Friday, March 13, 2026

Political Correctness Should Not Be Used To Explain Away Jew-Hatred & Jew-Murder

I despise Democrats and liberals. They can't bring themselves to refer to criminals and terrorists as criminals and terrorists, and they do everything to explain away the murders and attempted murders of Jews by terrorists. They also try to cover up the fact that the terrorists are Islamic supporters who worship Al Qaeda and Isis. Funny how it's okay for them to ignore that fact, but if YOU mention it, they call you "Islamophobic". 

I would think that every normal person suffers from some "Islamophobia" since the 9/11 terrorist attacks, and even before that: after the bombing of Pan Am 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland; after the murder of Leon Klinghoffer; after the bombing of the Khobar Towers.  And every normal Jewish person has "Islamophobia" since the massacre of Jews in Israel by Hamas on Oct.7, 2023 and prior to that horror. "Islamophobia" is an excuse the Muslims use to explain away our outrage.  For us, it means hatred of Islamic terrorists. If you don't like it that we hate you, then stop committing terrorist attacks. It's as simple as that.

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If Jewish "progressives" had their way, scores of children would have been murdered at Temple Israel yesterday

From Elder of Ziyon, 3-13-26 
 
"From all reports of the horrific terror attack at Temple Israel in Michigan yesterday, a bloodbath was averted because of the professional, armed security that the synagogue had in place.

"In all likelihood this was partially funded, directly or indirectly through Jewish Federations, by the Department of Homeland Security. 

"But "progressive Jews" don't like synagogues to be protected by armed guards.

"An April 2024 open letter to Congress signed by pseudo-Jewish organizations like the Jewish Voice for Peace, IfNotNow, Bend the Arc, Jews For Racial & Economic Justice, Synagogues Rising and others insisted that the best way to protect synagogues - which, they claim, are only threated by white supremacy - is through "Community Based, Non-Carceral Approaches." 

"Their "plan" is to partner with other groups and somehow that would stop Hezbollah-aligned actors or Islamist terrorists from targeting Jews. 

"They call it "safety through solidarity."

"Really.

"Oh, by the way, they hate the word "terrorist" altogether, saying 
"We refuse to see our family members and friends (or anyone) labeled as “terrorists” or on the “path to radicalization.” We demand community-based, non-carceral safety approaches that leave no one in our communities behind, and actively challenge our society’s reliance on criminalization and surveillance."
"See? No one is a terrorist, they are just misunderstood well-meaning people. Including someone driving a car with bombs and guns into a synagogue and preschool.

"If only the guards gave Ayman Mohamad Ghazali flowers and an invitation to an iftar meal after he crashed into the building, all would have ended up well. How dare they use guns, treating him like a criminal!

"So when you see empty statements of sadness from JVP or Bend the Arc, remember - if Temple Israel had listened to them, there would have been carnage."

Falling Vaccination Rates = Outbreaks of Infectious Diseases

By Jennifer B. Nuzzo  & Andrea Uhlig at The Conversation, 3-12-26

We study pandemics, and the resurgence of measles is a grim sign of what’s coming

"In the three decades between 1993 and 2024, measles in the U.S. was relatively rare – a few hundred cases each year, at most. But suddenly, the disease has become so entrenched in American life that it sometimes fails to make headlines when a new outbreak erupts.

"As of March 2026, measles has been continuously circulating around the U.S. for more than a year, starting with an outbreak in Texas that lasted from January to August 2025. Before that outbreak was declared over, an outbreak on the Utah and Arizona border began in August and is ongoing. An outbreak in South Carolina began in September, drastically increased in January 2026, and continues.

"Thirty states have had measles cases this year; 47 have seen cases since the start of 2025. Health officials across the U.S. have confirmed 1,300 infections already this year as of March 6, putting the country on track to surpass 2025’s numbers, which were the highest in 35 years.

"We study outbreak preparedness and response at Brown University’s Pandemic Center, and we view the return of measles in the U.S. as a grim signal of what’s to come.

"Low levels of vaccination across the country mean measles outbreaks will continue to occur, needlessly hospitalizing and killing the unvaccinated. But beyond these harms, the disease’s resurgence serves as a serious warning about the country’s capacity to manage infectious disease threats of all kinds.

An eliminated disease returns

"Measles’ return is no mystery: At its root is the falling vaccination rate.

"Around 90% of the U.S. population has received the MMR vaccine, which protects against measles, mumps and rubella, and in some regions of the country, the rate is below 60%. Since about 2019-2020, that overall number has dropped below the 95% needed for herd immunity. It is necessary to keep that rate nationally, but maintaining herd immunity at the local level is equally important in order to prevent measles from finding pockets of unvaccinated communities. 

"Countries that remain free of continuous transmission for 12 months are deemed to have eliminated measles – a designation the U.S. achieved in 2000. The Pan American Health Organization was scheduled to decide in April whether the U.S. should lose that designation, but the organization postponed its meeting until November.

"Current trends suggest that both the U.S. and Mexico, which has also been battling the disease, may lose this status – as Canada did in November 2025. All three countries have seen their vaccination rates fall below the 95% threshold, and their outbreaks may share epidemiological links.

A serious, long-term threat to US health

"By any measure, the ongoing U.S. measles outbreaks signal that the disease has returned in a way that will have serious adverse health consequences. In 2025, three people died from measles in the U.S. That is more than in any year since the disease’s elimination 25 years ago.

"Of the country’s 2,283 confirmed measles cases in 2025, 11% were sick enough to be hospitalized. In South Carolina, where most measles cases have been reported in 2026, hospitals don’t have to report when patients are admitted due to measles complications, so the actual number of hospitalizations due to measles could be much higher.

"People who recover from measles can experience complications such as pneumonia, which can lead to death, or encephalitis, which can later lead to deafness or intellectual disabilities from the brain swelling. The virus can also affect the immune system, making people more susceptible to other infections over the long term, even ones they’ve had before.

