Saturday, October 28, 2023

Ilan Pappe and Dima Khalidi On The Global Struggle To Fight Against Free Speech Restrictions On Palestine And Independent Journalists, Intellectuals, And Activists In The West Who Seek To Voice Their Solidarity With The Palestinian People in Gaza and Beyond

https://www.aljazeera.com/program/upfront/2023/10/27/the-double-standards-of-free-speech-on-palestine

UPFRONT

October 27, 2023

The double standards of free speech on Palestine amid Israel’s war on Gaza

As the war in Gaza continues, why is the West cracking down on free speech?

A battle is playing out in the realm of public opinion on Israel’s war on Gaza.

While demonstrations have taken place across the globe in solidarity with Palestinians, there have been campaigns to silence critics of Israel’s actions.

Commentators, academics and even common citizens have reported increasing threats and retaliation for expressing their views or voicing solidarity with the Palestinian people, often in countries that proclaim to uphold values of freedom of expression and democracy.

On UpFront, Marc Lamont Hill speaks to Dima Khalidi, director of Palestine Legal, and Ilan Pappe, renowned author and professor of history at Exeter University, about the limits to free speech on the Israel-Gaza war.


 

ANGELA DAVIS ON THE HISTORICAL LINKS BETWEEN PALESTINE AND AFRICAN AMERICANS AND WHAT THEY MEAN

https://www.aljazeera.com/program/upfront/2023/10/27/angela-davis-palestine-is-a-moral-litmus-test-for-the-world

https://www.aljazeera.com/program/upfront/

Angela Davis: ‘Palestine is a moral litmus test for the world’

UPFRONT
October 27, 2023

Citing the late poet June Jordan, political activist Angela Davis stresses the importance of Palestine for other social justice movements.

There has been a long history of solidarity between Palestinians and Black Americans, and these last few weeks have been no exception.

While Israel continues its bombardment of Gaza, numerous Black activists in the United States have come together to demonstrate their solidarity with Palestinians.

These two places are more than 6,000 miles away from each other, with very different histories. So what’s behind this common recognition of a shared struggle?

On UpFront, renowned political activist Angela Davis speaks with Marc Lamont Hill on the history and meaning of Black American solidarity with the Palestinian cause.

ABOUT THE SPEAKER:

Angela Y. Davis is Professor Emerita of History of Consciousness and Feminist Studies at UC Santa Cruz. An activist, writer, and lecturer, her work focuses on prisons, police, abolition, and the related intersections of race, gender, and class. She is the author of many books, from Angela Davis: An Autobiography to Freedom Is a Constant Struggle.

 

ABOUT THE PROGRAM HOST:

Dr. Marc Lamont Hill is an award-winning journalist and author and is the Steve Charles Professor of Media, Cities, and Solutions at Temple University. Hill is known for his work addressing the intersections of race, justice, politics and culture. His latest best-selling book is ‘We Still Here: Pandemics, Policing, Protest and Possibility’ which follows on the success of ‘Nobody: Casualties of America’s War on the Vulnerable from Flint to Ferguson’. Hill has received numerous prestigious awards from the US National Association of Black Journalists, GLAAD, and the International Academy of Digital Arts and Sciences.

 

About the show:

Through rigorous debate, Marc Lamont Hill cuts through the headlines to challenge conventional wisdom.

 

Friday, October 27, 2023

Briahna Joy Gray and Marc Lamont Hill two of the finest journalists in America today in a profound and very informative CONVERSATION about Israel, Palestine, Gaza, Hamas, the United States and the International Response to what is really happening in the 'Middle East'


Author and journalist Marc Lamont Hill knows better than most what can happen to media professionals who advocate for Palestinian liberation. Fired from CNN back in 2018 for doing exactly that, he’s an excellent resource to weigh in on Gaza, and how the mainstream media messaging around the issue of Palestinian liberation is changing rapidly. Also, he dives in to his viral interview with a former Israeli deputy former minister re collective punishment, and explains what he learned from interviewing a Hamas spokesperson. You won’t want to miss this. 

VIDEO:  

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F1omv_nKk38 

 


U.S. Congresswoman Ilhan Omar On the Plight of the Palestinians in Gaza and the Grave Necessity of a Ceasefire + She issues a statement in solidarity with the victims of the Tree of Life Synagogue on the Fifth anniversary of the Heinous antisemitic attack on the Jewish community in Pittsburgh, PA.

