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Year three of the siege on Jewish students begins


Year three of the siege on Jewish students begins

Jonathan S. Tobin


Blood libels against Israel may reignite campus antisemitism. Administrators who tolerate the targeting of Jews, however, will have to reckon with President Donald Trump.

A protester holds a sign reading “Free Speech for Columbia Students” over a large crowd gathered for a pro-Palestinian protest near campus, May 21, 2025. Photo by Madison Swart/Hans Lucas/AFP via Getty Images.

By the end of the second academic year since the Hamas-led Palestinian Arab attack against southern Israeli communities on Oct. 7, 2023, the unprecedented increase in antisemitism on American college campuses appeared to have abated. Some of the steam seemed to have gone out of the organized mobs of pro-Hamas demonstrators who took part in encampments and building takeovers while chanting for the destruction of Israel and Jewish genocide (“From the river to the sea”) and for terrorism against Jews wherever they lived (“Globalize the intifada”).

More importantly, the administrators who tolerated and encouraged the abuse of Jews—something they never would have stood for had the victims been any other minority group—had met a force they feared just as much, if not more, than truculent leftist faculty members and students. President Donald Trump came into the picture with an aggressive and ambitious plan to make campuses safe for Jewish students and roll back factors that had made the post-Oct. 7 surge of antisemitism possible.

By the time this past spring semester had ended, the second-term president’s effective threats of defunding those institutions that had tolerated and encouraged Jew-hatred had forced many schools to shut down the wave of illegal activity. The high tide that had flooded colleges under the Biden administration seemed to have ebbed.

Two forces collide

Still, as students return to campus for the fall semester, complacency about the problem would be a mistake. If anything, the coming months could turn out to be even more problematic for Jewish students as two equally powerful forces collide: the anti-Israel and antisemitic fervor that is the result of the war in Gaza eclipsing every other left-wing cause in importance, and the determination of Trump to end the reign of woke leftism in academia.

In recent months, as the campuses quieted down for the summer, the drumbeat of incitement against Israel, Zionism and Jews has increased rather than died down. Hamas propaganda about Israel committing “genocide” in Gaza and deliberately starving Palestinians in the Strip has been mainstreamed by corporate media outlets, making headlines worldwide.

These blood libels have become part of the conventional wisdom about the Middle East among liberal and left-wing elites in journalism, academia, cultural establishments and unions, as well as in the Democratic Party. That has caused even many Jews who fear being out of sync with liberal fashion to engage in unfair criticism of Israel, which essentially legitimizes anti-Zionist invective and the cause of letting the Hamas monsters behind the unspeakable atrocities survive the war they started on Oct. 7.

Most schools now understand that Trump means business and that he fully intends to punish academic institutions that let Jew-hatred flourish with defunding measures that will devastate their budgets. While most of them are far from ready to comply with the full range of demands, none want their campuses to become the focus of administration or congressional inquiries, let alone wake up and discover that Washington is pulling the money that represents the lifeblood for even the richest of universities.

That means they will, as many were in the spring, be ready to suspend and expel students who engage in campus takeovers. Nevertheless, the forces behind the pro-Hamas mobs are just as determined to exploit the successes in the information wage that the terrorists, their funders and enablers in the media have won.

So, as American higher education reopens for business, it’s far from clear which of these two immovable forces will prevail. The one thing we do know is that the stakes in this battle of wills between liberal educational bureaucrats and the Republican administration are not merely a matter of political advantage for Trump or his opponents.

Those at risk if the administration’s defunding threats and justified demands for reforms to abolish the root causes of campus antisemitism are ignored or fail to have the intended effect will not be Trump’s appointees. It is Jewish students who will suffer if administrators believe that they are better off appeasing leftist antisemites instead of the president. Their ability to move about their schools without fear of intimidation and even violence, as well as to engage in academic life without having to disavow their people, their faith and Israel, hinges on whether the administration makes it clear that the consequences of another antisemitic surge will prove serious.

A woke bureaucracy

The forces behind the pro-Hamas agitation on campus have not been eliminated by Trump. The same factors that had ignited the firestorm of Jew-hatred throughout many of the country’s institutions of higher learning remain in place.

The administration’s campaign to deal with campus antisemitism came down like a ton of bricks on elite institutions like Columbia and Harvard. The president’s task force dealing with the subject demanded that they not only take stringent measures to curb the activities of the pro-Hamas mobs but also address the inherent factors that had made them possible.

Trump’s ambitious goal was not only to make schools safer for Jewish students but to roll back the hold of leftist doctrines that made the post-Oct. 7 troubles inevitable. While a turning point may have been reached in which these forces will now start to decline, these institutions have not been converted from woke strongholds to their previous position as defenders of the Western canon, the neo-Marxists have warred against.

The reign of bureaucrats implementing the woke catechism of diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) that sought to exacerbate racial divisions, as well as falsely labeling Jews as “white” oppressors, is largely still there. So, too, are the overwhelmingly leftist faculties and administrators who have been thoroughly indoctrinated in the toxic myths of critical race theory, intersectionality and settler-colonialism.

The progressive takeover of academia has been slowly unfolding as the left has completed its long march through American educational institutions for decades. It reached its high point during the moral panic of the Black Lives Matter summer of 2020, following the killing that spring of George Floyd by a Minneapolis police officer. But as interest in dividing all Americans along immutable racial lines waned, the neo-Marxist ideas that animated this movement are held up as a new orthodoxy throughout the humanities and among educational bureaucrats.

Woke policies didn’t just predispose people to dislike Israel. They influenced the curricula taught at schools, as well as the hiring of professors and admissions, creating left-wing bubbles where antisemitic denial of Jewish history and rights became normative. And as “free Palestine,” the phrase that has come to encapsulate a belief in destroying the State of Israel and demonizing Jewish peoplehood, became the primary obsession of the American left, the Oct. 7 terrorist attacks helped mobilize students, faculty, school employees—aided and abetted by outside agitators and funders—to turn campuses into hostile environments for Jews.

