“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

Thursday, April 10, 2025

135-year-old Mount Sinai Beth Israel in Manhattan closes for good


 According to an announcement, the hospital officially closed at 8 a.m. on Wednesday, calling the closure “part of our ongoing transformation downtown.”

Brendan Carr, Mount Sinai’s CEO, sent out a staff-wide letter on Tuesday night announcing the move, according to amNY, which stated the hospital’s emergency room — its only operational department — would finally close for good.

“To some, the closure of a building may seem like a natural part of doing business, but I know how much this building meant to so many of you,” the letter read.

The hospital system also announced the opening of a new urgent care center two blocks from the former Beth Israel.

Mount Sinai has sought to close the 700-bed hospital since 2019, saying a lack of patients has led to the facility hemorrhaging $150 million a year, and that there was no viable way to staunch the bleeding.

Following the first year of the pandemic, the plans were temporarily shelved, but were revived in 2023.

But the move faced stiff opposition from the community, which feared that yet another downtown hospital closure could imperil health outcomes for residents in the area. 

Downtown New Yorkers have seen two other major hospitals close their doors for good: Cabrini Medical Center in 2008, and St. Vincent’s in 2010.

Health policy advocate Lois Uttley said on social media that Mount Sinai was “leaving a huge swath of Lower Manhattan with no community hospital” — and called the hospital system’s suggestion that patients seek care elsewhere “unacceptable.”

It’s unclear what will happen to the building that once housed the hospital.

Assemblymember Harvey Epstein, who represents the east side of Manhattan in Albany, told NY1 that whatever replaces it needs to benefit the neighborhood, adding that “we have a lack of beds in Lower Manhattan.”

In 2023, when the hospital began diverting stroke patients to other facilities, the Democrat accused Mount Sinai of violating the law during its closure plan, claiming that the state health department never approved “a plan for closure or service reduction.”

“You’re closing a key component of the medical system in Manhattan. It will impact patient care. A stroke can’t be reversed,” Oren Barzilay, the head of the union that represents FDNY-EMS workers, said at the time.

In August, a group called the Community Coalition to Save Beth Israel Hospital filed a lawsuit against Mount Sinai, claiming that the real reason behind the closure was to claim billions in real estate value following the site’s sale.

“Once this hospital is closed,” the lawsuit read, “it will be impossible to reopen.”

An appeals court judge tossed the case in a Tuesday ruling, but the group plans to file a motion with the state’s highest court in another attempt to fight the closure, according to reports.

Daring! Israeli Businessman Saves Three US Citizens, Including A Jew, From Execution In Congo


 In a story more reminiscent of a spy movie than reality, three American citizens—one of them Jewish—who had been sentenced to death in Congo were released and returned to the U.S. this week, following a dramatic operation led by Israeli-American businessman Motty Kahana. Behind the scenes, there was intense and dangerous international activity that ended with an emotional landing at Andrews Air Force Base in Washington, D.C.


The three—Marcel Malenga (21), Tyler Thompson Jr. (21), and Benjamin Reuven Zalman-Polun (36)—were arrested for their involvement in a failed attempt to overthrow the government of the Democratic Republic of the Congo’s president, Félix Antoine Tshisekedi, last year. While awaiting execution, Kahana—who has previously conducted rescue operations in Afghanistan, Ukraine, and Syria—worked tirelessly to change their fate.

In March, Kahana arrived in the Congolese capital, Kinshasa, together with two former U.S. State Department businessmen and members of CIA special units. The goal of the visit: to negotiate the prisoners’ release. Kahana described the trip as “three of the scariest days of my life,” after signs became clear that the Congolese hosts weren’t planning to play by the rules.

Despite what initially seemed like a warm welcome—including a meeting with Congo’s National Security Advisor—things quickly took a turn when their passports were repeatedly requested. Kahana suspected a trap, and indeed, American embassy representatives warned: “The Congolese are looking for an excuse to arrest you.” Their escape—nothing short of a thriller—happened at the last moment, as military forces attempted to stop their plane on the runway.

Although Kahana didn’t meet directly with the Congolese president, his mission wasn’t in vain. A friend of his had visited Kinshasa beforehand and delivered the message Kahana had planned to convey. Last week, the three Americans were notified: their death sentences had been commuted to life imprisonment, and they would be transferred to serve their sentences in an American prison.

