“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

Monday, September 15, 2025

After Charlie Kirk’s Death, Workers Learn the Limits of Free Speech in and Out of Their Jobs

In the days following the fatal shooting of conservative activist Charlie Kirk, numerous workers have been fired for their comments on his death, among them MSNBC political analyst Matthew Dowd.

Several conservative activists have sought to identify social media users whose posts about Kirk they viewed as offensive or celebratory, targeting everyone from journalists to teachers. Right-wing influencer Laura Loomer said she would try to ruin the professional aspirations of anyone who celebrated Kirk’s death.

It’s far from the first time workers have lost their jobs over things they say publicly — including in social media posts. But the speed at which the firings have been happening raises questions about worker rights versus employer rights.

In the U.S., laws can vary across states, but overall, there’s very little legal protections for employees who are punished for speech made both in and out of private workplaces.

“Most people think they have a right to free speech…but that doesn’t necessarily apply in the workplace,” said Vanessa Matsis-McCready, associate general counsel and vice president of HR Services for Engage PEO. “Most employees in the private sector do not have any protections for that type of speech at work.”

Add to that the prevalence of social media, which has made it increasingly common to track employees’ conduct outside of work and to dox people, or publish information about them online with the intent of harming or harassing them.

Hochul Endorses Zohran Mamdani for NYC Mayor

Skver Mayor Spitzer Poses With the Klavtah


 Gov. Kathy Hochul on Sunday urged New Yorkers to vote Zohran Mamdani for mayor of New York City, giving the Democratic nominee one of his most significant endorsements to date in the contest to lead the nation’s biggest city.

Writing in the New York Times’ opinion section, Hochul said that while she and Mamdani diverged on some issues, they came together on the importance of addressing the affordability crisis in the city and across the state.

“But in our conversations, I heard a leader who shares my commitment to a New York where children can grow up safe in their neighborhoods and where opportunity is within reach for every family,” wrote Hochul, a Democrat. “I heard a leader who is focused on making New York City affordable — a goal I enthusiastically support.”

The stunning success of Mamdani, a 33-year-old self-described democratic socialist, in the race for New York City mayor has exposed divisions within the Democratic Party as it struggles to repair its brand more than half a year into Donald Trump’s presidency. Hochul’s endorsement is the latest sign that Democratic leaders who had been skeptical of Mamdani’s liberal views are beginning to consolidate around him.

Mamdani thanked Hochul for the boost, saying it’s a sign “our movement is growing stronger.”

“Governor Hochul has made affordability the centerpiece of her work. I look forward to fighting alongside her to continue her track record of putting money back in New Yorkers’ pockets and building a safer and stronger New York City where no one is forced to leave just so they can afford to raise a family,” Mamdani said in a statement Sunday night. “I’m grateful to the Governor for her support in unifying our party — as well as the work she’s done standing up to President Trump, securing free lunch meals for our kids, and expanding access to childcare.”

In recent weeks, the other candidates in the race — former Gov. Andrew Cuomo, incumbent Mayor Eric Adams and Republican Curtis Sliwa — have intensified their criticism of Mamdani over his platform and past statements ahead of the city’s general election in November.

Hochul said another reason she decided to back Mamdani was his vow that he would make sure the New York Police Department had the resources it needs to keep the city’s streets and subways safe.

“I urged him to ensure that there is strong leadership at the helm of the N.Y.P.D. — and he agreed,” Hochul wrote.

Mamdani, who is leading in the polls, has not been endorsed by some prominent Democrats, including Chuck Schumer and Hakeem Jeffries, the minority leaders in the U.S. Senate and House.

U.S. House Republican Leadership Chairwoman Elise Stefanik, a New York congresswoman, said Hochul’s endorsement is a sign that the governor is moving left to shore up falling poll numbers.

“At the exact moment when New Yorkers are looking for strong leadership from their Governor with a majority opposing Zohran Mamdani, Kathy Hochul embraces this raging Communist who will destroy New York making it less affordable and more dangerous — once again putting criminals and communists first, and New Yorkers LAST,” Stefanik said in a Sunday statement.

Mamdani soundly defeated Cuomo in the Democratic primary. Cuomo has since relaunched his campaign as an independent. Adams, a Democrat, skipped the primary to run as an independent in November. Sliwa ran unopposed in the Republican primary.

Hochul served as lieutenant governor to Cuomo and replaced him after he stepped down in 2021 following a barrage of sexual harassment allegations. He denied wrongdoing during the campaign, maintaining that the scandal was driven by politics.

 

Actress Hannah Einbinder Takes a Page out of Satmar Handbook, and States On "Free Palestine" Speech: "It Is My Obligation As A Jewish Person To Distinguish Jews From The State Of Israel"

The "Tzneesdike" Satmar Chassiditeh Channa Einbinder  

 Backstage at the Emmy Awards ceremony Sunday night, Hannah Einbinder followed up on her acceptance speech call to “Free Palestine.”

Einbinder made the statement, along with saying “F–k ICE” as she accepted the Emmy for Best Supporting Actress in a Comedy for her role of Ava Daniels in Hacks.