Foreign students and funding

So, while the people who run American higher education understood that the election in 2024 of a president who prioritized the fight against antisemitism endangered their businesses, the inmates of these academic asylums remain just as interested in turning the fall 2025 semester into another ordeal for Jews and supporters of Israel.

Nor has the funding for these antisemitic groups, like Students for Justice in Palestine and others, from both foreign sources, such as the emirate of Qatar and left-wing foundations like those controlled by the Soros family, dried up.

One factor that may alleviate the problem has been Trump’s focus on the role of foreign students in campus disturbances.

Trump hasn’t yet banned the entry of students from abroad, especially Muslim-majority countries. Nor has he succeeded, as he still hopes to do, in deporting some of the leaders of the pro-Hamas and antisemitic illegal demonstrations and takeovers.

Syrian-born Mahmoud Khalil, who helped lead the chaos at Columbia, has (with the support of many liberal Democrats who have wrongly depicted him as a martyr to free speech and some empathetic judges) been able to remain in the country, despite the administration’s best effort to deport him.

Many other foreign students, who make up significant percentages of the student bodies of many leading schools like New York University, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Harvard and Columbia, have essentially self-deported since they, like Khalil, have undoubtedly lied on their visa applications and are vulnerable to legal action. Others who were similarly intent on coming to the United States to benefit from the education system here while undermining the values of the American republic and spreading Islamist doctrines have taken Trump’s hint and decided not to come to the United States this fall.

But there are likely enough still here, along with a cadre of leftist activists, to create havoc at schools in the name of the supposedly starving Palestinian people and against Israel.

Trump must double down

Averting another situation such as the one that unfolded after Oct. 7 will require two things to happen.

One is that the Trump administration must be prepared to double down on its threats against colleges and universities that behave as they did two years ago and let antisemites run amok.

Moreover, rather than work solely toward striking more deals with schools, such as the one they struck with Columbia, Trump’s team must escalate their efforts to pull funding and force them to give up their DEI bureaucracies, as well as dismantle those departments, like those in Middle East studies, that are engines of antisemitism.

At the same time, those whose job it is to defend Jews, in general, like the Anti-Defamation League and American Jewish Committee, and Jewish students, in particular, such as Hillel International, need to understand that they must cease opposing Trump’s efforts to reform academia and end DEI. Measures that are supposed to aid Jewish students that do not attack the reasons why they are under attack are useless and say more about the bankruptcy of many leading mainstream Jewish groups than anything else.

The coming months may prove trying for American Jews as they undergo another trial by fire, fueled by lies about Israel. The same leftist-Islamist alliance that has done so much damage in the last two years seeks to ignite another storm of antisemitism on campuses.

Still, they need to remember that they are not alone in this fight. Trump’s prioritization of the battle against Jew-hatred has put colleges and universities that would otherwise be inclined to abandon their Jewish students on notice that there will be a cost to doing so. We can only hope that this will be enough to force school administrations into actions that will finally rid academia of this scourge.


Jonathan S. Tobin is editor-in-chief of the Jewish News Syndicate, a senior contributor for The Federalist, a columnist for Newsweek and a contributor to many other publications. He covers the American political scene, foreign policy, the U.S.-Israel relationship, Middle East diplomacy, the Jewish world and the arts. He hosts the JNS “Think Twice” podcast, both the weekly video program and the “Jonathan Tobin Daily” program, which are available on all major audio platforms and YouTube. Previously, he was executive editor, then senior online editor and chief political blogger, for Commentary magazine. Before that, he was editor-in-chief of The Jewish Exponent in Philadelphia and editor of the Connecticut Jewish Ledger. He has won more than 60 awards for commentary, art criticism and other writing. He appears regularly on television, commenting on politics and foreign policy. Born in New York City, he studied history at Columbia University.


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Only a rule-breaking administration can truly combat antisemitism


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Only a rule-breaking administration can truly combat antisemitism

Jonathan S. Tobin


An ambassador’s broadside aimed at French President Emmanuel Macron is another example of how Trump 2.0 is prioritizing the battle against a rising tide of Jew-hatred.

French President Emmanuel Macron arrives to the South Portico of the White House in Washington, D.C., for a meeting with U.S. President Donald Trump, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and other world leaders, Aug. 18, 2025. Credit: Daniel Torok/White House.

To say this is the sort of thing that just isn’t done is the understatement of the century. It’s not clear if there is any precedent in the nearly 250 years of Franco-American diplomatic relations for the decision of Charles Kushner, the U.S. ambassador to France, to directly attack the French government’s indifference to antisemitism in a Wall Street Journal op-ed.

The traditional job of ambassadors is to promote good relations between the nations they represent and the government to which they are accredited. To speak out in this manner from that perch is pretty much the opposite of traditional ideas of diplomacy. In fact, that tradition dates back to the ancient world, when the concepts of nation-states and ambassadors, as well as the notion of diplomatic immunity for those who serve as go-betweens in this manner, were first known.

But the issue here isn’t—as some of Kushner’s critics and those of the administration he represents claim—one of an unqualified and even unsuitable ambassador behaving badly. Nor is it a matter of, as Trump’s detractors habitually assert, that on his watch the United States has been alienating its friends while cozying up to enemies. That is often how they misrepresent the president’s efforts to use diplomacy while attempting to solve problems like the Russia-Ukraine war and the North Korean nuclear threat.

