Tuesday, May 26, 2026

Spare Us the Selective Outrage - Victor Davis Hanson

 

by Victor Davis Hanson

Israel is condemned for surviving a massacre while regimes guilty of actual ethnic cleansing and mass slaughter escape outrage and scrutiny.

 

Since October 7, we have been lectured nonstop about the supposedly singular sins of Israel.

The campuses, the left-wing media, and the new Democratic Socialist officials, both federal and state, following the cue of student activists and professors from the Middle East, have painted Israel and their Jewish supporters as Nazis, fascists, and among the worst murderers in today’s bloody world.

This is nonsensical. The medieval-style massacre of 1,200 Jews in their homes on October 7, during a time of peace, should have increased awareness of the existential dangers Israel faced. Instead, it spawned a gathering storm of antisemitism.

What Was Israel Supposed to Do?

Note that leftists and pro-Hamas students and faculty were shouting the eliminationist slogan “From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free” in euphoria almost immediately in response to the news of the slaughter. Hundreds of dead Jews set off a Pavlovian spasm of glee from the Middle East to American campuses.

Indeed, during the three-week hiatus following the mass killings—well before the IDF entered Gaza on October 27—Israel and its supporters were damned in ways we have not seen for years. Even as Israel sought to negotiate a release of the 251 hostages and a surrender of all those in Hamas responsible for the massacres, the international furor at Israel only mounted. Or was it instead an ebullition of anticipation that still more slaughter of Israelis would follow?

Yet Israel’s demands were met with more defiance. Hamas, and its delusional supporters, both in the Middle East and in the West, saw October 7 not as the end of bloodletting but as the beginning of far more slaughter—and of the hoped-for end of Israel altogether.

Again, that dream explains the giddiness among the Democrat Socialist/pro-Hamas leftists. In their unhinged hatred, they assumed that Iran’s vaunted “ring of fire” (the terrorists of Hamas, Hezbollah, and the Houthis and scattered contingents in Syria and Iraq) would now ignite Israel from all sides.

The master planner of the attacks, Iran, had concluded that Israel would eventually be overwhelmed by hundreds of thousands of incoming drones, missiles, and rockets—the very reason why Iran had spent years arming its Arab terrorist clients.

Yet when Israel finally invaded Gaza on October 27, it was almost immediately damned for conducting “genocide.” None of its libelers offered alternate pathways for how Israel might stop the Hamas slaughterers or get the hostages back.

So how exactly was Israel supposed to restore deterrence, punish the guilty, and prevent such future mass butchery?

Go to the UN Security Council and beg China (one million Uighurs in Chinese camps) and Russia (engaged in a Verdun-like invasion of Ukraine) to examine the facts empirically?

Ask Hamas to shed their civilian shields and fight Israelis head-to-head?

Fly to Geneva to have European premiers and presidents like Pedro Sánchez, Emmanuel Macron, and Keir Starmer oversee “negotiations”?

What Would America Have Done?

Alternatively, consider this hypothetical: the United States is roughly 34 times larger than Israel, with roughly 340 million to Israel’s 10 million citizens. Apply that asymmetrical magnitude to a thought experiment about how Americans would react to a proportional slaughter of their own.

Suppose that some 200,000 Sinaloa cartel killers (34 times the size of Hamas’s 6,000) swarmed across the southern border. They then began massacring 40,000 American civilians (34 times the Israeli number of 1,200 dead)—as well as torturing, dismembering, raping, and beheading. And then they were followed by thousands of tag-along civilians eager for loot and torture themselves.

Further imagine that the killers returned south across the border with 8,500 American hostages (34 times the 251 Israeli hostages). Once there, they then descended into a vast multibillion-dollar labyrinth of cartel tunnels beneath the cities of Sinaloa, protected by supportive and sympathetic citizens. Their tunnel entries and exits would be built beneath hospitals, schools, and churches.

So what exactly would the U.S. do if neither the Mexican government nor the cartel planners agreed to hand over the hostages and surrender the killers?

Take our case to the UN?

Ask NATO member Spain to chair talks?

Go to Geneva to negotiate with El Chapo and his henchmen?

Further, imagine that after three weeks of American inaction, the cartels grew even more defiant, as their crimes won applause among the anti-Western media and throughout the hemisphere.

Indeed, the intelligentsia and the hate-Yanqui crowd would likely then claim that Americans, as “settler-colonialists” from Europe, had earned such an overdue slaughter slap, given their supposed historical maltreatment of the indigenous peoples of “Aztlan” on both sides of the border.

Knee-jerk joy at killing Americans is not just a Mexican hypothetical.

In 2024, former Mexican president Andrés Manuel López Obrador bragged that Pancho Villa’s brief invasion of the U.S., some 108 years earlier—which targeted Columbus, New Mexico, and killed 18 Americans, including 10 civilians—was “a symbol of resistance against imperialism—and we should thank Villa . . .”

(Note that the progressive President Wilson, in response, sent 100,000 soldiers to the border and not long after ordered General Pershing with 12,000 troops to invade Mexico and find the perpetrators.)

Of course, in such an imaginary scenario, America’s critics would add the usual boilerplate about the Mexican War and the theft of Mexico’s former North American holdings.

Nonetheless, the U.S. would no doubt issue ultimata to the terrorists to surrender the guilty and the hostages. And if stonewalled, it would then start with an air campaign to hit some 200,000 cartel members, while exercising caution not to harm tens of thousands of the cartels’ civilian shields—a near-impossible task.

Who Are the Real Ethnic Cleansers and Settler-Colonialists?

Moreover, do we ever hear to what degree these libels of genocide and ethnic cleansing apply far more accurately to a host of other nations, some of which are also recipients of U.S. aid?

Over the decades, we have sold arms and given billions of dollars in military aid to Turkey. Yet between 1915 and 1920, the Turkish government conducted a genocidal policy of ethnic cleansing against their Armenian population, for which it has never apologized and which it continues to deny. And that was not just ancient history.

None of our current critics of Israel seems worried that Turkey invaded Cyprus in 1974 and ethnically cleansed Northern Cyprus of its Greek inhabitants. The Turks then sent thousands of their own “settler colonialists” to help the Turkish minority population occupy the north to this day and alter Cypriot demography. There are no demonstrations anywhere in America on behalf of the far more recent “Nakba” of the Cypriot Greeks.

For that matter, did any of the loud campus Left demand distance from American ally Turkey when its president, Recep Erdoğan, recently cheered on Azerbaijan’s 2023 ethnic cleansing of some 120,000 Armenians from Nagorno-Karabakh—oddly, at almost the same time as the October 7 massacre.

Did Columbia University activist Mahmoud Khalil rally his armies of idealists to damn the Islamic-driven ethnic cleansing of this ancient population of Christian Armenians, or to call for the U.S. to sever joint arms deals with Turkey?

Before the 1967 war, there were nearly one million Jews whose ancestors had been living for centuries in the Arab and Muslim Middle East.

But during the serial Arab–Israeli wars of the last century, they were almost entirely ethnically cleansed from Arab countries. Today, almost none remain in the Arab Middle East. None appear today before television cameras, shaking the keys of their confiscated homes in Algiers, Amman, Baghdad, or Cairo.

