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Rep. Steny Hoyer to Retire, Ending Nearly Six-Decade Political Career
Trump Proposes Massive Increase in 2027 Defense Spending to $1.5T: ‘Dangerous Times’
President Donald Trump on Wednesday put forward a proposal to raise U.S. military spending to $1.5 trillion in 2027, arguing that the country is facing what he described as “troubled and dangerous times.”
The proposal comes just days after Trump ordered a U.S. military operation to capture Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro and remove him from the country to face drug trafficking charges in the United States. At the same time, American military forces continue to build up their presence in the Caribbean Sea.
Under current plans, the U.S. defense budget for 2026 stands at $901 billion.
Beyond Venezuela, Trump has recently floated a number of other aggressive national security ideas, including taking control of Greenland, a Danish territory, citing strategic concerns. He has also indicated a willingness to consider military action in Colombia, while Secretary of State Marco Rubio has warned that longtime adversary Cuba “is in trouble.”
Announcing the proposal on Truth Social, Trump said, “This will allow us to build the ‘Dream Military’ that we have long been entitled to and, more importantly, that will keep us SAFE and SECURE, regardless of foe.”
The Pentagon already received a substantial boost last year, with roughly $175 billion allocated through the GOP’s “big, beautiful bill” of tax cuts and spending reductions that Trump signed into law.
Despite that increase, Trump’s call for even more defense funding is expected to face opposition on multiple fronts. Democrats have traditionally pushed to keep defense and non-defense spending increases in balance, while fiscal conservatives within the Republican Party have warned against further swelling the federal deficit.
Trump has countered those concerns by pointing to increased federal revenue generated by tariffs imposed by his administration on allies and adversaries alike since his return to office. He has argued that these tariffs give the government the financial flexibility to fund higher military spending.
However, while tariff revenue has risen sharply, it still falls far short of covering Trump’s wide-ranging pledges, which include paying down the national debt, issuing dividends to taxpayers, and now funding a major expansion of the military budget.
Separately on Wednesday, Trump also issued a warning to Raytheon, one of the nation’s largest defense contractors, saying the company could lose Pentagon business if it does not stop buying back its own stock and instead reinvest profits into expanding weapons production.
Trump has repeatedly complained in recent months that defense contractors have failed to deliver critical weapons on time while continuing to reward investors through dividends and stock buybacks and paying hefty compensation packages to top executives.
“Either Raytheon steps up, and starts investing in more upfront Investment like Plants and Equipment, or they will no longer be doing business with Department of War,” Trump wrote on social media. “Also, if Raytheon wants further business with the United States Government, under no circumstances will they be allowed to do any additional Stock Buybacks, where they have spent Tens of Billions of Dollars, until they are able to get their act together.”
Raytheon manufactures several of the U.S. military’s most prominent missile systems, including the Tomahawk cruise missile, the Javelin and Stinger shoulder-fired missiles, and the Sidewinder air-to-air missile.
{Matzav.com}
Iran FM Araghchi Arrives in Beirut, Says Iran “Prepared for Any Scenario” with Israel
Israeli Drone Strikes Vehicle in Southern Lebanon
U.S. Productivity Jumps 4.9%, Highest Level in Nearly Six Years
IDF Strikes Gaza Launch Site After Failed Rocket Falls Near Hospital
VP Vance: U.S. Operation in Venezuela Secures Resources, Leverage, and Shows Military Strength
Venezuelan Interior Minister Says ~100 Killed in U.S. Military Operation That Ousted Maduro, Similar Number Wounded
Minneapolis Public Schools Cancel Classes Jan. 8–9 After ICE-Related Shooting Over Safety Concerns
Many Appear Duped By AI ‘Rabbi’ With 100,000 Social-Media Followers
An account purporting to depict a Rabbi Menachem Goldberg has some 100,000 followers on Instagram and TikTok, and although the accounts post videos that have backgrounds with apparently secular or Christian tapestries hanging on walls of shuls with multiple aronei kodesh, some with nonsensical Hebrew inscriptions, some users appear to be duped by the account.