The real significance

It is true that allowing the U.S. ambassador to Paris to take shots at the president of France is highly unorthodox. And it’s far from clear as to whether it will lead to a policy shift, either in terms of combating antisemitism or affecting its destructive anti-Israel stands.

However, the true significance is being lost amid the usual cacophony of criticism of Trump and his appointees, as well as the snark about Kushner, who is a convicted felon who was pardoned by the president and, more significantly, the father of Jared Kushner, the presidential son-in-law and former White House advisor.

Instead, what matters about this contretemps is that it demonstrates just how seriously this administration takes the issue of antisemitism and the way America’s traditional allies in Europe have become the allies, whether intentionally or not, of Hamas.

Everything else, including the sniping at Kushner, the foreign-policy establishment and the mainstream media’s horror at Trump’s unusual approach to diplomacy, remains secondary to this very obvious fact about the administration that its critics prefer to downplay or ignore.

The context in which this shot across Macron’s bow should be seen is how Trump has prioritized antisemitism in a way unprecedented for an American president. There is simply no other logical explanation for this move, which clearly happened with Trump’s approval. It’s unthinkable that Kushner would choose to mention the president—and the fact that he and his in-laws share Jewish grandchildren—without the White House’s authorization. Kushner’s article, and the way its publication deliberately courted controversy with the French, is yet another indication that this administration understands that the issue has escalated into a crisis demanding an end to business as usual on the part of Washington and its foreign envoys.

Taking Jew-hatred seriously

The development reflects Trump’s war on American universities—from the Ivy Leagues to public college campuses—where he has sought to punish those that tolerated and encouraged the surge of Jew-hatred swept in after the Hamas-led terrorist attacks in Israel on Oct. 7. That effort has also been criticized by Democrats, liberals and leftists for the willingness of the president to take on institutions that Trump’s predecessors never dared to challenge in this manner.

In that case, what has happened doesn’t validate the accusations of incipient authoritarianism that have been leveled at the president. Nor is it violating the rights of the mobs of leftist antisemites, many of whom are foreigners likely violating the terms of their visas, who have targeted Jews while chanting for the destruction of Israel and Jewish genocide (“From the river to the sea”) or for terrorism against Jews wherever they live (“Globalize the intifada”). Instead, the measures undertaken to pressure these schools via stripping them of federal funding (as is actually required under the law for their violations of Title VI of the 1964 Civil Rights Act) are a strategic decision aimed at toppling the reign of woke leftist ideology that seeks the destruction of the Western canon, an attack on America as an irredeemably racist nation as well as falsely labeling Jews and Israel as “white” oppressors.

The Kushner article is similar in that it, too, is an indication that this administration doesn’t feel bound by tradition or the usual constraints when it comes to dealing with matters it thinks are important. It’s also an entirely appropriate rebuke to a French government that is not only failing to protect its own Jewish community, but is also acting in a manner that is undermining U.S. diplomatic efforts in the Middle East and encouraging Hamas to continue to refuse to disarm or release the remaining Israeli hostages that they still hold.

For all of the umbrage that the French government has expressed about what it considers to be Kushner’s effrontery in calling them out in this manner, it is Paris and not Washington that should be apologizing for its behavior.

The piece, which took the form of an open letter to Macron, denounced the surge in antisemitism in the wake of Oct. 7. He demanded that Macron and his government enforce hate-crimes laws and ensure the safety of French Jews while adding that it should “abandon steps that give legitimacy to Hamas and its allies.”

That’s a reference to Macron’s announcement that France will—like the United Kingdom, Canada and Australia—recognize a Palestinian state at the annual meeting of the U.N. General Assembly in September. This decision isn’t just an unconscionable reward to the Palestinians for their atrocities on Oct. 7. It has also undermined American efforts to pressure Hamas to agree to a ceasefire-hostage release deal. The terrorists have concluded that they do not need to make concessions since continuing the war that has brought so much suffering to their own people has also garnered them international sympathy from Western nations.

That sympathy is the result of Hamas’s successful propaganda campaign falsely alleging that Israel is committing “genocide” and deliberately starving Gazans.

The call for a Palestinian state by France is the product of two factors.

One is Macron’s frustration over being left out of Middle East diplomacy. Paris and London have indeed been sidelined in efforts to end the post-Oct. 7 war. But that is a function of the fact that neither has been in any sense a great power for the last 70 years.

It’s a particularly sore point for the French for whom Kushner’s article was a humiliating act of lèse-majesté toward Macron—a devastating blow to their national self-worth, which is rooted in delusions about a past defined by la gloire—not to mention a reminder of their current second-rate status.

Both nations have become irrelevant, and their calls for a Palestinian state—something that the Palestinians have repeatedly rejected for 78 years if it means living side by side with a Jewish one—are a way to intrude into a diplomatic process to which they have nothing to offer but their own inflated sense of self-importance and growing hostility to Israel. That hostility relates directly to the criticism of Macron by Kushner and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Palestinian statehood and antisemitism

Calls for a Palestinian state now bolster Hamas and give it a reason to continue to hold onto hostages as well as to keep the war going. They are also a gesture of appeasement to the growing Muslim population in Western Europe and their left-wing allies. The effort to mollify the bizarre red-green alliance of Marxist and Islamist Jew-haters, whose voice grows louder with each passing year on the continent and in their respective countries, is behind Britain’s and France’s turn against Israel. In doing so, Macron is, despite his denials, helping to unleash the storm of antisemitic invective that has made French Jews unsafe, and caused both them and visitors to the country to conceal their Jewish identity to avoid being subjected to harassment or worse.

The increasing atmosphere of intimidation and violence with which French Jews have had to deal in recent years is primarily caused by the rising influence of Islamists in domestic politics and culture. And it has led many people to leave that country because they have not unreasonably concluded that there is no future there for Jews.

