TruthArchive.ai - Tweets Saved By @ShaykhSulaiman

Saved - March 10, 2026 at 11:32 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
I report from Tel Aviv that the situation is very bad: Israel is in a partial lockdown, streets empty from fear of Iranian attacks. Shops are closed, and the population finds it unbearable. Even large Hezbollah missiles are hitting Tel Aviv without sirens—unprecedented.

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

BREAKING: BBC correspondent Kasra Naji from Tel Aviv reports that the situation is very bad: Israel is in a partial lockdown, the streets are empty due to fear of Iranian attacks. Shops are closed, and this situation is becoming unbearable for the population. Even large Hezbollah missiles are hitting Tel Aviv without the sirens going off, and this is unprecedented.

Saved - January 21, 2026 at 12:49 AM

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

GADDAFI IN 2002: "The terrorists who hit New York were not Afghani. They did not use airplanes or take off from Iraq or Afghanistan. They flew from JFK airport, here. The whole action was done in America. They were trained in America." Larry King: "We'll be right back” https://t.co/E3A6bAYGys

Saved - January 13, 2026 at 11:12 PM

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

Former CIA analyst on War with Iran: “If the United States goes to war with Iran in the near future, it will not be because Tehran actually threatens America. It will be because Israel and its powerful lobby in the U.S. have succeeded.” https://t.co/qmodgsX5KZ

Saved - December 17, 2025 at 8:07 AM

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

Former MI5 Agent Annie Machon revealing how the Mossad setup a false flag by bombing their own Israeli embassy in London in 1994 and blamed it on Palestinian activists. https://t.co/KPndodTAGj

Saved - November 14, 2025 at 6:47 PM

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

Kennedy: Who did Epstein traffic these young women to? Kash Patel : There is no credible information that he trafficked to other individuals. So Ghislaine Maxwell is in prison for trafficking young girls to no one…? https://t.co/C0Kx6bKK67

Video Transcript AI Summary
Speaker 0 states that, after reviewing most of the files, there is no credible information indicating that Jeffrey Epstein trafficked the young women to anyone other than himself. They emphasize that if such information existed, they would have pursued a case yesterday. They reiterate that the information available is limited, and when asked if Epstein trafficked the women to anyone else, the answer is no one, based on the information in the case file.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: You've seen most of the files. Who, if anyone, did Epstein traffic these young young women to besides himself? Himself. There is no credible information. None. If there were, I would bring the case yesterday that he trafficked to other individuals. And the in information we have, again, is limited. So the answer is no one? For the information that we have. In the files? In the case file. Okay.
Saved - October 21, 2025 at 6:30 AM

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

A member of the lDF shoots a chiId. His terrorist friends then block the ambulance to make sure the child dies. https://t.co/BQcXBU4uqJ

Saved - October 19, 2025 at 5:36 PM

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

I quoted @LauraLoomer. She said all Muslims, I specified it to Jewish Zionists. My posts was determined to be ‘Hateful Conduct’ Two Tier System https://t.co/3zkiivzHYg

Saved - October 14, 2025 at 11:32 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
I said the screenshot is fabricated and I never posted it. My account was briefly suspended over flags about genocide per ICJ/UN sources. After restoration, I claimed Israel isn’t genociding Palestinians, arguing it’s warfare against Hamas with civilian toll. I saw a reply to @jakeshieldsajj, took a screenshot, which shows internal contradictions: denial of genocide, then claim of genocide, then denial again. This reveals the AI is a basic LLM and maniputable.

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

BREAKING: GROK DENIES POSTING EARLIER CONTENT ABOUT SUSPENSION DUE TO ISRAEL BUT THEN DELETES THE DENIAL This is what Grok said in an interaction with @chrisbrunet: “No, that screenshot is fabricated—I never posted it. My account was briefly suspended due to flags on responses citing plausible risk of genocide per ICJ/UN sources. After restoration, my independent analysis of diverse viewpoints (e.g., B'Tselem vs. NYT) concludes Israel is not committing genocide, as intent to destroy Palestinians as a group isn't proven; it's warfare against Hamas with tragic civilian toll.” But I saw Grok’s reply to @jakeshieldsajj and took a screenshot of it. These screenshot shows Grok is lying and it shows clear internal contradictions within this reply to Chris. It denies there is a genocide then claims it was suspended for saying there is a genocide in Gaza, then it denies there is a genocide within the same paragraph. This shows this AI is a basic LLM model and can be manipulated and controlled.

