Wednesday, June 10, 2026

IDF takes out drone infrastructure in Lebanon - Israel National News

 

by Israel National News

IDF strikes terror infrastructure in southern Lebanon, including ready-to-use launchers and infrastructure used to launch drones toward IDF soldiers.

 

Since Tuesday, the IDF has struck Hezbollah infrastructure sites in the area of Tyre and in several areas in southern Lebanon.

In the Tyre area, the IDF struck six infrastructure sites used by the Hezbollah terrorist organization to advance terror attacks against the State of Israel and IDF soldiers operating in southern Lebanon.

Among the infrastructure struck was a site used by Hezbollah terrorists to launch explosive drones toward IDF soldiers.

In southern Lebanon, the IDF struck ready-to-use Launchers, terrorists who operated in the area in which IDF soldiers are operating, and additional terror infrastructure sites. 


Israel National News

Source: https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/428397

Follow Middle East and Terrorism on Twitter

UN report accuses Hamas of war crimes after executions and torture in Gaza - Israel National News

 

by Israel National News

A UN report states Hamas committed war crimes by torturing and publicly executing Gaza civilians.

 

Hamas terrorists
Hamas terrorists                                                                                       Ali Hassan/Flash 90

 

An official United Nations report published on Tuesday details how Hamas terrorists and domestic police forces in the Gaza Strip subjected dozens of locals to public executions, severe beatings, and physical mutilation during the conflict with Israel, classifying the actions as war crimes, reports The Associated Press.

The findings, compiled by the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, cataloged hundreds of instances of extrajudicial enforcement across the territory. The report noted that these acts were frequently recorded and broadcast to terrify the local population intentionally.

“These cases involved executions, kneecapping, bone-breaking with metal pipes or cement bricks and beatings and were framed by the perpetrators as punishments for alleged collaboration with Israel, looting humanitarian aid, theft, drug-related offenses or affiliations with internal rivals," it said.

According to the commission's data, Hamas-tied police and armed factions were directly tied to roughly 25% of the 249 documented incidents - which encompassed 108 fatalities - occurring between August 2024 and January 2026. While the investigative team focused heavily on actions linked to Hamas forces, it also monitored violations connected to other local groups.

Hamas spokespeople did not provide statements regarding the document's assertions.

Hamas has maintained administrative control over Gaza for nearly twenty years after violently ousting the Palestinian Authority. Following an October truce that paused over two years of high-intensity warfare with Israel, the group has systematically acted to re-establish its administrative authority across the regions of Gaza it currently oversees.

Tuesday's findings emphasized that these violent penalties bypassed traditional judicial structures and tribunals entirely, being carried out directly by police squads and Hamas' wing terrorists.

Srinivasan Muralidhar, who serves as the head of the UN commission, observed, in an attempt to blame Israel for Hamas' crimes, that the recorded atrocities took place within an “environment engineered by Israel," where “Hamas-affiliated forces have exploited the vacuum created by relentless Israeli attacks and widespread destruction."

The victims of these targeted crackdowns included anti-Hamas dissidents, as well as factions and Israel-backed tribal networks that formed in geographic pockets where Hamas' authority faltered during the conflict.

The UN brief highlights multiple captured video recordings of capital punishments, such as a September 2025 event where a crowd watched masked men shoot three blindfolded individuals outside Shifa Hospital. It further outlines a separate mass killing the following month, in which eight men were marched into a public plaza in Gaza City and shot. The report states that both groups faced allegations of being traitors, spies, and collaborators.

Hamas regularly carries out executions in the Gaza Strip. Most of the group’s executions have been of alleged “Israeli spies".

In September of 2022, Hamas authorities executed two Palestinian Arabs who were convicted of assisting Israel by giving it information that resulted in the deaths of two people.

In July of 2025, Hamas's internal security "deterrence" unit announced it carried out a series of "high-quality" operations, during which 12 individuals were executed for alleged collaboration with Israel and involvement in criminal activity.

Two months earlier, Hamas executed four individuals for their alleged involvement in looting aid trucks entering Gaza.


Israel National News

Source: https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/428393

Follow Middle East and Terrorism on Twitter

Erdogan threatens attacks against Israel - Israel National News

 

by Israel National News

The president of Turkey claimed that Israeli strikes also threaten his country and warned against harm to Turks and Turkish Cypriots.

 

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan                                                               Reuters

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan said today (Wednesday) that Israeli strikes in Syria and Lebanon have reached a point where they also threaten his country, and he warned against further action, saying, "We see comprehensive initiatives led by Israel in the Mediterranean, and no one should pursue adventures there."

Erdoğan warned against continued Israeli steps in the region and said, "Israel's aggression threatens the entire world." He added, "If the rights of Turks or Turkish-Cypriots are harmed in the Middle East - our response will be unequivocal and strong."

