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Saturday, March 8, 2025

Israel Rescues 10 Indian Workers Held Captive in Arab Village near Jerusalem

 

Rescued foreign workers from India held captive in an Arab village near Jerusalem.


In a coordinated nighttime operation, Israeli authorities rescued ten foreign workers from India who had been held captive for over a month in A-Zaim, an Arab village near Jerusalem. The workers, who had arrived in Israel for employment in the construction industry, were stripped of their passports by their captors and left without the ability to leave the village or return to Jerusalem.

Workers Lured with Job Offers, Stripped of Passports
The workers had entered Israel legally with the expectation of securing jobs in construction. However, after being promised employment by a resident of A-Zaim, their passports were confiscated by their captors in the village, leaving them stranded. Without documentation, they apparently believed they were unable to leave the village or seek legal recourse. The authorities did not say under what physical conditions the men were being held.

According to information received by the Israeli Population and Immigration Authority, the workers’ passports were misused by the Arab residents attempting to bypass Israeli security checkpoints. Israeli forces eventually identified the individuals involved and recovered the stolen documents leading them to locate the kidnapped foreigners.

The authorities did not say if any of the Arabs trying to bypass security were involved in terrorism.

Complex Operation Ensures Safe Extraction
The rescue mission required coordination between the IDF, the Population and Immigration Authority’s Enforcement and Foreigners Administration, and the Israeli Ministry of Justice.

Under the cover of night, the workers were safely extracted from the village and transported them to a secure location.

The operation concluded successfully at 2:30 AM. Israeli authorities are now working to ensure the workers’ legal employment status is properly regulated.

Official Statement
The Population and Immigration Authority confirmed the details of the operation, stating [translated]:

The Enforcement and Foreigners Administration at the Population and Immigration Authority led a rescue operation last night for ten Indian workers who had come to Israel to work in the construction industry and were being held in the village of A-Za’im.
In a coordinated operation with the IDF and the Ministry of Justice, the ten workers were rescued from the village in the dead of night.”

Interior Minister Moshe Arbel said that his office will do everything to protect their rights and integrate them into the Israeli labor market

Israel expressed outrage over secret US-Hamas talks

 


Israel’s deep concerns over secret negotiations between the Trump administration and Hamas resulted in a heated exchange between a top Israeli official and the US envoy leading the talks, sources familiar with the matter told Axios on Friday.

According to the report, senior Israeli officials had cautioned the US against engaging directly with Hamas, particularly without preconditions. However, despite Israel’s warnings in early February, the US moved forward with the discussions.

The report further said that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has publicly avoided direct criticism of President Donald Trump since reports of the talks surfaced, but behind closed doors, tensions have been high.

Netanyahu’s closest confidant, Minister Ron Dermer, expressed Israel’s frustrations directly in a phone call with US hostage envoy Adam Boehler. Sources familiar with the discussion described the conversation as particularly intense.

The contentious call between Dermer and Boehler came just hours after the American envoy met in Doha with Khalil al-Hayya, a senior Hamas political official and the head of its negotiating team. The talks, which had begun a week earlier with lower-ranking Hamas officials, were part of Boehler’s efforts to secure the release of American hostage Edan Alexander, 21, as well as the remains of four other American hostages.

According to sources, the Trump administration saw an opportunity to expand the talks beyond hostages. The US signaled to Hamas that a deal could lead to broader discussions, potentially involving a long-term ceasefire, safe passage out of Gaza for Hamas leaders, the release of all remaining hostages, and an end to the war.

Despite the urgency, the discussions failed to yield the breakthrough Trump and his team had hoped for before his scheduled address to Congress. Hamas’ response was deemed insufficient, according to Axios.

The report said that the talks also broached sensitive matters Israel had not agreed to—specifically, the number of Palestinian prisoners that would be released in exchange for Alexander’s return.

Sources described Dermer’s call with Boehler as “difficult,” with the Israeli minister objecting to any US proposals made without Israel’s prior consent. In response, Boehler reassured Dermer that no deal had been reached and that he was fully aware of Israel’s red lines. One Israeli official suggested that Dermer’s strong opposition led the White House to reconsider its approach.