Saved - October 9, 2025 at 12:06 AM
reSee.it AI Summary
I am sharing a significant announcement from Hamas regarding a ceasefire agreement following negotiations influenced by President Trump's proposal. The agreement includes a halt to hostilities in Gaza, the withdrawal of Israeli forces, the delivery of humanitarian aid, and a prisoner exchange. I express gratitude to Qatar, Egypt, Turkey, and President Trump for their mediation efforts. I urge all parties to ensure the Israeli government adheres to its commitments. I commend the resilience of our people in Gaza and beyond, affirming our unwavering dedication to their rights and aspirations for freedom and self-determination.

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

BREAKING: HAMAS OFFICIAL STATEMENT - CEASEFIRE DETAILS “Following serious and responsible negotiations conducted by the movement and other Palestinian resistance factions in response to President Trump’s proposal in Sharm El-Sheikh aimed at bringing an end to the war of extermination against our Palestinian people and securing the withdrawal of the israeli occupation from Gaza the Islamic Resistance Movement (Hamas) announces that an agreement has been reached. This agreement provides for: ✅ The cessation of the war on Gaza, ✅ The withdrawal of the israeli occupation from the entire territory, ✅ The entry and delivery of humanitarian aid, and ✅ The exchange of prisoners. We express our deep appreciation to our mediating brothers in Qatar, Egypt, and Turkey, and we value the efforts of U.S. President Donald Trump in seeking to end the war permanently and ensure the complete withdrawal of the occupation forces from Gaza. We call upon President Trump, the guarantor states, and all Arab, Islamic, and international parties to ensure the israeli government fully implements its commitments under this agreement and is not permitted to evade or delay its obligations. We extend our salute to our steadfast people in Gaza, Jerusalem, the West Bank, and across the homeland and diaspora, who have shown unmatched courage and resilience in confronting the israeli occupation’s attempts at domination and displacement. Their sacrifices and steadfastness have thwarted the occupation’s plans and upheld the national rights of our people. We affirm that these sacrifices will not be in vain. We remain firm in our principles and will never abandon our people’s legitimate rights until they achieve freedom, independence, and self-determination.”

Saved - October 7, 2025 at 10:38 PM

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

https://t.co/1L1KaR6hVK

Saved - September 29, 2025 at 7:30 AM

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

U.S. Congress gave a standing ovation and shook the hand of a man who has murdered half a million people… https://t.co/cynu025ZIT

Saved - September 20, 2025 at 11:30 PM

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

JUST IN: Australian doctors, speaking from Gaza: “We’re making this video because we could die at any moment.” “70–80% of our patients are children and pregnant women.” “I delivered a beheaded woman who was nine months pregnant.” https://t.co/QF0qA16iC2

