“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, April 6, 2026

NPR didn’t quote a single member of Michigan synagogue after attack — but interviewed terrorist’s pals in Lebanon

NPR didn’t manage to quote a single member of the Michigan synagogue that was attacked last month by a crazed Hezbollah-supporting terrorist last month — but did manage to track down his pals 6,000 miles away in Lebanon, a new report reveals.

Now even NPR’s public editor is criticizing the lefty broadcaster for the stunning oversight.

Instead of focusing on the victims in the heinous attack, a March 14 “All Things Considered” segment sent an NPR reporter to the Lebanon hometown of Ayman Ghazali, 41, who just days earlier had rammed his truck into a Jewish preschool at Temple Israel in West Bloomfield Township.

The FBI later confirmed Ghazali — who killed himself after engaging in a firefight with a security guard — was inspired by the Iran-backed terrorist group.

NPR headlined its article “In a small Lebanese town, grief and fear follow the Michigan synagogue attack,” resulting in listeners quickly calling out the publicly funded outlet for attempting to paint the terrorist and his family in a sympathetic light.

One listener, Batya Ungar-Sargon, wrote sarcastically in a Substack post about the coverage that “NPR found the real victim of an attack on 140 Jewish American babies — and it’s the Hezbollah-infested town in Lebanon that raised a family of terrorists.”

Israel Defense Forces revealed after the attack that Ghazali’s brother was a Hezbollah commander.

Another audience member, Richard Wilkins, took NPR to task for its one-sided coverage that downplayed the brothers’ known association with the terror group.

“NPR’s reaction? Sympathized understanding for the subsequent ‘grief and fear’ in his former hometown. Concealment of then public knowledge that those two brothers were Hezbollah terrorists, in a town full of Hezbollah sympathizers,” he wrote NPR’s public editor Kelly McBride.

McBride began her response defending NPR’s reasoning for its reporting 6,000 miles away in Lebanon.

“The journalistic purpose of the story was to explore the connection between the terror attack on the Michigan synagogue and the family that was killed on the other side of the world,” she wrote.

“Simply documenting that relationship and humanizing the family does not imply that Ghazali’s attempt to kill more than a hundred children was justified.”

However, she admitted that the network fell short in telling the full story.

“This story on this village should not be judged as NPR’s complete coverage of the Michigan synagogue. NPR ran multiple stories on the attack,” she wrote.

“In all of that coverage, voices from Temple Israel are absent. I couldn’t find any stories that quote rabbis, congregation members or the families of the children who had to flee the building.

She also acknowledged that parallel coverage by local news outlets did cover the congregation extensively.

“NPR or Michigan Public Radio pulled away from the story at Temple Israel too soon,” she said.

She added, “when important voices are missing from coverage, it distorts the audience’s perception of everything else.”


Outrage at Officials allowing the Sexual Pervert Eliezer Berland Access to the Kotel while others are being Turned Away

 


While hundreds of worshippers were turned away due to strict restrictions, it has emerged that among those granted entry to the Western Wall was Eliezer Berland, leader of the “Shuvu Banim" community.

Berland’s entry sparked outrage, particularly in light of his past convictions: In 2016, he was convicted of sexual offenses, and in 2021 he was also convicted of financial crimes, including fraud, exploitation, and money laundering, for which he served a prison sentence.

The incident raised questions among many worshippers who had sought to reach the site but were denied entry due to strict quotas imposed since the start of Operation Roaring Lion on February 28.

While hundreds of worshippers were turned away due to strict restrictions, it has emerged that among those granted entry to the Western Wall was Eliezer Berland, leader of the “Shuvu Banim" community.

The Western Wall Heritage Foundation distanced itself from the incident, stating: “The manner of Rabbi Eliezer Berland’s entry to the Western Wall plaza was carried out by Israel Police - the Western Wall Heritage Foundation did not handle and was not aware of his arrival and entry to the Western Wall."

Police responded to the criticism by saying the entry was approved under procedures allowing access for elderly individuals and those with disabilities: “As in routine times, even during Operation Roaring Lion, Israel Police permits entry to the Western Wall plaza for elderly individuals with mobility limitations and for the disabled, in accordance with the prayer framework approved at the start of the operation."