Trump Honors The Lubavitcher Rebbe on Education and Sharing Day


 In a heartfelt tribute, the White House and President Donald Trump have proclaimed Education and Sharing Day USA, celebrating the enduring legacy of Rabbi Menachem Schneerson, the revered leader of the Chabad-Lubavitch movement. The proclamation, shared via White House and POTUS, highlights the Rebbe’s profound influence on education, compassion, and moral clarity, while also reflecting on the President’s personal visit to the Rebbe’s Ohel—the resting place of Rabbi Schneerson—on October 7, 2024, marking the first anniversary of the devastating Hamas attacks in 2023.

In his statement, President Trump recounted the emotional and spiritual significance of his visit to the Ohel, where he sought guidance from the Rebbe’s timeless teachings.

 “On the first anniversary of the brutal October 7, 2023, attacks, I visited the Ohel of Rabbi Schneerson and drew spiritual guidance and replenishment from his voice and message,” he said. Joined by family members of American hostage Edan Alexander and Auschwitz survivor Jerry Wartski, the President described the experience as a poignant reminder of the persistent threat of antisemitism. “There, praying with the family members of American hostage Edan Alexander and Auschwitz survivor Jerry Wartski, I was personally reminded of the horrors of antisemitism. My commitment to combating it is unwavering,” he affirmed.

The President also emphasized his administration’s efforts to address the aftermath of the October 7, 2023, attacks, which he described as “murderous and criminal” acts perpetrated by Hamas. “My Administration has made great strides in bringing home all hostages captured during the murderous and criminal Hamas attacks of October 7, 2023, and to securing peace and stability for the Jewish people in their homeland and around the world,” Trump stated, underscoring his dedication to both the safe return of hostages and broader regional stability.

The proclamation concluded with a call for national reflection on Rabbi Schneerson’s teachings, with President Trump and the First Lady encouraging Americans to embrace the Rebbe’s values. “The First Lady and I encourage all Americans to reflect upon the Rebbe’s teachings. His inestimable dedication and unwavering example have become woven into the very fabric of our Nation and its character,” he said. “His memory remains a blessing to the world.”

This tribute not only honors the Rebbe’s contributions to education and community-building but also reaffirms the administration’s resolve to confront antisemitism and support the Jewish people, drawing inspiration from a leader whose legacy continues to resonate globally.

Wednesday, April 9, 2025

Kevin O'Leary calls for 400% tariffs on China

 

Douglas Murray eloquently breaks down the absurdity of anyone defending Mahmoud Khalil.

 

Caroline Glick wipes the floor with Tucker Carlson

 

Trump Revokes Funding From Maine Dept of Corrections After They put "A giant, 6-foot-1, 245 pound guy in a Ladies Prison Because he identified as a woman

 

Trump Wants to Know how Adam Schiff's Fat Face Can Sit on a Finger?"

 

SENATOR KENNEDY: IF IRAN GETS A NUKE, ISRAEL WILL SLAP THEM TO PLUTO

 




Jamaica Hospital Switched Long Island Man At Birth


 A New York man is suing a Queens hospital after a shocking DNA test revealed he was switched with another baby at birth and spent over six decades unknowingly living with the wrong family.

Kevin McMahon, of Selden, alleges that Jamaica Hospital’s negligence led to him being sent home with the wrong parents—a mix-up that went undiscovered for 60 years, according to a lawsuit filed in Queens Supreme Court.

The revelation came in late 2020, when McMahon’s sister, Carol Vignola, submitted her DNA to Ancestry.com. The results raised red flags when they showed no genetic connection to Kevin.

Instead, they linked her to a man named Ross McMahon, who coincidentally shared Kevin’s birthday–May 26, 1960–and birthplace–Jamaica Hospital.

Further digging revealed that Ross and Kevin were born just hours apart and their birth certificate numbers were consecutive. Eventually, DNA tests confirmed what seemed unthinkable: the two men had been switched at birth.

The lawsuit, filed in November 2021, accuses Jamaica Hospital of negligence and medical malpractice. McMahon claims the hospital failed to properly monitor and identify newborns, sending them home with the wrong families — a mistake he says caused “great emotional mental anguish, distress, pain, and agony.”

Even more devastating, McMahon says he was denied the chance to meet his biological parents, who both passed away before the truth came to light. The lawsuit also notes that he was raised in an “emotionally abusive” home — a life he believes could have been avoided had the error not occurred.

McMahon is seeking damages in an amount that exceeds the jurisdictional limits of lower courts. The case remains pending in Queens.

Daily Voice has reached out to Jamaica Hospital Medical Center for comment.

Click here to read the full complaint.

