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THOUSANDS MOBILIZE AT GROUND ZERO AGAINST SURGING ANTISEMITISM & TERROR IN ISRAEL & US

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 World Trade Center rally among 14 nationwide

NEW YORK, May 23 – Thousands mobilized Sunday at 7 World Trade Center – Ground Zero – and across the nation in response to a wave of antisemitic attacks nationwide and to stand with Israel in its ongoing battle against terrorism and demonization.

The rally, “United Against Antisemitism. United Against Terror. United for Us” was led by the Israeli-American Council (IAC) New York Region with 100 Tri-State Jewish community organizations. IAC communities and many Jewish organizations joined in 14 rallies from coast to coast bringing thousands of people to the streets, as antisemitic hate crimes rise nationwide amid the current wave of Mideast violence.

“Despite the cease fire in Israel, we’ve seen a wave of unprecedented attacks on Jews and rise in antisemitic hatred here in the US. That’s why thousands of us mobilized today across this great nation to speak out strongly and stand with our families here and in Israel,” said IAC Co-founder and CEO Shoham Nicolet.

In addition to New York City, other rallies are taking place Sunday nationwide including in Atlanta; Austin, TX; Denver; Great Neck, Long Island; Houston; Kansas City; Los Angeles; Miami; Orange County, CA; Orlando; Philadelphia; Rochester, NY; and Tenafly, NJ.

“To our brothers and sisters in Israel, we want you to hear loud and clear: We stand with you as you show the world what it means to live bravely under the threat of hatred and annihilation you have faced since before the State of Israel was even created,” said Elisha Wiesel, son of the late author and Nobel Prize winner Elie Wiesel.

Sarri Singer, who survived a 2003 suicide bombing of an Israeli bus, said that “whether it is in Paris, London, Brussels, Israel, New York City, or anywhere else in the world, terrorism does not discriminate. It can happen anywhere and at any time. All of us have an obligation to show that we are not going to stand by while we let those who have little value for human life continue to hurt and murder innocent people. An attack on any of us is an attack on all of us.”

The IAC chose the World Trade Center as a gathering spot because the site reflects America’s own history of being targeted by hatred and terror.

“The World Trade Center is a powerful symbol of America’s resilience and resolve against hatred and terrorism, just as the people of Israel stand strong in the face of terrorism and hate,” said Nicolet. “Today we showed that New Yorkers and all Americans are resoundingly united against antisemitic hatred and terror, here and in Israel.”

 

 

Phyllis Shallman – Is It Ever OK to Use a Credit Cards?

Is it ever OK to use a credit card? Yes… but with qualifications.

Let’s explore some situations where using your credit card makes sense…and what pitfalls to avoid.

You’re strategically leveraging rewards. It’s perfectly possible to reap the benefits of cash back rewards without going into debt to earn them. How? Try using your credit card just for everyday purchases like gas and groceries. If you don’t overspend, you’re essentially getting paid for using your card.

But that’s the trick. Those rewards can make it tempting to buy things you don’t need. It’s easy to justify excess purchases if you’re earning those extra points! But in the long-term, the rewards won’t outweigh the costs and risks of overusing a credit card. So if you think you can thread the needle of responsibly using a credit card to leverage points without overspending, go for it!

You’re making significant online purchases. The simple fact is that there are serious rewards—and protections—when you use your card for online purchases. This is especially true for travel. Some cards offer specific rewards for booking hotels or plane tickets that you should certainly take advantage of. There are also some protections for online purchases that credit cards offer. Once again, don’t plan a fancy vacation just to take advantage of rewards. But if you need to travel, you might as well get any benefits coming to you!

Wisely using credit cards is a matter of self-control. If you can take advantage of rewards and protections without overspending, good for you! For others, however, it may be wise to avoid cards altogether while they pay down their debt.

Not sure which strategy is best for you? Contact a licensed and qualified financial professional. They can help evaluate your situation and make a recommendation.