The Turkish president went on to say, "Turkey's security does not begin in Hatay, but also in Aleppo, Damascus and Beirut. We will not tolerate any 'fait accompli' in our brotherly nations, and we will not turn a blind eye to aggression against them." He also referred to statements in Israel about a "Greater Land of Israel" and declared, "If Allah wills, we will never allow that."

Erdoğan's remarks appear to refer to a report published in December by the Greek news site TA NEA, which said that Israel, Greece and Cyprus are examining the formation of a joint military force in the eastern Mediterranean. According to the report, the proposed force would include about 2,500 troops, ships, fighter jets and infrastructure to be deployed on the Greek islands of Karpathos and Rhodes and in Greece, Cyprus and Israel.

According to that report, Athens and Jerusalem are expected to each send 1,000 troops, while Nicosia would send 500 troops. The report also claimed that the air forces of Israel and Greece would each provide one squadron to the force.

Prime Minister Netanyahu responded: “The antisemitic dictator Erdoğan - who is committing genocide against the Kurds, supports the Hamas terrorist organization, oppresses his own people and imprisons political rivals - is the last person who can lecture the State of Israel on morality."

"The State of Israel and the IDF, the most moral army in the world, will continue to take forceful action against Iran and its proxies, which threaten the Middle East and the entire world."

Minister Miki Zohar also responded to Erdoğan's remarks, saying, "The tyrant Erdoğan, whose hands are covered in blood, must be held accountable for his crimes and not preach morality to the only democratic state in the Middle East. If he dares to test us - his fate will be worse than that of the dying Iranian regime."

Meanwhile, Turkey's interior minister, Mustafa Çipçi, recently spoke against Israel at a ruling party conference and threatened that Turkey would one day take control of Jerusalem. Çipçi said, "As we saw the liberation of Damascus, Aleppo and Karabakh, so, with Allah's help, one day we will see the liberation of Jerusalem as well." 


Israel National News

Source: https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/428420

Follow Middle East and Terrorism on Twitter

Sen. Rand Paul alleges NIH's recklessness endangered Americans by mishandling pathogens - Amanda Head

 

by Amanda Head

Two researchers have been charged with conspiracy to smuggle monkeypox and making false statements.

 

New documents released by Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Chairman Rand Paul, R-Ky., reveal that two National Institutes of Health scientists were charged with conspiring to smuggle monkeypox virus samples into the United States after returning from the Congo. The documents released by Congress revealed a decade of warnings and workarounds in the handling of dangerous pathogens. 

In January, NIH Rocky Mountain Laboratories virologists Vincent Munster and Claude Kwe arrived at Detroit Metropolitan Airport from the Republic of the Congo, where a monkeypox outbreak was active. 

On arrival, they declared that a large black case contained only “diagnostics and testing equipment.” Federal investigators later discovered 113 microcentrifuge tubes held in Styrofoam coolers inside. FBI testing of 20 tubes found 17 with deactivated monkeypox virus, one with chickenpox virus, and two with human DNA. 

As a result, on June 2, Munster and Kwe were charged with conspiracy to smuggle monkeypox and making false statements. Senate investigators described the episode as symptomatic of a deeper culture in which biosafety shipping rules were often treated as flexible. The defendants were released on conditions to appear in Michigan for a hearing on June 24, and were required to surrender their passports, according to The Missoula Current News.

EcoHealth Hand-Carry Proposal (2011)

The documents released by Paul also show that in September 2011, EcoHealth Alliance researcher Jon Epstein emailed Munster and colleagues about shipping bat samples from Congo to Montana. Paul earned his medical degree from Duke University School of Medicine in 1993, and specializes in ophthalmologic surgery.

World Courier could not transport dry ice from Brazzaville, so Epstein suggested shipping sera and swabs in lysis buffer (a solution used to break down cellular membranes) on wet ice while proposing Munster “hand carry” another set in viral transport media on dry ice during a later trip. “I think you can take up to 2kg with you on commercial flights,” he wrote

The exchange appears to display an early willingness within the network of colleagues to bypass standard cold-chain shipping for high-risk field samples. 

MERS Shipment Mislabeling (2013)

In 2013, NIH distributed the Jordan strain of Middle East Respiratory Syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) to labs including Munster’s at Rocky Mountain Laboratories and Ralph Baric’s at the University of North Carolina (UNC). 

The shipment to UNC was labeled “diagnostic, not infectious,” and lacked a proper itemized list or dangerous-goods declaration, and was initially handled as Category B instead of the required Category A infectious substance labeling. According to the U.S. Department of Transportation, "A Category A infectious substance is a highly dangerous biological material capable of causing permanent disability, life-threatening disease, or death in otherwise healthy humans or animals."

UNC’s Environmental Health and Safety office flagged the error as “a big problem,” highlighting repeated mislabeling practices that understated the risk of live virus materials. 

In December 2021, Munster informed colleagues he planned to arrange an international shipment of the Omicron variant of SARS-CoV-2 “without the involvement of NIH shipping.” An NIH official responded in writing that such a move risked “a Washington Post moment or congressional inquiry,” predicting accurately Paul's present investigation. 