'Where is your humanity?': US Representative Ilhan Omar calls for Gaza ceasefire

October 22, 2023

VIDEO:    

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F6fnhal_NYs

"Where is your humanity?" US Democratic Representative Ilhan Omar gave a recent speech outside the Capitol building where she, along with a group of other Democrats, called for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza:

Middle East Eye Website:  

https://middleeasteye.net

Today marks 5 years since the tragic shooting at the Tree of Life synagogue. We remember the 11 lives lost and their loved ones. As we remember this loss that shook Pittsburgh, it’s more important than ever to fight against antisemitism and embrace all faiths with compassion.
 

 

Wednesday, October 25, 2023

Coverage on Day Nineteen of the Israeli-Hamas War and Its Deadly Impact on Palestinians in Gaza by Democracy Now! and the New York Times

Nowhere in Gaza Is Safe": Palestinian Death Toll Tops 5,000 as Israel Rejects Calls for Ceasefire


https://www.nytimes.com/2023/10/24/world/middleeast/israel-gaza-bombing-un.html

As Gaza Barrage and Deaths Surge, Angry Accusations Fly at U.N.

Israel said it struck more than 400 targets in Gaza in its broadest single-day assault of the conflict. Palestinian officials said more than 700 were killed, the highest one-day toll of the war.

A man embraces the shroud-covered bodies of people killed in an airstrike in Khan Younis, in the Gaza Strip.
PHOTO: Mourning relatives killed in an airstrike on Tuesday in Khan Younis, in the Gaza Strip, after an Israeli aerial bombardment that Israel said was the heaviest of the war, and that Gazan officials said was the deadliest. Credit: Yousef Masoud for The New York Times

by Vivian Yee, Farnaz Fassihi and Eric Nagourney
October 24, 2023
New York Times 

Escalating its onslaught against Hamas, Israel hit the Gaza Strip with hundreds of airstrikes in a single day, Israeli officials said Tuesday, and officials in Hamas-controlled Gaza said it was the deadliest day for Palestinians there since the conflict began.

It was not possible to independently verify the claims, but it was clear that even before Israeli soldiers have set foot in the Palestinian enclave to retaliate for Hamas’s Oct. 7 rampage in Israel, a humanitarian disaster in Gaza was growing worse by the day.

If a diplomatic solution is possible, there was little sign of it Tuesday at the United Nations, where diplomats spent the day issuing futile pleas for a ceasefire and bitter denunciations.

Israel’s foreign minister, Eli Cohen, began his address to the Security Council by holding up photos of Israeli children kidnapped when Hamas gunmen and allied militants streamed into towns and military bases, shooting mostly unarmed civilians and seizing hostages. “I have to remember and never let you forget,” he said.

In a scathing address of his own to the council, the Palestinian Authority’s minister of foreign affairs, Riyad al-Maliki, accused the international community of “selectivity and double standards.” Officials in Gaza say that 5,791 people there have been killed since Oct. 7.

“Doesn’t this wholesale killing offend you?” Mr. al-Maliki demanded. Officials of Egypt and Jordan accused Israel of violating international law in its conduct of the war.

Israel’s foreign minister, Eli Cohen, and the Palestinian Authority’s minister of foreign affairs, Riyad al-Maliki, separately addressed the United Nations Security Council on Tuesday.
PHOTO:  Israel’s foreign minister, Eli Cohen, and the Palestinian Authority’s minister of foreign affairs, Riyad al-Maliki, separately addressed the United Nations Security Council on Tuesday. Credit:  Eduardo Munoz/EPA, via Shutterstock


The U.N. secretary general, António Guterres, tried to thread the needle. “The grievances of the Palestinian people cannot justify the appalling attacks by Hamas,” he said, “and those appalling attacks cannot justify the collective punishment of the Palestinian people.”

Mr. Guterres did not emerge unscathed from the angry exchange, after he said that the attacks by Hamas, in which more than 1,400 people in Israel were slaughtered, “did not happen in a vacuum,” prompting the Israeli ambassador to the United Nations to demand his immediate resignation.

“It’s really unfathomable,” declared the ambassador, Gilad Erdan. “It’s truly sad that the head of an organization that arose after the Holocaust holds such horrible views.”

In Gaza, the situation appeared to be growing worse by the hour. “The situation is desperate,” the World Health Organization warned on Tuesday

With Gaza’s power grid down and fuel for backup generators scarce, six hospitals there were forced to shut down, the W.H.O. said, and those that have managed to stay open are running out of supplies, their workers taking boxes off delivery trucks and straight into operating rooms.

Israel has tens of thousands of troops massed outside Gaza, waiting for orders to invade the territory, where some 200 Israelis seized in the Hamas raid are being held hostage. In the meantime, Israel has been pounding the enclave with airstrikes, more than 400 in the previous 24 hours alone, up from 320 a day earlier, its military said Tuesday.

