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Biden Says ‘We’re The United States Of Amerigotit’ In Latest Gaffe At DC Conference

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At a conference in Washington, D.C., Joe Biden delivered a speech that quickly drew attention for a moment in which he stumbled over his words, declaring, “We’re the United States of Amerigotit” while calling on the audience to stay energized in the activism sphere. The line emerged as he urged attendees to “continue the fight” for equality.

Before the gaffe, Biden told the crowd that perseverance was essential, emphasizing resilience and identity. “We just have to get up. As long as we keep the faith … and remember who the hell we are. We’re the United States of Amerigotit, that’s who we are! We’re the U.S.!” he shouted, the mispronunciation instantly ricocheting across social media.

Later in the speech, Biden argued that political engagement was essential in pushing back against what he described as assaults on democratic principles. “All of us are dismayed by the present state of the union,” he said as he escalated his rhetoric. He pressed the crowd not to lose momentum: “This is no time to give up. It’s time to get up. Get up and fight back. Get up. Continue to fight. And what’s the fight all about? … it’s about protecting the Constitution. It’s about protecting the Constitution.”

His remarks soon turned toward President Donald Trump and those aligned with him, whom Biden accused of undermining national unity and derailing the movement for equal rights. He warned that “they’re trying to turn it into something scary, something sinister,” while insisting their efforts were rooted in division. He continued by framing the struggle in moral terms: “But folks, it’s really not about anything that’s all that complicated. At its core, it’s about making every American given the opportunity to be treated with basic decency, dignity, and respect they all deserve. That’s what every single American deserves, every American.”‘

WATCH:

{Matzav.com}

Somali Illegal Migrant Fraudster Photographed With Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, Rep. Ilhan Omar

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A Somali immigrant long accused of fraud — and photographed over the years alongside prominent Minnesota Democrats such as Gov. Tim Walz and Rep. Ilhan Omar — was arrested Friday as part of President Trump’s intensified immigration enforcement campaign.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents apprehended Abdul Dahir Ibrahim and transferred him to the McCook detention facility in Nebraska, a site the Department of Homeland Security informally refers to as the “Cornhusker Clink,” according to federal records.

Ibrahim has been the subject of removal orders since 2004 and carries a lengthy criminal record, Fox News reported. Before ever setting foot in the United States, he had already been convicted in Canada for asylum and welfare fraud, earning fines and a one-year probation sentence.

While living in the U.S., Ibrahim amassed a dozen traffic and parking violations and frequently appeared in photographs with influential figures in Minnesota political circles. DHS publicly posted images of Ibrahim standing with Walz, Omar, and former Minneapolis mayoral candidate Omar Fateh, noting the connections in a blunt statement: “Criminal illegal alien, Abdul Dahir Ibrahim has been linked to Minnesota’s top sanctuary politicians.”

The agency’s message continued, “Ibrahim was convicted in Canada for Asylum and Welfare Fraud prior to his entry into the United States. On April 3, 2004, an immigration judge ordered Ibrahim removed, citing the significant amount of fraud associated with him. ‘Bye-bye, Abdul.’”

Among the photos DHS released was one showing Ibrahim handcuffed and being escorted by federal officers into an unmarked vehicle.

Fox News also disclosed that Fateh, a Somali-American socialist, submitted a letter of recommendation on Ibrahim’s behalf during immigration proceedings. Ibrahim had entered the United States through New York in 1995 after Canada deported him, but his subsequent asylum claims collapsed under scrutiny. In one rejected filing, he attempted to present his sister and her five children as his own wife and kids — a fabrication that prompted the immigration judge to note Ibrahim’s “complete lack of credibility.”

Despite the earlier removal order, Ibrahim later obtained temporary protected status, shielding him from deportation for a decade. His application for an extension remains pending. Last month, however, Trump announced an end to TPS protections for Somali nationals altogether.

ICE has since launched a sweeping enforcement push in Minnesota, fueled by mounting alarm over widespread fraud involving Somali nationals in the state, a crackdown under which Ibrahim’s arrest became one of the first publicly revealed cases.

{Matzav.com}

Supreme Court Takes On Explosive Showdown Over Trump’s Birthright Citizenship Order

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The Supreme Court has agreed to wade into one of the most consequential immigration battles of President Donald Trump’s second term, announcing Friday that it will review whether his executive order limiting birthright citizenship passes constitutional muster. The order declares that children born on American soil to parents who are in the country illegally or only on a temporary basis are not U.S. citizens.

