Matzav

Israel Expected to Reopen Rafah Crossing Under U.S. Pressure After Netanyahu Talks

Israel is preparing to fully reopen the Rafah Crossing to both outgoing and incoming Gaza residents, with the move expected shortly after Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu returns from Washington later this week, according to an Israeli television report. The step would mark a shift from Israel’s previous position and comes amid intensified pressure from the Trump administration.

Channel 12 reported that Israel intends to proceed with reopening the crossing in both directions, citing an Israeli official who said the government does not want to be portrayed as obstructing Trump’s Gaza peace initiative. “Yerushalayim doesn’t want to be seen as the party that is blocking the implementation of Trump’s Gaza peace plan.”

The issue was a focal point during Netanyahu’s meetings on Monday with President Donald Trump and senior U.S. aides, after which a U.S. official told The Times of Israel that Washington expects the crossing to begin operating for both entry and exit of Gazans in the coming days.

Although the reopening of Rafah was included in the October ceasefire arrangement for Gaza, Israel has until now conditioned its cooperation on the crossing being used solely for departures from the Strip. Egypt has rejected that approach and has kept the crossing shut, contending that Israel’s stance amounts to an effort to thin Gaza’s population by preventing residents from returning.

Facing American pressure, Netanyahu presented the idea of reopening the crossing in both directions to his cabinet last week. The proposal encountered resistance from far-right ministers, some of whom have advocated throughout the war for policies aimed at encouraging Gazans to leave the territory.

{Matzav.com}

Israel’s Total Population Rises to Record 10.178 Million

Israel ended 2025 with a second consecutive year in which more people left the country than arrived, as tens of thousands departed amid ongoing war and domestic tensions, according to figures released Wednesday by the Central Bureau of Statistics.

The CBS reported that more than 69,000 Israelis moved abroad during the year, while the overall migration balance showed a net loss of roughly 20,000 people. This marked the second year in a row of negative migration, following a similar pattern in 2024, when 82,700 Israelis left the country — about 50,000 more than those who arrived.

At the same time, Israel’s population continued to grow, though at one of the slowest rates in the country’s history. The CBS said the population rose by 1.1 percent in 2025, reaching a record 10.178 million residents, matching the growth rate recorded the previous year.

A separate report published Wednesday by the Taub Center for Social Policy Studies painted an even bleaker picture, estimating that population growth stood at just 0.9 percent — the first time Israel’s annual growth rate has fallen below the 1 percent mark.

Immigration figures also declined. According to the CBS, about 24,600 new immigrants arrived in Israel in 2025, a drop of roughly 8,000 compared to 2024. The bureau noted that this number is still higher than the 21,900 immigrants announced earlier this week by the Immigration and Absorption Ministry. Much of the decrease was linked to a sharp fall in arrivals from Russia, after immigration from that country surged following the outbreak of the Russia-Ukraine war in 2022.

During the year, approximately 19,000 Israelis returned after spending extended periods abroad, and another 5,500 people entered the country under family reunification frameworks. Even with those returns, departures significantly outpaced arrivals.

Demographers have pointed out that for most of Israel’s history, immigration exceeded emigration, with notable exceptions during parts of the 1950s and 1980s. The recent reversal, they say, reflects growing unease tied to Israel’s political and security situation.

Analysts have linked the trend to the ongoing war in Gaza, which erupted after the Hamas massacre on October 7, 2023, as well as frustration over the government’s judicial overhaul initiatives, which opponents argue weaken democratic safeguards.

The CBS cautioned that emigration figures are calculated retroactively, as individuals are only classified as emigrants after spending the majority of a year outside the country. As a result, many of those counted in the 2025 data actually left Israel in 2024.

The demographic breakdown released Wednesday showed that Israel’s population of 10.178 million includes 7.771 million Jews and others — a category that encompasses non-Arab Christians and people not classified by religion — accounting for 76.3 percent of residents. Arabs number about 2.147 million, or 21.1 percent, while approximately 260,000 people, around 2.6 percent, are classified as foreigners.

