The Big Story
The famed ‘Arab street’ has come to America, and it’s being funded by George Soros and the Rockefeller Foundation
Protestors in masks and keffiyehs disrupted the Christmas-tree lighting in New York City’s Rockefeller Center Wednesday night and clashed with police as part of a “Flood the Tree Lighting for Gaza” rally, named in celebration of the Hamas attacks on Oct. 7. The journalist Julio Rosas, whose writeup of the protest will be appearing in Tablet this evening, was at the scene and captured some choice moments on camera, including this video of a protestor carrying a flaming NYPD hat:
Aside from the familiar scenes of violence, intimidation, and public disorder, there was something else about Wednesday night’s rally that fit a pattern from similar recent events: These supposedly spontaneous violent outbursts all show signs of being funded and backed by powerful progressive donors. The question, then, is who’s funding the pro-Hamas protests in U.S. cities?
Before “Flood the Tree Lighting”—an event deliberately planned to disrupt the annual Christmas tradition that has been taking place since 1933—there were earlier protests in the city named for Hamas’ Oct. 7 “Al-Aqsa Flood” operation. There was a “Flood Manhattan for Gaza” protest on Nov. 10, a “Flood Brooklyn for Gaza” march on Oct. 28, and another “Flood Brooklyn for Gaza” rally on Oct. 21. That’s in addition to the, well, flood of anti-Israel protests, rallies, sit-ins, and criminal blockades across the country since the start of the current war. A naive observer would be forgiven for thinking that some large proportion of the American public had recently converted to violent support for Palestinian terrorism.
The good news is that hasn’t happened. Recent public opinion polling shows that despite the seemingly endless videos of activists declaring Hamas a legitimate “resistance movement,” the terrorist group’s approval rating in the United States sits at about 1%. The bad news is that anti-Zionists from the far-left fringe don’t need organic public support because they’re backed by an opaque network of wealthy foundations, NGOs, and slush funds—as well as by New York City’s own City Council, which a new report in the New York Post reveals has given millions of dollars to four nonprofits that helped organize the Hamas-themed “Flood” protests in the city.
As a matter of public record, it’s important to know exactly which organizations have been involved in these events—with New York’s City Council actively funding the fire-starting, who knows, next year one of these groups might win an award for good citizenship.
Starting locally in New York City, here’s a quick rundown of some of the organizations receiving taxpayer funds:
The Arab American Association, formerly directed by the anti-Israel activist Linda Sarsour, helped to organize the Oct. 21 “Flood Brooklyn for Gaza” rally in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn. The association has received $6.8 million in New York City funds since 2010 and $3 million in the past two years for “criminal justice services, adult literacy programs, and mental health aid.”
The Muslim American Society of New York, which also helped plan the Bay Ridge protest, has received $260,000 in city contracts and funding from the city council.
Desis Rising Up and Moving, which along with the Democratic Socialists of America organized an Oct. 20 protest that blocked traffic on Fifth Avenue, received $390,000 from the city.
The Tides Center, the dark-money group that receives money from George Soros, Peter Buffett, and other progressive billionaires, earned more than $1.2 million since 2010 from contracts with the Department of Education and other city agencies.
Zooming out to the national level, here are some of the other “grassroots” groups—and their billionaire backers—active in organizing the anti-Israel protests in U.S. cities:
Jewish Voice for Peace, the “Jewish” anti-Zionist group that helped organize the violent Nov. 16 protest outside the Democratic National Committee headquarters and the Oct. 18 rally at the U.S. Capitol, has received $650,000 from George Soros’ Open Society Foundation, $350,000 from the Rockefeller Brothers Fund, and smaller donations from Tides and the charitable wings of Vanguard, Fidelity, and Morgan Stanley.
IfNotNow, JVP’s smaller and more radical partner, has received $400,000 from Soros, $160,000 from the Rockefellers, and “tens of thousands” from the Sixteen Thirty Fund, managed by the Democratic dark-money network Arabella Advisors.
Samidoun, which was banned from Germany in October and is widely alleged to be a front for the Popular Liberation Front for Palestine, a U.S.-designated terror group, is a “fiscal sponsor” of the Alliance for Global Justice, a left-wing NGO that has received millions in donations from funds in the Tides and Arabella networks. The fiscal sponsorship arrangement means that for legal and tax purposes, Samidoun is not an independent organization but a subsidiary of the AFGJ. Samidoun has also taken donations from James “Fergie” Chambers, the Communist multimillionaire and partial heir to the Cox family fortune.
