illustrated the blatant bias of the legacy media.
They insist that nothing they say or do can be construed as antisemitic while their behavior betrays their convictions.
As we prepare for the Days of Judgment ahead, may the Almighty help protect us from the outer Amaleks of this world.
“Unfortunately, many people repeat the narrative that in fact we are the ones preventing a deal,” said Gal Hirsch. “But this is a lie.”