Tuesday, July 7, 2026

Mamdani’s Embittered Fourth of July Rant to America - Victor Davis Hanson

 

by Victor Davis Hanson

Mamdani’s Independence Day message says more about his own politics than the country that gave his family extraordinary opportunity.

 

 

Zohran Mamdani, New York’s self-described socialist mayor, could not resist using the nation’s 250th anniversary celebration to trash the very country that he and his parents voluntarily sought out.

As is his custom, Mamdani speaks in stereotypes and generalities, offering few if any examples, all laced with his accustomed unctuous hypocrisy.

Let’s deconstruct his incoherent July 4 riff:

America, they will tell you, belongs only to those with the right accent or the right shade of skin. The rest of us, they insist, should be grateful for merely being allowed to visit. How small they are. How weak, how unoriginal . . .

At every moment in our past, those who led through exclusion and isolation have tried to win power and enrich themselves by turning us against one another.

Thus spoke the pampered rich kid from Uganda, who immigrated to America with his now-endowed professor father and elite filmmaker mother, the latter reportedly supported by millions of dollars in grants from the Qatari royal autocracy.

Upon arriving, the Mamdanis joined what is statistically America’s wealthiest and most highly credentialed ethnic group: the enormously privileged Indian American community. (But how was that possible in Mamdani’s version of a racist America that supposedly detests the wrong accents and skin colors?)

When this nepo baby includes himself among the supposedly “victimized” (“the rest of us”), should we laugh or cry?

If Mamdani wishes to invoke the tired Marxist oppressed-oppressor binary (“how small they are” versus “the rest of us”), then, by his own revolutionary vocabulary, he once belonged to a settler-colonial Indian expatriate elite.

After all, although Uganda’s Indian community comprises only about 1 percent of the population, it still controls roughly 60 percent of the nation’s GDP.

Mamdani melodramatically alleges of America: “The rest of us, they insist, should be grateful for merely being allowed to visit. How small they are. How weak, how unoriginal.”

I would argue that the United States has asked nothing of the Mamdanis, much less demanded gratitude from a family whose books, films, and activism have consistently reflected anti-Americanism.

Far from demanding that the Mamdanis express gratitude for exchanging Uganda for America or begrudging their rapid rise to multimillionaire status, America might reasonably ask why Mamdani is so angry at the country that welcomed his family and afforded it such extraordinary opportunities. Why is he so eager to slander it as xenophobic and racist?

Does he think there is less opportunity—but more oppression, misogyny, and religious and racial intolerance—in America than in Uganda or India?

In any case, what is so objectionable about assuming that foreign nationals who wish to immigrate and become American citizens might feel gratitude toward a country that welcomes them?

Americans welcome more immigrants each year than any other nation, and they have long admired legal immigrants who enriched the country by assimilating, acculturating, and integrating—not by carving out near-permanent ethnic enclaves.

Yet Americans are understandably astonished when recent immigrants from failed states—plagued by caste prejudice, dictatorship, endemic racism, religious intolerance, Marxist-induced poverty, antisemitism, systemic violence, misogyny, and homophobia—begin lecturing their American hosts about America’s supposed shortcomings.

Stranger still, many of these angry socialist immigrants were either far less critical of the countries they left behind or, in some cases, actually belonged to the privileged—and despised—ruling castes that presided over those failed societies.

Moreover, is it unreasonable to expect that no immigrant community engineer more than $1 billion in welfare fraud, as we have seen with the disproportionate number of Somali immigrants charged or under investigation in Minnesota?

What is so difficult about applying for legal entry into the United States instead of swarming the border under the assumption that illegal entry will be rewarded with generous housing, education, food, medical care, and other public subsidies?

Is it too much to expect that the roughly 500,000 convicted criminal immigrants living in the United States—many of whom entered the country illegally—not commit crimes against the citizens of the country that admitted them?

Can Mamdani explain why this supposedly racist and nativist America has since the mid-1960s admitted millions of immigrants—the overwhelming majority of them nonwhite—if it is so systematically xenophobic and racist?

If America is as hostile toward people of Indian ancestry as Mamdani alleges, why have some 5.4 million Indians immigrated here, making them one of the nation’s largest and fastest-growing foreign-born populations? Why do roughly 150,000 more choose to come to this racist hellhole each year? Do they come to be insulted—or to become prosperous, educated, privileged, and secure?

As for the alleged cruelty shown toward those with different accents or skin colors, Mamdani reveals a remarkable ignorance of America’s long tradition of self-criticism and self-correction.

Consider the diversity visa lottery, the hurdles confronting legal immigrants, and the de facto amnesties often extended to illegal immigrants. An alien visitor from another planet studying the demographics of the past seven decades might conclude that America is indeed racist—against immigrants from Europe and other English-speaking countries.

As for America’s past sins, some 165 years ago, roughly 700,000 mostly white Americans slaughtered one another in a war to abolish slavery—an ancient and evil institution that had brought ten times as many Africans to Spanish- and Portuguese-speaking Latin America as to the American South, while more than 15 million others were sent into the Muslim world through slave trades facilitated by African rulers who sold rival tribes into bondage.

To address the toxic legacy of segregation in the American South, Americans have spent roughly $25 trillion on income- and race-based entitlements for the poor and for nonwhites since the War on Poverty and Great Society programs began some six decades ago.

Yet for decades, federal and state governments ignored civil rights laws and court rulings prohibiting racial preferences, allowing race-based college admissions, separate dormitories, safe spaces, and graduation ceremonies to flourish. Mamdani himself understood the system well enough to attempt to game it by claiming minority status as an “African”—at least Columbia rejected the claim.

As for Mamdani’s charge that “At every moment in our past, those who led through exclusion and isolation have tried to win power and enrich themselves by turning us against one another,” such tactics of divide and conquer are precisely what he himself has mastered in demonizing whites and Jews. Indeed, such racialism has become a hallmark of his Democratic Socialists.

Few contemporary politicians have done more than Mamdani to exploit racial division in pursuit of political power—except, perhaps, others in his own movement who are similarly maniacally obsessed with castigating whites and Jews.

After all, who proposed targeting “whiter neighborhoods” with higher taxes? Who called AIPAC “monsters”?

Mamdani’s housing czar, Cea Weaver, declared that homeownership was a “weapon of white supremacy.” She also endorsed a platform calling for “no more white men in office.”

One of Mamdani’s former campaign operatives, Darializa Avila Chevalier, attacked white women as “ugly colonizer women.”

Mamdani’s newly appointed director of appointments, Catherine Almonte Da Costa, resigned after her past comments resurfaced about “money-hungry Jews” and the importance of ensuring “that white people feel defeated.”

Mamdani’s own wife, Rama Duwaji, reportedly liked more than 70 Instagram posts celebrating the October 7, 2023, massacre of 1,200 Jews. She also illustrated a book by the infamous and antisemitic Susan Abulhawa, who has called Jews “supremacist vampires,” “rootless soulless ghouls,” and “dual-loyalty Zionists.”

The projectionist Mamdani should look in the mirror.

Few contemporary politicians in America have done more in so short a time to exploit race and antisemitism in pursuit of political power.