“The case in question was handled in accordance with this policy, which has been implemented regularly in dozens of similar cases in recent weeks for the benefit of elderly and disabled individuals, in order to allow freedom of worship while maintaining safety restrictions."

Esther Sobel 44 a Nurse Killed by Maimonides Ambulance


 A 44-year-old nurse was struck and killed by an ambulance in Brooklyn early Thursday, and two emergency medical technicians have been suspended as authorities investigate the incident.

Police identified the victim as Cherry Cayetano Sobel. She was hit around 6:40 a.m. in the Midwood neighborhood when an ambulance operated by Maimonides Medical Center made a left turn from Avenue O onto Ocean Avenue, officials said.

Authorities said the driver did not stop after the collision. A bystander called 911, and Sobel was taken to a hospital, where she was pronounced dead.

Police believe the driver may not have realized a pedestrian had been struck. No arrests have been made.

A spokesperson for the hospital said the EMTs involved have been suspended pending the outcome of the investigation and expressed condolences to the victim’s family.

Sobel is survived by her husband, Jeff, and two young children, according to family members.

Officials said she lived about a mile from the scene. The case remains under investigation.

Sunday, April 5, 2026

How great is Trump??? "Open the Effen Strait you Crazy Bastards...


 

The Damned British Are Responsible for hundreds of thousands of Jewish corpses.



 Forty-five British MPs and peers have signed an open letter demanding that Prime Minister Keir Starmer apologize for the Balfour Declaration — the 1917 statement in which Britain expressed support for a Jewish homeland in Palestine. The letter argues that Britain had “no right” to make such a promise and that it bears “historical responsibility” for the creation of Israel. 

This is quite a moral accounting. But if Parliament is in the business of confronting Britain’s historical role in Palestine, there is a far more specific, far more deadly act of British policy that deserves an apology first — one whose consequences can be measured in hundreds of thousands of Jewish corpses.

It is the White Paper of 1939.

In May of that year, with Nazi Germany already in full persecution mode and war weeks away, Neville Chamberlain’s government issued a policy document that capped Jewish immigration to Palestine at just 75,000 people over five years — after which further immigration would require Arab consent. The explicit rationale, stated openly in cabinet discussions, was to preserve Arab goodwill. Colonial Secretary Malcolm MacDonald, who drafted the policy, told his colleagues that Britain “could not afford to forfeit the confidence and friendship of such a large part of the Muslim world.” Chamberlain himself put it even more bluntly: “If we must offend one side, let us offend the Jews rather than the Arabs.”

The timing was catastrophic.

At the very moment the gates of Europe were slamming shut on Jewish life, Britain deliberately locked the one door through which hundreds of thousands might have escaped. Palestine was not merely a desirable destination: for Jews trapped in Poland, Romania, Hungary, and Germany, it was the only realistic option. The United States had its own restrictive quotas. Most of the world had already demonstrated at the 1938 Évian Conference that it was unwilling to absorb Jewish refugees. Palestine, under British administration, was the escape hatch, and Britain sealed it.

The decision was immediately and loudly condemned as a moral catastrophe by the most credible voices in British public life. Winston Churchill, then in the political wilderness, rose in the House of Commons on May 23, 1939, to denounce the policy as a betrayal of solemn commitments. Former Prime Minister Lloyd George called it “an act of perfidy.” The Liberal MP James Rothschild warned his colleagues during the debate itself that for the majority of Jews seeking to reach Palestine, the choice was “migration or physical extinction.” The League of Nations’ Permanent Mandates Commission unanimously concluded the White Paper transgressed Britain’s mandatory obligations - it was a violation of international law.

They were right. And the consequences were exactly what they predicted.

Nathan Gettisburg ????? Who is this ??? Is this the Creepy Rayfeeeeeeeee Stein the Notorious Get Refuser??

 

 



K-9 Dog watches over a Chayelet while takes a nap!

 

Killing the biggest LIE that Satmar and Pro-Hamas Groups Keep Touting


 Time to kill one of the biggest lies of the Century:

One of Satmar's propaganda tools comes right out of the mouths of Hamas, Hezbollah and Iran, that Israel would not exist if not for $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ from the USA.
Of course they take the RBS"O out of the equation!