Trump is appealing a lower-court ruling that invalidated the order nationwide. Although the directive has been blocked from taking effect anywhere, the justices will now hear full arguments this spring, with a final decision expected early in the summer.

The executive order — signed on Jan. 20, the opening day of Trump’s second term — is a centerpiece of his administration’s larger push to overhaul federal immigration policy. The White House has also initiated aggressive enforcement operations in multiple cities and has, for the first time in peacetime, invoked the Alien Enemies Act of the 1790s.

Litigation against the administration has mounted quickly, leaving the Supreme Court to referee high-stakes disputes. For instance, the justices recently halted the administration’s plan to use the Alien Enemies Act to expedite removals of Venezuelan nationals accused of gang activity. Yet the Court also lifted a block on Los Angeles–area saturation stops, allowing officers to resume immigration sweeps even when based on factors such as race, language, occupation, or location.

Another emergency appeal remains pending: the administration’s request to deploy National Guard units for immigration enforcement in the Chicago region, something a lower court has forbidden for now.

Trump’s citizenship order marks the first full immigration-policy showdown of his second term to reach the justices for a final ruling.

If upheld, the policy would dramatically revise more than a century of legal understanding. Since the late 1800s, the prevailing interpretation of the 14th Amendment has been that nearly all children born within U.S. borders are citizens at birth, except those born to diplomats or to foreign occupying forces.

But every lower court to examine Trump’s directive has struck it down as unconstitutional or likely so. Even after the Supreme Court’s June decision scaling back nationwide injunctions, judges have continued to block the order through class actions and state-led lawsuits — tools the justices left intact. The high court has not yet addressed whether the underlying policy itself can survive constitutional scrutiny.

In New Hampshire, a federal judge barred implementation of the order in July in a sweeping class action covering all children who would be subject to its restrictions. And on the West Coast, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that Democrat-led states challenging the order required a nationwide injunction to avoid a chaotic patchwork of citizenship rules between states. The Supreme Court did not act on the administration’s request to overturn that ruling.

The administration maintains that the 14th Amendment has been misconstrued for generations and argues that the children of noncitizens do not qualify for automatic citizenship because they are not “subject to the jurisdiction” of the United States in the constitutional sense. As the government’s lead Supreme Court litigator, D. John Sauer, wrote, “The Fourteenth Amendment’s Citizenship Clause was adopted to grant citizenship to newly freed slaves and their children — not … to the children of aliens illegally or temporarily in the United States.”

The fight has drawn strong political backing. Twenty-four Republican-led states and 27 GOP lawmakers — including Sens. Ted Cruz and Lindsey Graham — have lined up behind Trump’s legal position.

{Matzav.com}

1 Ticket 8 Raffles!

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The Great 8 Giveaway: 8 Nights, 8 Incredible Prizes, Endless Excitement This Chanukah, Mechinas Ner Naftali invites you to join The Great 8 Giveaway, a one-of-a-kind raffle experience where every night brings a new reason to celebrate. Over eight unforgettable nights, we’ll be lighting up the season with eight extraordinary prizes, from luxury home items […]

Stephen Miller Calls Billion-Dollar Minnesota Welfare Scam ‘Single Greatest Theft of Taxpayer Dollars’ With Dozens of Somali Migrants Convicted

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White House Deputy Chief of Staff for policy Stephen Miller delivered a dramatic assessment of the sprawling Minnesota welfare-fraud scheme, calling it “the single greatest theft of taxpayer dollars through welfare fraud in American history.” Miller, who also advises President Trump on homeland security, argued that the scandal tied to Somali migrants in the state will “rock the core of Minnesota politics and American politics.”

During his appearance on Sean Hannity’s Fox News program, Miller said investigators are only beginning to grasp the scale of the fraud. “We believe that we have only scratched the very top of the surface of how deep this goes,” he told Hannity, warning that what has been uncovered so far may be just the beginning.

The sweeping criminal enterprise first came to light in 2022, after prosecutors described the scheme as the “largest pandemic fraud in the United States.” Central to the operation, according to federal authorities, was the group Feeding Our Future, a nonprofit entrusted with delivering meals to children during COVID. Investigators say the organization fabricated invoices and meal logs to mimic legitimate food-service operations. As then-U.S. Attorney Andrew Luger explained when announcing charges, “Their goal was to make as much money for themselves as they could while falsely claiming to feed children during the pandemic.”