See Attachment


Trump’s given Iran a way out from impending war—they can do it the easy way or the hard way

 

“To jaw-jaw is always better than to war-war,” Winston Churchill reportedly said. 

We will soon know if Iran agrees.

The talks scheduled for Saturday between Iran and the United States are shaping up as a crucial test of the mad mullahs’ intentions. If they are hell-bent on building nuclear weapons, war is inevitable.

It would be war with Israel and probably with America, too. For Iran, that means taking on the Little Satan and the Great Satan simultaneously. 

That’s what the crazy mullahs always said they wanted. If it hasn’t occurred to them yet, soon they will realize what a colossal mistake they have made. 

“If they don’t make a deal, there will be bombing,” President Trump said recently. “It will be bombing the likes of which they have never seen before.”

Nothing subtle about that!

A deal or destruction

The president, who revealed the planned weekend talks while meeting Monday in the Oval Office with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, said, “I think everybody agrees that doing a deal would be preferable to doing the obvious. 

“The obvious is not something that I want to be involved with, or frankly that Israel wants to be involved with if they can avoid it,” he said. “So we’ll see if we can avoid it . . . It’s getting to be very dangerous territory.”

The talks, to be held in Oman, will be direct negotiations, the president said, but Iran later said the talks would be “indirect,” meaning with a mediator. 

Either way, Trump’s bottom line is the absolute right one: Iran must dismantle its nuclear program and not just pretend to abide by restrictions and inspections aimed at preventing it from building a nuclear weapon.

Those were the major terms of the 2015 deal Barack Obama and Europe crafted, and Trump wisely canceled it during his first White House tenure because it lacked solid verification procedures and penalties. 

Because Iran was cheating on nearly every aspect of the deal and playing hide and seek with inspectors, there was no way to know with confidence what it was really doing.

Almost as bad, Iran was using billions of dollars Obama had unfrozen to fund its nuclear program and its terror proxies. Talk about a lose-lose. Naturally, Joe Biden foolishly aimed to reverse Trump’s reversal by trying to coax Iran back into another soft deal and even withdrew or stopped enforcing oil and banking sanctions to sweeten the offer. 

He also paid a reported $6 billion for the return of five American hostages. 

In return he got bupkis, demonstrating his fecklessness on the global stage. Thanks largely to his chaotic and deadly withdrawal from Afghanistan, our adversaries didn’t fear him, Iran included. 

Federal agencies Spent $4.6 BILLION worth of taxpayer dollars towards furniture in the past 4 years.

 


Outraged New Yorkers tossed garbage from their windows onto pro-Hamas demonstrators below.


 

18 months into the war, just 25% of Gaza tunnels are destroyed

 

A security source on Wednesday morning said that the IDF has destroyed around 25% of Hamas' tunnels in Gaza, Channel 12 News reported.

According to the report, the defense echelon believes that there is a significant number of smuggling tunnels which cross from Gaza into Egypt.

Earlier this year, Defense Minister Israel Katz said that the Philadelphi Corridor will remain a buffer zone, similar to those in Lebanon and Syria.

"I saw with my own eyes more than a few tunnels which penetrate the Philadelphi," he said. "Some of them are closed and some are open. We had information that Hamas, during the ceasefire, planned to attack soldiers and towns."

Last year, The New York Times reported that that Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar approved a $225,000 project to install blast doors to protect vulnerable sections of the tunnel network a year before the October 7 massacre.

According to the report, prior to the massacre, Israel focused on tunnels that were dug under the border with Gaza but largely ignored the tunnels being dug entirely within Gaza, allowing Hamas to build a vast network it has used to avoid unwanted confrontations, stage ambushes, travel in secret, and hide many of the approximately 250 hostages who were kidnapped on October 7.

Experts said that this vast tunnel network is the reason Israel has not yet succeeded in its stated goal of dismantling Hamas, as the terrorist group's forces would stand little chance against the IDF if they were forced to fight entirely aboveground.

Despite Lacking Authority On Issue: Supreme Court Freezes Shin Bet Chief’s Dismissal


The Supreme Court on Tuesday evening issued an interim order freezing Shin Bet chief Ronen Bar’s dismissal after 11 hours of deliberations over an issue it has no authority over.

Israeli law clearly authorizes the government to dismiss the Shin Bet chief.

Meanwhile, the court granted the government an extension until April 20 for the government and Attorney-General Gali Baharav-Miara to reach an “acceptable and creative solution” – and if one is not found, the Supreme Court will issue a ruling. The court also ordered the government not to announce a replacement for Bar or interview candidates for the position until a compromise is reached or a ruling is issued.