"In rare instances – though more likely if someone is infected as a child – measles patients can develop a progressive dementia known as subacute sclerosing panencephalitis, or SSPE, anywhere from two to 10 years after their infection. SSPE always leads to death. This past year, a school-age child in Los Angeles died of this condition years after being infected with measles as an infant, before they were old enough to be vaccinated.

Measles is an economic scourge

"Recurring outbreaks of measles in the U.S. will mean high economic costs. Countries have pursued measles elimination in part because of the clear economic benefits of stopping domestic transmission of the virus.

"Studies have found that the cost of containing measles outbreaks is often as much as tens of thousands of dollars per case. One outbreak in Washington state in 2018-2019, which involved 72 cases – a small outbreak compared with what states are reporting now – cost US$3.2 million for the public health response, medical expenses and productivity losses. The Common Health Coalition found that a sustained 1% drop in MMR coverage would cost the U.S. billions across health care systems and the economy.

An opening for infectious disease

"As concerning as recent outbreaks of measles have been, they herald a larger systemic problem.

"How a country controls measles can be viewed as a proxy for how well it would control many other diseases. That’s because the steps for stopping the spread are the same: deploying vaccines to prevent infections, detecting and isolating cases when they occur, identifying exposed contacts of infected people and making sure they stay home if they’re likely to be contagious, and treating sick people safely.

"But besides measles, we’ve already seen infections that were once controlled, like whooping cough, that rose sharply in 2024 and remained high in 2025 compared with before the COVID-19 pandemic.

"That’s because controlling the spread of many infectious diseases depends on the public’s trust in the basic components of public health. Declining MMR vaccine coverage reveals underlying challenges in public support for vaccines. Public confidence in the current Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is also eroding, according to polling from 2023 to early 2026 by the health policy organization KFF. Less than half of the people polled trust the government even “a fair amount” to provide reliable vaccine information.

"These growing cracks in the country’s public health armor will complicate efforts to protect Americans from future disease threats – whether an outbreak, a pandemic or a biological attack."

Thursday, March 12, 2026

It's Time Once Again To Play "What's The Motive?"!

As soon as the TV news hosts started wondering what the motive could possibly be, I had to shut the TV off before I could kick it in.

Stop the innocent act. What is usually the motive when maniacs drive into synagogues and start shooting? It's Jew-hatred, in case people are really that clueless, it's nothing new, and it's been going on for years.

The shooter is dead, which is a relief.  Michigan was also the scene for a thwarted mass murder plot to kill Jews at an East Lansing synagogue in 2023.

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Reports of active shooter at a Michigan synagogue prompt shelter-in-place orders
Smoke was seen coming from the building’s roof. Nearby schools and houses of worship were ordered to shelter in place, and Jewish organizations were told to lock down. 

"Michigan law enforcement agencies are responding to reports of an active shooter and car ramming at Temple Israel in West Bloomfield, midday Thursday.

"Smoke could be seen billowing from the roof of the temple. Police have not confirmed whether shots have been fired, or if anyone has been injured. A law enforcement official told the Scripps News Group that temple security confronted a person, but that person has not been apprehended."

Melanie Phillips on Britain's Cultural Suicide, 3-12-26

What is wrong with the UK? You'd have thought the 9/11 terrorist attacks would have made them understand what Islam is capable of. Instead, they are capitulating to the Muslims they've let into their country and allowing them to make the rules. 

It's hard to believe this is England. 

Let's just hope that Americans are stronger than that. 

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Britain's chilling trajectory. New guidance on "anti-Muslim hatred" will accelerate the slide towards cultural suicide.
Melanie Phillips, Mar 12, 2026

"Hardly had the UK Communities Secretary, Steve Reed, finished claiming that the new definition of anti-Muslim hostility would safeguard freedom of speech and in no way restrict it than an attempt was made by a Muslim MP to use it to to muzzle Parliament itself.

"Iqbal Mohamed, a “Gaza First” MP, claimed that “Islamophobia” had been normalised in both the House of Commons and the House of Lords. So, he demanded, “what sanction will apply?” to MPs and peers.

"The British parliament is a place where freedom of speech has near sacred status. Its members can speak without fear of being sued for libel, for example, on the grounds that the central institution of democracy should be where the people’s representatives aren’t fettered.

"It is grotesque to claim that MPs and peers have indulged in so much anti-Muslim prejudice that it has become normalised. They have merely drawn attention to troubling developments in Britain’s Muslim community, such as the Muslim-dominated rape and grooming gangs or the deeply alarming defamation of Israeli football fans by Birmingham police seemingly doing the bidding of local Muslim leaders.

"Just as feared, an attempt was promptly made under the new definition to depict this legitimate and indeed essential discussion as anti-Muslim bigotry.

"But instead of slapping down this instantaneous realisation of people’s concerns, Reed dodged the demand to muzzle parliament and agreed instead that it was “right to point to the huge concern that we should all share about the unacceptable level of hostility and abuse directed at Muslims”. Thus a government minister tacitly agreed with the defamatory falsehood directed at MPs and peers.

"The definition is the centerpiece of government guidance for behaviour codes to be adopted by public bodies, councils and businesses to combat prejudice, discrimination and hostility towards Muslims. This will be policed by an anti-Muslim prejudice “tsar”.

"Although it won’t have the force of law, it will have a chilling effect on a society already genuflecting to Islamist intimidation — pressure from Muslims promoting a politicised Islamic agenda to force Britain to adopt Islamic practices.

"Real prejudice against Muslims or anyone else is obviously bad and to be condemned. But Muslims, like other groups, are already protected by existing laws against discrimination and stirring up religious or racial hatred. The only purpose of this new definition is to shut down necessary and legitimate criticism or condemnation of Islam, Muslims or the Islamic world.