The scale of the case has astonished even seasoned prosecutors. Nearly 80 individuals have been charged, and 59 have already been convicted, with the fraud total soaring to $1 billion. The case originally appeared to involve $250 million, but as federal agents continued tracing the money, the losses ballooned into the largest theft of its kind in the country.

The fallout is now rippling through Minnesota’s political establishment. Washington officials have opened multiple probes into whether other state-run programs with federal funding were similarly exploited. That has brought Gov. Tim Walz under increased scrutiny as congressional investigators demand answers. Minnesota Republican floor leader Harry Niska told The New York Post, “The scrutiny is intense and it’s going to get more intense and I think he realizes that.” According to Niska, “He’s never gotten this level of scrutiny — he’s definitely going to continue to get skepticism from the administration, from Congress and I expect that is only going to intensify.”

Niska added that fraud vulnerabilities appear widespread across state agencies, remarking, “The list is so long all of the programs that have just been shoveling money out the door to anyone that sets up an LLC or a nonprofit.”

As public anger grows, President Trump has not held back. In an online message, he vowed to send certain Somali migrants “back to where they came from,” and during a cabinet meeting this week he declared, “They contribute nothing. I don’t want them in our country. Their country is no good for a reason. Your country stinks and we don’t want them in our country.”

Minnesota’s Somali population numbers around 80,000, including Rep. Ilhan Omar, who has been photographed with Abul Dahir Ibrahim — one of the men implicated in the fraud network. Ibrahim, long known to law enforcement, has been under a removal order since 2004.

Federal scrutiny is now sprawling beyond food-aid programs. Small Business Secretary Kelly Loeffler has ordered a fresh audit of Paycheck Protection Program loans issued in Minnesota during the pandemic. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has launched a separate investigation into whether any misappropriated state funds were funneled to al-Shabaab, the Somalia-based terrorist organization designated by the U.S. Dr. Mehmet Oz, who oversees the Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Services, has initiated yet another review targeting potential health-care fraud linked to the same network.

With billions in federal funding flowing through state systems each year, Washington investigators say this Minnesota scandal could become the catalyst for a nationwide crackdown. Miller’s warning on Hannity may prove prescient — the political and legal reverberations are only beginning.

{Matzav.com}

Musk Calls for EU to Be ‘Abolished’

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Elon Musk amplified his attacks on Brussels this weekend, using his platform on X to argue that the European project should come to an end. “The EU should be abolished and sovereignty returned to individual countries, so that governments can better represent their people,” he declared, injecting fresh fuel into a trans-Atlantic clash now spreading beyond tech policy and into broader geopolitics.

His criticism erupted just as European regulators intensified their campaign to impose the rules of the Digital Services Act, a sweeping framework aimed at policing online platforms. Less than 24 hours before Musk posted, the European Commission had hit X with a €120 million ($140 million US) penalty, accusing the site of flouting the DSA’s obligations regarding paid “blue check” verification, ad transparency, and access for qualified researchers. The move immediately provoked objections from American officials, who characterized the fine as part of a wider European offensive against U.S. innovation and free expression.

The dispute comes at a moment of shifting strategic winds. The National Security Strategy released Friday by President Donald Trump took an unusually blunt tone toward Europe, warning that the continent’s political drift, regulatory zeal, and lagging defense commitments could strain trans-Atlantic cohesion unless European states assume greater responsibility within NATO and rethink their dependence on supranational institutions. The administration’s message highlighted how far Washington and Brussels have diverged on issues ranging from tech governance to security burden-sharing.

Europe’s governing architecture itself has become part of the debate. What began in the 1950s as modest postwar economic cooperation through the European Coal and Steel Community gradually evolved—via milestones like the 1957 Treaties of Rome—into the fully integrated structure established by the Maastricht Treaty, which took effect on Nov. 1, 1993. That long trajectory toward deeper union now faces renewed philosophical and political scrutiny amid pressure from both sides of the Atlantic.

Musk, seizing the moment, returned to the theme later in the day with an even starker provocation: “How long before the EU is gone. Abolish the EU.”

{Matzav.com}

Trump Blasts ‘Fake News CNN’. Reporter ‘Stupid, Nasty’ Over Ballroom Reporting

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President Donald Trump used his morning Truth Social post to lash out at “fake news CNN” and anchor Kaitlan Collins while touting his ambitious overhaul of the White House, particularly the construction of a new ballroom he says is larger, grander, and still not costing taxpayers anything.

