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Taiwan Deploys Explosive Barriers Near Taipei Amid China Drills
Malaysia Renews Search for Missing Flight MH370 More Than a Decade Later
WH’s Leavitt Urges Senate GOP to Scrap 60‑Vote Filibuster
Trump: California Tops Minnesota in Fraud, Calling Both States “Crooked”
Yemen’s UAE-Backed STC Begins Troop Withdrawal from Hadramout
Sydney Pauses NYE Fireworks to Honor Jewish Community, Bondi Massacre Victims
India Tests Two Indigenous Pralay Missiles in Rapid Succession
Hundreds Attend Funeral of Bangladesh’s First Female PM Khaleda Zia
Russia: Drone Carrying Explosives Shot Down Near Putin’s Residence
Maklev Slams Temple Mount Activists: “They Have Blood on Their Hands”
MK Uri Maklev, chairman of United Torah Judaism, delivered a sharp rebuke Tuesday night against organizations promoting Jewish ascent to the Har Habayis, saying that such actions violate broad halachic and public consensus and directly fuel deadly unrest.
Maklev’s remarks were made during a meeting of the Knesset Finance Committee, convened to discuss recognition of nonprofit organizations for tax benefits under Section 46 of the Israel Tax Authority. His comments followed the appearance, on the list of candidate organizations, of an association involved in Temple Mount activity.
In forceful comments, Maklev said that ascending the Har Habayis represents a departure from accepted halachic and communal norms, stressing that the overwhelming majority of the chareidi public refrains from going there in accordance with the unequivocal prohibition issued by all chief rabbis. He added that the halachic ban is one of the few issues that unites most of Israel’s religious public.
Turning to security implications, Maklev warned that such visits are inherently provocative and lead directly to bloodshed. “Every time people go up to the Har Habayis, turmoil erupts, and Jewish blood is spilled like water,” he said.
He went on to level personal criticism at Har Habayis activists, declaring: “Those who went up to the Har Habayis and caused the disturbances — they have blood on their hands. How many Jews were murdered because of this?”
Maklev also rejected claims of sovereignty tied to escorted visits, arguing that an ascent carried out under the protection of hundreds of police officers does not reflect genuine sovereignty. Instead, he said, it only stirs unnecessary agitation with deadly consequences.
{Matzav.com}
Standing With Holocaust Survivors Now and Always
MENTAL HEALTH CRISIS: Record One in Three Israelis Now Needs Professional Mental Health Support, Survey Finds
Big Apple Hate: Mamdani Inauguration Committee Member Praised Tearing Down Hostage Posters
New York City Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani is facing mounting criticism after it emerged that his inaugural committee includes a senior activist from the Democratic Socialists of America who previously praised individuals caught tearing down posters of Israeli hostages.
The activist, Alvaro Lopez, a DSA electoral organizer, reacted in November 2023 to a post on X about a New York Post cover story showing two women ripping down hostage posters on Manhattan’s Upper West Side. Responding to the incident — during which one of the women cursed a passerby and shouted “[Curse] you, [Curse] Israel” — Lopez wrote: “All I see are heroes.”
The comment drew sharp backlash at the time and has now resurfaced following Lopez’s appointment to Mamdani’s inaugural committee.
The episode is not an isolated one. In October 2023, Lopez accused Ritchie Torres of complicity in violence, writing in another X post that the congressman had “Palestinian children’s blood on your hands.” In the same post, Lopez asked, “What’s your asking price from APAIC [sic] ?” — a reference to American Israel Public Affairs Committee.
Mamdani himself is a member of the DSA, an organization that came under widespread condemnation after promoting a pro-Palestinian rally in Times Square a day after Hamas terrorists murdered 1,200 people in Israel on October 7, 2023 — the first of several such demonstrations.
Lopez is one of several figures with records of extreme anti-Israel rhetoric who were selected for the mayor-elect’s inaugural committee. Mamdani has also appointed Ms. Rachel — the online persona of Rachel Griffin-Accurso — who previously appeared in a children’s video with Motaz Azzaiz, a Palestinian activist who had posted “May God curse the Jews themselves” on social media.
Griffin-Accurso has long been accused by critics of echoing Hamas messaging in content aimed at young children, while failing to address the suffering of Israeli children victimized during the October 7 Hamas attacks.
Also serving on the committee is Beth Miller, political director of Jewish Voice for Peace, who previously accused Israeli Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu of “pledging to commit war crimes against Palestinians in Gaza” following Israel’s announced response to the October 7 massacre.
Separately, Mamdani’s transition team has already been rocked by scandal. His head of appointments, Catherine Almonte Da Costa, resigned last week after past antisemitic tweets referring to “money hungry Jews” resurfaced.
Responding to the renewed scrutiny, Lopez told New York Post that he did not remember making the X post and said, “It’s possible I was talking about the people on the posters. It was a really chaotic time.”
