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Fraud Mastermind Behind Minnesota Child Nutrition Program Scheme Handed Stunning 4-Decade Sentence

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The woman prosecutors identified as the mastermind behind a massive Minnesota pandemic fraud operation that siphoned away $250 million intended to feed needy children has been sentenced to 41 years behind bars.

Aimee Bock, 45, received the lengthy prison term Tuesday after a jury convicted her in March on every charge she faced. Federal prosecutors called her the “ringleader” of what they described as one of the largest COVID-era fraud operations uncovered anywhere in the United States.

Most of the defendants charged in the sprawling case are Somali immigrants, while the food assistance was intended to benefit members of Minnesota’s Somali community.

In addition to the prison sentence, Bock was ordered to repay $5.2 million.

According to prosecutors, Bock and fellow defendant Salim Said falsely reported serving 91 million meals through the program. Authorities said the pair instead diverted hundreds of millions of dollars in federal money to support extravagant personal spending, Acting US Attorney Lisa D. Kirkpatrick said following the convictions.

Federal investigators said the nonprofit organization Feeding Our Future exploded from receiving roughly $3 million in federal funding to taking in more than $200 million by 2021. When officials at the Minnesota Department of Education began scrutinizing the dramatic increase, prosecutors said Bock responded by suing the agency, allowing the federal money to continue pouring in.

The scheme finally began to unravel in January 2022, when the FBI, IRS, and other federal authorities carried out coordinated raids at 26 sites across Minnesota suspected of participating in the fraud network.

To date, authorities have charged 79 individuals in connection with the Feeding Our Future scandal, and more than 60 people have already been convicted.

{Matzav.com}

Smotrich: “Zionism Without Torah is Lost”

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In a column published today ahead of Shavuos, Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, who is also the chairman of the Religious Zionism Party, examined the interconnection between the giving of the Torah, the offering of bikkurim, and Jewish settlement in Israel.

Smotrich contended that while some might see these elements as distinct aspects, they actually serve as a unified representation of the relationship among the Jewish people, the Torah, and the land itself.

He articulated that Shavuos embodies both “the spirit and the book” alongside “the soil, the tractor, and the agricultural produce born of our labor.” He stressed that the Torah “is not disconnected from life,” emphasizing its ties to the commandments associated with the land and the joy experienced by farmers as they present their initial harvests in Jerusalem.

The finance minister noted the resurgence of first-fruits celebrations during the period of Zionist settlement, asserting that the pioneers “did not invent a new holiday,” but rather brought back a long-lost custom that faded during years of exile. He remarked that this revival symbolizes a deep connection between the spiritual and the tangible, as well as between the Torah and the Land of Israel.

Smotrich further commented that “Zionism without a connection to Torah is a body without a soul, and it becomes lost,” making it clear that the Torah was never meant to be confined solely within academic settings.

“The Torah was given so that we would illuminate all of reality through it – the field and the battlefield, the economy and the culture,” he explained, highlighting its comprehensive significance.

Concluding his column, Smotrich touched upon the prevailing security situation and the relevance of Torah study alongside military service. He reflected, “When we see fighters who combine book and sword, who charge forward with a sacred book in their uniform pocket, and some of whom tragically do not return, we understand the depth of this connection.”

He expressed that on the night of Shavuos, “we will reconnect to the giving of the Torah, and through it continue to build and develop our land and our state.”

{Matzav.com}

UK Chief Rabbi Condemns Ben-Gvir: Very Antithesis of Core Jewish Values’

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UK Chief Rabbi Sir Ephraim Mirvis has strongly criticized Israeli National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir for mocking Gaza flotilla activists and sharing a video documenting his actions on social media. “I have rarely seen the Jewish world so united in revulsion than in its response to this shameful display. Such conduct is the very antithesis of our core Jewish values and an awful Chillul Hashem,” Rabbi Mirvis remarked.

The uproar began on Wednesday, following Ben-Gvir’s visit to an Ashdod Port facility where Gaza flotilla activists were being detained. During this visit, he confronted those held and subsequently shared video footage of both the confrontation and their treatment online.

The fallout from this incident provoked significant international backlash, prompting several nations to summon Israeli ambassadors to address the matter and calls for sanctions against Ben-Gvir.

On Thursday morning, the UK government summoned the Israeli Chargé d’Affaires to the Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office in light of the video posted by Ben-Gvir. A statement issued by the Foreign Office noted: “This behaviour violates the most basic standards of respect and dignity for people. We are also deeply concerned by the detention conditions depicted and have demanded an explanation from the Israeli authorities. We made clear their obligations to protect the rights of all those involved.”

In the wake of this situation, Israeli Minister of Foreign Affairs Gideon Sa’ar denounced Ben-Gvir’s actions, claiming he “knowingly caused harm to our State in this disgraceful display – and not for the first time. You have undone tremendous, professional, and successful efforts made by so many people – from IDF soldiers to Foreign Ministry staff and many others.” He added, “No, you are not the face of Israel.”

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu also expressed his disapproval of Ben-Gvir’s actions: “Israel has every right to prevent provocative flotillas of Hamas terrorist supporters from entering our territorial waters and reaching Gaza. However, the way that Minister Ben Gvir dealt with the flotilla activists is not in line with Israel’s values and norms. I have instructed the relevant authorities to deport the provocateurs as soon as possible.”

{Matzav.com}

26-Year-Old Yungerman Arrested as Draft Dodger Hours Before Shavuos

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A 26-year-old yungerman from Ofakim was arrested overnight at a gas station between Netivot and Ofakim after military authorities identified him as a draft evader wanted for military service.

The arrest took place just hours before the start of Shavuos, when traffic police conducting a routine inspection discovered that the young man was listed in military records as absent from IDF service. He was subsequently transferred to the custody of the military police.

According to reports from the Nosnim Gav organization, the avreich was taken to Ir HaBahadim for further processing and to determine possible punishment.

The organization stated that “the case is currently being reviewed by professional representatives and attorneys accompanying the family.”

The group also called on the public to daven for the swift release of Tzuriel ben Simcha.

The arrest comes amid growing tensions surrounding enforcement efforts against chareidi draft evaders and follows reports released ahead of Shavuos indicating that nine chareidi young men classified as deserters are expected to spend Yom Tov in military prison.

Organizations involved in assisting draft evaders and deserters say the number of arrests has increased in recent weeks, attributing the rise to heightened enforcement activity by military authorities.

The arrest has generated significant anger in chareidi circles, particularly because it occurred only hours before Yom Tov and involved a married avreich and young father whose life is devoted to Torah learning.

{Matzav.com}

San Diego Mosque Shooting Revives Scrutiny Over 9/11 Ties, Imam’s Pro‑Hamas Sermons

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Monday’s deadly shooting at the Islamic Center of San Diego, which claimed the lives of three men, has once again placed the mosque under intense public scrutiny due to both its historical connections to two September 11 hijackers and more recent outrage over inflammatory anti-Israel remarks made by its imam and members of his family.

Federal and local authorities are treating the attack as a hate crime after investigators said two teenage suspects — Caleb Liam Vazquez, 18, and Cain Lee Clark, 17 — allegedly opened fire inside the mosque before later being discovered dead in a nearby vehicle from what officials believe were self-inflicted gunshot wounds. Law enforcement sources said investigators uncovered Nazi paraphernalia, extremist manifestos, and antisemitic writings tied to the suspects, who authorities described as adherents of neo-Nazi ideology.

As investigators worked to piece together the motive behind the attack, attention also shifted back to the controversial history of the Islamic Center of San Diego, including longstanding questions surrounding individuals connected to the mosque and the September 11 terror attacks, as well as criticism directed at Imam Taha Hassane over comments defending what he described as Palestinian “resistance.”

The mosque first became the subject of national attention after it was revealed that two of the September 11 hijackers, Nawaf al-Hazmi and Khalid al-Mihdhar, attended services there while residing in San Diego. The 9/11 Commission later examined allegations that people affiliated with the mosque community assisted the pair with housing and logistical support after they arrived in California. Subsequent reports alleged that associates connected to the mosque also helped the hijackers obtain identification documents, buy a vehicle, and gain access to financial resources. The commission, however, did not determine that mosque officials or congregants knowingly participated in the terrorist conspiracy.