“Caitlin Collin’s of Fake News CNN, always Stupid and Nasty, asked me why the new Ballroom was costing more money than originally thought one year ago,” Trump wrote, explaining that the soaring estimates stem from a deliberate expansion in scope. “I said because it is going to be double the size, and the quality of finishes and interiors has been brought to the highest level. Also, the column SPAN has been substantially increased for purposes of viewing.”

Trump insisted the project remains on track financially and operationally. “It is actually under budget and ahead of schedule, as my jobs always are,” he continued. “It’s just much bigger and more beautiful than originally planned. Interestingly, and seldom reported, there are no taxpayer dollars involved. It is being fully paid for by private donations.”

He wrapped the message with another swipe at the network he has long derided. “FAKE NEWS CNN, and the guy who runs the whole corrupt operation that owns it, is one of the worst in the business. Their ratings are so low that they’re not even counted or relevant anymore. MAGA!!!”

Meanwhile, preparations for the new venue are moving ahead in Washington. The White House is set to submit the formal designs to the National Capital Planning Commission before the end of the year, roughly three months after work began. Will Scharf, tapped by Trump to chair the commission and also a senior White House aide, noted at the panel’s Thursday meeting that he was informed the detailed plans would arrive sometime in December. “Once plans are submitted, that’s really when the role of this commission, and its professional staff, will begin,” Scharf said, adding that the review would proceed at a “normal and deliberative pace.”

The administration confirmed this week that a second architectural firm has joined the effort. White House spokesperson Davis Ingle announced that Shalom Baranes, a prominent D.C. architect whose firm has worked on major federal landmarks including the Pentagon and Treasury, has been added as construction enters its next phase. “As we begin to transition into the next stage of development on the White House Ballroom, the administration is excited to share that the highly talented Shalom Baranes has joined the team of experts to carry out President Trump’s vision on building what will be the greatest addition to the White House since the Oval Office — the White House Ballroom,” Ingle said. “Shalom is an accomplished architect whose work has shaped the architectural identity of our nation’s capital for decades and his experience will be a great asset to the completion of this project.” McCrery Architects, the original firm, will remain involved as a consultant.

If completed as planned, the 90,000-square-foot hall — unveiled earlier this year and projected to open before Trump’s term ends in 2029 — would nearly double the footprint of the current White House. Trump has said the ballroom will hold 999 guests and carry a price tag of $300 million, up from an earlier $200 million estimate. Still, he insists that not a single dollar will come from the public purse, saying the funding is covered entirely by “patriots,” corporations, and his own contributions. The White House has released a list of 37 donors ranging from tech and tobacco giants to philanthropies, sports owners, financiers, media firms, Republican backers, and Palm Beach neighbors.

For years Trump has lamented the limited capacity of the executive mansion’s largest indoor spaces — the State Dining Room and the East Room — and criticized the use of tents for state dinners and other large gatherings. Last month, during the visit of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, Trump said he had to reject numerous requests to attend the dinner due to overcrowding. “I only wish we had about 2,000 more seats. We would have filled every one of them two times over,” he joked before hinting again at the ballroom’s necessity. “But very soon you’ll be having that, and we’ll have to do another one in about two years from now.”

Trump authorized site preparation for the ballroom in September even before the National Capital Planning Commission completed its approval process. Scharf has argued the commission only oversees above-ground construction, not demolition, while L. Preston Bryant Jr., who chaired the body under President Barack Obama, noted that typical reviews include four separate stages, beginning with conceptual consultation.

By October, demolition of the East Wing — the intended site of the new ballroom — was underway. Construction noise has since become part of the daily White House landscape as crews continue clearing and preparing the area. The East Wing, long used by first ladies and various administrative offices, has now been vacated, with staff working from other parts of the complex or the adjacent office building while the transformation proceeds.

{Matzav.com}

LIVE BLOG: Real-Time Updates From the US, Israel & Around the World

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For the past 21 years, YWN’s team of seasoned reporters has delivered breaking news and reliable updates, building two decades of trust with over half a million readers each day. On this live blog, YWN will be providing continuous, around-the-clock coverage, bringing you the latest developments as they unfold. You can also join over 150,000 […]

Qatar: Gaza Truce Is Only a Pause, Not a Ceasefire, Without Full Israeli Withdrawal

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Qatari Prime Minister Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani declared that the situation in Gaza cannot be described as a true ceasefire, insisting that such a designation would require Israel to completely pull its forces out of the enclave. His remarks came during a panel at the Doha Forum, where he also emphasized that the region had reached a pivotal point in the diplomatic process. “We are at the critical moment,” Al Thani said, underscoring the fragility of the ongoing negotiations.

