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Qatar: No Response from Israel on Gaza Ceasefire Proposal

Yeshiva World News -

The Qatari Foreign Ministry spokesperson, Majed Al-Ansari: “There has been no response from Israel so far regarding the ceasefire proposal in Gaza. The mediators have no choice but to encourage international parties to pressure Israel to accept the deal. There are such communications underway, but no results yet.”

Bismuth Proposes Immediate Draft of Chareidim Without Sanctions, Quotas, or New Legislation

Matzav -

Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee Chairman MK Boaz Bismuth is advancing a dramatic proposal to draft chareidim under a temporary emergency regulation, sidestepping the lengthy legislative process. The outline, revealed by Walla reporter Yehuda Schlesinger, would apply for just one year and allow the IDF to recruit according to its needs—without setting quotas, enacting a new law, or imposing sanctions.

The initiative aims to quickly address the military’s manpower shortage, bypassing what Bismuth sees as an impractical path of passing long-term legislation in the immediate future. Instead, the regulation would function as a stopgap until a more permanent law is crafted in the Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee.

The plan relies on the use of emergency regulations, an uncommon tool within the government, typically reserved for urgent security situations. These powers permit actions beyond what current law provides and eliminate the need for full Knesset approval.

At the same time, all enforcement measures against the chareidi public would be frozen. This includes halting the arrests of draft evaders, ending the practice of cutting yeshiva funding, and suspending all administrative and budgetary penalties.

Bismuth is expected to present the proposal in meetings with both chareidi representatives and reserve officers. According to Walla, the chareidi side has accepted the principle of a regulation that allows enlistment based solely on the army’s requirements, but they refused to agree to specific numbers. Their approval is contingent on a complete freeze of sanctions throughout the regulation’s one-year term.

The draft outline does not spell out how large numbers of soldiers would actually be recruited. Instead, it draws on understandings reached with chareidi political parties prior to Israel’s strike on Iran. The only guideline included is the phrase “according to the army’s needs,” with no clear mechanism for implementation or oversight.

In addition, the temporary regulation makes clear that no punitive measures will be imposed on chareidim who do not enlist. There will be no legal enforcement, no arrests, and no withdrawal of financial support from those who choose not to report for service.

{Matzav.com Israel}

IDF, Shin Bet Kill Senior Hamas Figures in Gaza Operations

Yeshiva World News -

The IDF said joint operations with Shin Bet over the past month in Gaza eliminated numerous terrorists, including senior Hamas and Nukhba figures such as Taleb Abu Atiya, a commander involved in the October 7 infiltration, and a Hamas Zeitoun Battalion deputy platoon commander linked to ambushes, attacks on Israeli soldiers, and recruitment efforts.

Trump Says He Would Consider Reopening ‘Insane Asylums’ as Part of Crime Crackdown

Yeshiva World News -

President Donald Trump suggested he is open to reviving long-shuttered “insane asylums” as part of his sweeping anti-crime agenda, reviving a controversial debate over mental health care and public safety. In an interview with the Daily Caller released Monday, reporter Reagan Reese asked Trump whether the federal government should reopen psychiatric institutions for people with “serious mental illness.” “Yeah, I would,” Trump replied, pointing to New York and California as examples of states that once had large asylum systems. “They released them all into society because they couldn’t afford it. You know, it’s massively expensive. But we had, they were all over New York. I remember when I was growing up, Creedmoor… Bellevue… and they were closed by a certain governor. They released them into society, and that’s what you have. It’s a rough situation.” Many of those institutions, including Bellevue, were transformed into psychiatric hospitals or repurposed facilities after widespread criticism of abusive conditions and mistreatment of patients. Trump’s comments follow his recent push to remove homeless encampments from major cities. Earlier this month, he ordered the immediate clearing of Washington, D.C. encampments and deployed the National Guard after assuming control of the city’s police department. “The Homeless have to move out, IMMEDIATELY,” Trump wrote in a Truth Social post at the time. “We will give you places to stay, but FAR from the Capital.” (YWN World Headquarters – NYC)

Israel Man Beaten And Bloodied By “Free Palestine” Mob At Santa Monica Pier In Los Angeles