Some commenters thank the “rabbi,” who wears a long beard and a black hat, and thank “him” for his words of wisdom. Others appear to be aware that something is amiss with the account, which launched on Dec. 29.
Both the Instagram and TikTok accounts hawk publications called “The Five Pillars” ($9.99) and “Rabbi’s Blueprint” ($19.99).
According to a biography on the website, the “rabbi” has “dedicated over 40 years to studying and teaching the intersection of Jewish wisdom and financial prosperity. Based in Brooklyn, he has helped thousands of people from all backgrounds achieve meaningful success through timeless Torah principles.”
In some backgrounds of the films, the “rabbi” sits in an apparent shul, in which a Sefer Torah lies open and unattended on a desk.
Many of the things that the “rabbi” says in the videos are platitudes, delivered in succession with minimal translations. The apparent rabbi refers to “God” rather than “Hashem,” and does not tend to cite particular Torah verses or rabbinic commentators in any of his messages. He also refers often to “abundance” and “renewal.” He often signs off his videos by directing people to buy his books and in several says just “link in bio.”
He says at one point that the Torah says not to put a stumbling block before “another.” The posuk says before a “blind person.”
Rabbi Gil Student, director of Jewish media and publications at the Orthodox Union, is part of the team developing Ohrbit, an artificial intelligence tool that delivers personalized Torah learning experiences.
“AI is a powerful tool to amplify Torah and help people study more Torah,” he told JNS. “AI should not replace human involvement and effort but can be an incredible tool when used responsibly.”
“AI requires transparency and responsibility,” he added. “Jewish tradition requires that any book, whether written by a human or AI, have a responsible human review and approbation.” JNS
{Matzav.com}
What Americans Think About Crowdfunding Campaigns, According To A New Poll
Three Months to Live – A Miracle at BJX
Three Months to Live – A Miracle at BJX
Trump to Launch Gaza Board of Peace Next Week
President Donald Trump is expected to announce the formation of a new international body known as the Gaza Board of Peace next week, as the ceasefire agreement moves into its second phase, according to U.S. officials and sources familiar with the plan.
The board would be led by Trump and include roughly 15 world leaders, with a mandate to oversee Gaza’s reconstruction and supervise the establishment of a yet-to-be-formed Palestinian technocratic government.
A source with direct knowledge of the process said, “Invitations are going out to key countries to be members of the board.”
Countries expected to participate include the United Kingdom, Germany, France, Italy, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Egypt, and Turkey.
U.S. officials cautioned that the initiative could still be adjusted depending on developments in other areas of Trump’s foreign policy agenda, including matters related to Venezuela and the Ukraine-Russia peace negotiations. The White House declined to comment.
Former UN envoy to the Middle East Nikolay Mladenov is expected to serve as the board’s representative on the ground. He is currently in Israel for meetings with Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu and other senior officials ahead of Trump’s anticipated announcement.
Netanyahu’s agreement to proceed to the second phase of the ceasefire during his meeting with Trump last week helped pave the way for the forthcoming declaration.
The first gathering of the Gaza Board of Peace could be held later this month on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum in Davos.
Trump said last month that he planned to reveal the board’s membership in early 2026 and emphasized that it would include top global leaders. “It will be one of the most legendary boards ever,” Trump said at the time, adding that it would be made up of “heads of the most important countries in the world – Kings, heads of state, and presidents – they all want to be on the ‘Board of Peace.'”
The Board of Peace, along with other elements of Trump’s broader plan for Gaza, was endorsed by the UN Security Council in a resolution adopted in November.
{Matzav.com}
Trump Pulls US Out of ‘Racist’ UN Forum That Pushed ‘Global Reparations Agenda’
The United States is withdrawing from a United Nations body that has pressed for race-focused policy frameworks and a worldwide reparations effort, following an executive order signed Wednesday by President Donald Trump, according to administration officials.
