A Jew in New York is a Jew in Israel, but you gotta call 'em Zionists, even though they are Jewish?
Sy Hersh, the arm-chair NY City Jew who calls murdered leader of Hamas "brutal" while the fact is all Jews are enemy combatants to so so many of us!
Fucking New York armchair Jew, calling Hamas leader, “brutal”?
The killing of Yahya Sinwar, the brutal leader of Hamas and mastermind of the October 7 attack, is not going to end Israel’s war against Hamas, and its devastation of the Palestinians in Gaza will continue.
I’ve heard nothing from contacts in Beirut close to Hezbollah—whose troops are putting up a stiff fight as they did in Hezbollah’s 2006 war against Israel—that suggests anything other than a long war ahead.
President Joe Biden applauded the death of Sinwar and again urged Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu to call for a ceasefire that might free the remaining hostages taken by Hamas, if any of them remain alive. That Sinwar was found and killed above ground and not in one of the tunnels under Gaza raised questions for me about the alleged brilliance of the Israeli intelligence community, which has at no time in the past year indicated that Sinwar was above ground, surrounded by a few aides or bodyguards and with a large chunk of cash.
He may have come up from underground for a breath of fresh air, as some Israeli media reports have suggested, leaving the remaining Israeli hostages behind, but he also may have put on sunglasses and pulled down a New York Yankees baseball cap and joined the more unfortunate of his people in chow lines with a plate and spoon...
Sure, fucking Hersh, man, that Jewish New Yorker bullshit tweed suit emptiness.
How did Sinwar group up?
Brutal? One of Hersh’s sisters. Now that’s brutal.
For one Palestinian father in besieged Gaza, Yahya Sinwar's death in battle trying to beat back a drone with a stick was "how heroes die." For others, it was an example for future generations.
"He died wearing a military vest, fighting with a rifle and grenades, and when he was wounded and was bleeding he fought with a stick. This is how heroes die," said Adel Rajab, 60, a father of two in Gaza.
"I have watched the video 30 times since last night, there is no better way to die," said Ali, a 30-year-old taxi driver in Gaza.
"I will make this video a daily duty to watch for my sons, and my grandsons in the future," said the father of two.
Sinwar — whom Tel Aviv claims was the architect of Hamas' October 7 blitz that was used by Israel as a pretext to carry out its genocidal war on Gaza — was killed on Wednesday in a gunfight with invading Israeli forces after a year-long manhunt, and his death was announced on Thursday.
A video of some of his final minutes, showing him masked and wounded in a shell-smashed apartment trying to hurl a stick at a drone filming him inspired pride among Palestinians.
Hamas confirmed his "martyrdom" on Friday and vowed to fight Israel until it ends its war on Gaza.
"He died a hero, attacking not fleeing, clutching his rifle, and engaging against the occupation army at the front line," a Hamas statement mourning Sinwar's death said.
In the statement, Hamas vowed his death would only strengthen the movement, adding that it wouldn't compromise on conditions to reach a ceasefire deal with Israel.
Yahya Sinwar: A refugee, novelist, strategist, and fighter
Hamas says its October 7 blitz on locations that were once Arab farms and villages was orchestrated in response to near-daily Israeli attacks on Al Aqsa Mosque, illegal settler violence in occupied West Bank and to put Palestine question "back on the table."
Palestinian fighters took more than 250 hostages and presently some 100 remain in Gaza, including 33 who the Israeli army says are dead, some of them killed in indiscriminate Israeli strikes.
Tel Aviv has since then killed more than 42,500 Palestinians and wounded nearly 100,000. Some 10,000 Palestinians are feared buried under the rubble of their bombed homes. Another 10,000 have been abducted by Israel and dumped in Israeli jails and torture chambers.
Experts and some studies say this is just a tip of an iceberg and the actual Palestinian death toll could be around 200,000.
Sinwar's own words in previous speeches, saying he would rather die fighting than from a heart attack or car accident, have been repeatedly shared by Palestinians online.
"The best gift the enemy and the occupation can offer me is to assassinate me and that I go as a martyr" he had said.
62-year-old Sinwar was elected to the top leadership of Hamas after the resistance group’s politburo chief Ismael Haniyeh was assassinated by Israel in Tehran on July 31.
While Sinwar was the number one enemy of the Jewish supremacist state, he learned Hebrew during his 23-year imprisonment in Israel’s notorious prisons. He spoke the language fluently.
“He studied Hebrew and he also studied Israeli society. He is well aware of the mentality of Israelis”, said Yousef Alhelou, a Palestinian political analyst, in a previous TRT World interview.
Born in a refugee camp in Khan Younis like many other Palestinians, Sinwar, also known as Abu Ibrahim, narrated his refugee upbringing in his first novel, “The Thorn and Carnation”, which was published two decades ago. His family had been expelled from Ashkelon during the 1948 Arab-Israeli war, which is called Nakba (catastrophe) in Palestinian political language.
