Lee Green

7.7K posts

Lee Green

Lee Green

@leegreennc

Fan of Ben Shapiro and Greg Gutfeld. I'm a Jewish Republican moderate & lover of Israel, Pickleball, cycling, dogs, game nights and bubble baths.

The Villages, FL Katılım Mart 2012
1K Takip Edilen489 Takipçiler
Lee Green
Lee Green@leegreennc·
Heroes.
Rabbi Poupko@RabbiPoupko

That is Lieutenant Colonel Or Ben Yehuda, commander of the CARACAL unit near Gaza. On the morning of October 7th, she opened her eyes and saw Hamas in front of her. “I look up at the sky, then lower my head again, glance to the side, and there are maybe five pickup trucks coming toward me, full of motorcycle riders. There are terrorists leaping between the sand dunes and the trees, all of them wearing vests and uniforms, moving in our direction, and I can’t even count them properly with my eyes. It’s hundreds. Hundreds. And farther back, on the distant road, I see columns of Gazan civilians simply walking toward us, some armed, some not. And I say to myself: ‘That’s it. This is where I die. Right here, exactly where I’m standing now. This is where I die.’ Then I said to myself: Fine. If this is the end, then I’ll end it well. I’ll die with honor. I’ll do the best I can. And I’ll fight until my very last drop of blood. So I turn to my soldiers, a group of twelve heroic fighters waiting for me to tell them what to do. I turn to them with half a smile. Later, they told me I smiled; I didn’t remember it. And I tell them: ‘Come on, let’s tear them apart!’ And they all shout back: ‘Yalla!!!’ They come to the embankment with machine guns, with everything they can carry, and we position ourselves there and start firing at everyone approaching the outpost. We’re shooting like mad. At some point, we had a LAU missile with us, so we fired it at one of the Hamas pickup trucks. The truck exploded in a massive blast, something unbelievable. There must have been huge amounts of explosives inside, and the explosion took several of the motorcycle riders with it. And little by little, I suddenly realize many of them are beginning to retreat, turn around, and flee back the way they came. And suddenly I understood: yes, we’re doing something significant here. We were there for about half an hour, and then, in the middle of all the chaos, I suddenly hear the tracks of a tank behind me. It was an unbelievable sigh of relief. I told my deputy company commander: ‘Stay here! I don’t know whose tank this is — I’m going to get it!’ It was already around eleven o’clock. I start moving backward, advancing toward the tank through the concrete barriers, and suddenly I realize a terrorist is jumping at me from point-blank range, and in another second, he would’ve been hugging me. And my luck was that I already had a round in the chamber and my finger on the trigger. It was literally a question of who shoots first, and I shot first. The terrorist collapsed in front of me. And I froze for a moment, like, what was that? What just happened? Then I hear my deputy commander yelling from behind me: ‘Commander! Commander! Are you okay?’ I look at myself, I’m okay. I turn back toward him and signal with my hand: everything’s under control. He runs up after me, looks at me, and says, ‘What… what just happened between you two?’ And I tell him: ‘Exactly what’s going through your head right now.’ But the tank! I remember — I can’t let it leave. We need it. I ran quickly toward it, and because I’m used to working with my tank crews, I started signaling to them in tank hand signals: ‘Terrorists there, behind me, do this, shell over there!’ And he’s with us, he understands immediately. And for the first time, I suddenly have additional force joining me. We make some kind of flanking maneuver, take up a strong position, and simply fire toward wherever the terrorists are coming from. We keep firing and firing, and they start pulling back. And I understand — all of us understand — that if we don’t continue fighting right now, those terrorists will get past us and reach all the communities behind us. At a certain point, my deputy commander and his radio operator are hit by an RPG and collapse to the ground. So we pull them out of there. Then I call friends of mine who are pilots flying Yasur and Yanshuf helicopters, and I ask them to come land at the helipad near the outpost, because I’ve evacuated wounded soldiers there and I need them to clear our casualties out. And it actually happens. They arrive, they land, and they evacuate the wounded for me. Meanwhile, my medical unit is there the entire time treating casualties, loading them up, evacuating them to the helipad. We managed to bring there the wounded from the APC we had seen, the wounded from our battalion, and several civilians we picked up along the way — people who escaped from Kibbutz Sufa, from Pri Gan, and from other places. They all received treatment from my incredible medical team — those angels — and the helicopters I called in evacuated them to Soroka Hospital, where they finally received proper care. There were also many dead in that battle. There were dead. And I remember one moment at the end, when everything was over, just minutes before they came to evacuate the bodies. There was a moment when they were lying there side by side, and I walked between them, gently touching their faces, stroking them softly, telling them I was sorry, and closing their eyes. And I remember telling myself in that moment that those people, who were now making their final journey, were unbelievable heroes. They fought there like lions to save Kibbutz Sufa. They fought until their last drop of blood." From Or's book 'book One Day in October'.

