Pro-Palestinian students can’t name the ‘river’ or ‘sea’ they’re chanting about



College students were quizzed by social media influencer Zach Sage Fox, and despite offering them a $100 prize for correct answers, they weren’t able to pull it off.

“Have you guys chanted, ‘From the river to the sea'?” Fox asks one student, who answers, “Yes.”

“Okay, which river? Which sea?” He presses. This particular student is attending Sarah Lawrence, where the tuition is over $85,000 a year.

“She knows it's Jordan and Mediterranean,” Pat Gray says. “She knows that.”

“Because the state of education right now, with Biden in office, is so good that you would think she’d immediately know,” he jokes.

While Gray had hope, the girl, who was holding a pro-Palestinian sign, did not know the answer.

“What does Hamas say their number one goal is according to their charter?” Fox asked another pro-Palestinian student.

“They just want to free Palestine,” the student answers. “No,” Fox says. “Murder all Jews around the world.”

“How many years did Israel occupy Gaza?” he asks more students, who all get it wrong.

“It was actually under Egyptian control for the first twenty or so years, and then Israel actually left Gaza in 2006,” Fox explains to the clueless students, before asking one of the most chilling questions of all.

“How much have our foreign adversaries donated to American universities in the last decade?” he asks, to which again, no one knows the answer. “The answer was over six billion,” he says.

“That says everything right there. You don’t think they have influence over your kid’s education?” Keith Malinak says.


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Pete Buttigieg tries to take DeSantis down on 'The View' but it backfires SPECTACULARLY



Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg joined Joy Behar, Sara Haines, and Ana Navarro on 'The View" this week to talk about Florida’s new “Parental Rights in Education” law — which he absurdly claimed "will kill kids" — before going on to add inflation and high gas prices to his list of Florida Governor Ron DeSantis' faults.

"Your husband, Chasten, is a teacher and he's been a vocal critic of what's going on in my state of Florida when the, with the so-called 'don't say gay' law, which he says will kill kids. Do you agree?" Navarro asked Buttigieg.

"Yeah, he's right," Buttigieg answered. "And I think every law to be judged for the effect it's going to have on real people in real life, and I get the political reasons why they're doing this. By the way, some of those political reasons (laughs), they don't have a plan on anything else, right? I mean, they don't have a plan on dealing with inflation or dealing with gas prices or dealing with the issues."


Pete Buttigieg says that prohibiting classroom instruction of sex and gender theory in kindergarten classes will \u201cKILL KIDS.\u201d \n\nThen he blames Ron DeSantis for inflation and gas prices.pic.twitter.com/t1VM0OR96L
— RNC Research (@RNC Research) 1649435421

Buttigieg's bizarre claims immediately drew harsh criticism on Twitter.

\u201cThey don\u2019t have a plan for dealing with inflation, or dealing with high gas prices\u2026.\u201d says the Secretary of Transportation.\n\nOh there\u2019s a plan. The voters have noticed that these problems became problems when your administration arrived. That\u2019s fixable.\n\nNovember is coming.
— Ken Catmull (@Ken Catmull) 1649500508
\u201cThat\u2019s correct. Kids will die unless we let teachers talk to 5, 6, and 7 year olds about sex behind their parents\u2019 backs.\u201dpic.twitter.com/LM5SZs2LAa
— Danny Dyer (@Danny Dyer) 1649445192
Wait\u2026was he just accusing DeSantis of \u201cnot having a plan to deal with inflation and high gas prices?\u201d
— Sara Gonzales (@Sara Gonzales) 1649460503
Wow Pete!! THEY have no plan??? Joking, right? Is there ANYTHING you are willing to take responsibility for?
— mario martino (@mario martino) 1649453999
\u201cThey don\u2019t have a plan on inflation or gas prices\u201d\u2026..Siri, who is Secretary of Transportation???
— RSP1971 (@RSP1971) 1649440106
From the same people that pushed forced lockdowns & school closures, causing sharp increases in adolescent depression, suicide rates, not to mention learning loss.
— JJ Giddyup \ud83c\udfc7\ud83c\udfff (@JJ Giddyup \ud83c\udfc7\ud83c\udfff) 1649436423
So Pete has just as much knowledge of the FL law as he does of Transportation then?
— Question Everything (@Question Everything) 1649444335


Biden apologizes after going off on reporter over question about Putin



President Joe Biden lost his cool with a U.S. reporter in Geneva on Wednesday over the journalist's question regarding Russian President Vladimir Putin.

The exchange went viral, sparking condemnation from other U.S. reporters. Afterward, Biden apologized for his response, saying he "shouldn't have been such a wise guy."

What are the details?

Following his summit with Putin, Biden held a press conference where he took questions from a list of pre-approved journalists, Fox News reported. But as the president turned and walked away, he decided to respond to questions shouted from the press pool.

That's when CNN's Kaitlan Collins asked, "Why are you so confident he'll change his behavior, Mr. President?" referring to Putin.

"I'm not confident he'll change his behavior," a visibly frustrated Biden replied. "What the hell! What do you do all the time?"

Biden then raised a finger and began walking toward Collins, saying, "When did I say I was confident? What I said was — let's get it straight — I said what will change their behavior is if the rest of the world reacts to them and it diminishes their standing in the world."

Collins pressed back, replying, "but given his past behavior has not changed, and in that press conference after sitting down with you for several hours, he denied any involvement in cyberattacks, he's downplayed human rights abuses, he even refused to say Alexei Navalny's name. So, how does that amount to a constructive meeting?"

"If you don't understand that, you're in the wrong business," Biden told the reporter.