He pushed back firmly on the characterization of the current lull in fighting. “What we have just done is a pause. We cannot consider it yet a ceasefire. A ceasefire cannot be completed unless there is a full withdrawal of the Israeli forces, there is stability back in Gaza [and] people can go in and out, which is not the case today,” he maintained. His framing was later echoed by Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan, who outlined Ankara’s conditions for carrying out the second phase of President Donald Trump’s Gaza peace initiative.

Under the truce that took effect on October 10, Israel repositioned its troops to the designated Yellow Line, splitting Gaza into eastern and western zones. However, Israel refrained from reopening the Rafah Border Crossing for more than a month, citing Hamas’s refusal to return the bodies of all fallen hostages. One of those still held is the body of slain police officer Ran Gvili.

This point was stressed by Gvili’s family, who issued a statement Saturday evening. “The first phase of the hostage deal is still not completed, while Rani hasn’t returned home. We demand that Prime Minister Netanyahu and President Trump pressure Hamas and Islamic Jihad to return Rani home immediately! We can’t move to the second phase of the deal without Rani here,” they said, in comments carried by Hebrew media.

Israel this week agreed to allow Rafah to open in one direction to let Palestinians exit the Strip, but Egypt rejected that arrangement and insisted the crossing must permit entry into Gaza as well. Meanwhile, Al Thani said the mediating countries — Qatar, Turkey, Egypt and the US — are “getting together in order to force the way forward for the next phase.”

A US official told The Times of Israel that Washington aims to formally introduce the transition to phase two within the next two weeks. That stage includes the establishment of a technocratic Palestinian government and an International Stabilization Force overseen by a Board of Peace chaired by President Donald Trump.

Al Thani stressed that Doha views this stage as an interim measure. He cautioned that “temporary” structures will not resolve deeper issues if they focus only on Gaza. “This conflict is not only about Gaza, but also the West Bank. It’s about the rights of the Palestinians for their state,” he said. “We are hoping that we can work together with the US administration to achieve this vision.”

He credited the Trump administration’s direct engagement — even with Hamas — for breakthroughs that made the October ceasefire possible. According to Al Thani, this willingness to communicate was essential for crafting agreements on both the truce and hostage releases.

When asked about resistance within Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu’s coalition to elements of the Trump plan, particularly those hinting at a future Palestinian state, Al Thani said Washington’s involvement will be central to ensuring Israeli compliance.

Pressed on Qatar’s hosting of Hamas leaders, Al Thani defended the arrangement, arguing it has been indispensable in securing every ceasefire and hostage deal throughout the war. He suggested that some of Qatar’s harshest critics rely heavily on Doha’s mediation — a thinly veiled reference to Israel. “Qatar provides a platform for those parties to talk. It doesn’t mean that we are taking one side or the other. Our role is to make sure that the dialogue is ongoing and the dialogue is coming out with a positive outcome… that ends conflicts,” he said.

{Matzav.com}

Russia Unleashes Massive Drone and Missile Attack on Ukraine as Diplomatic Talks Continue

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Russia unleashed a major missile and drone barrage on Ukraine overnight into Saturday, while Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said he had a “substantive phone call” with American officials engaged in talks with a Ukrainian delegation in Florida, aimed at ending the nearly 4-year war. Russia used 653 drones and 51 missiles in the wide-reaching overnight […]

1 Ticket 8 Raffles!

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The Great 8 Giveaway: 8 Nights, 8 Incredible Prizes, Endless Excitement This Chanukah, Mechinas Ner Naftali invites you to join The Great 8 Giveaway, a one-of-a-kind raffle experience where every night brings a new reason to celebrate. Over eight unforgettable nights, we’ll be lighting up the season with eight extraordinary prizes, from luxury home items […]

Herzog to Trump: Thank You for the Advice — But Israel Will Make Its Own Netanyahu Pardon Decision

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Israeli President Isaac Herzog said in a newly published interview that although he appreciates President Donald Trump’s opinion regarding a possible pardon for Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu, the ultimate decision will rest solely on what serves Israel’s national interest. He stressed that Israel’s sovereignty and its legal institutions—not external pressure—will determine the outcome.

