Saturday, June 20, 2026

Hezbollah Shatters Ceasefire Within Hours, Confirming the Nature of the Conflict



There are moments in the Middle East when reality cuts through diplomatic fantasy with remarkable speed. The latest ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah appears to be one of them.

Less than a day after a ceasefire agreement was announced, Hezbollah launched more than 50 projectiles at Israeli Defense Forces personnel operating in southern Lebanon. According to the IDF, the attack constituted a "blatant ceasefire violation," exposing once again the gulf between international hopes for peace and the conduct of an Iranian-backed terrorist organization that has repeatedly demonstrated its contempt for such agreements.

Israel responded by targeting Hezbollah operatives and infrastructure throughout southern Lebanon, including rocket launch positions, weapons depots, and command centers. The IDF emphasized that it remains committed to the ceasefire while making clear that it will continue to "remove any threat posed to the State of Israel and IDF soldiers."

The episode raises an obvious question that far too many observers continue to avoid: what exactly is a ceasefire worth when one side regards it as a tactical inconvenience rather than a binding commitment?

Israel's Arabic-language military spokesperson, Col. Ella Waweya, stated that calm could be restored if Hezbollah ceased its hostile activities and stopped violating existing agreements. She noted that Israel's security presence in southern Lebanon is intended to dismantle terrorist infrastructure and eliminate threats to Israeli citizens, not to target civilians.

Yet Hezbollah's own statements leave little room for ambiguity. Earlier Saturday, the organization acknowledged targeting Israeli soldiers and declared that it would "not hesitate to confront any attempt by Israel to seize land in Lebanon" despite claiming a continued "commitment to the ceasefire."

The contradiction is revealing. One cannot simultaneously violate a ceasefire and profess fidelity to it. Yet this sort of doublethink has become commonplace among groups that understand that much of the international community is willing to overlook actions that would be condemned without hesitation if carried out by a democratic state.

A senior Hezbollah official told Reuters that the group would not allow Israel "freedom of movement" in what it described as "occupied Lebanese territory." Such rhetoric is familiar. It serves not as a path toward stability but as a justification for perpetual confrontation.

Meanwhile, the Lebanese Army accused Israel of carrying out "brutal attacks" designed to prevent stability from returning to Lebanon. The statement, posted on social media, claimed Israeli operations had caused casualties, property damage, and the death of a Lebanese soldier.


This narrative has become equally familiar. Hezbollah launches attacks. Israel responds. International attention then shifts rapidly from the original act of aggression to criticism of the Israeli response. The sequence repeats so often that many observers no longer seem to notice it.

Lebanon's state news agency reported that at least ten people were killed in Sidon following Israeli airstrikes targeting multiple sites in southern Lebanon. As always in such conflicts, the human cost is tragic, yet any serious discussion of that cost must begin with the organization that chose to violate a ceasefire almost immediately after it took effect.

The broader regional implications are equally concerning. Iranian officials reportedly linked their decision to close the Strait of Hormuz to developments in Lebanon, while Iran's General Staff threatened missile strikes against Israel if what it called Israeli "aggression against Lebanon continues."

Such threats underscore the reality that Hezbollah is not merely a local Lebanese actor. It remains a central component of Iran's regional strategy, operating as an extension of Tehran's influence and military ambitions.

The ceasefire itself had only just been announced. An Israeli source confirmed that an agreement had been reached between Israel and Hezbollah, while a senior American official told Reuters that the arrangement would take effect Friday afternoon. According to reports, American and Qatari negotiators helped broker the deal with assistance from Iran.

Whether that agreement survives Hezbollah's actions is now an open question.

What is not in question is the lesson once again provided by events on the ground. Peace agreements can be signed in conference rooms, celebrated in diplomatic circles, and praised by international mediators. But they remain meaningless if one side views them as optional.

As an IDF spokesperson observed Friday, "Recent events have made one thing clear: IDF soldiers must stand between Hezbollah and Israeli civilians."

The events of the past twenty-four hours have done little to challenge that assessment.


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Friday, June 19, 2026

Silenced no more: The Israeli women who documented Hamas's October 7 sexual crimes


A new 298-page Civil Commission report lays bare the sexual violence of October 7. Drawing on thousands of photographs, videos, and interviews, it shows how social media itself became a weapon of psychological warfare.

When the privately funded Civil Commission on the October 7 crimes against women, men, and children published its landmark report on May 12, Dr. Cochav Elkayam-Levy felt something she had not known for a long time: a deep sense of relief.

The report. Silenced No More: Sexual terror unveiled: the untold atrocities of October 7 and against hostages in captivity. had at last appeared. Elkayam-Levy noted that it received fair and accurate coverage in hundreds of news outlets, among them the BBC, the UK’s Daily Mail, The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, Fox News, CNN, and The New York Times.

