Hamas attacks Israel

Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
Apr 9, 2008
31,302
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Regina, Saskatchewan
The clock was officially retired a day after Israeli soldiers recovered the body of Ran Gvili, a young police officer who was killed on Oct. 7 and whose body was that of the last remaining hostage in Gaza. Now, for the first time since 2014, there are no Israeli hostages in the Gaza Strip, Israeli President Isaac Herzog said.
Israeli forces on Monday brought home the remains of Gvili, who was killed in action during Hamas's attack on October 7, 2023 which triggered the devastating war in Gaza.

Of the 251 hostages taken by militants on that day, Gvili's were the last remains held in the Palestinian territory.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
119,649
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Low Earth Orbit

Telling...

So scroll to

Israel's Image Revisited
Aaron David Miller

May 16, 2012 -- Writing in the Wall Street Journal this week on the
occasion of Israeli Independence Day, Israeli Ambassador Michael Oren
penned a powerful op-ed on the erosion of Israel's image.

His conclusion: Israel's image has deteriorated in large part because of a
"systematic delegitimization of the Jewish state."

"Having failed to destroy Israel by conventional arms and terrorism," he
writes, "Israel's enemies alit on a subtler and more sinister tactic that
hampers Israel's ability to defend itself, even to justify its existence."
First, some full disclosure. I like and respect Michael Oren. He's a
remarkably talented historian, astute analyst, and able diplomat.
I also have no doubt that there are efforts to delegitimize Israel, that anti-
Semitism pervades some of the anti-Israel rhetoric, that Israel is one of the
EFTA00935817
 

Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
Apr 9, 2008
31,302
11,369
113
Regina, Saskatchewan
The fact that Israel-haters consistently try to conceal is that Hamas’s numbers do not distinguish between civilian and combatant deaths, which is vitally important. Simply stating that 70,000 people have died in two years of war is intentionally misleading, as the insinuation is that Israeli forces are slaughtering civilians en masse.

The reality is that, last August, the IDF estimated it had killed at least 23,600 terrorists since Oct. 7, 2023, or 38 per cent of the 62,000 Gazans that the Health Ministry claimed had died up to that point.

The Health Ministry numbers also don’t distinguish between those who have been killed as a result of Israeli actions and those who perished in “friendly fire” incidents, such as the 471 who were reported dead after an errant terrorist rocket hit the Al-Ahli Arab Hospital.

Even if we take both sides’ August 2025 numbers at face value and count every dead civilian as a war death, it would indicate that civilians accounted for 62 per cent of the war dead. This number is certainly high, but still lower than estimates for the Korean War (74 per cent), the Gulf War (87-88 per cent) and the Iraq War (66-67 per cent).

It is also lower than the 67 per cent civilian death rate in the October 7 massacre, so anyone screaming about “proportionality” should check their facts.

There is no doubt that the harms caused to civilians in Gaza are much higher than they should be, but that is because Hamas embeds terrorist infrastructure in civilian areas, including neighbourhoods, schools, hospitals and mosques. Even so, Hamas’s persistent claim that the overwhelming majority of deaths are women and children is likely a complete fabrication.

An April 2025 report written by two Australian academics and published by the U.S.-based Henry Jackson Society examined the Health Ministry’s own data and found that, between October 2023 and March 2025, 51 per cent of the casualties were women and children — a far cry from the 70 per cent that Hamas’s Government Media Office has been claiming throughout the war and media outlets have been repeating ad nauseam.

When specifically examining the effects of Israel’s military operation in Khan Younis, the researchers found that males between the ages of 15 and 40 were over-represented, and that females under the age of 18 made up nine per cent of the fatalities, while underage boys constituted 13 per cent.

This shows that the vast majority of the dead were fighting-age males — which one would expect to see in a war, but not in a genocide. The higher percentage of underage boys also indicates that many of them were not innocent children who happened to get caught in the crossfire, but child soldiers brandishing AK-47s.
1770490838070.jpeg
Indeed, Palestinian terrorist groups like Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad have a long history of recruiting child soldiers, dating back to the Second Intifada, when they were used as suicide bombers.

Before the war, Hamas ran annual summer camps, attended by tens of thousands of children, to “prepare the youth” to make “sacrifices.” These, according to the U.S. State Department, “involved firearm instruction and military training,” and “served as recruitment events.” And during the war, Israel found hard evidence that “minors are active in the military wings of Hamas and Islamic Jihad in the Gaza Strip.”