By contrast, when Israel was founded in 1948, some 800,000 Arabs lived within its borders. That number shrank to 150,000 during the violent wars that immediately followed. Yet today, the size of the Arab population has rebounded to 14 times its original post-1948 numbers, to include roughly 2.1 million Arab citizens of Israel.

Note that the current Arab population of Israel is close to 77 times larger than the remnant of 27,000 Jews who remain in Muslim-majority Middle Eastern nations.

So, who are the real ethnic cleansers, and who are the displaced persons and refugees?

Of course, no one dares to say Arabs “ethnically cleansed” almost all their Jewish citizens. Instead, that charge is reserved only for Israel, where its Arab population has swelled to 21 percent of the current Israeli total.

Who Shall Cast the First Stone?

Between 1987 and 1989, the Somali Marxist dictator Mohamed Siad Barre—a member of the powerful Darood clan and a former American ally during the Cold War, when the Soviets backed Somalia’s traditional rival, Marxist Ethiopia—began slaughtering entire rival Somali clans. The eventual death toll may have reached nearly 200,000. When Barre’s murderous regime finally imploded, many Somali refugees had either supported Barre or belonged to the Darood clan and its several affiliate tribes. Fearing retribution from the regime’s victims, thousands fled to the once-despised West, especially the United States and Europe.

Among those pro-Barre refugees—many of whom belonged to either Barre’s Darood clan or to subordinate clans—were apparently members of Representative Ilhan Omar’s family. Her father was a colonel and regimental commander in Barre’s army, which had fought both Ethiopians and fellow Somalis for over a decade. It is a bitter irony that Omar is now such a sharp critic of Israel and the United States, given that America granted refuge to many of the former regime’s supporters and associates after Barre’s collapse.

Yet we are not aware that any Somalis today are now being accosted by strangers—as are Jews—and lectured about what their former leader’s regime did to the thousands of innocent civilians.

After October 7, we were also lectured that Israel was not just guilty of various war crimes but illegitimate in its very existence. Indeed, it became chic to condemn Israeli Jews as “settler colonialists”—despite residing in the 3,500-year homeland of the Jewish people.

New York Mayor Zohran Mamdani, an immigrant from Uganda, is not just a fierce critic of so-called “white neighborhoods” and one-percenter billionaires and millionaires. He also seems to loathe Israel. In that context, his supporters and would-be appointees have damned the Jewish state as an illegitimate settler-colonial enterprise.

But under those very reductionist left-wing definitions, should not the Indian community in Uganda—which made up at most a wealthy 1 percent of the population—be defined as settler-colonialists (in addition to suspect rich one-percenters)?

The wealthiest man in Uganda is an Indian-Ugandan billionaire. And the minuscule Indian population today in Uganda continues to exercise power and influence, disproportionate to their numbers—in stark contrast to the impoverished indigenous population. The Mamdani family certainly was not representative, in terms of money and status, of the average Ugandan.

Is such privilege also a mortal sin in Mamdani’s eyes?

Should Mamdani himself, born in Uganda among “settler colonial” exploiters, then have to defend himself as a son of “interlopers,” as is often said of the Jews in Israel?

Certainly, Indians had no historical claim to Uganda analogous to that of the Jews in Israel. (Was there ever a four-millennium-long history of Indians living in Central Africa?)

The list of these absurd asymmetries could be expanded endlessly:

The furor over Gaza is accompanied by the silence over the recent 30,000 unarmed Iranians murdered by a theocratic dictatorship, one often cheered on by the Left for its resistance to the US.

Or the disgraceful and mostly covered-up history of France in Chad, where French repressive measures over the course of their 20th-century colonial occupation led to as many as 300,000 deaths. The cruelty was emblematized by the Coupe-Coupe (“cut-cut”) Massacre of 1917, when French soldiers beheaded some 150 local nobles and Islamic scholars. Does Macron ever recall this massacre amid his lectures on Israel’s supposed sinful past and present?

In short, the tell-tale sign of antisemites is not necessarily opposition to Israel.

It is instead an endless fixation on the supposed “crimes” of Israel, when far greater documented horrors elsewhere never merit a word from them. 


Victor Davis Hanson is a distinguished fellow of the Center for American Greatness and the Martin and Illie Anderson Senior Fellow at Stanford University’s Hoover Institution. He is an American military historian, columnist, a former classics professor, and scholar of ancient warfare. He has been a visiting professor at Hillsdale College since 2004, and is the 2023 Giles O'Malley Distinguished Visiting Professor at the School of Public Policy, Pepperdine University. Hanson was awarded the National Humanities Medal in 2007 by President George W. Bush, and the Bradley Prize in 2008. Hanson is also a farmer (growing almonds on a family farm in Selma, California) and a critic of social trends related to farming and agrarianism. He is the author of the just released New York Times best seller, The End of Everything: How Wars Descend into Annihilation, published by Basic Books on May 7, 2024, as well as the recent  The Second World Wars: How the First Global Conflict Was Fought and Won, The Case for Trump, and The Dying Citizen.

Source: https://amgreatness.com/2026/05/26/spare-us-the-selective-outrage/

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U.S. carries out defensive strikes on Iran's Gulf Coast, as tensions rise amid talks to end war - Joseph Weber

 

by Joseph Weber

U.S. Central Command characterized the strikes as defensive

 

U.S. forces struck missile launch sites in Iran and boats trying to "emplace" mines, a U.S. official said Monday night.

U.S. Central Command characterized the strikes in southern Iran as defensive and said they were to "protect our troops from threats posed by Iranian forces," according to The New York Times.

“U.S. forces conducted self-defense strikes in southern Iran today to protect our troops from threats posed by Iranian forces," U.S. Central Command spokesperson Capt. Tim Hawkins said. "Targets included missile launch sites and Iranian boats attempting to emplace mines. U.S. Central Command continues to defend our forces while using restraint during the ongoing ceasefire."

Hawkins also said the strikes were conducted in the area of Bandar Abbas, where Iran's main naval base is located.

The U.S. sank two Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps ships attempting to lay mines in the Strait of Hormuz and Iran launched surface-to-air missiles at U.S. planes, prompting the U.S. attacks on missile launchers near Bandar Abbas, officials said. 


Joseph Weber

Source: https://justthenews.com/government/white-house/us-carries-out-strikes-irans-gulf-coast-amid-talks-end-war-report

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Exclusive: Key Biden DOJ official raised red flags about FBI’s Mar-a-Lago raid, memo shows - John Solomon and Jerry Dunleavy

 

by John Solomon and Jerry Dunleavy

A recently disclosed email shows that top Garland associates raised the issue of declassification before the morning raid. Although the memo requested that lawyers check whether Trump had the authority to declassify documents, Garland personally approved the August 2022 raid, which included searching Melania Trump's underwear drawers.

 

A top Biden Justice Department official and key ally of then-Attorney General Merrick Garland raised legal “concerns” about the FBI's raid on Mar-Lago, warning that then-former President Donald Trump may have actually declassified the records seized by agents, a newly-unearthed email obtained by Just the News shows.

Patty Stemler, a decades-long DOJ veteran who was reportedly picked by Garland in 2022 to help consult on Trump-related cases, sent an email just two days after the bureau’s Aug. 8, 2022 raid of Trump’s Florida resort home, where Stemler said she had “a few concerns.”

