JEWS ARE DESPERATE.
Mark Levin is begging again Trump to reject the peace-deal and expand the war on Iran because the Iranian regime is literally “Hitler.”
Fighting this war to the bitter end is “our generation’s obligation.”
The main nuclear threat in the Middle East is not Iran, but Israel.
Israel is a threat to all of humanity. The biggest obstacle to peace is Israel and its twisted Zionism.
@emilyjuniper_ They were cheering and celebrating while they caused this on other parts of the world👇👇 history and future generations will remember.
https://t.co/P9m3gA7q8r
🚨 BREAKING : 15 year old Amir Al-Bashiti was shot and killed by Israeli forces while sleeping in a displacement tent in southern Khan Younis, Gaza Strip.
BREAKING:
Apocalyptic scenes in Lebanon’s capital right now.
Israel is bombing residential buildings in densely populated neighborhoods of Beirut.
A ceasefire that still allows bombs to fall on civilians is not a ceasefire.
A video documenting the moment Israel killed young Khalil Al-Masri with a gunshot wound to the head yesterday in Gaza
Khalil was one of my neighbors before the war a kind man who was loved by everyone He was killed, but his kindness and good character will remain a lasting testimony to the person he was 💔🕊️
Iran is not an Arab nation, yet it was the only country to stand up for Palestine and Lebanon. Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Kuwait, Jordan, Qatar, and Bahrain are all Arab, but they chose to back Israel. The moral courage of Iranians is truly unmatched!
There are moments in Gaza when suffering becomes so ordinary that people stop asking for solutions.
They begin asking only for the smallest relief. A little less pain.
A child who sleeps through the night.
When I entered the clinic that morning, I noticed a young woman carrying a baby so small that I could not tell whether the child was a newborn or simply made tiny by hardship.
When her turn came, she gently placed the baby on my desk and said:
“I want any cream you have.” Any cream. Not a specific medicine. Not a particular treatment.
Just anything.
She uncovered the baby and showed me the severe rash covering much of the child’s fragile skin.
“I treat the baby with whatever free creams I can find in clinics,” she explained.
“Anything helps.”
As she spoke, I noticed something else. The baby was not wearing a diaper. Only pieces of cloth.
I asked why.
“I can’t afford diapers,” she replied calmly. “I wash these and use them again.”
Then she added that they were living in a tent and that her husband had suffered a serious foot injury and was unable to work.
“I’m not asking for much,” she said.
“I only want a cream.”
But what caught my attention most was not the rash.
It was the malnutrition.
The baby was severely underweight. The kind of malnutrition that is visible before any examination even begins.
So I asked the mother whether she had noticed.
She nodded. “Yes, I know.”
Then she said something I cannot forget: “When the baby gets older, things will get better.”
Not because she truly believed it.
But because hope was cheaper than treatment.
And treatment was something she could no longer afford. That was the moment that broke me.
Not the tent. Not the poverty. Not even the illness.
But the fact that this mother had lowered her expectations so much that she no longer dreamed of proper medical care, diapers, or adequate nutrition.
She came asking for the smallest thing she could imagine. A tube of cream.
Any cream.
Something that might make the baby hurt a little less.
The baby could not have been more than five months old.
Too young to understand war. Too young to understand poverty. Yet already carrying both on that tiny body.
There is something profoundly cruel about a world in which a mother’s greatest hope for her child is no longer a better future.
Only a little less suffering tonight.
#WoundedGaza
Israel lobby ran 'AI videos to convince elderly voters I was SLEEPING WITH ILHAN OMAR AND AOC' — Rep Thomas Massie
'$500 per vote, that’s what the Israeli lobby spent to beat me'
🚨🇺🇸 🇮🇱 The Pentagon just rated Israel a critical counterintelligence threat, and Congress is voting to merge America's military and spy services with it anyway.
Anthony Aguilar went to Washington to fight these bills and came back with a warning about how deep the merger runs.
Section 224 fuses the militaries through Title 10.
The parallel Section 622, out of Tom Cotton's intelligence committee, fuses the spy services through Title 50.
The U.S. military melts into Israel's, the CIA melts into Mossad, all in the same few months.
And the roots sink too deep to ever pull back out.
Aguilar says he's never seen a defense initiative shrink once it's created, and Section 224 even mandates a permanent Israeli "executive agent" inside the Pentagon, saluted like a senior officer.
Here's what every American should be appalled by.
Wiring a foreign power this deeply into your own military and intelligence core is the kind of thing that gets a person charged with treason if the country were Russia or China.
Do it for Israel, and it sails through with a quiet committee markup while almost nobody objects.