“Everybody understands that any pre-emptive pardon has to be considered on the merits,” Herzog told Politico, pledging to “deal with it with utter seriousness.” He added that he holds Trump’s advocacy in high regard, noting the repeated appeals from the president to grant Netanyahu clemency. “I respect President Trump’s friendship and his opinion,” he said.

Herzog underscored why Trump’s views matter to him personally. “Why? Because as I tell many Israelis, it is the same President Trump we begged and asked to bring back our hostages and who led bravely an enormous step to bring back our hostages and get the UN Security Council resolution through. But Israel, naturally, is a sovereign country, and we fully respect the Israeli legal system and its requirements.”

After Netanyahu submitted a formal pardon request last Sunday—without admitting guilt—Herzog reiterated that his focus remains on the country’s welfare. “The well-being of the Israeli people is my first, second and third priority,” he told the outlet.

Netanyahu currently faces one bribery charge and three counts each of fraud and breach of trust across several corruption cases. Prosecutors allege he manipulated media coverage and received unlawful gifts in exchange for political favors. He has rejected the claims entirely, arguing the indictments were engineered by elements within the police and state prosecution attempting a political coup.

Herzog’s interview comes just ahead of his trip to New York, where political tensions have escalated following the election of socialist Zohran Mamdani as mayor. Mamdani has unsettled Jewish and pro-Israel communities with a series of radical stances. He initially refused to denounce chants like “globalize the intifada” or call for Hamas to disarm, positions he later softened only under significant backlash—stating he would “discourage” the slogan and that Hamas should lay down its weapons. While he now says he supports Israel’s right to exist, he has refused to affirm its identity as a Jewish state, opposing what he calls a “hierarchy of citizenship.”

Adding to the uproar, Mamdani has vowed to instruct police to arrest Netanyahu should he visit New York, citing an International Criminal Court warrant—despite U.S. law making such an arrest impossible. The warrant accuses Netanyahu of war crimes in Gaza, allegations Israel rejects in full.

“I’m extremely bothered by the statements of Mayor-elect Mamdani,” Herzog told Politico. “The rights of Jews, of the Jewish people, for self-determination and for independence, do not depend on Zohran Mamdani.”

Herzog contrasted Mamdani’s rhetoric with his own family’s history. He noted that his father, as Israel’s ambassador to the UN, famously tore up a now-revoked resolution branding Zionism as racism. “He also spoke about people throughout the ages, leaders who negated the Jewish people’s rights, and they’ve all disappeared, and their views disappeared,” Herzog said.

When asked if he would extend an invitation for Mamdani to visit Israel, Herzog replied that the mayor-elect should first better understand the very city he is about to lead. “I think Mayor-elect Mamdani should understand that in his own city, there are so many people who have Israel minted in their DNA, in their love of both America and Israel. He should study better and understand better their viewpoints and not show such disgust and hate.”

Herzog also expressed concern over the growing wave of anti-Israel sentiment in the United States, which he blamed partly on social media. He argued that the hostility “comes from TikTok, from a very shallow discourse of the current situation, pictures or viewpoints, and doesn’t judge from the big picture.”

While acknowledging the legitimacy of debate about Israel’s military actions, Herzog pleaded for honesty and context. “I respect the debate,” he said, “but all I’m asking is for fair reporting, not fake reporting, and not something superficial. You cannot just buy a TikTok message, which you know immediately blames Israel, without understanding what’s behind it. We are operating in self-defense according to international law and we are trying to defend our citizens.”

He ended with a stark warning about the scale of the misinformation campaign Israel faces. “There are billions and tens of billions of dollars poured into this brainwashing machine which doesn’t want to tell the real truth,” Herzog said. “And we may be all alone, but we will keep on saying the truth: We did not seek this war. We did not want this war.”

{Matzav.com}

BNEI BRAK: Major Fire Erupts in Kollel Halperin Building; Tefillin and Kisvei Kodesh Tragically Destroyed

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A large fire broke out on Friday night, just as Shabbos began, in the well-known Kollel Halperin building in Bnei Brak. The blaze started in an apartment located directly beneath the kollel, where a dormitory for bochurim of Yeshivas Ponovezh is situated. Several bochurim were sleeping there at the time. B’Chadrei Chareidim reported that, in […]

“A Clown World On Steroids” and “Deeply Disgusting,” ‘Senator Says of $1B Somali Fraud Scheme

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Sen. John Kennedy tore into the massive COVID-era fraud case uncovered in Minnesota’s “Feeding Our Future” scandal, blasting it as one of the most staggering abuses of federal aid ever exposed. The Louisiana Republican didn’t hold back on the Senate floor, calling the situation “a clown world on steroids” and “deeply disgusting.”

