Devastated Irishman says he was grateful to learn his daughter had been killed by Hamas rather than taken hostage: 'Death was a blessing'



Hamas terrorists have taken as many as 150 captives into Gaza following their savage attacks on Israel. Thomas Hand's daughter is not among them. Rather, she is among the over 1,200 Israelis murdered in recent days.

Upon learning that his little girl may ultimately have been spared the inhumanities captives often suffer at the hands of Hamas, the devastated Irishman reportedly rejoiced, later telling CNN, "Death was a blessing."

Hundreds of hostages facing unimaginable horrors

The Israel Defense Forces indicated Thursday that more than 95 families have been notified that their loved ones were taken hostage.

The New York Times noted that most of those Hamas has taken hostage were seized from their homes along Israel's border with Gaza. Among them are infants, children, people with disabilities, and geriatrics. Many are believed to have been stowed away by Hamas in various tunnels beneath Gaza.

Some Israelis have seen footage of their abducted family members circulated online.

Yoni Asher told the Times he saw a video online of his wife, Doron Asher Katz, in the back of a pickup truck surrounded by Islamist terrorists.

"I can't sleep — I'm living outside my own body," said Asher, noting that his 5- and 3-year-old daughters were with his wife when she was taken.

Writing in Newsweek, Asher said, "The captors need to release them as soon as they can. It's a critical window of time. There's not much time for little babies in captivity. Adults can hold on a few days. But not them."

Another couple saw their two children, including a 9-month-old, among the hostages in another video.

According to the Times of London, the terrorists are divided on what to do with the abducted women and children. Some allegedly are eager to get rid of them, recognizing that the videos of their beaten and bloody victims have unified support against them even in parts of the Arab world and have further legitimized the ballistic fury of the Israeli military.

Other factions want to keep the victims alive and use them as bargaining chips for prisoner exchanges.

"The idea of a prisoner swap now seems very distant," said Patrick Kingsley, the Jerusalem bureau chief for the New York Times.

Monday night, Hamas threatened to butcher a civilian hostage every time an Israeli airstrike hit Gazans "in their homes without warning."

Extra to executions, there have been multiple reports of Hamas terrorists sexually abusing their victims.

One survivor of the massacre at the Supernova music festival told the Tablet, "Women have been raped at the area of the rave next to their friends' bodies, dead bodies."

Several of the apparent rape victims were reportedly later executed, while others were taken to Gaza, where they were paraded through the city's streets with bloodied pelvic regions.

A 2022 U.N. report detailed various accounts of how Hamas and the Palestinian Authority have subject prisoners to various tortures in the past, including systematic abuses of a sexual nature.

A father's grief and unexpected solace

Unlike Asher and other family members whose loved ones were taken by Hamas, Thomas Hand is now certain of his 8-year-old daughter's fate.

Hand moved to the Be'eri kibbutz as a volunteer from Ireland 30 years ago and has lived there ever since. Although his wife recently died of cancer, he has not been alone thanks to his daughter, Emily, reported CNN.

Hand's daughter, Emily, went to a neighbor's house in the Be'eri Kibbutz for a sleepover Friday for "a girly night," according the grieving father.

The next morning around 7 a.m., terrorists stormed the kibbutz.

"Until I heard the shots. And it was already too late. If I had known … I could have maybe ran, got her, got her friend, got the mother, brought them back to my place. But by the time I realized what was happening, it was already too late," said Hand, noting the kibbutz had then been overrun by terrorists.

Hours later, Hand and other survivors were evacuated by the military to a hotel on the Dead Sea. Two days later he learned that Emily was among the 120 who had been massacred.

"They just said, 'We found Emily. She's dead,' and I went, 'Yes!' I went, 'yes!' and smiled because that is the best news of the possibilities that I knew," Hand told CNN. "That was the best possibility that I was hoping for. She was either dead or in Gaza."

"And if you know anything about what they do to people in Gaza, that is worse than death. That is worse than death," continued the grief-stricken father. "She'd be in a dark room filled with Christ knows how many people and terrified every minute, hour, day, and possibly years to come. So death was a blessing, an absolute blessing."

"In this crazy world, here is me hoping my daughter is dead," Hand later added.

In a heart-wrenching interview on @CNNsitRoom, CNN reporter Clarissa Ward speaks with @WolfBlitzer about a grieving father who finally received confirmation of his daughter's tragic death during the Hamas attack. Watch:
— CNN (@CNN) 1697082327

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CDC director 'inadvertently destroys' argument for vaccine passports after saying vaccines do not 'prevent transmission'



Did Rochelle Walensky, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, inadvertently argue this week against controversial vaccine-verification systems, such as the one being used in New York City.

That was the conclusion being circulated on social media Friday following an interview in which Walensky claimed that COVID-19 vaccines do not "prevent transmission" of the virus.

What did Walensky say?