Yeshiva World News -

An Israeli man was violently assaulted by a group of roughly 20 pro-Palestinian demonstrators at Santa Monica Pier in Los Angeles on Sunday, in an attack he says targeted him simply for being Jewish. The incident is the latest in a wave of violent confrontations tied to the war in Gaza spilling onto U.S. streets. The victim, 24-year-old Ariel Yaakov Marciano, moved to the United States earlier this year. He told Ynet he had come to Los Angeles for his cousin’s bar mitzvah when he and another Israeli, visiting from Las Vegas, were identified by demonstrators waving Palestinian and Mexican flags. Marciano, who wore a Star of David necklace, said the group recognized them as Israeli after hearing them converse in Hebrew. “One of them hit me from behind on the head, and I started bleeding,” Marciano recounted. “Others pushed me, tore the chain from my neck and when I pushed one attacker, they all jumped on me.” A video he posted to Instagram shows him bloodied and shaken, pleading with Israelis in Los Angeles to join him at the pier, saying he had been ambushed. Marciano said that as he attempted to make his way to a police station, shouting “God bless Israel,” he was pepper sprayed. He added that one assailant brandished a knife and warned him, “You’re lucky I don’t stab you.” He expressed concern for his companion’s family, noting that one of the man’s children suffers from muscular dystrophy and uses a wheelchair. “I don’t know what happened to them,” Marciano said. Marciano claimed police nearby did not intervene, saying the crowd was too large to control. “I can’t blame them,” he added, though his remarks highlight growing frustration among Jewish residents over perceived inaction from authorities. The assault comes just a week after another reported attack on Israelis in Los Angeles. In that incident, several men walking home from shul near Wilshire and Crescent Heights were confronted by a group demanding they chant “Free Palestine.” One man, Eyal Dahan—whose two sons serve in the IDF—replied, “Long live the IDF.” He was punched, his kippah knocked to the ground, and another man in his group was slashed on the hand. Dahan later identified one of Marciano’s alleged attackers as the same individual who assaulted him. “They’re paid $150 for three hours to protest. They’re very violent,” Dahan said. Marciano’s  cousin, Guy Illouz, was abducted by Hamas from the Nova music festival on October 7 and later killed in captivity. Another cousin was killed during Israel’s 2014 Operation Protective Edge. Yet Marciano insists he will not hide his Jewish identity. “I lost one cousin in this war and another in Operation Protective Edge. I won’t take off my Star of David,” he said. In a bizarre twist, hours after the attack, Marciano was dining in a restaurant when a stranger approached him and returned his stolen necklace. “He was a Chinese man who told me, ‘Here, this is yours.’ I don’t know how he found me, but the chain came back. I will keep wearing it.” (YWN World Headquarters – NYC)

Trump: Israel No Longer Commands Congress Like It Once Did

Matzav -

In an interview with the Daily Caller on Friday, portions of which were made public Monday, President Donald Trump spoke about a noticeable decline in support for Israel among younger Republicans and lamented how Israel’s once-formidable clout in Congress has weakened.

During the conversation, reporter Reagan Reese pointed to data from a Pew Research Center survey in March showing that half of Republicans under 50 now view Israel negatively, a jump from 35% just three years earlier.

Trump replied, “Yeah I’m aware of it. So, Israel is amazing… Look, nobody has done more for Israel than I have.”

He highlighted his administration’s stance toward Iran and reaffirmed his consistent backing of Israel. At the same time, he noted his astonishment at how the strength of pro-Israel advocacy has diminished. “Israel had the strongest lobby in Congress… Today, it doesn’t have that strong a lobby. It’s amazing.”

Trump attributed much of the change to the growing influence of left-wing members of Congress. “You have AOC plus three, and you have all these lunatics… They’ve changed it,” he said, referring to Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and her allies in “The Squad,” who are frequently outspoken against Israel.

He also brought up the October 7 Hamas attack, describing it as “a truly horrible day,” and condemned those who attempt to deny it.

“And you know, you have people that deny it ever happened, they’re deniers. You have people that deny the Holocaust ever happened. So, they’re gonna have to get that war over with. But it is hurting Israel. There’s no question about it. They may be winning the war, but they’re not winning the world of public relations, you know, and it is hurting them. But Israel was the strongest lobby 15 years ago that there has ever been, and now it’s, it’s been hurt, especially in Congress,” he said.