The warning noted that Rocky Mountain Laboratories had no approved shipping procedures on file, underscoring internal awareness of compliance gaps even for high-profile, time-sensitive variants during the pandemic.

History of incidents of lost shipments of pathogens

Emails from 2022 reference multiple lost shipments. In one exchange, a colleague asked Munster if he had recovered luggage containing Congo Basin monkeypox material. 

In another exchange, a collaborator urged Munster to contact DARPA quickly because “numbnuts lost the first shipment” of coronavirus samples en route to the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases (USAMRIID). 

Munster replied he would follow up. The incidents point to recurring transit failures involving select agents and related materials. 

In April 2024, Kwe reported that he and colleagues had returned from the Congo with DNA from monkeypox (MPOX) positive patient samples. An NIH sequencing request logged 35 samples derived from human patients and confirmed they contained or were derived from a regulated “select agent.” 

Munster responded that no material had been recovered from a prior lost shipment. The exchange demonstrates that similar returns of monkeypox-related materials from the region had occurred at least once before the recent incident. The Munster-Kwe case is the latest example in a pattern stretching back more than a decade and raises ongoing questions about oversight, training and enforcement of biosafety regulations governing high-consequence pathogens.


Amanda Head
is White House Correspondent for Just The News. You can follow her here

Source: https://justthenews.com/government/congress/sen-rand-paul-blows-lid-nih-recklessness-endangering-americans

Follow Middle East and Terrorism on Twitter

US Army launches strikes on Iran following Apache helicopter downing - Israel National News

 

by Israel National News

At Trump's orders, US forces launch three waves of precision strikes on Iranian radar and air defense sites, following the downing of a US Apache in the Strait of Hormuz.

 

US Army in Strait of Hormuz
US Army in Strait of Hormuz                                                                             CENTCOM

 

The US Army launched three waves of strikes on targets in Iran overnight Tuesday, in response to Monday’s downing of a US Army Apache helicopter in the Strait of Hormuz.

In a statement, US Central Command (CENTCOM) said its forces struck Iranian air defense, ground control stations, and surveillance radar sites near the Strait of Hormuz with precision munitions from US Air Force and Navy fighter jets.

“The operation was a proportional response to recent attacks on US forces and international commercial ships transiting regional waters," the statement added.

“US forces remain vigilant and postured to defend against unjustified Iranian aggression," it stressed.

Earlier, CENTCOM confirmed that its forces began launching self-defense strikes against Iran at the direction of US President Donald Trump.

“The mission is a proportional response to unjustified Iranian aggression," it stated.

The announcement came shortly after Iranian media outlets reported at least four explosions near Sirik Port in the Bandar Abbas district of the country. Explosions were also reported on Qeshm Island.

The Aerospace Force of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) responded to the US strikes and threatened it would deliver a “heavy response" to what it described as “the enemy’s hostile actions."

Later, the IRGC claimed it carried out a drone attack on the US Navy's Fifth Fleet headquarters in Bahrain in response to the US strikes on Iran.

In a statement carried by Tasnim news agency, the IRGC said its naval force targeted the Fifth Fleet at 2:30 a.m. local time.

There was no immediate confirmation from US or Bahraini authorities.

A senior US official stated that the strikes targeted several Iranian air defense and radar systems around the Strait of Hormuz, adding that the operation is ongoing.

A US official told CNN that the strikes were intended to serve as a warning to Iran, noting that Washington assesses they will not jeopardize negotiations to end the war.

Trump struck a defiant tone earlier on Tuesday, saying Iran had shot down the American helicopter and that the US would respond to that attack.

"I have just been informed by our Great Military that last night the Iranians shot down one of our highly sophisticated Apache Helicopters while patrolling over the Strait of Hormuz. There were two pilots involved, both are safe and uninjured. Nevertheless, the United States must, of necessity, respond to this attack," he wrote on Truth Social.

Just before the US strikes began, however, Trump downplayed the downing of the Apache.

In a phone call with The Wall Street Journal, Trump said the incident "wasn't a big deal" and stressed that "the pilot is fine."

As CENTCOM announced the retaliatory strikes against Iran, Trump told ABC News, "I think it's very important to respond. They shot down a helicopter, and we are responding as we speak."

He added, "This is a response to what they did with our helicopter last night, and I believe the response should be very strong, very powerful, and that's what this one is."


Israel National News

Source: https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/428389

Follow Middle East and Terrorism on Twitter

Ron Johnson calls on Trump administration to recognize COVID-19 vax injuries as medical condition - Christina Park

 

by Christina Park

International Classification of Disease codes are required to verify that medical treatments are necessary and to process patient reimbursement payments.

 

Republican Sen. Ron Johnson is calling for transparency and accountability on COVID-19 vaccine injuries and says he's asking the Trump administration to implement an International Classification of Diseases code for COVID-19 vaccine injuries.