Following internal discussions on Wednesday, Trump and his advisers decided to publicly pressure Hamas, at which point Trump issued his latest ultimatum to Hamas, writing on his social media channels that Hamas must release all the hostages “or it is over for you”.

On Thursday, Trump commented on the direct talks that his administration has had with Hamas and stated, "We are having discussions with Hamas. We are helping Israel in those discussions, because we're talking about Israeli hostages.”

Earlier on Thursday, Trump’s Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff also acknowledged the talks that Boehler had been holding with Hamas.

"We feel that Hamas has not been forthright with us and it's time for them to be forthright with us, and Edan Alexander would be a very important show [of goodwill]. We'll see how they're gonna react. The President has issued a statement about what's acceptable to him and what's not, and hopefully we'll see good behavior [from Hamas] next week and I'll be able to go in there and have discussions," he said.

Despite the focus on Edan Alexander, Witkoff stressed that "lives matter" to Trump, not just American lives, but "all lives," including all of the remaining hostages.


Time for American Jews to Come Home! Gallop Poll Says that Among DemonRats Just 21% say they sympathize with Israelis, while 59% sympathize with Palestinians.

 


Fewer than half of Americans sympathize more with Israelis than with Palestinians, according to a new Gallup poll, the lowest figure for Israelis since at least 2001.

The poll, published Thursday, found that 46% of respondents sympathize more with Israelis while 33% sympathize more with Palestinians.

The 13-point gap is also the smallest since at least 2001. That year, 51% of respondents sympathized more with Israelis, but only 16% sympathized more with Palestinians.

Sympathy for Israelis has dropped in the past few years, as Israel has been led by a hardline right-wing government and, since the Hamas attack on Oct. 7, 2023, fought a war against the terror group in Gaza.

Thursday’s poll was taken in February, spanning the time when Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu visited Washington, D.C. and President Donald Trump proposed a US takeover of the Gaza Strip, which Netanyahu endorsed.

A decade ago, 62% of respondents sympathized more with Israelis, compared to 16% with the Palestinians. In 2022, the gap was 55% to 26%.

Among Democrats, the drop this year was even starker, with the Palestinians receiving more sympathy by a wide margin: Just 21% say they sympathize more with Israelis, while 59% sympathize more with Palestinians.

That’s a considerable shift from 2022, when Democrats’ sympathies were about even at 40% for Israelis vs. 38% for Palestinians. Last year, it was 43% for Palestinians vs. 38% for Israelis. Polls taken more than a decade ago show Democratic sympathies lying more with Israelis by wide margins.

Thursday’s number dovetails with a Gallup poll released in late February that found just 33% of Democrats have a favorable view of Israel, compared with 83% of Republicans.

This week’s poll found that Republican sympathies with Israelis have remained relatively steady, at 75% vs. 10% for Palestinians. Among independents, the Israeli-Palestinian split was 42% to 34%.

The poll also found that 55% of Americans, and majorities of Democrats and independents, support the establishment of a Palestinian state in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. Among Republicans, support for a Palestinian state was at 41%.

The poll also found that just 40% of respondents approve of the way President Donald Trump is handling the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Trump Cancels $400M in Grants to Columbia Over Failure to Protect Jewish Students

 

The federal government has canceled approximately $400 million in grants and contracts to Columbia University, citing the school’s failure to address persistent harassment of Jewish students. The Department of Justice (DOJ), Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), Department of Education (ED), and the General Services Administration (GSA) announced the decision Friday, warning that more cancellations may follow.

Columbia, which holds over $5 billion in federal grant commitments, was notified on March 3 that its funding would be reviewed due to ongoing Title VI civil rights investigations. Officials say the university has failed to act, allowing chaos and anti-Semitic harassment to persist on campus.

“Since October 7, Jewish students have faced relentless violence, intimidation, and anti-Semitic harassment – only to be ignored by those who are supposed to protect them,” said Education Secretary Linda McMahon. “Universities must comply with federal anti-discrimination laws to receive federal funding.”