{Matzav.com}

Gold Hits Record $3,578 As Global Markets Eye Trump Tariff Ruling

Yeshiva World News -

The price of gold hit a new record and world shares were mostly lower on Tuesday after U.S. markets were closed for the Labor Day holiday. The spot price of gold, traditionally a haven for investors in times of uncertainty, climbed as high as $3,578.40 per ounce early Tuesday. That surpassed an intraday record of $3,509.90 an ounce set in April. It later slipped back a bit, gaining 1.1% to $3,549.10 per ounce. President Donald Trump’ s challenges to the U.S. Federal Reserve and other institutions have shaken faith in the U.S. dollar, prompting a shift into other investment options such as gold and silver, analysts say. The price of silver was up 1.8% at $41.46 an ounce on Tuesday, surpassing $40 an ounce for the first time since 2011. “That’s not just a price tick; it’s the market’s confession that faith in fiat is wobbling,” Stephen Innes of SPI Asset Management said in a commentary. He noted that the price of the precious metal has nearly doubled since early 2023. Investors have been shifting away from U.S. Treasuries for years but that shift has accelerated this year due to worries over U.S. government debt, trade tensions and geopolitical risks, said Ipek Ozkardeskaya, a senior analyst at Swissquote Bank. In early European trading, Germany’s DAX dropped 1.1% to 23,767.08, while the CAC 40 in Paris was nearly unchanged at 7,707.09. In Britain, the FTSE 100 declined 0.4% to 9,158.78. The future for the S&P 500 lost 0.5% while that for the Dow Jones Industrial Average was 0.4% lower. Since Wall Street was shuttered on Monday, analysts said traders also were still focusing on the potential implications of Friday’s ruling by a U.S. court against Trump’s higher tariffs on many countries around the world. In Tokyo, the Nikkei 225 picked up 0.3% to 42,310.49 as investors snapped up bargains following recent losses. An auction of 10-year Japanese government bonds was expected to test the stability of that market. Markets in China fell back from recent gains. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng shed 0.5% to 25,496.55, while the Shanghai Composite index lost 0.5% to 3,858.13. South Korea’s Kospi advanced 0.9% to 3,172.35, while the S&P/ASX 200 in Australia gave up 0.3% to 8,900.60. India’s Sensex rose 0.4% and the SET in Bangkok gained 0.4%. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit ruled Friday, 7-4, that Trump went too far when he declared national emergencies to justify imposing sharply higher import taxes on almost every country on earth. The ruling largely upheld a May decision by a specialized federal trade court in New York, but it rejected part of that ruling striking down the tariffs immediately, giving the Trump administration time to appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court. Updates on U.S. durable goods orders, manufacturing, jobless claims and other data that may provide insights into how the economy is holding up under the higher tariffs are due this week. European manufacturing data and a preliminary consumer price index reading for the countries using the euro also are on the agenda. In other dealings early Tuesday, U.S. benchmark crude oil gained $1.86 to $65.87 per barrel. Brent crude, the international standard, advanced $1.22 to $69.37 per barrel. The U.S. dollar rose to 148.54 Japanese yen from 147.18 yen. The euro fell to $1.1635 […]

Member Of ‘Genocide Scholars’ Org: “Members With An Agenda Forced Israel Resolution, Used Unreliable Data”

Yeshiva World News -

A member of the International Association for “Genocide Scholars” (IAGS) has accused the organization’s leadership of pushing through a resolution labeling Israel’s actions as genocide without holding the group’s customary debate and using unreliable data, the Times of Israel (TOA) reported The International Association of “Genocide Scholars” (IAGS) passed a resolution on Monday claiming that Israel’s actions in Gaza meet the legal definition of genocide. In response, Israel’s Foreign Ministry called the resolution “disgraceful.” “The statement of the International Association of Genocide Scholars (IAGS) is an embarrassment to the legal profession and to any academic standard,” a ministry statement said. “It is entirely based on Hamas’s campaign of lies and the laundering of those lies by others. The IAGS did not do the most basic task in research, which is to verify the information. It even manages to misrepresent what the ICJ has said.” “Above all, the IAGS has set a historic precedent – for the first time, ‘Genocide Scholars’ accuse the very victim of genocide—despite Hamas’s attempted genocide against the Jewish people, murdering 1,200 people, raping women, burning families alive, and declaring its goal of killing every Jew.” “Disgraceful,” the statement concluded. Sara Brown, a genocide scholar and an IAGS member for over 10 years, is also the American Jewish Committee’s regional director in San Diego. She said the resolution marked a troubling break from the association’s standard practice, with IAGS leaders issuing the resolution without holding a prior discussion on the matter. “The content of the resolution and the way it was forced through speak to an embarrassing absence of professionalism,” Brown said, noting that the measure relied on groups such as Amnesty International that broadened the definition of genocide to encompass Israel. Internal emails seen by TOA show that IAGS leadership initially promised a town hall to discuss the resolution but scrapped the plan days later. The association also barred dissenting opinions from its listserv and refused to disclose the names of those who drafted the text. Only 129 of the association’s roughly 500 members voted, Brown said. While members were notified in advance, many abstained because they did not feel qualified to weigh in. “That favors those activists seeking to advance a false narrative about Israel,” she said. Brown also raised concerns about the fact that the association recently expanded its membership, with almost no qualifications to become a member. Formerly comprised of mainly scholars, the association now includes activists and artists. “The appearance is that this was a unanimous vote on behalf of the entirety of the association. It was not, and they refused to have a transparent, critical discussion,” she said. “The leadership, in my opinion, had an agenda.” The result, Brown warned, is that the public will believe that “genocide experts agree.'” “No, we don’t, and we were deliberately silenced.” (YWN Israel Desk—Jerusalem)

