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BDE: Petira of Dr. Abba Spero, Z”L of Baltimore
Ukraine’s Naval Drones Strike Russian Oil Tankers in the Black Sea Off the Turkish Coast
Biden Says He’s Working “As Hard As He Can” to Boost U.S. Support for Ukraine
Ukrainian Naval Drones Strike Two Russian Oil Tankers in Black Sea
German Police Repel Mob at AfD Youth Conference Amid 30,000 Protesters
Trump Envoy, Kushner, and Putin Negotiator Draft Controversial Ukraine Peace Plan
90-Year-Old Crashes Into Bay Area Coffee Shop at 90 MPH, Survives
Northwestern to Pay $75M to Settle Discrimination Complaints, Restore Research Funding
German Far-Right Party Sets Up Its New Youth Wing as Thousands Protest
FBI Director Kash Patel Warns James Comey of Imminent Action
Southwest Airlines to Charge Upfront for Extra Seats Starting Jan. 27
Bismuth: “I Revised the Drafting of the Draft Law to Meet Legal Demands”
The chairman of the Knesset’s Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee, MK Boaz Bismuth, revealed Motzoei Shabbos that he has implemented a series of adjustments and stricter provisions in the updated version of the draft law, working hand-in-hand with the committee’s legal advisers. According to Bismuth, the goal was to reduce legal vulnerabilities and create a workable balance between the IDF’s manpower needs and the preservation of the Olam HaTorah.
Bismuth addressed the newly released text ahead of committee deliberations scheduled for this week, stressing that an “intensive and meticulous” drafting process was carried out with the full involvement of the legal team.
He explained that the latest version includes “a number of changes and tightened clauses” designed to fully comply with legal requirements and minimize the risks that plagued earlier iterations. “I worked in recent weeks on the wording of the law in full cooperation with the legal advisers of the Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee,” he said. “I made precise adjustments and changes to meet the legal demands and to prevent any future legal exposure.”
The committee chair emphasized that the updated draft seeks to strike a carefully calibrated compromise. With the IDF dealing with manpower shortages while the chareidi sector insists on safeguarding full-time Torah study, Bismuth described the proposal as “a responsible, balanced and stable law — a law that will return to the State of Israel the stability it has been lacking.”
Bismuth also made clear that the legislative process is already too far along to shift course. “The train has already left the station, and it will not stop until the law is approved in the Knesset plenum,” he declared.
His comments come amid reports over the weekend that the committee’s own legal adviser, Miri Frenkel-Shor, opposes portions of the draft Bismuth unveiled. The committee is expected to begin detailed discussions on the legislation in the coming days.
{Matzav.com}
Trump Threatens Biden With ‘Charges of Perjury,’ Says Auto-Penned Orders ‘Terminated’
President Trump issued a sweeping declaration Friday, announcing that he is voiding every document signed through the use of an autopen during Joe Biden’s presidency and threatening legal consequences if Biden insists he personally approved the signatures. Trump claimed he is prepared to have his predecessor “brought up on charges of perjury” if Biden says he was involved in authorizing aides to use the device.
For months, Trump has insisted that Biden was largely absent during his term, portraying the administration as one run by unelected staffers. In his latest Truth Social post, Trump asserted, “Any document signed by Sleepy Joe Biden with the Autopen, which was approximately 92% of them, is hereby terminated, and of no further force or effect. The Autopen is not allowed to be used if approval is not specifically given by the President of the United States.”
He went on to accuse Biden’s advisers of usurping authority, writing, “The Radical Left Lunatics circling Biden around the beautiful Resolute Desk in the Oval Office took the Presidency away from him. I am hereby cancelling all Executive Orders, and anything else that was not directly signed by Crooked Joe Biden, because the people who operated the Autopen did so illegally.”
Trump concluded his message with a direct warning: “Joe Biden was not involved in the Autopen process and, if he says he was, he will be brought up on charges of perjury. Thank you for your attention to this matter!”