The French government thinks that this is none of Kushner’s business—or, for that matter, that of the United States.

Macron’s claim that criticism of French inaction on antisemitism violated an ambassador’s “duty not to interfere in the internal matters of states” rings hollow. As Michael Oren, historian and former Israeli ambassador to the United States, noted, this is the “height of hypocrisy and chutzpah” because France violates “that principle daily with Israel” with its efforts to interfere in Jerusalem’s political controversies as well as its ability to defend itself against genocidal terrorists, who it wishes to empower with statehood.

It’s equally true that France’s involvement in the affairs of its former colonies in Africa is not merely a violation of this standard of non-interference but also a vestige of imperialism that harms those countries by draining their resources and contributing to the flow of illegal immigrants to Europe, something Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni has pointed out.

Kushner has himself been subjected to criticism as an inappropriate choice for such a prestigious ambassadorial post, as well as evidence of nepotism. Yet he is far from the first presidential friend, relative or donor to receive a diplomatic appointment, including some past ambassadors to France.

The New Jersey real estate magnate served time in prison for his role in an unseemly plot against his brother-in-law that inflated a private business dispute into a scandal. That his actions were illegal, as well as tawdry, is not in dispute. But it’s also possible to argue that Trump’s subsequent presidential pardon for his daughter’s father-in-law was at least partly justified by the fact that the 2004 prosecution undertaken against him by then-U.S. Attorney and future New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie was selective and unduly harsh in nature, in addition to a case of retaliation against a donor to his political opponents.

A taste of their own medicine

Whatever we might think about this appointment, Kushner’s willingness to use the bully pulpit afforded him by his ambassadorial rank to speak out against French antisemitism and sabotage of American Middle East diplomacy was entirely appropriate—and necessary.

Trump and Kushner have given France a taste of its own medicine; Paris deserved a rebuke for its continued failure to battle Jew-hatred. In doing so, they’ve also shown that the administration’s willingness to break the old rules of diplomacy is sometimes exactly what is needed if progress is to be made.

When such rules protect governments that tolerate antisemitism, the right thing for America is to denounce them. That’s just as true when it comes to democratic France as it would be for rogue Third World or Communist regimes that are a threat to peace.

Trump has done this before in Europe with respect to NATO members that aren’t paying their fair share of the costs of defending the continent and exploiting the generosity of the United States. While his sometimes harsh and even crass rhetoric about the obsolete nature of NATO raised hackles in Europe and among the foreign-policy establishment, such tactics are what have driven nations there to begin to pay up rather than depending on the largesse of American taxpayers.

Blunt American talk about feckless European enabling of Jew-hatred and Hamas is just as necessary.

If France or any other Western nation wants to be taken seriously on these issues, they have to cease their efforts to undermine Israeli security and to appease domestic forces that are the engines behind a new wave of antisemitism. Until then, they should be told in no uncertain terms by the United States that they are undeserving of the title of American ally and deserve no deference when it comes to their domestic troubles.

Loath as they are to give him credit for anything that he and his administration do, it’s time for Trump’s critics to acknowledge that his emphasis on the fight against antisemitism, at home and abroad, is laudable. It’s also a needed course correction from the policies of a Biden administration that, like Macron, was more interested in toadying to forces that hated Israel and the Jews than standing with an embattled Jewish people and a besieged Jewish state. The traditions of diplomacy that Washington is flouting are enabling antisemitism and encouraging Hamas. Trump and Kushner are right to scrap them.


Jonathan S. Tobin is editor-in-chief of the Jewish News Syndicate, a senior contributor for The Federalist, a columnist for Newsweek and a contributor to many other publications. He covers the American political scene, foreign policy, the U.S.-Israel relationship, Middle East diplomacy, the Jewish world and the arts. He hosts the JNS “Think Twice” podcast, both the weekly video program and the “Jonathan Tobin Daily” program, which are available on all major audio platforms and YouTube. Previously, he was executive editor, then senior online editor and chief political blogger, for Commentary magazine. Before that, he was editor-in-chief of The Jewish Exponent in Philadelphia and editor of the Connecticut Jewish Ledger. He has won more than 60 awards for commentary, art criticism and other writing. He appears regularly on television, commenting on politics and foreign policy. Born in New York City, he studied history at Columbia University.


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Głód jako współczesna odmiana oszczerstwa o krwi: krucjata dziennikarzy przeciwko Żydom

Generowanie głodu przy pomocy AI.


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Głód jako współczesna odmiana oszczerstwa o krwi: krucjata dziennikarzy przeciwko Żydom

Bob Goldberg


Ogłoszenie przez ONZ klęski głodu w Gazie nie jest neutralną informacją, lecz najnowszą mutacją starego oszczerstwa — oskarżenia o mord rytualny — przebranej w szaty dziennikarstwa, uświęconej przez NGO i wykorzystanej jako broń w sądzie opinii publicznej.

Prawdopodobnie znasz już ten rytuał, odmawiany z liturgiczną precyzją. „Głód potwierdzony.” „Porażka ludzkości.” Ulubione przymiotniki ONZ pojawiają się jak w zegarku — jakby żałosna skarga była komunikatem prasowym. 22 sierpnia wspierana przez ONZ organizacja IPC ogłosiła klęskę głodu w Gazie i wokół niej, stosując znane progi oceny i obowiązkowe potępienie Izraela. Agencje informacyjne zareagowały zgodnie z oczekiwaniami, a potępienia posypały się lawinowo.