Trump Said Weighing Plan To Pay Gazans To Leave, Put Strip Under US-Run Trusteeship

Matzav -

The Trump administration is reviewing a proposal for Gaza’s reconstruction that would see the territory placed under American oversight for a decade while paying about one-quarter of its population to move elsewhere, according to a report released Sunday.

The Washington Post, citing unnamed officials involved in the process, said the framework was intended “to make real” US President Donald Trump’s stated goal of transforming Gaza into the “Riviera of the Middle East.”

Under the blueprint, Gaza would fall under a US-managed trusteeship for roughly 10 years, “until a reformed and deradicalized Palestinian Polity is ready to step in its shoes,” according to the Post. The plan is outlined in a 38-page presentation for the so-called GREAT Trust — short for Gaza Reconstitution, Economic Acceleration and Transformation.

During this decade-long period, Gaza would be redeveloped into a lucrative hub for tourism and technology manufacturing, funded by both government and private-sector investors. Planned “mega-construction projects” include factories for electric cars, large-scale data centers, luxury beachfront hotels, and high-rise apartment towers.

At the same time, Palestinians would be offered incentives to leave the Strip. Those opting to relocate — either temporarily or permanently — would receive “a $5,000 cash payment and subsidies to cover four years of rent elsewhere, as well as a year of food,” according to the report.

The projections in the proposal estimate that roughly 25 percent of Gaza’s more than two million residents would accept relocation. Of those, about 75 percent — around 375,000 individuals — would likely move away permanently.

The financial calculations underpinning the proposal were prepared by a Washington-based team from the Boston Consulting Group, which has also worked with the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation backed by both the US and Israel.

The consultants forecast that investors could see returns quadruple their initial outlays, with an estimated $100 billion in investments over the 10-year period. Their presentation also recommended further reducing expenses by encouraging greater emigration among Gazans and tapping into international aid.

According to the proposal, once Gaza “is demilitarized and deradicalized, the Trust will transfer authorities to an independent Palestinian Polity,” which in turn would “join the Abraham Accords” — the normalization pacts Trump facilitated between Israel and several Arab nations.

Neither the White House nor the State Department provided comment to the Post. BCG, for its part, said the trust plan was never formally authorized and that two senior partners involved in the modeling were later dismissed.

A source familiar with the project told the paper the draft was completed in April “with only minimal change since then.” The source also emphasized the framework is not “prescriptive, but is exploring what is possible.” The Financial Times first disclosed parts of the plan back in July.

The revelations come on the heels of Trump’s Wednesday meeting with top figures — including Secretary of State Marco Rubio, envoy Steve Witkoff, former UK prime minister Tony Blair, and Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner — to deliberate on ending the war in Gaza and planning for the future.

According to The Sunday Times, Blair — who has been advancing a postwar vision for Gaza for several months — told Trump at the gathering that residents “were desperate for new leadership and dreamt of becoming the next Dubai,” though the outlet did not identify its sources.