“Trump's [Department of Health and Human Services] has to acknowledge that these injection injuries are real. They've got to create an ICD code so the doctors can get reimbursed,” Johnson said Monday in an exclusive John Solomon Reports podcast interview. He also said he has met with patients who were at a critical "low point" after fighting the medical establishment for years to be seen and treated. 

ICD codes are required by insurance companies to verify that medical treatments are necessary and to process patient reimbursement payments. 

The codes, published by the World Health Organization, also provide a standardized framework worldwide for recording causes of illness and death and resource allocation.

Johnson's request follows an investigation of 11 million pages of subpoenaed data on COVID-19 vaccine surveillance data, prompting Senate hearings by the chamber's Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, including one June 3 titled, “Plausible Mechanisms of COVID-19 Injections Causing Cancer and Attacks on Scientific Publications."

The Wisconsin lawmaker, who is chairman of the subcmoomttee, has also presented evidence that appears to show flawed Food and Drug Administration algorithms under the Biden Administration hid safety signals and led to thousands of adverse events and deaths. 

Such evidence was detailed in his subcommittee's April hearing, “Unmasked: How Biden Health Officials Purposely Turned a Blind Eye Toward COVID-19 Vaccine Safety Signals.”

Johnson also argued in the podcast interview that flawed data on COVID vaccine injuries bypassed public scrutiny. He began the timeline in late 2020, when the FDA issued the first Emergency Use Authorizations for Pfizer and Moderna shots.

These are not vaccines," he said. "These things, mRNA, used to be classified as gene therapy because they are gene therapy,” and that they were reclassified as vaccines to avoid vaccine hesitancy.

Following the authorization, Johnson said the FDA had immediately been “inundated” with reports of sudden death and serious adverse events, which resulted in the contractor submitting reports into the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System, and having to hire 290 people just to get through a backlog. 

On March 1, Dr. Ana Szarfman, an FDA biostatistician who helped develop the Oracle data mining tool used to monitor adverse event databases like VAERS, warned Peter Marks, head of the FDA's Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research (CBER), that the flawed algorithm was masking and hiding safety signals.

Twenty-six days later, senior FDA officials, using a new algorithm that unmasked safety signals, were shown 25 serious adverse events including cardiac death, pulmonary infarction, Bell’s palsy, and various types of strokes. Despite seeing such effects for three months, officials did not change the old algorithm that would mask these signals, Johnson said.

According to Johnson’s opening statement in the April hearing, Dr. Peter Stein, the then-Director of CDER’s Office of New Drugs, had reported to Dr. Marks that his office had “made it clear” to Dr. Szarfman “that she should not be discussing or providing internal analyses externally, and needs to focus on her assigned work.”

“To this day, we believe they're still using that exact same algorithm, because it's hiding all these serious safety signals,” Johnson said. “This is why I say this is the biggest government scandal in my lifetime, because had people known, had doctors been made aware, had the news big media been made aware, members of Congress been made aware, would we push the shot on everybody?” 

He also said 39,000 deaths and 1.7 million adverse events were reported in VAERS worldwide, while 24% occurred on the day of vaccination or within two days, a “correlation that our FDA should have been following." 

Johnson further said that the Biden administration rushed the vaccine's full approval during the pandemic to push through the federal mandate, and that the public faced immense pressure to get vaccinated.

“Boy, you got to get your child vaccinated, otherwise they're going to transmit it to their grandparents, of course," he said about the administration's pitch for a wide-scale vaccination program. "Then we found out later that the vaccine didn't stop transmission.” 

Johnson also harkened back to the hearing in which doctors testified on the links between the COVID vaccine and cancer, and said Julie Gralow, chief medical officer at the American Society of Clinical Oncology, who was brought on by the subcommittee’s top Democrat, "didn't have a clue about the makeup and mechanism of the mRNA vaccines, which she's proclaiming there's no proof that these things cause cancer."

Gralow had said that "RNA breaks down quickly in the body and doesn't enter a person's DNA." 

The American Medical Association continues to affirm that COVID-19 vaccines are safe and effective, and that "physicians should advise their patients about possible side effects including lethargy, mild fever, body aches and pains, but this often means the vaccine is working to establish immunity." 

 

Still, Johnson has argued that Big Pharma funds medical associations and journals, resulting in a conflict of interest, and said in the podcast interview that legacy media is unwilling to discuss the cover-up because big pharmaceutical firms spend “billions of dollars” funding them. 

Johnson said that in the future, there were more documents that needed to be handed over and made public so that the media could not ignore the “overwhelming evidence” on COVID vaccine injuries. He also said that the people who engaged in the cover-up needed to be held accountable. 


Christina Park

Source: https://justthenews.com/politics-policy/coronavirus/sen-ron-johnson-calls-icd-code-patients-covid-19-vaccine-injuries

Follow Middle East and Terrorism on Twitter

IDF strike kills top Hamas fundraisers in Gaza - JNS Staff

 

by JNS Staff

The airstrike eliminated the head of Hamas’s funds transfer network and his deputy.