The Trump administration has pledged to revoke funding from institutions that fail to protect students from anti-Semitic harassment. Senior DOJ official Leo Terrell called the funding freeze “just the beginning,” emphasizing that the government will not support institutions that neglect Jewish students’ safety.

GSA will assist in issuing stop-work orders on Columbia’s federal contracts, effectively freezing the university’s access to these funds. Federal officials say this move serves as a warning to all universities receiving taxpayer dollars: failure to combat anti-Semitism will have consequences.

Trump Says "All Palestinians in Gaza Support Hamas"

 

President Trump remarked today regarding Palestinian civilians during a recent presser. 

Trump stated that Israeli hostages who were held in Gaza told him they encountered no kindness from any Palestinians they met, claiming they were “slapped and punched.” 

Trump went further, suggesting that “they are all Hamas in Gaza,” implying widespread support in Gaza for the terrorist group.

Friday, March 7, 2025

Zera Shimshon Parshas Tetzaveh

 


UCLA Medical Students THOMAS ISSA & ZEENA MESTARI GLORIFY Murder of Jews

 


 Meet Udonne Eke-Okoro, who thinks "terrorism" & rape can be justified

New York Times, August 31, 1929: "Arabs Burn City of Safed; 22 Killed; Scores Wounded."

 

Isra Hirsi, Ilhan Omar’s daughter front and center at the violent takeover of Barnard library yesterday.

 

What??? The Exact Same Speech? Who wrote this crap for them?

 

Worse Than Murder!


 Liel was burned alive on #October7th.

Some of her belongings were buried in place of a proper burial.

An archaeologist later uncovered her remains-not far from her home. A 12-year-old girl, reduced to ashes, had to be found in the dirt. Worse than her murder? The world's indifference.
Because she was Jewish.💔

‘They’re all traitors’: Gazans slam lack of support from Arab countries and embrace Trump relocation plan


 A Palestinian teacher struggling to rebuild his life amid the rubble in Gaza said he has no faith in Hamas to help him and his family, and is not counting on the Arab world to come to the defense of the Palestinians anytime soon.

Instead, Marwan, 37, told The Post in an exclusive interview that he is relying on the US and European countries to help the devastated Gaza Strip after two years of war with Israel. In fact, he supports the idea of relocation — a plan President Trump has proposed.

“The first victim of Hamas is the Palestinian people,” said Marwan, who refused to provide his last name or any other details of his life, citing fears of retaliation from Hamas terrorists. “My message to the world is, don’t think that we are all Hamas

Marwan said he and his family fled to the southern part of Gaza during the recent war and, when they recently returned to their home, they found it almost completely destroyed.

“Only two rooms were standing,” he told The Post, adding that he and 19 other displaced members of his extended family now live in those rooms.

Marwan spoke to The Post in a telephone interview that was organized and translated from Arabic by the Center for Peace Communications, a New York-based nonprofit that has collected interviews with activists resisting totalitarian regimes in Iraq and other Middle Eastern countries.

In 2023, the group released a collection of interviews with Gazans who are against Hamas, the terrorist group that launched the October 7 attack against Israel that same year, killing 1,200 Israelis and taking 250 hostages.

In a video shared exclusively with The Post, other Gaza residents expressed frustration with their Arab neighbors, who they say have not done much to help them — ever.

“Based on our experience … from past wars, unfortunately the Arab League hasn’t provided anything except for some countries offering humanitarian and charitable assistance,” said one man in the video, which CPC said was shot in the last two weeks in Gaza.

“They’re all traitors,” said another man on the video, referring to Arab countries. “They’re all cheats. Only God stood with us, not Arab states, not Algeria, not Tunisia, not Egypt.”

Last month, Jordan’s King Abdullah agreed to take 2,000 sick children from Gaza at the urging of President Trump. On Tuesday, 29 children arrived in the country, according to reports.