The Israeli government has been under pressure to delay a ground assault to allow desperately needed provisions to get to civilians in Gaza. The United States government has also urged Israel to slow down out of concern that it has no real plan for achieving its goal of defeating Hamas, which controls the territory, once and for all.

But on Tuesday, John F. Kirby, a White House spokesman, made clear during a press briefing that the Biden administration does not support calls for a cease-fire. “A cease-fire right now really only benefits Hamas,” he said.

Israeli officials say they are using the air barrage to destroy Hamas installations, many of which are well concealed within — and beneath — residential neighborhoods and commercial districts, which have been devastated in the bombardment. But the challenges that poses became even clearer on Tuesday, a day after the militants released two women kidnapped in Israel.

Speaking to reporters at a hospital in Tel Aviv, one of the women, Yocheved Lifshitz, 85, described being marched through a network of subterranean tunnels under Gaza that she likened to “a spider web,” eventually arriving at a large room. In the first public account to emerge from any of the hostages, Ms. Lifshitz said she had been beaten by her kidnappers, but then had been treated relatively well in the tunnels.

An elderly woman sits before a cluster of broadcast microphones, with an Israeli flag and a group of people standing behind her.
PHOTO: “I went through hell,” said Yocheved Lifshitz, a hostage who was released on Monday. Credit:  Alexi J. Rosenfeld/Getty Images

About 20 of the hostages are believed to be children, and on Tuesday, family members pleaded with Hamas to release them. Some demonstrated outside U.N. headquarters in New York, while others have protested in front of Israel’s military headquarters in Tel Aviv.

Israel’s prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, warned Israelis on Tuesday to gird themselves. “It could be a long war,” he said after meeting with the president of France, Emmanuel Macron.

For his part, the French leader offered both support — “You are not alone,” he declared — and a note of caution.

“The fight must be without mercy,” Mr. Macron said, “but not without rules. Because we are democracies that are fighting against terrorists, democracies that respect the laws of war, democracies that do not target civilians, in Gaza or elsewhere.”

Mr. Macron later traveled to the West Bank, where violence has surged in the last two weeks, to meet with the Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas in Ramallah, and planned to head to Jordan on Wednesday to meet with King Abdullah II and possibly other regional leaders.

Concern remains high that the fighting between Israel and Hamas might set off a regional conflict that could be even harder to contain. Israeli forces have also been clashing with the militant group Hezbollah, which exercises de facto control over southern Lebanon; Hezbollah, like Hamas, is backed by Iran, an avowed enemy of Israel.

Mourners, several of them crying and others armed and in uniforms, stand over a flower-draped coffin at a funeral.
PHOTO:  The funeral of Yam Goldstein, who was an Israeli soldier, and her father, Nadav, on Monday in Shefayim, Israel. Credit: Tamir Kalifa for The New York Times

In Lebanon on Tuesday, the caretaker prime minister, Najib Mikati, met with U.N. peacekeeping forces and Lebanese troops stationed in the south of the country, calling for peace and denouncing Israel for “repeated attacks” on Lebanese soil, according to a statement.

Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken and other U.S. officials said there might be a surge in attacks on American troops from Iran-backed militias in Iraq and Syria because of the Israel-Hamas war.

In Gaza, a densely populated enclave wedged between Israel, Egypt and the sea, basic life necessities remain in desperately short supply, but some aid has begun to get in.

Egypt has allowed 54 trucks through the Rafah crossing into Gaza to date, and among their loads were 477 tons of medical supplies, 291 tons of food and 87 tons of water, Diaa Rashwan, the head of Egypt’s State Information Service, said at a news conference on Tuesday. An additional 250 trucks were waiting to cross.

Humanitarian groups have called for still more food, water and medicine to be sent in, as well as fuel — but Israel has balked at that last demand, because it says Hamas could use fuel for military purposes.

Boys stand around a horse-drawn cart filled with yellow, blue and clear plastic jugs at a water filling station in southern Gaza.
PHOTO:  A water filling station on Tuesday in Khan Younis, Gaza. Credit: Samar Abu Elouf for The New York Times

While Israel has cut off fuel shipments to Gaza, the Israeli military contends that Hamas has stockpiled an ample supply — and has refused to share it with hospitals.

There were hints that the Israel position might change, however. Asked whether Israel would allow fuel into the Gaza Strip, Herzi Halevi, the Israeli military’s chief of staff, appeared not to rule it out.