English
0
0
0
1
Lee Green retweetledi
Mor Edge Insight
Mor Edge Insight@MorEdge_Insight·
A Gazan man stands in front of a group of IDF soldiers, steps back, trips, and plays dead😂🤣 Count how many “journalists” you see rushing onto the scene, and how long it took an ambulance to arrive? So many things over the last three years that have happened in Gaza were so well choreographed and preplanned to ensure that you, the audience, bought into every second of it. Pallywood has worked overtime.
English
223
3.7K
13.5K
367.4K
Pedro Sánchez
Pedro Sánchez@sanchezcastejon·
Este año no estaremos en Eurovisión, pero lo haremos con la convicción de estar en el lado correcto de la historia. Por coherencia, responsabilidad y humanidad.
Español
19.5K
37K
215.9K
5.6M
The Uri
The Uri@uricohenisrael·
Describe this person in two words👇
The Uri tweet media
English
935
34
287
32K
Lee Green retweetledi
Hillel Fuld
Hillel Fuld@HilzFuld·
Want to know how you’re being duped? Check this out. Watch this video of Israelis singing “Ivdu Et Hashem Besimcha”, which means “Worship God with joy.” Then see this article. theguardian.com/world/2026/may… The guardian reports this as “Israeli nationalists chant ‘death to Arabs’ in violent Jerusalem Day march.” A blatant lie on all fronts. It was a beautiful and peaceful march and they weren’t saying anything about death to Arabs. Serious question. How is this allowed? Imagine such an article about literally any other ethnic group or race. Imagine a march of LGBTQ singing about equality and the media reporting it as “LGBTQ chanting ‘Death to straight people’” Imagine the outrage. A peaceful march of feminists singing about women’s rights being reported as “Violent feminists call for death to all men.” People would lose their minds! And yet, when it’s Jews or Israelis the media is defaming, no one says a word. So, someone tell me, what’s it called when you make up lies about Jews and spread those lies to millions of people?
English
62
285
772
18.8K
Lee Green retweetledi
Oren Barsky
Oren Barsky@orenbarsky·
It’s the same pattern every single time: They accuse the Jews of exactly what they tried to do themselves. They attempted genocide — then accuse the Jews of genocide. They carried out rape and organized sexual violence against Israeli civilians — then accuse Israel of systematic rape. They pour billions into academia, the media, and social platforms — then accuse Israel of buying influence. They refuse to let Jews in — then accuse Israel of apartheid. Look at every issue one by one, and you’ll see the exact same pattern repeated over and over again. Every accusation is a confession.
English
60
340
1.2K
11.9K
Lee Green retweetledi
The Persian Jewess
The Persian Jewess@persianjewess·
Amit Soussana: “I was kidnapped from my home by 7 Palestinian men and sexually assaulted in captivity.” NYT: “Rape Dogs.”
English
180
1.7K
9.6K
192K
Lee Green
Lee Green@leegreennc·
Kristof wrote an indefensible column. I hope he and the NY Times gets sued into bankruptcy.
Whitney Tilson@WhitneyTilson

