‘The Nakba never ended:’ Bernie Sanders helps Rashida Tlaib host anti-Israel event in the Senate

The event commemorating the “Catastrophe” of Israel’s founding came as Palestinian terrorists fired hundreds of rockets on civilians.

By World Israel News Staff

US Sen. Bernie Sanders (Independent-Vermont) on Wednesday redeemed a nixed Palestinian “Nakba Day” event organized by Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-Michigan) that was initially slated to take place at the U.S. Capitol.

Sanders allowed Tlaib to hold the event, which took place as Palestinian terrorists fired hundreds of rockets at civilian populations in Israel, in room belonging to the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions, a congressional committee he chairs.

House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) on Tuesday canceled the original event, which was supposed to be held at a 400-person auditorium at the Capitol Building and would commemorate the Nakba — Arabic for “catastrophe” — which condemns the founding of the Jewish state.

McCarthy said that instead, he would host a bipartisan discussion on Israel-U.S. ties to mark 75 years since Israel’s founding.

The event, titled “Nakba 75 & The Palestinian People,” was planned in collaboration with several organizations that support the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) movement against Israel, including Jewish Voice for Peace (JVP, as well as NGOs that have expressed support for terrorism.

Tlaib thanked Sanders for his help to restore the event, calling him her “aamu,” Arabic for uncle, in the Senate.

“We have a right to tell our stories of the Nakba of 1948… because the Nakba never ended,” Tlaib said, according to The Jewish Insider .

“No child should ever have to worry what will fall from the sky,” Tlaib said.

She charged Israeli police with enacting a “sustained campaign of terror,” and said that Israel is an apartheid state and that U.S. aid supports ethnic cleansing.

Rep. Cori Bush (D-Missouri), a fellow “Squad” member who attended the event, tweeted earlier this week: “Not a single dollar of US aid should go to funding Israeli apartheid.”

Tlaib tweeted photos from the event with the caption: “Let the headlines read, ‘McCarthy tries to erase Palestine but fails.’”

Let the headlines read “McCarthy tries to erase Palestine but fails.” https://t.co/iyUX9AVY4p pic.twitter.com/iMxCAMTVWy

— Congresswoman Rashida Tlaib (@RepRashida) May 11, 2023

 

Anti-Defamation League CEO Jonathan Greenblatt said in a statement: “It is disgraceful that Sen. Sanders allowed this event by Rep. Rashida to be held in our nation’s Capitol. Real conversations are needed around a path to peace, but not with groups & individuals who espouse antisemitism. We call on the Senate to condemn this event.”

The event, which billed itself as an opportunity to “educate members of Congress and their staff about this history and the ongoing Nakba to which Israel continues to subject Palestinians,” was full of lies. Even the invitation said the IDF “violently expelled approximately three-quarters of all Palestinians.”

Bernie Sanders is approximately as Jewish as a ham sandwich topped with shrimp on lard bread https://t.co/LFEh4ovAIg

— Ben Shapiro (@benshapiro) May 11, 2023

Tlaib, the daughter of Palestinian immigrants, routinely refers to Israel as an apartheid state and has made statements that perpetuate the antisemitic stereotype of Jews controlling the world.

Last week, Israeli Ambassador to the United Nations Gilad Erdan said Tlaib’s “ignorance and hate toward Jews and Israel know no bounds” after she posted a tweet about the Nakba, calling Israel an “apartheid state” that “was born out of violence and the ethnic cleansing of Palestinians”.

“Tlaib’s ignorance and hate toward Jews and Israel know no bounds. The facts are clear: the Arabs rejected the U.N.’s resolution to establish a Jewish state and started a war to annihilate it,” wrote Erdan, referencing the fact that in 1948, five Arab armies attacked the nascent state, with full support from the Palestinian leadership.

“Palestinian leadership is leading its people to catastrophe by inciting hate/terror and rejecting peace,” Erdan wrote.

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Unity in war? Lapid calls for end to IDF operation in Gaza after Netanyahu says ‘campaign not over’

The opposition leader pledged to support the government in its war against Gaza-based Palestinian Islamic Jihad terrorists, but it seems he couldn’t wait more than a couple of days to counter current policy.