That such rhetoric comes from a member of a remarkably privileged elite is less ironic than fitting. Mamdani has already described himself: “Those who led through exclusion and isolation have tried to win power and enrich themselves by turning us against one another.”

That fits Mamdani to a T. 


Victor Davis Hanson

Source: https://amgreatness.com/2026/07/07/mamdanis-embittered-fourth-of-july-rant-to-america/

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Iran fires missiles at commercial vessels in Strait of Hormuz - Akiva Von Koningsveld

 

by Akiva Von Koningsveld

Two ships suffered significant damage, but no casualties were reported.

 

Ships anchored off Oman's northern Musandam Peninsula near the Strait of Hormuz, June 27, 2026. Photo by AFP via Getty Images.
Ships anchored off Oman’s northern Musandam Peninsula near the Strait of Hormuz, June 27, 2026. Photo by AFP via Getty Images.

 

Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps fired at least two missiles at commercial vessels transiting the Strait of Hormuz early on Tuesday, two senior U.S. officials told Axios.

Both ships suffered significant damage, but no casualties were reported, one of the cited officials said.

U.K. Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO) confirmed one of the incidents, saying a tanker “reported being hit by an unknown projectile on the port side causing a fire, whilst traveling southbound.”

“No casualties or environmental impact reported. Authorities are investigating,” the maritime body stated. “Vessels are advised to transit with caution and report any suspicious activity to UKMTO.”

The reported attacks came after a week-long deal between Iran and the United States, under which Tehran had agreed to temporarily halt attacks in and around the strategic shipping lane, expired.

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said on Tuesday that Tehran would not begin negotiations on a final agreement with the U.S. “if threats continue.”

“Millions of proud Iranians rallied in unity to honor Grand Ayatollah [Ali] Khamenei and his legacy. Neither them nor our brave Armed Forces are moved by any threats,” Araghchi, a member of Iran’s negotiating team, wrote on X, sharing pictures of the slain supreme leader’s funeral.

“Para[graph] 13 of the MoU is clear: negotiations on final deal will not commence if threats continue,” he tweeted. “Honor your signature.”

Iran and the United States last week held indirect technical talks on implementing their June 17 Memorandum of Understanding, after a first round of negotiations was held in Switzerland on June 20.

Sources familiar with the talks told Reuters they focused on maritime traffic through the Strait of Hormuz and unfreezing Iranian funds.

U.S. President Donald Trump said on July 1 that the technical talks were going “very good.” Tehran has “come a long way” in implementing the MoU and was “getting along very well” with the United States, he told reporters at Joint Base Andrews in Maryland.

“We hit them very hard last week,” Trump said when asked about reports he had considered resuming all-out war with Iran. He added, “I think they’re fine.”


Akiva Von Koningsveld

Source: https://www.jns.org/news/world/iran-fires-missiles-at-commercial-vessels-in-strait-of-hormuz

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Can the Israel-US-Lebanon trilateral framework survive? - Jacques Neriah

 

by Jacques Neriah

The Washington agreement offers a diplomatic road map for ending the conflict, but Hezbollah’s rejection and Lebanon’s fragile political balance threaten to derail its implementation before it begins.

 

From left, Lebanon's former President Emile Lahoud, Iran's Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf and Lebanon's Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri attend the funeral of Hezbollah's slain leaders Hassan Nasrallah and Hashem Safieddine, at Camille Chamoun Sports City Stadium on the outskirts of Beirut on Feb. 23, 2025. Photo by AFP via Getty Images.
From left, Lebanon’s former President Emile Lahoud, Iran’s Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf and Lebanon’s Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri attend the funeral of Hezbollah’s slain leaders Hassan Nasrallah and Hashem Safieddine, at Camille Chamoun Sports City Stadium on the outskirts of Beirut on Feb. 23, 2025. Photo by AFP via Getty Images.

 

The Trilateral Framework Agreement, signed by Israel, Lebanon and the United States on June 26, in Washington, D.C., establishes a phased process to end the state of war and coordinate an Israeli military withdrawal from Southern Lebanon alongside the disarmament of non-state armed groups.

In practical terms, this means the eventual disarmament of Hezbollah, even though the Shi’ite terrorist organization is never mentioned by name. There is no doubt that the agreement is a major diplomatic achievement.

However, its real-world viability faces an immediate and potentially existential challenge.

The contrast between the ceremonial optimism in Washington and the military reality on the ground underscores the high-stakes gamble undertaken by all parties.

The situation became even more volatile when Hezbollah swiftly rejected the agreement, followed by several Lebanese political factions that declared their opposition and warned of renewed domestic conflict.

The starkest warning came from Nabih Berri, speaker of parliament and leader of Amal, Lebanon’s second-largest Shi’ite militia, who declared that Lebanon is on the brink of civil war.

The framework’s fundamental weakness is that it relies on a sequential process that its primary target, Hezbollah, has already rejected.

Within minutes of the signing ceremony, Hezbollah MP Hassan Fadlallah dismissed the agreement, declaring that the organization would oppose its implementation and “hold more firmly to its weapons.”

In effect, the agreement requires the Lebanese government to enforce a policy against a heavily armed organization that is deeply embedded within the Lebanese state.

Under the agreement, Israel will withdraw its forces from the southern security zone only after the Lebanese Armed Forces (LAF) verify that Hezbollah and other non-state armed groups have been disarmed and their military infrastructure has been dismantled.

President Joseph Aoun, Prime Minister Nawaf Salam and their political allies fully understand the risks. While they seek to restore the state’s sovereign authority as envisioned in the agreement, they lack both the military capability and the political capital necessary to impose it without risking national collapse.

The warnings that the agreement could trigger civil war reflect Lebanon’s fragile sectarian balance. For the LAF to implement Point 4 of the agreement—the state’s exclusive monopoly on the use of force—and dismantle Hezbollah’s military infrastructure would require it to engage in a direct and bloody internal confrontation. Ordering the army to forcibly disarm Hezbollah could fracture its ranks along sectarian lines, precisely the dynamic that ignited the Lebanese Civil War in 1975.

Faced with what Hezbollah views as a humiliating strategic setback, all bridges between Aoun and the Shi’ite “duo”—Hezbollah and Amal—appear to have been severed.

Hezbollah is likely to seek first to topple the government by compelling Shi’ite ministers to resign. At the same time, it may intensify attacks on Israeli forces operating within the southern security zone, and possibly beyond, in an effort to provoke a large-scale Israeli military response.

Such an escalation could pressure Washington to restrain Israel out of concern that wider fighting would jeopardize the U.S.-Iran Memorandum of Understanding, ultimately forcing Israel to withdraw from its positions in Southern Lebanon.

As U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio observed, the Washington agreement represents “the beginning of the beginning.”

It outlines an ideal postwar vision but provides no credible mechanism for implementation that avoids plunging Lebanon into internal conflict.

Unless the international community can find a way to neutralize Hezbollah’s political and military veto without fracturing the Lebanese state, the agreement’s 14 points are likely to remain a diplomatic blueprint rather than an operational reality.

Originally published by the Jerusalem Center for Security and Foreign Affairs.

 

Col. (ret.) Dr. Jacques Neriah, a special analyst for the Middle East at the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs, was formerly a foreign-policy adviser to Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and the deputy head for assessment of Israeli Military Intelligence.