"Part of the definition of what constitutes anti-Muslim hatred states:

It is also the prejudicial stereotyping of Muslims, or people perceived to be Muslim, including because of their ethnic or racial backgrounds or their appearance, and treating them as a collective group defined by fixed and negative characteristics, with the intention of encouraging hatred against them, irrespective of their actual opinions, beliefs or actions as individuals.

"This is dangerously broad. As the Government’s counter-terrorism tsar Jonathan Hall, KC has said, it could make people worried about discussing “uncomfortable” topics around Muslim culture, migration and Islamism.

"And Lord Walney, the government’s former anti-extremism tsar, has said extremists could use the definition to “deflect scrutiny from their quest to undermine our values and intimidate fellow Muslims”.

"The government itself knows very well how dangerous this definition is. Immediately after setting it out, its guidance states — with one line emboldened for emphasis:

It must be read alongside the accompanying text set out below, which makes clear that open debate in the public interest is important and must be fully safeguarded. Context must also always be taken into account when interpreting and applying the definition.

"In other words, the definition itself is a threat to free speech so grave it has to be followed by a hasty caveat. But no such feeble calls to protect open debate or apply context will mitigate it.

"The fact that the government has chosen not to use the term “Islamophobia” has been welcomed by some as a climbdown from the threat to deploy that deeply sinister, catch-all term. Such relief is premature. The term “Islamophobia” was dumped not because of anything bad in the concept. It was dumped purely because “Islamophobia” had become too toxic. Using the bland term “anti-Muslim hatred” neutralises that disquiet while introducing a measure which has the same catch-all characteristic and is just as dangerous to a free society.

"In other words, the language has been massaged to spin something dangerous to society as a progressive and necessary measure. It’s dangerous not least because the whole thing is dependent on a highly subjective view of hatred, hostility or prejudice.

"The minister, Steve Reed, said:

Over 40 per cent of all reported religious hate crime is directed against Muslims, which is wildly out of proportion to the number of Muslims we have in the country.

"It’s not clear where his 40 per cent figure comes from, since the latest government figures, published in October, showed that “hate crimes” targeted at Muslims were up by under one fifth, from 2,690 offences recorded in the 12 months to March 2024 to 3,199 offences in the year ending March 2025.

"In any event, some 90 per cent of terrorist suspects on the security service’s books are Muslim, a figure that really is wildly disproportionate to their estimated six per cent segment of the British population.

"But since Muslims claim that anything critical of the Islamic world is “hatred”, that 40 per cent figure likely to be itself a wild overstatement of real prejudice against them.

"Most British Muslims aren’t extreme and pose no danger to Britain; but a huge minority do. And as in the Islamic world in general, antisemitism among British Muslims is majority and mainstream.

"It’s certainly the case that rising public anger over mass immigration and the fact that the authorities bend over backwards not even to call out let alone tackle Muslim misdeeds has provoked increasing violence on the streets directed at the Muslim community.

"But it is British Jews whose every school, synagogue and communal gathering has had to be protected for years against attack, including the terrorist attack on a Manchester synagogue which left two worshippers dead. And Muslims are disproportionately involved in those attacks — something it may well become impossible to say under the government’s new definition.

"Indeed, the entire premise of that whole exercise is grotesque. British Jews are under siege from a vast increase in anti-Jewish attacks. For two years, Muslim-led mobs have staged demonstrations “for Gaza” chanting for the murder of Jews. Still more Muslim mobs have been marching in support of the genocidal Tehran regime which has sworn to wipe Israel off the map and kill all Jews.

"Muslims have attacked Hindus in north-west London and Birmingham, and Sikhs in west London. And yet the government chooses this moment to protect Muslims from hostility. One religion alone is responsible for the overwhelming majority of terrorist attacks in Britain and indeed the world. Yet that is the one religion to which the British government has decided to offer special protection.

"The deeper point is that hatred is an indelible part of human nature and cannot be eradicated. In addition, its identification is necessarily highly subjective and therefore always contestable. Moves to eradicate it therefore invariably entail an oppressive and even totalitarian approach.

"The comparison with the International Human Rights Association definition of antisemitism is inappropriate. That definition itself is weak and full of holes and has patently done absolutely nothing to halt the tsunami of antisemitism in Britain.

"But the real point is that antisemitism cannot be compared with “anti-Muslim” attitudes because it isn’t a mere prejudice or expression of hostility or hatred. It is is a unique pathology casting Jews as a demonic force with sinister powers, and it is fundamentally exterminatory in intent. It is in and of itself a danger to society.

"The reason that antisemitism has so appallingly roared out of control in Britain is the absence of political will to deal with it. And the reason for that, in addition to the government’s support for the cause of “Palestine” which has acted as a Trojan horse for Jew-hatred, is that ministers are desperate to placate and appease Muslim extremism — which takes its energy from the psychotic hatred of Jews.

"The consequences of official Britain’s genuflection to predatory Islamism are becoming increasingly widespread, egregious and dismaying.

  • The Royal Mint, of all things, has announced that it has partnered with Islamic Relief UK for Ramadan to donate online sales profits of its gold, sharia-compliant Kaaba bars to the charity.

"Zakat, one of the five pillars of Islam, requires Muslims to give 2.5 per cent of their wealth to charity. The Royal Mint produces Britain’s coinage. Why on earth is it performing a Muslim religious requirement? And why is it donating to Islamic Relief, a worldwide organisation that has faced accusations of ties to extremism and terror financing?

  • Bristol city council had the Muslim call to prayer sung out in Arabic at a public council meeting.

  • Chester-le-Street Church of England primary school in county Durham invited a Muslim speaker to teach pupils how to pray to Allah. The school published photographs of the visit on Facebook that showed the speaker and the children kneeling as if in prayer and a girl trying on a hijab.

  • The Free Speech Union reported this week that guidance issued to teachers by Labour councils warns that images made by pupils in art lessons could be seen as “idolatrous” under sharia law. The advice also warns that music and dance classes could be contrary to the teachings of Islam.