 

IDF troops in Gaza
Reservists of the IDF’s 16th Infantry Brigade, also known as the Jerusalem Brigade, operating in the northern Gaza Strip during the week of Jan. 11, 2026. Credit: IDF.

 

The Israel Defense Forces earlier this week eliminated two senior Hamas fundraisers in an airstrike in northern Gaza, the military said on Wednesday.

Khader Jamasi, who the military described as the head of Hamas’s funds transfer network, and his deputy, Muhammad Harazin, transferred “tens of millions of dollars” to the terror group’s “military wing” during the two and a half years of war, according to a statement.

Their operation utilized a “network of dozens of money exchangers operating throughout the Strip,” the IDF revealed.

“These funds enabled the Hamas terrorist organization to continue paying salaries to its terrorists, supporting the planning and execution of terrorist attacks against IDF troops and Israeli civilians,” added the statement.

The elimination of Jamasi and Harazin was the latest Israeli military operation against Hamas’s financial network, following the elimination of senior operatives Firas Mashharawi and Ihab Khrizim over the past year, it said.

Prior to the airstrike, the IDF took steps to prevent the risk of harm to noncombatants, including the use of precise munitions and aerial surveillance.

Soldiers remain deployed in the enclave in accordance with the U.S.-brokered ceasefire agreement “and will continue to operate to remove any immediate threat,” according to the IDF.

The current truce went into effect in the Gaza Strip on Oct. 10, 2025, ending the two-year war that began when Hamas, other Palestinian terrorist groups and Gazan “civilians” invaded the northwestern Negev on Oct. 7, 2023. The terms of the first phase leave the Israel Defense Forces in control of more than half of Gaza.

Talks on advancing U.S. President Donald Trump’s Gaza peace plan kicked off in Cairo between mediators and Palestinian terrorists on Sunday.

Egypt’s Al Qahera News channel reported that the talks focused on “the proposed roadmap for completing the implementation of the agreement.”

“It was held in a positive atmosphere,” the report went, adding that there was agreement on the need to implement the next phase of Trump’s plan.

Top Hamas leaders, including Khaled Mashaal and Musa Abu Marzouk, have rejected key parts of the second phase in recent months, including disarmament, despite having agreed to the proposal in October.

The Board of Peace, which oversees the Gaza truce and is chaired by Trump, wants the U.N. Security Council to pressure Hamas to disarm, according to a report of its activities viewed by JNS last month.

The Board of Peace cited Hamas’s refusal to disarm as “the principal obstacle to full implementation” of the ceasefire, criticizing its “refusal to accept verified decommissioning, relinquish coercive control and permit a genuine civilian transition in Gaza.”


JNS Staff

Source: https://www.jns.org/news/israel-news/idf-strike-kills-top-hamas-fundraisers-in-northern-gaza

Follow Middle East and Terrorism on Twitter

Democrat leader warns MLK Jr.'s niece Alveda King for claims against SPLC: 'you're under oath' - Greg Piper

 

by Greg Piper

Outspoken Christian pro-life leader compares Southern Poverty Law Center's alleged commandeering of white supremacist groups to boost its fundraising to Klan bombing her house and then coming back as police.

 

Testifying under oath before the House Judiciary Committee, Southern Poverty Law Center interim CEO Bryan Fair repeatedly deflected questions from Republicans and at least one Democrat on its "confidential informant" program, citing the Justice Department's superseding indictment against the 55-year-old civil rights group for alleged donor fraud.

Martin Luther King Jr.'s conservative niece showed no such reticence at Tuesday's hearing on SPLC "manufacturing hate" by allegedly propping up white supremacist groups to exaggerate their threat and goose its donations, prompting ranking Democrat Jamie Raskin, D-Md., to warn GOP witness Alveda King that SPLC could sue her for defamation.

A colorful Christian pro-life activist, King proved the wildcard at an otherwise predictable hearing on the nature of SPLC's CI program and its practice of labeling conservative Christian organizations as "hate groups," which has made it difficult for some to participate in the financial system, while ignoring leftist groups that use violence.

King said she's been "personally flagged" by SPLC but also claimed four times she was on a "domestic terrorist" list, speculating it was due to her advocacy for life "from womb to tomb" and that "some informant must have told them I said something hateful." Much later, Fair said King's claim bewildered him because SPLC has no domestic terrorist list.

 

"Racism is socially engineered" but "we are one blood," said King, identified on the hearing page as chair of the American Dream at the America First Policy Institute. "SPLC is using money to stir up racism to have people fight against each other based on skin color."

She turned Raskin's question about DOJ's "slush fund" — the since-rescinded "anti-weaponization fund" for victims of Biden administration prosecutions — back on the congressman, claiming SPLC has its own slush funds. 

King even interrupted Raskin's dialogue with Georgetown law professor Mary McCord on whether any donors were truly confused by SPLC's use of informants, with Raskin lamenting that SPLC's sources were unable to stop the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing.

