Robin Andersen

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Robin Andersen

Robin Andersen

@MediaPhiled

Media Critic, book series editor, award-winning author, Professor Emerita Fordham University. Writes for @commondreams @FAIRmediawatch @ProjectCensored

Fordham University Katılım Ağustos 2015
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Adil Raja
Adil Raja@soldierspeaks·
Thanks God, at least somebody is speaking the truth. Former MI6 Chief Alex Younger says #Iran has the "upper hand"... VC:@EconUS
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Jill Abson
Jill Abson@AbsonJill·
@mideastXmidwest Sorry, Tony( @ABlinken), nobody good is buying that "Hamas was mostly responsible for this". That's not eschewing the hierarchy of suffering you comically claim to reject. Israeli trauma counts, but not Palestinian's, is reinforced with every word uttered. Awful stuff.
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Zachary Foster
Zachary Foster@_ZachFoster·
@mideastXmidwest Why does Harvard allow genocidal monsters, war criminals, mass murderers on campus? Maybe Harvard could find a few commanders in the RSF to speak next? Why discriminate against Sudanese genocidaires? maybe they didn’t decapitare enough babies like Blinkin did to make the cut?
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Jonathan Guyer
Jonathan Guyer@mideastXmidwest·
How does Tony Blinken reconcile his Gaza legacy? Speaking at the Harvard Kennedy School, former Secretary of State Antony Blinken was asked yesterday about how he sees Gaza — and whether the Biden administration should have cut off arms to Israel. The moderator, New York Times journalist David Sanger, described Gaza as probably the "weakest" part of the diplomat's legacy. "Of course, for me, coulda woulda shoulda, is something that will always be there when it comes to Gaza," Mr. Blinken said. "Given the level of human suffering, given the horrific loss of of life among Palestinian women, men, children — you can't help but ask yourself on a regular basis, could we should we have done something different?" A Harvard student pushed further during the Q&A. He asked the former secretary of state more specifically about the 2024 USAID conclusion that Israel had blocked aid to Palestinians despite Mr. Blinken telling Congress the opposite, overriding experts to continue sending weapons to Israel. "You had opportunities to distance yourself and your administration from arming Israel, which committed what leading Holocaust scholars and human rights agencies call a genocide," the student said. "You rejected them and continued arming Israel. This is your legacy. How do you justify to the countless Palestinians, including thousands of children, that died from your decisions?" The student then read the names of several young children were killed in Gaza. "How do you reconcile with this and how do you reconcile with your legacy?" "This is something that I grappled with and will continue to grapple with for as long as I can see into the future," Mr. Blinken said. "Could we, should we have done things differently such that the suffering that people endured, the loss of the children you just listed and so many others could have been averted. The short answer is: Maybe yes. "We had to make judgments. We had to make judgments in real time about how to try to get to a better place. We made those judgments. People will make their own judgments about what we did and what we didn't do. "But let me just add a few things... and my great friend Samantha [Power] is here and we had this, you know, ongoing discussions in our own administration on the question of the assistance that was getting or not getting to Palestinians in Gaza throughout 2024. I was on this every single day, literally every single day. And we had a series of reports come out suggesting that there was an imminent famine that was about to happen. And then the next report would say actually fewer people are in danger even though people were leading terribly hard and difficult lives. "That didn't just happen. It happened because every single day we were on the Israelis to try to get assistance in, to open more crossing points, to flood the zone. They did that profoundly inadequately. They did that in ways that were not the way I would like to have seen it done, but we got some of that done. "When the report that you referred to came out and this was the product of the so-called NSM, the national security memorandum. If you look at that report, it lays out a lot of the actions that Israel were taking that were of more than deep concern to us. And I think that report actually served a very useful function in motivating the Israelis to do better. Not to do as much as they should have and as we would have wanted, but to do better. And at various points the aid went up, the number of trucks going in went up. The distribution even with the trucks going in was a huge problem. Looting, criminality, etc., all difficult problems that are really hard to control for. "But yes, of course, you couldn't be and I wouldn't be human if I didn't ask myself every day, could we have done things differently. "The one thing I want to suggest to you as well… I believe and look maybe I'm wrong that the nature of the the trauma in Israel, which is, there's no hierarchy of trauma, the trauma in Israel, the trauma among Palestinians, the same. The loss of a Palestinian life, the loss of Israeli life, the same. But on the Israeli side, the trauma was such that I believe the determination across that society to take the actions that they took in Gaza was such that irrespective of what we did, they would have continued to do what they did. And cutting off arms, sure, that was an option. But I don't actually believe that at least in the near term, it would have changed things. "And I also believe it would have led to an even wider war as Israel's enemies, and they were multiple, jumped in and that only would have extended the war in Gaza, not ended the war in Gaza. "We thought that the best way to get to an end, to protect people, to help people, was to get to a ceasefire, with hostages coming out and with aid going in. And you know I fully—more than respect—I empathize with people who felt this so, so deeply. I do remain with a question in my mind about why barely a word was spoken in all those months about Hamas, which was an actor too and is responsible for so much of what happened. "But yes, we all look at it, I certainly look at it, and say maybe we could have done differently. Maybe we could have done better by the people. I wish we could have."
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Bushra Shaikh
Bushra Shaikh@Bushra1Shaikh·
The Met previously said the investigation into the arson attack on several Jewish ambulances was looking at an Islamist group with potential links to Iran. Turns out two people arrested thus far are British nationals. The case is no longer being classed as a terror incident.
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Abier
Abier@abierkhatib·
Not only that.. , they wrap all their cruelty in comfort, parading their genocide to the world like it’s some kind of spectacle. Now they are doing it in Lebanon and Iran..
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IMEU Policy Project
IMEU Policy Project@imeupolicy·
Blinken’s own experts at the State Department repeatedly told him that Israel was violating US and international law, and he ignored those reports and lied to Congress about it. Blinken’s maneuvers to get weapons to Israel, in violation of US law, make him complicit in genocide.
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Jonathan Guyer@mideastXmidwest