Source: https://www.jns.org/analysis/can-the-israel-us-lebanon-trilateral-framework-survive

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‘Troubling’: NY Judge blocks DOJ from accessing medical records of child transgender procedures - Tate Rosentreter

 

by Tate Rosentreter

Chief medical officer at watchdog Do No Harm Dr. Kurt Miceli told The Center Square: "It’s troubling to see activist judges overlook children’s safety in matters involving sex change interventions.”

 

(The Center Square) -

In the wake of a New York judge’s temporary ruling barring the Department of Justice from accessing medical records of minors that various New York federally funded hospitals performed transgender procedures on, a consumer protection organization said it is “not shocking” the hospitals want to continue with their policies, while a medical watchdog called the ruling “troubling.”

Executive director of Consumers’ Research Will Hild told The Center Square that “it is not shocking that these nonprofit hospitals will stop at nothing to continue their woke policies.”

“We have already exposed nonprofit hospitals, like Mount Sinai, for using taxpayer dollars and tax-exempt status while abandoning their core patient care mission in favor of radical ideological agendas,” Hild said.

“These systems and their constant pushback against transparency and accountability only further raises questions of potential misuse of taxpayer dollars,” Hild said.

“But thanks to the Trump administration, these hospitals are finally facing accountability,” Hild said.

Chief medical officer at watchdog Do No Harm Dr. Kurt Miceli told The Center Square: "It’s troubling to see activist judges overlook children’s safety in matters involving sex change interventions.”

“Alongside concerns about the medical risks, the Department of Justice is investigating potential healthcare fraud and the off-label promotion of drugs such as puberty blockers,” Miceli said.

“Courts should enforce accountability, not block a needed examination of how these interventions have been used on minors,” Miceli said.

The Department of Justice declined to comment to The Center Square.

District Judge Katherine Polk Failla issued the temporary ruling last week. Failla’s staff did not respond to a request for comment from The Center Square.

American Principles Project President Terry Schilling shared with The Center Square recent cases that were settled concerning transgender procedures and minors.

"The Trump administration has won historic victories against hospital systems that profited from the misery of confused minors in both Texas and Ohio,” Schilling told The Center Square.

“The doctors and institutions that failed to protect patients and vulnerable families may try to dodge accountability and scrutiny, but justice is coming for children and detransitioners,” Schilling said.

Earlier in June, the DOJ announced that the Cleveland Clinic Foundation followed “Texas Children’s Hospital in reaching agreement with the Department of Justice to provide detransition care and not perform sex-rejecting procedures on minors.”

According to the Wednesday ruling, the DOJ is seeking access to the transgender procedure medical records for their “investigations into health care offenses related to gender-affirming medical care.”

The ruling’s reasoning was that “Plaintiffs have demonstrated that they will suffer irreparable harm if the Court does not issue relief.” The ruling also expressed concerns of running “afoul of constitutional protections” as well as committing breaches “of physician-patient confidentiality under New York law.”

The ruling further stated that DOJ defendants are “restrained and enjoined from…seeking, receiving, using, retaining, or disseminating any identifying or sensitive health information of Plaintiffs…through the Subpoenas at issue or substantially similar administrative or grand jury subpoenas.” 


Tate Rosentreter

Source: https://justthenews.com/nation/states/center-square/troubling-judge-blocks-doj-medical-records-child-transgender-procedures

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Trump fan or not, economists say Trump accounts are a good deal - Christina Park

 

by Christina Park

Backed by a $1,000 government seed deposit and billions in private philanthropy, the new tax-deferred accounts aim to give American newborns a massive financial head start

 

“Trump Accounts” officially launched on Monday following a July 4 opening, drawing positive feedback from economists who project the program will provide significant financial benefits for American children nationwide. 

The accounts come as part of Trump’s new tax law, the One Big Beautiful Bill, and are essentially tax-deferred investments for newborn American citizens born between January 1, 2025, and December 31, 2028. As of today, more than six million people have signed up for the accounts.

The program includes an automatic seed deposit of $1,000 from the Treasury Department into each account, which is invested into low-cost, diversified US stock index funds, such as mutual funds or exchange-traded funds (ETFs). 

Parents or employers can make private contributions of up to $5,000 annually, with employers able to contribute up to $2,500 tax-free as part of the $5,000 cap.

Trump accounts could grow to $5,000 by age 18 if no further contributions are made from the initial $1,000. If an additional $5,000 is contributed each year, TrumpAccounts.gov projects that funds can grow to $271,000 by age 18.

The accounts operate as custodial-style traditional IRAs, owned by the child but administered by a parent or guardian. Parents are able to open an account by filing IRS Form 4547 or through the online portal TrumpAccounts.gov, while families can track growth through the Trump Accounts app. 

Once the child turns 18, the Trump Account converts into a traditional IRA, with the young adult able to access funds penalty-free for qualified expenses such as education and first-time home purchases.

In an interview with Just the News, Michael Busler, an economist and public policy analyst and Professor of Finance at Stockton University, called the Trump Accounts “absolutely marvelous” as it would not cost taxpayers “anything” due to investments by Michael Dell and others.

Dell Computers founder Michael Dell, with his wife Susan, have pledged $6.25 billion for “Trump Accounts” for children 10 and under, specifically targeting children born before January 2025 and living in zip codes with a median income of $150,000 or less. 

SpaceX also announced Monday that it would donate shares to more than two million Trump Accounts. Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley are matching the government’s initial deposit, while philanthropists in several states are giving additional gifts to qualifying families. 

Busler said that the Trump accounts offer children an opportunity to further financial literacy, and options for where they could use funds once they turned 18 – including to pay off college debt, as capital to start a business, or even to fund a gap year. 

“These kids, who are very tech-savvy with cell phones typically by the time they're eight or nine years old, will be able to go on their account and watch their money grow,” said Busler, and said children could choose to save allowances in their accounts rather than spend them. 

“You get some birthday money or Christmas money. Instead of just going out and spending it, you put it into this account, and you can just watch this account grow," he said. 

Some economists have cited limitations to the Trump Accounts. John Berlau, Senior Fellow and Director of Finance Policy at the Competitive Enterprise Institute, argued that “the investment choices need to be broadened” to include private company stocks, private equity, and cryptocurrency, since the accounts are limited to index funds.

“They need to broaden the investment choices and let parents and their financial advisors decide and take the risk, but also reap the benefits,” Berlau said in an interview with Just the News. 

However, Berlau noted that Trump had indicated the accounts could eventually include Bitcoin, saying, "Something could happen," in the Oval Office where he rang the opening bell for the New York Stock Exchange and the Nasdaq to mark the program's launch ceremony.

Adam Frank, Head of Wealth Planning and Advice at J.P. Morgan Wealth Management, said that other investment accounts could be more viable, such as the 529 college savings plan, which can be accessed before age 18, withdrawn tax-free, and where up to $35,000 can be rolled over to a Roth IRA. 

Withdrawals from the Trump Accounts before the retirement age of 59 ½ are subject to income taxes and a 10% penalty, with exceptions for qualified purposes such as higher education.

Meanwhile, Busler said there were other alternatives families could invest in, but investing in index funds also meant it carried less risk. He also said that the Trump Accounts benefited all families, regardless of income levels.