Stemler sent the email to Sophia Brill, a future Biden White House lawyer and then an attorney inside DOJ’s National Security Division, which played a central role in this anti-Trump inquiry.

The memo was recently discovered by the Justice Department as part of its investigation into the weaponization of federal law enforcement.

“I didn’t know about this search in advance, but I have been worrying about it ever since and worrying more now,” Stemler wrote to Brill on Aug. 10, 2022. “Doesn’t Trump maintain that he had the authority to declassify documents while he was still President?

"Has anyone in NSD or OLC [Office of Legal Counsel] looked at that? I know we have procedures for declassifying, but is the President as Commander in Chief bound by those procedures? We also have procedures for granting pardons, but the President doesn’t have to follow them," she added.

Garland has said he “personally approved the decision to seek a search warrant” for the FBI’s unprecedented raid of Mar-a-Lago back in early August 2022.

Not the first time the raid was second-guessed inside the Biden admin

Her warnings are now the second showing federal law enforcement's unease with the unprecedented raid on Mar-a-Lago. Previously, FBI Director Kash Patel provided Congress evidence that agents did not believe they had not met the legal standard of probable cause required for the raid but proceeded anyway.

Trump's office told Just the News in mid-August 2022 that the materials with classified markings which the FBI seized from his Mar-a-Lago estate had actually been declassified under a "standing order" while he was president that allowed him to take sensitive materials to the White House residence at night to continue his work.

“The very fact that these documents were present at Mar-a-Lago means they couldn’t have been classified," the former president's office stated at the time. "As we can all relate to, everyone ends up having to bring home their work from time to time. American presidents are no different. President Trump, in order to prepare for work the next day, often took documents, including classified documents from the Oval Office to the residence.

Trump’s office added back in August 2022: "He had a standing order that documents removed from the Oval Office and taken into the residence were deemed to be declassified. The power to classify and declassify documents rests solely with the President of the United States. The idea that some paper-pushing bureaucrat, with classification authority delegated BY THE PRESIDENT, needs to approve of declassification is absurd."

Stemler appeared to be concerned with exactly that scenario, her email states.

 “I don’t know if we intend to charge anyone with respect to the classified documents seized yesterday, but if we disclose that we found X classified documents before we seek an indictment, will that trench on any fair trial rights or violate the ethical obligations of a prosecutor?" she wrote.

Prosecutorial ethical limits questioned

"I seem to recall that a prosecutor has some leeway to inform the public that we have arrested the serial killer and seized from his home evidence that ties him to the murders for the purpose of reassuring the public that they are now safe. But aren’t there ethical limits on what a prosecutor can say otherwise? I think this came up when Ashcroft was AG — post 9/11. Liza Collery drafted something to get him out of trouble. Let me see if I can find that.”

John Ashcroft was the attorney general including during the post-9/11 era under now-former President George W. Bush. Elizabeth Collery, like Stemler, was a longtime veteran of DOJ’s Appellate Section inside the Criminal Division.

“Has anyone looked at the privacy limitations on our disclosure of information seized from a residence where the disclosure is for a purpose other than investigation or prosecution (the recapture of government property)?” Stemler also asked Brill. “I seem to recall that a prosecutor has some leeway to inform the public that we have arrested the serial killer and seized from his home evidence that ties him to the murders for the purpose of reassuring the public that they are now safe. But aren’t there ethical limits on what we can say otherwise?”

Brill is now at the Gibson Dunn law firm, where she has posted about her involvement in the firm filing an amicus brief on behalf of the purportedly non-partisan Democracy Defenders Fund in support of Anthropic in its lawsuit against the Trump Administration over the Pentagon designating the AI company a “supply chain risk.”

Stemler’s concerns about the Mar-a-Lago raid are notable, given her reputation inside the DOJ.

It was reported by Law 360 in February 2022 that a DOJ spokesperson had confirmed that Stemler had retired from her position within the DOJ. Bloomberg Law described her as “Justice Fixer Stemler” when reporting on her retirement that month. The article included praise by DOJ colleagues over Stemler’s insights.

DOJ Criminal Division chief Kenneth Polite, Stemler’s boss at the time, reportedly sent an email stating that Stemler would continue working at the DOJ “in a new capacity for several months, perhaps even a year if we are lucky.” A spokesman for the DOJ told the outlet that Stemler’s new title at the time would be senior counsel.

Media praised Stemler as a "discreet and publicity-shy problem solver"

Justice Department prosecutors with a knotty criminal law question or senior officials needing to sort out a high-profile litigation mess, have usually turned to the same fixer for decades,” Bloomberg News reported. “That discreet and publicity-shy problem solver, Patty Stemler, retired Monday from a 30-year reign as DOJ’s top criminal appellate attorney. Colleagues say she’s built the appellate section into an elite unit consulted at every step of critical litigation and wading into some of the DOJ’s most delicate cases.”

The outlet said that Stemler had arrived at the Justice Department in 1976 and that she was promoted to run the appellate section in 1992 by Robert Mueller, who was the DOJ Criminal Division chief at the time before going on to be FBI director and then anti-Trump special counsel.

Bloomberg also said, “Garland already turned to a long-time criminal appellate section leader, Patty Stemler, who retired earlier this year from DOJ, to advise as a consultant on the January 6 investigations throughout this year.” The outlet added that “others from Stemler’s former unit and other sections are likely to shepherd cases and policy issues as needed.”

The Federal Bar Association awarded Stemer with the 56th Annual Justice Tom C. Clark Award for Outstanding Government Lawyer in 2023, where Garland and others sung her praises.

DOJ was told by a lawyer before the raid that "Under the U.S. Constitution, the President is vested with the highest level of authority when it comes to the classification and declassification of documents"

Trump lawyer Evan Corcoran had sent a May 2022 letter addressed to Jay Bratt, the chief of the counterintelligence and export control section of DOJ’s National Security Division, suggesting that Trump had declassified the documents at Mar-a-Lago being pursued by the Biden DOJ.

Corcoran pointed to “a few bedrock principles” in his letter, including that “A President Has Absolute Authority To Declassify Documents.”

“Under the U.S. Constitution, the President is vested with the highest level of authority when it comes to the classification and declassification of documents,” Corcoran told the DOJ official, adding, “Presidential Actions Involving Classified Documents Are Not Subject To Criminal Sanction. Any attempt to impose criminal liability on a President or former President that involves his actions with respect to documents marked classified would implicate grave constitutional separation-of-powers issues. Beyond that, the primary criminal statute that governs the unauthorized removal and retention of classified documents or material does not apply to the President.”

Kash Patel — an intelligence and defense official during the first Trump administration and the current director of the FBI — told Breitbart in May 2022 that “Trump declassified whole sets of materials in anticipation of leaving government that he thought the American public should have the right to read themselves.”

“The White House counsel failed to generate the paperwork to change the classification markings, but that doesn’t mean the information wasn’t declassified,” Patel told the outlet. “I was there with President Trump when he said ‘We are declassifying this information.' […] This story is just another disinformation campaign designed to break the public trust in a president that lived on transparency. It’s yet another way to attack Trump and say he took classified information when he did not.”

“Nothing approaching an order that foolish was ever given,” John Kelly, who worked as Trump’s chief of staff from 2017 to 2019 and emerged as a significant Trump critic, told CNN in 2022. “And I can’t imagine anyone that worked at the White House after me that would have simply shrugged their shoulders and allowed that order to go forward without dying in the ditch trying to stop it.”