Separate reports further alleged that members of the mosque community organized a welcoming event for the hijackers shortly after their arrival in San Diego in 2000.

In more recent years, controversy surrounding the mosque centered largely on Hassane, who has served as imam there since 2004. Following Hamas’s October 7, 2023 massacre in Israel — in which approximately 1,200 people were murdered and more than 250 were kidnapped in the deadliest attack against Jews since the Holocaust — Hassane faced backlash for comments widely viewed as justifying the violence.

“This did not start last week or on October 7th,” Hassane said in a video posted to social media days after the attack. “This is the result of brutal Zionist occupation and genocide.”

Hassane later promoted the sermon on Instagram, writing: “Resistance is justified when people are under occupation and don’t let them change that narrative.”

His rhetoric intensified in the weeks that followed. During an October 20 sermon delivered less than two weeks after the Hamas massacre, Hassane again defended what he repeatedly referred to as “resistance.”

“When people are occupied, then the resistance is justified,” Hassane said. “We cannot accuse somebody who is fighting for his life to be a terrorist. The terrorist is the one who started the occupation, not the one who is defending himself.”

The criticism surrounding Hassane did not end after the immediate aftermath of October 7. In subsequent months, his public statements and activism continued attracting attention over his harsh anti-Israel rhetoric and support for radical anti-Israel campaigns.

In January 2024, Hassane accused Israel of enforcing “apartheid.” Not long afterward, he posted online: “Zionism is Islamophobia!”

Several months later, in May 2024, Hassane publicly backed anti-Israel protest encampments at the University of California, San Diego. He appeared alongside demonstrators and urged university officials to “boycott and divest from Israel.”

Members of Hassane’s family also became embroiled in controversy over anti-Israel activism and inflammatory social media activity.

According to watchdog organization Canary Mission, Hassane’s daughter, Selma Hassane, “promoted incitement, spread hatred of Israel, engaged in anti-Israel activism and is a supporter of the Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions (BDS) movement.”

Canary Mission documented years of activism tied to Selma Hassane, including involvement with the controversial campus organization Students for Justice in Palestine, participation in anti-Israel demonstrations, and organizing efforts in support of Palestinian causes.

Meanwhile, Hassane’s wife, Lallia Allali, drew widespread condemnation after reposting an image weeks following the October 7 attacks that depicted a Star of David decapitating five babies alongside the phrase: “The devil is killing.”

The fallout from the post quickly spread into her professional life. At the time, Allali served on the San Diego Union-Tribune Community Advisory Board as an emeritus member and regularly contributed commentary focused on interfaith understanding and “Islamophobia.” She also taught at the University of San Diego and authored academic work addressing anti-Muslim bias.

The San Diego Union-Tribune later denounced the image as “a graphic and deplorable antisemitic image,” adding that after verifying the repost, “we accepted her resignation and removed her from the list of board members and contributors on our website.”

The University of San Diego also announced that Allali would no longer teach at the institution, stating: “While individuals have the right to express their views on their personal accounts, they do not reflect the views of USD leadership nor any official position of the university.”

Rabbi Abraham Cooper, associate dean and global social action director of the Simon Wiesenthal Center, strongly condemned the repost at the time, calling it a contemporary “blood libel” and labeling the imagery “despicable and deplorable.”

Residents living near the mosque also told the New York Post that relations between the Islamic Center and surrounding neighborhoods became increasingly strained after the October 7 attacks, particularly due to concerns involving a nearby Hebrew-language charter school.

“Hassane was supposed to bridge all the communities, but quickly became a hostile figure,” local journalist and parent Stella Escobedo told the outlet.

{Matzav.com}

Nova Survivor Says Childhood Scar Saved Her From Being Kidnapped by Hamas Terrorists

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A survivor of the Nova music festival massacre has revealed how a scar she carried since childhood may have ultimately saved her life after Hamas terrorists nearly abducted her to Gaza during the October 7 attack.

Mai Chayat, 33, from Tel Aviv, shared her harrowing account while visiting London ahead of the opening of a new exhibition documenting the atrocities committed at the Nova festival in southern Israel.

The exhibition, which will run for six weeks in the Shoreditch section of London, aims to show visitors how what began as a music festival suddenly turned into a scene of mass terror and slaughter.

During the Hamas attack on the Nova festival, 413 people were murdered and another 44 were kidnapped and taken into Gaza. At the same time, Hamas terrorists stormed nearby Israeli communities, including Be’eri, Kfar Aza, and Nir Oz, carrying out brutal massacres against civilians.

In an interview with the Daily Mail, Chayat recounted how she fled as gunfire erupted around the festival grounds, with bullets flying overhead as she ran for safety.

At one point during her escape, she noticed an abandoned ambulance in an open field where several young people had already taken shelter.

“I got inside, but something told me it was a death trap,” she recalled.

That instinct proved lifesaving. Shortly after she fled the ambulance, Hamas terrorists opened fire on the vehicle, which later became known as the “death ambulance.” Everyone hiding inside was murdered.

Later, Chayat spotted a man waving to her from a nearby field. Initially terrified that he might be a terrorist, she soon realized he was another festivalgoer. The two entered a vehicle together, but terrorists quickly began shooting at them.

“I saw bodies, burned cars and smoke everywhere,” she said. “I lay on the floor of the car, put the siddur on my head and began reciting Shema.”

After the vehicle was struck by gunfire and came to a stop, Chayat continued fleeing together with the man she had met, Avi Dadon hy”d. At one point, the two fell to the ground and pretended to be dead, but Hamas terrorists discovered them.

According to Chayat, eight terrorists dressed in civilian clothing surrounded them while armed with knives, hammers, and clubs.

The terrorists initially seized Chayat and then pulled Dadon out as well.

“He offered them money, said he had children, and begged,” she recounted.

Chayat said that at that moment she realized she needed to remain emotionally strong and avoid showing fear.

She then described how the terrorists noticed a scar on her right arm — a scar left from a childhood burn injury. Months later, she said, she was told that the terrorists viewed such scars as carrying spiritual significance and saw them as a sign of strength.

“I used to hate this scar,” she said. “Today I love it.”

According to Chayat, the leader of the terrorist cell gave her his coat and informed both her and Dadon that they would be taken to Gaza.

The pair were marched for more than two hours until Dadon finally refused to continue. Chayat said she was then forced to watch the terrorists murder him before her eyes.

“They killed him there, Avi, my angel,” she said.

Afterward, the terrorists forced her into an abandoned vehicle, but it failed to start. The group later returned toward the festival grounds, where they attempted to break open cash registers at the main bar area.

At one point, one of the terrorists pressed a knife against her face and warned her not to flee. However, Chayat said the leader of the group quietly signaled to her that she was free to go.

She immediately began running and later hid for hours near bodies at the massacre site until Israeli military forces eventually arrived and rescued her.

“Since Nova, I am a completely different person,” she said. “There is a reason I didn’t die. I feel that now I found my purpose, to tell my story to others.”

Chayat said the scar that once caused her years of embarrassment and ridicule during childhood ultimately became the very thing that saved her life.

“It was the thing I hated most,” she said. “Now I understand that everything is for the good, even after 30 years.”

{Matzav.com}

Former Police Officer Jailed for Anti-Charlie Kirk Posts Receives $835,000 Settlement

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A former Tennessee police officer who spent more than a month behind bars after posting social media content criticizing Charlie Kirk and Turning Point USA following Kirk’s assassination last September has received an $835,000 settlement.

According to the New York Times, Larry Bushart reached the settlement agreement with Perry County Sheriff Nick Weems and local government officials after filing a federal lawsuit late last year.

Bushart had been arrested after sharing memes on social media that accused TPUSA of promoting hatred. Following the arrest, he remained jailed for 37 days.

“The people’s freedom to participate in civil discourse is crucial to a healthy democracy,” Bushart said in a statement. “I am looking forward to moving on and spending time with my family.”

The report described Bushart as a “Facebook warrior” who reposted numerous memes created by others in a local Facebook group. The group had been circulating information about a prayer vigil honoring Kirk, who was fatally shot while speaking to students at Utah Valley University in September.