Part of the disconnect stems from the fact that while the Gaza Health Ministry is responsible for collecting data, the numbers are often spun by Hamas’s propaganda arm, the Government Media Office. Even if the baseline death toll is relatively trustworthy, it’s completely irresponsible of the global media to unquestioningly parrot Hamas’s claims about women and children being over-represented among the dead.
And even if it’s true that over 70,000 have died since the start of the war, this cannot be construed as evidence that Israel is perpetrating a genocide. Even being generous and assuming that 10,000 people are buried under the rubble and have yet to be added to the death count, the number of dead after more than two years of war still only represents around 3.7 per cent of Gaza’s population of 2.2 million.

By comparison, the global Jewish population was reduced by 34 per cent during the Holocaust, and in Rwanda, the two-year genocide in the early 1990s caused the population to decrease by 28 per cent.

It’s telling that Hamas and its useful idiots in the West were accusing Israel of “genocide” on October 7, before its military campaign even got underway, despite the fact that the Palestinian population in the territories increased by 336 per cent between 1967 and 2017.

There has clearly been a concerted effort on the part of Hamas and its backers to push the narrative that Israel is committing crimes against humanity in order to gain sympathy in West and among world leaders, even though the data shows that there has never been a systematic attempt to eliminate Palestinians — not before the war, and not after.

People on both sides of the debate should have a keen interest in knowing the truth, yet Israel’s enemies only seem interested in peddling lies intended to demonize the Jewish state.

The war in Gaza has unquestionably caused an immense amount of human suffering and we should all support current efforts to bring a lasting peace to the region. Yet we cannot begin to mend the deep wounds this war has caused — both in the Middle East and here at home — if we cannot be honest about what we know, what we don’t know and what the data is actually telling us.

On that note, Humanity “now has a common enemy,” United Nations Special Rapporteur Francesca Albanese told the Al Jazeera Forum via video link on Saturday night during her speech condemning Israel.
1770491505256.jpeg
'Francesca Albanese exploits her position at the UN to echo terrorist propaganda and antisemitism,' Danon's post read. 'And if what she has done so far was not enough, she is expected to speak at the Al Jazeera forum alongside the chief murderer who heads the Hamas terrorist organization, Khaled Mashaal.'
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
119,649
14,742
113
Low Earth Orbit
The fact that Israel-haters consistently try to conceal is that Hamas’s numbers do not distinguish between civilian and combatant deaths, which is vitally important. Simply stating that 70,000 people have died in two years of war is intentionally misleading, as the insinuation is that Israeli forces are slaughtering civilians en masse.

The reality is that, last August, the IDF estimated it had killed at least 23,600 terrorists since Oct. 7, 2023, or 38 per cent of the 62,000 Gazans that the Health Ministry claimed had died up to that point.

The Health Ministry numbers also don’t distinguish between those who have been killed as a result of Israeli actions and those who perished in “friendly fire” incidents, such as the 471 who were reported dead after an errant terrorist rocket hit the Al-Ahli Arab Hospital.

Even if we take both sides’ August 2025 numbers at face value and count every dead civilian as a war death, it would indicate that civilians accounted for 62 per cent of the war dead. This number is certainly high, but still lower than estimates for the Korean War (74 per cent), the Gulf War (87-88 per cent) and the Iraq War (66-67 per cent).

It is also lower than the 67 per cent civilian death rate in the October 7 massacre, so anyone screaming about “proportionality” should check their facts.

There is no doubt that the harms caused to civilians in Gaza are much higher than they should be, but that is because Hamas embeds terrorist infrastructure in civilian areas, including neighbourhoods, schools, hospitals and mosques. Even so, Hamas’s persistent claim that the overwhelming majority of deaths are women and children is likely a complete fabrication.

An April 2025 report written by two Australian academics and published by the U.S.-based Henry Jackson Society examined the Health Ministry’s own data and found that, between October 2023 and March 2025, 51 per cent of the casualties were women and children — a far cry from the 70 per cent that Hamas’s Government Media Office has been claiming throughout the war and media outlets have been repeating ad nauseam.

When specifically examining the effects of Israel’s military operation in Khan Younis, the researchers found that males between the ages of 15 and 40 were over-represented, and that females under the age of 18 made up nine per cent of the fatalities, while underage boys constituted 13 per cent.

This shows that the vast majority of the dead were fighting-age males — which one would expect to see in a war, but not in a genocide. The higher percentage of underage boys also indicates that many of them were not innocent children who happened to get caught in the crossfire, but child soldiers brandishing AK-47s.
View attachment 33150
Indeed, Palestinian terrorist groups like Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad have a long history of recruiting child soldiers, dating back to the Second Intifada, when they were used as suicide bombers.

Before the war, Hamas ran annual summer camps, attended by tens of thousands of children, to “prepare the youth” to make “sacrifices.” These, according to the U.S. State Department, “involved firearm instruction and military training,” and “served as recruitment events.” And during the war, Israel found hard evidence that “minors are active in the military wings of Hamas and Islamic Jihad in the Gaza Strip.”