Birth and death figures also contributed to overall growth. Some 182,000 births were recorded during the year, with 76 percent to Jewish mothers and 24 percent to Arab mothers. Meanwhile, about 50,000 residents died in 2025, a slight decline from the 52,000 deaths reported in 2024.

Taken together, these factors resulted in a net population increase of 112,000 people over the past year, according to the CBS, even as migration trends continued to raise concern among policymakers and demographers.

{Matzav.com}

Fury in Chareidi Camp After Supreme Court Freezes Funds to Torah Institutions

A storm erupted across the chareidi political spectrum following an interim ruling by Israel’s Supreme Court ordering a halt to coalition funds earmarked for chareidi educational frameworks that lack state supervision. The order was issued in response to a petition filed by the Yesh Atid faction.

Opposition leader Yair Lapid welcomed the court’s move, arguing that the freeze was unavoidable. “The Supreme Court issued an interim order against the fund transfers for one reason: they are illegal. Even the chareidim are not exempt from the laws of the state. Anyone who wants to receive funds will need to teach the core curriculum and accept proper supervision. You won’t take the money of reservists and taxpayers and use it to preach against conscription and deny young Chareidim the opportunity to gain tools for the job market. The chareidi parties have convinced themselves that they are above the law – they are not, and Yesh Atid will ensure that they are not.”

From within the coalition, the response was swift and blistering. United Torah Judaism chairman MK Moshe Gafni accused the judiciary of launching a direct assault on the Torah world. He said that “the court has declared war on the chareidi public and on Torah institutions.”

Gafni sharply criticized both the process and the substance of the decision. “The Supreme Court demanded a response within a few hours, which is not acceptable even in court, and the funds, which were approved legally, according to the standard procedure and the necessary approvals, were revoked with a sword swipe in half a day,” he said.

He went further, charging the court with ideological bias and disregard for democratic norms. “The judges’ malice to harm the livelihood of teaching staff and the harm to the system as a whole will not be forgiven, and the evil petitioners will not be exempt. It turns out there is no democracy in the State of Israel, and the judges make decisions according to their own views and worldview, with no connection to the subjects themselves or to the professional decisions made by the government and the Knesset. We will do everything to restore the situation to what it was,” Gafni declared.

UTJ leader MK Yitzhak Goldknopf also condemned the ruling, framing it as part of a broader political campaign. He warned that “the Supreme Court’s decision is adding fuel to the fire of the hatred campaign led by Yair Lapid. This is a direct attack on Chareidi children who are innocent of any wrongdoing, and an extension of the budgetary discrimination meant to prevent basic rights for the chareidi sector. We will not be silent in the face of this disgrace, nor will we accept turning hundreds of thousands of students into hostages of absurd petitions for propaganda purposes.”

Goldknopf added that responsibility also rests with the court’s leadership. “It is expected that the President of the Supreme Court, against whom a justified severe complaint was made today, will adopt the remarks of the ombudsman and act to temper the discourse and increase trust in the judiciary. The Supreme Court’s decision is an extension of the divide and increases distrust in the legal system. We will continue to fight with all the tools available to ensure equality for every child in Israel.”

Shas chairman Aryeh Deri raised the issue directly with Prime Minister Netanyahu, who is currently in the United States, and conveyed his party’s fierce objection to the ruling. In an unusually harsh statement, Shas said: “The Supreme Court is out of control, like a reckless driver on a busy road, ruthlessly and unprecedentedly crushing the chareidi public. From stealing the bread of young children to harming Torah learning and the education of tens of thousands of students. There are no judges in Jerusalem, but a dangerous gang of arsonists, who, in their desperate attempt to save their collapsing control, chose to take the chareidi public hostage.”

The Shas statement concluded with a call beyond Israel’s borders: “We call on Jews around the world to raise their voices against this antisemitic torment. The chareidi public will stand firm like a wall against these wicked decisions.”