It pains me to go after Nick Kristof so hard because I’ve met him many times and have a very friendly relationship. He’s an incredible humanitarian, writer and journalist, and I think he should get the Nobel Peace Prize for his work exposing the genocide in Darfur, sex trafficking, etc. But his latest column, The Silence That Meets the Rape of Palestinians, is clearly largely (though not entirely) inaccurate and has done enormous damage to Israel and all Jews. I think his big heart, seeing the genuine suffering of so many Palestinians, has created a huge blind spot allowing him to be manipulated by propaganda – some dating back a CENTURY (see article below). As Dan Senor writes, his column was “an explicit attempt to draw a moral equivalence between Hamas and Israel by alleging that both equally engage in systematic sexual violence”, which is OUTRAGEOUS. 1) Here’s Dan Senor: The Making of the Kristof Column — with Matti Friedman (podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the…) 2) The NYT is trying to defend the indefensible. The comments are brutal – and spot on. (x.com/NYTimesPR/stat…) 3) Good to see Israel plans to sue – I can’t wait to see what discovery uncovers. (x.com/IsraelMFA/stat…) 4) More powerful articles: - Guy Goldstein: The New York Times and 100 Years of Rape Inversion: Why the New York Times’ latest antisemitic trope can trace its roots back to the father of Palestinian nationalism (itsaguything.substack.com/p/the-new-york…) - WSJ editorial: The Truth About Hamas (wsj.com/opinion/hamas-…) - NY Post op ed: New York Times’ libelous campaign against Israel continues apace (nypost.com/2026/05/12/opi…) - The Free Press, Eli Lake: Nick Kristof’s ‘Dog Torture’ Claim About Israel Doesn’t Pass Muster (thefp.com/p/nick-kristof…) - Olmert Accuses NYT’s Kristof of Misrepresenting Comments on Alleged Rape of Palestinian Inmates (vinnews.com/2026/05/13/olm…) - WSJ op ed: Antisemites Right and Left: To speak plainly about Jew-hatred in one’s own party is hard. It’s also a duty. (wsj.com/opinion/antise…)