By Atara Beck, World Israel News

After months of leading massive protests against the Netanyahu government ostensibly over the controversial judicial reform, which has been put on hold for now, Opposition leader Yair Lapid vowed to give his full backing to the government’s war on terror.

“The opposition will support the government in any military action that will bring peace and security to the residents of the south,” he tweeted last week, when the IDF struck back at Gaza terrorists who had fired rockets into Israeli territory following the death of hunger-striking terrorist Khader Adnan.

Again this week, with the start of the IDF’s Operation Shield and Arrow, Lapid pledged unity, saying that “a firm Israeli response at a time and place that is good for us is the way to deal with terror from Gaza. We will back all operational activity to protect the residents of the south.”

Just two days later, however, on Thursday morning, Lapid said in an interview with Kan Radio that it’s time to stop the operation – in contrast to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s statement to the nation the previous evening that “the campaign is not yet over.”

“The operation is justified. A few days ago, they fired hundreds of rockets, and to repair deterrence, we must respond. There are no political gains that Israel needs at the moment from this operation. The operation had nice results, and we must stop now,” Lapid told the radio station.

It isn’t clear what “political gains” he was referring to, as the operation is in fact a defense measure for the security of Israeli civilians, particularly those living in the Gaza envelope.

The threat is far from over, as was seen later in the evening when a rocket achieved a direct hit on a building in Rehovot, killing one man and wounding several others.

As of 8 p.m. Thursday, since the start of the operation Tuesday morning against both the leadership and the infrastructure of the PIJ, the IDF has struck 191 targets, including facilities for the production of weapons, underground tunnels and leading terrorists, TPS reported.

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WATCH – Dead terror chief: Our only role is Jihad, blowing up all Zionist entity cities

Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas’ Fatah Movement published a video of terrorist Khalil Al-Bahtini, one of the three Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ) top leaders that Israel killed earlier this week.

In the video, Al-Bahtini calls for Jihad against Israel, praises “Martyrdom” for Allah, vows to educate Palestinian children to “hate the Zionist entity,” and urges to “blow up all of this Zionist entity’s cities.” Al-Bahtini also stressed that “negotiations” are not an option.

“What we were educated on, and [what] our culture is, is that whoever lives on this land and does not merit Martyrdom, he has lost out,” he said, according to a translation of his remarks by monitoring group Palestinian Media Watch.

“We have no role in this blessed land other than Jihad.It is our honor, all the honor, that we are fighting against Israel, this thieving entity, and that we are educating our sons to hate this entity.It is our honor that we are continuing with all our days, efforts, and intentions to blow up all of this Zionist entity’s cities,” he said, adding that Gaza and the Palestinian areas in Judea and Samaria would be a “thorn” in Israel’s side.

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Cypriot president meets with Netanyahu in Jerusalem in spite of rocket attacks

President Christodoulides said that he wanted to send a strong and clear message about the strategic nature of the relationship between the two countries.

By TPS

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu Thursday met at the Prime Minister’s Office in Jerusalem with Cypriot President Nikos Christodoulides. The meeting was held as part of a new relationship between Israel, Greece and Cyprus.

“We built together an Eastern Mediterranean alliance of democracies – Israel, Cyprus, and Greece. We put our American friends in the loop as well,” Netanyahu said.

“It’s a very stable and very promising alliance,” he added. “We should continue to build it: economically, in terms of our intelligence services, defense and political partnership, also in international forums. We welcome this, and we should continue.”

President Christodoulides said that he came to Israel despite the ongoing Islamic Jihad terrorist attacks that he said his government “fully condemns” because he wanted to send a strong and clear message about the strategic nature of the relationship between the two countries.

“We worked together in the past,” said the President. “I’m here to see how we can enhance even more our excellent bilateral relations, but also – and that is something that I always enjoy discussing with you, dear Benjamin – the regional developments and how we can work together, two democracies in the Eastern Mediterranean, in the Middle East; how we can work together in order to get the stable future.”