One of the memes Bushart allegedly shared featured President Trump saying, “We have to get over this,’” following a school shooting at Perry High School in Iowa.

According to the report, “The original poster” of the meme had also reportedly included the words, “this seems relevant today.”

Sheriff Weems later claimed that some residents believed Bushart’s posts amounted to threats directed toward the local high school.

As a result, the Perry County Sheriff’s Department reportedly contacted police officers in Bushart’s hometown and requested that an officer visit him regarding the posts.

According to the report, Bushart refused to delete the material when approached by law enforcement, despite the officer appearing confused by the request.

Bushart, who told the confused police officer that he would not remove his post, was arrested “later that night.”

{Matzav.com}

Kash Patel Reveals Former Prosecutor Charged with Stealing ‘Confidential’ Documents of Jack Smith Investigation of Trump

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Kash Patel announced Wednesday that a former Department of Justice prosecutor who worked on Special Counsel Jack Smith’s investigation into President Trump has been criminally charged for allegedly stealing and concealing confidential government documents.

According to Patel, former federal prosecutor Carmen Lineberger is accused of secretly sending sensitive investigative materials to her personal email accounts while disguising the files under recipe-themed names in an attempt to avoid detection.

“This afternoon, a former managing assistant U.S. Attorney who supported Jack Smith’s politicized investigation of President Trump has been charged with stealing the confidential investigation documents,” Patel said.

“Carmen Lineberger allegedly emailed the confidential material to her own personal email, disguising them as dessert recipes to conceal them from record searches. Lineberger is charged with four felony counts in the indictment.”

The charges were formally announced in a press release issued by the United States Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Florida.

According to prosecutors, Lineberger previously served as the Managing Assistant United States Attorney for the Fort Pierce branch office within the Southern District of Florida. Federal authorities allege she unlawfully transmitted internal DOJ records and then attempted to hide the activity by altering file names.

The press release states that Lineberger was “indicted in federal court for two counts of theft of government money or property, valued less than $1,000.00; destruction, alteration, or falsification of records in federal investigations; and concealment, removal, or mutilation of public records.”

Prosecutors claim the alleged conduct occurred during multiple incidents in late 2025 while Lineberger was still serving in her official DOJ position.

“The indictment alleges at the time of the offenses the defendant served as the Managing Assistant United States Attorney (MAUSA) of the Fort Pierce branch of the United States Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Florida. In separate instances in late-2025, the defendant altered the electronic file names of government records that she received in her official capacity as the MAUSA in order to conceal her unauthorized electronic transmission of those records to personal email accounts belonging to her without being detected. The altered government records included a document compiled by the defendant consisting of portions of internal DOJ electronic messages and an internal DOJ memorandum, and a DOJ report related to a criminal prosecution in the SDFL that had been court-ordered to remain under seal and prohibited from distribution or disclosure outside of DOJ.

“As alleged in the indictment, the defendant concealed her actions by saving electronic copies of the government records in question under the misleading files names “chocolate cake recipe” and “bundt cake recipe” before electronically transmitting those records to her person email accounts. As to the DOJ report, the indictment further alleges the defendant act knowing that her transmission of the record outside DOJ directly violated the court order and impaired the proper administration of the underlying criminal prosecution.”

Patel used the announcement to sharply criticize the original Trump investigation and vowed continued accountability for officials involved.

“This FBI will not hesitate to bring to account those who violated the trust of the American public in an investigation that should’ve never been brought to begin with,” Patel added in his post.

CNN separately reported that Lineberger is also facing “two felony charges related to her handling of Volume II of Smith’s final report, which detailed Smith’s findings that Trump and two co-defendants who worked for him in 2021 mishandled national security documents.”

{Matzav.com}

SHAME ON LANDER: Brad Lander Speaks of “Israel’s Genocide in Gaza” at Anti-Israel Mosque Event Where Imam Prayed for Killing of “Infidels”

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[Video below.] Brad Lander, a Democratic candidate in New York’s 10th Congressional District race, is facing criticism following remarks he delivered at a Queens mosque in which he condemned Israel’s war in Gaza and expressed solidarity with prominent anti-Israel progressive lawmakers in Congress.

During a May 15 appearance at the Al-Khoei Islamic Center in Queens, Lander recited a verse from the Quran in Arabic before addressing congregants on the ongoing conflict in the Middle East. Introducing himself as “a proud Jewish New Yorker,” Lander told attendees that what he described as “Israel’s genocide in Gaza” contradicts the Jewish teaching that all human beings are created in the image of God.

Lander also said that if elected to Congress, he hopes to build the same type of political partnership he currently shares with New York State Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani alongside Representatives Ilhan Omar of Minnesota and Rashida Tlaib of Michigan, two of the most outspoken critics of Israel in Congress.

Following the candidate’s speech, the imam led the congregation in a supplication invoking the coming of the Mahdi and asking that victory and relief come to believers through the defeat and killing of infidels “by his sword.”

Lander, who currently serves as New York City comptroller, has positioned himself as a progressive Democrat aligned with the party’s left wing on a range of domestic and foreign policy issues.

WATCH:

https://matzav.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/VIDEO-2026-05-21-09-23-48.mp4

{Matzav.com}

“HE’S A RODEF”: Senior Israeli Officials Furious After Ben Gvir’s Gaza Flotilla Stunt Sparks Diplomatic Backlash

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Senior officials in Israel’s Foreign Ministry are expressing outrage after National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir circulated footage appearing to humiliate pro-Gaza flotilla activists, a move diplomats now say caused major international damage to Israel’s standing abroad.

According to a report aired late Wednesday night on Israel’s Channel 12, the Foreign Ministry distributed an urgent message to Israeli embassies and diplomatic missions worldwide describing Ben Gvir’s actions as a “global strategic terror attack.”

The internal communication reportedly instructed Israeli diplomats to circulate alternative images and official footage showing what the ministry described as Israel’s humane and respectful treatment of the activists aboard the flotilla.

Embassy staff were also told to emphasize Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu’s public distancing from Ben Gvir’s conduct in conversations with officials in the countries where they serve.

One Israel official, speaking anonymously, called Ben Gvir an “outright rodef.”

Diplomatic officials quoted in the Channel 12 report delivered especially blistering criticism of Ben Gvir, accusing him of undermining extensive diplomatic efforts carried out behind the scenes with allied nations.

“Ben Gvir effectively joined the flotilla activists. He is the captain of the ship — second only to Greta,” one senior source said, apparently referring to climate activist Greta Thunberg.

“The damage he caused is immeasurable. Today he destroyed intensive work conducted with our allies around the world. He handed real weapons to the worst of our enemies. The disgrace cannot be described,” the source added.

The controversy erupted after Ben Gvir publicized footage documenting the treatment of activists aboard the Gaza-bound flotilla, triggering international criticism and diplomatic discomfort.

Prime Minister Netanyahu later attempted to distance the government from Ben Gvir’s conduct while reaffirming Israel’s right to block flotillas attempting to reach Gaza.

“Israel has every right to prevent provocative flotillas of Hamas terror supporters from entering our territorial waters and reaching Gaza. However, the way Minister Ben Gvir behaved toward the flotilla activists does not align with the values and norms of the State of Israel,” Netanyahu said.





{Matzav.com}

White House Fires Back After Tucker Carlson Accuses Netanyahu of Pulling US Into Iran War

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The White House issued a forceful response Wednesday after commentator Tucker Carlson accused Israeli Prime Minister Binyomin Netanyahu of drawing the United States into a damaging war with Iran during an interview with Israel’s Channel 13 News.

Responding to Carlson’s remarks, the White House defended President Trump’s longstanding position on Iran and praised the military operations carried out alongside Israel.

“Long before he was elected, President Trump has been consistent in his belief that Iran can never be allowed to possess a nuclear weapon. Israel has always been a great ally to the United States, especially through Operations Midnight Hammer and Epic Fury that obliterated Iran’s nuclear facilities and destroyed their defense industrial base,” the White House said in a statement to Channel 13 News.

“President Trump took bold, decisive action to protect the American people – something presidents have talked about for 47 years, but only this President has had the courage to address,” the statement added.

Carlson’s comments came during an interview aired Tuesday, in which he sharply criticized Netanyahu’s leadership and accused him of steering Israel in a dangerous direction.