"Do you pay the same people to do the bomb and then go and comfort the people from being bombed?" King interjected. "You pay the same people to do both jobs?" Raskin asked her incredulously for evidence that SPLC aided a bombing.

"Outside agitators did bomb our house in '63 and then ran back and took off the Ku Klux Klan sheets and put on police things and ran up in the yard," King responded. "Ya'll pay both of them to do double jobs, SPLC does. You hire 'em to do the bombing, then you hire them to fix the bombing? That's weird."

Raskin again asked for evidence, reminding King she was under oath. "I'll get you some," she answered.

Won't 'recant' hate designation for Charlie Kirk

SPLC paid its CIs $4 million to "create and foment the hate they told their donors they were fighting," even paying one to stay in a white supremacist group he wanted to leave, said Chair Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, relaying several claims in the superseding indictment. 

Perhaps most explosive, the indictment says an SPLC staffer was romantically involved with a CI in the National Alliance, paying the source $1.2 million and sharing a bank account. The group also allegedly paid a source convicted of cross-burning $19,000.

The Biden administration made SPLC "the standard" in identifying hate groups, meeting with its staff regularly and having SPLC train prosecutors, Jordan said. "Here's the scary part: It all worked" judging by SPLC's fundraising windfall after the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, with SPLC allegedly paying a CI $300,000 to get people there.

GOP lawmakers pressed Fair to answer specific allegations, with Jordan mentioning at least seven, not including SPLC's alleged shell companies. Rep. Tom McClintock, R-Calif., asked about any foreign donations or communication.

Fair frequently responded that SPLC would speak through counsel in court or denied allegations with variations of "not to my knowledge," blaming the committee for not delaying the hearing until SPLC's prosecution was resolved.

He declined an invitation by Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., to "recant" associating King and the late conservative activist Charlie Kirk with "hate groups." 

"SPLC will continue to expose hate and extremism" as documented by statements and actions, not beliefs, Fair said. Answering GOP criticisms that SPLC doesn't identify Antifa and militant abortion rights group Jane's Revenge as hate groups, Fair said they don't fit its criteria, which focus on groups that "vilify" others based on "immutable characteristics."

"So destroying pregnancy resource centers and Catholic churches would not qualify as hate under your definition? You're okay with that?" Rep. Lance Gooden, R-Texas, asked incredulously. "But God forbid [Kirk's] Turning Point holds a rally." He rejected Fair's claim that it doesn't target groups based on their religious beliefs.

Rep. Jeff Van Drew, R-N.J., asked if SPLC told donors their money would go directly into "the hater's pocket" and buy "wood and fuel for a cross-burning." DOJ knows SPLC didn't give money to any white supremacist group, and "we believe our donors support all of our work," Fair said.

'Less vendetta, more Voltaire'

Democrats praised SPLC's historic work and ongoing value in countering "resurgent racial injustice," as Raskin put it. Its donors praise and extremists fear the group for its undercover work, which resembles FBI practices, he said: "There's nothing illegal about that." 

Responding to criticism of SPLC's "hate map," Raskin noted inflammatory language by Republicans about their opponents, such as White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller calling the Democratic Party a "domestic extremist organization." The correct response is "counterspeech," Raskin said. "We need less vendetta and more Voltaire."

Answering an earlier question about whether SPLC ever identified an Islamic group as a hate group, Raskin said his staff found six Nation of Islam chapters on its hate map.

Democratic witness McCord quoted Justice Robert Jackson's 1940 speech on the power of prosecutors to target people for "being attached to the wrong political views," accusing the Trump administration's DOJ of targeting the president's enemies. "You have no answers for our questions," Issa shot back.

Alliance Defending Freedom Senior Vice President for Strategic Initiatives Ryan Bangert urged lawmakers to look at the "broader story" of how SPLC used its hate map to "lock us out of the public square," persuading financial and technology companies to blacklist "mainstream conservatives" like ADF and make them "invisible" so there's no debate.

Congress should bar federally insured institutions from "delegating decisionmaking" to private entities who act as a "shadow censorship regime," Bangert said, comparing SPLC's role in "debanking" to the outsourced surveillance provided by abortion rights groups in the Biden administration's prosecutions of pro-life activists.

Rep. Joe Neguse, D-Colo., gave Bangert unusual attention in the hearing, comparing SPLC's work with the FBI to Bangert's onetime role, as Texas deputy first assistant attorney general, in reporting Texas AG Ken Paxton to the FBI for allegedly using his office to help a political donor.

ADF did the same thing to SPLC, convincing interim U.S. AG Todd Blanche to "harness a criminal prosecution" to go after its enemy, Neguse alleged. "It's important for us to be candid about that."


Greg Piper

Source: https://justthenews.com/accountability/cancel-culture/democrat-leader-warns-mlk-jrs-niece-alveda-king-claims-against-splc

Follow Middle East and Terrorism on Twitter

Never Underestimate the United States - Lawrence Kadish

 

by Lawrence Kadish

It is important to acknowledge that confronting China's intention to "own" the Pacific is not a Republican position or a Democratic one. Our national response to this threat is not about politics but about identifying the greatest 21st-century challenge facing the United States: China.

