Cindy Mullock

941 posts

Cindy Mullock banner
Cindy Mullock

Cindy Mullock

@cindymullock

Founding Executive Director @HarrietMuseum Founding Trustee Cape May Point Science Center NJ State Coordinator @braverangels Board Member @volsprobono

New Jersey, USA Katılım Haziran 2011
434 Takip Edilen113 Takipçiler
Cindy Mullock retweetledi
Itay Epshtain
Itay Epshtain@EpshtainItay·
I did not expect to find myself nodding along to Tzipi Livni, Israel's former, and hawkish, Foreign Minister. Yet here we are. She is right on this: A State that treats the rule of law as optional, and human rights as conditional on race or nationality, irreparably corrodes itself. The decades-long project of violently subjugating Palestinians has not only harmed its victims. It has consumed Israel, from within.
Itay Epshtain tweet media
English
85
756
1.9K
103.3K
yung hill'ry
yung hill'ry@overlook_colony·
@ryangrim At a certain point I question why you'd even engage with this sort of creature
English
1
0
0
69
Cindy Mullock
Cindy Mullock@cindymullock·
@ryangrim Of course Trump had agency here--much as he had agency in continuing to fund & weaponize Israel's genocide in Gaza & in moving the US embassy to Jerusalem. Viewing entry into Iran as an unrelated action rather than a continuing capitulation to Israeli escalation seems bad faith.
English
0
0
0
118
Ryan Grim
Ryan Grim@ryangrim·
We did a national survey on this question and half the country believes Trump was more responsive to Israeli interests than American voters in making his decision to launch the war. Yes, he made the decision but do not ask people to pretend we don’t have eyes and ears
Neera Tanden🌻@neeratanden

The only person responsible for this war is Donald Trump. It was his decision and his decision alone. Unclear to me why and Dem would not be clear about that.

English
20
132
1.3K
42.3K
Aaron Regunberg
Aaron Regunberg@AaronRegunberg·
Our 2028 Democratic nominee needs to go all in on ending the rot of elite impunity, and that must extend not only to Trump officials, the Epstein class, and corporate criminals, but also to the Dems who are hanging out at Harvard when they should be locked up in the Hague.
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."

English
13
53
132
4.1K
Cindy Mullock retweetledi
Dr. Annelle Rodriguez Sheline
Dr. Annelle Rodriguez Sheline@AnnelleSheline·
The idea that the US is powerless to stop Israel is a complete fiction. At any moment, the US could have said, "We are (finally) going to follow our own laws, which require us to stop supporting you: 1) The Leahy Laws: no security assistance to units of a foreign military engaged in gross violations of human rights 2) 620i of Foreign Assistance Act: no security assistance to a foreign government that blocks US humanitarian assistance 3) 502B: no weapons to governments that abuse human rights (this one has never been applied, but it's a law) Instead Blinken broke the law to continue to arm Israel
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."