According to Carlson, Netanyahu is “leading Israel toward destruction” and is “a very bad leader and a very unwise leader”, though he also said that he believes Netanyahu “is acting in what he thinks is his nation’s best interest. So I give him credit for that and always have.”

Carlson further argued that the conflict with Iran has harmed the United States’ standing and interests because of its close alliance with Israel.

“because of this war…America’s relationship with Israel, while it may be based on good intentions, is hurting the United States very badly,” Carlson claimed, while also calling for Washington to completely end aid to Israel.

“I don’t think the United States owes Israel anything. I don’t think the United States should give Israel anything. I think we should stop all aid to Israel, all special deals for Israel.”

Discussing the American role in the fighting against Iran, Carlson criticized President Trump’s decision-making and argued that Netanyahu pressured him into entering the conflict.

Trump “turned out to be far weaker than I understood” and had been pushed by Netanyahu “into a war that hurts the United States.”

Carlson was previously viewed as an ally of President Trump, but in recent years has emerged as one of his sharpest critics, particularly regarding foreign policy and support for Israel.

Earlier this year, Carlson also drew attention after claiming he had been detained upon arriving at Ben Gurion Airport in Israel.

However, video footage later circulated on social media appeared to contradict Carlson’s account. The footage showed him calmly signing paperwork, smiling, hugging a security guard, posing for a photograph, and then departing the airport without incident.

{Matzav.com}

Tom Homan on Deportations: ‘I Want More’

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Tom Homan said the Trump administration remains fully committed to carrying out President Trump’s large-scale deportation agenda, even as critics from both parties — and some Trump supporters — question whether immigration arrests are moving quickly enough.

Speaking in an interview with the Washington Examiner published Wednesday, Homan insisted federal immigration authorities are continuing broad enforcement operations while prioritizing individuals considered the greatest threats to public safety and national security.

“We are after everyone, but again, you’ve got to prioritize those who are the biggest threats to our national security, public safety,” Homan said.

“Am I happy with the numbers right now? No, I want more, too. Even though numbers are historic, I want more.”

According to Homan, Immigration and Customs Enforcement and other federal agencies have arrested roughly 641,000 illegal immigrants with criminal records since the start of President Trump’s second term, while deportations have surpassed 800,000 individuals overall.

“Total of 800,000 out of the country,” Homan said. “If you take 60% of that, criminals, hundreds of thousands of public safety threats, have been removed from this country. Name another president who’s done that.”

Homan acknowledged that immigration enforcement activity has declined somewhat in recent months, attributing the slowdown to sanctuary-city policies, unfavorable court decisions, and the 75-day Department of Homeland Security shutdown earlier this year.

“There’s a lot of argument within the world that [questions], ‘Are we keeping our promise?'” Homan said. “Numbers are slightly down, but there’s a plan: Get them back up and even higher.”

“I’ve never seen so many activist judges … which adds to the 12% decline in arrests,” he added.

The border czar also rejected accusations that ICE is focusing only on violent offenders while neglecting wider deportation operations involving other illegal immigrants.

“I know there’s a lot of noise out there about, ‘You shouldn’t be just concentrating on criminals, you ought to be arresting everybody,’ but we are pursuing a broad range of arrests,” Homan said.

Homan argued that sanctuary-city policies continue to create additional dangers because federal agents are forced to locate suspects in neighborhoods and public spaces instead of taking them into custody inside jails.

Referring to a recent conversation with Kathy Hochul, Homan said, “I explained to her again, it’s safer for the community, safer for the officer, and safer for the alien to arrest him in the safety and security of jail.”

He also indicated the Trump administration is preparing additional legal challenges against sanctuary jurisdictions around the country.

“I’ve been fighting sanctuary cities for the last 20 years,” Homan said. “I think we’ve got an … acting attorney general now that’s going to take it seriously.”

Meanwhile, according to a Newsmax report, ICE officers arrested several illegal immigrants over the weekend who had previously been convicted of violent crimes, including child rape, assault, and drug trafficking offenses.

The Department of Homeland Security said the arrests are part of the administration’s expanding immigration crackdown targeting migrants with criminal convictions.

{Matzav.com}

Jeff Bezos Torches Mamdani Over $43B Poured Into Mismanaged NYC Schools — Claims Amazon Would Be Disaster If Run Same Way

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Jeff Bezos blasted New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani on Wednesday over the city’s massive education budget, arguing that the public school system spends enormous sums while delivering poor results.

During an appearance on CNBC’s “Squawk Box” with Andrew Ross Sorkin, Bezos mocked the efficiency of the city’s school system, saying Amazon customers would revolt if his company operated the same way.

“If we ran Amazon the way New York City runs their school system – your packages would take six weeks to arrive,” the Amazon honcho told Andrew Ross Sorkin during a sit-down on CNBC’s “Squawk Box.”

“We’d have to charge you a $100 delivery fee. And then when the package did finally arrive, it’d have the wrong item in it anyway.”

Bezos directed much of his criticism at the city’s record-breaking education expenditures, pointing to New York’s estimated $43 billion school budget and claiming the city spends roughly $44,000 per student — far above the levels seen in many other major American cities — despite declining enrollment and disappointing academic performance.

The sharp criticism comes as the Bezos family has simultaneously pledged major charitable funding toward early childhood education efforts in New York City.

The billionaire businessman argued that increased government spending is not meaningfully benefiting teachers, but instead disappearing into layers of administrative bureaucracy.

“None of this money is getting to the teachers, I promise you,” he stressed.

“If you’re charging $44,000 per student, how much of that money do you think is trickling down to teachers? Not much.”

Bezos also defended his own tax contributions while criticizing Mamdani’s push for higher taxes on wealthy residents, including proposals targeting luxury second homes that have drawn backlash from affluent property owners and business leaders.

The Amazon founder argued that even substantially increasing his own taxes would not meaningfully improve conditions for teachers or working families.

The Blue Origin founder insisted that the 34-year-old failed rapper-turned-mayor could jack up the billions Bezos already forks over in taxes and it still wouldn’t help “that teacher in Queens.”

Mamdani responded publicly on social media later Wednesday.

“I know a few teachers in Queens who would beg to differ,” Mamdani snapped on X.

City Hall did not immediately respond to additional requests for comment.

Bezos further argued that simply taxing wealthy Americans more heavily and pouring additional money into struggling systems will not solve underlying problems.

“What’s happening here is politicians are using the kind of age-old techniques … you know, picking a villain and pointing fingers,” he said, calling the fiscal mess a “tale of two economies.”

“But the problem is that doesn’t solve anything. And so like, if you want to help the group of people who are struggling, you have to figure out real root causes and solutions. And that takes skill.”

Describing Amazon’s internal management philosophy, Bezos said executives at the company rely on a method known as “the five whys” to identify deeper causes behind operational problems.

“What we don’t do, because it doesn’t work, is just point fingers and blame people,” he added after Mamdani singled out billionaire Ken Griffin.

“It might feel good for 10 seconds, but it doesn’t accomplish anything.”

The public clash unfolded as the Bezos Family Foundation expands its involvement in New York education initiatives. The family recently pledged up to $150 million toward early childhood education programs in the city while Mamdani continues promoting his universal free childcare agenda.

Last week, anti-poverty organization Robin Hood Foundation launched a $1 billion endowment effort anchored by a $100 million Bezos family contribution that will establish the Jackie Bezos Endowment for Early Childhood.

The Bezos family also committed an additional $25 million contingent on matching contributions, potentially bringing the total donation to $150 million in honor of Bezos’ late mother.

The donation further strengthens Robin Hood’s role in the city’s growing debate over affordable childcare and anti-poverty programs. The organization has already invested roughly $3 billion in poverty-related initiatives throughout New York City.

Meanwhile, Mamdani is reportedly attempting to raise $20 million for a separate childcare action fund through the Mayor’s Fund to Advance New York City, though reports indicate only about $3.5 million has been raised so far.

During the CNBC interview, Bezos also advocated broader changes to the federal tax structure, arguing that lower-income Americans should not be paying taxes at all.

He noted that the wealthiest 1% of taxpayers currently account for roughly 40% of all federal tax revenue while the bottom half contribute approximately 3%.