President Christodoulides was accompanied by the Cypriot ministers of Foreign affairs and Energy, Commerce and Industry. Also participating in the meeting were the Director of the National Security Council, the Prime Minister’s Chief-of-Staff, the Prime Minister’s Military Secretary, the Prime Minister’s Diplomatic Adviser and the ambassadors of both countries.

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There’s No Such Thing as a Spontaneous Strike

In March 2023, over one million people marched throughout France to protest President Emmanuel Macron’s effort to raise the retirement age. In an article published by CBS News, Elaine Cobbe described how the “the massive strikes” severely impacted “rail, road and air transport . . . causing widespread delays and cancellations. They also forced some […]

Prime Suspect in Natalee Holloway’s Disappearance Will Be Extradited to US

After a long and arduous search for justice, Joran van der Sloot, the prime suspect in the 2005 disappearance of Natalee Holloway, is to be extradited to the United States from Peru. This news was announced by Holloway’s mother, Beth Holloway, in an emotional statement. Van der Sloot, who is currently serving a 28-year prison sentence for the murder of 21-year-old Peruvian Stephany Flores in 2010, is being extradited to the US to face extortion and fraud charges.

The events leading up to Holloway’s disappearance saw her last seen leaving a bar in Aruba with Van der Sloot early on May 30, 2005. An extensive public search took place with media coverage and worldwide attention, but Natalee’s body was not found, and she was eventually declared legally dead in 2014. Although Van der Sloot was arrested in connection with her disappearance, he was released due to lack of evidence.

The Peruvian government approves the US-bound transfer, with Peru Minister of Justice and Human Rights, Daniel Maurate Romero, saying that “this action will enable a process that will help to bring peace to Mrs. Holloway and to her family.” Criminal defense attorney Ted Williams, who has been covering the case since 2005, commented on the news, saying it was “fantastic” but that the legal process could be “long and drawn out” depending on the charges.

Van der Sloot had previously told the police he killed Flores in a fit of rage after she found evidence on his laptop of his involvement in the Holloway case. Yet police forensic experts disputed this account. In her statement, Beth Holloway noted that her deceased daughter Natalee would have been 36 this year and expressed gratitude that justice may finally be possible.

The extradition of Joran van der Sloot to answer for his alleged crimes is a significant step in the search for justice for Natalee Holloway and her family. After almost eighteen years, their persistence is finally paying off, and it is to be hoped that their suffering will come to an end with a resolution for the case.

In Texas, Big Oil Is Trying to Buy Its Own Judges

Texas’s oil and gas industry is pushing legislation to create a new court system for hearing certain business cases. The law would give fossil fuel friend Gov. Greg Abbott the power to personally appoint judges to hear cases involving oil and gas companies.

Texas governor Greg Abbott looks on during a news conference on March 15, 2023, in Austin, Texas. (Brandon Bell / Getty Images)

When Texas oil and gas companies need to remove a legal roadblock to drilling, or answer for alleged wrongdoing, they head to court — and a bill that could be considered by the state legislature as early as Thursday would hand them considerable sway in picking the judges that hear some of their cases.

The state’s $200 billion fossil fuel industry has thrown its weight behind legislation that would create a new system of district courts to hear certain disputes involving corporations. While twenty-six states already have so-called business courts, the Texas proposal has a unique feature: Republican governor Greg Abbott, who has been bankrolled by fossil fuel donors, would have the power to personally appoint judges, who would then serve two-year terms — a tenure that would let Abbott quickly remove judges if they deny favorable rulings to his supporters.

The legislation backed by the oil industry comes just after the US Supreme Court allowed climate cases against fossil fuel companies to proceed in state courts. Opponents of the business-court plan say that not only would it run afoul of the state constitution, which mandates the popular election of district and appellate judges, but it could also set a dangerous national precedent by undermining the independence of the judiciary.

As a result, cases that would otherwise be heard by judges elected by communities in their districts could instead be forced into courts controlled by the governor — and by extension, his donors.