“Number one, it was all declassified,” Trump also contended on Truth Social in mid-August 2022. “Number two, they didn’t need to ‘seize’ anything. They could have had it anytime they wanted without playing politics and breaking into Mar-a-Lago. It was in secured storage, with an additional lock put on as per their request.”

Patel also joined a podcast hosted by Clay Travis and Buck Sexton in mid-August 2022, where the future FBI director emphasized that “the president of the United States has universal declassification authority” and that “if he says it or writes it anywhere about documents or sets of documents, they become immediately declassified.”

“Now, in October of 2020, the president wrote a statement that’s now publicly available that said, ‘I declassify every Russiagate document and every Hillary Clinton email investigation document.’ That’s it. That’s what it takes,” Patel said. “And then out — as he was leaving the presidency in December or January — he issued further sweeping declassification orders at the White House over whole sets of documents. So, those documents should have been immediately declassified.”

Trump and his allies condemned a late August 2022 Biden DOJ court filing featuring a photo showing documents seized from Mar-a-Lago arranged on the ground for a photo to be distributed to the press. “Terrible the way the FBI, during the Raid of Mar-a-Lago, threw documents haphazardly all over the floor (perhaps pretending it was me that did it!), and then started taking pictures of them for the public to see,” Trump said on his Truth Social account. “Thought they wanted them kept Secret? Lucky I Declassified!”

Then-President Biden claimed he wouldn’t weigh in on the case, but then scoffed and stumbled at Trump’s legal defense when speaking with reporters. “I just want you to know I’ve declassified everything in the world. I’m president, I can do — c’mon,” Biden said.

President Barack Obama’s executive order 13526, issued in 2009, laid out the stringent process all federal officials and agencies needed to follow for declassification, but explicitly exempted the sitting president and vice president from having to follow those procedures.

Trump's legal authority previously recognized by Obama

The Obama-era order — which was still in effect during Trump’s first term — laid out the rules for “Mandatory Declassification Review” but said that “information originated by the incumbent President or the incumbent Vice President; the incumbent President’s White House Staff or the incumbent Vice President’s Staff; committees, commissions, or boards appointed by the incumbent President; or other entities within the Executive Office of the President that solely advise and assist the incumbent President is exempted from the provisions” of that section.

Trump lawyer Christopher Kise emphasized the president’s declassification authority in a federal court filing in September 2022.

“President Obama enacted the current Executive Order prescribing the parameters for controlling classified information in 2009,” Kise wrote. “That Executive Order, which controlled during President Trump’s term in office, designates the President as an original classification authority, and grants authority to declassify information to either the official who originally classified the information or that individual’s supervisors — necessarily including the President. Thus, assuming the Executive Order could even apply to constrain a President, the President has absolute authority to declassify any information.”

Trump’s lawyer added: “There is no legitimate contention that the President's declassification of documents requires approval of bureaucratic components of the executive branch. Yet, the Government apparently contends that President Trump, who had full authority to declassify documents, ‘willfully’ retained classified information in violation of the law. Moreover, the Government seeks to preclude any opportunity for consideration of this issue.”

“Plaintiff has never disputed that the government’s search recovered records bearing classification markings. Instead, the district court cited portions of Plaintiff’s filings in which he suggested that he could have declassified those documents or purported to designate them as 'personal' records under the PRA [Presidential Records Act] before leaving office,” the Biden DOJ said. “But despite multiple opportunities, Plaintiff has never represented that he in fact took either of those steps—much less supported such a representation with competent evidence.”

The Biden DOJ also insisted that, even if Trump had indeed declassified the documents, federal investigators still would have scrutinized the former president’s actions, telling the court that “if the records had actually been declassified, the government would have an additional compelling need to understand what had been declassified and why (and who has seen it) to protect intelligence sources and methods.”

Judge Aileen Cannon granted the Trump defense team’s request for a special master, and the Trump appointee also temporarily blocked the DOJ from using the seized documents in their criminal inquiry into Trump — which was soon overruled by a federal appeals court.

“The Court hereby authorizes the appointment of a special master to review the seized property for personal items and documents and potentially privileged material subject to claims of attorney-client and/or executive privilege,” Judge Cannon ruled in early September 2022. "Furthermore, in natural conjunction with that appointment, and consistent with the value and sequence of special master procedures, the Court also temporarily enjoins the Government from reviewing and using the seized materials for investigative purposes pending completion of the special master’s review or further Court order.”

Judge Raymond Dearie, a former federal judge and member of the FISA Court, was selected as the special master in the classified documents case later that month. “If I'm going to verify the classification, what am I looking at? Is there a claim that the document is classified that should not have been classified?” Dearie asked in a September 2022 court hearing.

“The reason I ask is if the government essentially gives me prima facie evidence that these are classified documents and you, for whatever reason, decide not to advance any claims of declassification, which I understand is your prerogative, I'm left with a prima facie case of classified documents,” the special master told Trump’s defense team. “And as far as I'm concerned, that's the end of it.”

Trump’s lawyers attempted to push back in court.

“It's not about being kind of gamesman-like, I just can't do that without seeing the actual documents,” Trump defense attorney Jim Trusty said, adding, “We have not been in a position, nor should we be at this juncture, to fully disclose a substantive defense relating to declassification until we see the documents and have an opportunity to explore our options.”

Dearie replied, “My view of it is: You can’t have your cake and eat it.”

Dearie, as a former member of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, had previously approved the third and deeply-flawed FISA warrant renewal targeting former Trump campaign associate Carter Page.

“I completely understand people who don’t know Judge Dearie being highly suspicious of anyone who Trump wants. I would be too. But this is actually a Trump team (unsurprising) screw up: having their own Special Master choice rule against them will be fun to watch. Dearie is a model judge.”

A trio of judges at the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit critiqued the Trump defense team’s declassification arguments in a late September ruling.

“Plaintiff suggests that he may have declassified these documents when he was President. But the record contains no evidence that any of these records were declassified. And before the special master, Plaintiff resisted providing any evidence that he had declassified any of these documents. In any event, at least for these purposes, the declassification argument is a red herring because declassifying an official document would not change its content or render it personal. So even if we assumed that Plaintiff did declassify some or all of the documents, that would not explain why he has a personal interest in them.”

Trump referred to “Jack Smith and his group of thugs” during a CNN town hall in May 2023, where the president defended his decision to take documents with classification markings on them from the White House to Mar-a-Lago.

“I had every right to under the Presidential Records Act. You have the Presidential Records Act. I was there and I took what I took and it gets declassified,” Trump said, adding that “I have no classified documents. And, by the way, they become automatically declassified when I took them.”

Smith and the Biden DOJ charged Trump in June 2023 over allegations related to the improper retention of classified documents, followed by a superseding indictment the next month. The charging documents alleged that “the unauthorized disclosure of these classified documents could put at risk the national security of the United States.”

Judge Cannon dismissed Smith’s classified documents case against Trump in July 2024, ruling that Smith had been “unlawfully appointed” as special counsel. Smith attempted to appeal the ruling but soon dropped it after Trump won the 2024 election against then-Vice President Kamala Harris.