He said it shouldn’t be 3%, but instead “zero.”

“When people are starting out and they’re struggling, stop taxing them. We don’t need it. We live in the wealthiest country in the world,” Bezos told CNBC.

Bezos also reflected on his family background while discussing economic opportunity in America. He described how his adoptive father immigrated from Cuba during the 1960s and how his mother gave birth to him as a teenager in Albuquerque, New Mexico.

“I look at that and I think, I want to make sure that the people that are struggling today have a chance to do that too, to bring themselves up and maybe they’re gonna be the next Steve Jobs,” said Bezos, 62, who serves as executive chairman of Amazon, the country’s largest parcel carrier.

“Maybe one of their kids will be the next Steve Jobs, I don’t know. But we can give them a better chance by eliminating their tax bill. And I don’t want to reduce it, I want to eliminate it.

{Matzav.com}

Wings of Angels

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By Rabbi Pinchos Lipschutz

Mountains are central to our history. The first mountain we encounter is Har Hamoriah, where Avrohom Avinu approached to bring his son Yitzchok as a korban.

On that mountain, malochim appeared to Avrohom and Yitzchok. On that mountain, Yaakov Avinu experienced kedusha and received tremendous brachos. On that mountain, the Bais Hamikdosh was built.

The mountain that hosted so much holiness also experienced great tragedy. Though it witnessed immense kedusha, during the time of the churban its holiness was defiled and tumah found a resting place there. We anxiously await the day when the Shechinah will once again return there together with the Bais Hamikdosh Hashlishi.

The Torah also speaks about Har Gerizim and Har Eivol, the mountains near Shechem. Upon one, eternal brachos were proclaimed. Upon the other, eternal curses were declared for those who do not follow the Torah. The mountain of blessings was lush and green, while the other remained barren and desolate. They remain that way until today.

In Nach, we read about the mountain upon which Eliyohu Hanovi confronted the false prophets of the avodah zorah known as Baal.

But of all the mountains, the one most central to who we are is Har Sinai. Though physically small, it towers over the entire landscape of Jewish history. On Shavuos, we picture millions of Yidden encamped around it, overwhelmed with tangible awe. They had traveled for forty-five days, following Moshe Rabbeinu through a hot and dusty desert in order to reach it.

Their journey had truly begun at brias ha’olam, when the world itself was created. The nation was moving toward its ultimate destiny. Bereishis, Chazal teach us, bishvil haTorah shenikreis reishis – the world was created so that the Torah could eventually be given to the Jewish people.

There was thunder and lightning. The sound of the shofar echoed powerfully, growing louder and louder. Smoke rose from the mountain, which stood beneath a thick cloud. The Divine Voice reverberated throughout creation, shaking the foundations of the earth. The Bnei Yisroel trembled with fear as they watched their leader ascend the mountain and disappear into the arofel, the thick fog.

On Shavuos, as we revisit the story of Moshe Rabbeinu ascending Har Sinai, we are reminded that the road to the highest levels of kedusha is rarely smooth or clear. More often, it passes through fog, smoke, and uncertainty. The Torah tells us, “Vayavo Moshe besoch he’anan,” and later, “Moshe nigash el ha’arofel asher shom ha’Elokim.” Moshe entered the cloud and approached the dense darkness where Hashem’s Presence rested. Moshe Rabbeinu did not receive the Torah beneath calm and peaceful skies. It came amid thunder, lightning, smoke, and heavy fog.

Perhaps that itself was part of the lesson.

A person may think that drawing closer to Hashem always comes with clarity, serenity, and immediate inspiration. But the Torah teaches otherwise. Very often, before reaching greater light, a person must first pass through confusion. Before attaining deeper holiness, he encounters resistance, distraction, and what Chazal call tishtush hamochin, a fogging of the mind and spirit.

Wherever there is kedusha, there is tumah attempting to oppose it. The greater the potential for holiness, the stronger the forces that seek to obstruct and contaminate it. To demonstrate this, at the very moment the world was about to become forever elevated through Kabbolas HaTorah, Har Sinai was surrounded by arofel, darkness, and smoke.

That pattern has repeated itself throughout history.

Whenever Yidden sought to build Torah, strengthen themselves spiritually, or establish places of purity and growth, opposition inevitably arose. Sometimes the resistance came from external persecution and hardship. At other times, it emerged internally, through confusion, cynicism, temptation, or spiritual exhaustion. The greater and stronger the structure of kedusha becomes, the more aggressively tumah attempts to seep through the cracks and poison it.

Yet, those who seek taharah do not become lost in the fog or frightened by it. They understand that it is part of the process. Moshe Rabbeinu moved forward into the arofel because he knew that beyond it rested the Shechinah itself.

The challenge facing those who strive for greatness in Torah and avodas Hashem is to continue advancing even when clarity fades. To keep learning, davening, building, and striving despite the noise, confusion, and distractions swirling around them. The yeitzer hora tries to convince a person that if he feels uninspired, overwhelmed, or spiritually blocked, he should retreat. But the lesson of Har Sinai teaches the exact opposite. Sometimes, the greatest growth occurs precisely when one pushes through the fog rather than surrendering to it.

This is the foundation of the nisyonos involving emunah and bitachon. It is easy to believe when everything is clear. But we must also recognize the Hand of Hashem when it is hidden, when life becomes difficult and events do not unfold the way we hoped.

Throughout the generations, our forefathers understood this truth. They knew that there are periods of darkness and hester, and that the path to kedusha, survival, and a blessed Yiddishe life is not by avoiding struggle, but by refusing to allow struggle to define or stop us.

That message is especially relevant in our generation, when distractions are endless and confusion is everywhere, when moral boundaries become blurred and spiritual fog surrounds us. We live in an age of superficiality, shortened attention spans, and short memories. It is easy to lose clarity regarding who we are and what we are meant to strive for. This is the modern form of arofel.

We must continue pushing our way through the fog, recognizing that if we persevere – if we maintain our sense of kedusha and Torah values – we can continue climbing until we reach the place we seek, “asher shom ha’Elokim,” the place beyond the darkness where Hashem resides.

The Brisker Rov was the mesader kiddushin at a wedding. Standing under the chupah, it came time for the chosson to place the ring on the kallah’s finger and declare her his wife. As the young man attempted to put the ring on her finger, he became so nervous that he began shaking and dropped the ring.

His father bent down, picked up the ring from the floor, and handed it back to the chosson. Once again, the chosson’s hand trembled, and as he tried to place the ring on his kallah’s finger, it slipped and fell to the ground. His father picked it up and returned it to him.

The nervous chosson made a third attempt to place the ring on the girl’s finger. Once again, the seemingly simple task escaped him and the ring dropped to the floor. This time, people began murmuring. Someone turned to the rov and remarked, “This seems like a sign that they should not be getting married. Perhaps their match is simply not bashert.”

The rov shook his head. “No, no,” he replied. “This is a sign that the couple was meant to marry now and not three minutes earlier.”

Upon hearing those words, the young man relaxed. His father handed him the ring once more, he placed it on the kallah’s finger, and declared, “Harei at mekudeshes li… kedas Moshe v’Yisroel.”

The study of Torah is difficult, and many times, while learning, we feel as though we are trapped in arofel, lost in a fog of confusion. We cannot follow the back-and-forth of the Gemara or understand the kushya or teretz of Tosafos. We convince ourselves that the sugya is beyond our ability to comprehend. We feel tempted to close the Gemara and find something easier to occupy ourselves with.

But we must remember that this is the way of the Torah. It does not come easily. Nevertheless, we immerse ourselves in it, and after much toil, we slowly begin to understand and appreciate its beauty and brilliance.

Rav Shmuel Auerbach related a story that he heard from a direct witness, ish mipi ish. One of the holy tzaddikim of Yerushalayim possessed a kemei’a that he would lend to people in need of a yeshuah. The Kabbalistic parchment had been written by the Taz, author of the Turei Zohov on Shulchan Aruch. The kemei’a was known to be exceptionally powerful, and many who used it saw their problems resolved.

The owner of the kemei’a was extremely curious about what was written on the concealed parchment that possessed such extraordinary power. Although opening an amulet generally causes it to lose its effectiveness, he reasoned that perhaps he could copy the secret names of Hashem and the malochim written on it onto a new parchment and preserve its power to help those in desperate need.