Criticism also came from within the Knesset’s financial leadership. Finance Committee chairman MK Chanoch Milvitzky accused the court of steadily expanding its reach at the expense of elected institutions. “It is no surprise that the protégée of Judge Amit freezes funds that were legally transferred to chareidi institutions. The Supreme Court is taking more and more powers for itself. Unfortunately, in the meantime, it is playing on an empty field. This will not stop until we decide to rebel against this judicial tyranny. We are already very late.”

The interim order has now placed the funding of numerous chareidi institutions in limbo, setting the stage for an intensified political and legal battle over the future of Torah education and the balance of power between Israel’s courts and its elected branches.

{Matzav.com}

Minn. Somali-Run Daycare Bizarrely Claims Docs Were Stolen

As federal and state investigators continue digging into a sweeping fraud investigation tied to Minnesota’s human services programs, a Minneapolis day care center says it has been hit by a burglary that targeted sensitive records.

According to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, all child care payments to Minnesota were frozen Tuesday night unless the state can demonstrate that the funds are valid. The halted payments totaled $185 million in 2025 alone, federal officials said.

The announcement comes against the backdrop of an expanding investigation in Minneapolis, where authorities say at least $1 billion in fraudulent claims involving food assistance, housing support, and child care subsidies have already been uncovered. Prosecutors have warned that the real total could climb as high as $9 billion. So far, 92 people have been arrested in connection with the alleged schemes, including 80 Somali immigrants.

Amid the heightened scrutiny, Nakomis Day Care Center, which is operated by members of the Somali community, reported a break-in earlier this week. Nasrulah Mohamed, the center’s manager, said a suspect entered the building through a rear kitchen area, damaging a wall before forcing entry into the office on Tuesday.

Mohamed told reporters that the intruder took materials he described as “important documentation,” including records related to children enrolled at the center, employee paperwork, and checkbooks.

He pointed to a widely circulated YouTube video posted last week by Nick Shirley, who visited numerous Minneapolis-area day care centers while examining potential fraud, as a catalyst for the incident. “This is devastating news, and we don’t know why this is targeting our Somali community as one video made by a specific individual made this all happen,” Mohamed said, adding that staff have received “hateful” and “threatening” messages in recent days.

Describing the situation as emotionally draining, Mohamed said, “This is frightening and exhausting,” and dismissed Shirley’s work as “false.”

Nakomis Day Care Center itself did not appear in Shirley’s video, which has surpassed 110 million views online, but the attention generated by the footage has placed Minnesota’s child care system — and the communities connected to it — under intense national scrutiny.

{Matzav.com}

Goldknopf: There Are More Draft-Dodgers In Tel Aviv Than Among Chareidim

At a discussion held this week in the Knesset, Yitzchok Goldknopf, head of United Torah Judaism, addressed questions from twelfth-grade students of Ulpanat Ra’aya in Beit El about the ongoing debate over chareidi enlistment in the Israel Defense Forces.

Goldknopf concluded the meeting by rejecting claims attributed to him in the past regarding Religious Zionism, which were published by Makor Rishon. He said the report was fabricated and caused unnecessary pain. “This was lies and falsehoods, and was not said by me. It’s a shame that bereaved families shed tears over this. Since then, I do not give interviews there, because they falsify things.”

During the exchange, students challenged Goldknopf on why the chareidi community cannot follow the model common in their own families, combining Torah learning with military service. He pushed back, arguing that the issue is broader than the chareidi public alone. “Does no chareidi enlist? Do you know how many secular Israelis do not enlist? The head of the Personnel Directorate said that there are more draft-dodgers in the Tel Aviv area than there are in the entire chareidi community. I have a nephew in Gaza who has still not returned from there.”

Expanding on that point, Goldknopf said the focus on yeshiva students ignores the larger picture of non-enlistment nationwide. “Over 50% of the general public does not enlist. Where are they? [Former Supreme Court President] Aharon Barak once said, ‘Those whose Torah study is their occupation – are forbidden to cease studying.’ Those who do not learn Torah – we do not represent them. Whoever does not study Torah – whatever the law says.”