“Remember, this is money that's given to them, and the only restriction is you have to invest it in an index fund,” he said. “If you're the lowest of the low incomes or the highest of the highs, you're still getting a newborn child and an influx of capital.”  

Busler further touted the Trump Accounts for teaching children about the "system that took us… from the birth of a nation to the largest, most prosperous economy in the world in about 150 years,” namely capitalism, noting "talk" by several candidates in recent local and congressional races about replacing capitalism with socialism.

“Capitalism is a good thing — not perfect — but it is a good thing,” said Busler. "And it will show children at a young age that capitalism does work…and forget about all this socialism that they've been talking about, which will be a disaster for the country," he said. 


Christina Park

Source: https://justthenews.com/politics-policy/all-things-trump/trump-fan-or-not-economists-say-trump-accounts-are-good-deal

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The Islamic Republic of Iran's War on Christians - Uzay Bulut

 

by Uzay Bulut

A new 2026 annual report, "Scapegoats: Rights Violations Against Christians in Iran," published by Article18 in partnership with Open Doors, Christian Solidarity Worldwide and Middle East Concern, sheds an alarming light on the persecutions of Christians in Iran. 


  • House churches have been labeled as enemy groups. IRGC involvement in raids tends to be characterized by increased brutality.

  • The IRGC agents, singling out whoever was wearing a cross, tore them off and conducted body searches. After they wounded several individuals, the agents blocked emergency medical personnel who attempted to assist them.

  • Last month, regime security forces moved to seize Saint Peter Evangelical Church in Tehran. They ordered residents of the church compound to leave their homes, and worshippers were told to find a different church. The seizure of Saint Peter, built in 1876 and also known as Qavam Church, and the eviction of its residents, who belong to Iran's recognized Armenian and Assyrian Christian communities, come after a state organization moved to enforce a court order issued nearly 30 years ago. The order, issued by a Revolutionary Court in 1998, ruled that the entire church compound -- around 10 acres, which includes two schools and dozens of homes -- should be handed over to the Execution of Imam Khomeini's Order.

  • "House churches are commonly raided, often followed by arrests, interrogations, pressure to inform on other Christians and long-term imprisonment. This is typically under charges of breaching 'national security'. The conditions in prison are dire... Each year, thousands of converts flee Iran to escape persecution." — Open Doors.

  • A year after the Bible Society's closure [in 1990], Iran's representative at the United Nations wrote to the UN's special rapporteur, saying the Bible Society had been "temporarily closed", pending investigation of "violations of the Islamic Republic's laws and regulations" – without specifying which – and adding that "when the situation of the accused becomes clear, the Society could continue its activities."

  • Yet, 36 years later, Iran's Bible Society remains closed, and the Bible and other Christian books are frequently treated as illegal contraband and evidence of a crime.

  • The same regime that terrorizes its own citizens has also been demanding the right to develop and build nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles, and plans the continued use of centrifuges for uranium enrichment in its underground site at Pickaxe Mountain. The Islamic Republic has also declared that it will charge "fees" from commercial maritime passage through the Strait of Hormuz, and retain control of its main terrorist proxy, Hezbollah, which is now controlling beautiful Lebanon -- known before its 1975-1990 civil war as the "Switzerland of the Middle East."

  • The Islamic Republic of Iran has no intention of giving up exporting its terrorism throughout the wider Middle East. It funds, arms, and trains a network of terrorist proxies, in addition to Hezbollah in Lebanon: the Houthis in Yemen and various Islamic militias in Syria and Iraq.

  • The Islamabad Memorandum of Understanding that the Trump administration signed with Iran is most likely regarded by Iran's IRGC regime as an irrelevant infidel document. It will do nothing to curb their hatred for Christians, Jews, their own citizens, and the West.

Ordinary Christian activities are criminalized and punished in the Islamic Republic of Iran. Christians are arrested and imprisoned over charges related to church activities, such as baptism, Communion, gathering for prayer or Bible study, including those conducted abroad. Last month, regime security forces moved to seize Saint Peter Evangelical Church in Tehran, which was built in 1876 (pictured). They ordered residents of the church compound to leave their homes, and worshippers were told to find a different church. (Image source: Herbert Karim Masihi/Wikimedia Commons)

A new 2026 annual report, "Scapegoats: Rights Violations Against Christians in Iran," published by Article18 in partnership with Open Doors, Christian Solidarity Worldwide and Middle East Concern, sheds an alarming light on the persecutions of Christians in Iran.

According to the report, at least 21 Christians have received custodial sentences in 2025 related to their alleged involvement in the distribution of Bibles in Iran, in addition to other forms of punishment, such as fines, exile, and social deprivation.

In June 2025, two Christian converts were convicted under Article 500 of "propaganda activity of deviant Christian 'Zionist' beliefs opposed to the system of the Islamic Republic of Iran." Each was sentenced to 10 years in prison. They were also accused of "distributing smuggled goods" (Bibles) under Articles 22 and 24, for which they received two years and additional fines. They were tried in absentia, with the only evidence produced against them being Bibles and other Christian literature found in their homes.

Contempt for the Bible, the report states, can also be seen in a reference to it as a "prohibited book" in a different indictment of two Iranian-Armenians and three Christian converts. In June 2025, they were charged with "propaganda" and "collusion," and in November were sentenced to a combined total of more than 50 years in prison. In other court verdicts in 2025, the Bible was referred to as a "distorted", "deviant", "corrupt", or "misleading" book.

Other trends, according to the report, include the increasing involvement of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) in arresting Christians, targeting those involved in distributing the Bible; severe mistreatment of Christian detainees; consistent use of Article 500 of the penal code (relating to "propaganda contrary to the holy religion of Islam") to convict Christians; and the monitoring of Christians' overseas activities, such as attending theological seminars.

The IRGC is now playing an expanding role in gathering intelligence on and persecuting Iran's Christians. As the IRGC's declared role is to defend the Islamic Republic, the increasing arrests of Christians would suggest that the regime sees them as a threat.

House churches have been labeled as enemy groups. IRGC involvement in raids tends to be characterized by increased brutality. On the evening of February 6, 2026, for instance, at least 20 plainclothes IRGC agents raided a gathering of around 80 Christians in Gatab, Mazandaran Province, confiscated Bibles and musical instruments, and arrested a Christian convert, Somayeh Rajabi.

The IRGC agents, singling out whoever was wearing a cross, tore them off and conducted body searches. After they wounded several individuals, the agents blocked emergency medical personnel who attempted to assist them. A day after her arrest, Rajabi was permitted a brief phone call to her family, in which she informed them that she was being held in a prison in Sari. She was later transferred to Mati Kola Prison in Babol. On March 8, she was released on bail of more than $40,000 after being charged with "gathering and collusion" and "propaganda against the regime". On April 15, Rajabi and six others were summoned to the prosecutor's office of Babol to offer their final defense, the final step before an indictment. At the time of the report's release, no further updates had been received.

In 2021, Iran's parliament amended Articles 499 and 500 of the penal code to increase penalties and broaden the scope against those who could be charged with membership of a group "aiming to perturb the security of the country" or of engaging in "propaganda against the Islamic Republic of Iran".