When he carefully opened the ancient sacred document, he was astonished to discover that it did not contain holy names or the names of ministering angels. Instead, in the handwriting of the Taz, there was only a single sentence: “Dear Creator of the world, in the merit of my deep toil to understand the words of Tosafos in Chullin on daf 96, please bring salvation and blessings to the person wearing this amulet.”

That is the power of Torah. This is the reward for laboring to understand the words of a Tosafos.

The Torah grants life to those who struggle through the arofel in order to understand and absorb its holy words and messages. The strength it gives its faithful adherents is eternal. But to attain a true understanding of Torah, we must possess patience, discipline, and wisdom. We must never give up or surrender.

The first Jews who received the Torah had their own arofel: the slavery of Mitzrayim and the descent into the deepest levels of tumah. Their faith sustained them as they followed Moshe Rabbeinu out of the country and through the Yam Suf. Within forty-nine days, they prepared themselves to receive the Torah at Har Sinai. They fought their way through the fog of Mitzrayim’s tumah and elevated themselves to the highest levels attainable by man.

On Shavuos, we read Megillas Rus, the story of Na’ami and her daughter-in-law, Rus. Two courageous women survived tremendous tragedy and rose above their personal arofel to become the ancestors of Dovid Hamelech and ultimately Moshiach. Rus HaMoaviah rose above the depravity of her homeland and became a devoted giyores. Nothing deterred her from remaining loyal to Torah and the Jewish people. She endured poverty and loneliness while pursuing the path she had chosen. In return, she merited royal descendants and eternal blessings. We continue to await the arrival of her descendant, the ultimate redeemer.

Rus had every reason to return to Moav and to the wealth she had left behind when she married into the family of Elimelech, yet she so eloquently bound her destiny to the Jewish people. Her story inspires us to persevere during difficult times. It is yet another reminder that those who follow the path of Hashem and cling to Torah and mitzvos with determination will ultimately flourish and succeed.

Rather than retreating, she moved forward. Instead of surrendering to what appeared to be overwhelming obstacles, she demonstrated that commitment to Torah is always preferable to any alternative. We, too, must never give up, no matter what difficulties we encounter in the observance or study of Torah.

When Hashem appeared to the Bnei Yisroel and offered them the Torah, they responded in unison, “Na’aseh venishma – We will do and we will hear whatever You tell us.” Their response was so praiseworthy that the Gemara in Maseches Shabbos (88a) relates that afterward, malochim placed two crowns upon the head of every Jew, one for na’aseh and one for nishma. A bas kol rang out proclaiming, “Who taught My children this secret?”

Many ask what was so extraordinary about na’aseh venishma that it elicited such a dramatic response. Perhaps we can explain that by responding in this manner, they were declaring: “Na’aseh – we will live according to the dictates of the Torah and follow its commandments. Venishma – and we will accomplish this through dedicating ourselves to the study of Torah. No difficulty will stop us from working as hard as we can to understand the words of the Torah. We will not become lost or deterred in the arofel.”

Na’aseh venishma. We have been repeating that pledge for thousands of years. Wherever we are, whatever language we speak, regardless of our geographical distance from major Jewish centers, despite the ravages of exile, golus, churban, and pogroms, we continue proclaiming together, “Na’aseh venishma.”

Those words are what distinguish us and what have sustained us throughout the ages. We have been protected by the Torah and by our loyalty to it and to what it demands of us. The other nations that once filled the world have disappeared throughout history. We remain because of those two words that guide and define us.

On the Yom Tov of Kabbolas HaTorah, we once again stand at Har Sinai and proclaim, “Na’aseh venishma.” We receive the Torah anew and are reminded of our mission and purpose. Shavuos is not merely a commemoration of what our ancestors accepted long ago, but a renewal of our own commitment to live as people shaped and elevated by Torah, today and every day.

My uncle, Rav Avrohom Chaim Levin, rosh yeshiva of Yeshivas Telz, once recalled a difficult period in the yeshiva when an incident had deeply shaken the rosh yeshiva, Rav Elya Meir Bloch. The atmosphere in the bais medrash was tense as the talmidim gathered to hear the rosh yeshiva speak. They expected a fiery rebuke, a painful description of how low a person can fall. As they entered and took their seats for the shmuess, they feared what he would say.

But Rav Elya Meir spoke about something entirely different.

“We already know how low a person can sink,” he said. “Now let us speak about how high a person can rise.”

And with the classic mussar emphasis on gadlus ha’adam, he delivered a shmuess about possibility, about the greatness contained within every Jew, and the heights each person can attain.

The great mashgiach, Rav Yechezkel Levenstein, would say that while it is a serious failing for a person not to recognize his deficiencies, it is an even greater failing not to recognize his strengths and qualities. A person who ignores his weaknesses cannot improve himself, but a person who ignores his greatness cannot even begin the journey upward.

Perhaps this is one of the central messages of Shavuos as well.

The Torah was not given to malochim. It was given to human beings who struggle, fail, become discouraged, and sometimes lose clarity. Yet, Hashem looked at those very human beings and entrusted them with His Torah because of what they are capable of becoming.

The yeitzer hora wants a person to focus obsessively on his weaknesses and failures, convincing him that holiness and greatness belong only to others. But the yeitzer tov reminds us that the opposite is true.

The fire of Har Sinai burns within the heart of every Jew.

The fire of Torah possesses the power to illuminate the neshomah and burn away the tumah that seeks to envelop it. Even during periods of arofel and choshech, confusion and spiritual exhaustion, every Yid possesses the strength to continue moving forward, to walk through darkness with purpose, and to strive upward as a kadosh reaching toward Heaven.

So often in life, there is a temptation to surrender, to convince ourselves that the burdens are too heavy, the distractions are too powerful, and the challenges are too overwhelming. A person may feel that he has stumbled too many times to ever rise again.

But the nation that declared “Na’aseh venishma” is not a nation that gives up.

The very essence of those words was the willingness to continue forward despite uncertainty, despite difficulty, despite not fully understanding what lay ahead. At Har Sinai, Klal Yisroel demonstrated that it understood that greatness is achieved by accepting the challenge of growth.

Every Shavuos, as we once again accept the Torah, we are reminded not only of our obligations, but also of our greatness. We remember that we were created for more than mediocrity and distraction. We were created to rise, to horeveh in Torah, to grow, and to become a great nation of great people.

For those who carry the words “Na’aseh venishma” within their souls, no challenge is insurmountable and no height is beyond reach.

We speak about greatness, holiness, and climbing toward Heaven. We speak about the crowns that were placed upon our heads at Har Sinai, about walking through the arofel, about becoming anshei kodesh while living in a difficult physical world filled with challenges. But all of this can sound lofty and distant, as though true greatness belongs only to malochim and not to ordinary people like us.

The Torah teaches otherwise.

There was once a great commotion in the town of Sadigura. Rav Yisroel of Ruzhin had come to visit, and crowds gathered to catch a glimpse of the great tzaddik and perhaps receive a brocha. A young child heard the excitement and asked what it was about.

“A rebbe as holy as a malach has come to town,” they told him. “The heilige Ruzhiner is here.”

Curious and sincere, the child pushed his way through the crowd until he stood before the rebbe. He carefully walked around him, studying him from every angle.

The rebbe noticed and asked the boy what he was looking for. “I was told that the rebbe is a malach, and my cheder rebbi taught us that in Akdamus it says that malochim have six wings. I am looking for your wings.”

The rebbe looked down at the cherubic young boy and smiled. Pointing to the six sons accompanying him, he said, “These are my six wings.”

The Torah does not ask us to escape our humanity and become malochim. It asks us to elevate our humanity. True greatness is not found in withdrawing from life, but in sanctifying it. The wings that lift a Jew Heavenward are not hidden somewhere beyond this world. They are built here – through raising children, building families, learning Torah, refining our character, helping others, persevering through struggle, and remaining loyal to Hashem and His Torah.

Moshe Rabbeinu entered the arofel not to stop being human, but to demonstrate that a human being can ascend far beyond what he imagined possible. Klal Yisroel stood at Har Sinai and affirmed that ordinary people of flesh and blood could live lives infused with kedusha and eternal meaning.