Goldknopf also emphasized what he described as the central role of Torah study in Jewish continuity, framing it as a national asset rather than a sectorial interest. “We, the nation of Israel, what has held preserved us for thousands of years is Torah study. There is a minority who want to study Torah, and I am speaking about them. When someone turns to [Likud MK Boaz] Bismuth and tells him to enact sanctions against Torah learners, is that Torah? Why punish him?”

Addressing enforcement directly, Goldknopf said that those who neither learn nor serve should be dealt with under the law, but insisted that responsibility lies with the state, not with yeshiva students or their representatives. “Whoever does not learn Torah and does not enlist, activate the enforcement system against him. What do you want from me? Why am I to blame for the fact that the army is not organized? On October 7, as well, it was not organized. If someone does not pay taxes, am I to blame? If you have an issue, enforce it.”

{Matzav.com}

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Defense Minister’s Warning: ‘Prepare for a 10/7-Style Attack In Judea and Samaria’

During a visit on Wednesday to the Judea and Samaria Division, Israeli Defense Minister Yisroel Katz told senior officers to ensure operational readiness for extreme scenarios, directing them to “prepare to respond to a possible October 7th-style attack on communities in Judea and Samaria and along the seamline.”

Katz also reaffirmed that the Israel Defense Forces will maintain a sustained presence throughout Judea and Samaria, stressing that the military will function as a physical barrier separating civilians from terrorist networks. He said the same approach used in Lebanon, Syria, and Gaza applies there as well, with forces remaining on the ground to block the regeneration of terror infrastructure and prevent attacks.

Pointing to recent security gains, the defense minister said counterterror operations conducted over the past year in the camps of Jenin, Tulkarm, and Nur a-Shams led to a dramatic reduction in violence, citing a drop of more than 80% in terrorist activity across Judea and Samaria.

He urged commanders to draw practical conclusions from those results, recommending that the operational model be evaluated for expansion to additional camps and implemented forcefully and consistently over time.

Katz further instructed the military to continue moving ahead with plans to relocate IDF bases to northern Samaria, describing the effort as “it is a historical rectification of both defensive and settlement importance, and that the return to northern Samaria strengthens security and stability in the area.”

{Matzav.com}

NYC Releases First Ever Antisemitism Report On Mayor Adams’ Final Day In Office

On his final day in office, New York City Mayor Eric Adams made public the inaugural annual report of the Mayor’s Office to Combat Antisemitism, formally closing out a year of policy development and enforcement initiatives aimed at addressing antisemitism across the city.

Rabbi Joseph Potasnik, executive vice president of the New York Board of Rabbis, praised the mayor’s approach and leadership. “A famous quotation in the movie The King’s Speech is when King George VI says, ‘I have a voice.’ Thankfully, Mayor Eric Adams has been a courageous voice in combatting the scourge of antisemitism in our city,” he said. “While some were silent, he was not afraid to shout and stand in solidarity with the Jewish community. He would remind us that antisemitism is anti-Christianity, anti-Islam, and anti-all faiths. We will always be grateful.”

The report was issued jointly with the office’s executive director, Moshe Davis, and provides a detailed overview of the structures, policies, and legislative planning put in place since the office was launched in May 2025. It represents the first time a major U.S. city has established a municipal agency devoted solely to combating antisemitism.

Davis said the document is intended to serve both as a record of accomplishments and a practical guide for other cities. “We cannot control world events or eradicate centuries-old hatred, but we can do what government does best: create policy, enforce the law, educate, and speak with moral clarity,” he said. “This report is both a record of what we accomplished and a blueprint for what municipal government ought to do.”

According to the report, the decision to establish the office followed a surge in antisemitic incidents after the October 7, 2023, Hamas attacks on Israel. During early 2025, antisemitic incidents made up the majority of reported hate crimes in New York City, which the administration said underscored the need for a coordinated, citywide response.