Od miesięcy izraelska jednostka COGAT publikuje szczegółowy bilans ciężarówek, ton i tras. ONZ natomiast zlicza jedynie ułamek tych dostaw, ponieważ pomija kanały inne niż ONZ-owskie — dostawy międzyrządowe, prywatne transporty, zrzuty powietrzne i przesyłki od GHF. Manipulowanie liczbami

To nie jest zwykłe zaokrąglenie — to mechanizm napędzający narrację. Między majem a sierpniem 2025 roku, według COGAT, do Gazy wjechało ok. 9200 ciężarówek; ONZ publicznie odnotowała 3553. Różnica niemal 6000 ciężarówek — niedoszacowanie wystarczająco duże, by wpływać na nagłówki, politykę, a nawet modele głodu.

To nie są detale techniczne. Panele danych ONZ stały się de facto „jedynym źródłem prawdy” dla dziennikarzy, dyplomatów i prokuratorów tworzących przekazy medialne, a w niektórych przypadkach — wnioski o aresztowania. Ale gdy twoja „prawda” pomija całe kanały dostaw, przestajesz mierzyć rzeczywistość — zaczynasz ją fabrykować. (Publiczne dossier COGAT szczegółowo omawia te rozbieżności — warto przeczytać, nawet jeśli nie zgadzasz się z izraelską polityką.)


Przejdźmy do samego ogłoszenia klęski głodu. Jeśli masz déjà vu, to dlatego, że już tu byliśmy — tylko w innych słowach. W połowie 2024 r. Komitet Przeglądu Głodu IPC analizował wcześniejsze twierdzenia, że „głód już nadszedł”, i uznał, że w tamtym momencie głód jeszcze nie występował, choć ostrzegał, że ryzyko jest wysokie, jeśli wojna i ograniczenia dostępu będą się utrzymywać. Innymi słowy — nie zaprzeczenie, lecz ostrożność. Retoryka wyprzedziła dane.

Przeskakujemy do sierpnia 2025 r. — IPC twierdzi, że progi klęski głodu zostały spełnione w mieście Gaza. Wiele mediów powtarza klasyczne kryteria — skrajny brak żywności dla >20% gospodarstw domowych, ostre niedożywienie dzieci >30%, i dwa zgony na 10 000 osób dziennie. Krytycy odpowiadają, że IPC wprowadziło tu wskaźnik MUAC (obwód ramienia w połowie długości) na poziomie 15% — łatwiejszy do zebrania, lecz mniej precyzyjny niż standardowa miara (waga/wzrost) — co w praktyce oznacza przesunięcie jednego z progów. To nie jest akademicka różnica — to różnica między „kryzysem”, „nagłą sytuacją” a „klęską głodu” na pierwszych stronach gazet. IPC i agencje ONZ bronią swojej decyzji; sceptycy twierdzą, że standard został nagięty do z góry założonego wniosku. Obie strony nie mogą mieć racji.


Na scenę wkraczają organizacje pozarządowe. Konstelacja grup — niektóre z długą historią, inne z długimi listami celów politycznych — forsowała oskarżenia o „głodzenie jako broni” już w kilka dni po 7 października, przesuwając deklaracje i listy otwarte z sal konferencyjnych do biurek prokuratorów. Ten nieustanny nacisk doprowadził Międzynarodowy Trybunał Karny od przyjęcia wniosków (maj 2024) do wydania nakazów aresztowania (listopad 2024) wobec izraelskich przywódców — kroki bez precedensu, które od tej pory ciążą nad każdą debatą o Gazie. Można ten proces chwalić lub potępiać — ale nie można udawać, że odbył się w próżni informacyjnej.

Więc co tak naprawdę wiemy — a co zostało kunsztownie skonstruowane?

Wiemy, że organ wspierany przez ONZ ogłosił klęskę głodu w Gazie. Wiemy, że Izrael odrzuca to ustalenie i zarzuca ONZ niedoliczenie tysięcy ciężarówek z pomocą — co ONZ tłumaczy jako „problem z monitorowaniem”, a nie zniekształcenie rzeczywistości. Wiemy, że spór o metodologię pomiaru niedożywienia dzieci (MUAC kontra waga/wzrost; 15% kontra 30%) stanowi dziś oś geopolitycznego dramatu moralnego. I wiemy, że kiedy instytucje zamieniają sporne dane wejściowe w absolutne twierdzenia, polityka podąża za najkrzykliwszym arkuszem kalkulacyjnym.

A jeśli myślisz, że to przypadek — to nie zwracałeś uwagi. Prawdziwym osiągnięciem jest tutaj odwrócenie narracji — ukrycie faktu, że Hamas produkuje cierpienie, a ONZ je wybiela — po to, by mdłe demokracje Zachodu mogły legitymizować przekształcenie Izraela — ofiary ludobójstwa — w jego rzekomego sprawcę.



Widzieliśmy już ten spektakl.

Widzieliśmy, jak narody zamieniają Żydów jako grupę w „innego” — z natury złowrogiego. Widzieliśmy, jak całe społeczeństwa zamieniają się w stado, polując na ludzi jak na zwierzynę, zrywając okowy cywilizacji i uwalniając sadyzm. Sebastian Haffner (pseudonim Raimunda Pretzla) — niemiecki dziennikarz i historyk — w swoich wspomnieniach Przeciw Hitlerowi opisał stopniową erozję praw i bezpieczeństwa Żydów w nazistowskich Niemczech oraz reakcje niemieckiego społeczeństwa. Jako „Aryjczyk” z wieloma żydowskimi przyjaciółmi i narzeczoną, był bezpośrednim świadkiem prześladowań.

Haffner zauważył, że naziści nie byli pierwsi w historii, którzy „odmówili ludziom solidarności gatunku, pozwalającej przetrwać; którzy skierowali instynkty drapieżne, zwykle zarezerwowane dla innych gatunków, przeciwko członkom własnego — i uczynili z całego narodu sforę łowców.”

