Evil never announces itself — it seduces the hearts of the blind



Evil introduces itself subtly. It doesn’t announce, “Hi, I’m here to destroy you.” It whispers. It flatters. It borrows the language of justice, empathy, and freedom, twisting them until hatred sounds righteous and violence sounds brave.

We are watching that same deception unfold again — in the streets, on college campuses, and in the rhetoric of people who should know better. It’s the oldest story in the world, retold with new slogans.

Evil wins when good people mirror its rage.

A drone video surfaced this week showing Hamas terrorists staging the “discovery” of a hostage’s body. They pushed a corpse out of a window, dragged it into a hole, buried it, and then called in aid workers to “find” what they themselves had planted. It was theater — evil, disguised as victimhood. And it was caught entirely on camera.

That’s how evil operates. It never comes in through the front door. It sneaks in, often through manipulative pity. The same spirit animates the moral rot spreading through our institutions — from the halls of universities to the chambers of government.

Take Zohran Mamdani, a New York assemblyman who has praised jihadists and defended pro-Hamas agitators. His father, a Columbia University professor, wrote that America and al-Qaeda are morally equivalent — that suicide bombings shouldn’t be viewed as barbaric. Imagine thinking that way after watching 3,000 Americans die on 9/11. That’s not intellectualism. That’s indoctrination.

Often, that indoctrination comes from hostile foreign actors, peddled by complicit pawns on our own soil. The pro-Hamas protests that erupted across campuses last year, for example, were funded by Iran — a regime that murders its own citizens for speaking freely.

Ancient evil, new clothes

But the deeper danger isn’t foreign money. It’s the spiritual blindness that lets good people believe resentment is justice and envy is discernment. Scripture talks about the spirit of Amalek — the eternal enemy of God’s people, who attacks the weak from behind while the strong look away. Amalek never dies; it just changes its vocabulary and form with the times.

Today, Amalek tweets. He speaks through professors who defend terrorism as “anti-colonial resistance.” He preaches from pulpits that call violence “solidarity.” And he recruits through algorithms, whispering that the Jews control everything, that America had it coming, that chaos is freedom. Those are ancient lies wearing new clothes.

When nations embrace those lies, it’s not the Jews who perish first. It’s the nations themselves. The soul dies long before the body. The ovens of Auschwitz didn’t start with smoke; they started with silence and slogans.

RELATED: Evil unchecked always spreads — and Democrats are proof

Photo by Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

A time for choosing

So what do we do? We speak truth — calmly, firmly, without venom. Because hatred can’t kill hatred; it only feeds it. Truth, compassion, and courage starve it to death.

Evil wins when good people mirror its rage. That’s how Amalek survives — by making you fight him with his own weapons. The only victory that lasts is moral clarity without malice, courage without cruelty.

The war we’re fighting isn’t new. It’s the same battle between remembrance and amnesia, covenant and chaos, humility and pride. The same spirit that whispered to Pharaoh, to Hitler, and to every mob that thought hatred could heal the world is whispering again now — on your screens, in your classrooms, in your churches.

Will you join it, or will you stand against it?

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'Heroes of Islam and the country': Taliban promises land to families of suicide bombers who targeted U.S., Afghan troops



The Taliban have promised property plots to the relatives of suicide bombers who perpetrated attacks against American and Afghan troops, according to the Associated Press.

"The Taliban's acting interior minister, Sirajuddin Haqqani, offered the reward to dozens of family members of bombers gathered at a Kabul hotel, Interior Ministry spokesman Saeed Khosty tweeted on Tuesday," the AP reported.

Speaking to those present at the assembly on Monday, Haqqani lauded the sacrifices of "martyrs and fedayeen," Khosty tweeted, according to the AP. Haqqani described those individuals as "heroes of Islam and the country," the spokesman noted. At the conclusion of the gathering, he provided 10,000 afghanis ($112) to each family and promised each a plot of property, according to the outlet.