Elkayam-Levy, the commission’s principal author, had taken on a task of such heartbreak and disturbance. documenting crimes of extraordinary cruelty. that many on her team could not continue. For two and a half years she sat with the evidence and with survivors. She reviewed testimony about the sexual crimes committed by Hamas-led terrorists on October 7, 2023, and in the time that followed.

“One of the most important takeaways is the before-and-after reality of the report,” noted Danae Marx-Callaf, director of international communications and one of the four co-founders of the Civil Commission. “Our report shifts the conversation from ‘whether it happened’ to ‘what are the consequences.’

“Another important thing is recognition of the victims. The report will go around the world to different policy makers and not remain just the knowledge of a few in the world,” Marx-Callaf added.

The comprehensive 298-page document sets out the sexual terror committed on and after October 7. The Civil Commission concluded that this terror stood at the centre of Hamas’s war strategy.

An expert in international law, human rights, and feminist legal theory, Elkayam-Levy serves as a Sophie Davis Fellow at the Leonard Davis Institute for International Relations at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. She was a 2024 Israel Prize laureate for her tireless work on the report. For years she had taught and written about war crimes, gender-based violence, and the duty of legal systems to protect the vulnerable and pursue justice.

Yet she never imagined that other highly committed women’s advocates from other nations. the very people with whom she had spent a career teaching and working. would abandon her after October 7.

In the days after the massacre, while Israel was still counting its dead and families searched for missing loved ones, Elkayam-Levy travelled to New York to address the United Nations Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women. She reported on the sexual atrocities retrieved from Hamas’s phones and the victims’ phones, from survivors’ testimonies, and from the accounts of those given the grim task of identifying mangled corpses.

She arrived expecting that evidence of atrocities committed against women would command urgent international attention. Instead she encountered the UN Committee’s apathy and hatred as dozens of pro-Palestinian and pro-Hamas activists accused Israel of genocide. The experience left a profound impression.

“I remember feeling devastated,” Elkayam-Levy told the Magazine in an interview at the commission’s office in Modi’in.

The silence was deafening.

For a scholar of international law and human rights that moment became a turning point. “The silence was deafening,” she said.

“I remember thinking we had to establish an organization. If the crimes were not being investigated, documented, and preserved with the urgency they demanded, we in Israel would have to do it ourselves,” she continued.

At first the goal was simply to preserve evidence before it vanished. The terrorists’ horrific photographs and videos of sexual violence and torture spread virally through email, WhatsApp, and social media platforms.

“Hamas itself had uploaded and distributed large quantities of material to cause as much psychological damage as possible. We knew we had to preserve those images before they vanished,” Elkayam-Levy added.

What began as an emergency response soon became the Civil Commission. an independent civilian initiative separate from government institutions. Its purpose was not only to investigate the crimes but to do so according to the highest international legal and evidentiary standards. so that its findings could withstand scrutiny in courts, tribunals, academic research, and historical inquiry.

For Elkayam-Levy the aim was to place a meticulously documented historical record before the world. a wake-up call not only to governments and legal institutions but to humanity itself. The report, for instance, records the account of Raz Cohen, a Supernova music festival survivor: “The men pulled a woman from the vehicle... forcibly removed her clothing, and raped her… They repeatedly stabbed her, killing her… they continued to rape her after her death.”

Said Elkayam-Levy: “I never imagined something like this would happen here in Israel. For hours, terrorists moved freely through communities in southern Israel, murdering families in their homes, burning houses, taking hostages, raping them, and broadcasting much of it live.

“The attacks shattered more than Israel’s border defenses. They shattered a basic sense of security. One of the things we lost from the outset was our sense of safety. It felt like it could happen to any of us. Even today, that sense of vulnerability lingers,” Elkayam-Levy said.

Recalling her 51 days in Hamas captivity, Agam Goldstein, who was 17 when she was abducted, is quoted in the report: “It’s these little things that break you… when you have no control over your body and no control over how to take care of your body.”

Elkayam-Levy is the mother of four children. Her youngest son was two-and-a-half years old when she co-founded the commission. Each day she moved between two worlds. One filled with evidence of cruelty, degradation, and suffering. The other filled with children, homework, family dinners, and ordinary life.

“My children were the reason I did this,” she said. “They were what kept me sane.” Time with family became a form of emotional recovery. At the same time she worried constantly about what she was missing. “I wasn’t there enough. They needed me,” she said wistfully.

Elkayam-Levy worried about what her family was also sacrificing. While she immersed herself in evidence, interviews, and the daily demands of the investigation, her husband carried most of the burden of raising their four children. “He understood and supported me. But it was a lot.”

When Elkayam-Levy was awarded the Israel Prize in the newly created category of Arvut Hadadit (Mutual Responsibility) in 2024, the honour was deeply meaningful, she said, but not primarily for professional reasons. Her older children suddenly saw the work through the eyes of the nation after years of watching their mother disappear into a mission they were too young to understand.