Cannon dismissed Smith’s classified documents case against Trump in July 2024, ruling that Smith had been unlawfully appointed as special counsel. Smith attempted to appeal the ruling but soon dropped it after Trump won the 2024 election against then-Vice President Kamala Harris.

Judge Tanya Chutkan dismissed the January 6-related case against Trump in November 2024 after Trump’s win, pointing to the Office of Legal Counsel’s position that a sitting president could not be prosecuted by his own DOJ. Smith released his report in January 2025, a couple of weeks before Trump’s second inauguration.

DOJ Anti-Trump prosecutor charged with stealing classified documents, hiding them in her computer as "cake recipes."

A federal prosecutor in the DOJ office that assisted in Smith’s classified documents case was charged last week for allegedly illegally emailing herself a copy of the materials disguised as cake recipes.

The DOJ identified the indicted prosecutor as Carmen Mercedes Lineberger, a managing assistant U.S. attorney of the Fort Pierce branch of the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Florida, who has been charged with two counts of theft of government money or property; with the destruction, alteration, or falsification of records in federal investigations; and with the concealment, removal, or mutilation of public records. 


John Solomon and Jerry Dunleavy

Source: https://justthenews.com/government/courts-law/biden-doj-official-had-concerns-trump-declassified-documents-seized-fbis-mar

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Progressives Use Marxist Communication Techniques To Keep Power - Allan J. Feifer

 

by Allan J. Feifer

The labels have changed, but the tactics remain the same, and the ultimate goal is, as it always was, to confuse people into handing them power.

 

Nothing’s ever truly new under the sun. Labels change; methods always persist. The strategic instincts that have driven political movements for centuries survive rebranding, new jargon, and better marketing. The argument is strikingly simple: follow the mechanics—how ideas are framed, institutions are seized, language is reengineered, and dissent is delegitimized—and you will see a structural continuity that matters more than the name on the label.

Sun Tzu is worth a sentence: victory often comes from shaping an opponent’s beliefs rather than brute force. The Art of War points to what matters in politics as much as on a battlefield: control the information environment so your adversary reacts to his imagined beliefs rather than facts. Use tactics that make you appear weak when strong, distant when near, divided when unified—these are levers for shaping decisions. In modern life, those levers are narratives, institutions, and social penalties; they are the preconditions for political outcomes long before ballots are cast.

Today’s political contests are fought first in the mind. Movements that prioritize narrative dominance win less by persuading skeptics than by making dissent socially and professionally costly. They do this through a handful of deliberate moves: frame opponents as morally corrupt so disagreement looks like complicity; redefine language so old terms carry new moral weight; capture institutions—academia, media, NGOs, corporate HR—so the cultural infrastructure rewards conformity; enforce speech norms through social penalties that substitute ostracism for argument. These are carefully crafted strategic actions, not accidents. The aim is not merely to win an argument but to make certain arguments and subsequent actions unthinkable in polite company; over time, a manufactured consensus appears inevitable and almost impossible to overcome.

As an aside, there’s a lot of that at play in the moment with Iran, which has better control of the narrative, but not the facts. The good guys have to understand that ceding control of the narrative means allowing the other side to dominate, regardless of how weak they actually are.

America’s progressives, who are Marxism’s heirs, often use the same tools that Marxists refined–cultural capture, linguistic engineering, institutional control, and moral framing–to capture politics and social issues.

Once you see the mechanics, parallels reveal themselves: narrative framing casts one side as oppressor and the other as oppressed, granting near automatic legitimacy and making dissent seem morally bankrupt; language is redefined so old categories no longer map to a new moral grammar; institutions are treated not as neutral arenas of debate, but as instruments to be captured and repurposed—academia to train cadres, media to set the agenda, corporate compliance to enforce norms; speech norms to be enforced not by argument but by social and professional penalties that make disagreement costly on multiple fronts.

Place Progressivism and Marxism side by side, and the parallels are structural—fixed in how each constructs and employs power, culture, language, and legitimacy to shape public behavior. The chart below sketches that comparison; connect the dots from the mechanics to the outcome.

These are by no means random tactics. They form a coherent, hard-to-defeat strategy: it manufactures consent by shaping the cultural environment, then translates that consent into policy and institutional change. When dissent becomes a reputational or economic risk, debate dies; when debate dies, power concentrates in the hands of those who control institutions and cultural norms, exactly as we see it playing out in real life every day.

So what should we do? Stop treating labels as proof, and accept how we are being manipulated in a well-researched, tested, and powerful fashion. Powerfully and forcefully defend vital institutions that are arenas for argument and debate: universities that not just tolerate but encourage genuine disagreement, media that report the news and seek truth rather than perform for their side, workplaces that protect free expression rather than enforce ideological litmus tests that go only one way. Insist on clarity of language: call out redefinitions that foreclose debate and demand precise language before policy follows. Restore a belief in the art of persuasion: tolerate uncomfortable ideas, reward intellectual courage, and refuse to let social penalties substitute for reasoned rebuttal. Finally, understand that there is a war going on for power and control and even more, that we’re fighting the same old enemies all over again, just with a different label.

Persuasion invites counterargument and correction; coercion closes off debate and concentrates power.

God Bless America!

Author, Businessman, Thinker, and Strategist. Read more about Allan, his background, and his ideas to create a better tomorrow.

Image created using AI. 


Allan J. Feifer

Source: https://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2026/05/progressives_use_marxist_communication_techniques_to_keep_power.html

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The Gaza Roadmap: A Diplomatic Fantasy That Keeps Hamas in Power - Khaled Abu Toameh

 

by Khaled Abu Toameh

That Mladenov is appealing to the UN Security Council to pressure Hamas reveals the core flaw of the entire approach: the "Board of Peace" and its international sponsors continue to view Hamas as a rational political actor rather than what it actually is: a jihadist terror group.

 

  • Hamas remains armed, organized, and committed to its declared goal of destroying Israel through jihad (holy war). Yet instead of confronting this reality, international diplomats continue to indulge in dangerous fantasies about negotiating Hamas out of existence.

  • [Nickolay] Mladenov [former United Nations Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process] added that the biggest obstacle to full implementation of the ceasefire remains "Hamas's refusal to accept a verified decommissioning, relinquishing coercive control, and permit a genuine civilian transition in Gaza."

  • That Mladenov is appealing to the UN Security Council to pressure Hamas reveals the core flaw of the entire approach: the "Board of Peace" and its international sponsors continue to view Hamas as a rational political actor rather than what it actually is: a jihadist terror group.

  • Mladenov's roadmap repeatedly speaks about "reciprocity," "verification," "implementation mechanisms," and "phased decommissioning."

  • Hamas's charter states that "Israel will continue to exist until Islam will obliterate it," and mandates jihad as a religious and individual duty for all Muslims to "liberate Palestine."

  • Hamas [in the "roadmap"] is even being allowed to remain armed and influential during the early stages of the transition process....

  • This is unacceptable and contradicts the very spirit of the UN Security Council Resolution 2803, on which the roadmap claims to be based. The resolution authorizes a temporary International Stabilization Force and requires the complete demilitarization of the Gaza Strip, including the full disarmament of Hamas and the destruction of all its military infrastructure.

  • The message being sent to Hamas is unambiguous: continue holding your weapons, continue ruling the Gaza Strip through intimidation and terror, and the international community will keep negotiating with you.