"Teachers have been advised in the guidance titled “Sharing the Journey” that “for some Muslim parents, sensitivities may exist in connection with the teaching of aspects of art, dance, drama, music, physical education, religious education and RSHE.” It goes on to say:

It is very important that the school understands this and is also careful not to ask its students to reproduce images of Jesus, the Prophet Mohammed or other figures considered to be prophets in Islam. Some Muslim pupils may not wish to draw the human figure.

  • A primary school teacher in London was sacked and nearly banned for life after he stopped Muslim pupils from washing their feet in the school sinks (for pre-prayer ritual) on the grounds that it was unhygienic and against basic rules.

"He told his class that Britain was still a Christian country – pointing out the King is head of the Church of England and Islam ws a minority religion here Some children and parents complained that this “upset” them.

'Police investigated the teacher for hate crime but dropped it completely. Yet the school and council still fired him for “gross misconduct” after years of service, and even tried to bar him from ever working with children again, which he successfully fought. He’s now suing the local authority with support from the Free Speech Union, arguing he was punished just for stating obvious historical and factual reality while enforcing normal hygiene and school standards.

"What’s happening is that Britain has lost the will to uphold and defend its own historic identity as a nation.

"Thus the government’s anti-extremism body Prevent includes in its sub-category of extreme right wing terrorist ideology, along with white ethno-nationalism and white supremacism, “cultural nationalism” which it defines as holding:

‘Western culture’ is under threat from mass migration and a lack of integration by certain ethnic and cultural groups.

"Which in effect stigmatises as extreme right wing terrorist sympathisers millions of ordinary people in Britain who are concerned about precisely that because they see Britain’s identity rooted in a common culture being steadily destroyed.

"And now we learn that the Bank of England will replace historical figures on its new banknotes by animals and other images from the natural world. This is after a public consultation in which, after reading the Bank’s guidance note that stated:

The theme should not involve imagery that would reasonably be offensive to, or exclude, any groups,

the public overwhelmingly plumped for images from nature. Thus Winston Churchill might be replaced by a badger.

"So great is the collapse of British national identity, in a nation whose common culture has been replaced by groups competing for power and whose own history is therefore viewed as “divisive”, that people are now being replaced by wildlife.

"In Britain, predatory Islamism is pushing at an open door in a nation that is committing cultural suicide."

Another Stark Warning About Mamdani

He may have fooled the New Yorkers who foolishly voted for him, but he didn't fool me. Jonathan Tobin wasn't fooled, either.

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The Mamdani victimhood narrative and the American future
The embrace of terror supporters by the mayor and his wife, coupled with the media’s efforts to confuse the public about an Islamist terror attack, is a tipping point in American society

By Jonathan S. Tobin, Jewish News Syndicate, 3-11-26 

"Last week was a tumultuous one for New York City, its mayor and its Jewish population. Over the course of several days, the city was confronted with events that in any other era might have been considered not only deeply shocking but would have resulted in immediate and serious consequences. 

"Reporting about the fact that Rama Duwaji, the wife of Mayor Zohran Mamdani, had liked social-media posts celebrating the Hamas-led terrorist attacks in Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, and denying the rape of Israeli women, was followed by the news that the city’s first couple had hosted two well-known terror supporters at their Gracie Mansion official residence. But before the public had a chance to absorb any of that, the mayor and most of his liberal-media cheering section sought to downplay and then confuse the public about the fact that Islamist terrorists, apparently inspired by ISIS, had attempted to bomb an anti-Mamdani demonstration. 

"Taken as a whole, it painted a dismal picture of how the mayor and his supporters were not only doubling down on support for terrorism against Israelis and Jews, but also seeking to treat domestic Islamist terror as a minor issue. The fact that these events, like so much else about Mamdani, were generally treated as not that big of a deal says volumes about where Americans are as a society. And that, as much as anything else, is something that ought to be sounding alarm bells for Jews and everyone who cares about the consequences of cultural decline, as well as tolerance for antisemitism and violence. 

The mayor’s popularity

"Mamdani’s ability to shrug off these incidents while being proclaimed by The New York Times as “one of America’s most popular politicians” is an indication not only of how left-wing media and the Democratic Party have his back. Like his election victory in November, it’s also a sign that American society may be at a tipping point when it comes to tolerance for antisemitism. And anyone who thinks that won’t have an impact on Jewish life and the country as a whole hasn’t been paying attention to what has been happening in recent years. 

"At such a time, it’s essential to remember that when Mamdani was elected mayor of New York City last year, optimists told everyone not to be too upset about it. 

"It’s true, they conceded, that the 34-year-old was a longtime opponent of the right of Israel to exist as a Jewish state and a supporter of the discriminatory BDS movement. It’s true that he was a founding member of the Students for Justice in Palestine chapter at Bowdoin College in Maine, a campus group that routinely traffics in Jew-hatred. And it’s true that his brief political career was rooted in activism targeting Israel and its Jewish supporters. He’s also backed left-wing economic and cultural doctrines associated with some of the worst horrors of the 20th century and the collapse of liberalism in the 21st. 

"But as everyone was told, having a mayor with such repugnant views wouldn’t really affect Jewish life in New York, let alone impact what goes on in the rest of the United States or its foreign policy. The mayor would be too busy trying to run the country’s largest city to do any real harm to the Jews or anyone else. In fact, it was predicted, he would soon sink under the weight of the costly and misguided boondoggles that his long-discredited socialist policies would create. 

"Some of that is true. 

"The most hysterical predictions on social media of what his arrival at Gracie Mansion would entail were overwrought and inaccurate. New York in 2026 is not Berlin in 1939. Jews are not being rounded up; anything even remotely like that is not possible. Jewish life in all its complexity and vibrancy continues, and there’s no reason to believe that’s about to come to an end. It’s also true that—as has been the case throughout most of its 400 years of existence—New York is, in many ways, both good and bad, a very different place from the rest of America. What happens there doesn’t necessarily impact the nation as a whole. 

