Mohammed had bone marrow cancer and was treated at Israel's Sheba-Safra medical Center in Israel.
When he was cured the entire staff came to celebrate.
Israel is a country where every single citizen enjoys full equality regardless of their faith or race.
Hey Jewish people!! ✡️
Stop gatekeeping your incredible kindness and charity work! 😊
The Babka King reveals his most meaningful experience from his recent visit to Israel. 🇮🇱
As we all anxiously wait for Tucker to produce a single piece of evidence for any of his psychotic claims, I sense a growing rage amongst his shrinking number of groupies.
They must know by now that they’ve been played. They’ve invested their time in a circus clown who has backed himself in a corner. So rather than admit they got played, they rage out and claw at their own faces while emptying themselves into their pull-up diapers. It’s a sad thing to witness. The doomers and grifters are all being exposed.
Nas Daily on growing up Palestinian in Israel:
Nas says he spent the first half of his life trying to escape the place he grew up.
After earning a scholarship to Harvard, he met Jewish classmates for the first time and realized how different the world looked outside the environment he was raised in.
That experience shaped the mission behind Nas Daily: bringing people together instead of pushing them further apart.
He says those experiences continue to shape how he talks about one of the world's most difficult conflicts.
Nas on the Israel-Palestine conflict and the experiences that shaped his perspective:
“I happen to be part of 20% of Israel that’s not Jewish.”
“Arab, Palestinian, Muslim. As Muslim as it gets for hundreds of years.”
“I didn’t like the idea of being in a village, I didn’t like the culture of the village, and I didn’t like being looked down upon in Israel.”
“And so I escaped and went to Harvard, and that’s where I made Jewish friends. It took me 19 years to finally make a Jewish friend.”
“I’m here saying we didn’t want to live with Jews, and Jews didn’t want to live with us.”
“There’s a lot of blame to be assigned to everybody in the Middle East.”
“I grew up seeing people being torn apart because of labels. Because of your religion, where you come from, and what you believe in.”
“So the mission statement of Nas Daily is to bring people together, the opposite of what I grew up in.”
“My Israel-Palestine video that I made is not supposed to be divisive. It’s supposed to be uniting.”
“We are equally indigenous. We both have nowhere to go.”
“Would life have been better if I jumped on the Free Palestine train and made it a simplistic narrative?”
“I am a Palestinian. I understand how complicated this thing is.”
“The most dangerous thing for a Palestinian is not an Israeli, it’s another Palestinian with an AK-47.”
Nas Daily: The Internet Tried To Cancel Me via Trailblazers Podcast
I’m granting nepo baby @TuckerCarlson permission to publish the text messages he claims to have stating that I told him “President Trump shut down the investigation into Butler.”
Those were his words, and he should show he has a pair of balls and publish them.
Spoiler alert 🚨:
He won’t. Because they don’t exist. I’ve already shown you the messages which say the opposite. I’m really sorry if you’re still dumb enough to fall for this Times Square “Rolex” salesman’s act.
I went to an Israeli hospital.
I wanted to make this video for the last 7 years. This is what I grew up seeing. Now, you can see it too. Thank you @Hadassah for giving me access!
US Secretary of Health RFK Jr.:
If Israel wanted to commit a genocide against Palestinians, they could do it in a minute. That's doing the opposite. The Palestinian population is growing enormously around Israel.
If you want to see what a real genocide is, it's not happening in Israel. It's happening in all the nations around it.
I just received a private message from the biggest conservative think tank in the nation. I was told they made the decision to change their policy from ‘distinguishing between Islam and Islamism’ to moving more explicitly in the public debate about the incompatibility of ISLAM and the American republic, and that they’ve read my book and would love to have a meeting. 💪🏻💪🏻🔥🔥🔥
There is bipartisan opposition. As long as Turkey is under the leadership of Erdogan who aligns himself with Iran and Russia, harbors Hamas & remains the only NATO member to not sanction Russia, Turkey should NOT receive our best jets and military equipment.
For more than two years, a barefoot cartoon boy was the mascot of “Handala,” a self-described pro-Palestinian hacktivist collective that leaked the private photos of Israeli generals, wiped the servers of a Fortune 500 company, and broke into the personal inbox of the FBI director. The group insisted it was a grassroots resistance movement. It was not—and the IRGC has now confirmed that the man who actually ran it faced kinetic consequences for his digital warfare.
Seyed Yahya Hosseini Panjaki, who operated under the alias Yahya Hamidi, was killed in early March 2026 during the opening phase of Israel’s strikes on Iran. The Israeli military confirmed he died in a strike on the headquarters of Iran’s Ministry of Intelligence and Security (MOIS), part of a wave of precision operations against senior intelligence figures.