  • The latest roadmap explicitly states that the proposal "does not call for immediate surrender or unilateral disarmament." Instead, it outlines a "phased, Palestinian-led internationally verified process."

  • Hamas... has already made clear that it rejects the proposal altogether.

  • Hamas is again telling the world openly that it has no intention of disarming. It wants to remain in power so it can continue pursuing, with the help of the Iranian regime, its jihad against Israel.

  • Hamas also seems to understand something that many Western diplomats and officials refuse to acknowledge: armed Islamist groups are not removed through conferences, committees, or UN resolutions. They are removed through force. The only countries capable of removing Hamas militarily are Israel and the US.

  • While diplomats hold meetings in Cairo, New York, Doha, and Ankara, Hamas uses time to entrench itself, rearm, regroup, recruit, and tighten its control over the Gaza Strip's population.

  • Despite recognizing this reality, the proposed solution is still more diplomacy, more negotiations, and more phased implementation mechanisms.

  • The new roadmap offers no serious answers because it is based on the false premise that Hamas will agree to disarm and give up power through negotiations and diplomacy.

  • There is another, equally serious reality that many prefer to ignore. Some of the region's main mediators are themselves deeply sympathetic to Hamas. Qatar and Turkey are not neutral actors genuinely committed to dismantling Hamas's military machine.

  • Expecting Qatar or Turkey to help remove Hamas from power is like expecting Iran to dismantle its Lebanese proxy, Hezbollah.

  • The hard truth is that Hamas will not voluntarily disarm. It will not transform itself into a peaceful political movement. It will not abandon its jihadist ideology because of UN resolutions or international conferences.

  • When the Mladenov roadmap inevitably collapses under Hamas's rejectionism, the world may finally be forced to admit what should have been obvious long ago: Negotiations do not defeat Islamist terrorist groups. As with Afghanistan and Iran, deciding not to defeat them only re-empowers them.

The world may finally be forced to admit what should have been obvious long ago: Negotiations do not defeat Islamist terrorist groups. As with Afghanistan and Iran, deciding not to defeat them only re-empowers them. Pictured: Hamas terrorists in Jabalia refugee camp, in the Gaza Strip, on December 1, 2025. (Photo by Omar Al-Qataa/AFP via Getty Images)

Nearly two-and-a-half years after the October 7, 2023 Hamas massacre in Israel, the Islamist terror group is still firmly entrenched in the Gaza Strip.

Hamas remains armed, organized, and committed to its declared goal of destroying Israel through jihad (holy war). Yet instead of confronting this reality, international diplomats continue to indulge in dangerous fantasies about negotiating Hamas out of existence.

The latest example comes from former United Nations Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process, Nickolay Mladenov, who has presented to the UN Security Council a 15-point "Roadmap to Complete the Implementation of President Trump's Gaza Comprehensive Plan."

Mladenov chairs the so-called "Board of Peace," an international organization established by Trump with the stated purpose of overseeing the processes of his Gaza peace plan.

Mladenov urged the Security Council to use "every means at its disposal" to press Hamas to disarm and called on Israel to honor its ceasefire commitments. "There is no third option," he said. "There never was, and the people of Gaza should not be made to wait while some pretend that there is." Mladenov added that the biggest obstacle to full implementation of the ceasefire remains "Hamas's refusal to accept a verified decommissioning, relinquishing coercive control, and permit a genuine civilian transition in Gaza."

At the center of Mladenov's proposal is an astonishing assumption: that Hamas can somehow be persuaded, pressured, or diplomatically maneuvered into surrendering its weapons and relinquishing power.

Since when has Hamas complied with UN Security resolutions? Hamas is not Belgium or Canada. It is an Islamist terrorist organization designated as such by the US, Canada, the European Union, and other countries.

That Mladenov is appealing to the UN Security Council to pressure Hamas reveals the core flaw of the entire approach: the "Board of Peace" and its international sponsors continue to view Hamas as a rational political actor rather than what it actually is: a jihadist terror group.

Mladenov's roadmap repeatedly speaks about "reciprocity," "verification," "implementation mechanisms," and "phased decommissioning."

This language might work in negotiations between states or legitimate political parties. It does not work with an armed Islamist group whose 1988 charter openly calls for Israel's elimination.

The Hamas charter asserts that "the land of Palestine is an Islamic Waqf [holy possession] consecrated for future Moslem generations until Judgement Day." Hamas's charter states that "Israel will continue to exist until Islam will obliterate it," and mandates jihad as a religious and individual duty for all Muslims to "liberate Palestine."

The roadmap's sequencing is especially revealing. Disarmament, once supposedly central to the process, has now been pushed down to Point 6 under the slogan "One Authority, One law, One Weapon."

In effect, Hamas is even being allowed to remain armed and influential during the early stages of the transition process:

"Point 6: One Authority, One Law, One Weapon. What this means: This point establishes the governing principle of the transition: that only authorized Palestinian institutions would exercise security authority inside Gaza; only authorized personnel carry weapons, armed groups cease military activity, and governance and security structures become unified under one civilian authority. No society can sustainably recover while multiple armed structures operate alongside civilian institutions."

This is unacceptable and contradicts the very spirit of the UN Security Council Resolution 2803, on which the roadmap claims to be based. The resolution authorizes a temporary International Stabilization Force and requires the complete demilitarization of the Gaza Strip, including the full disarmament of Hamas and the destruction of all its military infrastructure.

The message being sent to Hamas is unambiguous: continue holding your weapons, continue ruling the Gaza Strip through intimidation and terror, and the international community will keep negotiating with you.

The latest roadmap explicitly states that the proposal "does not call for immediate surrender or unilateral disarmament." Instead, it outlines a "phased, Palestinian-led internationally verified process."

Hamas, however, has already made clear that it rejects the proposal altogether.

Hamas spokesman Hazem Qassem accused Mladenov of adopting the "Israeli narrative" and providing justification for Israel's military actions.

Hamas-affiliated political analyst Yasser Za'atreh went even further, denouncing Mladenov as "Netanyahu's envoy" and declaring that Hamas and other Palestinian terror groups would never surrender their weapons.

"Hamas and the resistance forces will not accept this despicable game, nor will they surrender their weapons," Za'atreh said.

There could hardly be a clearer answer.

Hamas is again telling the world openly that it has no intention of disarming. It wants to remain in power so it can continue pursuing, with the help of the Iranian regime, its jihad against Israel.

Hamas also seems to understand something that many Western diplomats and officials refuse to acknowledge: armed Islamist groups are not removed through conferences, committees, or UN resolutions. They are removed through force. The only countries capable of removing Hamas militarily are Israel and the US.

The "Board of Peace" appears increasingly detached from reality. Nearly every failed diplomatic effort in the Gaza Strip over the past two decades has rested on the same flawed assumption that Hamas can eventually be persuaded to lay down its weapons and relinquish power.

Instead, every ceasefire with Israel and every diplomatic initiative has produced the same result: Hamas becomes stronger.

While diplomats hold meetings in Cairo, New York, Doha, and Ankara, Hamas uses time to entrench itself, rearm, regroup, recruit, and tighten its control over the Gaza Strip's population.