The Arab Resource and Organizing Center, which organized the blockade of an Israel-bound military ship in Tacoma, Washington, and handed out anti-Israel scripts at the Oakland City Council meeting covered in yesterday’s edition of The Scroll, is a fiscal sponsor of Tides.
The Adalah Justice Project, which organized sit-ins in the offices of House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries and Congressman Ro Khanna (D-CA), is also a fiscal sponsor of Tides. In 2021, Adalah partnered with MPower Change, Linda Sarsour’s new organization, to launch the “Gaza is Palestine” initiative, which according to its website works to “influence media, policy, and grassroots pressure to keep the stories of Palestinian families decimated by Israeli state violence in the public eye.”
The People’s Forum, a far-left New York event space that has organized several anti-Israel rallies since Oct. 7, is almost exclusively funded by Neville Roy Singham, a Marxist tech millionaire with ties to the Chinese Communist Party.
We’ll keep you updated as more of these connections are revealed.
Read the Post report here: https://nypost.com/2023/11/04/metro/pro-palestine-rally-sponsors-raked-in-9m-in-city-funds/
IN THE BACK PAGES: Richard Landes fits the Al-Ahli Hospital explosion into a long history of Pallywood fakes
The Rest
→Henry Kissinger, the Cold War “realist,” gray eminence of U.S. foreign policy, and former secretary of state who masterminded Richard Nixon’s opening to China, died Wednesday at the age of 100. Born in 1923 to a German-Jewish family in Bavaria, Kissinger rose rapidly in the United States after his family fled the Nazis in 1938. As Gil Troy wrote in Tablet on Kissinger’s 90th birthday, “This brilliant refugee from Nazi Germany with the gravelly voice, Teutonic accent, and thick Poindexter glasses, embodied the pinnacle of a certain type of Jewish aspiration and achievement in 20th-century America, becoming a Harvard professor in 1954, Richard Nixon’s foreign-policy mastermind in 1969, and the first Jewish secretary of state in 1973, as well as the era’s most surprising sex symbol.” In addition to achieving détente between Washington and Beijing, Kissinger engineered the Paris Peace Accords that ended the U.S. war in Vietnam and led negotiations between the Israelis and Arabs to end the 1973 Yom Kippur War, which succeeded in removing the Russians as a major influence in the Middle East until their 2015 intervention in the Syrian Civil War. Kissingerian “realism” also had a dark side—he authorized indiscriminate U.S. bombing in Cambodia and Laos, backed Pakistan’s slaughter of hundreds of thousands of civilians in East Pakistan (now Bangladesh), and supported right-wing military dictatorships in Latin America, which, among other real and imagined crimes, earned him a near-satanic reputation on the American Left.
→The Ford Foundation has given a whopping $11 million in 2023 to groups pushing for the nonenforcement of U.S. immigration law. Among the grants identified in a new report from The Daily Wire’s Spencer Lundquist:
$450,000 to the National Lawyers Guild—the former Communist group that agitated for American neutrality in World War II following the 1939 Nazi-Soviet nonaggression pact and later developed deep ties with the Weather Underground—“to ensure that immigrants at risk of deportation receive as much protection as possible.”
$300,000 to the Civil Rights Education and Enforcement Center to “abolish the detention-and-deportation system through multi-faceted advocacy that leverages disability rights frameworks.”
$750,000 to La Union del Pueblo Entero to “change the narrative of the border,” including through a “cross-border day of action” protest against the state of Texas’ border security operations.
$850,000 to UndocuBlack to “build the power of Black immigrants to promote more inclusive immigrant rights and racial justice movements that support intersecting identities.”
Read the report here: https://www.dailywire.com/news/liberal-ford-foundation-pours-millions-into-pro-amnesty-groups-as-border-crossings-surge
→Number of the Day: $128 million
That’s how much defense contractors spent in 2022 on lobbying Washington for more defense spending. And it looks like they got what they wanted. The Biden administration has requested another $105 billion in supplementary aid for national security on top of the more than $800 billion headed to the Pentagon in FY 2024. The $105 billion aid package includes $30 billion for more matériel for Ukraine and the replenishment of U.S. stockpiles, as well as $149 million for the National Nuclear Security Administration in case of … nuclear emergencies. The bill also includes $10.6 billion for replenishment of U.S. stocks being sent to Israel, $3.4 billion for submarine manufacturers (related to a potential conflict in Taiwan), and $13.6 billion for securing the U.S.-Mexico border. All told, between the supplemental request and the 2024 budget, Stephen Semler, co-founder of think tank Security Policy Reform Institute, estimates that defense contractors will walk away with, wait for it … $559 billion.
