“I don’t speak because I have the power to speak; I speak because I don’t have the power to remain silent.” Rav Kook z"l

Friday, February 7, 2025

Trump mocks Schumer calls him a ‘Palestinian’

 


President Donald J. Trump on Thursday took a swipe at Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, indirectly referring to him as “Palestinian” in a Truth Social post about the future of Gaza.


“The Gaza Strip would be turned over to the United States by Israel at the conclusion of fighting. The Palestinians, people like Chuck Schumer, would have already been resettled in far safer and more beautiful communities, with new and modern homes, in the region,” Trump wrote.

The remark follows past attacks from Trump against Schumer, whom he previously called “a proud member of Hamas.”

Schumer, has been critical of Trump’s foreign policy and has called for a more balanced approach to the conflict.


Agam Berger Prayed To Have A Siddur. A Terrorist Fulfilled Her Wish

 


  Freed hostage Agam Berger inspired many with the story of how she bravely fought to maintain her Jewish values while in captivity, refusing to cook for the terrorists on Shabbat or to eat any meat despite the lack of available food. Agam’s mother had prayed that she would not be released on Shabbat as this would cause desecration of Shabbat by the news outlets, and in the end she was the only surveillance soldier released on a weekday.


Agam related recently how she managed to obtain a Siddur in Gaza, enabling her to pray daily.

I really wanted to pray while in captivity and I prayed to Hashem to send me a Siddur. I asked one of the terrorists if they had a book with Jewish prayers inside? He laughed and two days later brought me a Rinat Yisrael siddur. He said: Your G-d loves you, we  found this. It is likely that one of the soldiers forgot this in Khan Younis.’

 

After Schumer Sabotaged ICC Sanctions in the Senate ..Trump Sanctions Hague Court Over Israel Probe

 

U.S. President Donald Trump signed an executive order imposing sanctions on the International Criminal Court on Thursday over its investigation of Israel for alleged “war crimes” in Gaza and its decision to issue arrest warrants for Israeli officials, including Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

The order includes a declaration of a national emergency to respond to what it describes as the court’s “unusual and extraordinary threat to the national security and foreign policy of the United States.”

“The ICC’s recent actions against Israel and the United States set a dangerous precedent, directly endangering current and former United States personnel, including active service members of the Armed Forces, by exposing them to harassment, abuse and possible arrest,” the order states.

Neither the United States nor Israel are members of the court, which is a stand-alone entity in The Hague and is not a part of the United Nations. Both Washington and Jerusalem have argued that they are outside the tribunal’s jurisdiction.

In November, the court issued arrest warrants for Netanyahu and Yoav Gallant, then the Israeli defense minister.

Thursday, February 6, 2025

Trump: "Israel Will Transfer Control of Gaza to the U.S. After the War ..Fetterman "All For It"










Sen. Fetterman: 
‘I fully support’ Trump’s plan to send US troops to take over Gaza.



 

Red Cross Launches New "Uber-Style" App for Gaza

 





FCC Will Investigate Soros Funded Radio Station

 

The FCC has initiated an investigation into a Soros-funded radio station after it broadcasted the real-time locations of undercover ICE agents.

Another Win for Trump!! Panama will allow United States Navy ships free passage

 


Panama will now allow United States Navy ships free passage through the Panama Canal, saving the United States millions of dollars a year. 

The development comes after Secretary of State Marco Rubio’s trip to Panama.

Trumps brilliant Gaza plan explained

 



Ganif wearing a business suit Cleans out $15,000 From Tezdaka Box


 
I say it was an inside job, someone very familiar with this shul! In the video which I couldn't download for some reason, he goes up the stairs directly into the main shul, and knows to go to the Bima directly, and finds the pushkas almost immediately! 

A shameless intruder stole about $15,000 from donation boxes inside a Brooklyn synagogue during an early-morning heist last month, cops and sources said. 

The masked, suit-clad thief snuck into the Congregation Agudath Sholom on 18th Avenue near East 19th Street in Kensington around 1 a.m. Jan. 25, authorities said. 

Footage released by the NYPD late Tuesday shows the suspect stealthily opening the door and traipsing through the house of worship. 

The suspect – who wore a baseball cap and backpack alongside his business attire – entered various rooms of the synagogue and swooped up the large pot of cash from multiple donation boxes, police and sources said. 

He then left the same way he came, slowly closing and locking the door before casually walking away, the video shows.

