Remember the guy who got on a plane with a bomb built into his shoe and tried to light it?
“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
Sunday, March 30, 2025
Read to what the Judge told the "Shoe Bomber" at his Sentencing!
Remember the guy who got on a plane with a bomb built into his shoe and tried to light it?
Kamisha Hart a Nurse from Portland Univ Hospital said that Bibas Family should be "be grateful" to Hamas that members of the Bibbs "were not returned in blue body bags and handcuffs".
Here we go again!! Columbia’s new prez called Congress hearings on antisemitism ‘Capitol Hill nonsense’
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Claire Shipman |
Columbia University’s new president once called Congressional hearings on campus antisemitism “Capitol Hill nonsense.”
Claire Shipman, a former CNN White House correspondent whose ex-husband is former Obama Administration press secretary Jay Carney, served as co-chair of the University’s board of trustees before she was appointed Friday night to replace interim school president Katrina Armstrong.
In a Dec. 28, 2023, text message, Shipman wrote to then university president Minouche Shafik she thought Columbia would be spared from the “capital hill nonsense,” referring to December 2023 Congressional hearings that saw the presidents of Harvard University, University of Pennsylvania and MIT testify about campus protests against the war in Gaza.
The tense hearings famously resulted in Harvard’s Claudine Gay and Penn’s Liz Magill resigning after they were grilled on whether calling for the killing of Jews would violate their school’s bullying and harassment policies — and answered that it depended on the context.
Shipman’s text messages about the hearings were revealed in a 325-page October report from the Republican House Committee on Education and the Workforce that included leaked messages between university officials.
Columbia’s leaders had expressed contempt for the congressional investigation, according to the report.
In the same text message, Shipman also suggested reinstating student groups that had participated in the protests.
“I do think we should think about unsuspending the groups before semester starts to take the wind out of that,” she wrote to Shafik.
Armstrong’s resignation was the second in less than a year over the university’s handling of campus protests.
Armstrong left days after she caved and told President’s Trump’s administration she would implement a mask ban during campus protests as a condition for keeping $400 million in federal funding — while allegedly privately promising faculty she would not.
Shafik had resigned from the school’s top post in August amid the furor over the campus protests.
Shipman and Columbia could not immediately be reached for comment.
Katrina Armstrong’s resignation as Columbia’s interim prez is another Trump win against lefty insanity
Maybe the third time will be the charm.
Columbia University obviously subscribes to the belief that Friday night is the best time to put out bad news.
How else to explain the fact that, at 8 p.m. Friday, it announced that its interim president had quit?
If members of the Board of Trustees hoped nobody would notice, they’re more delusional than advertised.
The resignation of Dr. Katrina Armstrong is yet another bombshell development in the Trump administration’s crackdown on universities violating the civil rights of Jewish students, with Columbia a serial offender and top test case.
The announcement gave no reason why Armstrong is returning to the medical school or why she is being replaced by Claire Shipman, co-chair of the trustees.
Shipman, a former television journalist, will be Columbia’s third president in a year.
The first, Nemat Shafik, was overwhelmed by campus chaos after the Hamas terrorist invasion of Israel and the Jewish state’s response, and fled to London.
Then again, no explanation for the latest change was needed.
Numerous reports show Columbia mired in internal turmoil over the White House plan to strip it of at least $400 million in federal grants and contracts unless it makes changes that will subject disruptive students to arrest and provide responsible oversight to two departments that are hotbeds of antisemitism.
Armstrong’s sin was that she tried to play for two teams at the same time.
She initially promised the White House that Columbia would forbid demonstrators from wearing masks, then said the opposite to faculty members.
She later reassured the White House she would keep her initial promise, but her credibility was ruined.
So now she’s gone, and Shipman is left to clean up the mess.
Cabinet approves: Maale Adumim - Jerusalem route - with no Palestinians
Netanyahu's Plane to DC Had to divert European Countries Due to ICC Warrant
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s most recent flight to Washington took longer than it should have due to the arrest warrant issued against him by the International Court of Justice in The Hague, Israeli Ambassador to the United States Yechiel Leiter said on Thursday.
“When the prime minister arrived here last month, he had to fly 13.5 hours, a trip that should take 12 hours. People don’t know it, but the reason was that he can’t land anywhere in Europe,” Ynet cited Leiter as saying during a webinar.
Netanyahu “had just had surgery. He came with two doctors, and they told him he may have to land for treatment,” the envoy explained in an online conversation with the One Israel Fund, an American organization dedicated to supporting Jewish presence in Judea and Samaria.
“But if he were to land anywhere in Europe, he could be arrested as a war criminal. So he had to fly over American army bases [for] 13.5 hours,” Leiter added.
Netanyahu had undergone a surgery to remove his prostate, less than six weeks before he took flight to the U.S. on Feb. 2 to meet with President Donald Trump. It was the first official visit of a foreign leader following Trump’s inauguration on Jan. 20.
The ICC issued an arrest warrant against Netanyahu and former Defense Minister Yoav Gallant for alleged war crimes committed in the Gaza Strip during the war that broke when Hamas carried out one of the largest terrorist attacks in history against the Jewish state, murdering roughly 1,200 people and kidnapping 251 more into the enclave on Oct. 7, 2023.
“You can’t fight antisemitism if the No. 1 Jew in the world is branded as a war criminal,” Leiter said during the webinar.