The Prime Minister’s Office responded to the ruling by stating: “The panel of judges repeatedly stated in the hearing that there is no dispute over the government’s authority to remove the head of the Shin Bet from his position. Therefore, the Supreme Court’s decision to postpone the end date of the Shin Bet head’s term by ten days is puzzling.”

“The Attorney General’s goal is to prevent Ronen Bar’s dismissal in any way possible for a long time, under the pretext that there is an active investigation [Qatargate]. It is inconceivable that the government of Israel would be prevented from removing a failing Shin Bet head from his position simply because of the opening of an investigation that is not related to any of the government ministers. On the contrary – such a result would allow any failing Shin Bet head who wants to remain in office to open an investigation against anyone connected to the office of any of the ministers, thereby preventing his dismissal.”

The office noted: “The Prime Minister will continue to interview candidates for the position of head of the Shin Bet.”

Communications Minister Shlomo Karhi responded to the ruling by stating: “No! The government must obey the law! Duty of allegiance to the State of Israel and its laws (!) not to an unconstitutional and unauthorized order.”

“The ‘creative solution’ is very simple: Ronen Bar will end his term on April 10.”

“This is our duty: to protect democracy and the security of the state. These are the checks and balances sometimes required to balance the judicial authority. If not in such a case of harming the security of the state, where is the red line? Right of return for Palestinians? Abolishing the Jewish state and turning it into a state of all its citizens? What is democratic about the absolute rule of Yitzhak Amit???”

Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich responded by calling on the government to boycott Bar. “The Supreme Court allows itself to harm the security of the state, and we have the responsibility to prevent this. I call on the Prime Minister not to summon Bar to discussions and not to work with him, not to enter into any negotiations with the Attorney General to find an ‘acceptable compromise.’ “We have a responsibility for the continued functioning of Israel’s security, and the arrogance of the judges must not tie our hands in a time of war.”

Trump-Netanyahu Meeting Yields Little Progress on Trade Dispute

 

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s second meeting with U.S. President Donald Trump this year, while warmly staged, appears to have fallen short of delivering concrete results especially on the pressing issue of trade tariffs.

Following their first encounter in February, members of Netanyahu’s coalition loudly celebrated the meeting’s success. This time, however, there was near-total silence. The lack of public praise is telling, particularly in an Israeli political climate where positive spin is rarely withheld.

One of the major disappointments came in the form of Trump’s refusal to reverse the newly imposed 17% tariffs on Israeli goods. When pressed on the issue, Trump casually replied, “Maybe yes, maybe no.” With Netanyahu sitting beside him, the Israeli leader was left to meekly point out that Israel does not impose tariffs on the United States a comment that, while factual, underscores Israel’s one-sided vulnerability in the new trade dynamic.

This raises broader concerns about the future of Israeli-American economic ties. Netanyahu has suggested that the trade imbalance where Israel exports more than it imports from the U.S. will somehow be corrected. But he has not clarified how this will happen. Will Israeli exports shrink, or will U.S. goods be pushed into the Israeli market? Businesses and economic leaders in Israel remain in the dark.

Equally disconcerting to many Israelis was Trump’s public announcement that he intends to open direct negotiations with Iran. This marks a dramatic pivot for a president who, during his first term, exited the Iran nuclear deal at Netanyahu’s urging. Now, Trump is proposing a new engagement strategy an ironic reversal of roles that must be unsettling for a prime minister who has spent years warning the world about Iran’s nuclear ambitions.

To be sure, the Trump-Netanyahu meeting wasn’t entirely without value. Trump reaffirmed his support for Israel’s right to self-defense in Gaza and issued a stern warning to Iran. Yet these gestures were largely symbolic. They may boost morale, but they do little to address Israel’s growing economic concerns or to contain Iran’s regional aggression in a meaningful way.

In the end, the meeting produced more headlines than substance. While Netanyahu sought strategic reassurance and economic relief, he left Washington without either. For Israeli leaders and citizens alike, it’s a sobering reminder that even close friendships in politics can carry sharp limits.

Beit Shemesh Rabbis Done with "Sheitlach" Now Rule: Don’t Flush Chametz Down The Toilet


Prior to Pesach, which begins on Saturday night, the rabbis of Beit Shemesh published a special public notice (“Kol Koreh”) with specific instructions for the disposal of chametz (leavened products), emphasizing a prohibition against discarding chametz via the toilet.