During an interview with CNN anchor Wolf Blitzer on Thursday, Walensky explained the CDC changed its mask guidance because fully vaccinated people can allegedly transmit the delta variant as readily as unvaccinated people.

That is when she claimed the vaccines do not prevent COVID-19 transmission.

"That was the reason that we changed our guidance last Tuesday," Walensky said. "Our vaccines are working exceptionally well. They continue to work well with delta with regard to severe illness and death. They prevent it."

"But what they can't do anymore is prevent transmission," she added.

Walensky then followed up by recommending people wear face masks indoors if they are surrounded by unvaccinated people or those who could be more vulnerable to COVID-19.

“Our vaccines are working exceptionally well,” CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky tells @wolfblitzer. “They continu… https://t.co/nIA1fmI2Zp

— The Situation Room (@CNNSitRoom) 1628205297.0

What does the CDC say about vaccines?

Walensky's remarks contradict what the CDC says about vaccines.

In fact, the CDC's official website explains that vaccines are meant to prevent transmission of the disease or virus they protect against.

Vaccines contain the same germs that cause disease. (For example, measles vaccine contains measles virus, and Hib vaccine contains Hib bacteria.) But they have been either killed or weakened to the point that they don't make you sick. Some vaccines contain only a part of the disease germ.

A vaccine stimulates your immune system to produce antibodies, exactly like it would if you were exposed to the disease. After getting vaccinated, you develop immunity to that disease, without having to get the disease first. This is what makes vaccines such powerful medicine. Unlike most medicines, which treat or cure diseases, vaccines prevent them.

What was the reaction?

People reacted to Walensky's comments by suggesting she is both undermining confidence in the vaccines and inadvertently eroding the argument for vaccine passports.

  • "Did the CDC Director just inadvertently destroy the whole argument for vaccine passports? LOL," Christina Pushaw, spokeswoman for Gov. Ron DeSantis, said.
  • "Is the CDC actively trying to talk people out of getting vaccinated? A lot of people aren't necessarily worried about COVID for themselves but MIGHT get vaccinated to protect others. The CDC Director is telling people that's no longer a possibility," Republican communication strategist Matt Whitlock said.
  • "Unfortunately what the CDC Director doesn't seem realize is that she's undermining the public confidence in the vaccines. This Administration continues to fumble on this COVID response. smh," one person said.
  • "Another example of how the CDC has been a complete failure during covid," another person said.
  • "Again, the CDC Director is currently the largest source of misinformation regarding Covid-19 vaccines. This is absolutely false. They have reduced efficacy against Delta transmission, but still substantial relative to being unvaccinated," another person reacted.

Adam Schiff calls Republican leaders a 'dangerous cult' over threats made to Democrats



Democratic Rep. Adam Schiff of California lashed out at Republicans and called the party a "dangerous cult" over a report that the names of Democrat lawmakers were found on a list possessed by a man caught near the U.S. Capitol with a gun and ammunition.

The 71-year-old man was arrested on Wednesday at the Capitol after he shouted at a guardsman and arrested for possessing a pistol without a license. Police said that he had been at the protest at the Capitol and posted memes related to the QAnon conspiracy theory on his social media.

Schiff used the incident to hammer away at Republican leadership on Thursday after CNN uncovered several Facebook posts from Rep. Marjorie Greene (R-Ga.) calling for the execution of Democratic leaders.

"You look at some of these members, including Representative Greene, who have threatened on social media prior to her election other members of Congress," said Schiff to Wolf Blitzer on his CNN show.

"You have members like her who have suggested that attacks against students, murderous attacks on high school campuses like at Parkland were somehow fake, fraudulent, or false flag operations. And they're being rewarded by [House Minority Leader Rep.] Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) with assignments on the education committee!" he continued.

"You know, the GOP leadership is becoming little more than a cult and a dangerous cult," said Schiff.

Greene responded to the reports by claiming that the posts on her Facebook were written by members of her team, and did not express her personal views.

Schiff also criticized McCarthy for travelling to Florida to meet with President Donald Trump at his Mar-A-Lago residence.

"That is sadly where the GOP leadership is at in Congress, and that's part of the reason why the Capitol looks like an armed fortress right now," said Schiff.

Schiff said that he was disappointed at the permanent fencing being erected around the Capitol after the rioting by supporters of former President Donald Trump.

"It's just awful to see the necessary presence of so many troops, National Guard troops, guarding the nation's Capitol," he continued. "I would have never imagined that would be necessary, and I hope that it won't be necessary indefinitely."

Here's the video of Schiff's comments:

Democratic Rep. Adam Schiff reacts to threats of violence members of Congress are facing following the attack on the US Capitol and concerns over fellow colleagues. “The GOP leadership is becoming little more than a cult and a dangerous cult." pic.twitter.com/dnzQV24wmD
— The Situation Room (@CNNSitRoom) January 29, 2021