The document lays out the administration’s central initiatives, including adoption of the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance working definition of antisemitism, the formation of an interagency task force involving more than 35 city agencies, and the issuance of four executive orders. Those orders addressed antisemitism in city procurement, public communications, coordination with law enforcement, and enhanced protections for houses of worship.

“After the attacks of October 7, 2023, I wasn’t afraid to say what so many New Yorkers were feeling: We were not alright. That was the truth and a call to action,” Adams said in a statement released with the report. “Confronting antisemitism has been a priority for our administration. New York City is home to the largest Jewish community outside of Israel – a point of pride and responsibility.”

Adams said the administration emphasized pairing strong rhetoric with concrete enforcement. “In a few short months, we delivered four executive orders, built an interagency task force dedicated to coordinating responses, and adopted the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance’s working definition of antisemitism,” he said, adding that “there is still more work to be done.”

First Deputy Mayor Randy Mastro said the report captures a whole-of-government response to a growing problem. “We find ourselves at a crossroad in this city with antisemitism raging,” Mastro said. “Such hate cannot go unchecked here, home to the largest Jewish population of any city in the world.”

Beyond policy summaries, the report includes historical analysis of antisemitism in New York City, legal reviews of executive actions and proposed legislation, and a forward-looking plan that outlines legislative goals, citywide training programs, and expanded enforcement tools. Appendices provide the full text of executive orders, mayoral remarks, and draft legislative proposals.

The publication builds on steps taken throughout 2025, including the formal launch of the antisemitism office, creation of the interagency task force, recognition of the IHRA definition, and executive orders barring discriminatory procurement practices targeting Israel and directing the New York City Police Department to review protest-related policies near houses of worship.

Community leaders also welcomed the report’s release. Hindy Poupko, senior vice president of the UJA Federation of New York, said, “We are grateful to Mayor Adams, First Deputy Mayor Randy Mastro, and Executive Director Moshe Davis for their unwavering advocacy and support for Jewish New Yorkers at a moment when the community urgently needed government to act.” She added, “The recent antisemitic attack at Bondi Beach underscores the ongoing need for efforts like those undertaken by MOCA, including strengthened enforcement tools and training, streamlined security infrastructure for synagogues and Jewish institutions, and citywide educational initiatives – all helping to ensure that Jewish New Yorkers feel safe and supported.”

The report’s release comes as the city prepares for a transition in leadership. Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani is scheduled to be sworn into office on New Year’s Day.

{Matzav.com}

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}

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}

‘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}

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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Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee Debates Sanctions on Yeshivos, Fines of Up to NIS 20,000

The Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee continued deliberations Tuesday on the proposed draft law, focusing on enforcement clauses that would allow the imposition of financial sanctions on yeshivos and their officials.

The discussion centered on Sections 26K1 through 26K16 of the bill, which outline mechanisms for financial penalties as part of the law’s implementation. Under the proposal, the director-general of the Israeli Ministry of Defense would be authorized to levy monetary fines if it is determined that at least five percent of a given yeshiva’s students do not meet the “declared condition” — namely, that they are engaged in regular Torah study for a minimum of 45 hours per week, or 40 hours per week in the case of a kollel.

The declaration would be submitted by a senior official of the yeshiva who also serves as an authorized signatory for the nonprofit organization or public-benefit corporation that operates the institution. If a violation is found, the defense ministry’s director-general could impose a fine of up to 20,000 shekels, after granting the official an opportunity to present arguments.

In addition, the bill provides for a fine of 1,500 shekels for each student regarding whom a declaration was submitted that does not comply with the law’s requirements. The proposal further states that an official who is sanctioned more than once, or who is fined in connection with five or more students, would lose the right to submit additional affidavits seeking deferments from military service.

The legislation would also require the director-general of the Defense Ministry to submit a report every six months to the committee detailing the number of sanctions imposed, their total monetary value, and the grounds on which they were issued.