CDC Looking Into Heart Inflammation In Some Young Vaccine Recipients

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Some teenagers and young adults who received COVID-19 vaccines experienced heart inflammation, a U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention advisory group said, recommending further study of the rare condition.

The CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices in a statement dated May 17 said it had looked into reports that a few young vaccine recipients, predominantly adolescents and young adults, and predominantly male, developed myocarditis, an inflammation of the heart muscle.

The condition often goes away without complications and can be caused by a variety of viruses, the CDC group said.

CDC monitoring systems had not found more cases than would be expected in the population, but members of the committee on vaccinations felt that healthcare providers should be made aware of the reports of the “potential adverse event,” the committee said in the statement.

Read more at NEWSMAX.

{Matzav.com}

Temple Mount Reopened to Jews After 20-Day Closure

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 By Aryeh Savir/TPS • 23 May, 2021
Jerusalem, 23 May, 2021 (TPS) — The Temple Mount was reopened to Jewish visitors on Sunday after it was closed to them 20 days.

Israel readmitted Jews to the Temple Mount after a ceasefire brought Operation Guardian of the Walls to an end early on Friday morning after 11 days of warfare.

Israel shut down the Temple Mount even before Hamas launched its attack on Israel saying that it stoked tensions and enraged the Muslims.

Muslims rioted on the Temple Mount on Friday even after the latest war in Gaza ended and even though there were no Jews on site. Ten rioters were arrested.

The Temple Mount Visits Administration called on Israel to “neutralize the focal point of the outbreak of terrorism” and transfer the control of the mosques on the Temple Mount from Jordan and the Palestinian Authority to Saudi Arabia or “any other peace-seeking country.”

Some 1,130 Jews prayed on the Temple Mount in the Jewish month of Iyar, which roughly corresponded with most of May and the beginning of June. The Temple Mount was accessible to Jews for only 15 days, for 60 of the 696 hours of the month, less than 9% of the total month.

However, this number of visits consists of a 22% increase in the number of Jewish visitors to the Temple Mount, compared to their number in this time period two years ago.

Iranian facility where blast occurred was drone factory

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Just days after Israel accused Iran of supplying drones to Hamas, “mysterious explosion” strikes in the heart of Iran.

Just days after Israel accused Iran of providing drones to Hamas in Gaza, a factory where such drones are manufactured has fallen victim to a mysterious explosion.

The blast, at the Iran Aircraft Manufacturing Industrial Company, injured at least nine workers.

According to The Guardian, the factory “produces a variety of aircraft and drones for Iranian and pro-Iranian forces.”

Last week, while the Israel-Gaza war was still raging, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu displayed what he said were shards from an Iranian-made drone that the IDF had downed.

So far, Iran has noted merely that “the reason for the explosion is under investigation.”

(Arutz 7).

Biden administration pledges billions to “rebuild Gaza”, spearhead international efforts

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A senior Biden administration official said the U.S. would be “at the fore of an international response, most likely costing billions of dollars.”

The Biden administration is looking to spearhead international efforts to rebuild the Gaza Strip in the wake of two weeks of conflict between Israel, Hamas and other terror factions embedded in the coastal enclave.

A senior Biden administration official said the United States was planning to be “at the fore of an international response, most likely costing billions of dollars, to include restoring health and education services, and other reconstruction,” reported The New York Times.

The official added that the effort would likely be coordinated “through the United Nations”.

U.S. President Joe Biden hinted at the measure in his comments on Thursday addressing the ceasefire that began on Friday.

“I believe the Palestinians and Israelis equally deserve to live safely and securely,” he said in remarks at the White House, “and to enjoy equal measures of freedom, prosperity and democracy.”

According to the report, the Biden administration is also likely to focus on other initiatives, including the issue of Israeli settlements; strengthening of the ties between Israel and Muslim countries, started under the Trump administration; and attempting to foster unity between Palestinian factions in Gaza and Judea and Samaria, adversarial relationships that instigated the hostilities that began in full on May 10.