Although Trump has already undone many of Biden’s directives, he has also implied that a number of Biden’s pardons may be invalid. Biden, however, told the New York Times this year that he personally authorized the use of his name in his final clemency decisions. Historically, autopen signatures have been recognized as fully legitimate when used by staff under presidential direction, and presidents of both parties have relied on the device for decades — including in rare instances to enact legislation.
Legal precedent supports the practice. A Justice Department opinion issued in 2005 during the George W. Bush administration concluded, “the President need not personally perform the physical act of affixing his signature to a bill he approves and decides to sign in order for the bill to become law.”
{Matzav.com}
Hamas Terrorist Surrenders to IDF After Crossing Yellow Line
Trump Shuts Down Venezuelan Airspace ‘In Its Entirety’ As Drug Trafficking Surges
President Trump unveiled a sweeping new directive today, declaring that no aircraft may traverse Venezuela’s skies as part of an intensified campaign against narcotics flowing out of the region. In a sharply worded Truth Social message, he announced: “To all Airlines, Pilots, Drug Dealers, and Human Traffickers, please consider THE AIRSPACE ABOVE AND SURROUNDING VENEZUELA TO BE CLOSED IN ITS ENTIRETY.” He ended the post with: “Thank you for your attention to this matter!”
This latest move follows Trump’s pledge earlier this week to target drug operations on land. Speaking with reporters, he said, “The land is easier, but that’s going to start very soon,” hinting that the airspace shutdown is only the beginning of a broader escalation.
Since September, the administration has focused heavily on maritime strikes, hitting what it describes as narcotics-carrying vessels departing from Venezuela and elsewhere in Latin America. The White House says the maritime strategy has sharply curtailed drug movements, with Trump insisting that trafficking by sea has fallen by “85%” since the operations began. Critics—including human rights groups, academics, and Democratic lawmakers—have condemned the policy as a form of extrajudicial killing.
Defense officials acknowledge that at least 21 deadly strikes have taken place under the initiative. One of the most contentious incidents involved a boat near Trinidad, where survivors were reportedly killed in a second round of fire—an alleged “double tap” that prompted outrage. According to reports, the strike was carried out under direction from Pentagon chief Pete Hegseth to “kill everybody,” an allegation Hegseth dismissed as “fake news.”
Amid all this, Trump held a conversation last week with Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro. According to the New York Times, the discussion included the possibility of an unprecedented face-to-face meeting—something no U.S. president has ever pursued with the authoritarian head of state. Trump has long denounced Maduro, calling him illegitimate and accusing him of running the narcotics empire known as Cartel de los Soles.
The decision to seal off Venezuelan airspace marks the most dramatic step yet in the administration’s expanding campaign, signaling a readiness to widen the fight beyond sea and land—and into the skies.
{Matzav.com}
WAR DRUMS: President Trump Declares Venezuelan Airspaced “Closed” As US Prepares For Land Strikes
Shoppers Spend Billions on Black Friday to Snag Holiday Deals, Despite Wider Economic Uncertainty
Rabbi Gershon (George) Morgenstern z”l
It is with great sadness that Matzav.com reports the petirah of Rabbi Gershon (George) Morgenstern z”l, a man whose life embodied determination, brilliance, and unwavering devotion to Torah and avodas Hashem. He was 92.
Born and raised in New York in an era and environment where authentic Torah life was far from the norm, young Gershon stood out for his quiet resolve and inner fire. While most of his peers drifted far from Yiddishkeit, he charted a different path, one of conviction, courage, and fierce loyalty to Torah.
His journey began at Rabbi Yitzchok Shmidman’s Yeshiva Toras Chaim in East New York, where the foundations of his lifelong identity were formed. From there, his love for learning and his refined intellect led him to Yeshivas Rabbeinu Chaim Berlin, where he learned under the guidance of illustrious rabbeim. There, he forged a deep and enduring kesher with its legendary rosh yeshiva, Rav Yitzchok Hutner zt”l, whose teachings and worldview became the hashkafic backbone of his life. Until his final days, Rabbi Morgenstern was proud to call himself a Chaim Berliner, carrying its ideals with dignity and clarity.