Civil rights organizations, such as Article18, warned that these provisions would be used to "choke... freedoms" and intensify criminalizing minorities. The UN Human Rights Committee subsequently called on the Islamic Republic to "repeal or amend" the articles.

The Islamic Republic has nevertheless abused its laws to crack down on Christians even further. In 2025, according to the report, 254 Iranian Christians were arrested, nearly twice as many as in 2024, and sentenced to a total of more than 280 years in prison.

In the vast majority of cases (nearly 90%), charges against Christians were brought under the amended Article 500 of the penal code, which criminalizes "propaganda contrary to the holy religion of Islam."

The convictions and imprisonments of Christians continue. On July 3, Article18 reported that the sentences of five Iranian Christians condemned to a combined more than 70 years in prison -- for ordinary Christian activities, such as praying, performing baptisms, taking Communion and celebrating Christmas -- have been upheld by an appeals court.

On top of the prison sentences, the Christians' personal property, including Bibles and other Christian literature, was confiscated by the state for the "research" purposes of the Ministry of Intelligence – as in another case last year in which two Christians were sentenced to 12 years each in prison for "smuggling" Bibles into Iran.

Last month, regime security forces moved to seize Saint Peter Evangelical Church in Tehran. They ordered residents of the church compound to leave their homes, and worshippers were told to find a different church. The seizure of Saint Peter, built in 1876 and also known as Qavam Church, and the eviction of its residents, who belong to Iran's recognized Armenian and Assyrian Christian communities, come after a state organization moved to enforce a court order issued nearly 30 years ago.

The order, issued by a Revolutionary Court in 1998, ruled that the entire church compound -- around 10 acres, which includes two schools and dozens of homes -- should be handed over to the Execution of Imam Khomeini's Order (EIKO). EIKO has also been responsible for the confiscations of Assyrian Presbyterian churches in Tabriz and Mashhad, as well as an Assemblies of God church in Gorgan and a retreat center in Karaj.

According to a report on Iran by the organization Open Doors:

"[Chrisian] converts are most in the firing line. House churches are commonly raided, often followed by arrests, interrogations, pressure to inform on other Christians and long-term imprisonment. This is typically under charges of breaching 'national security'. The conditions in prison are dire, and bail sums can be extortionately high, financially paralyzing families. For Christians who are released, that typically comes with strict conditions, such as exile to another part of Iran, or self-censorship... Each year, thousands of converts flee Iran to escape persecution."

For 47 years, the Iranian people have been subjected to a regime that brutally quashes dissenting voices, opinions and beliefs.

For 47 years, the Islamic Republic has systematically repressed its own citizens, including the Muslim majority, through ruthless state-sponsored violence, discrimination, and political persecution targeting any citizen who dissents from the government's radical religious and political mandates.

If citizens criticize the regime or protest economic distress, they face heavy state surveillance, arbitrary detention, and lethal force. Women and girls who refuse to comply with mandatory hijab laws face savage crackdowns, imprisonment, and physical and sexual abuse by "morality" police.

Apart from tormenting their own Muslim population, the Islamic Republic of Iran also criminalizes conversions to Christianity, church activities and the printing and possession of Bibles. Printing and distributing Bibles within Iran has been a criminal offense since the Islamic regime closed the Bible Society in 1990.

Globally, the Bible Society plays a key role in the translation, publishing and distribution of Bibles, and the presence of the Bible Society in Iran dates back to 1811, with the visit of Henry Martyn and the revision of his Persian translation of the New Testament.

This changed in Iran in February 1990, when regime authorities raided the Bible Society of Iran in Tehran and ordered its closure. The organization had served for decades as the country's principal publisher and distributor of Persian-language Bibles and Christian literature. Its closure effectively ended the legal printing and publication of Christian texts in Persian — the language spoken by the overwhelming majority of Iranians — and marked a significant escalation in state efforts to restrict public access to Christian teachings.

Since the forced closure and confiscation of the Bible Society's premises in Tehran in 1990, Christians have found it challenging to access printed Bibles and the Iranian authorities have criminalized importing and distributing Bibles.

A year after the Bible Society's closure, Iran's representative at the United Nations wrote to the UN's special rapporteur, saying the Bible Society had been "temporarily closed", pending investigation of "violations of the Islamic Republic's laws and regulations" – without specifying which – and adding that "when the situation of the accused becomes clear, the Society could continue its activities."

Yet, 36 years later, Iran's Bible Society remains closed, and the Bible and other Christian books are frequently treated as illegal contraband and evidence of a crime.

Ordinary Christian activities are also criminalized and punished by the Islamic regime. Christians are arrested and imprisoned over charges related to church activities, such as baptism, Communion, gathering for prayer or Bible study, including those conducted abroad.

On December 28, 2025, mass protests erupted in Iran, leading to weeks-long nationwide demonstrations calling for an end to the Islamic Republic's leadership of the country.

"The response to those protests has been horrifying, with reports of many thousands killed, including several Christians, and every Iranian -- regardless of their religious background -– affected," states the recent report by Article18, Open Doors, Christian Solidarity Worldwide and Middle East Concern

The same regime that terrorizes its own citizens has also been demanding the right to develop and build nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles, and plans the continued use of centrifuges for uranium enrichment in its underground site at Pickaxe Mountain. The Islamic Republic has also declared that it will charge "fees" from commercial maritime passage through the Strait of Hormuz, and retain control of its main terrorist proxy, Hezbollah, which is now controlling beautiful Lebanon -- known before its 1975-1990 civil war as the "Switzerland of the Middle East."

The Islamic Republic of Iran has no intention of giving up exporting its terrorism throughout the wider Middle East. It funds, arms, and trains a network of terrorist proxies, in addition to Hezbollah in Lebanon: the Houthis in Yemen and various Islamic militias in Syria and Iraq.

The Islamabad Memorandum of Understanding that the Trump administration signed with Iran is most likely regarded by Iran's IRGC regime as an irrelevant infidel document. It will do nothing to curb their hatred for Christians, Jews, their own citizens, and the West.


Uzay Bulut, a Turkish journalist, is a Distinguished Senior Fellow at Gatestone Institute.

Source: https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/22678/iran-war-on-christians

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Israeli Supreme Court warns government of liability for noncompliance - Israel National News

 

by Israel National News

Israel's Supreme Court has warned that government ministers and public officials could face personal civil liability if they fail to comply with a court ruling on the broadcast authorities.

 

Yitzchak Amit
Yitzchak Amit                                                                                  Yonatan Sindel/Flash90

 

Israel's Supreme Court has warned that government ministers and public officials could face personal civil liability if they fail to comply with a court ruling concerning the Second Authority, escalating an increasingly tense standoff between the judiciary and the government.

In a response issued Tuesday, Court President Yitzchak Amit, together with Justices Alex Stein and Ruth Ronen, stressed that all public officials-both elected representatives and civil servants-are obligated to act in accordance with the law and judicial rulings.

The judges added that public employees who act contrary to court decisions could, in appropriate circumstances, lose the personal legal immunity that normally protects them from civil tort claims.

"The basic principles apply both to elected public officials and to public employees, who are all required to act in accordance with the law," the justices wrote, adding that immunity from personal lawsuits may not apply where officials disregard judicial decisions.