{Matzav.com}

DELUSIONAL: Republican Curtis Sliwa Likes His Chances In Crowded NYC Mayor’s Race

Yeshiva World News -

Curtis Sliwa, the colorful creator of New York City’s Guardian Angels anti-crime patrol group, ran for mayor four years ago and wound up losing to Democrat Eric Adams by almost 40 percentage points. This time around, the red beret-wearing Republican believes the math may be more in his favor. Even in an overwhelmingly blue city, the 71-year-old hopes that with three polarizing candidates splitting the Democratic vote, he can maintain the support he secured last time while picking up backers from the other side of the aisle with his message that he’s best positioned to fight crime. Zohran Mamdani, a 33-year-old state lawmaker and democratic socialist, is the Democratic nominee after upsetting former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo in the primary. Cuomo, who resigned as governor four years ago after harassment allegations, is running as an independent. Meanwhile, Adams, wounded by a federal bribery case and the Trump administration’s extraordinary intervention to drop the charges, skipped the primary altogether and is instead campaigning for a second term as an independent. “Zohran obviously is very unique. He’s way to the left, but then again, Cuomo and Adams, listen to the way they talk. They’re Zohran-lite,” Sliwa told The Associated Press. “I will be the alternative.” Even if he doesn’t win, Sliwa might play the spoiler. While some Mamdani critics have urged Sliwa to drop out and throw his support behind someone with a better chance of beating the Democratic nominee, Sliwa says that isn’t happening. ‘Bang, bang, bang, bang, bang’ Sliwa is hoping to ride to victory on crime, an issue that helped Adams, a former police captain, win the pandemic-era 2021 election. This year’s Democratic primary was dominated by discussions of New York’s high cost of living, but Sliwa believes crime is “beginning to creep up and almost be equal” to other issues voters care about. Sliwa’s Guardian Angels — a band of beret-wearing citizens — patrolled graffitied subway cars and the rough-and-tumble streets starting in the late 1970s, when crime was rampant. The city, by every measurable metric, has gotten much safer. So far this year, the city has had its fewest shooting incidents and shooting victims in decades. Crime is down this year in nearly every category, according to police. But in Sliwa’s telling, crime is “exploding.” In the Bronx, “blood is pouring from the streets.” The “madams and pimps” on the outskirts of Queens need to be arrested and the “Johns” should be named and shamed. When women ride the subway, they get “perved on,” Sliwa said. If the crime stats won’t paint the picture, Sliwa is happy to. As Sliwa spoke with a small gaggle of journalists on a street corner at a recent campaign stop, he illustrated an argument about the statistics by forming his hand into a gun — a “9 millimeter,” he said — and pointed it at his surprised spokesperson. “Bang, bang, bang, bang, bang!” he said. In another interview, he recounted how, in 1992, he was shot multiple times in what prosecutors later said was an attempted mob hit. Sliwa had been blasting Gambino crime family boss John Gotti on the radio. The mob boss’s son, John “Junior” Gotti, was charged with ordering the shooting, but multiple juries deadlocked and prosecutors eventually gave up the case. ‘Still trying, still striving’ Sliwa, like President Donald Trump, has […]

WhatsApp’s New Upcoming Feature Lets Anyone Find You Without Your Phone Number

Matzav -

WhatsApp is preparing a significant update that will allow people to connect with others using usernames rather than phone numbers, a change that mirrors the approach of Telegram and similar platforms. The capability was first noticed in the Android beta version 2.25.24.22 and is anticipated to be released more widely in the near future.

This adjustment is expected to reshape how users interact on WhatsApp, making it possible to begin chats without disclosing a phone number while still preserving the app’s hallmark encryption and privacy protections.

Each user will be able to create a distinct username, which must include at least one letter, follow a minimum length rule, and comply with WhatsApp’s formatting guidelines. These requirements are designed to avoid duplication, impersonation, or confusion between accounts. People can choose to display their username openly or keep it private, but once created, usernames will remain searchable within WhatsApp.

The new function will appear in the chat tab, where a username can be typed into a designated search bar. WhatsApp will then scan its directory for potential matches, even when the searched individual isn’t saved as a contact. If a match is found, the profile name and photo (when visible) will appear, letting the user open a chat immediately without needing a phone number. All conversations started this way will operate like normal WhatsApp threads, including support for media files, documents, voice notes, and complete message history—while staying fully end-to-end encrypted.

To give users more control over their privacy, WhatsApp will introduce a “Username Key.” This unique code must be provided before someone can send a first message. Even if a username is discovered, no contact can be initiated unless the person has this key. The feature is optional, functioning like advanced privacy settings seen on other social platforms such as Facebook and Instagram.

Using a username will not be compulsory, as those who prefer the traditional phone-number system can continue as usual. To limit misuse and spam, WhatsApp will employ monitoring tools that identify suspicious behavior, automatically blocking and reporting accounts that engage in unwanted messaging in violation of its policies.

Although the feature has not yet been officially launched, its presence in beta testing signals that it is nearing completion and could be introduced to all WhatsApp users in the months ahead.

{Matzav.com}

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