State Department officials said the decision targets the UN Permanent Forum on People of African Descent, arguing that its agenda conflicts with core constitutional principles, including the 14th Amendment and equal protection guarantees. Officials accused the forum of promoting racial grievance narratives and what they described as “victim based social policies” within the UN system.
Announcing the move, Tommy Pigott, the State Department’s principal spokesman, said the administration would no longer participate in bodies it considers discriminatory. “America will no longer lend its credibility to racist organizations,” Pigott said.
Pigott added that the administration is drawing a firm line against what it views as coercive ideology. “Radical activists who embrace DEI ideology and seek to compel the United States to adopt policies mandating race-based wealth redistribution, in organizations such as the UN Permanent Forum on People of African Descent will no longer be entertained,” he said.
He underscored the point by reiterating the administration’s stance: “The United States is proudly withdrawing from racist organizations such as this forum.”
The forum has openly advocated what it calls a “global reparations agenda,” seeking to “compensate Africa and the African diaspora for the enduring legacies of colonialism, enslavement, apartheid and genocide between the 16th and the 19th centuries.”
Beyond reparations, the body has linked other policy areas to race, asserting that “efforts to advance climate action” must be rooted in “racial equity,” and arguing that “climate justice cannot succeed without addressing historical and structural forms of injustice.”
Its positions have also extended into emerging technologies. In statements on artificial intelligence, the forum contended that only “reparatory justice” could prevent what it labeled “technology-enabled racism.”
One of the forum’s members was Justin Hansford, a law professor at Howard University and a proponent of critical race theory, who began serving on the panel in March 2022. He was the only member based in the United States among the forum’s ten participants.
Hansford has previously called for dismantling police departments, expressed support for the Black Lives Matter movement, and endorsed the creation of a UN tribunal that would require the United States to pay $5 million in reparations to Black Americans, according to prior reporting by the Daily Mail.
{Matzav.com}
Dose Of Uncertainty: Experts Wary Of Newly Unveiled AI Health Gadgets
Mamdani’s First Major Move: New York City to Pilot Universal Care for Toddlers
Tapestry of Redemption
By Rabbi Pinchos Lipschutz
This week, we begin Sefer Shemos, the Sefer Hageulah. It is the sefer that tells the story of how a broken, enslaved people rose from the depths of despair to stand at Har Sinai to receive the Torah. It carries us from the bitterness of bondage to the ecstasy of redemption, from drowning terror at the YamSuf to the highest spiritual moment in human history.
But Sefer Shemos is not merely a historical account. It teaches us what destroys a nation — and what saves it.
The Alter of Kelm would explain that just as Avrohom, Yitzchok and Yaakov are called the avos because they laid the foundations of Yiddishkeit, so do the parshiyos of Sefer Shemos function as avos, forming the bedrock of our emunah and guiding us how to live as Jews.
How we treat other people defines us. It shapes our souls and announces, louder than any slogan, who we are. When we are attentive to others, when we notice them, value them, and appreciate them, we grow. We become capable of achdus. And through that unity, we become capable of far more than we ever could accomplish alone.
Hashem designed human beings to need one another. A person cannot thrive in isolation. From the moment we enter the world, we survive only through connection. As infants, we are utterly dependent. Even as adults, nearly everything we require to sustain our lives — food, shelter, education, health, security — comes from the labor and kindness of others. Every act of care, every hand extended, is part of the invisible network that sustains us.
Arrogance blinds people to this reality. Those who refuse to acknowledge how much they owe others imagine themselves self-made. It should be obvious that without the contributions of many other people, they would be hungry, lonely, ignorant, and lost. Everything we know, everything we have, exists because someone else cared enough to give. Appreciating even the smallest kindness is part of the lifeblood of community.
A meaningful life cannot be lived alone. Peirud — division — is not merely a social flaw. It is spiritual corrosion. It weakens communities and hollows out the people who cause it.
The Torah is filled with mitzvos that cultivate humility and gratitude, mitzvos that remind us that the world is sustained by kindness and that Hashem showers us with blessing every day. Whatever we pursue in life, we must remember the ultimate goal. Not winning arguments. Not momentary triumphs. But building something enduring. Unity makes our efforts last.