During the session, members of bereaved families addressed the committee with emotional testimony. Mia Moreno, the widow of Lt. Col. Emanuel Moreno, said: “Both of my sons serve in the army. No leniencies apply to me — if they don’t enlist, they go to prison, and they are IDF orphans. How can it be that the State of Israel discriminates between citizens? One of my sons studied for two years in yeshiva, a talmid chacham, and chose to enlist in a regular army unit. There is great value to Torah, but Torah without a connection to the state — I question what its value is.”

Michal Castel-Keidar, the widow of Lt. Col. Dolev Keidar, also spoke at the hearing. “We are not a religious family, but Dolev commanded a company of yeshiva students and did everything he could to ensure they received what they needed,” she said. “How is it not self-evident that everyone who lives in this country must also help defend it?”

{Matzav.com}

Mamdani Taps Controversial Lawyer Who Defended Al Qaeda Terrorist For Top Role: ‘Powerful Advocate’

New York Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani revealed Tuesday that he is selecting Ramzi Kassem, a lawyer whose past work has drawn controversy, to serve as the city’s chief counsel, the highest legal position in City Hall.

Mamdani, who is set to be sworn in on January 1, said Kassem will take on the role of chief counsel. He also announced additional senior legal and policy appointments, naming Steven Banks, who has described himself as a “social justice attorney,” as corporation counsel, and Helen Arteaga as deputy mayor for health and human services.

Kassem previously served in the Biden White House as a senior policy adviser on immigration within the Domestic Policy Council.

His legal career includes acting as lead defense counsel for Ahmed al-Darbi, an al Qaeda operative who in 2014 pleaded guilty before a U.S. military commission to conspiracy related to a terrorist attack on the French oil tanker MV Limburg off the coast of Yemen. The attack killed one civilian and wounded others. Al-Darbi was convicted in 2017 and, in 2018, was transferred by the Trump administration into Saudi Arabian custody.

“While it may not make him whole, my hope is that repatriation at least marks the end of injustice for Ahmed,” Kassem said at the time of the transfer, adding he had “16 long and painful years in captivity.”

More recently, in 2025, Kassem represented Mahmoud Khalil, a Columbia University student and anti-Israel activist who was arrested by ICE over his alleged involvement in leading antisemitic protests on campus. Khalil has since been released, though the case remains unresolved.

In announcing the appointment, Mamdani praised Kassem’s background and values.

“I will turn to Ramzi for his remarkable experience and his commitment to defending those too often abandoned by our legal system,” Mamdani said.

The mayor-elect added that “City Hall will be stronger with him in it, and our work of building a more prosperous city for all will have a powerful advocate.”

“My sincere hope is that New Yorkers who have long felt on the margins of this city, the homeless veteran straining to survive, the patient searching for the care that they need, an immigrant trying to get by will feel that they now have leaders in their corner who understand their struggles and care to fight for them,” Mamdani went on, adding, “That is the city I want to build. The prosperity I intend to deliver and the leadership that has too long been lacking.”

Kassem responded by expressing gratitude for the appointment and a sense of obligation to the city.

He said the role represents a “call of duty to serve the city that I’ve called home, the city that embraced me.”

“I grew up in war-torn countries in the Middle East, authoritarian regimes, and New York City was really my first stable and permanent home,” said Kassem. “This is an opportunity for me to repay that debt. I’ve been trying to repay that debt ever since I came to this country, ever since I immigrated.”

Kassem is also the founder of the Creating Law Enforcement Accountability & Responsibility law clinic, known as CLEAR, which states on its website that its mission is “to support Muslim and all other client, communities, and movements in the New York City area and beyond that are targeted by local, state, or federal government agencies under the guise of national security and counterterrorism.”

{Matzav.com}

“TRAITOR TIM”: Elon Musk Unleashes On Tim Walz With New Nickname Amid Minnesota Fraud Investigations

As investigations widen into multiple alleged fraud schemes involving Minnesota’s social services programs, Gov. Tim Walz is facing mounting criticism from high-profile figures and federal officials.