Part of the disconnect stems from the fact that while the Gaza Health Ministry is responsible for collecting data, the numbers are often spun by Hamas’s propaganda arm, the Government Media Office. Even if the baseline death toll is relatively trustworthy, it’s completely irresponsible of the global media to unquestioningly parrot Hamas’s claims about women and children being over-represented among the dead.
And even if it’s true that over 70,000 have died since the start of the war, this cannot be construed as evidence that Israel is perpetrating a genocide. Even being generous and assuming that 10,000 people are buried under the rubble and have yet to be added to the death count, the number of dead after more than two years of war still only represents around 3.7 per cent of Gaza’s population of 2.2 million.

By comparison, the global Jewish population was reduced by 34 per cent during the Holocaust, and in Rwanda, the two-year genocide in the early 1990s caused the population to decrease by 28 per cent.

It’s telling that Hamas and its useful idiots in the West were accusing Israel of “genocide” on October 7, before its military campaign even got underway, despite the fact that the Palestinian population in the territories increased by 336 per cent between 1967 and 2017.

There has clearly been a concerted effort on the part of Hamas and its backers to push the narrative that Israel is committing crimes against humanity in order to gain sympathy in West and among world leaders, even though the data shows that there has never been a systematic attempt to eliminate Palestinians — not before the war, and not after.

People on both sides of the debate should have a keen interest in knowing the truth, yet Israel’s enemies only seem interested in peddling lies intended to demonize the Jewish state.

The war in Gaza has unquestionably caused an immense amount of human suffering and we should all support current efforts to bring a lasting peace to the region. Yet we cannot begin to mend the deep wounds this war has caused — both in the Middle East and here at home — if we cannot be honest about what we know, what we don’t know and what the data is actually telling us.

On that note, Humanity “now has a common enemy,” United Nations Special Rapporteur Francesca Albanese told the Al Jazeera Forum via video link on Saturday night during her speech condemning Israel.
View attachment 33151
'Francesca Albanese exploits her position at the UN to echo terrorist propaganda and antisemitism,' Danon's post read. 'And if what she has done so far was not enough, she is expected to speak at the Al Jazeera forum alongside the chief murderer who heads the Hamas terrorist organization, Khaled Mashaal.'
Hilarious 😂
 

Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
Apr 9, 2008
31,302
11,369
113
Regina, Saskatchewan
There has clearly been a concerted effort on the part of Hamas and its backers to push the narrative that Israel is committing crimes against humanity in order to gain sympathy in West and among world leaders, even though the data shows that there has never been a systematic attempt to eliminate Palestinians — not before the war, and not after.
Israel’s genocide against Palestinians in Gaza and its geopolitical fallout reverberating across the Middle East and beyond have dominated the 17th Al Jazeera Forum in Doha.