The warning drew a sharp response from Bezalel Smotrich, chairman of the Religious Zionism party and a cabinet minister, who accused the judiciary of attempting to intimidate elected officials.

"The legal 'mafia' has moved to extortion through threats," Smotrich said. Comparing the court's warning to a protection racket, he argued that such threats warrant a police investigation and declared that "no one is above the law, not even Yitzchak Amit and Gali Bahar-Miara." He added that the government would ultimately prevail "at the ballot box."

The exchange follows a government statement issued earlier this week criticizing the Supreme Court's June 17 ruling that allowed the Second Authority Council to continue functioning despite its membership falling below the minimum number required by law.

Government Secretary Yossi Fuchs sought to clarify that the government's position does not call for defying the court's decision.

Writing on X, Fuchs said media reports had mischaracterized the government's statement, arguing that it expressed strong criticism of the ruling while committing only to pursuing "all legal tools" available to overturn it in the future.

"How do legal tools become non-compliance with a ruling?" he asked.

In its approved statement, the government maintained that the rule of law requires all branches of government to be subject to the law and asserted that no institution-including the government, the Knesset, or the Supreme Court-is above it.

The government argued that the June 17 ruling conflicts with the explicit language of Section 21 of the Authority for Television and Radio Law by permitting the Second Authority Council to operate without the legally required number of members.

It pledged to use all available legal avenues to seek the ruling's reversal and said it would not recognize future claims seeking to validate actions taken by a council that, in its view, does not satisfy the statutory quorum requirements.

The government described the dispute as an exceptional case, arguing that the law's wording is unambiguous and that the court's interpretation directly contradicts it, rather than representing a routine disagreement over judicial interpretation.


Israel National News

Source: https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/429776

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A 'stab in the back': Israel's refusal to extend Jordanian water agreement may spark crisis - Danielle Greyman-Kennard

 

by Danielle Greyman-Kennard

The 1994 peace treaty signed by Amman and Jerusalem required Israel to supply Jordan with 50 million cubic meters of water annually, an amount doubled in a 2021 commitment that expired in 2025.

 

Water discharging from a desalination plant into the Zalmon River and into the Sea of Galilee, March 4, 2026.
Water discharging from a desalination plant into the Zalmon River and into the Sea of Galilee, March 4, 2026.
(photo credit: MICHAEL GILADI/FLASH90)

Jerusalem’s refusal to extend a water agreement with Amman until it changes its rhetoric on Israel will likely be interpreted by Amman as a “stab in the back” after the support Jordan gave to Israel during the Iran war, Dr. Ronen Yitzhak, an expert in Israeli-Jordanian relations from the Moshe Dayan Center for Middle Eastern and African Studies, told The Jerusalem Post on Tuesday.

The 1994 peace treaty signed by Amman and Jerusalem required Israel to supply Jordan with 50 million cubic meters of water annually, an amount doubled in a commitment made in 2021 which expired in 2025.

After a series of extensions, Jerusalem conditioned the resumption of supply on Amman softening its rhetoric on Israel and on the thawing of relations, which grew increasingly hostile over the course of the Israel-Hamas war.

Yitzhak said the disagreement “reflects the political crisis between the countries,” but added that the issue was not surprising given Amman’s “fear” of Israeli annexation of the West Bank and the potential imposition of sovereignty, including “changing the status quo on the Temple Mount.”

Jordan is furious about Israel’s continued refusal to renew a 2021 water agreement between the two neighbors, the Kan public broadcaster reported Monday.

Israeli walks along the edge of the ancient archaeological site of ''Herod's Pool'' near the Jewish settlement of Petzael, in the Israeli occupied Palestinian West Bank, in the Jordan Valley, after water was recently diverted into the site from a nearby spring on June 15, 2026.
Israeli walks along the edge of the ancient archaeological site of ''Herod's Pool'' near the Jewish settlement of Petzael, in the Israeli occupied Palestinian West Bank, in the Jordan Valley, after water was recently diverted into the site from a nearby spring on June 15, 2026. (credit: Ilia Yefimovich/AFP via Getty Images)

Peace treaty mandates Israel supply Jordan with water

The 1994 peace treaty between Israel and Jordan mandates that Jerusalem supply 50 million cubic meters annually to its eastern neighbor. In 2021, during the Naftali Bennett-Yair Lapid government, Israel agreed to double the amount of fresh water it provides to Jordan, one of the world’s most water-deficient countries.

The 2021 agreement expired in late 2025 after a series of extensions, though Israel still supplies the initial 50 million cubic meters laid out in the peace treaty. Israel reportedly conditioned the supply of the additional volume on Jordan moderating its rhetoric toward Israel and restoring full diplomatic ties.

A Jordanian source close to the royal family told Israeli broadcaster Kan that “The water issue is very important to us, and is part of the peace treaty.”

Ynet reported that an Israeli official told the site that though there was no legal obligation for Israel to provide Jordan with water, “there is goodwill between the two countries.”

“Jordan needs the water, but when you help your neighbors, you expect warmer relations,” the official said. “If there is a meeting, everything will be on the table - normalization, water, and strengthening bilateral ties.”

Though the unnamed official said that the exchange of the vital resource might lead to the expectation of warmer ties, Yitzhak pointed out that Amman has provided Israel with support some might consider more significant than softened public statements.

Jordan acts in defense of Israel during Iran war

Jordan has previously shot down Iranian missiles and drones targeting Israel above its sovereign airspace.

“The timing of the Israeli announcement not to renew the agreement is not good for Jordan because it comes at the height of the war with Iran and the aid that Jordan gave to Israel during the war. Public opinion in Jordan did not like Jordan's support for the United States and Israel in the war against Iran, and now that this news has been published in Jordan, they feel like they have been stabbed in the back,” Yitzhak explained.

“They supported Israel against Iran, and now Israel is returning evil for good. This is another card for those opposed to Israel in Jordan.”

Israel’s reported demands that Amman soften its statements on Jerusalem are being interpreted as “blackmail,” he continued. Should Amman now comply with Israel’s request, it will be seen as “selling support for Palestinians” in exchange for water, an exchange that would be heavily criticized in a country comprised of a population where upwards of 50% are estimated to be of Palestinian origin.

Jordan is considered to be one of the most water-scarce countries globally, according to the United States Commerce Department. Jordan currently has 61 cubic meters of renewable freshwater available per capita per year, and its situation is only worsening due to population growth, economic development, and unsustainable agriculture.

“Ultimately, this will not harm the strategic cooperation between the countries, but it expresses the political crisis that exists between them,” Yitzhak predicted.

“I assume that behind the scenes, in discreet and secret talks, the issue will be resolved because Israel also has an interest in maintaining the stability of the Jordanian regime, and harming the water supply could create tension and unrest in Jordan and strengthen opponents of peace within Jordan.” 


Danielle Greyman-Kennard

Source: https://www.jpost.com/israel-news/article-901731

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Trump panel finds Smithsonian American history museum ideologically captured, engages in ‘activism’ - Steven Richards

 

by Steven Richards

The White House quietly released a final report from the Domestic Policy Council outlining evidence of “ideological capture” and “activism” from the leadership of the National Museum of American History.