"The promise of rewards for suicide bombings signals conflicting approaches within the Taliban leadership," according to the AP. "They are trying to position themselves as responsible rulers, who promise security for all and have condemned suicide attacks by their rivals, the militant Islamic State group. On the other hand, they praise such tactics when it comes to their followers."

The news comes after the chaotic U.S. pullout from Afghanistan earlier this year for which the Biden administration has faced heavy criticism. The Taliban, which swiftly took control in the country, seized the capital city of Kabul in mid-August. The U.S. announced the completion of its pullout later that month, even as Afghan allies and some U.S. citizens were still in the country.

Taliban figure Mullah Nooruddin Turabi during an interview with the AP last month indicated that hand amputations would again be carried out under the group's rule in Afghanistan.

"Cutting off of hands is very necessary for security," he stated, saying it had a deterrent impact.

"No one will tell us what our laws should be. We will follow Islam and we will make our laws on the Quran," Turabi said during the interview, according to the outlet.

23-Year-Old Marine Days Before She Was Killed In Kabul Attack: ‘I Love My Job’

'She absolutely loved the work she was doing in Afghanistan and was excited to tell me more about it once she was back home,' said Gee's sister.

Obama's education secretary compares 'anti-mask,' 'anti-vax' Americans to suicide bombers, triggering swift backlash



Arne Duncan, the secretary of education most of Barack Obama's presidency, triggered a tsunami of backlash Sunday when he compared terrorist suicide bombers to "anti-mask and anti-vax" Americans.

What did Duncan say?

According to Duncan, Americans opposed to face masks and vaccines are "strikingly similar" to the terrorists who carried out the attack outside the Kabul airport last week.

"Have you noticed how strikingly similar both the mindsets and actions are between the suicide bombers at Kabul's airport, and the anti-mask and anti-vax people here?" Duncan wrote on Twitter. "They both blow themselves up, inflict harm on those around them, and are convinced they are fighting for freedom."

Have you noticed how strikingly similar both the mindsets and actions are between the suicide bombers at Kabul’s ai… https://t.co/7ZOcRsP2Cp

— Arne Duncan (@arneduncan) 1630244248.0

In addition to leading the Education Department from 2009 to 2016, Duncan also served as the CEO of Chicago Public Schools from 2001 until 2009.

What was the reaction?

Duncan's comparison was swiftly rebuked as critics pointed to Duncan's comments as symbolic of problems within the ruling class.

  • "This guy was US Secretary of Education under Obama. Explains all you need to know about our failing, embarrassing education system. Parents need re-think government education & ha doing their precious kids over to people like this for 8 hrs a day," Fox News host Rachel Campos-Duffy said.
  • "[T]his tweet will just make people think mental illness is a side effect of the vaccine," another person said.
  • "Knowing this guy ran Dept of Ed for eight years under Obama explains all the insanity in our public schools happening right now, doesn't it?" radio host Larry O'Connor said.
  • "The strongest case against 'mask mandate!' religious fervor I've seen. I'd laugh at this clown, but I've lived long enough to know how dangerous these folks are," Fox News host Joey Jones said.
  • "If people are wondering why our country's education system is in the pits, this guy ran things for 8 years," Brent Scher, executive editor at the Washington Free Beacon, said.
  • "No. I haven't… because they're not similar. You lack a soul and brain. The only thing striking is your ignorance," radio host Jason Rantz said.
  • "So disrespectful. You owe those military families an apology for using them like this. Disgusting," another person said.
  • "No, but I did notice similarities to the Taliban's control of its people to 'the woke left' trying to do the same," one person mocked.
  • "The most troubling similarity is to people like you, who see their ideology as so superior that any use of force in its behalf is entirely justified. No American should ever forget that the ONE property that defines government is its ability to use violence against citizens," former Rep. Nan Hayworth (R-Md.), who is also a doctor, said.

Last week, Gen. Michael Hayden, former director of the National Security Agency and Central Intelligence Agency, made headlines after saying it would be a "good idea" to send unvaccinated supporters of Donald Trump to Afghanistan.