Innowacją nazistów było przekształcenie tych instynktów w narracje konstruowane przez dziennikarzy i historyków — narracje, które nie opowiadały o nienawiści, ale o „kwestii żydowskiej”. Haffner pisał:
„Publicznie grożąc osobie, grupie etnicznej, narodowi lub regionowi śmiercią i zniszczeniem, prowokują ogólną debatę nie na temat własnej egzystencji, lecz na temat prawa swoich ofiar do istnienia.”

Arabowie w Palestynie dobrze przyswoili tę lekcję — zarówno od nazistów, jak i od Sowietów. Tym, co dziś się zmieniło, jest — jak zauważył David Nirenberg — że media nie tylko rozpowszechniają wiedzę w nowych formach, lecz także tworzą nowe formy „wiedzy”.

Tak było z wynalezieniem druku — i tak jest w epoce mediów społecznościowych: współudział historyków w przekształceniu oszczerstwa o krwi z zabobonu w „naukę” czy „dziennikarstwo”.

Narracja o „Izraelu ludobójczym” nie zwyciężyła dzięki sile dowodów, lecz dzięki łatwości powielania. Dziennikarze, akademicy i influencerzy przyjmują tę ramę, powtarzają ten język i cytują siebie nawzajem, aż źródła wyparowują, a pozostaje jedynie aura autorytetu.

Wczorajszemu oszczerstwu wystarczały kroniki filmowe i gazety; dziś potrzebuje Canvy, Substacka, niebieskiego ptaszka i pętli zwrotnej. W ciągu jednego cyklu informacyjnego zamienia się w ideologię — potem w politykę: szkolne dogmaty, raporty NGO-sów, uchwały parlamentarne, rozmowy o sankcjach, a nawet akty oskarżenia. Oszczerstwo wraca — z przypisami — i pisze notatki służbowe.

Dlaczego sposoby myślenia o Żydach jako siłach zła, których samo istnienie budzi sprzeciw, okazały się tak trwałe, tak elastyczne i tak łatwe do przekazywania przez epoki i kultury — także w naszej? Niezależnie od kontekstu, w którym powstały, co sprawia, że logika spiskowa wciąż czerpie nowe życie z technologii, nauk i środków komunikacji każdej kolejnej epoki?

Jak pokazuje próba oskarżenia Izraela o zagłodzenie Gazy w ramach kampanii ludobójczej — ścieżka wytyczona przez oszczerstwo o krwi jeszcze się nie skończyła. Być może właśnie osiąga swój punkt kulminacyjny.


Link do oryginału: https://thenewzionisttimes.substack.com/p/famine-as-blood-libel-journalisms

The New Zionist Times, 22 sierpnia 2025. 


Bob Goldberg współzałożyciel Center for Medicine in the Public Interest (CMPI) i przewodniczący Manhattan Institute’s Center for Medical Progress.


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Homo sapiens i myślenie stadne

Australijscy demonstranci podczas Nationwide March for Palestine w Sydney niosą lalki umazane „krwią” (Sydney, Australia, 24 sierpnia 2025. Photo credit: REUTERS/HOLLIE ADAMS).


.

Homo sapiens i myślenie stadne

Andrzej Koraszewski


Racjonalizm naszego gatunku jest złudzeniem. W ubiegłym stuleciu dwukrotnie widzieliśmy obłęd polowań na czarownice na globalną skalę. Absurdalne obietnice wspaniałego jutra pociągnęły setki milionów do akceptacji gułagów i obozów zagłady. Chińska rewolucja kulturalna nie tylko zmieniała stada chińskich studentów w bestie, ale miała również wdzięcznych sympatyków na Zachodzie. Ludobójstwo w Sudanie i w Rwandzie miało niemal pełne poparcie społeczeństwa. Stulecia historii pokazują, że trzeci szympans nieustannie szuka okazji do wystąpienia w roli szlachetnego mordercy. W całej udokumentowanej historii widzieliśmy, jak grupowy konformizm nieodmiennie brał górę nad gotowością kwestionowania nawet najbardziej idiotycznych twierdzeń.

Tak, miliony ludzi wierzyły w czarownice, a protestujących przeciw ich paleniu na stosach można było policzyć na palcach. Miliony wierzyły, że Żydzi zatruwają studnie i są winni zarazom. Możesz się zastanawiać, dlaczego w tych zbiorowych obłędach tak często pojawiają się właśnie Żydzi? Nie zawsze tak jest — nawet dziś afrykańskie polowania na czarownice odbywają się bez Żydów. Widzieliśmy w historii liczne religijne obłędy i kiedy stawały się w danym społeczeństwie naprawdę powszechne, niewiara była karana z całym okrucieństwem tłumu i bezwzględnością prawa.

Kiedy zbiorowa histeria sprzęga się z dostępem do władzy, irracjonalna idea dostaje przyzwolenie władz kościelnych i świeckich oraz wzmocnienie ze strony instytucji edukacyjnych i mediów. Krytyk staje się automatycznie heretykiem napiętnowanym przez opinię publiczną, a często również winnym przestępstwa w oczach prawa.

Konformizm okazuje się instynktownym odruchem i każda próba naruszenia wierzeń grupy wywołuje lęk i gniew. Propozycja wspólnej analizy traktowana jest jako atak — i w pewnym sensie słusznie, ponieważ samo rozważanie słuszności grupowego credo jest herezją. Pytanie: „Skąd to wiesz?” kwitowane jest odpowiedzią: „Nie dyskutuję o moich wartościach!”

W dzisiejszym świecie potępienie Izraela jest dogmatem „oświeconych”. Terminy takie jak „ludobójstwo”, „głodzenie”, „dzieciobójstwo”, „apartheid” — to stały repertuar wierzeń niepodlegających dyskusji.