“They take pride in it now. The recognition helped them understand why I had been absent so often, why the work mattered, and why I had felt compelled to continue despite its enormous toll emotionally and on family life,” she added.

The establishment of the Civil Commission on October 7 Crimes by Hamas against Women, Children, and Families grew organically out of the independent, non-governmental Dvora Research Institute, which Elkayam-Levy established in 2021. Recognised as a prominent legal scholar and human rights expert, and active in the Israeli women’s protests against the judiciary overhaul, she quickly gathered a team of professionals and colleagues.

The Civil Commission drew on legal experts, trauma specialists, archivists, researchers, and volunteers. It was guided by a board of high-level international advisers, including the Hon. Irwin Cotler, former minister of justice and attorney-general of Canada, and Sheryl Sandberg, the American technology executive and Lean In Foundation founder. According to a commission spokesperson, Sandberg provided steadfast support, mentorship, and moral leadership from the earliest days.

“Very few people agreed to bear witness to these crimes,” explained Marx-Callaf, the communications director. “The exposure to this violent material is one of our biggest challenges, and the fact that [the authenticity of] these crimes were questioned even by prominent figures kept us motivated to do this work, despite the difficulties. We wanted to ensure that the world knows what happened and the victims receive the dignity they deserve.”

Among the key figures was Karen Jungblut, director of archives, whose task was both technical and deeply human, Elkayam-Levy said. “Before evidence could become part of a legal record, someone had to view it, authenticate it, classify it, preserve it, and ensure it would remain accessible to future investigators, prosecutors, and historians. That responsibility fell to Jungblut.“She was among the first people to confront much of the material that would eventually form the backbone of the commission’s findings: evidence of murder, torture, humiliation, sexual violence, rape, and gang rape in the aftermath of the attacks. The scope of that effort was staggering.”

By the time the report was completed, the commission had reviewed more than 10,000 photographs and video segments representing approximately 18,000 minutes of footage, and conducted 430 in-depth interviews with survivors, former hostages, eyewitnesses, first responders, medical professionals, bereaved families, and others connected to the events of October 7 and its aftermath.

Her task was not only to see it but to create order from chaos. to transform scattered fragments of evidence into a permanent historical archive. Without such documentation much of the evidence might have disappeared into deleted accounts, broken phones, fading memories, and the endless churn of social media. Instead it became part of a carefully preserved historical record, Elkayam-Levy explained.

What emerged from a collection of seemingly isolated incidents were patterns. The Civil Commission studied them to understand the broader picture.

The report found recurring patterns of sexual violence, torture, humiliation, and degradation across multiple locations. These led investigators to conclude that the crimes reflected a wider operational method rather than the actions of a few individuals acting alone.

Social media as psychological warfare.

One of the report’s most consequential findings concerns the role of social media itself. The videos, photographs, and live streams were not incidental byproducts of the attacks. According to the commission’s findings they were part of the strategy.

“The terrorists were trained, instructed, and encouraged to maximize pain and suffering,” Elkayam-Levy said. “Many of these acts were documented by the perpetrators themselves and uploaded onto social media and other digital platforms.”

For investigators this became one of the clearest indications that psychological warfare was not incidental to the attacks but part of the strategy itself. Among the videos were acts of extreme cruelty, helplessness, torture, degradation, and humiliation. Family members were often forced into impossible situations, compelled to witness the suffering of loved ones or participate in unspeakable acts intended to shatter personal dignity and destroy the sanctity of family bonds.“They leveraged social media and digital platforms to maximize the terrorization,” the report concludes.

Hamas made families bear witness, prompting the commission to develop new terminology to describe this deliberate, widespread use of violence to impact an entire family.

Family members often learned what had happened to loved ones through videos circulating online before any official notification arrived. The report found that the violence was designed to harm the victims, traumatise families, communities, and the wider public through deliberate acts of forced witnessing.

“The videos created so much suffering for people who were not physically there,” Elkayam-Levy said. She added that the tactic represents an evolution in modern terrorism. The violence did not end at the crime scene. The phone became part of the weapon, and the screen an extension of the battlefield, intended to target family and loved ones by amplifying their trauma.

The report points to a troubling gap between the speed with which terrorist organisations exploit digital platforms and the ability of societies, legal systems, and the world’s leading technology platforms to respond.

Elkayam-Levy noted that she is deeply troubled that phone usage in warfare now serves another purpose. “I have no doubt that these videos serve as inspiration for other terrorist groups around the world.”

A civil commission led by women.

The Civil Commission team was made up largely of women, many of whom had spent years working in human rights, sexual violence, and victim advocacy. At the centre of that effort was adv. Merav Israeli-Amarant, the commission’s CEO. “She’s my ‘partner in justice,’” Elkayam-Levy said.