He fled east on 18th Avenue and then south on Coney Island Avenue, cops said.  

It wasn’t clear if anyone else was inside the synagogue at the time, but no injuries were reported. 

Anyone with information on the suspect is asked to call the NYPD’s CrimeStoppers Hotline at 1-800-577-TIPS (8477) or, for Spanish, 1-888-57-PISTA (74782). 

The public can also submit their tips by logging onto the CrimeStoppers website at https://crimestoppers.nypdonline.org/, or on X @NYPDTips.

"Evil" Schumer manufactured a quibble to justify voting against ICC sanctions

 

Last week, Senate Democrats led by Schumer tanked a vote on a bill that would have slapped sanctions on the International Criminal Court for its outrageous arrest warrants against Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his former defense minister, Yoav Gallant.

The ICC’s action showed its willingness to act against non-members like Israel and the United States, putting American service members and other potential US targets in danger.

But the Democrats’ action was equally craven: Not only did it keep alive the grotesque prosecution of Israel’s leaders for defending their nation against terrorist attackers, it set a ticking time bomb for President Trump.

The “Illegitimate Court Counteraction Act” would have imposed direct sanctions on ICC officials who “engaged in any effort to investigate, arrest, detain, or prosecute” an individual or entity in the United States, or any citizen or lawful resident of a US ally that has not agreed to the court’s jurisdiction.

In other words, the bill would have protected Americans and allies like Israel from being targeted by the rogue court.

The bill passed with significant bipartisan support in the House, and Senate Democrats previously said they favored it.

But at the last minute Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) manufactured a quibble to justify voting against it, claiming the bill’s “lack of precision” could have put in its crosshairs American tech companies that assist the ICC in its investigations.

Schumer’s argument was disingenuous: The first Trump administration imposed sanctions almost identical to those in the bill by executive order, without any US firms being penalized.

But it was enough to sink  the ICC Act — and preserve the court’s hounding of Israel in the wake of Oct. 7.

The ICC enjoys a ballooning annual budget of $200 million, yet over its entire lifespan it has convicted a total of six individuals of the mass-atrocity crimes it was supposedly designed to prosecute.

Having had little success targeting warlords and mass murderers like Sudan’s Omar al-Bashir, it turned its attention to Israel, a non-member state and globalists’ favorite punching bag.

And the action against Netanyahu came after the ICC in 2020 opened an investigation into the United States, allegedly for military service members’ war crimes in Afghanistan.

Senate Democrats are far from stupid. Their party has already used impeachment, state prosecution and federal criminal charges to target Trump — and they view the ICC warrants against Israeli officials as an avenue for a future lawfare strategy.

Four years from now, when Trump is once again an ex-president, expect the ICC to seek warrants against him, administration officials and perhaps Republican lawmakers for attempting to sanction it.

The ICC warrants against Israeli leaders show that its prosecutors can be as creative as Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg in manufacturing charges.

Indeed, the ICC prosecutor has already threatened American legislators with punishment merely for threatening to “retaliate” against the court with sanctions.

Of course, should a Trump indictment happen, a Democratic presidential successor would publicly lament the ICC’s overreach, while doing nothing to stop it.

The ICC is no stranger to such maneuvers. In its latest ploy targeting Israel, the court invented a state of Palestine over which to exercise its jurisdiction, then invented a phenomenon of mass starvation in Gaza to prosecute, despite the thousands of aid trucks Israel has facilitated.

Senate Democrats also claimed that sanctions would only make the ICC dig in its heels against Israel, but experience shows otherwise.  

When Trump sanctioned ICC personnel via executive order in 2020, its prosecutors promptly abandoned their investigation into alleged torture by US troops stationed in Afghanistan — only to reopen the matter when President Biden rescinded the sanctions.

Ironically, ICC officials thought the court could survive the sanctions that Schumer blocked. What they truly fear is a stronger measure that would sanction the institution itself, not just its employees.

Republicans passed on imposing such a measure because Democrats signaled their support for the more limited bipartisan bill that passed the House.

Now that the façade of cooperation has disappeared, Trump has no reason not to sanction the ICC once again by executive order — and now that he’s witnessed the cozy relationship between the court and the Democrats, he knows he can’t stop at half-measures.

Erielle Azerrad is a senior fellow at the Center for the Middle East and International Law at George Mason’s Scalia Law School, where Eugene Kontorovich is a professor of law.