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U.S. Politics

“A small, but meaningful, piece of the history of the Jewish faith will be returned to its rightful owner,” stated Damian Williams, the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York.
The Republican vice-presidential nominee spoke at a rally co-organized by Christian and Jewish groups marking one year since Hamas’s Oct. 7 terrorist attacks.
“Treasury will continue relentlessly degrading the ability of Hamas and other destabilizing Iranian proxies to finance their operations and carry out additional violent acts,” said Secretary Janet Yellen.
The bipartisan legislation further condemns rising Jew-hatred worldwide, “and commits to confronting and combating this hatred in all its forms and at every level.”
“I believe that history will also remember Oct. 7 as a dark day for the Palestinian people,” U.S. President Joe Biden stated.
“The purpose of a union is to represent their members, not force them to fund extreme political agendas against their will,” stated Sen. Bill Cassidy.
The U.S. attorney general decried “threats of hate whenever and wherever they occur” on the anniversary of Hamas’s Oct. 7 terror attack.
Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant is scheduled to travel to the United States on Wednesday for an “urgent, 24-hour visit.”
Man sustains non-life threatening injuries, claims he’s a journalist and “We spread the misinformation.”
U.S. intelligence agencies warned that the anniversary of Oct. 7 “could motivate threat actors across ideologies, including those who espouse violent antisemitism and Islamophobia, to engage in violence.”
The U.S. State Department said that the two individuals and one organization are “undermining peace, security and stability In the West Bank.”
“That is absolutely false,” the State Department spokesman said. “We had no kind of warning from the government of Iran that they were going to launch such an attack.”