“Fuel?” he said. “We will ensure that it is where it needs to be to treat civilians. We will not allow fuel for Hamas so it can keep fighting the citizens of Israel.”

Hospitals in Gaza are paying a heavy price for the fuel shortages, with dozens of health centers out of commission, Palestinian officials said. A Health Ministry spokesman said in a statement on Tuesday that “the health care system has reached its worst stage in its history.”

The World Health Organization said that thousands of patients were at risk of complications or death as more shutdowns loom, including 1,000 people on dialysis, 130 premature babies and patients in intensive care or in need of surgery.

 

ABOUT THE AUTHORS:

 

Vivian Yee is the Cairo bureau chief, covering politics, society and culture in the Middle East and North Africa. She was previously based in Beirut, Lebanon, and in New York, where she wrote about New York City, New York politics and immigration. More about Vivian Yee

Farnaz Fassihi is a reporter for The New York Times based in New York. Previously she was a senior writer and war correspondent for the Wall Street Journal for 17 years based in the Middle East. More about Farnaz Fassihi

A version of this article appears in print on Oct. 25, 2023, Section A, Page 1 of the New York edition with the headline: Gaza Deaths Rise As Anger Flares In U.N. Speeches. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper 

 

Cenk Uygur On What the Real Stakes Are in the Israeli-Hamas War, the Deadly Siege in Gaza, And What It All Means Not Only to Palestinians But The World

Israel-Hamas War: "Enough Of The Bigotry Against Palestinians!" Piers Morgan vs Cenk Uygur

October 23, 2023

#piersmorgan #hamasattack #israel 

Piers Morgan Uncensored is joined by host and creator of The Young Turks and Presidential hopeful Cenk Uygur to discuss the ongoing war between Israel, Hamas and Palestine and a passionate and emotive debate over whether Israel's treatment and occupation of Palestine is just as bad as Hamas' attack on Israel. Cenk says that he has "had enough of the bigotry against Muslims and Palestinians", explaining that there is far more coverage and public condemnation of the atrocities committed by Hamas than there are the atrocities committed by Israel. He questions why people do not call the Israeli government terrorists when they've killed three times as many civilians as a terrorist group.

VIDEO:   https://www.youtube.co/watch?v=YRFKkmsDpuw


 

Nicholas Kristof On the Intrinsic Human Value of Palestinian children in Gaza Vis-A-Vis the Human Value of the Jewish children in Israel

https://www.nytimes.com/2023/10/21/opinion/israel-gaza-palestine-children.html 


We Must Not Kill Gazan Children to Try to Protect Israel’s Children
by Nicholas Kristof
October 21, 2023
New York Times
A black and white photograph of several children looking through the shattered windows of a car.
PHOTO:  In Gaza, children inspect damage from an Israeli bomb. Credit:  Samar Abu Elouf for The New York Times

The crisis in the Middle East is a knotty test of our humanity, asking how to respond to a grotesque provocation for which there is no good remedy. And in this test, we in the West are not doing well.

The acceptance of large-scale bombing of Gaza and of a ground invasion likely to begin soon suggests that Palestinian children are lesser victims, devalued by their association with Hamas and its history of terrorism. Consider that more than 1,500 children in Gaza have been killed, according to the Gaza Ministry of Health, and around one-third of Gaza homes have been destroyed or damaged in just two weeks — and this is merely the softening-up before what is expected to be a much bloodier ground invasion.

I’ve flown into beautiful, sun-washed Tel Aviv, where the graffiti reads “Destroy Hamas.” Israelis have been shattered by the Hamas terrorism and kidnappings, an attack that felt existential and explains the determination to dismantle Hamas, whatever the cost. The anxiety in Tel Aviv is palpable, peaceful though it seems, while Gaza is an inner ring of hell and probably on a path to something much worse.

The United States speaks a good deal about principles, but I fear that President Biden has embedded a hierarchy of human life in official American policy. He expressed outrage at the massacres of Jews by Hamas, as he should have, but he has struggled to be equally clear about valuing Gazan lives. And it’s not always evident whether he is standing four-square with Israel as a country or with its failed prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, a longtime obstacle to peace.

What are we to make of the Biden administration’s call for an additional $14 billion in assistance for Israel and simultaneous call for humanitarian aid for Gazans? Defensive weapons for Israel’s Iron Dome system would make sense, but in practice, is the idea that we will help pay for humanitarians to mop up the blood caused in part by our weapons?

What are we to tell Dr. Iyad Abu Karsh, a Gaza physician who lost his wife and son in a bombing and then had to treat his injured 2-year-old daughter? He didn’t even have time to care for his niece or sister, for he had to deal with the bodies of his loved ones.