Noted Israeli-Amarant: “To produce this report, our team spent months immersed in some of the most painful evidence imaginable.

“This is deeply lonely work, because so few people are willing to look at these materials, or even hear about them,” she added. “We understood from the outset that it would come at a personal cost. With the guidance and support of trauma experts, we carried not only a responsibility to the victims and survivors, but also to one another.

“The solidarity within the team was not simply a source of strength; it was a form of protection. In order to bear witness to such profound suffering, we had to ensure that no one carried that burden alone.”

The report includes evidence and pictures documenting a range of sexual atrocities, including the burning of genital areas, the insertion of foreign objects into genital areas, sexual torture, and sexual humiliation. These materials contributed to the identification and mapping of the 13 categories of sexual violence documented in the report. Throughout the process, extensive measures were taken to protect the privacy, dignity, and identities of victims and survivors whenever possible.

For all the evidence collected by the commission, nothing prepared investigators for the conversations they would have with former hostages. People often assume the hardest part of the work was watching the videos.

Elkayam-Levy disagreed. “The hardest conversations were with families, the bereaved, the first responders, the search-and-rescue teams, and the doctors and nurses who treated survivors and returning hostages.

And, most difficult of all, the former hostages. The investigators found themselves confronting experiences that seemed to resist language.

“There aren’t enough words,” she said. “We don’t have enough legal definitions.”From the outset the commission partnered with the Israel Trauma Coalition to provide professional support for Civil Commission staff and volunteers exposed to profoundly disturbing material. Founded in 2001 at the initiative of the UJA-Federation of New York, the Israel Trauma Coalition is an NGO that serves as a cornerstone of trauma treatment in Israel.

“We realized from the beginning that we needed emotional support,” Elkayam-Levy said.As the project evolved, the commission began establishing new criteria for those joining the effort. Professional experience became increasingly important, not only because of the complexity of the work but because of the emotional demands it imposed.

“We understood that you needed people with significant professional experience,” Elkayam-Levy said. “People with young children were often especially affected.”

As a mother herself, Elkayam-Levy understood the challenge. After long days immersed in testimony, evidence, and legal analysis, she would leave the office and return to her family. Simply holding her toddler-age son became a source of comfort. “My children kept me sane,” she said. Time spent with them reminded her of what she was fighting for.

The commission’s report records testimony from former hostages who described reaching a point where they no longer wanted to live. Yet something kept them going. Some say it was important to go back to their families and survive for their families. Others drew strength from faith, or the deep spiritual experiences in captivity that kept them alive, and fighting for their lives.Listening to former hostages speak about survival, Elkayam-Levy found herself thinking about other survivor narratives she had encountered throughout her career. “It sounds similar to the testimonies of Holocaust survivors,” she said. “In the most difficult reality, they wanted to keep their humanity. Their victory would be to establish a family, to continue with their lives, to show they survived for their family and for future generations.”

Yet even as she spoke about resilience, Elkayam-Levy was careful not to romanticise survival. The report makes clear that many victims, witnesses, and former hostages continue to carry profound psychological wounds. Among the accounts that remain with Elkayam-Levy is that of a psychiatrist who stayed beside a newly released hostage for three days. without sleeping the entire time.

As the report neared completion, Elkayam-Levy found it increasingly difficult to set the work aside, even during the time she treasured for her family.

“The work often followed me home,” Elkayam-Levy recalled.

On one recent Shabbat she caught herself thinking about the report’s final edits. “What if something happened to me before the report was finished?” she worried. The weight of the responsibility was enormous.

The commission’s report would even follow her into her dreams. One night, after reviewing agonising evidence of sexual violence inflicted upon a woman whose name and story had become etched in her mind, Elkayam-Levy found herself wrestling with a question that had accompanied the commission from the beginning. How much should be shown? How much could be revealed while still protecting the dignity of the victim?

That night the victim appeared to her in a dream and said: “Share it. People need to know.”Scrolling through her notes she found a message she had written to herself: “In order to do this work, I had to believe that there is as much goodness in this world as there is evil.”She paused. “The cruelty is real. But so is human courage. So is love. So is humanity. So is the goodness in people. Hold on to that. Especially now.”

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California Raisin Heir Discovers Threatening To Murder Rabbi Is Surprisingly Bad For Public Relations

This idiot didn't earn his fortune

PACIFIC PALISADES, CA — In what experts are calling an innovative new approach to neighborhood relations, the heir to one of California's largest raisin fortunes has been charged with felony hate crimes after allegedly standing on his balcony and screaming anti-Semitic death threats at a rabbi leading a Sabbath prayer service next door.

Authorities say Bruce Alfred Lion, 64, apparently looked at a peaceful gathering of Jewish worshipers and concluded that the best use of his evening was to audition for the role of "Most Unhinged Hateful Neighbor in Los Angeles."