Even Mladenov himself acknowledged before the UN Security Council that Hamas remains in "military and administrative control" over more than two million Palestinians. Despite recognizing this reality, the proposed solution is still more diplomacy, more negotiations, and more phased implementation mechanisms.

What happens when Hamas inevitably refuses to disarm? What happens when Hamas attacks members of the proposed new governing authority? What happens when Hamas continues terrorizing Palestinian civilians who oppose its rule? What happens when Hamas uses the transition period to rebuild its military infrastructure?

The new roadmap offers no serious answers because it is based on the false premise that Hamas will agree to disarm and give up power through negotiations and diplomacy.

There is another, equally serious reality that many prefer to ignore. Some of the region's main mediators are themselves deeply sympathetic to Hamas. Qatar and Turkey are not neutral actors genuinely committed to dismantling Hamas's military machine. Both countries have long supported Hamas politically, financially, and diplomatically.

Expecting Qatar or Turkey to help remove Hamas from power is like expecting Iran to dismantle its Lebanese proxy, Hezbollah.

The tone of the diplomacy surrounding the Gaza Strip has clearly shifted. There is growing pressure on Israel to accommodate Hamas indirectly through international frameworks, while Hamas itself continues rejecting the most basic condition for peace: surrendering its weapons. This approach, bluntly, rewards terrorism.

Trump's "Board of Peace" now risks becoming a mechanism for prolonging Hamas rule. Every day spent pursuing diplomatic fantasies is another day that Hamas uses to solidify its grip on the Gaza Strip and prepare for more terror attacks.

The hard truth is that Hamas will not voluntarily disarm. It will not transform itself into a peaceful political movement. It will not abandon its jihadist ideology because of UN resolutions or international conferences.

At some point, reality will catch up with diplomacy. When the Mladenov roadmap inevitably collapses under Hamas's rejectionism, the world may finally be forced to admit what should have been obvious long ago: Negotiations do not defeat Islamist terrorist groups. As with Afghanistan and Iran, deciding not to defeat them only re-empowers them.


Khaled Abu Toameh is an award-winning journalist based in Jerusalem.

Source: https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/22543/gaza-roadmap-diplomatic-fantasy

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As Netanyahu announces intensified strikes on Hezbollah, Washington shows support - Mike Wagenheim

 

by Mike Wagenheim

Israel “will never be expected to passively absorb attacks on its forces and civilians,” said a senior U.S. official.

 

Netanyahu
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu talks to U.S. President Donald Trump in February 2026. Credit: Avi Ohayon/GPO.

 

A senior U.S. official on Monday blamed the Iran-backed terror group for the necessity of Israeli action in Southern Lebanon, after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he’d given the Israeli military authorization to deal Hezbollah “a crushing blow.”

Hezbollah “has ignored repeated requests to stop firing at Israel,” the official said, adding that Israel “will never be expected to passively absorb attacks on its forces and civilians.”

The Israeli military conducted a wave of strikes across Lebanon on Monday, including against Hezbollah targets in the Bekaa Valley in Lebanon’s east, close to the Syrian border, with Netanyahu stating Jerusalem will intensify its actions.

Israel has largely struck in the south of the country over the last five weeks.

Earlier this month, Israel and Lebanon agreed to extend a U.S.-brokered 45-day ceasefire, though Hezbollah has refused to hold its fire.

“What this requires of us now is to increase the strikes, to increase the intensity,” said Netanyahu, announcing that over 600 Hezbollah terrorists had thus far been eliminated. Ten Israeli soldiers have been killed since the initial ceasefire with Lebanon was announced.

All of this comes as Iran has reportedly demanded a complete cessation of hostilities by Israel against Hezbollah as part of a broader deal to end Washington’s war with Tehran, though U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio insisted on Monday that the two conflicts are to be treated separately.

The senior U.S. official said the status quo was “untenable,” accusing Hezbollah of trying to “derail ongoing negotiations between Lebanon and Israel.”

Israel opposes ending the fighting against Hezbollah, as a fourth round of direct talks between the Israeli and Lebanese governments take place next week in Washington, including discussions on Hezbollah’s disarmament, which Beirut says can only take place under ceasefire conditions.

The official put the blame on Hezbollah for the current situation, saying the terror group is “entirely responsible” and “is now intent on denying the Lebanese people a path to peace and reconstruction.”

“The idea that the Lebanese government is negotiating directly with Israel and stands to get significant support from the United States, all while Hezbollah is having their narrative of resistance challenged, is an existential threat to Hezbollah,” the official said, adding, “A successful ceasefire led by the government of Lebanon would strip Hezbollah of their power and their narrative.”

Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar blamed the Lebanese government on Monday for insufficiently pushing Hezbollah north of the strategic Litani River, contrary to a U.N. Security Council resolution.

“Israel’s activities in southern Lebanon are solely intended to protect its citizens from Hezbollah attacks and to dismantle the terror kingdom it built there,” Sa’ar wrote. “This is the result of the Lebanese government’s total failure to uphold its commitments.”


Mike Wagenheim is a Washington-based correspondent for JNS, primarily covering the U.S. State Department and Congress. He is the senior U.S. correspondent at the Israel-based i24NEWS TV network.

Source: https://www.jns.org/news/u-s-news/as-netanyahu-announces-intensified-strikes-on-hezbollah-washington-shows-support

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City of Atlanta gave Muslim Action group a $35k donation, didn’t track how it got spent - Johnny Edwards

 

by Johnny Edwards

Donation came from taxpayer funds and was among four payments made to the Chicago-based Inner-City Muslim Action Network and three other nonprofits in 2023.

 

(The Center Square) -

Atlanta's city government gave a Muslim activist group that raised money for Gaza a $35,000 donation on top of $250,000 in federal grants, a continuing investigation by The Center Square has found.

The donation came from taxpayer funds and was among four payments made to the Chicago-based Inner-City Muslim Action Network and three other nonprofits in 2023. The City Council voted to approve, its resolution saying the money was to "support public safety patrols and other public safety initiatives" by aiding community organizations that hire off-duty police officers, organize neighborhood watches and take other steps to protect residents and businesses.

Each nonprofit signed a contract requiring them to submit detailed annual reports on how they spent the money, a combined $205,000. The Buckhead Public Safety Foundation ($100,000), the MLK-Ashby Merchants Association ($35,000), and the Cascade Business Association ($35,000) received the remainder.

The required spending reports could answer questions of how exactly nongovernmental organizations spent taxpayer money on public safety. But once the checks passed hands, the city apparently never followed up. The Center Square found no evidence the reports were ever collected – or that any city department was responsible for enforcing the requirement.

The missing records came to light through more than a half-dozen requests filed under the Georgia Open Records Act. According to the responses, the reports are not on file with the Mayor's office, Contract Compliance, Finance, Procurement, the Law department, City Council, or the Atlanta Police Department.

City payment records describe the checks as donations – which a legal expert said raises questions about compliance with the Georgia Constitution’s prohibition against local governments giving away assets without receiving something of value in return.

"The job of enforcing the contract should be the city executives' who entered into the contract," said attorney Lester Tate, a former president of the State Bar of Georgia who has litigated cases involving the Gratuities Clause barring unconditional donations. "But it appears that they’re just not doing their job."

Money for Muslims

The Center Square reported earlier this year how the Inner-City Muslim Action Network (IMAN) received a quarter-million more dollars from Atlanta in Federal Emergency Management Agency grants to accommodate "unhoused immigrants."