"Still, as the Times asserts and polls confirm, Mamdani is viewed favorably by most New Yorkers. And if his conduct doesn’t change that—and there’s little reason to believe that it will—then that illustrates the shift in public opinion about Jews in the city with the largest demographics outside of Israel. 

Spinning terror support

"Let’s acknowledge that there is nothing really new concerning the revelations of Duwaji or the couple’s decision to host Mahmoud Khalil, the organizer of the pro-Hamas demonstrations at Columbia University, or Abdullah Akhil, another cheerleader for the genocidal group, at their home for Ramadan. Mamdani has tried (with help from sympathetic left-wing journalists) to spin his opinions about the Middle East as support for the “Palestinian cause.” Their backing for the ideology behind Oct. 7 goes beyond his tolerance for the genocidal chants of “Globalize the intifada” and “From the river to the sea” heard on college campuses. Even a cursory look at his conduct and his statements demonstrates that his views are no different from those of his wife, both of whom cheered for and also denied the victimization of Jewish women and even the kidnapping of children. Whether his media fans admit or not, they are Hamas supporters. 

"His unwillingness to condemn the social-media posts endorsed by his wife, even as he tried to say her opinions were not necessarily his own, spoke loudly about his stance. And by inviting in those who also cheered for the largest mass slaughter of Jews since the Holocaust, they also demonstrated that in Mamdani’s New York, such sentiments are not only considered within the bounds of acceptable opinion but are actually laudable. He’s now made it clear that the house that mayors of New York have lived in for the past 80 years is a place where such persons are not merely welcome but honored. 

"Just as with his qualified encouragement of a siege of a Manhattan synagogue last fall, in which he sought to argue that Jewish support for Zionism “violates international law,” the new mayor has laid down a marker that has normalized Jew-hatred. 

"Perhaps even more ominous, however, was the way the mayor and much of the media reacted to the terror attack that took place on March 7 outside of Gracie Mansion. On that day, two Muslim Americans from Pennsylvania threw bombs (fortunately, they didn’t explode) at demonstrators who had come to protest Mamdani. 

"Two groups had gathered outside the Upper East Side landmark—one composed of right-wing demonstrators protesting an alleged “Muslim takeover” of New York, and another supporting Mamdani and the influx of Muslim immigrants. In a scene that can only be described as surreal, one of the terrorists came up behind a Mamdani supporter speaking through a bullhorn about the need to welcome everyone to the city and shouted Allahu Akbar” (“God is great”). He then hurled the explosive device with anti-personnel shrapnel over his shoulder. After another failed attempt to explode a device in the midst of the anti-Mamdani group and a brief scuffle with police, the assailant and his accomplice were arrested. 

Muslim victimhood narrative

"What is key about this incident is the way that most media in New York and nationally, as well as the Mamdani administration, sought to blame the violence on the peaceful demonstrators, who were the terrorists’ intended victims. It’s true that the initial scene was confusing, but for days, leading media outlets and leading left-wing commentators, like CNN’s Ana Navarro and Abby Phillip, have continued to obfuscate the truth about which side the terrorists were on. 

"The same was true of most New York City politicians, including Mamdani, who, as the Times diplomatically put it, “chose his words carefully” when speaking about what happened in an effort to deflect the blame for the crime on his critics, rather than those who shared his enthusiasm for the “cause” of attacking Jews and other opponents of political Islam.

"This was disgraceful in and of itself. But it also showed the commitment of the mayor and much of the liberal media to a narrative of Muslim victimhood in which the real problem is “Islamophobia,” rather than the troubling support for Islamist hate and terror. Had the violent culprits been those extremists who had turned out to oppose Mamdani, no one can doubt that the condemnation of their conduct and their ideas from both the mayor and the liberal media would have been unqualified and vehement. Instead, the crime was depicted as mainly the result of the allegedly bad opinions and behavior of the victims.

"So successful was this media campaign to spin the incident as an attack on Mamdani that Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro actually called him to sympathize and ask if he was alright. Shapiro was the intended victim of a firebombing at his official Harrisburg residence last year during Passover. He has sought to push back against growing tolerance for antisemitism within the Democratic Party that he hopes to lead in 2028 and has criticized Mamdani for his stands. But even he is vulnerable to being influenced by a narrative in which Islamophobia is the real threat, rather than the Jew-hatred and rhetorical support for Islamist violence that Mamdani and others have promoted. 

"That there is a direct connection between this and Mamdani’s attempts to depict the unspeakable orgy of murder, rape, torture, kidnapping and wanton destruction of Oct. 7 as primarily the fault of the Jewish victims. The mayor would, no doubt, prefer it if Muslims did not toss bombs, whether they explode or not, in the vicinity of his residence. Still, the effort to portray him as a victim of anti-Muslim intolerance, rather than as someone who gives his official seal of approval to those who applaud such actions when Jews are the victims, isn’t merely outrageous. It essentially normalizes and distorts the debate about anti-Jewish hate. 

A dystopian scenario

"The main takeaway from this story must be a realization that the dystopian fantasies about the consequences of a Mamdani mayoralty are already starting to come true. Had his opponents in the 2025 election said that if he were elected, Islamist thugs would be tossing bombs aimed at their critics on the streets of New York, they would have been denounced as hysterics trying to foment anti-Muslim hate. Yet that is what has happened, and the response from much of the media has been to do everything they can to twist the discussion about it to one about the awfulness of the mayor’s political opponents. 

"At the moment, there is little that New York’s Jews or anyone else can do about the mayor, who continues to enjoy the enthusiastic backing of his party and its leading media outlets like the Times. But they can draw conclusions from these incidents and act accordingly. 

"At the very least, no self-respecting member of the Jewish community or anyone else with claims to a moral compass should accept an invitation from Mamdani as long as he hosts those who cheer for Jew-killers and condones his wife’s pro-Hamas stands. 