“So, as I told the joint session of the Senate leadership, if you are all fighting antisemitism—the first thing you must do is remove the mark of Cain from the prime minister’s forehead. That is the first step, because if he is a child murderer, then we are all child murderers, and we deserve the hatred,” the ambassador said.
Leiter added that the Trump administration has demonstrated a “commitment to assisting us and ensuring that no international entity undermines our right to defend ourselves. This also includes direct engagement with European countries to prevent unilateral actions against us.”
The ambassador also discussed his office’s work against the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement. The fight against antisemitism includes the fight against decisions made by local U.S. governments and districts to suspend their investments in Israeli government bonds—a phenomenon that has grown since the start of the current war in Gaza, he noted.
Leiter stepped into the ambassador role on Jan. 27. A U.S.-born former chief of staff to Prime Minister Netanyahu, Leiter founded the One Israel Fund in 1994.
His son Maj. (res.) Moshe Yedidyah Leiter was killed while fighting against Hamas terrorists in the northern Gaza Strip on Nov. 10, 2023.
Leiter, a 39-year-old father of six from Kibbutz Ein Tzurim, was killed along with three other Israel Defense Forces reservists while inspecting a booby-trapped tunnel entrance in the northeastern Gaza Strip’s Beit Hanun area.
Miriam Elisheva Yarimi Accused of Horrific Fatal Brooklyn Crash Is Luxury Wigmaker with History of Traffic Violations
Miriam Elisheva Yarimi, the 32-year-old driver accused of fatally running down a mother and her two daughters in Brooklyn on Shabbos, is a wigmaker with a luxurious lifestyle and a history of legal and traffic issues. Yarimi was driving her Audi with a suspended license on Ocean Parkway in Gravesend when she collided with a Toyota Camry, then careened into a crosswalk, killing the family as they left Shabbat services.
Known for flaunting her affluent lifestyle on social media, Yarimi has posted pictures of vacations, luxury cars, and nights out. She also gained attention after winning a $2 million settlement in 2023 from the NYPD over a misconduct claim.
In addition to her legal troubles, Yarimi has accumulated over 93 traffic violations, including 20 speeding tickets and fines exceeding $10,000. Authorities have not yet disclosed whether she will face charges in connection with the fatal crash.
Jewish Mother and Two Daughters Killed in Brooklyn Crash While Crossing on Ocean Parkway
A tragic accident in Brooklyn claimed the lives of a mother and her two young daughters as they walked home from synagogue on Shabbos. The crash, involving a driver with a suspended license, left the woman’s 4-year-old son critically injured and sent shockwaves through the local community.
The collision occurred around 1 p.m. on Ocean Parkway near Quentin Road in Gravesend, a neighborhood with a large Orthodox Jewish population. The 35-year-old mother and her daughters, ages 8 and 6, were pronounced dead at the scene. Nine people were injured in total, authorities said.
A witness described the moment of impact as overwhelming. “The sound was like an explosion,” the witness said. “Everything just stopped.”
According to police, the crash involved a Toyota Camry operating as an Uber and an Audi driven by 32-year-old Miriam Yarimi. After the initial impact, the Audi veered into the crosswalk, striking the family. Images from the aftermath showed shattered vehicles, scattered belongings, and emergency responders working frantically to aid the victims.
“This was a terrible tragedy caused by someone who shouldn’t have been behind the wheel,” said NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch.
Yarimi and the 62-year-old Uber driver were transported to Coney Island Hospital in stable condition. Authorities have not yet filed charges but are conducting tests to determine if impairment played a role.
The father of the children was at home with the couple’s infant when he received the devastating news. “A neighbor had to go to him and tell him his wife and two daughters were gone,” a resident said. “He lost his wife and two of his four children in one instant.”
The close-knit community has been deeply affected by the tragedy. First responders, visibly shaken, were seen consoling one another at the scene. One was reportedly on his knees, overcome with grief.
“It’s unthinkable,” said a witness. “The streets were filled with families walking home from synagogue, and in an instant, everything changed.”
Mayor Eric Adams described the incident as “a tragedy of immense proportions.”
“A mother and her children were simply enjoying a beautiful day, and now a family has been shattered,” Adams said. “The pain they are enduring is beyond words.”
The two young girls were pronounced dead at Maimonides Medical Center, while their brother remains in critical condition.
As investigators continue to examine the circumstances, the community is left mourning an unimaginable loss and seeking answers about how such a devastating event could have occurred.
Saturday, March 29, 2025
The true scandal of the WZO affair and Lakewood leadership
The reason people are so upset about Eretz Hakodesh and the WZO affair is this:
Nobody cares that rabbanim paskened one way or the other. I can understand both sides. It’s a halacha shayla, make the psak, and finished.
What bothers people is the absolute amount of energy and time and yes, care put into an entirely pointless issue.
There’s a famous pyramid based on Maslow’s hierarchy of needs. It’s a psychological theory that one must address the base issues in a person’s life such as food water and warmth, before moving on to higher levels in the pyramid of friends, prestige, and creative activities.
Now, let’s look where WZO is on this pyramid. You see it? No? That’s right - the WZO is nowhere freaking on there! That’s because it does not matter. Not a bit! The fact the local Lakewood ‘leadership’ spent hours and hours on it and stopped seder for this waste of time tells us one of two things:
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
Biden Funded Israeli Left-Wing Organizations to Topple Netanyahu
'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.