The supplemental request comes in the context of yet another unsuccessful audit at the Pentagon, recently failing for the sixth year in a row. Where are the missing assets? No one can be certain, but you can bet your britches that the lack of oversight probably benefits the defense ouroboros, whose $128 million lobby is staffed primarily by former government employees—72% of them, in fact.
—Clayton Fox
Read more here: https://www.theepochtimes.com/article/us-spends-billions-on-overseas-wars-but-who-really-benefits-5534663?src_src=partner&src_cmp=ZeroHedge
→Three ultra-Orthodox Israeli civilians were killed in a shooting attack by Palestinian militants at a crowded bus stop in Jerusalem on Thursday morning. Six other people were wounded in the shooting, while the two assailants, Palestinian brothers from East Jerusalem, were killed by IDF soldiers and an armed civilian. Hamas has claimed responsibility for the attack.
→U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken met with Israeli and Palestinian Authority leaders on Thursday, reportedly telling the Israeli war cabinet that if the IDF does not minimize harm to civilians in Gaza, it will only have a few weeks left to fight. Blinken also urged Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to “hold settler extremists accountable for violence against Palestinians” and emphasized the U.S. commitment to establishing a Palestinian state after the current war. In his meeting with PA President Mahmoud Abbas, Blinken “discussed ongoing efforts to accelerate the delivery of humanitarian assistance to Gaza, including through maximizing humanitarian pauses,” according to Haaretz. Also on Thursday, Hamas pledged to release 10 Israeli hostages in exchange for a one-day extension of the cease-fire.
TODAY IN TABLET:
Visiting Hours, by Hillel Kuttler
After surviving the Hamas massacre, a Thai agricultural worker with severe burns arrived at an Israeli hospital all alone. Now he’s on the road to recovery—and getting more visitors than he can handle.
SCROLL TIP LINE: Have a lead on a story or something going on in your workplace, school, congregation, or social scene that you want to tell us about? Send your tips, comments, questions, and suggestions to scroll@tabletmag.com.
Pallywood’s Latest Blockbuster
How the media’s lockstep coverage of the Al-Ahli Hospital explosion promoted Hamas propaganda
by Richard Landes
In 2003, after watching the first postmodern blood libel go viral, I coined the term Pallywood to describe the widespread use of staged scenes of Palestinians suffering violence supposedly at the hands of Israel, fabricated for global consumption. The term was decried as a “conspiracy theory,” and against all evidence, Israel was blamed for murdering 12-year-old Muhammad al-Durah. Twenty years later, we’re back where we started.
On Nov. 2, 2023, the “fact-checking website” (ostentatiously called Polygraph) of the government-funded Voice of America warned that “Israel supporters on X are using the derogatory label ‘Pallywood’ … to claim that Palestinians are staging scenes of death and violence using so-called crisis actors to elicit global sympathy and win the PR war with Israel.” These Israel supporters were “propaganda campaigners” spreading “disinformation,” the state media organ asserted.
The following day, the Anti-Defamation League joined in with a blog post (which it later stealthily deleted) titled, “ADL Debunk: Myths and False Narratives About the Israel-Hamas War.” The post tackled "a slew of misinformation, disinformation and conspiracy theories about the ongoing conflict.” It listed a number of "false or misleading narratives," which it proceeded to “debunk.” Only the ADL post didn’t debunk any one particular example of Pallywood. Rather, it declared that Pallywood—the notion that “Palestine is using elaborate filmmaking tactics to create fake victim footage”—as a whole was a “false narrative.” The post then explained what “reality” is: “The ‘Pallywood’ conspiracy theory has been around for years … There is ample evidence of Palestinian victims suffering in Gaza.”