"Jews—or at least those who are willing to be dubbed as “bad Jews” by leftist media because they oppose terrorist murderers either in the Middle East or the United States—should not serve in a Mamdani administration. And it should also be said that his political opponents, like President Donald Trump, should stop cozying up to Mamdani or treating him as if he were a normal politician on the other side of the aisle with whom one can agree to disagree. 

"The normalization of Mamdani’s conduct may be inevitable in a political culture where antisemitism has become fashionable orthodoxy on the political left. The costs of that attitude will become increasingly apparent in a city and a national culture where tolerance of hate for Jews is regarded as either nothing out of the ordinary or an acceptable opinion. A city where people like Zohran Mamdani and Rama Duwaji are not held accountable for supporting the atrocities of Oct. 7 and Jew-hatred in general is one in which, sooner or later, Islamist violence will not only occur but be tolerated, rationalized and excused in the same manner as Hamas’s crimes."

Jonathan S. Tobin is editor-in-chief of JNS (Jewish News Syndicate). Follow him: @jonathans_tobin.

Wednesday, March 11, 2026

COVID Began Its Deadly Path, March 11, 2020

6 years since COVID-19 pandemic began. What happened March 11, 2020

Greta Cross, USA Today, 3-11-26 

It has been six years since the COVID-19 pandemic began and though aftershocks continue to affect us all, one day stands out as monumental.

On March 11, 2020, the World Health Organization (WHO) declared COVID-19 a global pandemic, as the NBA suspended its season, Tom Hanks tested positive for the virus and President Donald Trump announced a U.S. travel ban.

That morning, during a meeting with the House Oversight and Reform Committees, then-Chief Medical Advisor Dr. Anthony Fauci warned lawmakers that, "Things will get worse than they are right now." At the time, 118,000 cases and 4,291 deaths related to COVID-19 had been reported in 114 countries. As of Feb. 22, more than 7.1 million COVID-19-related deaths had been reported in 231 countries, according to WHO, with 1.2 million deaths in the U.S.

Here's a look at the key moments from the start of the COVID-19 pandemic on March 11, 2020.

WHO declares pandemic

Not long after Fauci made his statements on March 11, 2020, WHO declared COVID-19 a global pandemic.

Cities ban large gatherings

Throughout the day, government officials across the U.S. put bans on large gatherings, aimed at reducing the spread of the virus.

Former San Francisco Mayor London Breed prohibited gatherings of more than 1,000 people, former Washington Gov. Jay Inslee and former Oregon Gov. Kate Brown put bans on events of 250 people throughout their states.

First positive case on Capitol Hill

A staff member for Washington Sen. Maria Cantwell was the first individual on Capitol Hill to test positive for the virus on March 11, 2020.

NBA suspends season; NCAA rolls back March Madness crowds

The NCAA announced that due to the virus outbreak, March Madness would only be held with the players, essential staff and limited family in attendance. A day later, the men's and women's basketball tournaments were canceled.

The evening of March 11, 2020, shortly before tipoff between the Oklahoma City Thunder and Utah Jazz, referees and coaches learned that Jazz center Ruby Gobert was positive for the virus. The game was postponed and then ultimately, the National Basketball Association suspended the remainder of its 2019-2020 season.

Tom Hanks, Rita Wilson test positive

Actor Tom Hanks posted a photo on Instagram, sharing that he and his wife, Rita Wilson, tested positive for COVID-19.

"We felt a bit tired, like we had colds, and some body aches. Rita had some chills that came and went. Slight fevers too. To play things right, as is needed in the world right now, we tested for the Coronavirus, and were found to be positive," Hanks wrote in his post. "We'll keep the world posted and updated. Take care of yourselves!"

Trump declares nationwide emergency, issues travel ban

In the evening of March 11, 2020, Trump declared COVID-19 a nationwide emergency and announced a 30-day travel ban on non-U.S. citizens traveling from 26 European countries would be implemented at the end of the week.

Six years later: March 11, 2026

While social distancing and masks have faded away, COVID-19 variants still circulate, primarily during cold and flu season.

Last year, COVID-19-related deaths peaked the week of Jan. 11, 2025, with reported 1,049 deaths, according to the Centers for Disease Prevention and Control (CDC). In comparison, the peak number of weekly deaths in 2024, also in January, was 2,587 deaths. And for an even more drastic comparison, the peak number of weekly deaths in 2021, in early January, was 31,349 deaths, according to the CDC.

As of March 10, COVID-19 cases were only growing in two states – Virginia and Arkansas, according to the CDC. Throughout most of the country, cases were on the decline.

As of November 2025, the Centers for Disease Prevention and Control recommended the 2025-2026 COVID-19 vaccine for anyone over the age of six months. The vaccine is particularly important, the CDC states, for folks who have never received a COVID-19 vaccine, are 65 and up, are at high risk for the virus, live in a long-term care facility and are pregnant, breastfeeding and/or trying to get pregnant.

Greta Cross is a national trending reporter at USA TODAY.

The Babylon Bee: More Trustworthy Than The Mainstream Media

Mamdani Condemns New Yorkers For Making Muslims Throw Bombs At Them
Politics · Mar 8, 2026 · BabylonBee.com

"NEW YORK CITY — Mayor Zohran Mamdani has strongly condemned New Yorkers for making Muslims throw improvised explosive devices at them.

"After two bombs were hurled by ISIS-inspired Muslims at a group gathered near the Mayor's mansion, Mamdani demanded that people stop forcing Muslims to kill them with explosives.

"I am absolutely disgusted that people would make Muslims throw bombs at them," said Mamdani. "I condemn the people who had bombs chucked at them in the strongest possible manner. We will not tolerate the Islamophobia that compels Muslims to construct homemade explosives and toss them into crowds. New York City is better than this."

"Mamdani has ordered all of the citizens who had explosive devices flung at them to apologize for making Muslims do so. "This is how we heal," said Mamdani. "Until people accept responsibility for Muslims trying to kill them, we cannot have peace. Or, until they just let the Muslims kill them. Either way."