Several other U.S. reporters took to social media condemning Biden for his treatment of Collins, and her name became a trending topic on Twitter.

New York Magazine's Olivia Nuzzi tweeted, "If you're the most powerful person in the world and you can't field questions from the media without losing your temper, maybe you're in the wrong business." Nuzzi added, "What kind of example does it set for other countries when the president of the United States insults a member of the free press on an international stage for asking a fair question in good faith?"

Glenn Greenwald described video of the exchange as showing "Biden aggressively insulting and demeaning a female reporter while she's just doing her job, all in front of her colleagues."

Before boarding Air Force One afterward, Biden stopped to tell the White House press pool, "I owe my last questioner an apology. I shouldn't have been such a wise guy with the last answer I gave."

President Biden apologizes to CNN’s Kaitlan Collins before departing Geneva for his response to her question at the… https://t.co/ngPh1h5GmU

— JM Rieger (@RiegerReport) 1623868156.0

124 retired generals and admirals say US in 'deep peril' under Biden, warn of his 'mental' condition



More than 120 retired generals and admirals have signed a letter saying that the U.S. is in "deep peril" under the leadership of President Joe Biden, specifically warning that the mental condition of the nation's oldest commander in chief "cannot be ignored."

What are the details?

The letter was released by Flag Officers 4 America, and was signed by 124 retired "military officers entitled to carry a flag indicating their rank," The Daily Caller noted.

It begins, "Our Nation is in deep peril. We are in a fight for our survival as a Constitutional Republic like no other time since our founding in 1776. The conflict is between supporters of Socialism and Marxism vs. supporters of Constitutional freedom and liberty."

The retired military leaders went on to say that "without fair and honest elections that accurately reflect the 'will of the people' our Constitutional Republic is lost," saying that "aside from the election, the Current Administration has launched a full-blown assault on our Constitutional rights in a dictatorial manner, bypassing the Congress, with more than 50 Executive Orders quickly signed."

At the end of a long list of bullet points citing "additional national security issues and actions," Flag Officers 4 America wrote:

"The mental and physical condition of the Commander in Chief cannot be ignored. He must be able to quickly make accurate national security decisions involving life and limb anywhere, day or night. Recent Democrat leadership's inquiries about nuclear code procedures sends a dangerous national security signal to nuclear armed adversaries, raising the question about who is in charge. We must always have an unquestionable chain of command."

The officials ended the letter with a call for action, urging "all citizens to get involved now at the local, state and/or national level to elect political representatives who will act to Save America, our Constitutional Republic, and hold those currently in office accountable," concluding, "The 'will of the people' must be heard and followed."

Biden, 78, is the oldest American president to ever be elected, and he faced questions from opponents during both the Democratic primary and the general election over his mental fitness for office.

A White House spokesperson told People magazine on Wednesday that Biden "is planning to have a checkup later this year, and the results will be made public."

The outlet noted that White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki told reporters last week that the administration "will be transparent" to reporters about the results of Biden's first physical when it happens.

People further reported that "Biden similarly promised during the 2020 campaign to be 'totally transparent in terms of my health.'"

Vermont to question schoolchildren over Thanksgiving gatherings, and require quarantine for violators



The state of Vermont has announced that schoolchildren and their parents will be questioned about the nature of their Thanksgiving gatherings after the kids' return to school, and children in families that admit to violating the state's rule against celebrating with another household will be required to quarantine at home.

What are the details?

Earlier this month, Vermont Gov. Phil Scott (R) issued an executive order prohibiting gatherings of any kind between households. The state's website notes that the ban "includes both inside and outside social gatherings, in public and private spaces."

On Tuesday, state officials delivered an added threat to those who dare to visit Grandma for Thanksgiving: Children will be banned from the classroom and must return to remote learning at home for two weeks — or for one week if they can present a negative COVID-19 test result after that time.

In a lengthy Twitter thread on Tuesday, Scott urged citizens to do their part in stopping the spread of the virus as the state experiences a surge in cases, and asked folks "to help by avoiding getting together with people outside your households and not travel this week."

"Unfortunately, we know some will still get together and schools have asked for help," he continued, before announcing that the Vermont Agency of Education "will direct schools to ask students or parents if they were part of multi-family gatherings and if the answer is yes, they'll need to go remote for 14 days or 7 days and a test."

Unfortunately, we know some will still get together and schools have asked for help. @VTEducation will direct schoo… https://t.co/3Nz5FCNQfj
— Governor Phil Scott (@Governor Phil Scott)1606235646.0

The Republican urged businesses to adopt the same policy, adding, "We also advise businesses to consider asking employees to quarantine if they don't adhere to gathering restrictions. This isn't a way around the ban or an excuse to get together. The more we adhere to this policy, the faster we'll lower case counts & ease up on restrictions."

State officials hope families will be honest

Vermont Education Secretary Dan French told the Burlington Free Press that state officials hope that families will be honest in answering their questions about Thanksgiving plans.

"Schools operate on trust with their parents and their students, and we're hopeful this guidance will give them some additional tools to help everyone do the right thing and keep school safe," French said.

The outlet noted that the rules against households interacting does not apply in the workplace, at retail stores, or in schools.

Anything else?

WPTZ-TV reported that since the beginning of November, Vermont has reported more than 1,500 new cases of COVID-19, and that "a model provided by the state's Department of Financial Regulation projects a 41% increase in new cases over the next month."

Chrystia Freeland implies Israel is an 'authoritarian,' 'anti-democratic' regime

"We are living in a world where there is a worrying rise of authoritarian regimes, a worrying rise of anti-democratic populism, and our country in that world will always stand up for human rights."