English
0
0
0
13
Lee Green retweetledi
Mor Edge Insight
Mor Edge Insight@MorEdge_Insight·
There is stupid. There is really stupid. And then there’s Candace-Stupid™ 😂 She genuinely believes the Muslim Quarter in Jerusalem is the only place Muslims are allowed to live in Israel. Then she doubles down and says a “Rabbi told her so.” There are 2 million Arab citizens (mostly Muslim) living freely all over Israel in Haifa, Tel Aviv, Jaffa, Nazareth, the Galilee, the Negev, everywhere. Just like Italians don’t only live in Little Italy and Chinese don’t only live in Chinatown. The level of stupidity is actually impressive. This is Candace-Stupid™
English
75
271
1.7K
23.5K
Rawan Osman روان عثمان
Rawan Osman روان عثمان@RawaneOsmane·
Exile My skin is thick, but last week in Israel was too much even for me. People see the shiny dress, the big smile, the glamorous pictures from the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange where I received a prestigious award while people showered me with love and respect. What they do not see is that I went through some of my lowest moments since October 7th, precisely because some of those who hurt me most are supposed to be on my side. An Israeli friend who attended the ceremony left before I even received the award. No congratulations, no message afterward, nothing. People later told me he was jealous. Jealous of what exactly? Believe me, in my life, there is nothing to be jealous of. A few days later, I went for dinner at a friend’s house in Jerusalem. He told me he had bought a bottle of Lebanese arak made in Chtaura, the town where I grew up. I do not even drink arak, yet holding that bottle sent shivers down my spine. I was holding a piece of home. Unconsciously, he had invited me to mourn. He is a convert himself, also cut off from parts of the Arab world and from family. On October 7th, his estranged brother messaged him asking if he was still alive. For one brief moment, he thought sympathy had motivated the message. Then another message followed: “I wish you and your filthy family dead.” I showed him the message I received from my younger sister on October 8th. She insisted the massacre was Israeli propaganda. Her sympathy was entirely with the Palestinians. The conversation ended with “shame on you” before she blocked me. I still do not know what was worse: the first conversation I had with my mother after October 7th or the last. How does one process such hatred from one’s own family? The answer is that you do not. You simply absorb it while trying to remain sane. At dinner, I sat across from my friend’s daughter. Her partner had recently been injured in Lebanon. She would not greet me, barely looked at me, and when our eyes crossed by accident, she rolled hers. That moment stayed with me because it captured something painful and difficult to explain: exile does not always happen between enemies. Sometimes it happens among people who should understand you best. A religious convert in Jerusalem once told me that even if I converted a hundred times, I would never become a Jew. A family member told me years ago that they wished I had died of cancer before seeing the day I visited Israel. My son has paid a price too. In Modiin, teenagers called him a Nazi because he lives in Germany. When I missed his high school graduation because of my work, I watched the ceremony from afar wondering whether his teachers thought I was simply a terrible mother. The truth is that I wanted nobody to know he was my son because I wanted to protect him from the hatred directed at me. And still, despite all of this, I cannot betray what I know to be true. I do not do what I do for money, applause, or awards. If anything, the higher I rise publicly, the lower I fall in the eyes of many people I once loved or expected solidarity from. I do what I do because Israel is worth it to me. Israel, the project that materialized. The model that defies the hatred, tribalism, victimhood, and fatalism that destroyed so much of our region. Every Israeli or Jew whose heart becomes consumed by darkness after October 7th is a victory for the axis of evil. I cannot allow that. Even when I am exhausted. Even when I feel humiliated. Even when I feel completely alone. If you are ever jealous of pro-Israel activists, especially those who came from the Arab world, remember this: Many of them are living in exile. And sometimes friendly fire hurts more than the enemy. #israel #october7
Rawan Osman روان عثمان tweet media
English
268
233
2K
43.4K
Lee Green
Lee Green@leegreennc·
@its_Lexieroy She’s asking very stupid divisive questions whose only purpose is to attempt to make Trump uncomfortable. He just doesn’t take the bait.
English
0
0
0
5
Lexie🌹👉🏻🇺🇸
Lexie🌹👉🏻🇺🇸@its_Lexieroy·
🚨TRUMP JUST CALLED TWO FEMALE REPORTERS “STUPID”… AGAIN In case anyone’s keeping count: Today alone, he called not one, but TWO female reporters “stupid” to their faces. This isn’t a one-off. He’s going to keep doing it. He’s going to start calling them far worse. Because nobody in that room — or in his own party — has the spine to stop him. When does the press corps finally push back? Do YOU think this is acceptable behavior from the President of the United States? YES or NO?
English
24.1K
1.1K
5.5K
536.3K
Lee Green
Lee Green@leegreennc·
@VividProwess I feel sad for you because you will be oppressed by your future Muslim husband. Gullible women like you attract bad men.
English
0
0
0
10
Vivid.🇮🇱
Vivid.🇮🇱@VividProwess·
A British girl who converted to Islam says she's not brainwashed. She wants rewards in the afterlife because she wears a hijab. How does someone end up believing this?
English
1.7K
457
2.6K
57.4K
Lee Green retweetledi
Dr. Maalouf ‏
Dr. Maalouf ‏@realMaalouf·