On the same day, Rolling Stone published a long article, which consulted a “senior fact-checker,” and which affirmed the same talking points: The “derogatory” Pallywood term is an “old myth” that “Palestine’s opponents” are reviving “to discredit the suffering, grief, and pleas for help coming from Gaza.” Rolling Stone then added another important point explaining why the Pallywood “conspiracy theory” is especially “insidious.” It’s not only because it claims “falsely, that the Palestinians are faking it,” but also because it “dovetails with a rise in anti-Muslim hate speech.”
The new, remarkably uniform line of attack echoed an initiative the White House had just unveiled: the first-ever national strategy to counter Islamophobia in the United States. As antisemitic incidents spiked across American cities following Hamas’ Oct. 7 massacre, the Biden administration decided that an initiative to combat “the scourge of Islamophobia” was the nation’s most pressing priority.
With so much at stake, the danger posed by the conspiracy theory, that the Palestinians make visual productions for information warfare, had to be exposed and expunged. The Pallywood false narrative was a clear example of what the administration says are the two most egregious offenses against our democracy: “disinformation” and “hate speech,” namely against Muslims.
Against this background, one of the most vivid examples of the Pallywood genre during the current war in Gaza took place at the Al-Ahli Arab Hospital in Gaza City the day before President Joe Biden landed in Israel.
***
At 6:59 p.m. on Oct. 17, a blast occurred in the parking lot of the Al-Ahli hospital. The crater it left was small and shallow, and the explosion that followed was a sudden fireball that left two fires burning in the parking lot. The hospital was undamaged, except for some broken windows on the blast side, and half a dozen cars were strewn around, badly burned.
Anyone who saw the crater knew right away that it was what observers call a “fell-short”: a Palestinian rocket that never made it to its target in Israel. It was a familiar sight, as 20%-30% of the rockets Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad have fired into Israel in previous rounds of fighting have fallen short, according to the Israeli military. Sometimes, as in the Shati Refugee Camp tragedy of 2014, children are among the dead.
Moreover, the evidence apparently was cleared—“all traces of the munition have seemingly vanished from the site of the blast, making it impossible to assess its provenance,” The New York Times stated. The source of this information was a senior Hamas official, Ghazi Hamad. “The missile has dissolved like salt in the water,” Hamad told the NYT over the phone. “It’s vaporized. Nothing is left.” See how it works?
Hamas had a massive advantage in circulating the accusation that Israel struck a hospital killing hundreds, since there were few or no Western reporters in Gaza at that time. Virtually every journalist there was a local—resident stringers, photographers, and correspondents who supply the world, including Western news correspondents, with their news. Al Jazeera was the only international outlet to have reporters on the scene. The Qatari-owned channel played a key role in disseminating Hamas’ claims as issued through the Hamas-run Gaza health ministry. A Gaza paramedic delivered the narrative on Al Jazeera English: “We have seen a massacre, a genocide for [sic] the people. They were sleeping only under the trees. No rooms, nothing, no shelters. They have bombed them by rockets. No one has [been] injured. All of them have been killed. This is a genocide.” The story exploded in the Arab world where the shocking news was greeted with fury and outrage at Israel’s genocidal war crime.
Hamas still had one problem: As soon as the evidence came out, its story would collapse. Therefore, within a limited window, it had to supply Western media with the semblance of evidence to get them to bite and run with the story, long enough for the Hamas version to take hold around the world. Once the story was out, Israel’s subsequent efforts to deny it would have no effect on those who already believed.
In order to do that, Hamas needed the proper footage to accompany the claims. That meant no photos of the site of the impact, no long shots that would reveal the absence of 500 corpses, and no shots of the largely intact hospital exterior. Instead, they needed short, jerky, close-ups of chaotic scenes and overworked medics in the dark, the removal of actual dead bodies, and a focus on wounded children. Since it was just nightfall, the site of the explosion would be shrouded in darkness for the next several hours. It was pure Pallywood: Provide a sketch and appeal to the imagination of the target audience to fill out the picture.
The ruse succeeded. Like stenographers, the Western media reported the Hamas version as the headline news item. CNN was all over the story. All through the night in Israel, the large CNN crew here—Anderson Cooper (Tel Aviv), Ben Wedeman (Lebanon), Nic Robertson (Tel Aviv), Jeremy Diamond (Tel Aviv), Clarissa Ward (near Gaza border), Erin Burnett (Tel Aviv), Sarah Sidner (Tel Aviv), Nada Bashir (Jordan)—discussed at length every aspect of the horrific story, both “what we know” happened, and, critically, its impact on President Biden’s diplomatic trip to the region.