President Donald Trump has publicly described Minnesota as a “hub of fraudulent money laundering activity,” as his administration and members of Congress move forward with probes into the state’s handling of federally funded aid programs.

Elon Musk weighed in sharply on Tuesday, offering a blunt assessment of the Minnesota governor.

“Traitor Tim Walz,” Musk said in a Tuesday post on X.

Musk’s comment was prompted by a separate social media post that mocked a hypothetical call to personal finance radio host Dave Ramsey, describing Walz’s record as governor.

That post cited claims that Walz raised taxes, depleted billions of dollars from a state budget surplus, and is now under scrutiny over multiple alleged fraud schemes involving Medicaid and other programs intended to feed children.

One of the largest investigations centers on the “Feeding Our Future” scandal, a $250 million scheme that allegedly exploited a federally funded children’s nutrition program overseen by Minnesota during the COVID-19 pandemic.

The scheme took advantage of the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s decision to waive certain Federal Child Nutrition Program requirements, according to investigators.

So far, at least 77 individuals have been charged in connection with that case.

Another major investigation involves Minnesota’s Housing Stability Services Program, which provided Medicaid coverage for housing stabilization services aimed at individuals with disabilities, mental health conditions, and substance-use disorders.

The Justice Department has charged fewer than a dozen people to date in that case, but authorities have indicated that additional charges are expected.

Many of those charged across the various cases are members of Minnesota’s Somali community, a fact that drew national attention after Trump announced in November that he was ending Temporary Protected Status for Somali migrants in the state, which had shielded them from deportation.

On Tuesday, the Department of Homeland Security said it is taking an active role in addressing the alleged misconduct.

“Our investigative agents are conducting a massive operation to identify, arrest, and remove criminals who are defrauding the American people. We will root out this rampant fraud plaguing Minnesota,” the Department of Homeland Security wrote on X.

Despite the growing investigations, state officials have pushed back strongly against claims that fraud has been ignored or enabled at the highest levels.

That defense intensified after a viral video posted Friday by YouTuber Nick Shirley drew widespread attention to alleged misconduct at Minnesota childcare and learning centers.

A spokesperson for Walz responded by saying the governor has spent years working to combat fraud and has taken steps to improve oversight of state-administered programs.

Minnesota Department of Children, Youth and Families Commissioner Tikki Brown echoed that position during a Monday press conference, stating that earlier inspections of the facilities did not uncover fraud and that regulators are now increasing unannounced visits.

“We are aware of a video that’s being circulated that has gained local and national attention about childcare centers in Minnesota,” Brown said. “While we have questions about some of the methods that were used in the video, we do take the concerns that the video raises about fraud very seriously.”

{Matzav.com}

Shirley Associate Says He Filed Criminal Complaint Against Walz Over Daycare Fraud Allegations

An independent journalist whose reporting ignited national attention over alleged misuse of childcare funds in Minnesota returned Tuesday to a Minneapolis facility at the heart of the controversy, this time alongside his researcher and dressed to make a statement.

Nick Shirley and his researcher, identified as David, showed up outside the Quality Learning Center wearing matching sweatshirts emblazoned with the phrase “1-800 FRAUD.” The visit followed the release of Shirley’s widely shared video that raised questions about possible fraud involving state-funded daycare centers.

Photos and video from the visit were later posted on X, showing the pair standing outside the building in sweatshirts that also read “Quality ‘Learing’ Center,” deliberately mirroring a misspelling associated with signage tied to the facility.

Shirley accompanied the post with the caption, “WE OUT HERE LEARIN AND STOPPING FRAUD.”

The return visit came after the daycare’s manager publicly accused Shirley of misrepresenting the business in his original video, saying it was filmed outside normal operating hours and wrongly implied the center was not functioning.

State officials and a daycare manager rejected the fraud allegations earlier in the week, insisting the facility was not closed and was not improperly receiving public funds.