According to prosecutors, Lion allegedly shouted threats at Rabbi Zushe Cunin of Chabad of Pacific Palisades while the rabbi was leading a Shabbat service on June 5. Witnesses reported that the service had previously been focused on prayer, community, and worship before being unexpectedly interrupted by what sounded like a malfunctioning cable-news comment section.

The Los Angeles County District Attorney's Office charged Lion with three felony hate crimes, including one count of violation of civil rights and two counts of criminal threats.

"Hate has no place in Los Angeles County. My office is aggressively prosecuting these disturbing acts that tear at the fabric of our society," Los Angeles County District Attorney Nathan J. Hochman said in a statement.

Prosecutors say hate crimes in Los Angeles have surged in recent years, with antisemitic incidents reaching record highs. Meanwhile, Lion allegedly contributed to those statistics with all the subtlety of a man trying to speedrun a felony indictment.

Hochman warned that crimes motivated by prejudice against religion, race, nationality, gender, or sexual orientation will continue to be prosecuted, a reminder that "don't threaten to kill your neighbors" remains one of society's more achievable standards.

Lion was arrested on June 13. Prosecutors requested, and received, bail set at $225,000. If convicted, he faces up to nine years and four months in prison, giving him ample time to reflect on the fact that screaming antisemitic threats at a rabbi is generally considered a poor life strategy.

Perhaps the most remarkable part of the story was the speed with which Lion's family's company sprinted away from him.

"Recent reports about the conduct of Bruce Lion are deeply troubling and do not reflect the values of Lion Raisins. We unequivocally condemn anti-Semitism, racism, and all forms of hate, discrimination, and intolerance," the company said in a statement.

The company further clarified that the suspect "does not actively participate in the company’s day-to-day operations," a corporate phrase roughly translating to: "Please stop associating us with the guy yelling threats from a balcony."

The statement added that Lion Raisins remains "committed to fostering understanding and respect among all communities and to ethical conduct, mutual respect, and responsible corporate citizenship."

Sources say the company's public relations team achieved a new Olympic record in the event known as Distancing Yourself From The Relative Who Just Got Charged With Three Felony Hate Crimes.


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‘Opportunistic Cowards’: Local Man's Lifelong Quest To Offend Absolutely Everyone Continues




Campaign Staff Reportedly Begin Excavation Project After Discovering Candidate's Closet Contains Entire Cemetery

Maine Senate Democrat candidate Graham Platner is once again making headlines after old online posts resurfaced showing that, at various points in his life, he apparently attempted to alienate every voting bloc in the state simultaneously.

The latest controversy centers on comments Platner made in 2020 in which he described police officers as "opportunistic cowards" while mocking local law enforcement for requesting riot-control equipment during the nationwide unrest that followed the death of George Floyd.

Political observers say the discovery is merely the latest artifact recovered from what experts now describe as the Platner Digital Archaeological Site, a sprawling online ruin containing years of inflammatory commentary, ideological experiments, and what historians believe was an unsuccessful attempt to offend every demographic category known to man.

Retired federal special agent and Maine state Rep. Donald Ardell was unimpressed by the revelations.

"It just shows a complete lack of understanding of the way law enforcement operates," Ardell said. "They have to be prepared for eventualities."

Investigators soon uncovered additional comments in which Platner referred to a police chief as "thin blue line trash," embraced the slogan "all cops are bastards," and suggested corruption might be embedded throughout law enforcement.

Ardell noted that many officers have grown weary of the steady stream of discoveries.

"It's a series of consistent bad decisions, and it seems to be continuing."

The police remarks join an already impressive collection of campaign headaches. Before scrubbing nearly a decade of social media activity, Platner reportedly described himself as both a communist and a socialist, mocked rural voters as racist and stupid, and made remarks about a teenage girl's suicide attempt that critics characterized as cruel.

Meanwhile, scrutiny of his personal life has produced enough material to keep opposition researchers employed through at least 2034. His campaign acknowledged that he sent sexually explicit messages to multiple women while married. Questions have also persisted regarding a Nazi-linked tattoo and why former romantic partners seemed to understand its symbolism before he did.

Platner has defended many of the posts as jokes and internet "sh*tposting," while attributing some comments to PTSD stemming from military service.

The explanation has not convinced Ardell.

"This is not a guy that has a skeleton in the closet," the lawmaker said. "This is a guy that has a whole graveyard."

At press time, opposition researchers reportedly announced the discovery of three additional digital graveyards, a crypt, and what appears to be an abandoned mineshaft beneath Platner's old Reddit account.


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Internal Security Minister says "All of Lebanon must burn" after 4 IDF soldiers killed

Ben-Gvir wears a hangman's noose pin to back the Death to Terrorists bill,
Monday, December 8, 2025 (Otzma Yehudit)


The death of four Israeli soldiers in southern Lebanon on Friday has once again exposed a widening divide between those who must confront the realities of war and those who prefer to theorize about it from a safe distance . . . like most politicians and pundits do.