Marwan said he believes the only way to save the Gaza Strip is to evacuate its residents to “a country that works,” to begin the process of rebuilding. He said he supports Trump’s vision of a rebuilt “Gaza Riviera” or a city-state like Singapore, as long as whoever comes in respects the property rights of the people of Gaza.

Joseph Braude, founder and president of CPC, said Trump’s call to allow Gazans to emigrate would be welcomed by many Gazan civilians seeking a safe place to live.

“Those who denigrate Trump’s proposal as a call for ‘ethnic cleansing’ ignore the urgent pleas of Gazans to be granted refuge from Hamas brutality and the horrors of war,” he said in a statement. “No plan to rebuild Gaza is viable without the removal of Hamas — a root cause of suffering for Israelis and Gazans alike — as well as freedom of movement for the many civilians in Gaza who choose to pursue a better life elsewhere.” 

Marwan agreed.

“Nobody likes Hamas in Gaza,” he said, describing how the terrorist group steals the majority of foreign aid meant for local residents and sells much of it on the black market. “People are fed up with them because they are so corrupt.”

And he said he has a message for campus protestors who continue to support the terrorist group in the US.

“They are fooled by Hamas,” he said. “I was very disappointed with people. If you are pro Hamas, you are anti the Palestinian people. You have to differentiate between the two. We would one day like to speak to [protesters] to educate them about what is really going on.”

He also noted that Palestinians who are against Hamas do not have the luxury of protesting.

“If you go and speak out, they think nothing of killing you. One bullet is equal to one person,” Marwan said. “Nobody in Gaza likes Hamas.”

Pro-=Hamas protesters arrested at Barnard were mostly privileged youths

 

The nine agitators arrested during Wednesday night’s takeover of a Barnard College academic building were all released with desk appearance tickets, as it was revealed none of them were actually students at the elite women’s college.

The disruptors taken into custody included several from privileged backgrounds, including one whose family founded the popular Hampton Jitney bus service in the 1970s — and one rabble rouser who had been busted at two other protests and has called for the “overthrow” of America.

The nine were cuffed after more than 200 protesters swarmed the Milstein Library at Barnard College, many of them from nearby schools including Columbia University and Union Theological Seminary, a source told The Post.

Among those arrested was Alexander Nanci-Marr, 20, whose family, from tony Sag Harbor in the Hamptons, started the Hampton Jitney, which in its heyday shuttled Hollywood royalty like Lauren Bacall and George Plimpton to their oceanside estates, and even once appeared in an episode of “Sex and the City.”

She was taken into custody after refusing cops’ orders to disperse while trying to clear the area following a bogus bomb threat that prompted an evacuation of Milstein Library. According to sources, Nanci-Marr locked arms with fellow protesters and pushed back against police lines.

She was taken into custody after refusing cops’ orders to disperse while trying to clear the area following a bogus bomb threat that prompted an evacuation of Milstein Library. According to sources, Nanci-Marr locked arms with fellow protesters and pushed back against police lines.

Cops eventually got inside and arrested 44 people including two professors.

Holmes was featured in a video on X filmed at Columbia in which he blasted the university curriculum as “imperial in nature” and flippantly said he was “fighting for the total eradication of western civilization,” adding, “except for African civilization.”

Also arrested was Columbia class of 2025 president Gabrielle Wilmer, a medical student at Columbia University’s Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons from Westport, Connecticut, on the Nutmeg State’s “Gold Coast” — one of the wealthiest suburbs in the US.

She’s an active member of White Coats for Black Lives at the university, and Students for a National Health Program, according to her social media posts.

Others hauled off campus by police included Hanna Puelle — whose Instagram identifies her as publisher of Columbia Law Review — and Yunseo Chung, a Columbia women’s studies junior, former high school valedictorian and social media editor for Quarto, the university’s official undergraduate literary magazine.

The bomb threat that came in at the height of Wednesday’s protest at Barnard was apparently meant to intimidate the rowdy mob of masked students and interlopers, a source told The Post.