The Torah tells us in Devorim (7:7) that Hashem did not choose us because we were many. We are, in fact, the smallest of the nations. And yet, when we are united, we become greater than the sum of our parts. Our deeds combine. Our merits accumulate. Other nations may be larger, but when we have achdus, no one can overtake us.
We must learn how to move forward together, not as individuals who happen to share a label, but as a people bound by shared purpose. Loving another Jew does not require agreement, and appreciating another Jew does not require seeing the world through the same lens. What matters is the shared neshomah beneath the surface, the spark that unites us despite our differences. When we recognize that spark, unity becomes real, lived, and enduring.
Even before Moshe Rabbeinu was born, this lesson was already being written. Shifra and Puah, his mother and sister, risked their lives to save others. They were renowned for their righteousness and rose to achieve levels of nevuah. Yet, despite their overarching greatness, the Torah refers to them by the names given them for their acts of kindness involving infants. Their identity was chesed. In reward for their chesed, they merited dynasties of Kehunah, Leviyah, and Malchus.
Kindness is greatness.
Moshe Rabbeinu survived because of chesed. A helpless infant, placed in a basket among the reeds, was saved by Basya, the daughter of Paroh. She named him Moshe, “because I drew him from the water.” The Maharal teaches that although Moshe had many names, this is the one by which he is eternally known, because it reflects an act of compassion. The Torah is Toras Chesed. Even Hashem calls Moshe by a name rooted in kindness.
Moshe’s greatness did not come from the palace. It came from his heart. The Torah says, “Vayigdalhayeled— And the youth grew.” How? “Vayeitzeielechovvayarbesivlosam.” He left comfort behind and went out to feel the pain of his brothers. Though raised as royalty, walled off from what was going on, he took it upon himself to leave the blissful comfort of the royal palace to view what was happening in the lives of the lower classes. The suffering that he saw changed him forever.
When he saw a Jew being beaten, he intervened. When he saw a Jew striking another Jew, he recoiled in horror. “Acheinnodahadovor,” he cried. Now I understand. Redemption cannot come where Jews fight one another. Disunity locks the gates of geulah.
That day’s events forced him to leave Mitzrayim. Upon escaping to Midyon, Moshe’s first act was chesed, standing up for vulnerable strangers at a well. That kindness led to his future, his family, and his destiny.
The Sefer Hachareidim writes at the conclusion of the sefer that prior to his passing from this world, Yaakov Avinu called for his sons, the twelve shevotim, and said to them, “Hikovtzuv’shimubnei Yaakov — Gather together the sons of Yaakov.” He then told them that they should rid their hearts of jealousy, hatred, and competition, and view each other as if they are one person with one soul. Yaakov told them that if they could not achieve that unity, the Shechinah would not be able to rest among them.
The Rishonim (Rashi, Rabbeinu Bachya, Ibn Ezra, Rashbam) explain the pesukim (Shemos 29:45–46) which state that Am Yisroel “should know that I, Hashem Elokeihem, took them out of Mitzrayim so that I can dwell among them.” They write that this means that Hashem took us out of Mitzrayimin order for us to build the Mishkon. This denotes that they were unified at the time of YetziasMitzrayim or else they would not have been redeemed, for the Shechinah can only rest among us, and in the Mishkon, where we are united. Had we not been b’achdus, and had there been peirud, Hashem would not have removed us from there.
The pattern repeats throughout history. In every golus and every geulah, chesed and achdus are decisive. They carried us out of Mitzrayim, and they will carry us forward again.
If we remember who we are, if we reach for one another instead of turning away, we can build something radiant and enduring. Even small acts of appreciation — a kind word, a gesture of help — ripple outward, strengthening the bonds that protect and sustain the klal.