Among the dead was Lt. Col. Dor Ben Simhon, commander of Battalion 52, along with three of his soldiers. Their deaths came after an attack by Hezbollah, the Iranian-backed terrorist organization that has spent decades embedding itself within Lebanon while threatening Israel's northern border. 

Lt. Col. Ben Simhon

According to the Israel Defense Forces, the battalion commander's tank was struck shortly after midnight. Military investigators are still determining whether the attack involved an explosive device or a drone launched by Hezbollah operatives.

The losses prompted a furious response from National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir, who correctly argued that Israel's enemies must be made to understand the consequences of attacking the Jewish state.

"With all due respect to the Americans, Israel must make it clear to the entire world that the blood of our sons and the security of our citizens are not up for bargaining. All of Lebanon must burn," Ben-Gvir said.

His remarks arrived at a particularly sensitive moment. Senior American officials have increasingly expressed frustration with Israel's continued military operations to defend itself. Israel is, of course, opposed to the MoU signed by President Trump on Wednesday that pretends to bring an end to the conflict with Iran, a country that hopes to bring back the 12th imam and totally annihilate Israel and Jews worldwide.

One provision of the MoU extends the ceasefire to Lebanon, a condition that many Israeli officials regard with deep skepticism, knowing the 12th imam thingy and that anti-Semitism situation.

Their concern is totally rational. 

Hezbollah remains heavily armed, deeply entrenched, and openly committed to Israel's destruction. To many Israelis, any arrangement that leaves that reality fundamentally unchanged appears less like a peace agreement than a temporary pause, as anyone with a functioning cortex would agree with.

Yet in an interview with The New York Times, Vice President JD Vance appeared dismissive of such concerns.

"There is this weird panic almost in the Israeli system that I've picked up on, where they assume that everything that is contemplated that is good for Iran will happen, but that will happen without the Iranians changing any behavior. And I just don't know why anybody would think that's true," Vance, who is not a Jew nor lives in Israel said.

It is a curious observation. After all, modern Israeli skepticism did not emerge in a vacuum. It was shaped by decades of experience with adversaries who routinely violated agreements, exploited ceasefires, and treated diplomatic concessions as opportunities for strategic regrouping. What some observers characterize as panic, others might call memory.

Vance acknowledged that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had not publicly criticized the memorandum but pointed to figures such as Ben-Gvir who had done so.

"It's clear that large segments of the Israeli political system and population are very sensitive about this deal," he said. "But I also think they're picking up on some misinformation about the deal and running with it and sort of panicking about it."

The vice president then offered a challenge to Israeli critics.

"I guess my response to them would be: What is your exact proposal? You're a country of nine million people. You can't just kill your way out of solving every single national security problem that you have."

The question is fair enough. Yet it is equally fair to ask what alternatives are available when a neighboring terrorist army repeatedly attacks your citizens while openly declaring its intention to destroy your country. Nations do not choose the threats they face. They must deal with the threats that actually exist.

President Trump also voiced dissatisfaction with Israel's conduct in Lebanon during the G7 conference. After all, the terrorists crossed their hearts and promised to never kill anyone anymore.

"We have a little dispute over Lebanon," Trump told reporters. "I say, 'You can do a little softer touch, Bibi. You don't have to knock down a building every time somebody walks into it that's from Hezbollah.'"

Such comments reflect a familiar tension in Western policymaking. Leaders far from the battlefield understandably desire restraint and stability. Those living within range of Hezbollah rockets tend to place a higher premium on security, unlike politicians. The challenge, as always, is that while diplomatic agreements can be signed in conference rooms, the consequences of failure are paid for on the front lines.

For Israel, the deaths of Lt. Col. Ben Shimhon and his fellow soldiers serve as a stark reminder that Hezbollah remains a lethal threat. Any discussion of ceasefires, memorandums, or regional diplomacy must begin with that reality rather than attempt to wish it away.

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Tim Walz Falls Behind Trump in Minnesota, Begins Losing Popularity Contest to Parking Meters and Unattended Snowbanks


Minnesota Governor Tim Walz has achieved what many political analysts once considered impossible: becoming less popular in Minnesota than Donald Trump.

According to a new poll, Walz's approval rating has cratered to 39%, the lowest level of his six-year tenure, prompting state Democrats to launch an emergency investigation into whether reality itself has become a right-wing conspiracy.

The collapse comes as Minnesotans continue to grapple with the fallout from a massive fraud scandal that allegedly flourished under Walz's watch. Residents who once worried about potholes, taxes, and brutal winters now have the added burden of discovering that hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars apparently wandered off unsupervised.

The poll found that voters trust Republicans more than Democrats to address the fraud issue, a result that reportedly caused several MSNBC producers to faint dramatically onto antique fainting couches.