Kiedy tłumy mieszkańców Australii wylegają na ulice z umazanymi „krwią” lalkami, kryje się za tym udrapowana w „sprawiedliwość” żądza mordu.

Bliżej nas mamy chwilowo mniej liczny tłumek podobnie myślących. Mamy tu posłów, dziennikarzy, profesorów i celebrytów. Same znakomitości, które nie mogą się mylić i stanowczo odmawiają odpowiedzi na proste pytania. Ostatnio zwróciłem się do posła Franka Starczewskiego z poznańskiego Łazarza z następującym pytaniem:

Czy może Pan wymienić w dotychczasowej udokumentowanej historii konfliktów zbrojnych od czasów Hannibala jeden przykład, w którym wroga populacja była tak zaopatrywana w żywność i medykamenty jak populacja Gazy?

Jak łatwo się domyślać, poseł Franek Starczewski nie odpowiedział. Ten poseł z dumą publikuje na swojej stronie na Facebooku, że niebawem statki z 44 krajów z całego świata popłyną, żeby przełamać blokadę, i że nie zabraknie tam przedstawicieli Polski — czyli Franka Starczewskiego, który będzie miał zaszczyt płynąć razem z innymi.

Poseł nie jest gotów odpowiedzieć na żadne pytanie, ponieważ Guardian poinformował go, że 83 procent ofiar to palestyńscy cywile. Więc poseł konkluduje: „To nie jest obrona przed terrorystami, to jest czystka etniczna i eksterminacja całego narodu.” Franek S. apeluje do rządu o poparcie jego misji, ponieważ — jak pisze:

„Niewyobrażalne cierpienie Gazy wynika z działań militarnych oraz z blokady organizowanej przez Izrael — do strefy od miesięcy nie dociera pomoc humanitarna.”

Heretyk mógłby bez trudu skonstruować kilka innych pytań do posła Franka Starczewskiego, do profesora warszawskiego uniwersytetu czy do sławnej pani reżyser. Mógłby zapytać o przykład ludobójstwa, w którym ludność cywilna była przed atakami ostrzegana i proszona o ustąpienie z pola walki. Mógłby zapytać, na jakiej podstawie orzeczono o głodzie. Mógłby zapytać, co poseł rozumie przez „eksterminację całego narodu” i „ludobójstwo”.

Ani poseł Starczewski, ani profesor uniwersytetu, ani sławna pani reżyser, ani nawet reprezentujący nas premier nie odpowiedzą nam na te pytania, ponieważ zagrażałoby to ich egzystencji — samym podstawom ich zbiorowej wiary.

Czarny mieszkaniec RPA postanowił sprawdzić, jak to jest z tym apartheidem w Izraelu. Na lotnisku Ben Guriona zapytał pierwszego spotkanego człowieka, gdzie tu jest toaleta dla kolorowych. Osłupienie na twarzy Izraelczyka powiedziało mu wszystko — reszta pobytu była tylko potwierdzeniem, że był przez lata oszukiwany.

Przypominanie, że Międzynarodowy Trybunał Sprawiedliwości nakazał 24 maja 2024 r. wstrzymanie ofensywy w Rafah „ze względu na możliwość popełnienia ludobójstwa”, ma zapewne ograniczony sens. Czy powinniśmy być zdziwieni, że dziennikarze nie zauważyli czasu przyszłego, ani faktu, że zajęcie Rafah przez IDF nie spowodowało strat cywilnych, a tym bardziej żadnego ludobójstwa?

Zadawanie pytań, kto orzekł, że Izrael popełnia ludobójstwo, jest niestosowne. Kiedy badamy oficjalne wypowiedzi ONZ, okazuje się, że nie ma tu ani jednego jednoznacznego stwierdzenia. Są obawy, są insynuacje, są ucieczki od definicji utworzonej przez polskiego prawnika Rafała Lemkina i znajdującej się w konwencji o ludobójstwie, ale działania armii izraelskiej są tak odległe od ludobójstwa, że nawet ONZ daje do zrozumienia, że tego nie mówi — tylko zachęca innych do takich stwierdzeń.

Heretycy są indywidualistami, zadają pytania, na które nikt nie zamierza odpowiadać. Nie biegają z lalkami upaćkanymi „krwią”, ani nie płyną wyzwalać Gazy. Podobnie jak w czasach palenia czarownic, nasza odmowa szacunku dla pokrak w rodzaju posła Franka Starczewskiego jest konsekwencją gotowości zadawania pytań, samodzielnego myślenia i odmowy konformizmu — stadnego myślenia, które wydaje się być wpisane w ludzką naturę. Osobnicy w rodzaju posła Starczewskiego są romantykami, kierują się pełną tkliwości potrzebą bycia częścią wspólnoty ziejącej nienawiścią. Herezja krytycznego myślenia pozbawiłaby ich romantyzmu, odarłaby ich z tego, co wydaje im się człowieczeństwem.


Nihil novi sub sole.
 Posła Starczewskiego nie wybrali sympatycy PiS, ani Konfederaci, ani partii Grzegorza Brauna. W poznańskiej dzielnicy Łazarz głosowali na niego czytelnicy „Gazety Wyborczej”. Zdobył miejsce w Sejmie, przekonując do siebie ponad dziesięć tysięcy wyborców. Gdyby ktoś pytał, co zmartwychwstało w poznańskiej dzielnicy Łazarz — polecam numery przedwojennego „Kuriera Poznańskiego”.


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‘Nazi Summer Camp’: Fidelity Investment Employee Launches Antisemitic Tirade Against Jewish Journalist


‘Nazi Summer Camp’: Fidelity Investment Employee Launches Antisemitic Tirade Against Jewish Journalist

Dion J. Pierre


Danielle Gordon, who harassed Jewish author, journalist, and mother Bethany Mandel. Photo: Screenshot.