It remains unclear how the administration and the international community will facilitate rebuilding efforts while at the same time addressing concerns that Hamas, a U.S.-designated terror organization, would use the money and equipment to rebuild its rocket arsenal, terror infrastructure or tunnel system to infiltrate Israel.

After the previous conflict in 2014, the international community established a monitoring system called the Gaza Reconstruction Mechanism to prevent Hamas from using imported supplies to produce weapons.

However, as the recent conflict showed, that effort totally failed  – and was, in fact, doomed from Day One –  as Hamas was able to build an extensive terror tunnel network and launch 4,000-plus rockets at the Jewish state.

Last month, the Biden administration announced it would commit $150 million to UNRWA—the U.N. agency in charge of Palestinian refugees—that were suspended under the Trump administration, as well as provide funds to NGOs in the West Bank and Gaza.

(Arutz 7 / JNS).

Police Say 1 Arrested In Attack On Jewish Men In Los Angeles

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Los Angeles police on Saturday announced the arrest of a suspect in an alleged attack by a pro-Palestinian group on Jewish men outside a restaurant earlier in the week.

A police statement, which did not identify the man, said he was arrested on suspicion of assault with a deadly weapon late Friday at a residence outside the city of Los Angeles with assistance from a U.S. Marshals Service task force.

Increased bail was requested “due to the crime being motivated by hatred,” the statement said.

“The male is one of the primary suspects in the assault and beating of several men who were outside of a restaurant in the evening hours in the Mid-City area of Los Angeles on Tuesday May 18, 2021,” it said.

The violence, recorded on video, occurred when a car caravan flying Palestinian flags stopped near a restaurant where diners were eating at outdoor tables.

Witnesses told news media that people in the caravan threw bottles and chanted “death to Jews” and “free Palestine,” and men got out of the vehicles and began asking who was Jewish. A brawl erupted when two diners said they were Jewish.

Civic and faith leaders have condemned the incident.

(Vosizneias).

Blinken: Iran hasn’t shown that it’s ready to follow nuke deal

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US Secretary of State says Iran has yet to prove it is willing to comply with nuclear deal, a condition for lifting of US sanctions.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken chided Tehran Sunday, saying Iran has yet to show it intends to adhere to the 2015 nuclear deal. Blinken said that the Islamic republic must prove that it will follow the deal in order for the US to lift its sanctions.

Speaking with ABC Sunday, Blinken said the burden of proof is on Iran to prove that it will follow the terms of the nuclear deal, and that Tehran has yet to convince the Biden administration it is willing to adhere to the limits imposed under the deal.

“Iran, I think, knows what it needs to do to come back into compliance on the nuclear side, and what we haven’t yet seen is whether Iran is ready and willing to make a decision to do what it has to do. That’s the test and we don’t yet have an answer,” Blinken said.

Blinken expressed concern of Iran’s support for terrorist activities across the Middle East. At the same time he criticized the Trump administration’s “maximum pressure” approach, emphasizing the current administration’s desire to rejoin the nuclear deal.

“Iran is engaged in a number of activities, including funding extremist groups, supporting terrorism more broadly, supporting very dangerous proxies that are taking very dangerous positions throughout the Middle East, proliferating weapons.”

“Iran with a nuclear weapon, or with a capability to build one in very short order is going to act with even greater impunity in those areas. This adds to the urgency of trying to put the nuclear problem back in the box that the nuclear agreement put it in.”

“Many of these actions are going forward now…under the so called ‘maximum pressure’ put forward by the previous administration, which clearly did not get the result that we all seek, which is to curb all of these activities.”

“The first thing we need to do is get the nuclear problem back in the box, which is why we’re committed to see Iran will come back into compliance with the nuclear agreement.”

(Arutz 7).