“Israel is a parasite state living off U.S. money” Israel’s GDP ≈ $610B It spends ~5–6% of its OWN GDP on defense ~𝟑𝟔 𝐁𝐢𝐥𝐥𝐢𝐨𝐧 fighting our common enemies. U.S. aid ≈ 𝟑.𝟖 𝐁𝐢𝐥𝐥𝐢𝐨𝐧 on American made weapons.
Facts just killed the lie.

The secret lives of niece, grandniece of Iranian Gen. Soleimani before they were arrested by ICE in dramatic raid

 

Sarinasadat Hosseiny, 25

The stunned Los Angeles renter of the property owned by the niece of Iranian terror mastermind Gen. Qasem Soleimani said he now realizes the mom and her daughter had been on ICE’s radar for some time before agents swooped on the quiet Tujunga home and hauled the pair away.

Hamideh Soleimani Afshar, 47, and her daughter, Sarinasadat Hosseiny, 25, were arrested by ICE Friday and had their green cards revoked for ties to the Iranian regime.

Afshar had celebrated attacks on US soldiers and military facilities, praised Iran’s Supreme Leader, called America the “Great Satan,” and voiced support for the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, a designated terror organization, according to the State Department.

Piano instructor Halasius Bradford, 50, who rents a single-story property owned by Afshar, said the women were taken into custody in dramatic scenes about 5 p.m. Friday. He said ICE had been active in the streets leading up to the arrests.

Bradford said he was driving back to the property during the raid and arrived to find the street blocked off by ICE vehicles and three LAPD patrol cars.

“It was crazy seeing what happened. I saw three LAPD patrol cars and one or two from ICE,” he told the Post.

“I didn’t see the women being taken away.”

The Post’s visit to the home on Saturday revealed Afshar was living in a small ADU behind the main two-bedroom, two-bathroom home Bradford rents. She had bought the Plainview Avenue property for $505,000 in 2021.

Photos from the scene offer a glimpse into the women’s carefully curated Los Angeles lifestyle.

Inside her humble home, about 20 miles north of downtown Los Angeles, was a selfie ring light and a full-form mannequin for her to hang her designer label outfits.

She also drove a black Tesla, which on Saturday was stuffed with luxury goods, including a Miss Dior bag, some Hermes cushions, a Sephora makeup bag, and another gray leather handbag in the front passenger footwell.

Some items inside the car bore Arabic writing, while a few parking tickets were also scattered inside.

Friday marked the first time Bradford had met Hosseiny in person.

He said both women were at the property for a scheduled City of Los Angeles inspection of the ADU, which explains why they were there when ICE arrived.

Bradford added that Hosseiny’s boyfriend was also present during the raid. He told Bradford that he and Hosseiny were driving outside the house when ICE intercepted them, demanding to know where Afshar was.

Bradford said while Afshar lived in the ADU behind the main house, Hosseiny managed lease affairs remotely.

He described Afshar as ”crazy” and acting strangely.

“It was the first time I met Hosseiny,” he said. “The mother seemed kinda nuts. She said she’d been having chemo for cancer.”

Outside the main house, old mattresses and furniture from previous tenants were visible.

Bradford said the home was listed for rent on Zillow, and he signed the lease online with Hosseiny because her mother, Afshar, did not speak English well.

He moved in on March 21 and declined to say how much he pays.

The mother and daughter both created curated online personas showcasing glamorous LA lifestyles, complete with designer goods and jetsetting activities.

Hosseiny appeared poised and camera-ready in Instagram images, her long dark hair framing a composed face as she cradled a small fluffy dog against a dark coat.

Her wardrobe ranged from structured black corsets paired with delicate pink skirts and oversized sunglasses to casual yet meticulously styled ensembles.

Other luxury symbols included posed photos beside helicopters and designer accessories, projecting a jet-set, influencer-ready image far removed from their modest suburban neighborhood.

Afshar entered the US on a tourist visa in 2015, gained asylum in 2019, and became a green card holder in 2021.

Her daughter arrived in 2021 on a student visa and secured her green card in 2023.

Both had traveled back to Iran multiple times, raising red flags with US authorities.