"At publishing time, Mamdani had proposed a new law making it illegal to run away from bombs that are thrown at you."

Tuesday, March 10, 2026

A Deadly Terrorist Bombing Thwarted in NYC

It never fails to amaze me  how the liberal, politically correct media continues to downplay terrorism even when it's in our own country.  I had heard these terrorists referred to as "boys" and their bombs as "a prank gone wrong." How quickly people have forgotten.  Why are Americans so willing to overlook and excuse what could have been a deadly bombing in the city where nearly 3,000 lost their lives on September 11?  
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 CNN deletes outrageous post downplaying moment suspected terrorists hurled bombs near Gracie Mansion 

"CNN deleted a social media post Tuesday after outraged critics flamed it for trivializing the self-radicalized ISIS fanatics accused of hurling bombs at Gracie Mansion – calling them two “teenagers” who entered New York City for “what could’ve been a normal day.”

“Two Pennsylvania teenagers crossed into New York City Saturday morning for what could’ve been a normal day enjoying the city during abnormally warm weather,” the tweet from the lefty news outlet said, according to screenshots.

“But in less than an hour, their lives would drastically change as the pair would be arrested for throwing homemade bombs.”

"By Tuesday morning, a link to the social media post produced an error message and the news outlet released a statement acknowledging it was deleted.

“A post regarding the two individuals arrested for throwing homemade bombs outside of New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s home failed to reflect the gravity of the incident thereby breaching the editorial standards we require for all our reporting. It has therefore been deleted,” CNN said in a statement.

"The full article remained available on CNN’s site, notably referring to Ibraham Kayumi, 19, and Emir Balat, 18, as “two Pennsylvania men,” not “teenagers,” and omitting the flowery language on the weather and “what could’ve been a normal day.” 

Your Local Epidemiologist:The Dose, 3-10-26

Cue the allergies and time change, the flu vaccine process is starting, WH's impact on Tylenol, and good news
The Dose (March 10)
Katelyn Jetelina and Hannah Totte, MPH, Mar 10, 2026

Anyone else dragging this week? Daylight saving time has arrived, along with the coffee dependency and the annual chorus of “why do we still do this?” But the time change also has real health effects. More on that below.

Also, the respiratory season is finally winding down, but spring viruses are already stepping in to fill the void. The flu vaccine process for next season has begun, and it’s already getting complicated. New data reveal just how much harm a single White House briefing caused for pregnant patients in emergency departments last fall.

Here’s what it all means to you and your health.


Disease “weather” report

The winter respiratory season is finally easing. After six weeks stuck at high levels, influenza-like illness is starting to decline. Good riddance.

That said, RSV and common cold viruses are still climbing. Some outlets are dramatically overhyping a rise in one in particular: HMPV (black in the chart below). But… this virus isn’t showing anything unusual. A rise is normal, starting in March and peaking in April and May.

What is HMPV? It’s a virus related to RSV, and causes similar symptoms (cough, fever, congestion, shortness of breath). For healthy kids and adults, HMPV is typically a miserable cold. But for infants, older adults, and the immunocompromised, it can be as serious as RSV. Like many viruses, HMPV has no vaccine or treatment, and care focuses on symptom relief.

Positive tests for respiratory viruses; Source: CDC; Annotated by Your Local Epidemiologist.

What this means for you: Expect more snotty noses and cranky kids, but nothing unusual so far this spring season. Full viral reprieve will come in another month or two.

And, did anyone catch the measles plot on The Pitt? I addressed it on social media.

Your Local Epidemiologist | Public Health Expert on Instagram: …

Cue allergy season

My husband is downstairs sneezing up a storm. And I know it’s not just him: Google Trends shows an enormous spike in googling allergies. If we look at pollen data, the Southern portion of the country has high levels, specifically from trees.

Allergy season is becoming longer—plants are releasing pollen earlier in the year (about 40 days earlier) and stopping pollination later in the year (about 2 weeks later)—due to rising temperatures. There’s also more pollen because of the increased amount of CO2 in the atmosphere.

What this means for you: You’re getting exposed to more “pollen grains,” and your immune system may be irritated by them. Dr. Zach Rubin, an allergy doctor, joined us on our podcast America Dissected last year and gave great tips on managing allergies:

  • Rinse your nose regularly with saline water (just like you brush your teeth)

  • Go with second-generation antihistamines, like Zyrtec, instead of Benadryl. Benadryl was made in the 1940s as one of the first antihistamine drugs, but it has a lot of side effects. Always chat with your doctor for more information.


Flu vaccine dominoes are starting

The U.S. annual flu vaccine rollout is a six-month process with many moving parts, refined over more than half a century. It feels early (flu is just now receding), but the sequence has to start now so vaccines are ready for you in the fall.

Last year’s process was a mess: pieces missing, timelines wobbling, disrupted by federal disarray and ideological interference.

Will this year be any different? Too soon to say.

Figure by Your Local Epidemiologist

Where things stand: Last week, WHO made its official vaccine formula recommendation: a three-strain (trivalent) formula with one newcomer. Subclade K is a subvariant of flu that mutated enough to behave differently from its parent strain. It only emerged last August and has already driven record-breaking hospitalizations in several states.

Although the U.S. formally withdrew from WHO earlier this year, CDC flu experts were granted an exception to attend the meeting virtually. That’s good news because global data sharing is essential regardless of politics. Two of the three recommended strains came from viral samples collected right here in Missouri and Pennsylvania.

The U.S. doesn’t automatically follow WHO’s recommendation. We run our own process through an FDA advisory committee called VRBPAC, which rarely diverges from WHO. But this year it might.