The news of an Israeli strike drew condemnation the world over. Arab countries like Egypt, Jordan, and Saudi Arabia expressed outrage, while the famed “Arab street” raged. Western leaders also issued condemnations, with some urging respect for international law.
After evidence emerged showing that the cause of the explosion might not have been Israel, The New York Times headline and the CNN chyron were changed from “Israeli strike" or "strike” to “blast.” Even then, CNN reporters continued to repeat the Hamas version of a massive strike as news. Western journalists were primed to accept that an IDF strike deliberately targeted a hospital and obliterated it. That their information came from Hamas was hardly a problem.
Hence, the NYT was perfectly content to cite as its source a “spokeswoman for the Gazan health ministry, which is overseen by Hamas,” asserting “that the death toll was expected to rise as bodies were pulled from the rubble.” After quickly noting the highly dubious source, almost as a formality, journalists ran with the Hamas narrative. Not only did CNN repeatedly invoke the (false) Hamas claim, it adopted it as its own: “We expect there are many more innocent people still trapped under the rubble.” (Emphasis added.) All through the night, it ran the chyron: “Hundreds Believed Dead In Gaza Hospital Blast.” Apparently, they wanted it to be believed.
Importantly, and despite its implausibility, CNN kept repeating the Hamas-provided body count. The point was not only to amplify the emotional effect of hundreds of people seeking refuge at a safe location only to be tragically killed, but also to cast doubt on the Israeli claim. Such extensive damage could not have been caused by a Palestinian rocket that fell short, as Israel is saying.
The power of suggestion, which the Pallywood production is designed to enhance, can be seen in a comment by CNN’s Clarissa Ward early in the night on Oct. 17: "We don't know exactly yet what caused the incident. It does appear to have been some kind of a massive strike, though, from preliminary videos that we are starting to look through."
We do not know what preliminary videos CNN looked at (it would be a great service to publish the lot), but here is a medley of clips that either the CNN staff put together from their video feeds or they got ready-made from the stringers, and which they ran repeatedly as background to their commentary. Nothing in the clips offers evidence of a massive strike on a hospital that killed hundreds.
At 3:00 a.m. on Oct. 18, Anderson Cooper opened with a summary that accentuated gory visual evidence intended to emphasize the massive scale of the explosion:
It is 3 a.m. here in Israel, which is even at this late hour dealing with the repercussions of a human tragedy on a terrible, terrible scale, the massive explosion at a hospital in Gaza City. We should say at the outset, the pictures are as horrible as the incident itself. We want to show you new video just moments after the blast. Hundreds are believed dead. We're talking about men, women, and children. Civilians. More may still be buried under the rubble.
“We cannot independently confirm how many people were killed in this blast,” Cooper added as a caveat, “but the pictures are sickening.” In support of this visual evidence, Cooper went on to cite a NYT article that quoted the testimony of a local photographer: "There were so many bodies I couldn’t even photograph."
After Cooper’s opening, Clarissa Ward came on to reinforce the key point: scale as evidence of an Israeli strike. Cosplaying as a ballistics analyst, Ward loosened the reins of her imagination:
I will say, just based on seeing these rocket attacks many times over the years, that they don’t usually have an impact like that in terms of the size of the blast, in terms of the scale of the death toll, and the scope of the damage. It's also not the first time, it's important to add, that we’ve seen the IDF categorically deny something categorically before being forced to kind of do an about face after an extensive investigation.
This message permeated CNN’s coverage. Jake Tapper dismissed Israel’s claim that the cause of the blast was a Palestinian Islamic Jihad rocket: “that is a lot of damage for one rocket.” It could only be Israel. It had to be. The BBC's Jon Donnison made the point explicitly: "It is hard to see what else this could be, really, given the size of the explosion, other than an Israeli air strike, or several air strikes." He added, “when we've seen rockets being fired out of Gaza, we never see explosions of that scale.”
The “terrible scale” required a commensurate death toll, which is why the Western media generally jumped on the implausible figure of 500 dead that was quickly made available by Palestinian sources. Alternatively, they ran with the elastic, and potentially expandable, “hundreds,” also provided by the Gaza health ministry. “No figure could be confirmed independently,” the NYT noted, before adding, “but images from the hospital … and witness accounts made clear that it was high.”