Abbott, who has raked in more than $42 million of campaign cash from the oil and gas industry during his career, has already raised eyebrows by appointing some of those donors to political positions — including an oil tycoon whom he tapped to head the agency overseeing the state’s energy grid.

Some experts also raised alarms about a separate intervention by Abbott into the legal process last month, when he called for the pardon of a man convicted of killing a protester before his sentencing had even taken place.

The business court bill exacerbates those concerns by allowing the governor to handpick judges overseeing cases impacting some of his largest contributors.

Since they serve terms shorter than his own, “there’s a real danger that he can just swap them out every two years if they aren’t making the kinds of rulings he wants,” said Texas-based commercial practice attorney Michael Smith. “It’s a basic separation of powers issue.”

Smith testified against the bill last month on behalf of the Texas chapter of the American Board of Trial Advocates (ABOTA), one of three statewide legal associations opposing the measure alongside several Democratic appeals court judges and state consumer groups.

The push for business courts is backed by a broad swath of industries, including lobbying groups representing the different segments of the state’s fossil fuel sector, as well as Energy Transfer, the pipeline company owned by billionaire Abbott donor Kelcy Warren.

Those groups rely on the state’s district courts for a range of issues that help maintain business as usual — from suing Texas cities over municipal bans on fracking to removing regulatory roadblocks to pipeline development and filing condemnation petitions against residents who resist it.

Fossil-fuel companies also frequently end up in the state’s district courts when they’re accused of wrongdoing. Energy Transfer, ExxonMobil, and Kinder Morgan — all of which have delivered big donations to Abbott — are among the energy companies currently facing a spate of lawsuits over claims of profiteering during the state’s deadly winter blackouts in 2021, though the new business courts would not have jurisdiction over claims already before district courts.

The Texas House passed the bill last week on a party-line vote; the state senate is scheduled to vote on it as soon as Thursday.

Neither Abbott’s office nor Energy Transfer responded to our request for comment.

A Court of Their Own

Since the 1990s, a growing number of states have established specialized business courts, modeled in part on Delaware’s two-hundred-year-old Chancery Court, which presides over corporate disputes and helps give the state its pro-business reputation. The exact jurisdiction of business courts varies by state, but they typically hear high-dollar, complex cases.

The US Chamber of Commerce, a business lobbying group, publishes annual rankings of industry-friendly courts — and firms that have access to those courts enjoy higher returns, according to a recent study.

Critics of business courts say they effectively create a two-tiered system of justice: one for corporate litigants and another for everyday citizens.

But even advocates of business courts told us that Texas’s current bill may undermine some of the model’s advantages, including the development of judicial expertise to handle lengthy, complex cases that might otherwise bog down civil courtrooms.

Commercial cases often drag on longer than the two-year terms judges would serve under Texas’s current bill, meaning they could be replaced midway through.

“That kind of turnover undermines the features of consistency, predictability, and reliability,” said Georgia State University law professor Anne Tucker, who previously served as a staff attorney for the Fulton County Business Court.

No other state currently selects business court judges in this fashion, according to legal experts who spoke to us. While North Carolina allows the governor to nominate justices, for example, they must be confirmed by the General Assembly, at which point they serve five-year terms.

The US Justice Department is already attempting to combat the use of Texas’s federal courts for forum-shopping, which is the practice of litigants choosing courts based on where they’re most likely to get a favorable ruling.

Establishing a business court with handpicked gubernatorial appointees could intensify forum-shopping within the state, said Darlene Byrne, the chief justice of Texas’s Third Court of Appeals, who submitted testimony opposing the bill.

“Building a specialized court system for rich companies doesn’t seem like equal justice to me,” she said.

Fossil Fuels on Trial

The business court bill is the brainchild of Texans for Lawsuit Reform, a powerful, pro-corporate political action committee that’s shaped state politics since the 1990s.

In addition to successfully pushing legislation to restrict consumer lawsuits, the group has played a role in the political careers of both George W. Bush and Abbott, whom Bush appointed to the Texas Supreme Court. Abbott later cited his record helping “cement tort reform” at the Supreme Court when he campaigned successfully to become the state’s attorney general in 2002.