Remember Asia Bibi, a Pakistani Christian woman who spent 8 years on death row after being accused of “blasphemy” for drinking water from a Muslim’s cup. Asia was working in the fields with her Muslim coworkers. She got thirsty and went to fetch water from the well, where she took a drink with an old metal cup she had found. That’s all it took. Christians are considered dirty and impure in Islam, and she was accused of attempting to contaminate the Muslims’ water just by drinking from their cup. She was sentenced to death by hanging. The governor of her province voiced opposition to the verdict and was assassinated by his own bodyguard. When she was finally acquitted in 2018 due to international pressure, tens of thousands of Muslims rioted, demanding her immediate execution. A local poll found that 10 MILLION Pakistanis would personally kill her if given the chance. Just for drinking water from a Muslim’s cup. Her lawyer had to flee the country. And after months in hiding, she was finally able to escape Pakistan and received asylum in Canada. This is Pakistan, where non-Muslims live under the constant threat of death. The more I learn about this country, the more it just feels like ISIS with a formal government.
Dr. Maalouf ‏ tweet media
English
669
9.5K
21.5K
309.8K
Lee Green
Lee Green@leegreennc·
@mattvanswol Just be thankful you are not narrow minded like them. Stay proud and assertive. Never hide who you are.
English
0
0
0
3
Matt Van Swol
Matt Van Swol@mattvanswol·
I’ve gone to the same gym for almost 4 years now. Good friends with nearly everyone there. One day a guy who used to make small talk with me, just stopped. Didn’t think much of it, but it went on for weeks. Found out later he’s a liberal and someone showed him my X account and he just won’t talk to me now. This has happened many many many times since becoming publicly conservative. I’ve lost many friends and even many more acquaintances. They won’t even discuss us. Won’t even look at me. It’s bad for me… but it’s 10,000x worse for my wife. Liberal women are genuinely EVIL to conservative women. It’s on another level. Pure evil. No one talks about this enough but the public shaming of people who are openly conservative is extremely intense and unless you have a lot of mental fortitude and surround yourself with better people quickly… I can understand why many find it is not worth saying anything at all. But that doesn’t make it harder for those of us who speak up… because we are the few.
English
6.1K
4.1K
30.5K
3.3M
Kat Timpf
Kat Timpf@KatTimpf·
My seemingly healthy, strong father Daniel “Dad Timpf” Timpf died very unexpectedly on the evening of May 7 at just 69 years old.   It does not seem like enough to simply call him my father, because he was so much more than that. He was my rock, my hero and my best friend. He was loyal, funny, kind, selfless, hard-working, and so devoted to his children that it was impossible to be near him and not find yourself inspired. He was a writer, a painter, a sailor, and somehow knowledgeable on every subject from world history to literature to accounting. He was the most dependable person anyone has ever met. I always felt like, as long as I had his phone number, there was not a problem I could not solve. I needed him here with me; I am not okay, and I am far from the only person who feels this.   The birth of my son in February 2025, his first grandchild, was supposed to be a happy new beginning for our family. A family that had been already once devastated by an untimely loss: the loss of my mother Anne Marie to a rare disease in 2014 just a matter of weeks after her diagnosis.   The joy of my son’s birth was, of course, complicated by my also very unexpected breast cancer diagnosis just a matter of hours before going into labor with him. During this time, my dad did what he did best, which was to save the day. As soon as he heard about my diagnosis, he simply got into the car and started driving to New York -- making it through the tunnel just as my  son was born…on the day that happened to be his own birthday, as well.   In the tumultuous time of a simultaneous new cancer diagnosis and new baby, my dad was the sole reason for our stability, rushing in to help care for our son, and returning to do so again for my double mastectomy, reconstructive surgery, and any time that we ever needed him. It was an awful, awful year… but I found so much joy and hope throughout it by watching the beauty of a very special relationship form between my son and my father. This horrible thing that was happening was creating such a very special bond between the two of them -- almost making the terrible thing worth it -- and I was so excited to see how that bond would grow.   The bond was of top priority for my father, who visited from Michigan often. I saw him last on the Monday before he died, and my son was so proud to help his grandfather push his suitcase down to the car as he left. The goodbyes were quick. Why wouldn’t they be? We would all see each other again at the beginning of June, when we would all head to Texas for my shows and to see my grandpa. We wanted to make sure that my son could spend as much time as he could with his great-grandfather. He is, after all, 93.   I was certainly not over the trauma of my cancer or having to amputate the breasts I so badly wanted to feed my son with, but the one thing I could always count on to get me through my worst moments was seeing my son’s and my father’s faces light up when they saw each other, be it during the visits or our routine morning and bedtime FaceTime calls.   That is, at least, until I had to hear over the phone from a doctor I had never met in an emergency room in the same town up north that I’d previously announced to my father that I was pregnant that my dad was dead; I would never see him again, and neither would my son. It would turn out that last year was not the hard one, after all. Rather, it was the one I would now do anything to relive. I would amputate my breasts every year just to be able to speak with him one more time, even for five minutes.   I am currently living an unimaginable horror. For many people, this is a tragic story. For me, it’s my life. I do not know how I will recover from it. I only know that I have to for the sake of what is left of my family.
English
19K
4.6K
78K
1.7M
Lee Green
Lee Green@leegreennc·
@NateSilver538 What a world where so many people eagerly await the hateful vile words of Jackson Hinkle, Andrew Tate and Dan Bilzerien. Curious why you put Hinkle in red? His antiJewish screeds are the typical type of leftist hate speech generated by those in the pocket of Qatar, Turkey…
English
0
0
0
32
Nate Silver
Nate Silver@NateSilver538·
These are the Twitter/X accounts with the most engagement so far in 2026. I suppose I had some intuition for how bad it was, but jeez, this is what you get when the ecosystem is broken.
Nate Silver tweet media
English
7.5K
5.5K
29.8K
21.2M