The NYT stuck with the “hundreds” figure, though limiting it to “100 to 300 people.” To back up this estimate, the NYT’s Julian Barnes cited anonymous U.S. officials and an “unclassified assessment drafted by U.S. intelligence agencies.” These officials emphasized, however, that even if the estimate “is revised downward further … the blast had still caused a significant loss of life.” True, the assessment agreed that “Israel Probably Did Not Bomb Gaza Strip Hospital,” but, Barnes added, it “highlights how much U.S. officials still do not know about the blast at the hospital, what exactly caused it and how many lives were lost there.” You know, Barnes explained, the assessment was “full of standard caveats that their understanding of events may change.” Maybe the Biden administration could still use this to push Israel to accept a ceasefire.
By the following morning, it was irrelevant that the hospital was only lightly damaged, that there weren’t thousands of Gazans sheltering in place or hundreds of dead, and that there was no rubble entrapping dozens more. And so, as the president arrived in Israel, CNN’s Becky Anderson gave this highly emotive performance:
[G]iven what we saw [sic] local time here at 7 o’clock yesterday, the enormous [emphasis hers] loss of life by an explosion at the hospital in Gaza. The IDF absolutely, 100% describing that as an attack by Islamic Jihad. Hamas absolutely determined that that strike was caused by an air strike from the Israelis. So as that sort of back and forth goes on, clearly, what we see is the fallout from that, which, you know, Gaza had already been described as nigh on a catastrophe, and now you see [sic] this incredible [emphasis hers] loss of life, at a hospital, I mean this is just, you know, the sort of thing that nobody hoped to see, and what is unfolding on the ground is very, very devastating.
Had it been merely an Islamic Jihad rocket that fell short, the chances of it eliciting this kind of outrage are nil. The only way the media story could potentially have an impact on U.S. policy is if it were an Israeli strike targeting a hospital and killing hundreds of innocent Palestinians.
Hence, once the evidence became clear on Oct. 18, CNN had to adjust and explain that, actually, it didn’t matter who was responsible. “In the eyes of the international community maybe this does make a difference. But in the eyes of the streets, no,” opined Erin Burnett. Burnett then turned to her colleague Clarissa Ward in Ashkelon for comment. Ward repeated verbatim the narrative from the previous night without any concern for how little sense it now made. What mattered was the desired political effect. “The focus now,” Ward commented, “is very much on the reaction and the fact that for many Arab states, this is now becoming a national security issue in their own countries because people are horrified. People are angry.” And so, Burnett and Ward doubled down, the former declaring the hospital blast “a huge inflection,” and the latter concurring that “there’s no question this feels like a watershed moment.” That was the hope, at least.
Hamas' Al-Ahli Hospital information operation succeeded in enlisting the cooperation of Western media organizations. By the time the evidence became clear, the damage had been done, both in the Middle East and in the West, where Hamas supporters rallied in the streets. Although President Biden accepted Israel's evidence that proved it was not responsible, the pressure at home was such that Biden had to apologize to Muslim American leaders for questioning the figures provided by the Hamas health ministry.
Curiously, the campaign in the U.S. to declare Pallywood a “false narrative” intensified after the Al-Ahli op was exposed. Just this week, NPR ran a segment (citing the same fact-checker used by Rolling Stone) on the Pallywood “pejorative." The timing dovetails with the White House's Islamophobia initiative, which provided the necessary framework for the campaign: The Pallywood conspiracy theory is a form of hate speech that endangers Muslim lives in America, and is a manifestation of Islamophobia. There is no place for it in America.
U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken met with Israeli and Palestinian Authority leaders on Thursday, reportedly telling the Israeli war cabinet that if the IDF does not minimize harm to civilians in Gaza, it will only have a few weeks left to fight. Blinken also urged Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to “hold settler extremists accountable for violence against Palestinians” and emphasized the U.S. commitment to establishing a Palestinian state after the current war.
Blinken is a total fool. There is no 'settler violence' - this is a blood libel against Jews.
A Palestinian State? Really? What in the last 50 years would lead an intelligent person to think this meshes with peace?
Ro Khanna is not a US senator from California. He’s a congressman representing California’s 17th district. This error has become routine due to cut-and-paste writing. The error is never corrected; it just propagates.