Sinwar the novelist
While many Israelis and their allies might have a hard time to believe, Sinwar, one of the “human animals” in the words of Zionist leaders, has made immense contributions to Palestinian literature, writing several novels.
In his first novel named the Thorn and Carnation, Sinwar’s main narrator is Ahmed, the youngest grandson of the expelled Palestinian family of the 1948 War. “This is not my personal story, nor is it the story of a specific person, even though all its events are true. Every event in it or every set of events relates to a Palestinian,” Sinwar wrote in the book’s preface from his Beersheba Prison.
“The novel chronicles the family’s struggles — shaped by the disappearance of their father and uncle — the harsh conditions of the refugee camp, and political events spanning 37 years,” wrote Amira Howeidy, a Cairo-based journalist, in an article this month to explain how Sinwar’s personal suffering has been intertwined with general Palestinian suffering.
In Sinwar’s novel, the refugee family’s eldest son joins the secular Fatah movement, while his younger brothers align with religiously-inspired groups like Hamas, which was formed in 1987 almost three decades after Fatah’s establishment. Sinwar joined Hamas in its very early stage.
Sinwar’s novel visits “personal and historical events, documenting key milestones of Palestinian history from 1967 to the early years of the Second Intifada,” wrote Howeidy. The Second Intifada, which is also called the Al-Aqsa Intifada, happened between 2000 and 2005 across occupied Palestinian territories from Gaza to the West Bank.
Sinwar’s portrayal of the two brothers - one joins Fatah, a secular Palestinian resistance, while the other becomes a member of Hamas - also shows that he has considered both movements fighting for the same cause, which is the ultimate liberation from Israeli occupation.
“Sinwar’s detailed narrative of the life he lived in the strip offers compelling insight into the current conflict in Gaza. The parallels demonstrate that Israel’s ongoing war is merely a violent reiteration of the same mechanisms and policies of occupation that have persisted since the time depicted in the novel,” said Howeidy.
“These policies — forced mass displacement, land grabs, massacres and mass arrests — continue to shape Palestinian actions, as they have since 1948.”
In 2010, six years after his first novel, Glory, Sinwar’s second book was published. It is about the Shin Bet, Israel’s General Security Service, which has played a central role in Palestinian lives and Zionist state’s continuance of its occupation, carrying out many assassinations against resistance leaders.
Returning to Gaza
A year after Glory’s publication, which had been produced in prison like The Thorn and Carnation, Sinwar gained his relative freedom thanks to a prisoner swap deal between Israel and Hamas.
After his release, Sinwar returned to Gaza, which has also gained relative freedom after the Israeli military’s withdrawal from the Palestinian enclave in 2005 under former Prime Minister Ariel Sharon leadership. Gaza has been ruled by Hamas since 2007 while Israel has placed a total siege on the Palestinian enclave.
In early 2010s, he was tasked by Hamas in a role similar to the defence ministry and he met with regional leaders during this time, developing strong ties with Hezbollah, which has eventually led to a rapprochement between the two groups.
In 2017, he became the top military leader of Hamas in Gaza and has led the group’s operations since then. Sinwar has been able to escape several Israeli assassinations.
Many believe that he was the main force behind Hamas’s fateful October 7 attack against Israel, which many historians and intellectuals have described as the 1943 Warsaw ghetto uprising against the Nazi occupation. Since then, Sinwar has reportedly been in Gaza’s tunnels leading Hamas’s fight against Israel’s brutal attacks, which have dropped countless bombs on the enclave, even overshadowing the WWII Hiroshima tragedy.
Yahya Sinwar: A refugee, novelist, strategist, and fighter
Fuck these goddamned New York Hersh-NYT-WSJ-WoP.
Yahya Sinwar’s Novel Is a Tale of Palestine, and of His Own Past
The work the Hamas leader penned in prison offers insights into his political views and personal journey Amira Howeidy
BRUTAL, fucking Sy Hersh?
BRUTAL? UBER of death camps. Jewish run FEMA (soon) operation.
The Biden administration has approved the deployment of 1,000 CIA-trained private mercenaries as part of a joint U.S.-Israeli plan to turn Gaza’s apocalyptic rubblescape into a high-tech dystopia.
Starting with Al-Atatra, a village in the northwestern Gaza Strip, the plan calls to build what the Israeli daily Ynet calls “humanitarian bubbles” – turning the remains of villages and neighborhoods into tiny concentration camps cut off from their environs and surrounded and controlled by mercenaries.
This comes as Israel carries out daily massacres and ethnic cleansing in northern Gaza, enacting the proposal known as The Generals’ Plan, originally crafted by former national security chief Giora Eiland to turn Gaza into “a place where no human being can exist.”