Senior political figures and officials warned on Saturday that the conflict is accelerating the collapse of international norms, reshaping regional power balances, but also noted it has pushed the Palestinian cause back to the centre of global diplomacy.
Part of the disconnect stems from the fact that while the Gaza Health Ministry is responsible for collecting data, the numbers are often spun by Hamas’s propaganda arm, the Government Media Office. Even if the baseline death toll is relatively trustworthy, it’s completely irresponsible of the global media to unquestioningly parrot Hamas’s claims about women and children being over-represented among the dead.
Iranian Minister of Foreign Affairs Abbas Araghchi, fresh from indirect talks in Oman with the United States, described the Palestinian issue as the central strategic question shaping the future of the Middle East, warning that Israel’s military campaign in Gaza and regional posture are undermining the global legal order.
1770570136105.jpeg
He said the Palestinian struggle is “the defining question of justice in West Asia and beyond” and “the strategic and moral compass of our region”.😉
…if it’s true that over 70,000 have died since the start of the war, this cannot be construed as evidence that Israel is perpetrating a genocide. Even being generous and assuming that 10,000 people are buried under the rubble and have yet to be added to the death count, the number of dead after more than two years of war still only represents around 3.7 per cent of Gaza’s population of 2.2 million.
Condemning the war, Araghchi stated: “What we are witnessing in Gaza is not merely war… It is the deliberate destruction of civilian life on a massive scale. It is genocide.” He added that the violence has “wounded the conscience of humanity” and exposed the inability of global powers to prevent attacks on civilians.
Araghchi warned that the consequences extend far beyond the Palestinian territories. “We are witnessing not only the tragedy of Palestine, but the transformation of the world into a place where the law is replaced by force,” he said, adding that impunity for attacks on civilians risks normalising military domination as a guiding principle of international relations.
Humanity “now has a common enemy,” United Nations Special Rapporteur Francesca Albanese told the Al Jazeera Forum via video link on Saturday night during her speech condemning Israel.
Iranian Minister of Foreign Affairs Abbas Araghchi also described Israel’s policies as part of a broader Israeli regional strategy, saying the “expansionist project” aims to weaken neighbouring states and enforce “permanent inequality” across the region while allowing Israel to expand its arsenal without meaningful oversight.
1770570594779.jpeg
Israel (see above) carried out attacks on six countries in 2025: Palestine, Lebanon, Syria, Yemen, Qatar and Iran. It also carried out strikes in Tunisian, Maltese and Greek territorial waters on aid flotillas heading for Gaza.
1770570884478.jpeg
Calling for coordinated international action, Iran’s top diplomat urged governments to impose “comprehensive and targeted sanctions against Israel, including an immediate arms embargo,” alongside the suspension of military and intelligence cooperation, and legal accountability for violations of international law.
'Francesca Albanese…is expected to speak at the Al Jazeera forum alongside the chief murderer who heads the Hamas terrorist organization, Khaled Mashaal.'
Araghchi stressed that the Palestinian issue is “not only a humanitarian issue … It is a strategic issue,” arguing that regional stability depends on ending occupation and building a system grounded in sovereignty and equality.
Sheikh Hamad bin Thamer bin Mohammed Al Thani, chairman of the board of the Al Jazeera Media Network, said in his opening speech that Israel’s assault has become a turning point for the Palestinian issue, warning that the occupation is attempting to permanently alter realities on the ground.
It’s telling that Hamas and its useful idiots in the West were accusing Israel of “genocide” on October 7, before its military campaign even got underway, despite the fact that the Palestinian population in the territories increased by 336 per cent between 1967 and 2017.
Addressing the Al Jazeera forum, he warned that the “Israeli occupation seeks to reoccupy Gaza by displacing its people … settling parts of it and … the West Bank … to prevent the establishment of a Palestinian state”.

He also emphasised the heavy toll paid by journalists covering the war, saying Al Jazeera “has sacrificed… and paid a heavy and dear price of its correspondents,” noting that reporters “were targeted only because they wanted to report the truth to the world”.
1770574398707.jpeg
As of early 2026, the Iranian regime has significantly intensified its crackdown on media, journalists, and social media users, utilizing the judiciary to issue severe punishments, including the death penalty, for alleged "propaganda against the state," "spreading false information," or cooperating with foreign-based media.🤫

Despite the risks, the network (Al Jazeera, regarding Israel) remains committed to “reporting the truth to the world,” he said, honouring journalists who “provided the ultimate price … for the sake of the truth”.
Somali President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud, also speaking at the forum, warned that Israel’s Gaza war and escalating tensions in the Red Sea are unfolding alongside a broader breakdown in the international system. The U.N. Security Council renewed its call to States and regional organizations to deploy naval vessels, arms, and military aircraft to combat Samali piracy, and stressed that the importance of international coordination.
He said the Palestinian crisis represents “another level of inhumane engagement in the history of the world,” cautioning that the failure to secure an “equitable … durable solution based on the two-state solution” risks prolonging instability across the region and beyond.
Calling Israel’s recognition of Somaliland “reckless and fundamentally wrong and illegal action under international law,” he said the move “undermines stability, security and trade in a way that affects the whole of Africa, the Red Sea and the wider world”.
On that note, Humanity “now has a common enemy,” United Nations Special Rapporteur Francesca Albanese told the Al Jazeera Forum via video link on Saturday night during her speech condemning Israel.
Burhanettin Duran, Turkiye’s head of the Directorate of Communications, said Israel’s genocidal war on Gaza reflects a deeper transformation of global politics, warning that the erosion of international institutions has enabled atrocities to unfold with limited accountability.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
119,649
14,742
113
Low Earth Orbit
Israel’s genocide against Palestinians in Gaza and its geopolitical fallout reverberating across the Middle East and beyond have dominated the 17th Al Jazeera Forum in Doha.

Senior political figures and officials warned on Saturday that the conflict is accelerating the collapse of international norms, reshaping regional power balances, but also noted it has pushed the Palestinian cause back to the centre of global diplomacy.