Conservatives were quick to note the political significance.

"Tim Walz has a lower approval rating than President Trump in deep blue Minnesota right now," Townhall columnist Dustin Grage posted on X. "That’s how toxic the fraud has become for Democrats."

The Trump administration has spent the past year treating Minnesota like a crime scene, dispatching fraud investigators, conducting raids, and uncovering enough questionable activity to keep congressional committees employed for the next decade.

As if the fraud scandal weren't enough, Walz is also taking heat for the state's redesigned flag, which many Minnesotans reportedly regard with the same enthusiasm normally reserved for root canals and airline baggage fees.

The new banner, approved by a commission assembled by the Democratic legislature, has become a lightning rod for criticism. Opponents argue that the flag looks less like a proud symbol of Minnesota and more like a graphic that was accidentally approved after being generated three minutes before a deadline.

"Two issues that unite a majority of Minnesotans are the rejection of Tim Walz and his failed policies and our hatred for the Minnesota Somali state flag," Republican House Majority Whip Tom Emmer told Fox News Digital. "The flag is an embarrassment and good on the cities who are actively removing it from their city halls and communities."

Emmer continued to pour salt directly into the governor's political wounds.

"President Trump is more popular than Tim Walz in his home state because Minnesotans are sick and tired of Walz siding with illegal aliens and Somali fraudsters over his hardworking, taxpaying constituents."

He added, "The legacy of Tim Walz will be the fires that destroyed Minneapolis, the fraud that he allowed to be stolen under his watch, and his failures that have harmed our great state."

The polling numbers suggest fraud has become the defining issue of Walz's final months in office. His support has dropped ten points in a year, while approval among Republicans has fallen to a statistically remarkable 1%, a figure usually associated with telemarketers calling during dinner.

Republican State Senator Michael Holmstrom had perhaps the most optimistic outlook for the departing governor.

"America rejected Tim Walz in 2024," Holmstrom told Fox News Digital. "Now Minnesotans are following suit. The good news for Tim is that, now that his record is on full display, he could soon be the most popular guy in the jailhouse."

Meanwhile, Republican State Senator Mark Koran argued that Walz's troubles are entirely self-inflicted.

"He let his fraud crisis blow up and didn’t do anything to fix it while he was busy shoving all this radical stuff into state government," Koran said. "After years of extreme far-left ideology and policies that don’t help normal people, Minnesotans have had enough. His legacy is going to be the fraud crisis and desecrating the state flag. Minnesota is just tired of it."

At press time, Walz's staff was reportedly encouraged by one promising development: the governor still maintains a slight polling advantage over mosquitoes, though analysts warn that race remains within the margin of error

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Thursday, June 18, 2026

Alleged UFC White House Terror Plot Exposes Yet Another Security Nightmare


Just when you thought the threat environment surrounding President Trump couldn't get any crazier, federal investigators say they disrupted an alleged terror plot targeting the UFC Freedom 250 event at the White House that involved explosive-laden drones, sniper teams, and plans to storm the White House gates.

And here's the detail that's sure to reignite an already heated immigration debate: the alleged ringleader was reportedly an illegal immigrant who had received protection under the Obama-era DACA program.

According to Homeland Security information first obtained by Fox News Digital, Abraham Hermosillo Alvarez, 31, allegedly orchestrated a plan to carry out a mass casualty attack during the June 14 UFC event held on White House grounds. Alvarez reportedly entered the United States as a child and remained in the country after his B2 visa expired in 2001. In 2014, he was granted deportation relief through Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals after failing to leave the country.

Federal authorities say Alvarez wasn't acting alone. Five co-conspirators have already been arrested, and investigators have identified a total of 23 individuals connected to the alleged planning network.

According to court documents and DOJ filings, the plot called for drones equipped with explosives to force an evacuation of the event. As crowds scrambled to escape, a sniper team allegedly planned to open fire. Authorities say Alvarez, who allegedly used the alias "Shepherd" in group communications, was "responsible for planning, organizing, and directing the planned attack."

When discussing weaponized drones in the group chat, Alvarez allegedly responded, "As many and as deadly as we can get." Investigators also claim he boasted of possessing a functioning drone capable of carrying out the attack.

The allegations don't stop there.

Federal authorities say the conspirators planned a "second wave" operation after the initial assault, allegedly intending to rush the White House gates amid the confusion. Prosecutors say the group hoped the violence would trigger a broader political uprising, citing grievances that ranged from government corruption and the Epstein files to data center water consumption and perceived Israeli influence over American politics.

ICE has lodged a detainer against Alvarez following his arrest by the FBI in Omaha, Nebraska, on the day of the event.


"This illegal alien from Mexico should never have been allowed in our country," DHS Acting Assistant Secretary Lauren Bis said. "He was the ringleader of a failed terror attack targeting UFC Freedom 250 at the White House."