This AMeriKKKan Israel First, the Wailing Wall White House, the fucking Zyklon Blinken and Final Solution Mother Fucking Jews and Jew Lovers, who YOU, kind reader, have to continue calling ZIONISTS but not “real Jews.”
The Uber Files are an unprecedented insight into how one of the world’s most notorious tech companies lobbied at the highest level to assist its aggressive expansion into Europe.
Uber Technologies, Inc. (UBER) has many shareholders, including:
Dara Khosrowshahi: As of November 2023, Khosrowshahi was Uber's top individual shareholder, with 1,016,240 shares. He became CEO in 2017, replacing Travis Kalanick, Uber's controversial founder. [Kalanick's parents are Bonnie Renée Horowitz Kalanick (née Bloom) and Donald Edward Kalanick. Bonnie, whose family were Viennese Jews who immigrated to the U.S. in the early 20th century, worked in retail advertising for the Los Angeles Daily News]
The Vanguard Group: As of December 2023, the Vanguard Group was Uber's top shareholder, with 167.63 million shares.
BlackRock Inc. A major shareholder of Uber.
Morgan Stanley: A major shareholder of Uber.
State Street Corp: A major shareholder of Uber.
Public Investment Fund: A major shareholder of Uber.
Jpmorgan Chase & Co: A major shareholder of Uber.
Dara Khosrowshahi, Dad of Silicon Valley — The Uber CEO dreams of “pushing a button and getting a piano delivered to your home in an hour and a half.” Uh … let’s start with dinner? [Khosrowshahi is married and has four children, two from a previous marriage. His current wife, Sydney Shapiro, is Jewish and a former actress. The couple married in December 2012 and had twin boys in 2013.]
Sy Hersh — BRUTAL Jews?
“Now go, attack the Amalekites and totally destroy everything that belongs to them. Do not spare them; put to death men and women, children and infants, cattle and sheep, camels and donkeys.”
This is what the deputy commander of Israel’s 749 Combat Engineering Battalion, Lieutenant Colonel Adi Bekore, posted on his personal Facebook account on October 9, 2023, just two days after the Hamas attacks of October 7. Numerous soldiers from the battalion he had command over liked the post. It is a quote from a biblical passage in which the biblical nation of Israel is commanded to attack the Amalekites, an ancient biblical nation that was a recurrent enemy of the Israelites. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu also invoked this reference early in the war—a moment cited by South Africa in its case to the ICJ as a piece of genocidal rhetoric:
[Photo: How can you not see the evil in that Jewish face? Soldiers from Israel’s 749 Battalion planting explosives, September 19, 2024 in south Gaza City.]
In December 2023, Company A of the 749 Battalion was tasked with rigging up the south Gaza City campus of Al-Azhar University with explosives and detonating it, reducing Gaza’s second-largest university to rubble.
"On Shabbat, we loaded the mines, and I signed off on the shipment with a modification due to the sanctity of Shabbat,” First Master Sergeant David Zoldan, the operational officer of Company A of Israel’s 749 Battalion wrote in a Facebook post on December 20. “A few days later, we assembled them and booby-trapped one of Gaza’s symbols of the future—Al-Azhar University in the northern part of the strip—and blew it up.”
Zoldan—a reservist who normally works as a journalist at ICE, a local Israeli news outlet—attached several photos and videos of the entire operation “from the unloading stage to the massive explosion.” In one of the videos, he cheers as the three buildings of the university campus are prepared to be blown up. “This is the explosion before redemption. December 2023.”
As the university is blown up, Zoldan tells his fellow soldiers, “Hiroshima and Nagasaki combined, did you see?!”
All Jews are combatants.
Other soldiers from the battalion made no effort to conceal their intentions, gleefully mocking the destruction of civilian and educational property. Maya Radoszkowicz, another soldier in the 749 Battalion, was among them. She filmed the explosion of Al-Azhar University, captioning it, "Goodbye to higher education in Gaza” with an emoji of hands in the form of a heart.
She is one of 27 soldiers Drop Site News identified as being deployed to blow up Al-Azhar University. This group also includes Royi Wickes, who fights with an American-flag patch sewn on his sleeve and was involved in planting the explosives that led to the destruction of the institution.
https://unlimitedhangout.com/2024/02/investigative-reports/tokenized-inc-blackrocks-plan-to-own-the-fractionalized-world/
The Tokenized and ETF Jews:
Tokenized, Inc: BlackRock’s Plan To Own The Fractionalized World --
In the aftermath of the recent Bitcoin ETF approvals, BlackRock’s Larry Fink revealed that soon everything will be “ETF’d” and tokenized, threatening to fractionalize not just existing assets and commodities, but the natural world, reducing most living things into Wall Street financial products to be traded on a single, universal ledger.