Those payments went out later, during the final year of the Biden administration, when Washington was still doling out hundreds of millions of dollars to local governments and NGOs to shelter, feed, clothe, transport, and provide other services for migrants pouring through the U.S. border.

At least seven other nonprofits also received FEMA grants from Atlanta for that purpose totaling $5.7 million, city payment records show. The Center Square raised questions about payments to the Muslim group because, at the time, IMAN was itself raising money for a "Benefit Concert for Gaza" held in Chicago, which benefitted another NGO that has been accused by Israeli watchdogs of aiding Hamas.

That other nonprofit, Anera, strongly denies any links to the terrorist organization responsible for the Oct. 7 massacres.

IMAN's founding Executive Director Rami Nashashibi did not respond to a request for comment, and the organization's Chicago and Atlanta offices have not responded to multiple calls and emails this year, including a message left in person at the group's Atlanta branch on Martin Luther King Jr. Drive. IMAN also did not respond to specific questions about the $35,000 donation or the missing spending reports.

Written agreements

The city’s 2023 donations came out of general funds, with each recipient organization signing a contract titled a "Donation Agreement."

On each, a page 2 stipulation required reports to be submitted before the end of each calendar year "detailing the use of all disbursed funds and work performed including but not limited to the allocation of funds, expenditures for programming, and other related costs." The annual reports were to continue until the money was all spent.

With no evidence those reports were ever filed – and with only one of the four groups willing to speak with The Center Square – it’s difficult to trace how the donations benefitted the city.

Buckhead Public Safety Foundation Executive Director Debra Wathen signed an agreement "to make significant investments in improvements for off duty police patrols in APD Zone 2." She was the only representative of any of the four nonprofits who would explain what that meant.

Wathen said the foundation combined the city’s $100,000 donation with $400,000 in other fundraising to pay off-duty officers to beef up patrols in the Buckhead section of Atlanta, using donated patrol cars. "The visibility was so much better" and crime went down, she explained.

She said she does not recall submitting any annual spending reports to the city.

"I don't know if they ever asked for them," Wathen said.

In the case of the Inner-City Muslim Action Network, the agreement required the group to "carry out all project activities" and "make significant investments in improvements to protect and enhance the quality of life for inner-city communities across the Atlanta area."

The two other nonprofits that received donations, MLK-Ashby Merchants Association and Cascade Business Association, did not respond to phone or email messages from The Center Square. Representatives of those two groups also signed agreements to use the money for such work as "investments in improvements and employment opportunities for the youth and businesses" or "investments in improvements for minority and small business owners."

The Georgia Constitution has a Gratuities Clause that bars local governments from giving away money or resources without receiving something of value in return. But Atlanta’s charter – approved by the Georgia General Assembly – allows the City Council to donate tax money "for purely charitable purposes."

Tate, the former Bar president, said state law supersedes city charters, and that the donation agreements appear to have been drafted to keep the payments legally defensible. Without enforcement of the reporting requirement, he said, that defense weakens.

"I think if the city’s got the contract, and they’re not requiring that, then they’re complicit in just making a donation," Tate said.

The Center Square found no city officials willing to talk about the donations, who at the city came up with the list of recipients, or the missing spending reports.

The city’s in-house lawyers wouldn’t talk about the Gratuities Clause, with attorney Amber Robinson saying in an email that "the Department of Law cannot provide legal advice to persons or entities outside of City government, or disclose legal advice provided to the City of Atlanta which is protected from disclosure under the Attorney/Client Privilege."

The office of Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens did not respond to The Center Square – his spokesman Michael Smith did not answer email or phone messages from a reporter. As an executive press secretary, Smith's salary with the city is $155,000, according to 2025 personnel data.

IMAN would get more money

The Center Square also reported this year that the Atlanta mayor’s office wouldn’t release records under the Open Records Act of how the Inner-City Muslim Action Network and other NGOs spent the FEMA grant money, unless the newswire paid production fees ranging from hundreds to more than a thousand dollars. The mayor’s spokesman said all records had to be reviewed to remove any personal or confidential information, which drove up the cost.

The Center Square has since obtained a limited tranche of records on IMAN’s spending, for a price of just $50.

Among the receipts and invoices produced, it showed taxpayers paying for landscaping work, heating and air system repairs, Home Depot purchases, restaurant bills, Instacart orders, gasoline costs, mileage, and Georgia Power bills. 


Johnny Edwards

Source: https://justthenews.com/nation/states/center-square/new-findings-atlanta-gave-muslim-action-group-35k-donation-didnt-track

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Overpayments to welfare, Medicare recipients surged in fiscal 2025 to $186 billion: GAO report - Kevin Killough

 

by Kevin Killough

The overpayments involved 15 federal agencies paying benefits through 64 programs.

 

The federal government overpaid recipients of welfare and social services by $186 billion in fiscal 2025, according to a new Government Accountability Office analysis.

This was an increase of $24 billion over the previous fiscal year, the according to the New York Post

The overpayments involved 15 federal agencies paying benefits through 64 programs, with about 82% of the overages being the result of overpayments. 

Medicare programs accounted for $57 billion of the overpayments – $37 billion in Medicaid mistakes and $21 billion in Earned Income Tax Credit payments to people who weren't qualified to receive the credit, the analysis found. 

Recipients of Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits accounted for $10 billion of the overpayments.  


Kevin Killough

Source: https://justthenews.com/accountability/waste-fraud-and-abuse/over-payments-welfare-and-medicare-recipients-surged-fy2025

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American journalist charged with acting as an agent for the Chinese government - Kevin Killough

 

by Kevin Killough

At the request of his handler, Pauken took a lie detector test and provided a cell phone and laptop to another person who was living in the U.S. This individual was seeking a job in the Trump administration, Special Agent Timothy Healy wrote in the affidavit.

 

An American journalist has been charged with acting as an agent for the Chinese government. 

An affidavit recently submitted in federal court alleges that Thomas Pauken II, who has lived in China for more than a decade, prepared confidential reports for a contact in China. The handler, according to the affidavit, told Pauken that his reports were being sent to Chinese President Xi Jinping, Politico reported Tuesday. 

At the request of his handler, Pauken took a lie detector test and provided a cell phone and laptop to another person who was living in the U.S. This individual was seeking a job in the Trump administration, Special Agent Timothy Healy wrote in the affidavit. 

Pauken refused his handler's request for classified information, but he told the FBI that he believed there was a likely chance the individual in the U.S. would provide the requested information. Pauken had warned the individual not to do so. 

According to Healy, the individual was not hired for the exact job he wanted in the administration, but he works for a U.S. agency. 

Charles Burnham, Pauken's attorney, told Politico that Pauken isn't charged with spying or mishandling classified information. The government alleges that Pauken did professional work for a foreign government without filing the required paperwork, Burnham explained. 

"We look forward to responding to the government’s allegations in court," Burnham said. 

According to Voz, Pauken writes under the pseudonym Tom McGregor and is the son of Thomas Pauken, chairman of the Texas Republican Party. 

Pauken was arrested by the FBI in February and has been in custody since. 


Kevin Killough

Source: https://justthenews.com/accountability/media/american-journalist-charged-acting-agent-chinese-government

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