Iranian Minister of Foreign Affairs Abbas Araghchi, fresh from indirect talks in Oman with the United States, described the Palestinian issue as the central strategic question shaping the future of the Middle East, warning that Israel’s military campaign in Gaza and regional posture are undermining the global legal order.
View attachment 33162
He said the Palestinian struggle is “the defining question of justice in West Asia and beyond” and “the strategic and moral compass of our region”.😉

Condemning the war, Araghchi stated: “What we are witnessing in Gaza is not merely war… It is the deliberate destruction of civilian life on a massive scale. It is genocide.” He added that the violence has “wounded the conscience of humanity” and exposed the inability of global powers to prevent attacks on civilians.
Araghchi warned that the consequences extend far beyond the Palestinian territories. “We are witnessing not only the tragedy of Palestine, but the transformation of the world into a place where the law is replaced by force,” he said, adding that impunity for attacks on civilians risks normalising military domination as a guiding principle of international relations.

Iranian Minister of Foreign Affairs Abbas Araghchi also described Israel’s policies as part of a broader Israeli regional strategy, saying the “expansionist project” aims to weaken neighbouring states and enforce “permanent inequality” across the region while allowing Israel to expand its arsenal without meaningful oversight.
View attachment 33163
Israel (see above) carried out attacks on six countries in 2025: Palestine, Lebanon, Syria, Yemen, Qatar and Iran. It also carried out strikes in Tunisian, Maltese and Greek territorial waters on aid flotillas heading for Gaza.
View attachment 33164
Calling for coordinated international action, Iran’s top diplomat urged governments to impose “comprehensive and targeted sanctions against Israel, including an immediate arms embargo,” alongside the suspension of military and intelligence cooperation, and legal accountability for violations of international law.

Araghchi stressed that the Palestinian issue is “not only a humanitarian issue … It is a strategic issue,” arguing that regional stability depends on ending occupation and building a system grounded in sovereignty and equality.
Sheikh Hamad bin Thamer bin Mohammed Al Thani, chairman of the board of the Al Jazeera Media Network, said in his opening speech that Israel’s assault has become a turning point for the Palestinian issue, warning that the occupation is attempting to permanently alter realities on the ground.

Addressing the Al Jazeera forum, he warned that the “Israeli occupation seeks to reoccupy Gaza by displacing its people … settling parts of it and … the West Bank … to prevent the establishment of a Palestinian state”.

He also emphasised the heavy toll paid by journalists covering the war, saying Al Jazeera “has sacrificed… and paid a heavy and dear price of its correspondents,” noting that reporters “were targeted only because they wanted to report the truth to the world”.
View attachment 33165
As of early 2026, the Iranian regime has significantly intensified its crackdown on media, journalists, and social media users, utilizing the judiciary to issue severe punishments, including the death penalty, for alleged "propaganda against the state," "spreading false information," or cooperating with foreign-based media.🤫

Despite the risks, the network (Al Jazeera, regarding Israel) remains committed to “reporting the truth to the world,” he said, honouring journalists who “provided the ultimate price … for the sake of the truth”.
Somali President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud, also speaking at the forum, warned that Israel’s Gaza war and escalating tensions in the Red Sea are unfolding alongside a broader breakdown in the international system. The U.N. Security Council renewed its call to States and regional organizations to deploy naval vessels, arms, and military aircraft to combat Samali piracy, and stressed that the importance of international coordination.
He said the Palestinian crisis represents “another level of inhumane engagement in the history of the world,” cautioning that the failure to secure an “equitable … durable solution based on the two-state solution” risks prolonging instability across the region and beyond.
Calling Israel’s recognition of Somaliland “reckless and fundamentally wrong and illegal action under international law,” he said the move “undermines stability, security and trade in a way that affects the whole of Africa, the Red Sea and the wider world”.

Burhanettin Duran, Turkiye’s head of the Directorate of Communications, said Israel’s genocidal war on Gaza reflects a deeper transformation of global politics, warning that the erosion of international institutions has enabled atrocities to unfold with limited accountability.
It's happening, Jew Klux Klan supremacists openly laud it, you openly support it and it's never ever ever going away.

Does this sound like the shit you want to say when facing genocide and ethnic cleansing charges? Yes or No?


In September 2025, Israeli far-right Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich suggested that the Gaza Strip could be transformed into a "real estate bonanza," describing the destruction caused by the war as the "demolition phase" of urban renewal.

Key Details of Smotrich's Statements:
"Demolition Phase" as Urban Renewal: Speaking at a Real Estate Center conference in Tel Aviv, Smotrich said: “We have done the demolition phase, which is always the first phase of urban renewal – now we need to build,”.

"Real Estate Bonanza": He claimed that the Gaza Strip is becoming a "real estate bonanza" and proposed that Israel should profit from the land, stating: "We paid a lot of money for the war, so we need to decide how to divide the percentages of the land in Gaza".

Post-War Plans: Smotrich stated that negotiations were underway with the US regarding a business plan for Gaza and claimed this plan was "on President Trump's desk".

Context: These comments were made in September 2025 amid ongoing Israeli operations in Gaza, which have resulted in massive destruction, with the UN estimating that over 90% of residential buildings were damaged or destroyed.