Workers World Party salutes the heroic revolutionary leader Yahya Al-Sinwar, chair of the Political Bureau of the Hamas Islamic Resistance Movement and Commander of the Al-Aqsa Flood Battle, who died heroically in battle along with other Hamas combatants on Oct. 17 in Gaza. While the Israeli war criminals, led by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, along with U.S. imperialist backers cheered his death, millions of people around the world, especially in West Asia, paid homage to the legendary fighter in words and deeds.
Yahya Al-Sinwar was in the forefront of the Palestinian Resistance, leading it to a new combative level. His final breaths before martyrdom, viewed globally on social media, will no doubt inspire a new generation of fighters for the national liberation of Palestine from over 76 years of white-supremacist, settler colonialism.
Al-Sinwar taught concrete skills to combatants in the making and use of the most creative weapons. He was pivotal in developing an incredible array of homemade weapons, from hang gliders to repurposed rockets built from Zionist bombs.
Al-Sinwar helped create the vast array of tunnels that enabled the totally blockaded Palestinians in besieged Gaza to challenge the most technically sophisticated military machine. But his most important contribution was in building a militant, resilient spirit among the fighters of Hamas’ Al-Qassam Brigades.
In planning the incredibly complex military operation of the Al Aqsa Flood, Al-Sinwar took the time to engage politically with every resistance group, from small units to long-standing political parties to the Resistance organizations across West Asia. All of this was accomplished while keeping the actual plan totally secret from the all-pervasive Mossad security forces.
Al-Sinwar was sentenced to four life terms and imprisoned for 23 years in Zionist jails. He was 49 when he was released in 2011 in a deal where 1,027 Palestinian prisoners — 280 of them serving life sentences — were released in exchange for the Israeli soldier, Gilad Shalit.
Al-Sinwar’s prison writings are collected in the book “The Thorn and the Carnation,” a novel describing a journey from despair to defiance for a refugee family. The novel teaches across generations how to understand and survive the most horrific forms of forced mass displacement, land grabs, massacres, mass arrests, imprisonment and expropriation.
Resistance resurges after each martyr’s death
Since the illegal establishment of Israel, repressive efforts rubber-stamped by the imperialist powers have attempted to derail the aspirations of the Palestinian people for sovereignty and self-determination.
To the great frustration of the Zionist war criminals, time and again after every wave of heinous repression the Palestinian Resistance has resurged, regrouped and burst forth at a higher level.
Yahya Al-Sinwar’s martyrdom — preceded by the July 31 martyrdom of another Hamas leader, previous Chair of the Political Bureau Ismail Haniyeh — will fail to prevent the ultimate defeat of Israel, a terrorist state so isolated and repugnant to the vast majority of the world. Israel is today a besieged, colonial outpost, totally dependent on a decaying U.S. empire.
Despite the more than one-year-long ongoing Israeli genocide that has slaughtered, maimed and displaced hundreds of thousands of Palestinians, like the current horrendous ethnic cleansing campaigns targeting the Beit Lahia and Jabalia refugee camps in northern Gaza, the resistance continues to cause daily, demoralizing casualties amongst occupying soldiers.
This includes the elimination of Colonel Ihsan Daqsa, the highest-ranking Israeli officer killed since October 7, 2023. The Palestinian Resistance has just put out a call for the masses in West Asia to besiege the Israeli and Western embassies in their countries in protest of the ongoing atrocities.
Two days after Al-Sinwar’s death, the Lebanon-based Hezbollah liberation group fired a drone close to Netanyahu’s home on Oct. 19. Hezbollah’s persistent air strikes against illegal Zionist settlements and inside Tel Aviv, as well as ground attacks against occupying forces along its border, are causing deepening dissension and anxiety within the terrorist occupation forces. This has reached the point that growing numbers of the Israeli military are reportedly quietly refusing to return to Lebanon and Gaza.
The Iraqi masses destroyed a Saudi TV station that defamed resistance fighters as “terrorists.” Greek dockworkers successfully blocked an Israeli container full of weapons from leaving the port of Piraeus on Oct. 18.
Throughout his life Yahya Al-Sinwar focused on turning pain and grief into the rage of resistance — which does not die with the martyrdom of leaders. Resistance and steadfastness live on, as long as the yearning for liberation lasts. This will be an enduring legacy of this self-sacrificing freedom fighter who epitomizes the fact that when one resistance fighter is martyred, thousands more will rise up until final victory.
Long live the fighting spirit of Yahya Al-Sinwar, Ismail Haniyeh and Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah!
Victory to the Axis of Resistance!
https://www.workers.org/2024/10/81507/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=yahya-al-sinwar-his-death-will-birth-thousands-to-fight-for-palestine