Backstage, standing alongside Hacks co-star Jean Smart who just won in her Lead Actress category, Einbinder was asked by the press to expand on her statement about Palestine and about her move earlier this week, alongside 1,200 others, to sign a pledge to boycotting Israeli film institutions.

“I thought it was important to talk about Palestine,” she said, “because it’s an issue that’s very dear to my heart. I have friends in Gaza who are working as frontline workers, as doctors right now in the north of Gaza, to provide care for pregnant women and for school children to create schools in the refugee camps. And it’s an issue that’s really close to my heart for many reasons.”

She continued, taking a page out of the Satmar and Neturei Karta manifesto and said with a straight dace 

“I feel like it is my obligation as a Jewish person to distinguish Jews from the State of Israel, because our religion and our culture is such an important and long standing institution that is really separate to this sort of ethno-nationalist state.”

Sunday, September 14, 2025

Elimelech Stern of Beit Shemesh Convicted of Spying for Iran

 

Elimelech Stern

The Jerusalem District Court on Sunday convicted Elimelech Stern, a 22-year-old Haredi yeshiva student from Beit Shemesh, of spying on behalf of Iran.

He was found guilty of contact with a foreign agent and conspiring to make threats after he carried out several missions for an Iranian intelligence agent in exchange for money last year.

Stern is one of dozens of Israeli citizens who have been arrested and charged with spying for the Islamic Republic. He is one of the first to be convicted since most espionage cases are still working their way through the legal system.

During a series of Shin Bet interrogations following his arrest, Stern confessed to being in contact with his operator, who went by the alias Anna Elena, over Telegram. Later in court, he insisted that he had been unaware he was communicating with a foreign actor.

According to the conviction handed down by Judge Hannah Miriam Lump, Stern recruited two other Israeli citizens to help him carry out the tasks assigned to him by his handler.

At the request of the agent, Stern enlisted one of his accomplices in printing and hanging fliers of bloodied palm prints with the English phrase: “It will be written in history that children were killed, let’s stand on the right side of history.” The assistant took pictures of himself hanging the fliers in Tel Aviv in early June 2024 and sent the photo evidence to Stern, who then forwarded it to the agent.

Stern also planned in June 2024 to leave a threatening package on the doorstep of Ronen Shaul, Israel’s representative in the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), but never followed through.

The Iranian agent requested that he send a severed animal’s head alongside a flower bouquet to Shaul. When he was unable to find an animal’s head, the agent changed course and asked him to send a severed doll’s head alongside a knife. Fearing legal repercussions, Stern eventually declined to send the package entirely.

That month, after a period of debate, he also refused to ignite a brushfire in Jerusalem at the agent’s behest.

Stern’s case is one of dozens to come to light over the past two years in which Iranian agents have successfully recruited Israelis into espionage schemes via social media, specifically the Telegram messaging app. Most of the accused spies start out with innocuous tasks that gradually grow into more serious offenses, like intelligence gathering and assassination plots.

The growing number of Iranian agents has even prompted Israel to open up a new wing for them in Haifa’s Damon prison.

The unlikely operatives, from diverse walks of life, are usually ordinary civilians contacted by Iranian intelligence officers online. The effort appears to be part of a mass recruitment scheme by Tehran to gather intelligence on Israel’s alleged nuclear and military sites, as well as key Israeli figures such as defense officials and top scientists.

Given Stern’s relatively young age when committing the offenses, he will be reviewed for probation before sentencing at the request of his attorney.

How Radical Domestic Terrorists Embedded Themselves into the Colleges, Secret Service, FBI , The US Navy, The US Army Etc

 

Stephen Miller goes nuclear

 

Charlie Kirk’s assassination is the result of a decade of anti-Trump rhetoric from the left

 

A predictable reaction to the horrible murder of Charlie Kirk among legacy media outlets has been to condemn the ugly tenor of America’s political debate and call for a timeout. 

On its face, the plea sounds reasonable enough, but it rests on the false idea of both-sidesism, as if left and right are equally to blame for the frightening rise of political violence. 

Count that as another Big Media lie and a repugnant effort to obscure the actual source and motivation of the assassination scourge. 

There are not two sides contributing to the horror and equally responsible for it. The single truth is that we are witnessing the inevitable result of a decade of Trump Derangement Syndrome. 

Kirk’s death is another piece of poisoned fruit growing out of the far left’s hysteria and its fetish-like obsession about killing the president. 

The cancer declaring that Trump was fair game appeared in 2015, soon after he entered the presidential sweepstakes. And it has never stopped spreading, even during the four years when he was out of office. 

Now it has clearly metastasized to where Trump is not the only target and words are not the only weapons. 

The accused killer of Kirk, Tyler Robinson, was “deeply indoctrinated with leftist ideology,” according to Utah Gov. Spencer Cox. 

Robinson, a stellar student in high school, dropped out of college after just one semester, and seems to have gotten drunk on the social media Kool-Aid about the evils of Trump, Kirk and everyone who subscribes to any conservative principles. 