Smotrich's remarks have been heavily criticized for appearing to treat the destruction of Gaza as a real estate project and for encouraging the permanent removal of Palestinians. (Gee whiz, only an anti-semite would think that for fuck sake).
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
119,649
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WEST BANK: A White House official said that U.S. President Trump "has clearly stated that he does not support Israel annexing the West Bank," saying a "stable West Bank keeps Israel secure" and aligns with the administration's plans for regional peace. The comments came after Israel's security cabinet approved a plan to intensify Israeli control over areas of the West Bank formally governed by the Palestinian Authority.
A German diplomat told Haaretz that the cabinet plan, that transfers administrative powers to Israeli civil authorities, is a "further obstacle on the path to a two-state solution."

The Israel Police are avoiding the allocation of forces for operations against Jewish terrorism in the West Bank, senior Shin Bet officials said in private discussions obtained by Haaretz.

According to several sources, an emergency discussion on Jewish terrorism was convened at PM Netanyahu's office in November, after which it was agreed that the police would send forces to support the Shin Bet's Jewish Division. That commitment, sources said, has not been implemented.
"Palestinian Authority officials who spoke to Haaretz on Monday described Israel's security cabinet approval the day before to expand Israeli oversight and enforcement measures in Palestinian-controlled areas of the West Bank as 'the final nail in the coffin of the authority and the Oslo Accords'... The prevailing sentiment within the PA is clear: without immediate intervention from the international community, and especially the Trump administration, the Palestinian aspiration for a state is at high risk" – Jack Khoury
 

spaminator

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Oct 26, 2009
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Fred Hahn to step down as president of CUPE Ontario in May
The union leader has been dogged by accusations of antisemitism for anti-Israel rhetoric and support for Boycott Divestment Sanctions movement

Author of the article:Spiro Papuckoski
Published Feb 14, 2026 • Last updated 23 hours ago • 3 minute read

Fred Hahn, president of CUPE Ontario, speaks to a crowd in support of children's aid workers across Lanark, Leeds and Grenville at a rally held in Brockville, July 19, 2023.
Fred Hahn, president of CUPE Ontario, speaks to a crowd in support of children's aid workers across Lanark, Leeds and Grenville at a rally held in Brockville, July 19, 2023. Photo by Sabrina Bedford / Files /Brockville Recorder
Fred Hahn, the Ontario president of the Canadian Union of Public Employees who faced controversy over his stance on Palestine and Israel’s war against Hamas, says he will not run for re-election and end his 20-year tenure in May.


The news comes after Hahn lost his national post as general vice-president with CUPE last October. He was also dogged by accusations of antisemitism for his anti-Israel rhetoric and support for the Boycott Divestment Sanctions movement in recent years.


“Serving as an officer of CUPE Ontario for the past 20 years has been one of the greatest honours of my life,” Hahn wrote in a letter addressed to union members Thursday.

“It has been demanding, joyful, exhausting, and profoundly meaningful. Thank you for your trust, your solidarity, and your unwavering belief in collective power.”

Hahn said he will not be re-offering his name as president at the union’s provincial convention this May, adding it is a time for renewal after two decades as leader.

“This union has never belonged to any one person. Its strength has always come from the courage, clarity, and determination of its members,” he wrote. “It’s time for you all to choose the next generation of leadership to take on the challenges our members continue to face.”


Long history with union
Hahn has been an active member of CUPE since 1991 and began his work in union leadership in 1998 as a member of the Ontario Executive Board. He was elected as secretary treasurer of CUPE Ontario in 2006.

In 2010, Hahn became the first openly gay CUPE Ontario president.


“During my time as President, our members have confronted bullies of every kind: employers demanding deep concessions; governments imposing austerity to hollow out public services; Bay Street interests trying to convince workers to weaken their own pensions; and Premiers legislating away fundamental collective bargaining rights – and outrageously using the notwithstanding clause against CUPE education workers,” Hahn wrote.

“In the face of these attacks, I have been proud to fight back together with you in campaigns that have helped shape our union’s history and future,” he added.

Calls for resignation
Hahn faced criticism and repeated calls for his resignation in August 2024 when he shared a video to his personal Facebook account of an Israeli diver at the Paris Summer Olympics jumping into the pool and spliced it with a bomb that drops on civilians.


Days later, he removed the video from his feed and said he understood it caused hurt and pain to Jewish union members.

“Recently I posted a video on this platform, which I understand caused pain for some who viewed it,” he wrote on Facebook. “I have removed it from my feed because I deeply regret any such reaction.”

Later, Hahn brushed aside continued accusations of antisemitism and calls for his ouster.