 

While President Donald Trump marked the 250th anniversary of American independence with great fanfare in the nation’s capital city, his White House quietly released a report from the Domestic Policy Council detailing the “ideological capture” and “activism” infecting the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History. 

The museum was first approved by Congress in 1955 to tell the national story of the United States, to “place before” visitors “a stimulating permanent exposition that commemorates our heritage of freedom and highlights the basic elements of our way of life.”

But, the museum’s current leadership has instead sought to use the institution as “a political instrument” to accomplish its own ideological goals at the expense of its original mission, the Trump administration argues in the report titled: “Saving America’s Story: How Ideological Capture at the Smithsonian Institution’s National Museum of American History Erases Our Heritage.” 

The council's review of the Smithsonian museum was in response to Trump’s March 27, 2025, executive order aimed at purging “revisionist” and ideological materials from U.S. history references and exhibits at federally funded museums and sites. 

“Our central finding is not that the Museum has simply added overlooked stories, corrected perceived errors, or broadened its historical scope,” the council wrote. “Rather, it is that Museum leadership has explicitly adopted an ideological framework that no longer treats the American story as a shared national inheritance to be taught or celebrated, but as a political instrument to divide, dispirit, and discourage our citizens.”

The council specifically singled out the museum’s director, Anthea Hartig, and delivered blazing criticism of her leadership, arguing she has recast the museum as an instrument of her own “social justice” agenda. The DPC provided citations of evidence from the museum itself and Hartig’s public statements in recent years. 

In the wake of the George Floyd and Black Lives Matter protests in 2020, Hartig said, "We work to reframe the traditional, celebratory narrative of U.S. history for visitors ... .” 

The following year, she spoke to the University of California Riverside and described how she believes the museum profession has “to figure out” how “we’re going to” “problematize” the “250th Anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence in 2026,” that “loving America is very complicated,” according to the report. 

“These are not the words of an objective historian, but rather those of an activist advancing an ideological agenda contradictory to the Museum’s founding purpose of fostering patriotism,” the DPC concluded.

You can read the report below: 

The National Museum of American History did not respond to a request for comment from Just the News

“For more than 180 years, the Smithsonian has served the American public with nonpartisan and independent scholarship, and we remain committed to doing so,” Smithsonian spokeswoman Julissa Marenco told The New York Times

Hartig was appointed by the secretary of the Smithsonian to be the new director of the museum in 2018. Shortly after, Hartig charted a new course for the institution and outlined a new goal: to “the most accessible, inclusive, relevant, and sustainable public history museum in the nation.” To this end, Hartig asked the museum’s staff to craft a new mission statement. 

“Through incomparable collections, rigorous research, and dynamic public outreach, we explore the infinite richness and complexity of American history. We help people understand the past in order to make sense of the present and shape a more humane future,” read the museum’s previous mission statement. 

Under Hartig’s leadership, it changed to: “Empowering people to create a more just and compassionate future by exploring, preserving, and sharing the complexity of our past.”

The DPC raised concerns that the organization's new directive removed references to the “infinite richness” of American history and instead solely emphasizes the “complexity” of “our past.” 

“‘American history’ was replaced by ‘our past,’ the new objective became empowerment for the sake of social and political activism, not learning for the sake of understanding,” DPC wrote in the report. 

Hartig said explicitly that the change in the mission statement was to help “get out of the ‘America First’ mentality” at the museum dedicated to American history. 

One of the report’s main concerns is that there is no major exhibit dedicated to the American founding era, including the Founding Fathers, the Continental Congress or major moments of the American Revolution. 

Instead, the panel notes that when the museum references the American founders, it often invokes their flawed characters and participation in slavery, while downplaying contributions to the ideas that later led to the end of slavery in the United States. 

Visitors “will find no major exhibit dedicated to America’s founding era, George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, other founding fathers, the Continental Congress, the pilgrims, the Puritans or major moments of the American Revolution,” the DPC wrote. 

The DPC also noted that the museum failed to schedule or hold any special events to celebrate Independence Day in 2025 or to mark the 250th Anniversary of the country in 2026. An events list for July 2025 shows that the museum hosted a “Wish For U.S. Wall” from June 19 to July 3 where visitors could “share their wish for the nation.” However, no events were scheduled on Independence Day to celebrate the holiday. 

In 2026, as the nation’s capital marked the historic semiquincentennial anniversary of the United States, the museum did not offer any “July 4th-only programming for Independence Day,” the DPC wrote.

The report compared the lack of programming for July 4th to the museum’s extensive catalogue of events for Pride Month in 2025, such as performances from the Gay Men’s Chorus of Washington, D.C., book signings, and showcasing special objects from museum storage.  

The DPC also criticized the museum for advocating for explicit political causes, like anti-racism efforts surrounding the 2020 riots, as well as boosting the stories of illegal-alien activism. Some of the evidence for those programs and exhibits has been removed from the museum’s website, the report claims. 

The report shows how “undocumented organizing” materials were integrated into various exhibits throughout the museum, including a monarch butterfly labeled “DACA wings” with the written phrases “#Here to Fight” and “Undocumented & UNAFRAID.” Surrounding the object were panels labeled “Raising Citizens,” “Claiming Citizenship,” and “Making Citizens.

The museum participated in the Smithsonian’s “Our Shared Future: Reckoning with Our Racial Past” initiative in 2021. The initiative's director, Deborah Lynn Mack, described how the initiative encouraged museums to take an "activist stance” and help staff “engage in this work in ways that actually reinforces their activism, their sense of equity, their sense of social justice ... ."  

The DPC concludes that the evidence shows the National Museum of American History has “become subject to institutional capture by a radical, activist ideology that is fundamentally opposed to telling the noble, honest story of the great country we know and love.”

“Rather than part of a national trust for the diffusion of knowledge, dedicated to explaining the ‘infinite richness and complexity of American history,’the National Museum of American History has become an instrument – a ‘prime tool,’ as Director Hartig has put it – for a radical, activist cohort dedicated to reframing the American story to serve its ideological ends,” the panel wrote.  


Steven Richards

Source: https://justthenews.com/nation/culture/trump-panel-finds-smithsonian-american-history-museum-ideologically-captured-engages

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Don't call it 'safe': Public records suggest Canada didn't accurately track COVID vaccine injuries - Christina Park

 

by Christina Park

As roughly 3,000 reportedly injured Canadians demand reforms to compensation system, communications show government's internal tracking of injuries and vaccine safety data was far less reliable than senior officials publicly let on.

 

As the Public Health Agency of Canada internally discussed the rationale it would give the public for no longer publishing reported COVID-19 vaccine injuries on its vaccine safety webpage two years ago, its executive director made a startling request: Don't call the immunizations "safe."

Records requested by Just the News under Canada's Access to Information Act show the Canadian government's internal tracking of COVID vaccine adverse events and vaccine safety data was far less reliable than senior officials publicly let on, as documented by communications within PHAC from October 2023 to September 2024.

Even as the agency's tracking was crippled by mismatched data production timelines and disagreements with the overarching federal health agency, Health Canada, about what counted as "serious" medical events, planners chose to discontinue the public website rather than address underlying data production issues.

While the government operated on a standard five-week data lag to generate its public updates, intended to capture adverse events within 30 days of jabs, internal communications show tracking was backlogged for months.