An unknown individual sent the school a vulgar email through an anonymous dark web messaging service claiming to have placed a 1-inch by 8-inch pipe bomb in the Barnard College library, specifically targeting what the sender referred to as “anti-white f—-t terrorist communist (sic).”

A staff member called 911, which prompted the police to come in and evacuate the library, the source said.

The chaos at Barnard on Wednesday spilled into Thursday, when a fresh crop of some 200 student protesters gathered on the steps of Low Library at Columbia in the afternoon. The NYPD set up barricades and was checking student IDs before allowing them on campus in an attempt to maintain order.

Some anti-Israel protesters outside the campus, all of whom refused to speak to The Post, held signs reading “CUNY faculty member says: Down with McCarthyite witch hunts against pro-Palestine protesters!” and “CUNY students in solidarity against the witch hunt — cops out!”

Another protester handed out flyers from Bob Avakian’s New Communism group, Revolutionary Communist Party, USA, comparing President Trump to Hitler.

“Trump’s fascist rule, like Hitler’s before him, is a regime of horrors — and is completely illegitimate,” it read in part.

By mid-afternoon, some students from the Columbia protest, most wearing masks and keffiyehs, marched to Barnard, chanting “Barnard College we know you, you arrest our students too” and “Laura Rosenbury we know you, you arrest students too,” in a reference to Barnard President Laura Rosenbury.

This week’s protests, which followed another campus building takeover last week, were sparked by the expulsion of a pair of students who barged into a class on modern Israel to distribute hateful literature, including a flyer featuring an army boot stomping down on a Star of David.

Rosenbury and other Barnard administrators drew most of the protesters’ ire, who were even featured in an Old West-style “wanted” poster and a hastily rigged effigy outside Milstein Library.

There were signs calling for Rosenbury’s removal, and even suggesting Wednesday’s bomb threat was fabricated to have students removed.

“Lyin’ Laura must resign, we will fight for Palestine,” one chant repeatedly rang out.

Just before 3 p.m. the protest at Columbia ended not with a bang, but with a whimper, but the protesters vowed they would return.

“We will be back, f–k the police. Buddy up, mask up, stay safe,” they chanted before departing in an uncharacteristically orderly fashion.

Thursday, March 6, 2025

Trump to Recognize Israeli Sovereignty over Judea and Samaria

 

A senior U.S. official revealed that the Trump administration is weighing the possibility of recognizing Israeli sovereignty over Judea and Samaria. 

Additionally, officials are not dismissing the potential application of the “Gaza Plan” in the area.

Discussions include proposals for a collaborative American-Israeli initiative in parts of the region, alongside efforts to encourage Palestinian relocation to Sinai and Jordan.

Trump To Shut Down The Department of Education




CNN Was 100% Positive that Trump Lied When He said that "that Biden spent $8 million for making mice transgender" ..Turns out it 100% True!

 

Why None of the Arab Nations Want the Gazans!

 

Disgraceful Dems callously politicized DJ Daniel, Laken Riley – and sunk to a new low in the process


 So much for Democrat women being more compassionate than the rest of us. Uh uh. They have hearts of stone.

Take cute DJ Daniel, the pint-sized 13-year-old boy with brain cancer who dreams of being a cop. There shouldn’t have been a dry eye in the House when President Donald Trump announced in the middle of his speech to Congress Tuesday night that he was making little DJ an honorary Secret Service agent.

But one side of the chamber was bone dry, their desiccated hearts a perfect reflection of Democrats’ barren ideas for revival.

As Republicans applauded and DJ’s face lit up, Trump asked his new Secret Service director, Sean Curran, “to officially make you an agent of the United States Secret Service.” The little boy’s spontaneous hug of the usually stone-faced Curran would melt the coldest heart.

Except for the heartless Democrats scowling in the House, sitting on their hands, determined to act like sullen adolescents. Except for the Trump-deranged MSNBC hosts Nicolle Wallace and Rachel Maddow, whose putrid comments about the touching moment took their network to lows nobody thought possible.