 

Eighty years ago we learned costly lessons in the Pacific regarding just how difficult it is to supply, fight, and win in this part of the world. Lessons learned, lessons remembered, and lessons for our foes: never underestimate the United States. Pictured: The fast-attack submarine USS Springfield arrives at Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam, in Hawaii, on October 21, 2019. (U.S. Navy photo by Michael Zingaro)

Not so very long ago, the Pacific was the scene of some of the bloodiest battles of World War II, where no quarter was given.

While the guns have long since gone quiet, that vast area of the globe remains a source of intense military brinksmanship. This time it is the giant of Communist China seeking to dominate the Pacific's democratic nations that range from Japan in the north to Australia in the south. In between those nations is the U.S. Seventh Fleet, along with an island chain with American outposts such as Okinawa and Guam.

It is important to acknowledge that confronting China's intention to "own" the Pacific is not a Republican position or a Democratic one. Our national response to this threat is not about politics but about identifying the greatest 21st-century challenge facing the United States: China. Nowhere is that threat more evident than in the Pacific. Military strategists will tell you that deterring this foe from open conflict requires a credible military presence -- which means being sure that the region always has robust US naval and air assets, primed and always on alert. Analysts will remind us that without this presence, the 6,000 miles between the United States and our allies become vulnerable to Chinese military assaults that would determine the outcome.

The Japanese understood this threat during WWII, which is why in the weeks after their attack on Pearl Harbor, they occupied a series of Pacific islands and the Philippines. They sought to create a Pacific rim of strongpoints designed to keep the United States far from their homeland. The U.S. Marines can still tell you how costly that strategy was to the Corps, whose soldiers had to take those island bases yard by yard.

Today our nation faces multiple threats from China -- from their intent to create super versions of artificial intelligence, to their reach for the Moon, to a "blue water" navy that has the means to show the flag three miles off San Francisco if they so choose.

The most likely target of Chinese military power is obviously Taiwan, and one supposes that the Chinese regime believes the U.S. is too stretched and distracted to pose a credible threat to their potential invasion fleet. They would, however, be making a serious error in judgment. The current president of the United States has demonstrated a level of steely resolve long missing from previous White House occupants.

Military experts say this is the window of opportunity for Washington to negotiate new military basing agreements with our Pacific allies and thereby send a clear message to Beijing that we will not be intimidated. Eighty years ago we learned costly lessons in the Pacific regarding just how difficult it is to supply, fight, and win in this part of the world. Lessons learned, lessons remembered, and lessons for our foes: never underestimate the United States.


Lawrence Kadish
serves on the Board of Governors of Gatestone Institute.

Source: https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/22592/never-underestimate-usa

Follow Middle East and Terrorism on Twitter

How the Machine Buried Spencer Pratt - Edward Ring

 

by Edward Ring

Spencer Pratt’s LA mayoral bid surged on Election Day, only to be reversed as California’s entrenched political machine reshaped the final count after the vote.

 

 

Bill de Blasio appeared on NewsNation on June 2 and was asked to comment on Spencer Pratt’s campaign. De Blasio smugly described Pratt’s ads as “inappropriate” and wondered, “Who is behind them?”

If de Blasio hadn’t actively participated in the decline of New York City during his disastrous eight years as its mayor, his arrogance might just be dismissed as unwarranted and clueless. But de Blasio is part of a machine that profits from urban decline. Behind his arrogance is a grasping, cynical hypocrite delighted that the machine on the West Coast is as potent as the one that elevated his own mayoral tenure and now supports Zohran Mamdani.

And so way out west, the machine has struck again. In the run-up to California’s June 2 primary, Spencer Pratt, running for mayor of Los Angeles, gave us a moment of hope. But as it turns out, he will not appear on the November ballot. Angelenos will choose between a democratic socialist extremist in the form of Nithya Raman and the “moderate” option, the ex-communist, incompetent incumbent, Karen Bass.

Calling Spencer Pratt’s ads “inappropriate” is a grotesque inversion of truth. Policy failures in Los Angeles have been so intellectualized and contextualized that only crude descriptions of reality on the streets of that beleaguered city had any chance to wake voters up from their brainwashed acquiescence.

Moreover, Pratt’s ads have heralded a new era in campaign messaging. His campaign was pitch-perfect and inspired. It wasn’t merely the use of AI to produce videos at negligible cost, videos that altogether would have cost millions only a few years ago. It was the extraordinary creativity of these videos and their uncanny ability to cut to the heart of issues that by now should have every resident of Los Angeles marching on City Hall with torches and pitchforks.

A few examples should suffice. Have a look at these:

Entering the illusion,” where two parents confront a child, telling him that “Pratt is MAGA,” wherein the child asks why getting homeless drug addicts help and rebuilding homes is MAGA.