“I utterly reject the charge of antisemitism; anyone who knows and works with me knows it to be a lie,” he wrote. “It remains my strongly held view that it is a terrible mistake, and antisemitic, to conflate abhorrent actions by the state of Israel with Jewish humanity or identity.”

In Thursday’s letter to union members, Hahn thanked all who put their trust in him and signed off as having “CUPE pink in my blood.”

“While my role as President will come to an end, my commitment to this union will not,” he wrote. “I will continue to stand with you – in solidarity, in struggle, and in hope – just as I always have.”
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
119,649
14,742
113
Low Earth Orbit
Fred Hahn to step down as president of CUPE Ontario in May
The union leader has been dogged by accusations of antisemitism for anti-Israel rhetoric and support for Boycott Divestment Sanctions movement

Author of the article:Spiro Papuckoski
Published Feb 14, 2026 • Last updated 23 hours ago • 3 minute read

Fred Hahn, president of CUPE Ontario, speaks to a crowd in support of children's aid workers across Lanark, Leeds and Grenville at a rally held in Brockville, July 19, 2023.
Fred Hahn, president of CUPE Ontario, speaks to a crowd in support of children's aid workers across Lanark, Leeds and Grenville at a rally held in Brockville, July 19, 2023. Photo by Sabrina Bedford / Files /Brockville Recorder
Fred Hahn, the Ontario president of the Canadian Union of Public Employees who faced controversy over his stance on Palestine and Israel’s war against Hamas, says he will not run for re-election and end his 20-year tenure in May.


The news comes after Hahn lost his national post as general vice-president with CUPE last October. He was also dogged by accusations of antisemitism for his anti-Israel rhetoric and support for the Boycott Divestment Sanctions movement in recent years.


“Serving as an officer of CUPE Ontario for the past 20 years has been one of the greatest honours of my life,” Hahn wrote in a letter addressed to union members Thursday.

“It has been demanding, joyful, exhausting, and profoundly meaningful. Thank you for your trust, your solidarity, and your unwavering belief in collective power.”

Hahn said he will not be re-offering his name as president at the union’s provincial convention this May, adding it is a time for renewal after two decades as leader.

“This union has never belonged to any one person. Its strength has always come from the courage, clarity, and determination of its members,” he wrote. “It’s time for you all to choose the next generation of leadership to take on the challenges our members continue to face.”


Long history with union
Hahn has been an active member of CUPE since 1991 and began his work in union leadership in 1998 as a member of the Ontario Executive Board. He was elected as secretary treasurer of CUPE Ontario in 2006.

In 2010, Hahn became the first openly gay CUPE Ontario president.


“During my time as President, our members have confronted bullies of every kind: employers demanding deep concessions; governments imposing austerity to hollow out public services; Bay Street interests trying to convince workers to weaken their own pensions; and Premiers legislating away fundamental collective bargaining rights – and outrageously using the notwithstanding clause against CUPE education workers,” Hahn wrote.

“In the face of these attacks, I have been proud to fight back together with you in campaigns that have helped shape our union’s history and future,” he added.

Calls for resignation
Hahn faced criticism and repeated calls for his resignation in August 2024 when he shared a video to his personal Facebook account of an Israeli diver at the Paris Summer Olympics jumping into the pool and spliced it with a bomb that drops on civilians.


Days later, he removed the video from his feed and said he understood it caused hurt and pain to Jewish union members.

“Recently I posted a video on this platform, which I understand caused pain for some who viewed it,” he wrote on Facebook. “I have removed it from my feed because I deeply regret any such reaction.”

Later, Hahn brushed aside continued accusations of antisemitism and calls for his ouster.

“I utterly reject the charge of antisemitism; anyone who knows and works with me knows it to be a lie,” he wrote. “It remains my strongly held view that it is a terrible mistake, and antisemitic, to conflate abhorrent actions by the state of Israel with Jewish humanity or identity.”

In Thursday’s letter to union members, Hahn thanked all who put their trust in him and signed off as having “CUPE pink in my blood.”

“While my role as President will come to an end, my commitment to this union will not,” he wrote. “I will continue to stand with you – in solidarity, in struggle, and in hope – just as I always have.”
Criticism of Israel is not as antisemitism.
 

Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
Apr 9, 2008
31,302
11,369
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Regina, Saskatchewan
MSF, one of the largest humanitarian organizations operating in Gaza, said it ceased all non-critical operations at Gaza's second-largest medical center as of January 20. According to the organization's statement, staff observed "a pattern of unacceptable acts, including the presence of armed men, intimidation, arbitrary arrests of patients, and a recent situation of suspicion of movement of weapons."
Humanitarian group Doctors Without Borders, or MSF, announced on Friday that it was halting its work in most departments at Nasser Hospital in the southern Gaza Strip, citing the presence of armed militants and weapons inside the hospital.
"Hospitals must remain neutral, civilian spaces, free from military presence or activity, to ensure the safe and impartial delivery of medical care," the organization stated.
The organization announced the end to its operations in the hospital's pediatric, maternity and neonatal intensive care units. MSF also closed consultation clinics in physiotherapy, occupational therapy, a burns clinic and mental health.