{Matzav.com}
U.S. Jobless Claims Fall to 199,000 Despite Signs of Labor Market Weakness
‘Learing’ Center Finally Fixes Misspelled Sign
A Minneapolis daycare that unexpectedly became famous for a spelling error on its front sign has now fixed the mistake, but the episode has only intensified questions about oversight and accountability in Minnesota’s child care system amid lingering fraud concerns.
The business, known as the Quality “Learing” Center, drew national attention after a misspelling on its sign circulated widely online and became a symbol of broader skepticism about state monitoring of daycare providers. The error was corrected Tuesday morning, when a sticker was added to amend the name to “Quality Learning Center.”
Despite the correction, not all mistakes were addressed. The street name displayed beneath the sign still read “Nicolet” rather than the correct “Nicollet,” leaving another visible inaccuracy in place.
Manager Ibrahim Ali told the New York Post on Monday that the original typo was the fault of the center’s graphic designer and said it would be fixed.
The sign was changed just one day after independent journalists visited the location while probing allegations of fraud involving daycare providers across Minneapolis. Critics had pointed to the misspelling as an ironic warning sign for a facility responsible for early childhood education.
State officials said the daycare had shut down. The Minnesota Department of Children, Youth, and Families stated that the center closed last week because of space limitations, and Commissioner Tikki Brown said Monday that authorities found no evidence of fraud linked to the operation.
What reporters observed on site appeared to conflict with those assurances. On Monday afternoon, the building appeared active, with cars pulling into the lot and children arriving. At least 20 children were seen entering the center, despite official claims that it was no longer operating.
The situation also revived memories of an infamous 2015 video from an earlier Minnesota child care fraud scandal. According to the Daily Mail, that footage showed adults posing as students to artificially boost enrollment figures at state-funded education programs.
The video emerged during investigations into fraudulent billing schemes and became emblematic of how lax oversight allowed providers to collect public funds for services that were never actually delivered.
Its reappearance alongside the “Learing” Center controversy has deepened public doubt that Minnesota has fully resolved the systemic weaknesses exposed nearly a decade ago, particularly as officials once again insist there is no wrongdoing.
Federal authorities, meanwhile, have highlighted recent enforcement actions tied to other fraud cases in the state. FBI Director Kash Patel announced on X that the bureau has been aggressively pursuing a major fraud network connected to Feeding Our Future in Minnesota.
“The FBI has toppled a $250 million fraud network that targeted vulnerable children and exposed a large-scale money laundering operation,” Patel said.
“The investigation exposed sham vendors, shell companies and large-scale money laundering tied to the Feeding Our Future network,” he wrote. “The case led to 78 indictments and 57 convictions.”
The daycare’s misspelled sign first caught widespread attention after it appeared in a viral video by independent journalist Nick Shirley, who visited multiple Minneapolis daycare centers while examining alleged misuse of taxpayer funds.
Shirley said some of the centers he reviewed had received hundreds of millions of dollars in payments without legitimate business activity to support those sums.
{Matzav.com}
Poll: 0% Say Eric Adams Will Be Remembered as One of NYC’s Best Mayors; 70% Disapprove of His Performance
Only 28 Years in Prison for Romema Terrorists: Prosecution: “The Fact That No One Was Murdered Is A Neis!”
Matzav Inbox: The AI Panic Is Getting Old
Dear Matzav Inbox,
Every few years, the same script gets dusted off, the same alarms are sounded, and the same hysteria is repackaged. This time, the hashkafah villain of the hour is AI.
Suddenly, we are told it is uniquely dangerous, spiritually radioactive, a threat to the very fabric of Yiddishkeit. People are “yelling.” Flyers are warning. Speeches are thundering. And once again, common sense is nowhere to be found.
Give me a break.
AI is not some supernatural force of tumah. It is a tool. A powerful one, yes—but a tool nonetheless. And if we’re being honest, it is no more inherently treif than a smartphone, the internet, email, or a laptop. All of those can be used for garbage—or for tremendous good. The difference has never been the technology. The difference is the user.
Let’s not pretend we haven’t been here before.
When phones became smart, we were told they would destroy kedusha. When internet access became widespread, it was described as an open sewer. When texting appeared, people warned it would end normal human communication. And yet—somehow—Klal Yisroel survived. Not only survived, but adapted. Guardrails were built. Filters were installed. גבולות were drawn. Life went on.
Were the dangers real? Of course. Are they real with AI? Absolutely. No one is denying that. But danger does not equal prohibition, and fear does not equal wisdom.
If “it can be misused” is the standard, then we need to ban phones, cars, credit cards, microphones, printing presses, and pens. Kefirah can be written by a machine, but it can also be written by a human being. The כלי is not the problem. The lack of yiras Shamayim is.
There is a difference between responsible guidance and panic. Between caution and absolutism. Between leadership and yelling.
We do not need screaming proclamations that everything new is treif by default. We need measured voices, thoughtful boundaries, and adults who trust other adults to act responsibly within halacha.
A little perspective would go a long way. A chill pill wouldn’t hurt either.
Sincerely,
A tired observer of tech panic cycles
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