"He will face justice and swiftly be removed from our country," she added.

One question remains difficult to ignore: if investigators identified 23 individuals connected to the alleged plot, why was the event allowed to proceed while many of those suspects apparently remained unaccounted for?

Neither the White House nor the FBI offered additional details when Fox News Digital asked about the whereabouts of other participants allegedly involved in the planning.

Vice President JD Vance sought to reassure the public, arguing that the conspiracy never progressed very far.

"The FBI, our law enforcement partners and our U.S. Attorneys did what they do every day to make America Safe through quick response and vigilance in investigating, disrupting and dismantling this alleged plan before it could be carried out," Acting Attorney General Todd said in a DOJ statement. "We will take immediate and aggressive action to identify and prosecute those who incite and plan acts of violence."

Vance likewise noted that the alleged plans were "not that advanced" and said none of the suspects "weren’t in town" during the event itself.

Still, the case highlights the reality that Trump's public appearances continue to attract dangerous actors.

UFC CEO Dana White acknowledged as much, saying multiple threats had been directed at the event.

"These are the kind of events that bring the nuts out, this is normal stuff," White said.

Normal or not, that's a remarkable statement when discussing an event held on White House grounds.

The alleged conspiracy is merely the latest entry on a growing list of threats directed at Trump since he survived an assassination attempt during a campaign rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, in July 2024. Since then, authorities have investigated a second assassination attempt at his Florida golf club, an alleged Iran-linked murder-for-hire scheme, an armed man who rushed the White House Correspondents' Dinner, and countless threats made online and through other channels.

The good news is that this alleged plot was stopped before anyone was harmed. The bad news is that it serves as yet another reminder that the people tasked with protecting America's leaders are confronting an increasingly relentless threat landscape.

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Wednesday, June 17, 2026

In a first-of-its-kind, Israel seizes property tied to Gaza drone smuggling


In a rare and resolute demonstration of strategic enforcement, Israel has moved decisively to seize property linked to the smuggling of drones into Gaza—the first such action of its kind in this domain. This is not mere policing; it is a calculated strike against the shadowy financial and logistical arteries that sustain terror.

Authorities make clear the intent: to dismantle the economic scaffolding behind these operations, to interrupt the steady flow of illicit goods, and to send an unmistakable message of deterrence to those who would aid the terrorist networks entrenched in Gaza. Working in close coordination, Israel Police, the Southern District Unit, and the National Headquarters for Economic Counter Terrorism under the Defense Ministry confiscated the assets on Wednesday. The targets were vehicles tied to drone smuggling into the Strip since the beginning of the year.

What makes this operation notable is its foundation in precise intelligence and hard evidentiary material, gathered and passed on by police. The owners—residents of Bedouin communities in the Negev—were not caught red-handed, yet Defense Minister Israel Katz had no hesitation in imposing economic sanctions. In the unforgiving logic of counterterrorism, complicity does not require being caught in the act; it requires only the enabling of murder.

The measure, officials emphasize, is designed to target the financial infrastructure of smuggling, to disrupt ongoing efforts, and to bolster deterrence against all those who assist terrorist organizations in Gaza. As Katz stated: "Anyone who smuggles weapons, equipment, or funds to terrorist organizations in Gaza is part of the terrorist network itself and will pay a heavy price."

Israel Katz

Katz framed the decision as part of a broader and more sophisticated policy—one that refuses to limit its focus to the terrorists alone. Instead, it reaches into the economic and logistical ecosystems that keep them armed and operational. "This is another significant enforcement tool in our fight against smuggling infrastructures," added Southern District Unit commander Chief Superintendent Shimon Portal. "Alongside operational and intelligence activity on the ground, we are also working to damage the economic capability of those involved, thereby disrupting their activity, deterring additional actors, and preventing the strengthening of terrorist organizations in the Gaza Strip."

There is a refreshing clarity here. For too long, the West has often treated terror as a problem of lone actors and isolated cells, while ignoring the vast, enabling networks that make it possible. Israel, under sustained threat, has chosen a different path: one that recognizes that the financier, the smuggler, and the logistician are as culpable as the man who fires the rocket or launches the drone. This is enforcement rooted in reality, not rhetoric—and in a world grown dangerously tolerant of euphemism, it is a model worth noting.

Thank you for following Brain Flushings. Please take time to simply check out the sponsors on this page--it's one way to support my work and you don't need to purchase anything to do so. Of course, you can Buy Me A Coffee if you want to support me directly. And finally, don't be afraid to subscribe if you enjoy the blog--it's free, and worth the cost.

Hezbollah Shatters Ceasefire Within Hours, Confirming the Nature of the Conflict

There are moments in the Middle East when reality cuts through diplomatic fantasy with remarkable speed. The latest ceasefire between Israel...