How does Tony Blinken reconcile his Gaza legacy? Speaking at the Harvard Kennedy School, former Secretary of State Antony Blinken was asked yesterday about how he sees Gaza — and whether the Biden administration should have cut off arms to Israel. The moderator, New York Times journalist David Sanger, described Gaza as probably the "weakest" part of the diplomat's legacy. "Of course, for me, coulda woulda shoulda, is something that will always be there when it comes to Gaza," Mr. Blinken said. "Given the level of human suffering, given the horrific loss of of life among Palestinian women, men, children — you can't help but ask yourself on a regular basis, could we should we have done something different?" A Harvard student pushed further during the Q&A. He asked the former secretary of state more specifically about the 2024 USAID conclusion that Israel had blocked aid to Palestinians despite Mr. Blinken telling Congress the opposite, overriding experts to continue sending weapons to Israel. "You had opportunities to distance yourself and your administration from arming Israel, which committed what leading Holocaust scholars and human rights agencies call a genocide," the student said. "You rejected them and continued arming Israel. This is your legacy. How do you justify to the countless Palestinians, including thousands of children, that died from your decisions?" The student then read the names of several young children were killed in Gaza. "How do you reconcile with this and how do you reconcile with your legacy?" "This is something that I grappled with and will continue to grapple with for as long as I can see into the future," Mr. Blinken said. "Could we, should we have done things differently such that the suffering that people endured, the loss of the children you just listed and so many others could have been averted. The short answer is: Maybe yes. "We had to make judgments. We had to make judgments in real time about how to try to get to a better place. We made those judgments. People will make their own judgments about what we did and what we didn't do. "But let me just add a few things... and my great friend Samantha [Power] is here and we had this, you know, ongoing discussions in our own administration on the question of the assistance that was getting or not getting to Palestinians in Gaza throughout 2024. I was on this every single day, literally every single day. And we had a series of reports come out suggesting that there was an imminent famine that was about to happen. And then the next report would say actually fewer people are in danger even though people were leading terribly hard and difficult lives. "That didn't just happen. It happened because every single day we were on the Israelis to try to get assistance in, to open more crossing points, to flood the zone. They did that profoundly inadequately. They did that in ways that were not the way I would like to have seen it done, but we got some of that done. "When the report that you referred to came out and this was the product of the so-called NSM, the national security memorandum. If you look at that report, it lays out a lot of the actions that Israel were taking that were of more than deep concern to us. And I think that report actually served a very useful function in motivating the Israelis to do better. Not to do as much as they should have and as we would have wanted, but to do better. And at various points the aid went up, the number of trucks going in went up. The distribution even with the trucks going in was a huge problem. Looting, criminality, etc., all difficult problems that are really hard to control for. "But yes, of course, you couldn't be and I wouldn't be human if I didn't ask myself every day, could we have done things differently. "The one thing I want to suggest to you as well… I believe and look maybe I'm wrong that the nature of the the trauma in Israel, which is, there's no hierarchy of trauma, the trauma in Israel, the trauma among Palestinians, the same. The loss of a Palestinian life, the loss of Israeli life, the same. But on the Israeli side, the trauma was such that I believe the determination across that society to take the actions that they took in Gaza was such that irrespective of what we did, they would have continued to do what they did. And cutting off arms, sure, that was an option. But I don't actually believe that at least in the near term, it would have changed things. "And I also believe it would have led to an even wider war as Israel's enemies, and they were multiple, jumped in and that only would have extended the war in Gaza, not ended the war in Gaza. "We thought that the best way to get to an end, to protect people, to help people, was to get to a ceasefire, with hostages coming out and with aid going in. And you know I fully—more than respect—I empathize with people who felt this so, so deeply. I do remain with a question in my mind about why barely a word was spoken in all those months about Hamas, which was an actor too and is responsible for so much of what happened. "But yes, we all look at it, I certainly look at it, and say maybe we could have done differently. Maybe we could have done better by the people. I wish we could have."