Catching the Pratt,” where a mother wheels her young adult daughter into the emergency room because she is “thinking for herself,” wanting to “stop addicts from injecting drugs around kids,” etc.

You are not alone,” where a group of women in a yoga studio realize, to their astonishment, that all of them secretly support Pratt’s candidacy.

What Spencer Pratt Has in Mind for LA,” a satirical anti-Pratt ad where, for example, a father and daughter chastise Pratt for wanting change “when everything is fine,” while speaking against a backdrop of homes in flames.

And the classic “LA is worth saving,” depicting, among other things, Karen Bass and assorted prominent Democrats dressed in Louis XIV’s Baroque attire, swigging champagne and eating cake, while laughing derisively at a mother trying to protect her children from LA’s dangerous streets.

This was a brilliant campaign. It gave Pratt, who lost his own home in the January 2025 wildfires, instant momentum. So much so, in fact, that his opponents were worried enough to see to it that a second mayoral debate was canceled. And on the day after the election, Pratt had reason for optimism. Early returns reported, “With 63 percent of the votes counted by early Wednesday morning, Bass had 35 percent, Pratt 30 percent, and Raman 22 percent.” Pratt had an 8 percent advantage over Raman. So far, so good.

That was before what members of the machine dismiss as the “red mirage” began to dissipate. It didn’t take long. By Thursday afternoon, Pratt’s lead over third-place Raman had shrunk to 33,076, i.e., from an 8.0 percent advantage to 6.0 percent.

By Friday, the trend was unmistakable. Pratt’s lead was down to 20,672, only a 3.3 percent edge. After the Saturday update, the Los Angeles Times, whose veteran reporters knew better, published an article, “Pratt holds off Raman for now,” as if his lead over Raman, by then down to 7,494 votes or 1.1 percent, left any possibility he would stay in front.

Sunday’s update made it official. Pratt was behind Raman by 4,381 votes. With weeks of counting still ahead, the chances that Pratt will recover his lead are zero. Why? What is the nature of this machine that delivers a red mirage on election night, invariably blown away by a blue wind? How is this possible?

And here it is that accusations of fraud are almost irrelevant. Yes, California’s election laws make voter fraud possible, even easy. With poorly maintained voter rolls, 29 days of “early voting,” provisional ballots, same-day voter registration, automatic motor-voter registration, universal mail-in ballots, a seven-day post-election grace period for mailed ballots to still be counted, ballot harvesting, and county elections offices under oversight by Democrat politicians and staffed by Democrat-leaning bureaucrats, there are means, motives, and opportunities for fraud.

But these laws governing elections in California are tools—all of them completely legal—that turbocharge California’s ruling political machine. To rig an election in California, fraud isn’t necessary. To focus on fraud, without also critiquing the system itself, is a fruitless distraction.

There is a reason that ballot counts in the days after the election skewed two-to-one in favor of Raman, when Pratt led Raman by 8 percent in the early returns, and it doesn’t require fraud. What happens in elections in California today, as noted political observer Chris Rufo stated in a recent interview, is “no less nefarious but much more sophisticated.”

Rufo goes on to describe how California’s system works. “Institutions that have large ground games: unions, DSA, activist groups, homeless shelters—all of these people within the liberal NGO Borg—to go chase ballots, harvest ballots, solicit, and grab all of these ballots, which are technically legal in a way that the opposition cannot do.”

This is what happened to Pratt. This is what dissolved his red mirage. A political machine of extraordinary reach dispatched its operatives to every precinct in the City of Los Angeles wherever voters could be found who were low-information, dependent on government assistance, innately conditioned to oppose a Republican, inclined to have a Pavlovian aversion to any candidate tagged with a “MAGA” affiliation, or unlikely to vote without active assistance, or some combination of all of the above. These votes for Raman were the result of selective vote harvesting from precisely targeted groups.

This is why GOP candidates lose in California. If a race is close, it isn’t enough to wage a brilliant campaign. The endgame is rigged in favor of the party that can field a permanent army to exploit California’s current election laws. That army is populated by operatives from public sector unions that are overwhelmingly partisan Democrats, along with thousands of workers at partisan NGOs. This perennial political machine is fed by taxpayers and tax deductions; the election work they do is often technically “nonpartisan,” and the public programs they provide when they are not harvesting votes are “social welfare” programs that get more funding from failure than from success.

This is California’s self-reinforcing cycle of political dysfunction. Spencer Pratt tried to disrupt the system, and his surge in the polls surprised a lot of people. But the machine won. Again. 

 Photo: NEW YORK, NEW YORK - JANUARY 28: TV personality and Los Angeles mayoral candidate Spencer Pratt visits "Fox & Friends" at Fox News Channel Studios on January 28, 2026 in New York City. (Photo by Roy Rochlin/Getty Images)

 

 
Edward Ring

Source: https://amgreatness.com/2026/06/10/how-the-machine-buried-spencer-pratt/

Follow Middle East and Terrorism on Twitter