Despite his humble beginnings, he became the living definition of a self-made man. Everything he achieved—spiritually, professionally, and personally—was earned through perseverance, grit, and a refusal to compromise on the values he cherished. He built himself into a ben Torah, and later built a family rooted in those same ideals, determined that his children and grandchildren live lives rich with Torah and mesorah.
As a young married man, after marrying his devoted wife Faigy, he assumed rabbinic positions in both Lynn and Lowell, Massachusetts, where his warmth, intellect, and genuine care for every Jew left a lasting imprint. Congregants who met him during those formative years never forgot the way he listened, guided, taught, and uplifted, leading with both head and heart, helping countless individuals draw closer to Hakadosh Baruch Hu.
In time, Rabbi Morgenstern moved from the rabbinate into the world of business, where his extraordinary brilliance came to the fore. Long before the computer revolution reshaped the world, he stood at its front lines as a pioneer and visionary. He founded multiple companies, including Data Systems & Software Inc. (DSSI) and Tower Semiconductor Ltd., breaking ground in areas no one else had yet imagined. His forward-thinking innovations were decades ahead of their time, and his creativity and acuity were unmatched. One of his company’s major achievements was its development of advanced sonar systems purchased by the Israeli government, a testament to the caliber of his technological contributions.
Yet, even at the height of professional success, parnassah was never merely a business objective for him. It was an opportunity for chesed. As chairman of Decision Systems Israel, he recognized the extraordinary potential of yeshiva students and began hiring them en masse, believing that their training in limud haTorah made them uniquely suited to programming. At one point, he employed approximately 200 yeshiva graduates, giving them a dignified means of support.
He would often explain, with a mix of clarity and pride: “In programming you need patience, a willingness to go into detail and the concentration to make sure you dotted your I’s and crossed your T’s and to go over it again and again. It’s the same thing with Gemara [study].”
He would emphasize that it took six months to train a yeshiva student to excel in software, compared to one to two years for a typical high-school graduate. To him, this wasn’t merely a statistic. It was a celebration of Torah, of its rigor, its discipline, and its ability to shape extraordinary human beings.
Eventually, Rabbi and Mrs. Morgenstern settled in the then-young, blossoming community of Monsey, New York, where he immediately became a quiet, steady pillar of support for local mosdos. As a member of the tuition committee at Yeshiva of Spring Valley, he helped countless families ensure that their children could learn Torah without unbearable financial strain. He involved himself in supporting other institutions, always with discretion, respect, and boundless generosity.
His relationships with rabbonim—such as Rav Shmuel Faivelson, rosh yeshiva of Bais Medrash L’Torah, and Rav Zorach Shapiro, with whom he learned b’chavrusah for many years—were deeply meaningful to him. They reflected his appreciation for talmidei chachomim, his love of learning, and his lifelong quest for aliyah.
From his home on Shalvah Place, the very block he personally built during Monsey’s early days, Rabbi Morgenstern poured out chesed. People from every walk of life crossed his threshold seeking advice, support, guidance, employment, resources, or simply a listening ear. And in every instance, he gave with generosity, dignity, and a sense of mission.
He was a wellspring of memories, stories, and insights, recounting his years near gedolim, his experiences in the birth of the tech revolution, his time as a rov, and his personal journey of spiritual resilience. Anyone fortunate enough to hear those stories walked away richer, because every tale carried a message, a value, a surge of inspiration.
Together with his wife Faigy, he was zocheh to raise a distinguished family of bnei and bnos Torah who today make their mark across the world, carrying forward his legacy of integrity, perseverance, and ahavas haTorah.
He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Faigy Morgenstern; by his children, Mrs. Shoshana Schechter, Mrs. Reyce Krause, Mrs. Alisa Rokach, Rav Dov Morgenstern, and Reb Shloime Morgenstern; and many grandchildren and great-grandchildren.
Yehi zichro boruch.
