“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

Saturday, March 29, 2025

Ms. Rachel of YouTube in no Mr Rogers.. She is a Leftist Hamas Supporter Poisoning Your Children

 

Most parents my age grew up believing that Mister Rogers was speaking directly to us in our living rooms. He felt like a member of the family — a beloved one.

He didn’t just explain the world as it was; he showed us what it could be.

Fred Rogers helped raise two entire generations of Americans with a gentle, nonpartisan and uncontroversial moral compass grounded in common sense.

Today, many parents see Ms. Rachel as the next Mister Rogers — only her audience finds her not on PBS, but on digital media.

Back in the day, we had to wait for Mister Rogers’ scheduled airtime.

But Ms. Rachel’s “Songs for Littles” is available on demand, around the clock, on both YouTube and Netflix.

Rachel Griffin Accurso’s super-sweet, sing-songy Ms. Rachel persona is a top YouTube draw, with over 14 million subscribers and more than 10 billion views.

That’s billion — with a “B.”

Her social-media feeds on Instagram and TikTok, where she remains in character in her trademark pink headband, are followed by millions more.

Mount Sinai doctor fired over disturbing anti-Israel posts denying Oct. 7 attacks: ‘Long live Hamas’

 



A Mount Sinai doctor who allegedly denied Hamas atrocities and hailed the terror group as “noble resistance and freedom fighters” has been fired from her teaching gig there, The Post has learned.

Dr. Lila Abassi, an assistant professor of medicine at the Upper East Side hospital, was canned earlier this month after a probe into a series of disturbing online posts, a hospital spokesperson confirmed this week.

In a series of unhinged screeds, Abassi, 46, allegedly wrote “Long Live Hamas & Hezbollah,” labeled the Israeli army a “plague,” accused Israel of “slaughtering babies,” and rejected reports of rape during the Oct. 7, 2023 attack that left 1,200 Israelis dead and thousands injured. 

“Please show me actual rape video,” Abassi wrote in a Facebook doctors group, using the pseudonym “Kluver Bucy,” the name for a rare brain disorder that affects memory and behavior and may cause eating disorders, hypersexuality, seizures and dementia.

And she asserted that Israel was responsible for “massacr[ing] more people on 10/7 than [were] killed by Hamas.”

City Councilwoman Inna Vernikov (R-Brooklyn), who is Jewish, reported Abassi to the hospital last month.

The hospital initiated a probe that ultimately resulted in her dismissal, according to a Mt. Sinai spokeswoman.

“Our most basic expectation of doctors is that they will perform their duties in an unbiased manner — especially a doctor serving a city as ethnically and religiously diverse as ours,” Vernikov told The Post.

“How scary is the thought that this woman was entrusted with the lives of Jewish patients while expressing blatant support for the same terrorists that seek to eliminate the Jewish people and destroy America?”

Her flurry of online hate is well-known within physicians’ groups on social media.

“She’s known as one of the more outspoken and egregiously antisemitic physicians in the community,” a fellow Mount Sinai doc told The Post.

In a 2016 “Doctors for Afghanistan” Facebook post, Abassi gushed about the “lack of a filter” at her job at the American Council on Science and Health, which she said she can “appreciate personally.”

“Because I don’t have a filter either,” she added.

Hateful posts erode trust — especially at a hospital.

“No longer will any Jewish patient feel confident that they will receive safe care from that individual, and by extension, at the facility that employs them,” said the founders of the watchdog Physicians Against Antisemitism, which exposed the posts online.

Abassi, who graduated in 2011 from St. George’s University School of Medicine before starting a residency at SUNY Downstate, did not return several requests for comment.

Nearly a quarter of Americans raised Jewish have left the religion, survey says

 

Nearly 100% of Israeli Jews still identify as Jews in adulthood, compared to 76% of American Jews, Pew survey finds.


Almost one in four US adults raised Jewish do not identify as religiously Jewish anymore, according to a recent study by the Pew Research Center.

The study, published Wednesday, surveyed “religious switching” around the world, and found that significant percentages of people raised in religious homes in the United States and internationally are now religiously unaffiliated. Smaller numbers have converted to another religion.

Among Americans raised Jewish, 17% now describe themselves as religiously unaffiliated. An additional 2% now identify as Christian while 1% now identify as Muslim. An additional 4% identify with another religion or didn’t answer.

The survey also found that 14% of Jewish adults in the US had converted into the religion. Of that population, half were raised as Christians while most others grew up religiously unaffiliated.

In contrast to the US findings, survey data from Israel found that 100% of those raised Jewish remained Jewish as adults, and only 1% of the adult Jewish population had converted. Virtually all Israelis raised Muslim also still identify as Muslim in adulthood.

But Pew also found in a separate survey that more than one in five Israeli Jews had switched between Jewish religious sectors — going from secular to religious Zionist, for example, or traditional to haredi.

That survey found that the secular population had gained more members than it lost due to religious switching, while the reverse was true for the religious Zionist community. Religious switching did not have an effect on the numbers of traditional or haredi Israeli Jews. (Those numbers do not account for differing birth rates among the groups.)

Wednesday’s survey found that retention rates were similar among Americans raised Jewish, Muslim and Christian.