English
76
1.2K
3.2K
128.7K
Cindy Mullock
Cindy Mullock@cindymullock·
@_ZachFoster @mideastXmidwest Harvard invites genocidaires to speak, graduates them from its programs, & also provides them with a soft landing post-admin: Former National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan is the inaugural Kissinger Professor of the Practice of Statecraft & World Order at Harvard Kennedy School
English
0
0
0
109
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?
English
10
74
458
7.3K
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."
Jonathan Guyer tweet media
English
264
204
605
730.3K
Cindy Mullock
Cindy Mullock@cindymullock·
@MustafaBarghou1 Absolute moral collapse that this Kahanist convicted terrorist is in charge of Israeli prison policy and operations.
English
0
0
0
11
Mustafa Barghouti @Mustafa_Barghouti
Dangerous development in Israel; The Israeli Knesset’s National Security Committee approved tonight a bill to impose the death penalty on Palestinian prisoners, in preparation for presenting it for the second and third readings. The proposal stipulates: •Imposing the death penalty as mandatory, without the need for unanimity •Carrying out executions by hanging through the prison service •Implementing the sentence within a specified period not exceeding 90 days •No possibility of pardon The bill is scheduled to be brought to a vote in the Knesset next week during its second and third readings. The Israeli fascist internal security minister Ben - Gvir ecorded previously a video saying he is proud of this proposed law which he is responsible for.
English
241
1.5K
1.7K
65K
Cindy Mullock retweetledi
Furkan Gözükara
Furkan Gözükara@FurkanGozukara·
Absolute insanity. Since Citizens United outside spending in elections has skyrocketed by nearly 680 percent to 4.5 billion dollars. It is no wonder voters feel like politicians only work for big business and the super wealthy. The system is completely broken.
English
61
965
3.1K
38.1K
Cindy Mullock
Cindy Mullock@cindymullock·
@malonebarry Lots of scrubbing — Blinken’s now working as hard to sanitize his own complicity in this genocide as he did to ethnically cleanse Gaza in the first place.
English
1
1
8
184
Cindy Mullock
Cindy Mullock@cindymullock·
@FurkanGozukara @anders_aslund More like a sanitization than a bombshell! “Our negotiators simply didn’t understand”—the Omani diplomat gave full context. Sullivan didn’t name names—why is he shielding Kushner & Witkoff? And why not share it’s at least as likely a bad faith negotiation as a misunderstanding?
English
0
0
0
9
Furkan Gözükara
Furkan Gözükara@FurkanGozukara·
BOMBSHELL: Jake Sullivan reveals that just days before the US started bombing Iran, Tehran put a massive peace proposal on the table in Geneva. The US negotiators "simply didn't understand what they were being offered" and bombed them anyway!
English
5.1K
8.7K
22.7K
1.7M
Cindy Mullock retweetledi
Mark Ruffalo
Mark Ruffalo@MarkRuffalo·
Gavin, know where you stand and stand there. You said you what you meant. I don’t know what billionaire got in your ear but it’s not working for you. This is not how you are going to win. It’s Apartheid and it’s a Genocide. Today! theguardian.com/us-news/2026/m…
English
1.3K
4.9K
30.4K
1.1M
Cindy Mullock retweetledi
Cindy Mullock retweetledi
Agnes Callamard
Agnes Callamard@AgnesCallamard·
It is more than time for Germany to denounce Israel/US violations of international law. The people of Lebanon, Iran, the Gulf, Occupies Palestinian Territory, Israel are paying an inhuman price. The entire world is on the brink of a global catastrophe. What took Germany and the majority of European States so long? They should have strongly objected to the US and Israel unlawful attacks in the same way they denounced Iran’s internal repression and unlawful retaliatory attacks against civilians.
DW Politics@dw_politics

German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier has said the US-Israeli attacks on Iran are "a violation of international law."

English
20
120
307
7.5K
Cindy Mullock retweetledi
jasper nathaniel
jasper nathaniel@infinite_jaz·
So, to be clear: settlers conducting “land patrols” through Palestinian land to menace and attempt to expel its residents crashed their ATV, were helped by the very Palestinians they terrorize, then their leaders labeled it a “terror car ramming” and unleashed two days of pogroms
Ihab Hassan@IhabHassane

New footage shows Palestinian residents and Palestinian Red Crescent teams helping Israeli settlers injured in a car accident in which Israeli settler Yehuda Sherman died in the village of Beit Imrin in the West Bank. Israeli settlers and ministers in the Israeli government falsely labeled it a “murder” and incited pogroms against Palestinian villages.

English
20
1.6K
4.2K
102.7K
Cindy Mullock retweetledi
Senator Chris Van Hollen
Senator Chris Van Hollen@ChrisVanHollen·
In addition to the 13 American servicemembers who have been killed, Trump's war has resulted in the deaths of over 2,000 civilians in the region, including over 100 Iranian school kids. All of them should be alive today. To stop the killing we must end the war, NOW.
English
172
899
3K
43K
The Tennessee Holler
The Tennessee Holler@TheTNHoller·
POLITICO: “Do you regret using the word ‘APARTHEID’?” NEWSOM: “I do, in this context…” @GavinNewsom walks back his criticism of Israel (to @PodSaveAmerica) — saying he meant it about the “direction” 🇮🇱 is going, as a word “others may use” if they annex the entire West Bank
English
333
189
705
521.7K
Cindy Mullock
Cindy Mullock@cindymullock·
@jonskolnick @SJojo47 With respect, there’s an intentional conflation from Kahanists & extremists to redefine & subsume Zionism. Smotrich leads the Religious Zionism party, for example. People often attribute the shift to non-Jewish groups/college protesters, but that misses this intentional dynamic.
English
0
0
0
2
Jon Skolnick
Jon Skolnick@jonskolnick·
@SJojo47 Somehow everyone just redefined Zionism as Kahanism. That’s the shift of the past two years: non-Jewish groups and leaders redefining Zionism as a genocidal Kahanist philosophy citing only the worst examples they can find. And then insisting that all Jews adopt their definition.
English
1
0
11
388
SuperJojo47 🎗🇮🇱🇺🇦
My hot take for the day: a majority of diaspora Jews are liberal Zionists. We support and defend Israel as our spiritual home, and Israelis as our extended family. BUT we want nothing to do with Kahanism. It is sick, racist, counter to everything we are. Don't go down this path.
English
92
63
563
19.7K