Our Torah is Toras Moshe, the inheritance of a gentle shepherd who led with compassion. It must be taught and lived in a way that builds people, not breaks them. Greatness is tied to sensitivity to the klal and to every individual within it. Such sensitivity awakens Heavenly mercy. Greatness is formed through many small acts of kindness born of an appreciation for every person and their needs and emotions.
The Torah says that after the passing of all the shevotim, there arose a “new” Paroh who did not know Yosef. Rashi explains that according to one view, this was not a new king at all. It was the same Paroh, who chose to pretend that Yosef had never existed. Gratitude became inconvenient. History was rewritten.
This tactic is ancient and familiar: Isolate, discredit, demonize.
The newly installed president of Venezuela and other leftists and anti-Semites blamed “the Zionists” for President Trump’s takedown of the dictator Nicolas Maduro. Facts were distorted, history was bent, and Jews were once again cast as convenient villains for events they did not create.
Actions concurrent with the inauguration of New York City’s new mayor were disconcerting to many Jews who are concerned about the direction he will take.
As Shabbos departs and the melavamalka candles flicker, we feel the ache of transition, from light to labor, from holiness to struggle. We sing, “Al tiraavdi Yaakov.” Do not fear. With the voice, restraint, and faith of Yaakov, we can endure.
Together, we hold the key to redemption. We come from different lands, speak different languages, and follow different customs. But beneath it all, we are family. One on one, Jews get along. We must not allow labels to tear us apart.
Where others bring darkness, we must bring light. Where others sow loneliness, we must offer brotherhood. When we are divided, Amaleik gains strength. When we stand k’ishechadb’levechad, no force can overcome us.
We cry together. We rejoice together. We live for one another. We have tasted what redemption feels like.
Let us hold onto that taste. Let us strengthen achdus, deepen love, and remember that we are part of something larger than ourselves so that we can merit the geulah.
Unity does not mean sameness. Achdus does not demand that we think alike, dress alike, or experience life in the same way. Klal Yisroel has always been a tapestry woven from different strands, from the time of the twelve shevotim, each distinct in nature and approach, each bringing a different koach to the same sacred mission. Yehudah’s leadership, Yissochor’s depth, and Zevulun’s support are not competing paths, but complementary ones.
Our diversity is not a sign of weakness. It is a source of strength. A people built from many perspectives is more resilient, more complete, and better able to meet complex challenges. When different strengths stand together, blind spots are covered, balance is created, and the whole becomes greater than the sum of its parts. Achdus is not forged by erasing difference, but by weaving difference into a shared purpose.
Loving another Jew does not depend on agreement. Appreciating another Jew does not require us to see the world through identical lenses. It asks only that we recognize the shared shoreshbeneath the surface, the common destiny that binds us together even when our paths look different. We do not have to blur distinctions in order to maintain connection.
When differences are handled gently, they enrich us. When they are handled harshly, they wound. Achdus is sustained not by winning debates, but by preserving dignity. It grows when we listen a little longer, judge a little less, and remember that the person before us is more than a position or a label.
Every Jew carries a cheilekElokamimaal, a spark of the Divine worthy of care and respect. When we speak kindly, when we give the benefit of the doubt, when we assume sincerity even where we disagree, we create an environment in which unity can breathe. Disagreement does not have to fracture us. Handled with warmth, it can deepen understanding.
Achdus is often built quietly, through patience, restraint, and small acts of consideration. It is found in choosing compassion over suspicion and connection over distance. When we relate to one another as people rather than categories, unity becomes not an ideal, but a lived reality.
There are many lessons for us in the parshiyos of Seder Shemos, but the need for achdus to bring about geulah is a primary one, especially during these times of darkening clouds as we pine for the geulah and Moshiach.
We don’t always have to agree, but when we disagree, it needs to be with respect and without hatred, as bnei and bnosTorah and not as people devoid of middos and derecheretz. Let us work to make ourselves worthy of having the Shechinah dwell among us, so that Hakadosh Boruch Hu can feel confident enough to bring us all home, surrounding the Bais Hamikdosh, with the coming of Moshiach, speedily in our day.
{Matzav.com}