 

Pro-Palestinian Who Beat Jewish Man In Midtown: ‘I Would Do It Again’

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The man who was arrested for savagely beating a Jewish man in Midtown last week is showing no remorse for his actions.

In fact, he would do it again, given the chance.

23-year-old Waseem Awawdeh of Bay Ridge was arrested on Friday for the beating of 29-year-old Joseph Borgen, and charged with assault as a hate crime, gang assault, menacing, aggravated assault as a hate crime and criminal possession of a hate crime.

In the attack, Borgen was kicked and struck repeatedly by at least six people after being knocked to the ground in middle of Broadway.
The New York Post reported that Borgen suffered a concussion, a black eye and sustained bruises all over his body.

According to a prosecutor at the arraignment, Awawdeh told one of his jailers “If I could do it again, I would do it again. I have no problem doing it again.”

In view of this, it is incredible that he was released on bail. Awawdeh’s bail was set at $10,000.

The Manhattan assistant district attorney added that the case is being investigated as a hate crime, noting that Awawdeh called Borgen a “dirty Jew” and said, “[expletive] Israel, Hamas is going to kill all of you.”

The NYPD has released an image of more suspects being sought in the case.

Five males knocked Joseph Borgen to the ground and assaulted him while making anti-Semitic statements (DCPI)

(Vosizneias).

US appeasement of Iran, misconceptions over facts linger in wake of Israel-Gaza conflict

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“The appeasement on the nuclear question leads to appeasement across the region,” said Michael Doran of the Hudson Institute. The Biden administration “cannot acknowledge the role Iran is playing in Gaza because if it does, it will be asked to leave the negotiating table in Vienna.”

The conflict in Gaza over the last two weeks highlighted a number of misperceptions and emerging trends between the United States and Israel.

While the Biden administration largely supported Israel’s right to defend itself, it became clear as the conflict wore on that impatience was growing in America, largely among Democrats, over both U.S. support for Israel and the “proportional” use of force in the Gaza Strip.

At the same time, the conflict also came amid negotiations between Iran and world powers over a nuclear deal, as the Biden administration has made it a priority to re-enter the 2015 deal, officially called the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA).

Experts say the role of Iran behind the conflict, as well as Hamas’s own bid for dominance in the Palestinian arena, cannot be overlooked.

Michael Doran, a senior fellow at the Hudson Institute, told JNS that “from a strategic point of view, both Washington and Jerusalem should frame the Gaza conflict as an attack on the American security system in the Middle East.”

“The appeasement on the nuclear question leads to appeasement across the region,” said Doran, adding that the Biden administration “cannot acknowledge the role that Iran is playing in Gaza because if it does, it will be asked to leave the negotiating table in Vienna.”

Doran noted that it is a well-known, documented fact that rockets and missiles produced and obtained by Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad are funded by Iran.

“These terror groups openly acknowledge their strategic connection to the Quds Force for the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps,” he said.

Negotiations in Vienna over the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, the existing Iran nuclear deal, May 2021. Source: Enrique Mora/European External Action Service/Twitter.

‘Avoiding anything that will make them angry’

Yossi Kuperwasser, director of the Project on Regional Middle East Developments at the Jerusalem Center, said U.S. officials “sure don’t sound as if they consider Iran to be a threat.”

“They sound like they want to accommodate it,” he told JNS. “They are avoiding anything that will make them angry.”

Kuperwasser noted that even when the United States stopped a massive shipment of arms to Yemen earlier this month, “they didn’t say where it came from. The language used is to avoid confrontation with Iran.”

Another major issue that arose during the conflict against Hamas centered around a $735 million arms sale to Israel approved by the Biden administration before hostilities began on May 10.

Progressives in the Democratic Party have called for a review of the sale, and some have promised to block it as they falsely accuse Israel of targeting innocent civilians in Gaza.

Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) wrote on Twitter, “At a moment when U.S.-made bombs are devastating Gaza, and killing women and children, we cannot simply let another huge arms sale go through without even a congressional debate.”

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez also posted on Twitter, “The United States should not be rubber-stamping weapons sales to the Israeli government as they deploy our resources to target international media outlets, schools, hospitals, humanitarian missions and civilian sites for bombing.”

These blanket accusations against Israel paint the Jewish state as one that intentionally targets civilians using American munitions.

Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-Mich.) speaking on the floor of the U.S. House of Representatives about the current conflict between Israelis and Palestinians, May 13, 2021. Source: Screenshot/C-SPAN.

‘Tone is stridently anti-Israel and seemingly pro-Hamas’

Jonathan Schanzer, senior vice president of research at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, told JNS the opposite is true.

“The assistance American has supplied Israel has allowed it to strike surgically at Hamas targets,” which has allowed it to achieve a low civilian-casualty rate.

“It is these munitions that have helped Israel keep this fight to a surgical nature,” he said.

As for the progressive group of legislators, Schanzer said “they are small, but they are loud.”

“What is remarkable is the tone of some of these legislators: stridently anti-Israel and seemingly pro-Hamas for that matter.”

Some of the lawmakers appear to have a utopian view of warfare. War has always involved the death of civilians. International law recognizes this, as long as it is proportionate. Some accuse Israel of targeting civilians; however, Israel goes out of its way to save human life, as noted by the Israel Defense Forces, intentionally using precision-guided munitions in an effort to kill only terrorists and avoid civilian deaths.

“It would not be disproportionate, were it not for Iron Dome,” said Schanzer, referring to Israel’s air-defense system that protects its cities from incoming rockets. “Hamas has tried to kill more civilians, and it’s tried to do more damage to Israel. This remarkable technology has prevented them from doing so. Israel should not be blamed for saving the lives of its own people, nor should it be blamed for responding to aggression.”

Schanzer added that he has “a hard time recalling another conflict where this rhetoric has been wielded to try to hamstring the party that did not start the war. It’s truly remarkable.”

Palestinians and left-wing activists protest in the eastern Jerusalem neighborhood of Sheikh Jarrah on April 16, 2021. Photo by Yonatan Sindel/Flash90.

 Misconceptions about Sheikh Jarrah dispute

He also addressed the existing “misconception” in the United States regarding the Sheikh Jarrah property dispute in eastern Jerusalem.

Both the mainstream media and many Democrats viewed the issue as one of the top reasons behind the hostilities—an issue that is not new and that came to the fore this year during Ramadan and reaching a pressure point on May 10, Jerusalem Day.

“The Israeli court system is a legitimate court system that is generally beyond reproach,” said Schanzer. “This is not a casus belli. This is not an act of military aggression taken by Israel. The first act of military aggression was taken by Hamas. This has been lost in the U.S.”

Indeed, some point to Hamas’s own ambitions to be the dominant group within the Palestinian arena as a real factor behind the war. The conflict itself arose after Palestinian Authority leader Mahmoud Abbas canceled Palestinian elections scheduled for May 22 after it became clear that Hamas and his other rival were likely to be victorious.

Hamas stirred tensions in Jerusalem, especially on the Temple Mount, to assert itself after Abbas canceled the elections.

He recalled the Second Palestinian Intifada that began in 2000 when the Palestinians (and some elements in the United States and Europe) blamed former Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon for visiting the Temple Mount and accused him of causing a provocation.

That perceived “act of war”, according to the accusers, was the reason for organized violence carried out by Hamas and the P.A.

“The same would go for what just happened here,” he said, noting how the Palestinians, as well as some progressive U.S. legislators, among many others, point to the pending eviction of Palestinian families from Sheikh Jarrah as a legitimate cause for a coordinated campaign of violence and the firing of more than 4,000 rockets directly into civilian areas of Israel.

“If there is disproportionate force,” said Schanzer, “I think we see where it is.”

(JNS).

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