The revelations come as more than 3,000 Canadians who have reported COVID vaccine injuries are slated to share their stories in Ottawa later this year, to press for reforms to the vaccine injury program, Global News reported. 

PHAC and Oxaro, a third-party consulting firm that formerly managed the vaccine injury compensation program, underestimated the number of injured Canadians for the claims, predicting just 40 claims a year, according to a Global News investigation.

They have in fact received 400 claims a year, with 3,317 applications filed and 1,738 people still waiting on their claims, the investigation found. PHAC took over the program in April following investigations showing that Oxaro had spent $34 million of $50 million on administrative costs rather than helping patients.

Systemic failure to accurately track and report COVID vaccine adverse events is not unique to Canada. 

Wisconsin GOP Sen. Ron Johnson presented evidence that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration used flawed algorithms that hid serious safety signals to track COVID vaccine adverse events under the Biden administration. 

A whistleblower claims senior FDA officials had been shown adverse events associated with the vaccines such as cardiac death, pulmonary infarction, Bell’s palsy, and various types of strokes, but chose to use an algorithm that masked such signals to avoid creating vaccine hesitancy.

The World Health Organization says more than 13 billion COVID vaccine doses have been administered internationally to date, including more than 100 million in Canada and 676 million across the United States, according to PHAC and the CDC, respectively. 

The public 'might worry we're hiding things'

Just the News sought records explaining and supporting the government's decision to discontinue updates to its "Reported side effects following COVID-19 vaccination in Canada" website, including briefing notes, decision records, internal correspondence, analyses, or communications created, reviewed or relied upon to make or justify the update cutoff, including records addressing COVID vaccine safety surveillance or adverse event reporting. 

The COVID vaccine safety page says it was last updated Jan. 19, 2024, with data up to and including Jan. 5, 2024. As the COVID response evolves into "an ongoing health issue," and "extensive evidence on COVID-19 vaccine safety has been gathered globally," there's no reason to keep updating the site, it says.

However, the records shared by PHAC with Just the News, which made the production searchable, show significant discrepancies in the data behind the agency’s regular updates to the page from 2021 to 2024.

Epidemiologist Ashley Weeks sent PHAC colleagues a draft document Jan. 15, 2024, of "considerations for [the] future" of reports on COVID adverse events following immunization (AEFI), with a section on "emerging issue[s]."

She cited a "misalignment of timing of vaccine administered data availability and the Online report schedule," whose five-week data lag relies on the assumption that side effects will appear within 30 days of vaccination and another week will be needed to enter data into the system. 

An online report for Dec. 22, 2023, using data pulled two weeks earlier, would require vaccination records up to Nov. 3 to reflect recent vaccinations, but the most recent data available at the agency for that date was stuck at Sept. 14, Weeks' draft said.

She said that another emerging issue was that they did not "receive denominator information on the coadministration of vaccines," further diluting the government’s ability to track the total number of shots actually given. 

According to the documents, the federal tracking system was entirely dependent on provincial registries, which were not tracking instances in which a patient received the vaccine at the same time as another shot like the flu vaccine, skewing the baseline of the data.

Tracking was also complicated by conflicting definitions between federal agencies. At the time, Health Canada’s Canada Vigilance Database was tracking "adverse events of special interest" for conditions such as anaphylaxis, Bell’s palsy, Guillain-Barré syndrome, multisystem inflammatory syndrome and myocarditis/pericarditis.

Though PHAC was integrating the CVD data at the time it was tracking AEFI reports for the public, Weeks' draft cited "limitations with including Canada Vigilance," such as “differences in serious definition.” 

She noted Health Canada inflates the numbers by including “other medically important events as serious," and considered removing the data altogether.

"We should anticipate lots of public pushback if we were to completely remove CVD," Weeks wrote in an entry for a table on options to consider for the future of the online COVID report, including its advantages and considerations. 

She warned that "the public may not understand why the sudden change, might worry we're hiding things, and may claim that our previous way of reporting wasn't proper."

As of Jan. 26, 2026, CVD had received 2,040 domestic and 29,619 foreign adverse events for myocarditis and pericarditis alone, according to the March 11, 2026, Order paper Q-766, requested by Conservative Member of Parliament Ted Falk that legally forced disclosure of numbers in Health Canada's CVD database.

Health Canada has said that these do not necessarily imply a causal relationship, and that the risks of COVID illness outweigh the harms of being vaccinated, “including the rare risk of myocarditis or pericarditis which, despite hospitalization, is relatively mild and resolves quickly in most individuals.”

 

Don't call COVID vaccines 'safe,' just backed by 'extensive evidence'

Documents show that officials spent months debating public messaging on the reasons for discontinuing online reporting, instead of trying to reconcile conflicting federal definitions or resolve data delays.

PHAC Executive Director Susanna Ogunnaike-Cooke gave the Director General's Office talking points on reasons for ending AEFI public reporting ahead of a meeting with the Office of Chief Public Health Officer, then led by Theresa Tam. 

The Jan. 19, 2024, email pointed to the "transition from pandemic to endemic," declining vaccine uptake and a "decrease in [Health Canada's] COVID-19 specific resources" as reasons for ending public reports.

She noted it had already scaled back reporting from weekly to monthly, then quarterly from January 2021 and spring 2023, before discontinuing the report altogether that same day of Jan. 19.

Four days earlier, epidemiologist Weeks' draft on the future of AEFI reports identified another "emerging issue," bureaucratic burnout, namely the “desire from [Health Canada] and PHAC to shift demands for data including AEFI data from CVD to pre-pandemic levels."

By February 2024, the agency was planning an alternative system "aiming to transition to a new webpage inclusive of all vaccines," as Weeks' planning document said. That would ultimately launch STARVAX, which lumps COVID vaccine statistics into routine shots like the flu vaccine. 

Weeks' planning document for AEFI surveillance includes a table of "minimum key variables" to be included in the new system. Under "seriousness," the document says officials should communicate that most reported issues were "non-serious to increase confidence in the vaccine."

"It could be interesting to create a new seriousness definition and see if there are any reports MAE [Medically Important Adverse Event] deem serious which are not picked up in the new definition," a footnote also said.  

PHAC's Ogunnaike-Cooke put her foot down a month later when communications staff and senior officials pored over the wording of the "Draft Blurb For the Vaccine Safety Website," as the email subject line calls it.

“Sorry to be difficult, but we can't/shouldn't say" that "COVID-19 vaccines are safe," she wrote March 26, 2024, since "there have been a few (though rare) causally associated adverse events that caused serious morbidity and even some deaths." 

Instead, Ogunnaike-Cooke suggested the ambiguous statement that would end up in the blurb: "extensive evidence on COVID-19 vaccine safety has been gathered globally."

At least one member of the public noticed the absence of reported side effects, emailing Health Canada in April to learn when the next report would be posted. This triggered a back-and-forth between departments to clarify official public messaging that carried on for nearly three months.

Even as the report had already been discontinued in January, staff debated how to avoid public scrutiny for months. One internal instruction suggested keeping the links live until May instead of archiving them "in case people are searching," delaying public realization that the program had been killed. 


Christina Park

Source: https://justthenews.com/politics-policy/coronavirus/canadian-government-failed-accurately-track-covid-vaccine-adverse

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