The uncertainty: The data clearly support an updated vaccine. Whether Americans get one is another question, for two reasons:

  1. Formula in flux. RFK Jr.’s political leadership signaled a new framework that would require randomized controlled trials (RCTs) for fall vaccine approval. This is a serious problem: flu mutates fast, production must begin months before the season starts, and there’s simply no room for the long timelines RCTs require. This is also not necessary. Flu isn’t a brand new vaccine. Rather, we tweak it like editing a word or two in a Word document—we don’t create a whole new document.

  2. Leadership chaos. Vinay Prasad, the official overseeing this process, is stepping down after an extraordinarily turbulent tenure.

What this means for you: You will almost certainly have a flu vaccine this fall. The open question is whether it’ll be an updated formula (matching this season’s strains, like the rest of the world will get) or last year’s formula held over due to impossible approval standards. The latter isn’t catastrophic, but it’s a poor strategy against a fast-mutating virus.

What’s next: VRBPAC meets this week. You can submit a public comment here.


Tylenol prescriptions plummeted after White House brief

On September 22, 2025, President Trump held a White House briefing in which he claimed that acetaminophen, the active ingredient in Tylenol, was linked to a “very increased risk of autism” in children when used during pregnancy. This claim was not backed by new data or new scientific evidence. Read more in our response here. At the same briefing, the White House promoted leucovorin (folinic acid) as a treatment for autism.

New data is showing just how much words matter. Researchers at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Harvard tracked prescription orders at a hospital before and after the White House announcement. What did they find?

  • Orders for acetaminophen for pregnant women at emergency departments dropped 20%. There was no corresponding change in orders for non-pregnant patients. Prescribing rates gradually crept back toward baseline.

  • Prescriptions of leucovorin for children ages 5–17 jumped 71%. This translates to roughly 25 additional children per 100,000.

Figure Source: Scientific American.

On acetaminophen: This is just devastating. For pregnant patients in pain or with a fever, the ED is often the last resort. These are people who are already suffering. Acetaminophen is one of the very few tools available to treat them safely, and because of a baseless claim made at a press briefing, even that was being withheld. Untreated fever in pregnancy is associated with miscarriage, birth defects, and premature birth.

On leucovorin: A small body of research suggests that leucovorin may help a subset of autistic children, particularly those with cerebral folate deficiency. But the largest supporting study included just 77 children, and it was retracted in January due to data errors. This means in the hospital prescriptions study, given the rarity of this disease, the president’s claim has likely replaced clinical judgment.

What this means for you: Acetaminophen remains the safest available pain and fever reducer during pregnancy. If you are pregnant and have a fever or pain, talk to a clinician and take acetaminophen.


Losing an hour of sleep: the health impact

With the spring forward change, we lose an hour of sleep. Research has consistently linked the springtime change to a temporary increase in heart attacks, strokes, and fatal car crashes in the days following the shift. The disruption to your circadian rhythm—your body’s internal clock—is the driver. Even a small decrease in sleep can spike stress hormones and affect blood pressure, metabolism, and alertness.

What this means for you:

  • Prioritize morning light. Get outside in the morning during this first week. Sunlight is the strongest signal to reset your circadian clock.

  • Go easy on evening screens. That extra evening light from the time change already delays melatonin. Screens make it worse.


Good news

  • Florida’s rollback of school vaccine requirements is stalled. Despite Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo’s dramatic announcement last fall that Florida would eliminate all school vaccine requirements, the Florida Legislature did not take up the proposal. House Speaker Daniel Perez confirmed this week that the House version of the bill was never heard in committee and won’t be brought to the floor.

  • Shift in vaccine communications. CDC Acting Director Jay Bhattacharya posted a video last week simply saying the measles vaccine works and that vaccination is the most effective protection against measles. When you’ve been banging your head against a wall, stopping, even briefly, feels worth noting. We’ll take it. (Read our recent piece on Bhattacharya here.)

Monday, March 09, 2026

Mamdani: A Real Bomb As Mayor

Mamdani attacked a "right-wing activist" who was having an anti-Islam counter-protest, but he had nothing to say about the actual bomb-throwers, who allegedly shouted "Allah Akbar". 

And this unfortunately is the man who will be part of the commemorations this Fall for the 25th anniversary of September 11.  I suppose he can claim that the Twin Towers fell on their own without any Al Qaeda involvement. Or maybe he will be gone by then.

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New York Post, 3-9-26 

ISIS-inspired NYC bomb throwers hoped attack would be deadlier than Boston Marathon bombing: feds 

"The ISIS-inspired extremists who tried to detonate IEDs outside Gracie Mansion wanted to outdo the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing, according to a newly released federal complaint. 

"Investigators asked accused wannabe terrorist Emir Balat following his arrest Saturday if he was familiar with the deadly Boston bombing and whether that was what he and his alleged accomplice hoped to accomplish.

“No, even bigger. It was only three deaths,” he replied, according to the 10-page complaint unsealed in Manhattan federal court Monday.

"Balat, 18, and 19-year-old Ibrahim Kayumi were hoping for more carnage, the feds said.

"Both are charged with tossing two IEDs at anti-Muslim protesters outside Gracie Mansion.

"According to the complaint, Kayumi handed Balat one device — which was packed with a volatile explosive known as “Mother of Satan” — which he hurled at anti-Muslim protesters at a rally organized by right-wing agitator Jake Lang.

"Balat dropped the second bomb near a group of NYPD cops, the feds said.

"Fortunately, neither of the homemade devices exploded.

"NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch called the botched bombing “an ISIS-inspired act of terrorism” at a Monday morning press conference.

"The two extremists both drove to New York City from their upscale family homes in Pennsylvania to carry out the alleged attack, Tisch said.

"Sources with knowledge of the investigation told The Post that both suspects had traveled overseas in recent years, including Istanbul, Turkey, a known hotspot for ISIS training.

"Balat defiantly flashed an ISIS hand symbol as he was led out of a Manhattan precinct and turned over to federal agents on Monday morning.

"Both Balat and Kayumi were being arraigned on similar charges in Manhattan federal court later Monday."