“I have no time to talk now,” he told a Times colleague, his voice trembling over the phone. “I want to go bury them.”

In his speech on Thursday, Biden called for America to stand firmly behind Ukraine and Israel, two nations attacked by forces aiming to destroy them. Fair enough. But suppose Ukraine responded to Russian war crimes by laying siege to a Russian city, bombing it into dust and cutting off water and electricity while killing thousands and obliging doctors to operate on patients without anesthetic.

I doubt we Americans would shrug and say: Well, Putin started it. Too bad about those Russian children, but they should have chosen somewhere else to be born.

Here in Israel, because the Hamas attacks were so brutal and fit into a history of pogroms and Holocaust, they led to a resolve to wipe out Hamas even if this means a large human toll. “Gaza will become a place where no human being can exist,” declared Giora Eiland, a former head of the Israeli National Security Council. “There is no other option for ensuring the security of the State of Israel.”

I think that view reflects a practical and moral miscalculation. While I would love to see the end of Hamas, it’s not feasible to eliminate radicalism in Gaza, and a ground invasion is more likely to feed extremism than to squelch it — at an unbearable cost in civilian lives.

I particularly want to challenge the suggestion, more implicit than explicit, that Gazan lives matter less because many Palestinians sympathize with Hamas. People do not lose their right to life because they have odious views, and in any case, almost half of Gazans are children. Those kids in Gaza, infants included, are among the more than two million people enduring a siege and collective punishment.

Israel has suffered a horrifying terrorist attack and deserves the world’s sympathy and support, but it should not get a blank check to slaughter civilians or to deprive them of food, water and medicine. Bravo to Biden for trying to negotiate some humanitarian access to Gaza, but the challenge will be not just getting aid into Gaza but also distributing it to where it’s needed.

A prolonged ground invasion seems to me a particularly risky course, likely to kill large numbers of Israeli soldiers, hostages and especially Gazan civilians. We are better than that, and Israel is better than that. Leveling cities is what the Syrian government did in Aleppo or Russia did in Grozny; it should not be an American-backed undertaking by Israel in Gaza.

The best answer to this test is to try even in the face of provocation to cling to our values. That means that despite our biases, we try to uphold all lives as having equal value. If your ethics see some children as invaluable and others as disposable, that’s not moral clarity but moral myopia. We must not kill Gazan children to try to protect Israeli children.

The Times is committed to publishing a diversity of letters to the editor. We’d like to hear what you think about this or any of our articles. 

Here are some tips. And here’s our email: letters@nytimes.com.

 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

 
Nicholas Kristof joined The New York Times in 1984 and has been a columnist since 2001. He has won two Pulitzer Prizes, for his coverage of China and of the genocide in Darfur. You can follow him on Instagram, Facebook and Threads. His forthcoming memoir is “Chasing Hope: A Reporter’s Life.” @NickKristof

Tuesday, October 24, 2023

DEMOCRACY NOW! ON PUBLIC PROTESTS IN WASHINGTON D.C. LED BY JEWISH VOICE FOR PEACE AND IFNOTNOW IN SUPPORT OF PALESTINE AND TO DEMAND AN IMMEDIATE CEASEFIRE IN GAZA

Ceasefire Now! 

Rashida Tlaib, Naomi Klein Join Thousands in Jewish-Led D.C. Protest Against Gaza War

October 19, 2023 

Latest Shows 

Thousands rallied at the U.S. Capitol this week calling for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza, in what organizers with IfNotNow and Jewish Voice for Peace called the largest-ever protest of Jews in support of Palestine. Hundreds were also arrested during a sit-in of the Cannon House Office Building. We feature addresses by Rep. Rashida Tlaib, the only Palestinian American member of Congress, and author Naomi Klein.

Transcript: democracynow.org 

Democracy Now! is an independent global news hour that airs on over 1,500 TV and radio stations Monday through Friday. Watch our livestream at democracynow.org Mondays to Fridays 8-9 a.m. ET.

VIDEO:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3Uv7w7n_3q8



 

AOC AS ALWAYS ON THE CASE IS CALLING FOR A CEASEFIRE IN ISRAEL AND PALESTINE--SPREAD THE WORD...

"I'm for truth, no matter who tells it. I'm for justice, no matter who it's for or against."
--Malcolm X
 

It’s been a devastating time. Alexandria got onto Instagram Live last night to give some updates, and be in community, about the situation in Israel and Palestine.

We wanted to share her words directly with you →


Watch →

Yours in service,

Team AOC

Updates on #CeasefireNOW| Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez