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John Cusack Rejects Antisemitism Accusations As ‘Complete Lies’

American actor John Cusack hit back at accusations of antisemitism lobbed against him on social media this week by the StopAntisemitism group.

The organization declared Cusack its “Antisemite of the Week” on Sunday for sharing posts denying that Hamas raped women in Israel during its massive October 7 attack on the south, in which 1,200 people, mostly civilians, were murdered and 253 were taken hostage; for saying Hamas was a charitable organization; and for accusing Israel of helping create Hamas for its own purposes.

Cusack shares dozens of posts a day on X, formerly Twitter, many of which accused Israel of carrying out a genocide in Gaza. The actor also presented many posts showing Jewish people expressing anti-Israel views to back up his claims.

Among multiple tweets shared by Cusack denying mass rape on October 7 was one that included a blog post by Nazareth-based journalist Jonathan Cook, who accused Israel of lying about the use of rape in Hamas’s attacks despite plenty of evidence compiled by police.

This includes testimonies from survivors and ZAKA search and rescue personnel, who spent weeks collecting and identifying the bodies of October 7 victims, as well as footage made by Hamas during the massacres. Testimony of sexual assault in captivity was also given by hostages who were released during a brief truce in November.

Cook also said that ZAKA’s members were lying about the rape, basing his accusation on them being what he described as “Jewish religious extremist men.” While most of the organization’s members are ultra-Orthodox, this does not mean they are extremist, and Cook did not explain how his description of them proved they were unreliable.

Another post shared by the actor was a Mark Twain quote saying, “I’ve never wished a man dead, but I have read some obituaries with great pleasure.” The poster wrote that this was his sentiment regarding “Zionist obituary notices.”

Cusack called StopAntisemitism’s tweet about him it a “list of lies” in a comment he later deleted. In another comment, which he didn’t delete, the actor accused StopAntisemitism of “trying to spread [things] to distract our attention.”

On Tuesday, StopAntisemitism tweeted that it “unequivocally stands by its decision to spotlight John Cusack as its ‘Antisemite of the Week'” and that it was clear to the group that “he hasn’t learned a thing from his 2019 apology after he shared a comic that featured dangerous tropes about ‘Jewish control’ and money.”

That comic showed a giant hand with a Star of David on it crushing a group of people alongside the quote “To learn who rules over you, simply find out who you are not allowed to criticize.”

The quote, which is often misattributed to 17th-century French writer Voltaire, was actually said by white supremacist Kevin Alfred Strom.

Cusack also shared a video that Pink Floyd musician Roger Waters posted of himself calling for a “ceasefire [in Gaza] now, today, this morning.”

Waters was recently dropped by record company BMG because of antisemitic comments he has made as well as inflammatory remarks in which he said Russia’s invasion of Ukraine was not unprovoked, according to an exclusive report by Variety on Tuesday.

Similarly to Cusack, Waters has posted tweets accusing Israel of genocide and celebrating South Africa’s petition in the International Court of Justice, which made the same accusation.

A month after the October 7 massacres, Waters still refused to condemn the attack, saying that “we don’t know what [Hamas] did do,” despite an abundance of evidence in the form of footage of the attack that Hamas members made and livestreamed online.

He also claimed that Hamas was justified and “legally and morally bound to resist the occupation since 1967.”

John Cusack Fires Back After Being Branded ‘Antisemite of the Week’ Over Israel Stance

Actor John Cusack fired back after the non-profit watchdog group StopAntisemitism branded him the “Antisemite of the Week” in an X post on Sunday.

“Wow – a list full of lies,” the “Say Anything” star replied on the thread.

StopAntisemitism’s post contained a picture of Cusack accompanied by the “Antisemite of the Week” label.

In the caption, the group accused him of denying mass rapes that occurred on Oct. 7, labeling Hamas as a “charitable organization” and claiming the Israeli government funded Hamas.

The post went on to tag Cusack’s talent agency asking why they are “repping this bigot,” and concluded with a link to archives and posts from the actor.

In a separate reply, Cusack accused the organization, along with the International Legal Forum, of “weaponizing racism against peace activists.”

“Slandering smearing people – I want to know if people who follow them know – and if they know do they condone this vile behavior ?” he continued.

Replying to another X user who defended him as not being antisemitic, Cusack labeled his critics’ accusations a “smear to distract.”

He has also retweeted posts espousing pro-Palestinian but not pro-Hamas views.

A representative for Cusack and the APA agency did not immediately reply to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.

In another recent X post, the actor also had terse words for anyone not calling for a cease-fire in Gaza, accusing them of having “no soul.”

“My god – my god – if you don’t call for a cease fire – You have no soul – We can’t stop until this stops – it’s the most shameful thing I can imagine – staying silent in the face of this,” he wrote last Thursday, responding to a video from a pro-Palestinian account that reportedly included footage of a bloody Palestinian girl.

The video from the original post has since been removed, but the caption, which read, “Is this the kind of world you wish for your children to experience as they grow up? If your answer is no, then demand a #CeasefireNOW for the sake of all humanity #PeaceforAll” remains.

Cusack has been outspoken about the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas that began last October when Hamas terrorists launched unprecedented attacks on Israeli residential areas, killing 1,200 and taking hundreds of hostages.

Israel’s military campaign in Gaza since then has drawn strong criticism from the Jewish state’s detractors.

“Words fail – the barbarity of the western response is unmatched In depravity / imagine Oct 7 th going on for 115 days ?” Cusack wrote in a separate post on Thursday.

John Cusack Denies He Questioned October 7 Atrocities, Despite Proof

After the controversy sparked by his provocative tweets against Israel published on Ynet and demands from the Jewish organization StopAntisemitism to have him fired from his talent agency, actor John Cusack took to Twitter Monday night to claim that "it's all lies" and eventually deleted the post.

Cusack's denial comes two days after reports emerged about the renowned actor, who has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, frequently sharing inflammatory statements and promoting antisemitic stereotypes on his X social media account. Since the October 7 tragedy, he has posted phrases like "F**k Israel," referring to it as the "murder state" for his 1.8 million followers. He has called Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu a "Zionist pig" and labeled billionaire and X owner Elon Musk as the "creator of the country's propaganda, everything this man says is a lie."

Cusack denies that Zionism is part of Judaism and describes Musk's visit to the Auschwitz Nazi extermination camp as an endorsement of "white supremacy." Cusack has also celebrated the filing of a lawsuit against Israel at the International Court of Justice in The Hague and criticized Western countries' decision to cut funding to UNRWA following the involvement of its employees in the October 7 tragedy, retweeting claims of a "collective punishment."

Cusack also reposted an X post which read: "Why the Guardian's 'Hamas mass rape' story doesn't pass the sniff test; The woman leading the "Hamas mass rape" campaign - now an academic - is a former spokesperson for the Israeli military. Their job, as any honest reporter will tell you, is to lie to journalists to excuse Israel's incessant war crimes."

In response to these actions and more, Stop Antisemitism, an organization dedicated to combating antisemitism, publicly condemned Cusack on the X platform, dubbing him the "antisemite of the week" for his tweets denying the rape cases that occurred on October 7, for labeling Hamas as a "charity organization," and for asserting that the Israeli government funds Hamas. In addition, the organization shared the email address of Cusack's talent agency, urging the public to send emails demanding the termination of its association with him.

Cusack retorted with: "Wow - a complete list of lies," in response to the tweet from Stop Antisemitism. However, he deleted this comment after a few hours. Another deleted response from Cusack, as reported by Fox News, accuses the organization, along with the conservative group "International Legal Forum," of using bigotry as a weapon against peace activists. He further questioned: "Dehumanizing and smearing people - I want to know if the people who follow them are aware of this, and if they are aware, do they condemn this degrading behavior?" When a user attempted to defend him, Cusack responded: "They are trying to spread [things] to distract our attention," referring to the current wave of criticism against him.

It is worth noting that the StopAntisemitism organization responded to Cusack's allegations by providing evidence in the form of screenshots of the posts he shared. One of those posts claimed that "Considering Hamas was originally a charity organization funded and supported by Israel. You'll have to ask Netanyahu why he funded and put Hamas in power."

John Cusack Fires Back After Branded 'Antisemite of the Week'

Actor John Cusack fired back after the non-profit watchdog group StopAntisemitism branded him the "Antisemite of the Week" in an X post on Sunday.

"Wow – a list full of lies," the "Say Anything" star replied on the thread.

StopAntisemitism's post contained a picture of Cusack accompanied by the "Antisemite of the Week" label.

In the caption, the group accused him of denying mass rapes that occurred on Oct. 7, labeling Hamas as a "charitable organization" and claiming the Israeli government funded Hamas.

The post went on to tag Cusack's talent agency asking why they are "repping this bigot," and concluded with a link to archives and posts from the actor.

In a separate reply, Cusack accused the organization, along with the International Legal Forum, of "weaponizing racism against peace activists."

"Slandering smearing people - I want to know if people who follow them know - and if they know do they condone this vile behavior ?" he continued.

Replying to another X user who defended him as not being antisemitic, Cusack labeled his critics' accusations a "smear to distract."

He has also retweeted posts espousing pro-Palestinian but not pro-Hamas views.

A representative for Cusack and the APA agency did not immediately reply to Fox News Digital's request for comment.

In another recent X post, the actor also had terse words for anyone not calling for a cease-fire in Gaza, accusing them of having "no soul."

"My god - my god - if you don’t call for a cease fire - You have no soul - We can’t stop until this stops - it’s the most shameful thing I can imagine - staying silent in the face of this," he wrote  last Thursday, responding to a video from a pro-Palestinian account that reportedly included footage of a bloody Palestinian girl.

The video from the original post has since been removed, but the caption, which read, "Is this the kind of world you wish for your children to experience as they grow up? If your answer is no, then demand a #CeasefireNOW for the sake of all humanity #PeaceforAll" remains.

Cusack has been outspoken about the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas that began last October when Hamas terrorists launched unprecedented attacks on Israeli residential areas, killing 1,200 and taking hundreds of hostages.

Israel's military campaign in Gaza since then has drawn strong criticism from the Jewish state's detractors.

"Words fail - the barbarity of the western response is unmatched In depravity / imagine Oct 7 th going on for 115 days ?" Cusack wrote in a separate post on Thursday.

StopAntisemitism, weighing in on Cusack again, later provided the following statement to Fox News Digital:

"StopAntisemitism unequivocally stands by its decision to spotlight Mr. Cusack as its ‘Antisemite of the Week.’ From sharing X posts denying the mass rapes of 10/7 to claiming Musk is in the pocket of Zionists, it seems like Cusack hasn’t learned a thing from his 2019 apology after he shared a comic that featured these dangerous tropes about ‘Jewish control’ and money.

"We invite the public to explore all of his commentary which has been archived on our website and firmly believe it’s time Hollywood considers the harmful impact of these statements. Antisemitism is spreading like stage 4 cancer and those with large platforms have the duty to not make it worse."

‘Overwhelmed With Gratitude’: Georgia Assembly Passes Bill Adopting Leading Definition of Antisemitism

The Georgia General Assembly on Thursday voted overwhelmingly to approve legislation, co-sponsored by Rep. Esther Panitch (D) and Rep. John Carson (R), that would require state officials to refer to the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) definition of antisemitism when investigating antisemitic hate crimes, drawing praise from national civil rights groups and nonprofits.

The bill, HB30, passed nearly a year after similar legislation was blocked during the waning hours of the 2023 legislative session, an outcome that a legislator described to The Algemeiner at the time as “devastating to watch.” This time it passed in the Georgia House 129-5 and in the Georgia Senate 44-6. It now awaits a signature from Governor Brian Kemp (R).

“I am overwhelmed with gratitude to my co-sponsor Rep. John Carson and colleagues in the Senate for their bipartisan support of this bill,” Rep. Panitch told The Algemeiner in a statement. “Jewish Georgians know our state supports us and can better protect us with the added tool of the IHRA definition.”

HB30, proposed after a series of antisemitic incidents in the state involving harassment and literature drops by neo-Nazi organizations, faced numerous obstacles on its way through the Georgia Assembly. Last year, lobbyists representing the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) worked to add unfriendly amendments to it that would have defeated its purpose, and a Republican lawmaker, Sen Ed. Setzler, amended it to replace the IHRA definition of antisemitism with his own After Setzler proposed his amendment, three Democrats voted to approve it, prompting sponsors of the bill to motion to table it. Further efforts to pass it failed.

A surge of antisemitic incidents in the US and across the world after Hamas’ massacre across southern Israel on Oct. 7 gave the measure new importance this legislative session, and both parties worked to ensure its success.

Jordan Cope, Director of Policy Education at StandWithUs, an antisemitism watchdog that has filed numerous civil rights grievances on behalf of US college students, commended the Georgia Assembly for passing the bill this year.

“With antisemitism having exploded worldwide post October-7, the IHRA definition remains a tool of paramount importance for helping identify and quell the mounting tide of antisemitism,” Cope said. “Georgia’s moral clarity on this matter sets a clear example from which other states ought to draw inspiration as Jews around the world desperately seek assurances of their own safety.”

StopAntisemitism, a nonprofit that tracks antisemitic incidents across the world, also praised Georgia lawmakers, calling the vote “great news,” noting that the IHRA definition will be used “for purposes of hate crime and prosecution.”

First adopted in 2005 by the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe, the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) definition of antisemitism states that “antisemitism is a certain perception of Jews, which may be expressed as hatred toward Jews,” and includes a list of illustrative examples ranging from Holocaust denial to the rejection of the Jewish people’s right to self-determination. The definition is used by hundreds of governing institutions, including the US State Department, European Union, and the United Nations and is supported by lawmakers across the political spectrum.

Kanye West Wears Shirt Supporting Nazi After Apologizing For Antisemitism

A picture is worth a thousand words… or more powerful than a 40-minute apology video, we guess?

Kanye West released an apology for his antisemitic comments last month, and was on the cusp of dropping another one, a rambling video said to be nonsensical but lengthy. But what good are those words when he’s wearing a picture of what he really supports?

The Power rapper was spotted in a pic on the social media of fellow rapper JPEGMafia on Friday morning, and in it he’s wearing an extremely controversial t-shirt. It’s the shirt of a Norwegian black metal band from the ’90s called Burzum — a band actually made up of just one man, Varg Vilkernes (above, inset — from prison), whose face is shown prominently on the tee.

If any of these names are sounding familiar it’s less likely you’ve heard his music on Spotify — and more likely you’ve heard about him on a true crime podcast.

Vilkernes is a convicted arsonist and murderer who spent 15 years in prison for burning down churches and stabbing to death a bandmate and rival named Euronymous from the band Mayhem. They made a movie about it a couple years back called Lords of Chaos. It starred a Culkin.

The other thing that’s crucial to know about Varg? He was an out-and-proud, unabashed Nazi.

Yes, during his time in prison he actually launched a whole neo-Nazi movement in Scandinavia called the Norwegian Heathen Front. He was one of the few people to receive a copy of the manifesto by that far-right terrorist who killed 77 people in Norway in 2011. He was arrested a couple years later on suspicion of planning acts of terrorism, but it couldn’t be proven. After that he dropped some of the more overtly antisemitic, explicitly Nazi rhetoric. But he still preaches the same crap: racism and white supremacy, enough that YouTube deplatformed him in 2019.

We say all this so you know this isn’t hyperbole — this man is a modern neo-Nazi thought leader. And those in the know spoke out, with fans on social media writing:

“Bro wearing a band t-shirt from a known Neo-n*zi.”

“Burzum’s music and views are trash so that makes sense for YE.”

“Huge fan of you bro but this is disappointing.”

Has that last person not been paying attention to anything else Ye has been saying for the past couple years??

Liora Rez, the exec director of StopAntisemitism, said in a statement to DailyMail.com:

“StopAntisemitism strongly condemns Kanye’s decision to wear a t-shirt depicting Kristian ‘Varg’ Vikernes, a neo-Nazi killer with a notorious history of violence and hate. This is yet another disgusting example of the disgraced rapper publicly associating with white supremacists — promoting the legacy of an individual who has caused immense harm and poses a threat to marginalized communities everywhere. There will never be a redemption arc for Kanye West, period. What will he try next? Another apology in Hebrew?”

Fair.

Obviously this isn’t the most egregiously antisemitic thing Kanye has done, but it’s a pretty big red flag — or black flag in this case — that he’s in no way remorseful for his views.

Gaza War Fallout: The US Medical Industry Is Not Immune to Antisemitism

“What kind of America are we living in that a physician feels empowered to blast these types of hateful, racist opinions?" asks one Jewish doctor after a wave of antisemitic posts by medics, including some likening Israel to Nazi Germany

Antisemitism has skyrocketed in the United States and other countries since the Oct. 7 massacres in Israel, and the medical field is not immune. Rather, several US physicians, nurses, and other medical professionals have made comments that contradict the Hippocratic Oath and shine a light on the growing issue of antisemitism in the medical field.

“Medicine is being corrupted in a way that is antithetical to our profession. We live on science. We live on truth through science. We treat all humans. That is our life’s calling. And when we see either an ignorance of facts or a misappropriation of facts, it really causes an existential crisis,” Dr. Yael Halaas, the president and founder of the American Jewish Medical Association, told The Media Line.

Halaas, a world-renowned plastic surgeon who runs a practice in Manhattan and has trained thousands of physicians, said she founded the association in part because many Jewish physicians “felt left out of the conversation” and “alienated from colleagues that one day before we were calling amiable colleagues and all of a sudden now there was this divide based on ignorance.”

Watchdog groups such as Canary Mission and StopAntisemitism have highlighted several medical professionals who have made unsavory comments about Israel and Jews. The comments range in their degrees of Jew-hatred. Much of the antisemitism is cloaked in liberalism, masked in pacifism, or tucked away in subtexts. A lot of it references Nazism.

“The IDF [Israel Defense Forces] is the most accomplished military killing machine since the Einsatzgruppen,” Arizona-based surgeon Dr. Sam Durrani posted on Threads, referring to the Nazi death squads responsible for the mass murders of some 1.5 million Jews, mostly by shooting.

“Don’t like Nazi comparisons? Stop acting like them, you are not beyond reproach,” he wrote.

In another post, Durrani wrote: “The Hamas terrorist attacks, horrifying as they were, are a false flag for Netanyahu’s (Likud’s) Final Solution.” The Final Solution was the Nazi plan for the genocide of the Jews, 6 million of whom were ultimately killed in the Holocaust.

Durrani is adamant that he is not antisemitic and that he cares for all patients equally. He also condemns Hamas and claims that he donated to the Anti-Defamation League after Oct. 7.

However, according to the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance, “drawing comparisons of contemporary Israeli policy to that of the Nazis” and “claiming that the existence of a state of Israel is a racist endeavor” are examples of antisemitism.

I think it is the apex of gaslighting when antisemites use Nazi language to describe Zionism, which is just asking for Jews to have the right to self-determination in their homeland

The IHRA has 35 member countries, and its working definition of antisemitism has been adopted by the majority of US states, including Arizona, and 40 countries.

“I think it is the apex of gaslighting when antisemites use Nazi language to describe Zionism, which is just asking for Jews to have the right to self-determination in their homeland,” Dr. Sheila Nazarian, a board-certified plastic surgeon and star of Netflix’s Emmy-nominated series “Skin Decision: Before and After,” told The Media Line.

Nazarian, a Jew from Iran, fled Iranian persecution as a child. She now owns a medical practice in Beverly Hills and is a clinical assistant professor at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles.

Canary Mission and StopAntisemitism have found numerous troubling incidents of antisemitism in the medical community.

A group called Doctors Against Genocide attempted to organize an anti-Israel protest on Dec. 28 at the US Holocaust Memorial Museum. Their online flyer called it an “urgent action” to “stop the genocide in Gaza.” After receiving blowback, they canceled the event and issued a statement saying the action was actually “a planned visit to the Holocaust Memorial Museum as a way to educate and engage the medical community.”

Dr. Ali Imran, who reportedly works at the same hospital as Durrani, is listed on Canary Mission’s website for “spreading hatred of Israel” and “blaming Israel for terrorist war crimes.” He was a featured speaker at an anti-Israel event held in Phoenix, Arizona.

Dr. Tariq Hilal, a board-certified sports and spine physician, was publicly called out by StopAntisemitism.

“In his spare time, [Hilal] refers to Israelis as ‘pigs’ and ‘baby killers’ and compares Zionism to Nazism,” the group posted on the social media platform X.

In late October, within weeks of the Hamas massacre in Israel, a letter was submitted to the esteemed medical journal The Lancet titled “Call to Action: An Open Letter from Global Health Professionals.” It amassed 2,700 signatures. Claiming to speak on behalf of global health workers, the letter called for an immediate cease-fire in Gaza, while barely condemning Hamas. Neither was there any call for the release of the more than 240 hostages Hamas was holding, including many elderly people and young children. A clause calling for this had been removed after eliciting complaints from signatories. 

The Lancet never published the letter, thanks in large part to a competing letter signed by more than 47,500 international medical professionals that asked the journal to reconsider publication. That letter said the first letter contained misinformation, one-sided, biased views, incomplete context and history, and largely included opinion rather than evidence-based references. “How in good conscience can a health professional call themselves humanitarian and choose not to demand the release of innocent people?” it ended.

“What kind of America are we living in that a physician feels empowered to blast these types of hateful, racist opinions? What kind of medical societies do we have that allow this to happen?” Nazarian asked. “If any other race was spoken about this way, or any other minority group was spoken about this way, there is no way that a physician would be able to get away with it. So why is there a double standard when it comes to Jews?”

Asked by The Media Line whether she would be comfortable taking family members to see a doctor who posted material such as Durrani posted, Nazarian replied, “Absolutely not.”

“What I learned living in Iran and having witnessed antisemitism and Islamist ideology firsthand, is that there are some people who can be educated and some who have been brainwashed so thoroughly from birth, in schools, in their religious institutions, and at their dinner table at home. And so it’s going to take a lot of work to de-brainwash someone with that level of indoctrination,” she said.

Nazarian said that even though many physicians have been reported to their medical boards over antisemitic social media posts, most boards believe that doctors’ opinions on social media do not fall under their medical jurisdiction, and therefore, incidents are typically handled by employers, if at all.

Halaas said she was aware of only one doctor who had been disciplined by a medical board: Dr. Darren Klugman, a Jewish doctor who was the director of pediatric cardiac critical care at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore. He had posted on X, “Palestinians showing world exactly who they are & what they want, dead Jews & no more #israel. Just savage animals … time to reclaim Gaza since 2005 & end Iran nuclear program. Time is now. #IsraelUnderAttack.”

Klugman’s posts were written in the first two days of the Hamas attacks on Israel, as the horrors of the slaughters, atrocities, and abductions were still emerging, and he had family members in Israel who were unaccounted for.

Meanwhile, cardiologist and Harvard professor Dr. Nasrien Ibrahim, who was showcased by several social media watchdog groups for antisemitic posts, received considerably different treatment. According to StopAntisemitism, Ibrahim “wouldn’t condemn Hamas” after Oct. 7, among other questionable things. Ibrahim recently announced on social media that she had been “elected to the Human Rights Forum Executive Board of the American Public Health Association as the communications chair.”

Hamas is a designated foreign terrorist organization in the United States, United Arab Emirates, and other countries, and the Oct. 7 attacks marked the single largest loss of Jewish life since the Holocaust.

Around 132 people are still being held in Gaza, of whom at least 25 are known to be dead.

I think the best thing to do is to create awareness and amplify these physicians’ messages so that the public knows their doctors and to be able to choose their doctors wisely with morals and ethics that align with their morals and ethics

Former hostage Mia Schem, a 21-year-old Israeli who was abducted from the Nova music festival and released after 54 grueling days in the late November hostage release deal, said in an interview that ordinary Palestinian families were helping to hide the hostages. Durrani responded on social media by calling Schem’s interview an exploitation of her trauma “to justify child murder” in Gaza.

“I think the best thing to do is to create awareness and amplify these physicians’ messages so that the public knows their doctors and to be able to choose their doctors wisely with morals and ethics that align with their morals and ethics,” Nazarian said.

Halaas said it was a good sign that there were many examples of doctors who came together after Oct. 7, regardless of personal beliefs or external factors, to uphold their duty of care.

“We have doctors of all faiths in my center, and in my particular center, both Muslim and Jewish doctors have made a point of reaffirming their caring and their humanity to each other. … It’s actually been a testament to how physicians really behave, really should behave, really want to behave, and the ideal that we really want to embody,” Halaas said.

Kanye West Set to Apologize for Antisemitism in 40 Minute Video - Report

Kanye West is set to apologize for his antisemitic rant in a 40-minute long video which will be released ahead of the launch of his new album “Vultures” on February 7, TMZ reported.

According to the source, West was incoherent throughout the video. 

According to Yahoo, the fact that the launch of the video coincides with that of the album suggests the video is more of a publicity stunt or an image rebranding rather than an actual expression of remorse at his past actions. 

Earlier this December, the rapper issued an apology in dubious Hebrew regarding his past statements. 

Over the years, the rapper has become notorious for his antisemitic remarks.  

In 2022, a watchdog group named StopAntisemitism labeled West “antisemite of the year.” This came following the star’s posts on X in which he said he wished to go “death con 3” on Jews, among others. Throughout this time, in an interview with conspiracy theorist Alex Jones, he also lauded Adolf Hitler and denied the Holocaust.

Following his remarks, many of his sponsors decided to disassociate themselves from the rapper, ending their contracts with him

In June, 2023, a documentary entitled “The Trouble with KanYe” aired on the BBC shed light on Kanye’s rabid antisemitic remarks during his 2024 presidential campaign. 

In December 15, 2023, West was filmed ranting about Jews at a Las Vegas event, stating that the Zionists and the Rothschilds control schools and hospitals. 

Watch Dick Durbin’s Face After Ted Cruz Blasts Him for Calling Him a Bigot

Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) eviscerated Senate Judiciary Chairman Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) on Thursday after Durbin accused Cruz of "prejudicial treatment" and “bigotry” for opposing the nomination of Adeel Mangi, Joe Biden’s judicial nominee for a U.S. Circuit Judge position in the Third Circuit Court of Appeals in New Jersey, and hiding behind a statement for the left-leaning Anti-Defamation League while doing so.

“You have just impugned my character by making a false accusation, and I will say it is disgraceful!” Cruz told Durbin on Thursday. “Did you respond to any of the substance of what I said? No! You just attacked me and called me a bigot, and you responded by stating deliberate falsehoods,” Cruz said in a fury of anger. "You said he would be the first Muslim. Well, you know what? I understand," he continued as Durbin attempted to interrupt him. “Excuse me, I have a right to defend myself when you impugn my character in a way that is a new low for this committee.”

“You did not dispute any of the facts I said about the organization that he was an advisor of, he was a donor of, he raised money for,” Cruz continued, lighting up the room with fireworks. “The Democrats don’t want to defend the substance, so now they’re screaming Islamophobia, and I understand, playing the race card when anyone disagrees with the Democrats, they scream racist.”

Cruz reiterated that his opposition to Mangi's confirmation is not based on Mangi’s religion but on Mangi's "extreme” record, including his time on the advisory board of Rutgers Law School’s Center for Security, Race, and Rights (CSRR), during which the group favored Hamas over Israel and held an event in support of a Palestinian Islamic Jihad terrorist.

Cruz also cited a letter from the Coalition of Jewish Values, which called on the committee to reject the confirmation, and StopAntisemitism, an organization that is also troubled by Mangi’s ties to CSSR.

“The left-wing Jewish organizations lining up to back Mr. Mangi’s nomination do not represent the consensus of American Jewry, much less its rabbinic leadership,” the Coalition of Jewish Values said in a statement. “Mr. Mangi’s alliance with the Center raises genuine concerns about his judgment and his commitment to American principles. Those concerns have nothing to do with his religious background or faith.”

Despite the evidence, Durbin insisted that Mangi had no connection to CSSR, which sent sparks flying from Cruz.

“Did you just say he had no connection with this organization? Is that seriously what you said in this hearing?” Cruz asked. “He was on the board of advisors; he was a donor and raised money for it, but you said he has no connection with them?”

“See? You twist this situation,” Durbin responded dumbly.

“Mr. Chairman, you just said he has no connection with this organization,” Cruz replied. “Is that your view and the view of Senate Democrats? Is that your view that he had no connection with this organization? Okay, you’re refusing to answer because it’s obviously indefensible and false.”

You have to watch the entire exchange to get a sense of how epic it was.

Antisemitism Watchdog Pans Biden Judicial Nominee

An antisemitism watchdog has raised red flags about President Joe Biden's nomination of Judge Adeel Mangi for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 3rd Circuit over his affiliation to a pro-Palestinian advocacy group and its controversial 9/11 event.

StopAntisemitism Executive Director Liora Rez told the New York Post that Mangi should be "removed from consideration immediately" over his association with the Center for Security, Race and Rights (CSRR) at Rutgers University.

Mangi's confirmation vote in the Senate for appointment to the 3d District Appeals Court is expected to be held Thursday. If appointed, Mangi would be the first Muslim in U.S. history to serve in the federal appellate courts.

"We are not confident he can impartially execute his judicial duties, and should be removed from consideration immediately," Rez told the Post. "His association with the Center for Security, Race and Rights (CSRR) raises serious concerns, as does his connection with CSRR's Executive Director Sahar Aziz and their horrifying commemoration of 9/11 featuring convicted terror supporter Sami al-Arian."

Mangi said in confirmation hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee last month that he didn't "know anything" about CSRR's controversial 9/11 event or panelist Al-Arian, a former professor who pleaded guilty in 2006 for aiding the terrorist group Palestinian Islamic Jihad. Al-Arian was sentenced to 57 months in prison, according to the Post.

Mangi said he didn't know that Hatem Bazian, a professor and founder of Students for Justice in Palestine who has called for Intifada in the U.S., according to the Jerusalem Post, was also a member of the 9/11 panel, which sponsored the event, titled: "Whose Narrative? 20 Years Since 9/11/2001."

"I don't know anything about this event or who these people are. I never heard of any of them. If someone on there is a terrorist, I condemn them," he told the Senate Judiciary Committee.

Mangi told Senate Republicans on the committee that his role with CSRR was limited to academic advisory.

Mangi resigned from CSRR and left in July.

Andrew Bates, Deputy White House press secretary, issued a statement to Newsmax on Thursday.

"President Biden is deeply proud to have nominated Adeel Abdullah Mangi, an indisputably qualified and experienced attorney who has lived the American dream and is devoted to our Constitution and the rule of law," Bates said. "These vile, unconscionable smears have been discredited by the Anti-Defamation League, the American Jewish Committee, and the American Association of Jewish Lawyers and Jurists, among many others.

"The Constitution, which every Senator has sworn to uphold – and which Mr. Mangi will uphold as the first Muslim to serve on an appellate court in American history – forbids religious litmus tests. The Senators spreading these hateful and undignified attacks – Senators [Tom] Cotton, [Ted] Cruz, and [Josh] Hawley – should take note of that fact.”

Jewish Groups to Senate Judiciary Committee: Oppose Third Circuit Nominee With Ties To Radical, Antisemitic Law School Organization

Several Jewish organizations wrote to the Senate Judiciary Committee urging them to oppose Adeel Abdullah Mangi’s nomination to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit.

Mangi donated thousands of dollars to the Rutgers’ Center for Security, Race and Rights and was personally invited to serve on the Center’s board of advisors by the Center’s director, who has consistently promoted anti-Semitic rhetoric.

Coalition for Jewish Values:

“The left-wing Jewish organizations lining up to back Mr. Mangi’s nomination do not represent the consensus of American Jewry, much less its rabbinic leadership. Mr. Mangi’s alliance with the Center raises genuine concerns about his judgment and his commitment to American principles. Those concerns have nothing to do with his religious background or faith.”

“We believe these concerns to be sufficiently grave that we urge the committee to await a more suitable candidate, untainted by associations with antisemitic organizations, especially at a time when antisemitic hatred is openly displayed in a fashion which Americans have not seen since the Nazi era.”

Letter on January 16, 2024

Zionist Organization of America, Americans Against Antisemitism, StopAntisemitism and Students Supporting Israel:

“Mangi repeatedly asserted that he was merely a CSRR Advisory Board member; merely advised on CSRR’s ‘academic research’; and he had no knowledge of, responsibility for or involvement in CSRR’s activities, statements, publications, officials and featured speakers.”

“If a nominee for a top judicial post asserted that he was merely a Ku Klux Klan advisory board member, and merely advised on the KKK’s ‘academic research,’ his nomination would be flatly rejected.  Mangi likewise must not be confirmed.”

“We also note those Jewish organizations that are supporting Mr. Mangi do not represent the views and deep concerns of the majority of American Jews or the majority of decent Americans. We thus strongly urge the Senate to vote against Adeel Abdullah Mangi’s confirmation.”

Biden Judicial Appointee Draws Scrutiny Over Ties to Controversial 9/11 Memorial Event

A prominent Jewish rights organization said it has “serious concerns” over President Biden’s nomination to a US court of appeals — over his ties to a controversial pro-Palestinian advocacy group at Rutgers University. 

The non-profit watchdog StopAntisemitism said Adeel Mangi’s association with Rutgers Center for Security, Race, and Rights (CSRR) will affect his ability to remain impartial as a judge.

The New Jersey-based lawyer, who is Muslim, was picked by President Biden to serve as a federal judge on the US Court of Appeals for the Third District in November.

The nomination quickly drew fiery scrutiny from conservatives over his ties to the CSRR, where he served as a member on its advisory board from 2019 to 2023.

The advocacy group raised eyebrows when it hosted a panel on the 20th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks in 2021 — during Mangi’s tenure — which featured Dr. Sami Al-Arian, a former University of South Florida professor who pleaded guilty in 2006 to aiding the Palestinian Islamic Jihad, a terrorist group.

Al-Arian, who was born in Kuwait to Palestinian parents, was sentenced to 57 months in prison.

The panel, titled “Whose Narrative? 20 Years since September 11, 2001,” also included Hatem Bazian, a UC Berkeley professor and co-founder of Students for Justice in Palestine who appeared to call passionately for Intifada in the US in a video unearthed by the Jerusalem Post.

Another speaker on the panel was Dr. Rabab Abulhad, who tried in 2020 to organize an event featuring notorious Liberation of Palestine terrorist member Leila Khaled, known for a pair of brazen hijackings she undertook in the late ’60s and early ’70s.

A poster for the event at the Rutgers center is shown, the same location where Adeel Mangi is on the advisory board, entitled: Whose Narrative? 20 Years since September 11, 2001.

“We are not confident he can impartially execute his judicial duties, and should be removed from consideration immediately,” said StopAntisemitism executive director Liora Rez in a statement.

“His association with the Center for Security, Race and Rights (CSRR) raises serious concerns, as does his connection with CSRR’s Executive Director Sahar Aziz and their horrifying commemoration of 9/11 featuring convicted terror supporter Sami al-Arian,” Rez said, adding that the group “strongly oppose” Mangi’s nomination.

Not all Jewish groups agreed with StopAntisemitism’s position, however.

The Anti-Defamation League (ADL) called the questioning of Mangi “inappropriate and prejudicial” in a Jan. 9 statement, characterizing it as blatant Islamophobia.

“This was an attempt to create controversy where one did not exist,” the organization said.

“ADL urges leaders to refrain from fueling discrimination and hate — and urges the Senate to offer Mr. Mangi a fair vote, based on his qualifications and fitness for the job.”

It added that Mangi “was subjected to aggressive questioning unrelated to his professional expertise or qualifications. Rather, he was forced to provide responses to a wide range of inquiries regarding his views on global strategic considerations in a manner that inappropriately politicized these issues and raised serious questions regarding pretext and bias.”

The CSRR on its website lists “criminalization of Muslim identity” through “United States and global national security laws and policies” as one of the main themes of its mission.

Recent lectures held at the CSRR include “Psychoanalysis Under Occupation: Practicing Resistance in Palestine,” and “Palestine Teach in Series: Israeli Settlements in the Occupied Territories,” according to its website.

During Mangi’s confirmation hearing before the US Senate Judiciary Committee in December, Republican lawmakers tore into the attorney over his association with the center.

“Are you willing to denounce the center on whose board you served inviting a convicted terrorist, a supporter of Palestinian Islamic Jihad…” Texas Sen. Ted Cruz said during an aggressive line of questioning.

Mangi insisted his involvement was limited to academic advisory and he did not know about the controversial 9/11 panel.

“I don’t know anything about this event or who these people are, I never heard of any of them, if someone on there is a terrorist, I condemn them,” he told the Senate Judiciary Committee.

Mangi submitted his resignation to the CSRR last June and left at the end of July.

“The center’s work had not matched what I personally felt were the most productive areas of academic focus to support civil rights litigation,” he wrote in the Committee questionnaire.

Mangi’s confirmation vote is scheduled for Thursday. If appointed, he would be the first Muslim in American history to serve in the federal appellate courts, where judges serve for life.

He did not respond to requests for comment when contacted by The Post.

The Post has also reached out to the CSRR.

MSNBC Associate Producer Accuses IDF of Rape, Mutilation

An MSNBC producer called condemnation of Hamas’s violence against Israeli women “tone deaf” on Sunday and accused the IDF of perpetrating similar atrocities against Palestinians.

Nicole McReynolds, an associate video producer on Ali Velshi’s MSNBC show, scolded Big Time Rush singer James Maslow over an Instagram post that described Hamas’s murder, mutilation, and rape of Israeli women on October 7.

“James, I’m a huge fan of yours, but this is quite tone deaf. We are all aware of the horrors that Israelis went through on October 7th, and are still going through — but to not even mention the atrocities that Israel and the IDF have put Palestinians through is ridiculous,” McReynolds wrote in a since-deleted Instagram comment. “Just under 25 thousand people have been murdered by the Israeli government (and the IDF has raped and mutilated both women and children) and half a million people are starving.”

“While there is no easy solution to this, what is happening on both sides should not be happening at all,” she continued. “We all need to be open minded, educate ourselves, and have compassion.”

McReynolds’s now-deleted LinkedIn profile listed her as an employee of Velshi, MSNBC’s Chief Correspondent Ali Velshi’s weekend show.

Velshi has brought on his show many pro-Palestinian commentators who have legitimized Hamas’s attacks. On October 7, the same day Hamas waged its attack against Israel, Velshi invited Palestinian activist Nour Odeh on his show to discuss what Velshi called “Israel’s inhumane treatment of the Palestinians who live under Israeli occupation.”

To think that the “record number of Palestinian children killed by Israeli occupation forces, a record number of Palestinian homes demolished by Israel, a record number of Israeli settler attacks against Palestinian villages where homes and businesses were set on fire, where Palestinians were injured or killed by armed Israelis,” wouldn’t “have consequences, or wouldn’t have a reaction from the Palestinians, all Palestinians, was delusional,” Odeh said.

Odeh also stressed the importance of recognizing the “context in which all of this is happening, the fact that Israel is an occupying power, the fact that Israel has violated international law and Palestinian rights.” At the time Velshi invited Odeh on the show, Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu had just declared war on Hamas, and Israeli Defense Forces were still calculating the magnitude of Hamas’s attack.

Velshi has also urged the United States not to “reward Israel’s bad behavior” and has called Israel’s democratic system “ostensible” because “millions of people, Palestinians who live under illegal occupation, are subject to Israeli persecution and prosecution without either its protections or the right to vote.”

As a video producer, McReynolds shapes the direction of the show by creating news packets, pitching news segments, and compiling video clips for on-air stories.

Maslow’s post attracted a host of pro-Palestinian activists who seconded McReynolds’s unsubstantiated claims.

“Bro I love you but now your [sic] emberassing [sic] yourself with this bullshit.. you see what is happening right now but still you support the bullshit!” European amateur boxer Farzahd Razaghzadeh commented. “Wouldve respect you more if you supported all innocent people.”

U.S. intelligence, Israeli authorities, and independent investigations led by the New York Times and USA Today have all confirmed details of Hamas’s systemic brutalization of women on October 7. A growing number of witnesses, health-care workers, and October 7 survivors have corroborated heinous claims that Hamas terrorists gang-raped women on the streets of Israel, stabbed women in their vaginas, cut off women’s breasts, and even shot and killed a woman while inside of her.

MSNBC did not respond to a request for comment.

Rashida Tlaib Named ‘Antisemite Of The Year’ By StopAntisemitism Group

Michigan Representative Rashida Tlaib has won the title of “Antisemite of the Year.”

On Monday, the StopAntisemitism organization designated Tlaib (D-Mich.) as the “Antisemite of the Year,” following her antisemitic statements regarding the October 7th attacks on Israel launched by the terrorist group, Hamas.

Congresswoman Tlaib received the title after she defeated a tough field of contenders who appeared to be fighting for the top spot as antisemitism has increased globally after Hamas’s October 7th attack. Tlaib even defeated senior leader of Hamas, Ismail Haniyeh, as well as supermodel Gigi Hadid.

After 15,000 voters casted ballots, Tlaib, who represents the 12th district in the Great Lake State, was declared the winner.

Tlaib, who is the fifth “Antisemite of the Year,” joins the likes of Kanye West (2022) and Anuradha Mittal (2021), the vice president and head of the board of directors of the Ben & Jerry’s Foundation Inc. 

The StopAntisemitism association states that its mission is to expose “groups and individuals that espouse incitement towards the Jewish people and State and engage in antisemitic behaviors.” 

The organization specified several occurrences of the Michigan representative’s continuing criticism of Israel.

“Rep. Tlaib’s well-earned title reflects a long history of antisemitism, but her statements in the wake of Hamas’s October 7th attacks were particularly unconscionable,” said StopAntisemitism Executive Director Liora Rez. “Tlaib not only victim-blamed Israel, but she also accused it of committing genocide against the Palestinians and continues to defend calls to ethnically cleanse Israel of Jews and genocide.” 

“This is a historically dangerous time for American Jews,” added Rez. “Amid an explosion in antisemitic incidents and hate crimes, we can’t afford to have our elected representatives adding fuel to the fire.”

In October, Tlaib was criticized for falsely claiming that an Israel Defense Forces (IDF) bomb had destroyed a Gaza hospital, even though records prove that it was Palestinian Islamic Jihad missile that had misfired.

A few days later, Tlaib came under scrutiny on social media for standing alongside demonstrators who were shouting, “Palestine will be free from the river to the sea.”

Despite the Anti-Defamation League’s claim that the chant is a call for the elimination of the state of Israel in its current form between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea, the American-Israeli Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) says that the phrase reflects a literal call for genocide against Jewish people. Tlaib continues to insist that the chant is “an aspirational call for freedom, human rights, and peaceful coexistence.”

The House of Representatives censured Tlaib for her defense of the hateful chant, with 212 Republicans voting with 22 of her fellow Democrats in favor of her censure.

Additionally, it was eventually revealed that the Michigan congresswoman is involved in a secret Facebook group that has applauded the Hamas terrorists who abducted and murdered hundreds of Israeli civilians, including at least 39 Americans.

The orchestrator of the hidden Facebook group, which is called “Palestinian American Congress,” has claimed that Israeli people are “not real Jews” and allegedly doubted whether the Holocaust really happened.

In declaring Tlaib as the “Antisemite of the Year,” the StopAntisemitism Executive Director additionally highlighted that Tlaib is a member of Congress.

“This is a historically dangerous time for American Jews,” Rez stated. “Amid an explosion in antisemitic incidents and hate crimes, we can’t afford to have our elected representatives adding fuel to the fire!”