What was the leader of a grassroots hacktivist collective doing inside Iran’s intelligence nerve center? The answer is that he had never really been one. As Western intelligence had long suspected, “Handala” was a front for the MOIS. Cybersecurity firm Check Point named the underlying unit Void Manticore; others label it Banished Kitten, Storm-0842, Dune, Red Sandstorm, or TAG-145. The names differ, but they converge on the same entity: a state cyber-warfare unit embedded within Iran’s intelligence ministry.
Yesterday, for the first time, an IRGC-linked channel publicly tied Panjaki to the leadership of the hacking operation—a rare instance of Tehran acknowledging what Western intelligence had assessed for years. His death marks one of the most significant blows in years to Iran’s cyber-espionage apparatus and its overseas covert-operations network.
Handala surfaced in December 2023, just weeks after October 7, taking its name and imagery from the barefoot child drawn by Palestinian cartoonist Naji al-Ali in 1969, a symbol of the Palestinian national movement. Early posts cast the group as “a small fighter” aligned with Hamas before it pivoted to broader anti-Israel and anti-American messaging.
Its notoriety came from a relentless cadence of breaches and leaks designed to humiliate Iran’s enemies. In April 2026, it published what it said were more than 19,000 confidential images and videos pulled over years from the phone of former IDF Chief of Staff Herzi Halevi—including imagery from undisclosed meetings abroad. Earlier leaks targeted former PM Naftali Bennett, former Justice Minister Ayelet Shaked, Netanyahu’s chief of staff Tzachi Braverman, and figures such as Benny Gantz and Natan Sharansky.
In March 2026, it claimed to have breached the personal Gmail of FBI Director Kash Patel. Washington, in response, offered up to $10 million for information on the group’s members. The most consequential operation, however, was a destructive wiper attack on Stryker Corporation, the Michigan-based Fortune 500 medical-device maker, which reportedly wiped devices across the company’s global footprint—described as the most significant wartime cyberattack ever carried out against the United States.
Panjaki’s reach went well beyond cyber, into the wider machinery of Iran’s “grey-zone” warfare; that murky space that is neither open war nor peace, where a state attacks its enemies but stays just below the line that would trigger a military or legal response.
In Iran’s case—and Panjaki’s specifically—that meant operations to assassinate Iranian dissidents living abroad, along with kidnappings and sabotage against regime opponents and Israeli targets around the world. His fingerprints are on a recent wave of Iranian plots that hire local criminal gangs to attack Jewish targets globally—schemes that have been broken up in Spain, the United Kingdom, Australia, and even Sweden. That outsourcing is a microcosm of the whole grey-zone game: by paying a hired crew to do the killing instead of using its own officers, Tehran can deny involvement, make the attack hard to trace back, and slow down any response.
Western countries often struggle to fight this ambiguous kind of warfare. Their systems are built to treat a problem as either a crime for the police or an act of war for the military, so an attack that is deliberately neither falls through the cracks while agencies argue over whose job it is to respond. Western states are also instinctively reluctant to play the same game, often seeing this kind of covert subterfuge as unethical or too provocative—which leaves Tehran free to inflict real harm while rarely paying a price for it.
Operations like Handala’s are not just data theft—they are influence operations, built to humiliate a target’s leadership, expose its secrets, and stir up internal strife. Leaked emails and images of Israeli officials, a wiped hospital network, or a fake rocket siren played into a kindergarten do real damage to public trust and national morale, yet each arrives wrapped in enough deniability that the victim state can rarely hit back as if it were an act of war. In Israel, Iranian influence operations have focused on the war itself—sowing distrust and demoralization, inciting violence against Arab citizens, and spreading general chaos. Internationally, they have pushed libels and anti-Israel content, contributing to Israel’s destruction in the public square.
Panjaki’s comeuppance seriously disrupted Iran’s hack-and-leak leadership and its overseas-operations network, but it did not end Handala, nor Iran’s broader grey-zone campaign. Israel and the West face a serious, lasting challenge from operatives like Panjaki—and the clearest lesson of his death is the one Tehran understands best. Grey-zone operations are acts of war, and as it has become increasingly clear, the only way to stop Iran’s malicious activity is to ensure it faces real, explosive consequences.
President Trump, let's be honest. Syria fought Hezbollah for 12 years and couldn't defeat it. It was only after Israeli airstrikes destroyed Hezbollah's infrastructure in Damascus and provided air superiority during the opposition's advance that Assad's five-decade rule collapsed on December 8, 2024. The lesson? If you want to dismantle Hezbollah, you need Syria and Israel working together, not replacing one force with another. And if that's the goal, perhaps don't make a deal with the Islamic regime in Iran, the very regime that sponsors Hezbollah.
Every word of this is true. John has studied this war comprehensively.
He has been in the tunnels.
He understands the reality of what is happening.
You can definitely learn a thing or two by reading and following him 🫡🇺🇸
Because Hezbollah, a designated foreign terrorist organization, uses Southern Lebanon for training and staging attacks.
Oh, and because Hezbollah launches rockets and drones from there into Israel quite literally daily.
Happy to help, idiot.