Lauren Bis, a DHS spokesperson, emphasized the seriousness of the revocation. “It is a privilege to be granted a green card to live in the United States of America. If we have reason to believe a green card holder poses a threat to the US, the green card will be revoked.”

The arrest of Afshar and Hosseiny follows similar moves against other Iranian regime-linked figures in the US, highlighting continued vigilance against threats tied to Qasem Soleimani and his network.

US Forces have rescued missing crew member of F-15E jet downed by Iran in daring mission, intense fighting


 US forces have successfully rescued and extracted the missing crew member of an American fighter jet that was shot down over Iran following “one of the most daring search-and-rescue operations” in the country’s history, President Trump announced early Sunday.

“WE GOT HIM! My fellow Americans, over the past several hours, the United States Military pulled off one of the most daring Search and Rescue Operations in US History, for one of our incredible Crew Member Officers, who also happens to be a highly respected Colonel, and who I am thrilled to let you know is now SAFE and SOUND!” Trump posted on Truth Social just after midnight.

The Air Force officer — a weapons specialist who has not yet been publicly identified — was one of two aboard an F-15E Strike Eagle shot down on Friday. Both had ejected over southwestern Iran, triggering a massive high-risk rescue mission.

The weapons officer was injured during the ejection, but was still able to walk, a US official told Axios.

“He sustained injuries, but he will be just fine,” Trump said.

The crew member was recovered in a dangerous Saturday night operation following intense fighting near the crash site, as US forces carried out a complex operation deep inside Iranian territory.

No rescuers were injured during the massive, multi-domain operation involving hundreds of special operations troops, dozens of warplanes and helicopters and advanced intelligence capabilities spanning cyber and space, officials briefed on the operation told the New York Times.

“The fact that we were able to pull off both of these operations, without a SINGLE American killed, or even wounded, just proves once again, that we have achieved overwhelming Air Dominance and Superiority over the Iranian skies,” Trump added in his post.

A senior military official told the outlet that the mission was one of the most challenging and complex in the history of US special operations.

The airman evaded capture for up to a day in mountainous terrain, using survival training to move away from the wreckage and hide on elevated ground while signaling for rescue.

He had little more than a pistol as Iranian forces scoured the area and mobilized civilians to hunt him down, the Times reported.

“This brave Warrior was behind enemy lines in the treacherous mountains of Iran, being hunted down by our enemies, who were getting closer and closer by the hour, but was never truly alone because his Commander in Chief, Secretary of War, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and fellow Warfighters were monitoring his location 24 hours a day, and diligently planning for his rescue,” Trump added.

The airman and the rescue team safely evacuated Iran and flew to Kuwait, where the injured airman could be treated, according to the Times.

The operation unfolded amid reported airstrikes and clashes in Kohgiluyeh and Boyer-Ahmad Province, where local officials said multiple people were killed or wounded, as US special operations forces and Air Force pararescue teams engaged in a fierce firefight with Iranian Revolutionary Guard and Basij fighters searching for the downed crew member.

US attack aircraft bombed and strafed Iranian convoys closing in on the airman’s position, while commandos pushed toward the site —- triggering a firefight as American and Iranian forces collided.

In a dramatic final twist, two US transport planes sent to extract the team became stranded at a remote base inside Iran.

Commanders ordered them destroyed rather than risk sensitive equipment falling into enemy hands, flying in replacement aircraft to complete the escape, the Times reported.

Iranian forces had been searching for the pilot and at one point claimed he had been captured, though those assertions were never verified, with reports that local forces and even civilians had been mobilized to hunt for the airman.

Two US rescue helicopters were hit by enemy fire during the mission, injuring crew members, while an A-10 attack aircraft providing cover was also struck and later went down after the pilot safely ejected.

Both F-15E crew members are now safely recovered following the dramatic mission.

Iranian forces had been searching for the pilot and at one point claimed he had been captured, though those assertions were never verified, with reports that local forces and even civilians had been mobilized to hunt for the airman.

Two US rescue helicopters were hit by enemy fire during the mission, injuring crew members, while an A-10 attack aircraft providing cover was also struck and later went down after the pilot safely ejected.

Both F-15E crew members are now safely recovered following the dramatic mission.