However, MSF continues to operate in the inpatient and surgical departments because, it stated, leaving these departments could lead to the death of patients.
 

Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
Apr 9, 2008
31,302
11,369
113
Regina, Saskatchewan
Hahn faced criticism and repeated calls for his resignation in August 2024 when he shared a video to his personal Facebook account of an Israeli diver at the Paris Summer Olympics jumping into the pool and spliced it with a bomb that drops on civilians.
Criticism of Israel is not as antisemitism.
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I’m sure Dude meant the non-Jew Israeli divers in his video, etc…😉…& then spliced that in with a bomb dropped on non-Hamas Palestinians, collectively.
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
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Fred Hahn to step down as president of CUPE Ontario in May
The union leader has been dogged by accusations of antisemitism for anti-Israel rhetoric and support for Boycott Divestment Sanctions movement

Author of the article:Spiro Papuckoski
Published Feb 14, 2026 • Last updated 23 hours ago • 3 minute read

Fred Hahn, president of CUPE Ontario, speaks to a crowd in support of children's aid workers across Lanark, Leeds and Grenville at a rally held in Brockville, July 19, 2023.
Fred Hahn, president of CUPE Ontario, speaks to a crowd in support of children's aid workers across Lanark, Leeds and Grenville at a rally held in Brockville, July 19, 2023. Photo by Sabrina Bedford / Files /Brockville Recorder
Fred Hahn, the Ontario president of the Canadian Union of Public Employees who faced controversy over his stance on Palestine and Israel’s war against Hamas, says he will not run for re-election and end his 20-year tenure in May.


The news comes after Hahn lost his national post as general vice-president with CUPE last October. He was also dogged by accusations of antisemitism for his anti-Israel rhetoric and support for the Boycott Divestment Sanctions movement in recent years.


“Serving as an officer of CUPE Ontario for the past 20 years has been one of the greatest honours of my life,” Hahn wrote in a letter addressed to union members Thursday.

“It has been demanding, joyful, exhausting, and profoundly meaningful. Thank you for your trust, your solidarity, and your unwavering belief in collective power.”

Hahn said he will not be re-offering his name as president at the union’s provincial convention this May, adding it is a time for renewal after two decades as leader.

“This union has never belonged to any one person. Its strength has always come from the courage, clarity, and determination of its members,” he wrote. “It’s time for you all to choose the next generation of leadership to take on the challenges our members continue to face.”


Long history with union
Hahn has been an active member of CUPE since 1991 and began his work in union leadership in 1998 as a member of the Ontario Executive Board. He was elected as secretary treasurer of CUPE Ontario in 2006.

In 2010, Hahn became the first openly gay CUPE Ontario president.


“During my time as President, our members have confronted bullies of every kind: employers demanding deep concessions; governments imposing austerity to hollow out public services; Bay Street interests trying to convince workers to weaken their own pensions; and Premiers legislating away fundamental collective bargaining rights – and outrageously using the notwithstanding clause against CUPE education workers,” Hahn wrote.

“In the face of these attacks, I have been proud to fight back together with you in campaigns that have helped shape our union’s history and future,” he added.

Calls for resignation
Hahn faced criticism and repeated calls for his resignation in August 2024 when he shared a video to his personal Facebook account of an Israeli diver at the Paris Summer Olympics jumping into the pool and spliced it with a bomb that drops on civilians.


Days later, he removed the video from his feed and said he understood it caused hurt and pain to Jewish union members.

“Recently I posted a video on this platform, which I understand caused pain for some who viewed it,” he wrote on Facebook. “I have removed it from my feed because I deeply regret any such reaction.”

Later, Hahn brushed aside continued accusations of antisemitism and calls for his ouster.

“I utterly reject the charge of antisemitism; anyone who knows and works with me knows it to be a lie,” he wrote. “It remains my strongly held view that it is a terrible mistake, and antisemitic, to conflate abhorrent actions by the state of Israel with Jewish humanity or identity.”

In Thursday’s letter to union members, Hahn thanked all who put their trust in him and signed off as having “CUPE pink in my blood.”

“While my role as President will come to an end, my commitment to this union will not,” he wrote. “I will continue to stand with you – in solidarity, in struggle, and in hope – just as I always have.”
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