Shirley’s original reporting showed visits to several daycare locations across the state, including the Quality Learning Center, which appeared inactive at the time despite receiving state childcare assistance.

The video quickly gained traction online, drawing praise from figures such as Rep. Mike Lawler of New York, Donald Trump Jr., and Elon Musk, while also prompting pushback from Minnesota officials, including Gov. Tim Walz.

The controversy unfolded against the backdrop of broader criticism facing Walz, as Minnesota authorities have acknowledged that alleged fraud tied largely to social services in Minneapolis — much of it connected to the Somali community — has cost taxpayers at least $1 billion.

During Tuesday’s visit, David told reporters that he had taken legal action against the governor.

“I filed a formal criminal complaint against Tim Walz for violating Minnesota Statute 3.971, Subdivision 9,” David said before confirming he had filed the complaint three to four weeks ago. “So there’s an investigation ongoing, and I think Tim’s going to have a bad day, and he deserves it, because he allowed this fraud.”

He went on to allege political motivations behind the inaction.

“Because he wanted the voting block that the Somalis represent, because they all vote in a block, and it’s 100,000 150,000,” he added. “Who knows how many, but it’s so bad now that when we go to a facility, they’re already screaming, Nick Shirley, Nick Shirley, Nick Shirley!”

{Matzav.com}

IRS Hands Workers Bigger Tax Break For Business Expenses In 2026

Drivers who rely on their personal vehicles for work will see a higher tax break in the coming year, as the federal government updates how much mileage can be deducted on tax returns.

Beginning January 1, the Internal Revenue Service said the standard mileage rate for business travel will rise to 72.5 cents per mile. At the same time, the deduction for medical-related driving will drop slightly to 20.5 cents per mile, while the charitable mileage rate will remain unchanged at 14 cents.

According to the IRS, the latest adjustments are based on “updated cost data and annual inflation adjustments.”

The standard mileage rate is a per-mile figure set by the IRS that taxpayers may use to determine deductible vehicle expenses when using a personal car for work. This method is commonly used by self-employed individuals, freelancers, gig workers, and small business owners. Separate mileage rates also apply to driving for medical purposes, qualifying moves by certain active-duty members of the Armed Forces and members of the intelligence community, and charitable activities.

Under the new schedule, the rate for business use will be 72.5 cents per mile, while medical and qualifying military moving mileage will be set at 20.5 cents per mile. The IRS confirmed that the charitable rate will stay fixed at 14 cents per mile.

These mileage figures apply across vehicle types, including electric vehicles, hybrids, and cars powered by gasoline or diesel. For those driving leased vehicles, the IRS said the standard mileage method must be used for the entire lease term, including any renewals.

The agency explained that the medical and moving mileage rates are calculated based only on expenses that rise with increased driving, such as fuel, oil, and routine maintenance.

Taxpayers are not required to use the standard mileage rate. The IRS noted that filers may instead choose to deduct the actual costs associated with operating their vehicle, if that approach is more advantageous.

{Matzav.com}

World’s Most Contagious Virus Detected At Two Major US Airports

Health officials are warning travelers after a confirmed measles case involving air travel during the busy holiday season, as millions of Americans take to the skies.

The New Jersey Department of Health reported that a passenger who passed through Newark Liberty International Airport was diagnosed with measles after being present in terminals B and C on December 12.

Because measles spreads through the air, officials cautioned that transmission can occur when an infected individual coughs or sneezes, even without direct contact.

Measles virus particles can linger in the air for as long as two hours after an infected person has left an enclosed space, according to public health guidance.

State health authorities urged anyone who believes they may have been exposed, or who is experiencing symptoms, to contact a healthcare provider before going to a doctor’s office, urgent care facility, or emergency room.

“NJDOH is working in collaboration with local health officials on ongoing contact tracing and on efforts to notify people who might have been exposed and to identify additional exposures that may have occurred,” says the release.

Those considered most vulnerable include individuals who are not fully vaccinated against measles or who have never previously contracted the disease, the Department of Health said.

{Matzav.com}

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