And every year on Shavuos, we stand there once again, hearing the call to greatness and reminding ourselves that despite the darkness of the times, despite the distractions of life, our weaknesses, and our struggles, we are the people to whom Hashem spoke at Har Sinai, and we are the people to whom He gave the Torah. That upward path still exists.

We are not malochim. But we possess the wings that can carry us as high as we wish to go.

Let’s go.

Ashreichem Yisroel.

Gut Yom Tov.

Feds Give $200 Million More for NYC Penn Station Rebuild

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The Transportation Department announced Wednesday that it will allocate an additional $200 million to help launch construction on the long-awaited redevelopment of New York’s Penn Station, part of a sweeping $8 billion modernization effort expected to begin by the end of next year.

According to Amtrak and the Trump administration, the project will dramatically transform the aging transit hub by increasing rail capacity, constructing a new grand entrance along Eighth Avenue, creating a modern train hall, and replacing outdated passageways with larger open concourses.

Penn Station remains the busiest transportation hub in the United States, handling roughly 10 million Amtrak passengers each year and approximately 100 million travelers overall when regional rail systems are included.

Last month, Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy announced that the department planned to direct $4.7 billion toward rail infrastructure upgrades along Amtrak’s Northeast Corridor, including improvements at Penn Station and Union Station in Washington, D.C.

“We’re going to give $8 billion to rebuild Penn Station,” Duffy said Tuesday during a Senate hearing.

The decision effectively ends the possibility that New York would relocate Madison Square Garden, which sits above Penn Station and serves as the home arena for the New York Knicks and the New York Rangers, in addition to hosting concerts and other major events.

Plans for the reconstruction also include expanded retail areas and a redesigned exterior intended to give the station a more classical architectural appearance.

New York previously unveiled the $1.6 billion Moynihan Train Hall project in 2021, opening a large new concourse inside the former Farley Post Office building across Eighth Avenue from Penn Station.

The 255,000-square-foot Moynihan Train Hall features a massive glass skylight rising 92 feet overhead, as well as amenities including a lounge for nursing mothers. The facility provides access to 17 Amtrak and Long Island Rail Road tracks.

Meanwhile, the Trump administration has continued facing legal setbacks regarding the separate $16 billion Hudson Tunnel Project. Federal courts have ordered the Transportation Department to continue funding the project after administration officials attempted to halt payments.

The Hudson Tunnel Project is designed to construct a new commuter rail tunnel linking Manhattan and New Jersey while also rehabilitating the century-old existing tunnel currently used by more than 200,000 passengers and 425 trains every day.

The current tunnel sustained extensive damage during Hurricane Sandy in 2012 and now requires repeated emergency maintenance, causing disruptions along the nation’s busiest passenger rail corridor.

{Matzav.com}

Finding Balance in a Fast Moving World Through Time Honored Botanicals

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In a world that often feels rushed and overwhelming, many people look for ways to regain a sense of calm without stepping away from their daily responsibilities. Across different communities, there has been renewed interest in natural approaches that support both focus and relaxation. This quiet shift toward balance reflects a deeper desire to live with intention while staying grounded in values that have guided generations.

Among these options, some have turned to plant based solutions that draw from long standing traditions. Products like kava and kratom shots have gained attention for combining two well known botanicals into a simple, ready to use format. These blends are designed to support a steady state of mind, helping individuals remain engaged while easing the tension that can build during demanding days.

Ancient Roots in Modern Times

Kava and kratom each carry a rich cultural history. Kava has been used for centuries across the South Pacific as a communal drink, often shared during gatherings that emphasize connection and peace. Its calming properties have long been associated with moments of reflection and unity.

Kratom, on the other hand, originates from Southeast Asia, where it has traditionally been used in different ways depending on the time of day. Some have used it for energy during work, while others have found it helpful for unwinding later.

Bringing these two traditions together in a single product reflects a thoughtful approach that blends heritage with modern convenience. The result is something that speaks to both the past and the present, offering a way to experience these botanicals without complex preparation.

A Practical Approach to Daily Balance

Many people today are seeking simple ways to maintain clarity while managing stress. The appeal of these botanical blends lies in their ability to offer both calm and focus in one serving. According to product information, these shots are formulated with additional ingredients such as ashwagandha, L theanine, and GABA, all of which are commonly associated with relaxation and mental support.

This combination creates a balanced effect that does not overwhelm. Instead, it supports a steady mindset that can be especially useful during long workdays, study sessions, or even social gatherings where presence and composure matter.

The convenience of a small liquid shot also makes it easier to incorporate into daily routines. There is no need for preparation or measuring, which can often discourage consistent use. With everything contained in a single bottle, the experience becomes straightforward and accessible.

Why Simplicity Matters

For many readers who value structure and clarity in their daily lives, simplicity plays an important role. Complex solutions often fall short because they demand too much time or attention. In contrast, a well designed product that fits naturally into an existing routine is more likely to be used consistently.

This is where modern botanical blends stand out. They take something traditional and present it in a format that aligns with the pace of contemporary life. The goal is not to replace long standing practices, but to make their benefits more accessible.

In communities that emphasize discipline and mindful living, this kind of approach resonates. It reflects a respect for tradition while acknowledging the realities of modern schedules.

A Look at the Broader Conversation

The growing interest in botanicals like kava has also led to increased research and discussion in the wellness space. For example, a detailed overview published by a trusted health resource explains that kava has been studied for its calming effects and its role in reducing short term anxiety in certain cases.

Readers can explore this further through this helpful resource on kava benefits and effects which outlines how the plant interacts with the body and why it has remained relevant for so many years.

Such discussions highlight the importance of understanding what we consume and making informed choices. They also reinforce the idea that traditional plants continue to have a place in modern conversations about well being.

A Thoughtful Conclusion

Balance is not something that happens by accident. It requires intention, awareness, and often a willingness to explore new approaches while staying rooted in what has proven meaningful over time.

Botanical blends that combine kava and kratom offer one example of how this balance can be approached in a practical way. By drawing from established traditions and presenting them in a convenient form, they provide an option for those seeking calm without losing focus.

As more people look for ways to navigate the pressures of daily life, solutions that respect both heritage and practicality are likely to remain part of the conversation. In that sense, these small, carefully crafted products reflect something larger. They represent a quiet effort to live with steadiness, clarity, and purpose in a demanding world.

 

“HATRED”: Gafni Launches Sharp Attack on Attorney General Over Delayed Approval of Chareidi Organizations

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Moshe Gafni launched a fierce public attack Wednesday against Israeli Attorney General Gali Baharav-Miara over the continued delay in approving tax benefits for charitable organizations, accusing her of acting beyond her authority and targeting chareidi institutions.

The Degel HaTorah chairman also called on the head of Israel’s Tax Authority to ignore the attorney general’s position and move forward with bringing the matter before the Knesset Finance Committee for approval.

The dispute centers around Section 46 of Israel’s tax ordinance, which grants tax deductions to donors who contribute to approved nonprofit organizations. The benefit has long served as a major incentive for donations to various charitable and religious institutions, including many chareidi organizations.

Baharav-Miara previously ruled that the state should stop providing direct or indirect support to certain chareidi nonprofit groups through the approval of these tax-exempt donation benefits.

Reacting angrily to the move, Gafni accused the attorney general of abusing her position.

“This woman, Baharav-Miara, does whatever she wants as though the country belongs to her. She is harming hundreds of third-sector organizations waiting for approval under Section 46,” Gafni declared.

According to Gafni, efforts had quietly been underway for weeks in an attempt to resolve the matter and secure approval for the organizations through the Finance Committee.

“For many weeks we worked quietly in order to find a solution to the issue and approve the organizations in the Finance Committee, but unfortunately without success,” he said. “Everything is only because she decided they must not be approved, in a decision that is blatantly unlawful.”

Gafni then issued a direct appeal to the head of the Tax Authority, urging officials to bypass the attorney general’s objections.

“I call on the head of the Tax Authority not to listen to her and to bring the matter for discussion and approval by the Finance Committee in accordance with the law,” he said.

He concluded with an especially harsh accusation against Baharav-Miara, stating: “Hatred has clouded her judgment.”