Texans for Lawsuit Reform remains one of the biggest spenders in state races, contributing more than half a million dollars to Abbott’s campaigns since he first announced he was running for governor in 2014. The group, which did not respond to a request for comment, also donates heavily in state judicial races.

Oil and gas interests contribute heavily to Texans for Lawsuit Reform, donating nearly $4 million to the group in 2022 alone.

Creating a special Abbott-controlled court for corporations could empower donors to use the campaign finance system to exert even more control over the state’s judiciary, according to state legal associations, though an amendment inserted into the bill will require the governor to seek the “advice and consent” of the Republican-controlled Senate on judicial appointments.

“You start donating the hell out of the governor’s political action committees,” said TEX-ABOTA’s Smith. “And then you go call up the governor’s office and say, ‘Look, I’m over here getting sued and your damn judge won’t grant summary judgment.’”

Abbott’s political rivals have already accused him of delivering favors for one prominent fossil fuel-industry donor: billionaire Kelcy Warren, whose pipeline company Energy Transfer made billions from soaring natural gas prices during the deadly winter storm that knocked out power for four million people and killed an estimated seven hundred people in 2021.

Just weeks after the state legislature allowed gas companies to opt out of costly weatherization upgrades that summer, Warren gave a million-dollar donation to Abbott. The exchange sparked both suggestions of a quid pro quo from Beto O’Rourke and a defamation lawsuit by Warren against the former gubernatorial candidate, as The Lever reported in January.

Now, Energy Transfer is among the oil and gas companies pushing to have some of its suits heard in courts. Sam Hardy, the company’s head of litigation, testified in favor of the bill during a state senate hearing in March, telling lawmakers, “It is important that big commercial cases have a venue and a forum where their unique needs are met.”

Hardy said during the hearing that about a quarter of the company’s eight hundred open cases are being heard in Texas, about twenty of which would fall under the jurisdiction of business courts. That jurisdiction will depend on the language of the final bill. Its current version excludes many types of actions where the dollar-amount in controversy falls below $5 million.

But lawmakers rejected a proposal from legal associations to explicitly limit jurisdiction to disputes between businesses, according to Texas Trial Lawyers’ Association president Bryan Blevins — leaving the door open to individual plaintiffs being forced to face off against corporations in specialty courts in the future.

“This is going to be a system that plays very favorably to the biggest corporations and the biggest law firms,” said Blevins.

You can subscribe to David Sirota’s investigative journalism project, the Lever, here.

First Israeli casualty: Rocket hits building in central Israel -1 killed; several injured, some trapped in rubble

Palestinian Islamic Jihad terrorists scored a direct hit on a building in Rehovot, claiming the life of one victim and wounding several others.

By World Israel News Staff

Shortly after 6 p.m. on Thursday, one person died and at least five were injured after a building in Rehovot collapsed following a direct hit from rocket-launching terrorists in Gaza.

The victim was trapped under the rubble and critically wounded – he died minutes later.

United Hatzalah volunteers have provided initial treatment to five people who sustained light injuries, including a woman in her 60s who sustained a head injury. The organization’s Psychotrauma and Crisis Response Unit is treating many people for shock.

“When we arrived on the street we saw a lot of destruction in the building. We immediately went inside and began to search the apartments. In the apartment on the third floor, an unconscious victim was found with a very severe multi-system injury and we had no choice but to determine his death,” said Magen David Adom medics Yedidia Hachmon and Tomer Peshko.

They also found a 74-year-old man in another apartment whose leg was trapped under the rubble, TPS reported. He was rescued by the fire brigade and transported on a stretcher to the MDA ambulance, which sent him for further treatment at the hospital in moderate condition.

Police forces and rescue services are searching for more people who may be trapped under the rubble.

Rehovot is located approximately 20 km. south of Tel Aviv.

(Video courtesy TPS)

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Video: When The Lie Becomes The Truth. Prof. Michel Chossudovsky

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