“This is disgusting — the president made a spectacle out of [DJ],” snarled Maddow. Wallace then dragged DJ into her obsession over the Capitol riot: “I hope he never has to defend the US Capitol against Donald Trump’s supporters and if he does, I hope he isn’t one of the six who loses his life to suicide.”

As a lifelong Dem, I never thought I’d see my party embarrass itself so much

 




by Council Member Robert Holden (D) represents District 30 in Queens.

As a lifelong Democrat, I never imagined I would watch my own party embarrass itself so thoroughly — and so publicly — as it did during Tuesday’s joint session of Congress.

From obnoxious booing to childish protest signs to a sitting member of Congress having to be physically removed from the chamber, Democrats turned what should have been a solemn, dignified event into a bad reality show.

And for what?

To go viral on TikTok?

To book a slot on MSNBC to brag about their “resistance”?

Nothing was more disgraceful than when my colleagues refused to stand or clap when 13-year-old DJ Daniel, a brain-cancer survivor, was made an honorary Secret Service agent.

This boy beat cancer and dreamed of protecting the president.

That dream came true when President Donald Trump honored him — a beautiful, human moment that should have transcended politics.

Democrats used to be the party of compassion — the party that stood up for the vulnerable and celebrated stories of triumph over adversity.

Now? We can’t even clap for a kid who beat cancer if the “wrong” president is standing beside him.

When Trump said biological men shouldn’t compete in women’s sports, Democrats acted like he’d proposed banning Little League.

But most Americans — including plenty of Democrats — agree that protecting women’s sports isn’t radical.

It’s common sense.

The same thing happened when Trump called for cutting waste, fraud, and abuse in the federal government.

Democrats stayed silent.

Are we now the party that supports waste, fraud and abuse?

When Trump honored families whose loved ones were killed due to reckless sanctuary policies — policies I’ve fought to reform in New York City — Democrats couldn’t even show basic respect.

When he honored Stephanie Diller, the widow of murdered NYPD Officer Jonathan Diller, it should have been a moment of unity.

Yet many Democrats offered only lukewarm applause, if any at all.

And when Trump called for the death penalty for cop killers, the silence was deafening.

Since when did standing up for the families of fallen officers become controversial?

Another disappointing moment came when President Trump called for peace in Ukraine — a goal that should have brought both sides of the aisle to their feet.

Democrats were once the party of peace, but you wouldn’t know it from the silence.

Have we really reached a point where even supporting peace is treated as partisan?

It’s a sad reflection of how far my party has drifted.

This isn’t principled resistance — it’s emotional immaturity.

It also reeks of hypocrisy: Democrats rightly condemned Republican Rep. Joe Wilson when he shouted, “You lie!” at President Barack Obama during a State of the Union.

Back then, we said such outbursts were beneath the dignity of Congress.

But Democrats’ antics on Tuesday — waving signs, heckling and walking out — were just as bad, if not worse.

Democrat Rep. Al Green even had to be physically removed from the chamber.

When we act like this, we embarrass ourselves and alienate the very voters we claim to champion.

Sen. John Fetterman (D-Pa.) called it “a sad cavalcade of self-owns and unhinged petulance” that only made Trump look “more presidential and restrained.”

He warned that Democrats are becoming the political equivalent of a car alarm — constantly blaring, and increasingly ignored.

Voters want leaders who act like adults, who clap for good ideas, no matter who proposes them, and who show bipartisan respect for families who’ve suffered unimaginable loss.

Americans are exhausted by this nonsense.

They want leaders who solve problems, not politicians chasing retweets.

They want representatives who stand up for common sense — not political theater.

Until we get back to that, we don’t deserve to govern.

I’m not saying we should agree with everything Trump says — far from it.

However, there’s a way to disagree with dignity and class.

My fellow Democrats didn’t just miss that opportunity — they sprinted in the opposite direction.

I’m embarrassed for my party.

But more importantly, I am worried for my country.

If Democrats can’t even applaud a kid beating cancer, grieving families, saving tax dollars, securing our borders or a call for peace — what does that say about us?