Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

‘We don’t need a lecture,’ Anderson Cooper counters left-wing smears of Israel

The “CNN” host had no patience for Nina Turner’s progressive talking points.

Anderson Cooper
“CNN” anchor Anderson Cooper speaking with attendees at the 35th Annual Cronkite Award Luncheon at the Sheraton Grand Phoenix in Arizona. Credit: Gage Skidmore via Wikimedia Commons.

In a discussion last week during the results of the Michigan primary, CNN news anchor and host Anderson Cooper spoke up for those murdered in southern Israel by Hamas terrorists on Oct. 7 when a guest on the show offered a biased picture of suffering in the Gaza Strip.

Nina Turner
Nina Turner, a political pundit who used to sit on the Ohio State Senate. Credit: Gage Skidmore via Wikimedia Commons.

Pundit Nina Turner, a former member of the Ohio State Senate, said in response to U.S. President Joe Biden’s push for a ceasefire in the war that began when Hamas infiltrated the Gaza border and massacred men, women and children, that “30,000 people have been slaughtered” and “people are living in famine. They can’t get medical care. So, it can’t come soon enough for them.”

Turner also cited left-wing Reps. Rashida Tlaib (D-Mich.) and Cori Bush (D-Mo.) for their early demands for a ceasefire. “They were called ‘abhorrent.’ Now, fast-forward to all of these bodies laying in the wake and people are living through this every single day—”

Cooper then interrupted Turner from her recitation of progressive shibboleths, saying “by the way, there’s also been slaughter in Israel.”

He added that “there’s a lot of pain on both sides. So, we don’t really need a lecture on the problem. I’m not talking about the politics of this tonight.”

Turner pressed back, arguing that Biden should pressure Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for a ceasefire.

Cooper replied, “We don’t need to debate the issue.”

“The Democratic Party has changed,” David Wecht said. “Hateful anti-Jewish invective and actions are minimized, ignored and even coddled.”
The opinion piece, written by columnist Nicholas Kristof, parroted “cartoonishly evil Hamas propaganda that would make Goebbels blush,” Eitan Fischberger, a Middle East analyst, stated.
The state initially said that it is giving its 2025 Montana Exporter of the Year Award to a company that exports "$5.4 million worth of products to Canada, Egypt, European Union, Japan, Kuwait, Palestine, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, South Korea, United Kingdom and United Arab Emirates.”
A new documentary by Abner Benaim is a personal project that takes viewers to the terrorist attack against Alas Chiricanas Flight #901 and explores the aftermath on the families of the victims, including Benaim himself.
The department “will continue to deprive the regime of funding for its weapons programs, terrorist proxies and nuclear ambitions,” the U.S. treasury secretary said.
“This is yet another hateful incident meant to intimidate Jewish New Yorkers and divide our city,” New York City officials stated after swastikas were discovered in Highland Park and Forest Park.