The penchant for calling Trump the devil incarnate has put a target on his back and given would be assassins a license to kill him and others in his circle. 

Investigation Reveals: Attack helicopter spotted trucks on Oct 7 but did not strike

 


Exclusive footage published in an expose by Ayala Hasson reveals a case that raises sharp questions about the IDF's conduct during the October 7th massacre.

According to the report, a missile-armed combat helicopter scrambled to the Supernova festival site and identified a convoy of Hamas pickup trucks near Be'eri, but did not open fire.

The incident occurred about four hours after the start of the masaacre, as media worldwide were already showing footage of Hamas pickups in Israeli territory. The helicopter recorded the events and transmitted the information in real time to the Air Force command center, but was not ordered to fire.

The footage raises serious questions about the decisions made by the commanders at the time. "The helicopter saw the terrorists near the festival, but did not fire," the investigation said.


Ex-Con Olmert to Al Jazeera: "Sorry for the death of Khalil Al-Hayya's son"

 

Former Prime Minister Ehud Olmert harshly criticized the Israeli attack in Qatar last week in an interview with the anti-Israeli network Al Jazeera about the fact that in the attempt to assassinate senior Hamas figure Khalil Al-Hayya, his son and wife died.

"There are senior Israeli officials who need to be tried for their crimes. The Israeli government gave orders to kill Palestinians. Killing the negotiators means that you don't want negotiations and you don't want to release the hostages. I want to say that I'm sorry for Al-Hayya's son and his wife - they shouldn't have been victims. We kill terrorists and we will continue to fight terror," Olmert claimed.

He stated that he does not represent a government position because he opposes the government and is working to overthrow it. He took advantage of the platform he was given to attack the prime minister, saying, "Netanyahu was a friend of Qatar for many years and cooperated with them in financing Hamas while it was suffering from major financial problems. "Netanyahu does not represent us and does not represent Israel. I am making every effort to bring him down."

However, Olmert made it clear that in his view all Hamas members are terrorists who should not be pitied, but according to him, two conditions must be considered before eliminating senior figures. "The first condition is the timing," he said, "and here we are talking about an attack that took place at a time when negotiations were underway to release hostages. I believe that the timing was completely inappropriate, because the State of Israel's top priority should be the release of the hostages."

The second condition, he claimed, is the location. "I am not satisfied with Qatar's policy, it is nothing new," he said. "I do not support Qatar's efforts to assist a terrorist organization, but at the same time Israel is cooperating with Qatar to release the hostages and is using its services. The Israeli delegation goes to Doha and returns from there. I do not think that the attack should have been carried out there, while violating Qatar's sovereignty."

How Israel bypassed Qatar's sophisticated air defense systems


The AIR LORA is a new Israeli ballistic missile designed to penetrate any air defense system by descending from space at a 90-degree angle at supersonic speed. According to the reports, its velocity is so high that it does not even require an explosive warhead to be lethal.



 Since last week, analysts have questioned how Israel managed to bypass Qatar’s sophisticated air defense systems in its strike on Hamas leaders in Doha.

The Wall Street Journal reported on Friday that Israeli fighter jets launched ballistic missiles into space over Saudi Arabia to avoid violating its airspace in a sophisticated attack that stunned the world.

Senior US officials told WSJ that the operation was carried out by 12 aircraft—eight F-15s and four F-35s—which flew to the Red Sea, 1,500 kilometers away from Doha, to carry out the attack.

Israel has never publicly confirmed possessing air-launched ballistic missiles, but defense publications have long reported that the Jewish state owns multiple models. These include Rafael’s Anchor, originally designed as a test target for the Arrow missile defense system; the Rampage, produced by Elbit and Israel Aerospace Industries; and Rock, also produced by Rafael and believed to be derived from the Anchor.

Unlike slower, maneuverable cruise missiles, ballistic missiles travel at high speed along steep, fixed trajectories, making them difficult for dense air defense networks to intercept. When they are launched from the air, they avoid the vulnerability of ground launch sites and can strike with extraordinary speed.

Only a few countries possess air-launched ballistic missiles, including Russia, China and Israel.

The report added that Israel notified the U.S. military only minutes before the strike, without providing precise details about the target. The officials told WSJ that “space-based US sensors that detect infrared heat signatures picked up the launch and the trajectory of the missiles, confirming Doha as the destination.”

However, information reached Washington too late for the Trump administration to respond.

“Notice was given so close to the actual launching of missiles that there was no way to reverse or halt the order,” a senior U.S. defense official said.

U.S. Central Command relayed the information to the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, who informed the White House. President Trump instructed envoy Steve Witkoff to alert Qatar, but officials in Doha said the warning arrived about ten minutes after the missiles had already struck.

The episode underscored both Israel’s ability to carry out precision strikes over long distances and the diplomatic risks of operating in the territory of a close US ally. Saudi officials condemned the attack but avoided publicly addressing the Israeli missile flights over their airspace.

However, the strike failed to kill Hamas’ top leaders, including Khalil al-Hayya and Zaher Jabarin, who were reportedly nearby but not in the building that was hit.