A telecenter operator who was, until recently, employed by Fidelity Investments launched on Monday a volley of antisemitic insults at a Jewish journalist via social media after learning that her children attend a summer camp which fosters pride in Zionism.

“F—k you and f—k your kid who goes to Nazi summer camp!” Danielle Gordon, the now-former employee, wrote to Bethany Mandel, author and contributor to the “Mom Wars” Substack. “Free Palestine from you sick f—ks!”

The exchange began when Mandel publicly discussed the presence of a paraglider over the camp’s property which, due to lingering trauma caused by the memory of the use of paragliders in Hamas’s Oct. 7, 2023, massacre across southern Israel — which preceded an explosion of antisemitic incidents across the US — appeared to pose an imminent security threat. Gordon seemingly took umbrage at Mandel’s concern for Jewish life and the lives of her children, and hastily fired off the messages from an account which listed her legal name.

“I found it troubling that she sent such antisemitic vitriol when she’s just a working class, college educated white woman living in Denver — that is how far this rot has spread,” Mandel told The Algemeiner on Monday after her sharing of Gordon’s messages amassed over a million views on X. “Antisemitism has become normative discourse for people of her demographic.”

Mandel continued, “That word, Zionist, triggered her very much, and she had no qualms about coming at me, coming at my kids … There should be consequences for talking like this.”

On Tuesday, StopAntisemitism, a Jewish civil rights group based in New York City, reported that Fidelity Investments promptly fired Gordon from her role, citing anonymous reports from people close to the situation. The corporation, however, has so far declined to publicly comment on the matter.

“Internal Fidelity employees have confirmed that Danielle Gordon’s employment has been terminated. Fidelity Investment Services deserves recognition for acting swiftly and decisively, sending a powerful message that violence and blatant antisemitism have no place in our society,” StopAntisemitism said in a statement. “At a time when moral clarity is often missing, their response sets an example we should all uphold.”

A source separately confirmed with The Algemeiner that Gordon no longer works at Fidelity.

This incident comes just weeks after another sudden outburst of hatred against Jews.

Earlier this month, Eden Deckerhoff — a female student at Florida State University (FSU) — allegedly assaulted a Jewish male classmate at the Leach Student Recreation Center after noticing his wearing apparel issued by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF).

“F—k Israel, Free Palestine. Put it [the video] on Barstool FSU. I really don’t give a f—k,” the woman said before shoving the man, according to video taken by the victim. “You’re an ignorant son of a b—h.” Deckerhoff has since been charged with misdemeanor battery.

According to the Tallahassee Democrat, Deckerhoff has denied assaulting the student when questioned by investigators, telling them, “No I did not shove him at all; I never put my hands on him.” However, law enforcement charged her with misdemeanor battery and described the incident in court documents as seen in viral footage of the incident, acknowledging that Deckerhoff “appears to touch [the man’s] left shoulder.” Despite her denial, the Democrat noted, she has offered to apologize.

Days later, an unknown person or group graffitied swastikas and other hateful messages on the grounds of the Israeli-American Council’s (IAC) national headquarters in Los Angeles, underscoring the severity of the antisemitism crisis in the US.

“F—k Jews,” one cluster of graffiti said.

“BDS,” the message added, referring to the boycott, divestment, and sanctions movement against Israel.

Elsewhere, the vandal defaced the property with a symbol representing the Nazi paramilitary Schutzstaffel (SS) group, several more swastikas, and, scrawled in capital letters, the word, “BURN.” Local law enforcement is on the case, numerous outlets have reported since the incident.

Mandel and the male Jewish FSU student were not the first victims of violence or harassment motivated by antisemitic anti-Zionism in the US. In some cases, such incidents have been fatal.

In June, a gunman murdered two Israeli embassy staffers in Washington, DC, while they exited an event at the Capital Jewish Museum hosted by a national Jewish organization. The suspect charged for the double murder, 31-year-old Elias Rodriguez from Chicago, yelled “Free Palestine” while being arrested by police after the shooting, according to video of the incident. The FBI affidavit supporting the criminal charges against Rodriguez stated that he told law enforcement he “did it for Gaza.”

Less than two weeks later, a man firebombed a crowd of people who were participating in a demonstration to raise awareness of the Israeli hostages who remain imprisoned by Hamas in Gaza. A victim of the attack, Karen Diamond, 82, later died, having sustained severe, fatal injuries.

Another antisemitic incident motivated by anti-Zionism occurred in San Francisco, where an assailant identified by law enforcement as Juan Diaz-Rivas and others allegedly beat up a Jewish victim in the middle of the night. Diaz-Rivas and his friends approached the victim while shouting “F—k the Jews, Free Palestine,” according to local prosecutors.

“[O]ne of them punched the victim, who fell to the ground, hit his head and lost consciousness,” the San Francisco district attorney’s office said in a statement. “Allegedly, Mr. Diaz-Rivas and others in the group continued to punch and kick the victim while he was down. A worker at a nearby business heard the altercation and antisemitic language and attempted to intervene. While trying to help the victim, he was kicked and punched.”

The wave of hate continues a pattern of year-on-year surges in acts of anti-Jewish bigotry.

In 2024, according to newly released FBI statistics, hate crimes perpetrated against Jews increased by 5.8 percent to 1,938, the largest total recorded in over 30 years of the FBI’s counting them. Jewish American groups noted that this surge, which included 178 assaults, is being experienced by a demographic group which constitutes just 2 percent of the US population.

A striking 69 percent of all religion-based hate crimes that were reported to the FBI in 2024 targeted Jews, with 2,041 out of 2,942 total such incidents being antisemitic in nature. Muslims were targeted the next highest amount as the victims of 256 offenses, or about 9 percent of the total.


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