Speaking about the scheme, Kennedy highlighted what federal prosecutors have described as an unprecedented theft of taxpayer funds. “For the last five years, there has been massive welfare fraud in the great state of Minnesota. Over one billion dollars of American taxpayer dollars has been stolen — just stolen. They can call it fraud, but a better term would be stealing. And this fraud has been centered in the Somali community in Minnesota,” he said, adding that learning how taxpayer dollars were misused makes him “angry.”
“It makes me want to knee someone in the groin,” Kennedy said, directing his fury at state officials and insisting on full accountability. “It just makes me furious and I think the American taxpayers feel the same way.”

Kennedy emphasized that his criticism was not aimed at every member of Minnesota’s Somali population. He noted that he does not wish to “criticize the 80,000 members of the Somali community” living in the state, while also stressing, “it is a fact that this one billion dollars in welfare fraud occurred almost exclusively in the Somali community.”

Reporting from the New York Times was the first to outline how the scheme proliferated within segments of Minnesota’s Somali community, with various individuals setting up entities that billed state agencies for social services that were never delivered. Some of those involved were connected to Feeding Our Future, a fraudulent nonprofit that claimed to provide meals to needy children and received $250 million through the Federal Child Nutrition Program.

According to the Times’ earlier reporting, “Federal prosecutors say that 59 people have been convicted in those schemes so far, and that more than $1 billion in taxpayers’ money has been stolen in three plots they are investigating. That is more than Minnesota spends annually to run its Department of Corrections.”

Peter Schweizer, head of the Government Accountability Institute, said the evidence makes the fraud unmistakable. “Hundreds of millions of dollars were diverted again by several dozen Somali nationals, who took the money they were supposed to be using to feed children. And in fact, we’re pocketing for criminal instances,” he said. “It was 125 million meals that this charity claimed that they were providing to children that were not provided at all.”

The White House has described the scandal as involving “a massive, complex network of nonprofits and affiliates” that purported to aid thousands of underprivileged children, serve the homeless, and offer therapy for autistic Somali youth. In reality, “Kickbacks were paid, lavish lifestyles were funded, and money was sent overseas — some of it even allegedly funneled to a terror group,” the administration said.

President Donald Trump weighed in sharply on the revelations, denouncing Minnesota as “a hub of fraudulent money laundering activity” and announcing he was ending Temporary Protected Status for Somali nationals in the state. He also made clear he opposed allowing additional Somali immigrants to remain in the U.S. “We can go one way or the other, and we’re going to go the wrong way if we keep taking in garbage into our country,” he said, arguing that the state had become a “hellhole” because of the community. “Somalians should be out of here,” he told reporters. “They’ve destroyed our country.”

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz fired back, condemning Trump’s remarks as inflammatory and beyond the bounds of any past presidential rhetoric. He said Trump had slurred an entire community — the largest Somali population in America — and insulted the state as a whole. “We’ve got little children going to school today who their president called them garbage,” Walz said, calling the comments “unprecedented for a United States president.”

Republican legislative leaders, while not embracing Walz’s rebuke of Trump, countered that the outrage now engulfing the state could have been avoided if the governor had acted sooner and more forcefully to prevent fraud within Minnesota’s welfare programs.

{Matzav.com}

Hegseth Defends Strikes on Alleged Cartel Boats, Says Trump Can Order Use of Force ‘as He Sees Fit’

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WASHINGTON (AP) — Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth defended strikes on alleged drug cartel boats during remarks Saturday at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library, saying President Donald Trump has the power to take military action “as he sees fit” to defend the nation. Hegseth dismissed criticism of the strikes, which have killed more than 80 people […]

NY Governor Hochul Says Mamdani Can’t Actually Arrest Netanyahu

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Governor Kathy Hochul made clear on Thursday that New York City’s incoming mayor, Zohran Mamdani, has no legal power to detain Israeli Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu, directly contradicting Mamdani’s repeated claims that he would attempt to do so if Netanyahu sets foot in the city.

