RECAP: Hamas terrorists launch bloody surprise attack against Israel



Israel is under attack.

The Hamas terrorist group attacked the country on Saturday, leaving Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu no other option than to declare, “We are at war.”

Horrific videos of the conflict have been circulating on social media, including kidnappings and murders of Israeli civilians.

Mark Levin is understandably outraged.

“They have people in the streets being slaughtered, people in their homes being slaughtered. You’ve seen this video of them kidnapping people and just whacking them around like they’re not even human beings. Killing people left and right,” he says.

While those behind the attacks are being referred to as Gaza militants or Palestinian militants, Levin believes they’re much worse than that.

“These are Nazis. This is what the Nazis do. This is what the Nazis are all about. This is what their children are being taught,” he explains.

Levin recalls that in addition, just two weeks ago, America unfroze $6 billion for Iran.

“Why the hell are we agreeing that Iran should have $6 billion, period?” Levin asks angrily. “They threaten to blow us off the face of the Earth, they threaten to blow Israel off the face of the Earth. They’re behind this entire damn thing.”

“There needs to be accountability here,” he adds.

He notes that Biden has also failed to condemn the recent terror wave against Israelis.

“Our enemies see all this, they see appeasement,” Levin says. “I’m telling you the truth. President Biden reaffirmed his commitment to a two-state solution. You know what a two-state solution is for Israel? It’s the final solution.”


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Iran turned off cameras belonging to a UN nuclear watchdog in one of its uranium enrichment facilities



The Iranian government was exposed for turning off two surveillance cameras of a United Nations nuclear watchdog program that was monitoring one of the country’s atomic development sites.

The Independent reported that the development initially broke on Iranian state television. The report did not identify at which of the nuclear development sites the infraction occurred, but it did indicate that the interference was a likely a part of a new pressure technique being pushed by the Iranian government as it seeks to muscle its way out of an imminent censure from Western nations at an upcoming meeting of the International Atomic Energy Agency.

The Iranian state television report described the two disabled cameras as monitoring “OLEM enrichment levels and flowmeters.” This refers to the IAEA’s Online Enrichment Monitors, which watch the enrichment of uranium gas through piping at enrichment facilities.

Reportedly, the Iranian government is enriching uranium gas at both its Fordo and Natanz underground nuclear sites.

In 2015, the Iranian government and various world powers agreed to a nuclear deal that would allow the Iranian leadership to drastically restrict the amount of uranium it could enrich in exchange for lifting economic sanctions.

In 2018, former President Donald Trump unilaterally withdrew the U.S. from the arrangement, subsequently raising tensions in various parts of the Middle East.

In the time since Trump’s withdrawal from the arrangement, Iran has broken every limit imposed on it by the 2015 deal and now enriches uranium at a 60% purity — weapons-grade enrichment is 90%. Despite the Iranian government’s disregard for the restrictions placed upon it, the IAEA has been allowed to continually visit the country’s enrichment facilities.

The Vienna-based IAEA did not immediately acknowledge the Iranian regime’s disabling of the surveillance cameras.

This past February, a senior official in the U.S. State Department said that Iran was “weeks, not months” away from being able to power an atomic.

The statement came after a series of indirect discussions with Iran and other world powers in Vienna.

After over a year of negotiations, the State Department confirmed that diplomatic talks with Iran and other nations about the future of the country’s nuclear capabilities would come to an end whether Iran accepts the deal offered to it by U.S. officials or not.

At the time, the Biden administration believed that Iran’s nuclear program had become so advanced that there would be no benefit to proposing a return to the 2015 arrangement that restricted Iran’s nuclear enrichment capabilities while gradually lifting economic sanctions on the country.

Anti-Semitic assaults hit an all-time high in New York and New Jersey in 2021, higher throughout the country



Anti-Semitic incidents in the U.S. hit an all-time high in 2021, with the states of New York and New Jersey accounting for nearly 30% of the reported total.

According to the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), incidents (being defined as vandalism, harassment, or assault) were up significantly last year. According to the ADL’s annual summary, these incidents are due to pandemic restrictions decreasing and a retaliatory backlash in response to Israeli airstrikes in the Gaza Strip in May 2021, NBC 4 New York reported.

The ADL recorded 416 incidents in New York in 2021, including 51 assaults that primarily occurred in Brooklyn. The organization also reported 370 total incidents in New Jersey.

Scott Richman, the regional director for the ADL in New York and New Jersey, said, “The alarming uptick in anti-Semitic incidents in our state should be deeply concerning to all — Jews and those outside of the Jewish community. The fact that these incidents included an unprecedented number of vicious assaults — frequently targeting visibly Jewish individuals on the streets of New York, including young children — is incredibly disturbing.”

The rise in anti-Semitic attacks runs parallel to a general increase in hate crimes throughout these areas, as well. Hate crimes rose 24% in the first four months when compared to the same period in 2020. They rose another 32% in the same period this year.

According to the ADL Center on Extremism’s Audit of Antisemitic Incidents, 2,717 anti-Semitic incidents occurred throughout the U.S. in 2021. This marks a 34% increase from the recorded 2,026 incidents in 2020. It also marks the highest number on record since the ADL began tracking anti-Semitic incidents in 1979.

The ADL said, “Of the 2,717 incidents recorded in 2021, 1,776 were cases of harassment, a 43% increase from 1,242 in 2020 and 853 incidents were cases of vandalism, a 14% increase from 751 in 2020. The 88 incidents of antisemitic assault (a 167% increase from 33 in 2020), involved 131 victims; none of the assaults were deadly.”

The ADL reported that “incidents in K-12 schools, colleges and universities increased in 2021 but were flat compared to the five-year average.” The ADL logged 331 incidents of anti-Semitism at non-Jewish K-12 schools — marking a 106% increase from 2020 — and 155 incidents at colleges and universities — indicating a 21% from 2020.

The report also catalogued 525 anti-Semitic incidents at Jewish institutions such as synagogues, Jewish community centers, and Jewish schools.