Among those raised Jewish, 76% are still Jewish, while the corresponding figure is 77% for American Muslims, and 73% for American Christians. Other religious groups in the United States have higher rates of attrition: Just 45% of those raised Buddhist, for example, are still Buddhist.

The rate of religious switching among Jews has remained constant: The data reflected just a slight change since the last survey of its kind in 2014, where 75% of US adults raised Jewish said they still identified as such.

Another Pew survey of American Jews in 2020 sought to answer the same question, and found that 88% of people raised Jewish continued to identify as Jewish in adulthood.

The key difference? The 2020 survey measured both religiously affiliated Jews and those identified as “Jews of no religion” — people who may identify as culturally or ethnically Jewish but not religious. In that survey, if someone stopped affiliating religiously as Jewish, but still identified as a Jew of no religion, they still counted as Jewish — leading to a higher retention rate.

US data was taken from the 2024 Religious Landscape Study which surveyed 850 American Jews and had a margin of error of 5%. The Israeli data was taken from a sample of 591 Jewish adults and had a margin of error of 4%.



Friday, March 28, 2025

Zera Shimshon Parshas Pekudei

 


Anyone out there that can help Abraham Cohen ?

 

Biden Funded Israeli Left-Wing Organizations to Topple Netanyahu


U.S. Investigating Israeli Left-Wing NGOs Over Alleged Government Funding

Reports indicate that the U.S. has launched an investigation into six Israeli left-wing organizations, suspected of receiving tens of millions of dollars from the previous American administration to fund protests against Prime Minister Netanyahu and the right-wing government.

These protests allegedly included violent street demonstrations, road blockages, economic sabotage, disruptions to healthcare and education, and threats to national security—especially within the IDF reserves.

Still working on my surprised face.

 

'Hamas engineered the protests in the Gaza Strip'

 

i24news Arab affairs commentator Zvi Yehezkeli claims that the protests against Hamas were actually orchestrated by the organization.

"I can't say what is behind them, but I suspect. My gut doesn't feel good about it, because I know the Gazans. The movements against Hamas were immediately suppressed. I think there is an interest for Hamas for these protests to come out, because Hamas is currently not concerned about its rule. These are not protests that threaten its rule. These are protests that come to show the world: we want to stay in Gaza and we agree that Hamas should not rule Gaza. That's the story," Yehezkeli claimed.

He stated, "If the world buys this, Hamas has done its part because it is essentially looking ahead. It sees Trump's plan that threatens to remove it and the Gazan citizens from the Gaza Strip and comes and says to the world: look, there are people who oppose me, there are sane people in Gaza - leave them alone. When they hear Israel's threats to evict everyone from the northern Gaza Strip - these protests serve Hamas and do not threaten it."

He added that there may also be anger in the Strip towards Hamas - but it does not stem from support for Israel. "Those who are currently protesting against Hamas are the same ones who are referred to in quotes as 'unaffiliated.' If there were an October 7th situation now, they would break the fence and do exactly what their predecessors did. Gaza is Gaza."

"My gut feeling is that this is too good to be true, and one should not rely on it. And let no one think that there are now complete partners in the Gaza Strip. There are only partners for what we saw on October 7th, to slaughter and murder," he concluded.

Knesset Passes Key Judicial Reform, Amendment To Judicial Selection Committee


The Knesset has passed the controversial bill to change the makeup of the judicial selection committee, which will greatly increase political power over the judicial appointments process in Israel. The bill was the main issue of contention during the 2023 judicial reform debate, and was eventually deferred to a later date.

The new legislation removes the two representatives of the Israel Bar Association currently on the nine-member Judicial Selection Committee, which makes all judicial appointments, and replaces them with one lawyer to be directly chosen by the coalition and another chosen by the opposition.

It also gives political representatives from the coalition, opposition and judiciary on the nine-member Judicial Selection Committee veto power over lower court appointments, as opposed to the current system where no side has a veto. The bill removes any influence of the three judges on the committee over appointments to the Supreme Court, while granting the coalition and opposition vetoes.

Critics say the bill, which will only take effect in the next Knesset, will politicize judicial appointments.

A Big Loss for Israel BUT Trump had no choice but to withdraw Stefanik’s UN Ambassador Nomination



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Donald J. Trump

@realDonaldTrump

As we advance our America First Agenda, it is essential that we maintain EVERY Republican Seat in Congress. We must be unified to accomplish our Mission, and Elise Stefanik has been a vital part of our efforts from the very beginning. I have asked Elise, as one of my biggest Allies, to remain in Congress to help me deliver Historic Tax Cuts, GREAT Jobs, Record Economic Growth, a Secure Border, Energy Dominance, Peace Through Strength, and much more, so we can MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN. With a very tight Majority, I don’t want to take a chance on anyone else running for Elise’s seat. The people love Elise and, with her, we have nothing to worry about come Election Day. There are others that can do a good job at the United Nations. Therefore, Elise will stay in Congress, rejoin the House Leadership Team, and continue to fight for our amazing American People. Speaker Johnson is thrilled! I look forward to the day when Elise is able to join my Administration in the future. She is absolutely FANTASTIC. Thank you Elise!