The governor’s comments came as she sought to distance herself from several of Mamdani’s hard-line positions on Israel ahead of his January 1 inauguration. While Hochul has consistently aligned herself with Israel, Mamdani has long been identified with anti-Israel activism and has drawn widespread concern from Jewish communities. Despite her differences with him on these matters, Hochul endorsed Mamdani during his campaign.

Speaking to reporters, Hochul addressed the mayor-elect’s declaration directly. According to Politico, when asked about Mamdani’s vow to arrest Netanyahu, she rejected the notion outright and added, “The New York City mayor does not have the power to do that.”

Mamdani has pointed to an International Criminal Court arrest warrant as justification for his threat, but the argument does not stand on firm legal ground. The ICC has no jurisdiction inside the United States, and federal law expressly forbids state or municipal authorities from cooperating with the court. Additionally, another federal statute protects foreign officials — including sitting heads of state — from detention or interference.

Legal specialists have echoed this assessment, noting that Mamdani’s threat carries no legal weight whatsoever.

Netanyahu, for his part, brushed aside the mayor-elect’s remarks, announcing Wednesday that he still intends to travel to New York. The prime minister traditionally visits the city each fall to address the United Nations General Assembly.

The controversy over the ICC warrant has intensified in recent weeks. The Wall Street Journal reported that prosecutor Karim Khan accelerated the issuance of the warrant for Netanyahu without carrying out a planned investigation, doing so after a subordinate accused him of misconduct. The report added that Khan then leveraged the warrants in an effort to pressure that accuser into abandoning the allegations.

{Matzav.com}

‘Is That a Yes or No?’ Hegseth Waffles When Asked If He’ll Release The Second-Tap Airstrike Video

Matzav -

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth came under sharp questioning today over whether he intends to follow through on President Donald Trump’s public assurance that the full video of the controversial double-tap airstrike on an alleged drug-smuggling boat in the Caribbean will be released.

Hegseth appeared at the Reagan National Defense Forum, where Fox News correspondent Lucas Tomlinson raised the issue directly during a Q&A. Referring to recent briefings that Admiral Frank “Mitch” Bradley delivered on Capitol Hill, Tomlinson asked, “After Admiral [Frank ‘Mitch’] Bradley’s meetings from Capitol Hill with joint chiefs, President Trump said he would have no problem if the full video of the strike is released. When can we see that video? When will you release it?”

Hegseth avoided making any commitment, saying only that the Pentagon is considering the implications. “We are reviewing it right now to make sure sources, methods — I mean, it’s an ongoing operation right now, TTPs,” he said. “We have operators out there doing this now. Whatever we decide, we have to be responsible and we are reviewing it.”

Tomlinson then referenced a Washington Post report alleging that Hegseth had instructed forces to kill everyone on the vessel, even survivors. The secretary immediately shot down the claim. “Is anybody here from The Washington Post? I don’t know where you get your sources, but they suck.”

He went on to reject the report entirely. “Of course not! Anybody that has been in this situation room, or has been in the war room there, the secretary’s office, know you don’t walk in and say, ‘Kill them all —’ It’s patently ridiculous. It’s meant to create a cartoon of me.”

Hegseth then offered a broader defense of the operation and the professionals carrying it out. “What people think is cavalier or cowboy about it is the opposite. These are the most professional Americans going through specific processes about what they can and cannot do, understanding all the authorities, all the laws of war, all the capabilities, and applying it to deter our adversaries.”

He intensified his argument by detailing the operational goals behind the missions. “And by the way, there are not many people getting in boats right now running drugs, which is the whole point. We want to stop the poisoning of the American people. The catch and release program of the ‘pat them on the head and release them so they can go back to the fight’ did not work in Iraq and Afghanistan, and it’s not gonna work in the Caribbean. So, we’re putting them at the bottom of the Caribbean, which forces them to change the way they operate, and hopefully it makes the American people safer — not hopefully, it will make the American people safer in the process.”

Tomlinson pressed again: “So, Mr. Secretary, you will be releasing that full video?”

Hegseth repeated his earlier line. “We are reviewing it right now.”

The reporter pushed for clarity: “Is that a yes or no?”

The secretary again declined to give a definitive response. “That is — We’re — The most important thing to me are the ongoing operations in the Caribbean with our folks that use bespoke capabilities, techniques, procedures in the process. I’m way more interested in protecting that than anything else. So, we’re reviewing the process and we’ll see.”
{Matzav.com}

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