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Zachary Foster
Zachary Foster@_ZachFoster·
Murder is effectively legal in Palestine, including live-streamed murder, so long as the murderer is Jewish, and the victim is Palestinian.
Drop Site@DropSiteNews

⭕️ Israel has not prosecuted a single killing of a Palestinian civilian in the West Bank since 2020, Guardian analysis finds No Israeli soldier, police officer, or settler has been charged for killing a Palestinian civilian in the occupied West Bank since the start of this decade, a Guardian review of legal data and public records shows. At least 1,100 Palestinian civilians have been killed there since 2020, more than a quarter of them children, according to UN data. Dozens of former Israeli security chiefs, including two former military heads, five former Mossad and Shin Bet directors, and four ex-police commissioners, have signed a letter warning that "almost daily" attacks on Palestinians amount to "organized activity" by people "wearing uniforms, who shoot at innocent people and burn the property and homes of civilians." They warned that failure to address what they called "Jewish terrorism" poses an existential threat to Israel. This month alone, Israeli settlers and police killed 10 Palestinian civilians in the West Bank, including a family of four shot in the head, among them brothers aged five and seven, as they returned from a Ramadan shopping trip. According to legal rights group Yesh Din, between 2020 and 2025: ▪️over 96% of police investigations into settler violence concluded without an indictment ▪️Of 368 cases, only eight ended in full or partial convictions ▪️Palestinians filed 1,746 complaints against Israeli soldiers in the same period, including over 600 related to killings. Less than 1% resulted in charges

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Robin Andersen
Robin Andersen@MediaPhiled·
Wow, really great independent reporting. She’s good. She picks up store nobody’s talking about that are really important.
Ryan Dawson@RyLiberty

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Abier
Abier@abierkhatib·
The most horrifying creatures of mankind
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Dr Rahmeh Aladwan
Dr Rahmeh Aladwan@doctor_rahmeh·
They had me fired. Arrested 4 times. Suspended my medical licence. Smeared me in every paper. Now the British zionist jewish lobby is attacking my fundraiser! It cost me £90,000 to defend my licence. I live on what remains of my life savings. I set up a Chuffed fundraiser to tackle police harassment and keep me on my feet. Campaign Against Antisemitism (CAA) is now threatening Chuffed with police action. They want to destroy me. I am a Palestinian and a British citizen. I have never had a patient complaint. Never broken the law. Worked for 7 years in the NHS. Cared for my fellow British citizens. Paid my taxes. My crime? I opposed genocide and jewish supremacy. Exposed their grip on Britain. That's it. My response: {فَٱقْضِ مَآ أَنتَ قَاضٍ ۖ إِنَّمَا تَقْضِى هَٰذِهِ ٱلْحَيَوٰةَ ٱلدُّنْيَآ} So do whatever you want! Your authority only covers the ˹fleeting˺ life of this world. Qur'an 20:72 - I would do it all over again. Everything I did was to save the lives of the Palestinian people being murdered by the jewish occupation. And to stop the British government from using my taxes to arm them. May justice and truth prevail. We fear God only. Free Palestine and Britain from jewish supremacy 🇵🇸🇬🇧 chuffed.org/project/dr-rah…
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Furkan Gözükara
Furkan Gözükara@FurkanGozukara·
Absolute bombshell. Al Jazeera exposes how the US completely hijacked Iraq's economy. Two decades after the illegal invasion, Washington still forces all Iraqi oil revenues to be deposited in the New York Federal Reserve, giving America a permanent chokehold on the nation.
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Tucker Carlson
Tucker Carlson@TuckerCarlson·
Avraham Burg, former speaker of the Knesset and interim president of Israel, on why Netanyahu can never settle, only kill. (0:00) Introduction (3:16) What Is Israel's Strategy? (9:21) What Does Victory Look Like for Israel? (13:15) Does Israel Actually Want Peace? (23:06) Was the US Forced Into This War? (29:15) Is Netanyahu Afraid of Trump? (33:09) What Will the US Gain From This War? (36:19) How Do Israelis View Gaza? (47:41) How Do Israelis View the US? (53:59) Is This a Religious War? (59:06) The Many Attempts to Rebuild the Third Temple (1:05:25) How Netanyahu Has Changed Politics Forever (1:13:11) How Real Is the Greater Israel Project? (1:18:37) Will Israel Use Nuclear Weapons? (1:30:37) The Response to Burg's Writings
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Ounka
Ounka@OunkaOnX·
"Every single person she spoke to espoused casual genocidal rhetoric. Israeli society has gone full fascist. It's like Berlin 1930" - Abby Martin. The casualness: that's the horror. Not rage. Not passion. Just... normal. Like discussing traffic. Like the genocide is just part of the day
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Furkan Gözükara
Furkan Gözükara@FurkanGozukara·
Absolute psychopath. Trump casually admits on live TV to intentionally targeting civilian electric plants in Iran. He boasts about roaming free and destroying civilian infrastructure. This is a blatant admission of war crimes and collective punishment.
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ADAM
ADAM@AdameMedia·
You’re never going to believe this 😂 Israelis are crying about damage to buildings. They’re even using the word “war crimes” You can’t make this up.
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