{Matzav.com}

Rav Yitzchak Yosef Rules on Separate Minyanim for Israelis During Second Day Yom Tov Abroad

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As thousands of Israelis prepare to spend Shavuos outside of Eretz Yisroel, a major halachic question surrounding Yom Tov Sheini Shel Goluyos has now received a clear ruling from the former Rishon Letzion, Rav Yitzchak Yosef.

The question was submitted by the rov of Uman, Rav Yaakov Jan, who sought guidance regarding the many Israeli visitors expected to spend Yom Tov in the city.

This year, Shavuos falls on Friday. In Eretz Yisroel, where only one day of Yom Tov is observed, the following day — Shabbos — will already feature the reading of Parshas Naso. Outside of Eretz Yisroel, however, Shabbos itself is observed as the second day of Yom Tov, and the regular weekly Torah reading is delayed. As a result, a gap develops between the parshiyos read in Eretz Yisroel and those read in chutz la’aretz, a discrepancy that will continue for several weeks until the readings are synchronized again around Parshas Balak.

In his letter, Rav Jan asked whether Israelis staying in Uman would be permitted to organize a separate minyan on Shabbos in order to hear the reading of Parshas Naso according to the Eretz Yisroel schedule.

Rav Jan noted that it is already well established that Israelis visiting abroad may not publicly perform melachah on the second day of Yom Tov. However, he suggested that given the unusually large number of Israeli guests expected this year, perhaps there would be room to allow a separate Torah-reading minyan without objecting to it.

Rav Yitzchak Yosef responded immediately with a detailed written teshuvah, ruling decisively that Israelis staying outside Eretz Yisroel must conduct themselves publicly exactly like local residents observing two days of Yom Tov.

According to the ruling, this requirement applies not only to melachah but also to the public structure of tefillah and Torah reading in shul. Therefore, separate public minyanim for the Eretz Yisroel Torah reading may not be held.

At the same time, the Rishon Letzion clarified that privately, within their homes, Israelis may daven and read according to the custom and schedule of Eretz Yisroel.

The issue of Yom Tov Sheini Shel Goluyos has long created fascinating customs and practices among various chassidic communities during the Yomim Tovim.

Visitors from abroad who travel to Eretz Yisroel for the regalim — particularly to spend Yom Tov in Yerushalayim or near their rebbes — continue observing two days of Yom Tov even while in Eretz Yisroel. Because these visitors are maintaining the stringencies of Yom Tov rather than relaxing them, their public minyanim do not create a concern of public desecration of Yom Tov.

In some chassidic courts in Eretz Yisroel, local chassidim have even adopted the custom of wearing their Shabbos clothing on the second day of Yom Tov as a visible sign of solidarity with their fellow chassidim visiting from overseas.

By contrast, Israeli chassidim who travel to the United States or Europe to spend Yom Tov with their rebbes are careful not to perform melachah publicly on the second day of Yom Tov, even when that day is an ordinary weekday back in Eretz Yisroel.

In typical years, when the second day falls during the week, some Israeli visitors quietly put on tefillin in complete privacy inside their lodgings so as not to appear to local residents as though they are violating Yom Tov. This year, however, that issue does not arise because the second day of Yom Tov coincides with Shabbos.

{Matzav.com}

Tefillos for Ponovezh’s Legendary Masmid, Rav Chaim Berman

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Deep concern has spread throughout the Torah world and the halls of Yeshivas Ponovezh following reports that the famed masmid, Rav Chaim Berman, has become seriously weakened.

Rav Chaim, widely regarded in the yeshiva world as one of the greatest masmidim of the generation, has long been known for his extraordinary consistency in Torah learning and for never missing a single day in the famed Ponovezh bais medrash.

Several weeks ago, Rav Chaim was hospitalized for several days after his medical condition worsened. Although he has since returned home, he has yet to regain his strength, and his absence from the main bais medrash in Bnei Brak has been deeply felt by generations of talmidim.

For Ponovezh bochurim, the absence is especially painful. Rav Chaim is known as someone who virtually never left the walls of the yeshiva and who, despite his towering stature in Torah, would regularly enter the shiurim klaliyim and sit among the younger bochurim with humility and simplicity.

In light of Rav Chaim’s condition and prolonged absence from the yeshiva, Ponovezh rosh yeshiva Rav Berel Povarsky issued an unusual and emotional public letter addressed to current and former talmidim of the yeshiva, calling on them to intensify their tefillos for Rav Chaim’s recovery.

The rosh yeshiva went so far as to refer to Rav Chaim Berman with the rare title “hamaor hagadol – the great luminary” and wrote that “all of us are obligated to share in his suffering.”

The letter states: “To the holy sons of our yeshiva, throughout all generations: I hereby come with a request to increase prayer and supplication for the complete recovery of the great luminary, the gaon Rav Chaim ben Reisha Rizel Berman, shlita, whose image has served as a living example for generations of yeshiva students, like Yehoshua, the devoted student who never departed from the tent. His influence through his Torah, fear of Heaven, and tefillos upon the holy yeshiva is deeply evident.

“And now, to our great pain, his place is missing, as due to his suffering and weakness he is unable to come to the heichal Hashem as he did continuously throughout all the years until very recently. All of us are obligated to share in his suffering and to increase Torah, good deeds, and tefillos for his complete recovery. May Hashem hear our cries, and may the students of the yeshiva merit to continue benefiting from his light for many more years in health and tranquility.”

{Matzav.com}

MK Michal Waldiger Blames State Failures Following Murder of Bnei Brak Yungerman

Matzav -

Michal Waldiger sharply criticized Israeli government agencies and welfare authorities on Wednesday following the murder of yungerman Rav Yishai Por z”l in Bnei Brak, arguing that the tragedy reflects a deep systemic failure in the handling of severe mental-health crises.

Reacting to the shocking stabbing attack inside Kollel Chazon Ish, Waldiger described the incident as far more than an isolated criminal act and said the state bears responsibility for failing to properly address the suspect’s condition.

“The horrifying case in Bnei Brak gives me no rest. The death of Yishai Por z”l is first and foremost a failure of the state,” the Religious Zionism lawmaker wrote in a public post.

She questioned whether the suspect — described in reports as a homeless individual with a known psychiatric background — had received proper treatment or oversight from government agencies.

“‘The background is criminal,’ the headlines will scream. But what do we know about the background of the stabber?” Waldiger wrote.

She continued with a series of pointed questions aimed at the country’s welfare and mental-health systems: “Did he receive a proper support framework from the ministries? Was he under any supervision? Who sees him during the days of madness? Who takes him to the police station — a police officer in uniform or a social worker? And who will be able to say, ‘Our hands did not spill this blood’?”

As previously reported, Rav Yishai Por z”l, 50, was stabbed to death Tuesday afternoon while learning alongside his son inside the Chazon Ish kollel on Rechov HaAri in Bnei Brak.

According to reports, the suspect fled immediately after the attack. Authorities later arrested him near Beit Shemesh.

Investigators say the victim and suspect were involved in a heated verbal confrontation several days earlier inside the kollel, during which the suspect allegedly threatened Rav Por, saying, “I’ll deal with you yet.”

Waldiger concluded her remarks with a broader warning about the state of mental-health care in Israel.

“If mental health remains in the backyard of the State of Israel, we will not be denying the problem — on the contrary, the neglected garden will grow thorns into the main street for all of us,” she wrote.

Her comments reignited the longstanding public debate over how Israeli law enforcement and welfare authorities handle individuals suffering from severe psychiatric crises, particularly those who may pose a danger to others.

The discussion has increasingly centered on whether existing government systems provide sufficient supervision, treatment, and intervention for mentally ill individuals before situations escalate into violence.

Several months ago, the Knesset marked World Mental Health Day for the first time during an event led by Waldiger herself. At that gathering, Israeli Health Minister Uriel Buso stated that “during the war year, the State of Israel is treating hundreds of thousands” of citizens suffering from anxiety and emotional trauma.

Waldiger’s latest remarks drew widespread attention and shifted much of the public conversation from the specific crime itself to the larger unresolved questions surrounding Israel’s mental-health and social-service systems, as calls grow louder for broader reform and earlier intervention by trained welfare professionals.

{Matzav.com}

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