DIN: There is no such "prohibition"; they made it up! It's a common-sense issue! I see signs in the toilets on an airplane and in malls that one shouldn't flush down anything except toilet paper, and no rabbi ever signed beneath those signs! 

The notice, signed by Rabbi Natan Kupshitz—chief rabbi of the Haredi quarter in Beit Shemesh and a judge on the Badatz of the Edah HaChareidis—along with about 30 other rabbis from the city, states that the prohibition applies to flushing chametz down the toilet “whether on its own, and all the more so if wrapped in plastic or placed in a container.”

DIN: its erev Pesach and everyone I see on the street has no time to talk to each other, yet these rabbis got together to discuss this? When was this "asifa?" was this on zoom? Wasn't there one single rebbitzen screaming at their husband " stop with the shutsim, go unpack the Pesach stuff"

Because Passover Eve this year falls on Shabbat, it requires special preparations for the removal of chametz. Many people have been accustomed to disposing of chametz on Shabbat by flushing it, but the rabbis are now ruling that this is not permissible.

DIN: Are they ruling? For whom are they "ruling" this? Every sane person knows not to flush down stuff that can clog the plumbing! Apparently, the Yeshiva Leit are so naive and dumb that they need a ruling to "prohibit" something that makes common sense! 

This letter comes in response to a request from Rabbi Meir Shechter, a member of the city council and the supervisor of the municipal water corporation “Mei Shemesh.” He reported that in previous years with the same calendar setup, incidents occurred where flushing chametz caused clogs, pipe bursts, and even flooding that led to chametz resurfacing in people’s homes during the holiday.

DIN: My premonition is correct, they are addressing the Yeshiva Leit who are so far-frumt or should I say far-krumpt, that they have no problem flushing down plastic bags with chumetz! And this krum thinking comes from not working for a living! Someone who works for a living and knows how difficult it is to support a family knows not to clog his pipes, because they don't need an extra expense! 

The rabbis stress that this is not only a technical or infrastructure concern, but also poses significant halachic (Jewish legal) problems.

“There have been several cases where, due to clogged pipes, chametz surfaced in other people’s homes, causing both damage and halachic stumbling blocks. This falls under the category of a ‘mitzvah achieved through a transgression,’ which is forbidden.”

DIN: "halachic stumbling blocks?????" What???? "Significant halachic problems????".......I am asking in all seriousness... would anyone in their right mind eat their neighbor's chumetz that came up through his pipe? What "halachic problems other than having a mess is there? I cannot for a second believe any of the signed rabbanim even know about this. This must be a sick prank!! 

As an alternative, the rabbis recommend a different solution:
“Therefore, in a year like this, leftover pieces of chametz should be thrown into a public garbage bin such as one on the street or sidewalk [where there is an eruv], and it must be done before the deadline for chametz burning.”

The city’s rabbis, representing all community sectors, add that this solution is fully acceptable, stating:
“The municipality does not intend to take possession of what is in the public bins and will officially renounce ownership of all public garbage bins before Shabbat.”

According to some poskim one must include the garbage can in one’s Mechiras Chametz and also put bleach on the chametz one throws into the garbage to render it unfit for consumption.

The Beit Shemesh rabbis also instructed that the traditional burning of chametz must be done on Friday morning, as early as possible, as in other years—not in the later hours of the day.

Tuesday, April 8, 2025

Song of Sanhedrin

 


Hamas Lies about Casualty Count Exposed and the Media and Hamas Agrees!


 Hamas’s release of their latest fatality list has validated every page of our @HJS_Org report into previous lists. Recent revelations reinforce and prove our earlier findings.

- Thousands of errors, showing that the numbers parroted by world media for 18 months were totally unreliable.

- Demographic data showing the majority by proportion are fighting age male deaths.

- Inclusion of natural deaths.

- Concealment of combatant deaths.

We have been proved right about absolutely everything.

Deeply telling that all criticism has been nothing but personal attacks. Nobody has landed a punch on this work, because they’re simply Hamas’s own numbers and words, nothing else. We just exposed them and did the work the world’s media should have done.

Very proud to have worked on this with Salo Aizenberg, Elliot Malin, Mark Zlochin and others.

The report has had over 300m social media impressions, media coverage in 20+ countries and has been briefed to lawmakers in Washington, Israel, Paris and Westminster.

You can read it here: henryjacksonsociety.org…

Its Bein Hazmanim and the Ones Protecting Us Are Out in Full Force to Protest!