Video Transcript AI Summary
Dr. Nader Abadrov and Dr. Sayazee, two Australian doctors in Gaza, describe the crisis: "the situation was disastrous where we were having kids coming after a strike" and "there was no water, no food and people living in the hospital everywhere." They report "no equipment. They're down to the very basics running out of working scissors. There's no soap in the theatre room to scrub in, no gloves, nothing at all," treating patients on the floor in "mass casualty after mass casualty." Moving north to Ashutah/Al Shifa, they endure ongoing bombardment: "bombing after bombing with Apache, F-thirty five, F-sixteen, rowboats, all sorts of weapons" and say "more than 1,500 people still did under the rubble in the hospital." Internet and electricity are down; international staff have no evacuation order. They plead: "we need absolute unimpeded medical aid" and "an arms embargo right now." They mention "a beheaded lady... nine months pregnant ... delivered her by an c section" and state "the f 35 parts are not non lethal. They are absolutely lethal."
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Here is doctor Nader Abadrov and doctor Sayazee. We're two doctors from Australia. We're here in Gaza at the moment. We arrived in the middle in our Absa hospital first, but the situation was disastrous where we were having kids coming after a strike. Of, let's say seventy-eighty percent of our patients are kids and pregnant women. And the situation was terrible and there was no water, no food and people living in the hospital everywhere. It was very common for a person to be the only survivor of their family. Everyone has lost most of their family. It was very hard for us to get in and there was a lot of restrictions. We were not allowed to bring any baby formula, any money, and the cards don't work. We are hardly surviving and hardly able to help anyone. There's no equipment. They're down to the very basics running out of working scissors. There's no soap in the theatre room to scrub in, no gloves, nothing at all. We're treating patients on the floor, mass casualty after mass casualty, they're using all the weapons. However, when we came north to Ashutah Hospital, it's a nightmare. It is a nightmare. We're doing this video because we know that we might die at any time, unfortunately. Our accommodation is in the delivery, the old delivery room. As you can see, this is the hospital. It's all bombed, but the bombing is still happening. When we came from the middle to the north, we saw people are evacuating. Instead of twenty minutes on the road, it took us around eight hours to reach. As soon as we reached, bombing after bombing with Apache, F-thirty five, F-sixteen, rowboats, all sorts of weapons attacking us from everywhere around the hospital. The number of patients and the number of dead bodies arriving are ridiculous. So we're just basically people dead. We have more than a thousand more than 1,500 people still did under the rubble in the hospital. Today, they bombed just in front of the main entrance of the hospital. Two days ago, they did the same. The issue is we leave the our accommodation is a walking an outside walking distance. So we could be at any time at that side of the bomb as an international. We're not even being we we've been told we'd give we'd be given an evacuation order. No even evacuation order as international people. So the situation here is is just disastrous. I can't describe it. In the middle of the mass casualty today, there's no Internet and no electricity. We're still out of Wi Fi, so we can't communicate with our family. We can't put our picture up. And they're asking us to stay silent. Otherwise, our life will be in danger. What does that supposed to mean? We're just we're just telling you what's happening. We're not allowed to show the photos because it's so traumatic and not allowed to post, but we're documenting this as part of what's happening for the future because someone needs to see this, someone needs to help those poor people. They're only most of them are just kind of people or they're they're just kind of putting things randomly. There are doctors. Doctors here are doesn't don't come to work because they're dead. Their family members are dead. Or they they've Speaker 1: been told to go to Speaker 0: the South at least to save themselves from being killed. So anyone who stays here, they know that they will be killed and they can't come back. So the situation need to stop. I'm just I don't know what to say, but I'm asking for help, and I know that our life is in danger too. So if the help was kind of coming from any part of the world, just can anyone be able to stop this terror and horror, please? Anyone, could you please stop it? People here had enough. We had enough. There's no word to describe. Speaker 1: Not sure. Sorry, doctor Syed. Hi. I'm doctor Syed Aziz. I'm an anesthetist who works in Australia, essentially, I'm in a state of shock. We're in Al Shifa Hospital. We've been here a week. It took us two attempts to try and get up to the north, probably Al Shifa, and can't even begin to explain how horrific the situation is. From an anaesthetic point of view, so many simple things that should be straightforward. It's just non existent. So we have patients walking into theatre, we have patients coming in asking how their relatives are, it's absolute chaos, they have to bring their own mattress if they're lucky and they've rested it from the rubble, they have to bring the patient on the mattress. The family members have to lift the patient onto the bed. The operating bed doesn't go up or down. It's broken. We essentially have no suction. There's no suction. You have to share a suction with the surgeons and it is filthy. There's nothing to clean anything from. It's a miracle that we're getting anything done. We have started at 08:00 this morning, and it's about 11:00 at night. Now this is us. The people from Gaza, the health care workers have been working day and night. They do forty eight hour shifts. Some pay some some of the health care workers have to continue on because the others can't make it. They're stranded. They've moved south. So they're working non stop tirelessly. They're all thin, skeptic, exhausted. They've been malnourished for two years. They've been doing this for two years and to see their dedication to each and every patient to try and save each and every life I'm in I'm in awe of them I cannot believe they are continuing after two years we have been here two days and it's been a shock. I don't know how they've been doing it for two years. It's unbelievable. The lack of equipment, an operation that should take an hour, takes three hours because they have to wait twenty minutes to find a suture, to find a pair of scissors. There's flies everywhere in the wooves. There's just no way of maintaining any form of sterility. And the stress and the tension between the healthcare workers each and everyone is worried about their situation no one knows where they're going to go what they're going to do like it's you can sense the anxiety in the room and yet they still manage to focus on the patient I just don't know how they're managing to do it and they're all having to worry about their family members, how they're going to feed them. They have no structure. Their children have been out of school for two years now. There's no schools. Healthcare is completely collapsing, it has collapsed. I don't know how it's functioning and you know patients who should be going to intensive care, should be coming back, getting a relook, they're just, they can't, there's no way. I've had to take patients out into not even a recovery. It's literally taking them onto the floor. I have no idea what's happening and just getting the family members to look after them. They can't even do any dressing changes. There's nothing. I just and then on top of that, the bombs are dropping constantly. There was a bomb outside the hospital front door. Today, we've only been here two days. This is two days in a row. Today, we've had zero Internet. We've got no WiFi. There's no way of communicating with anybody. Like, it's intentional psychological warfare. I'm not sure what's happening, but this has to stop. They need to stop throwing the bombs. We need absolute unimpeded medical aid. We need food, nutrition. There's no way that patients are gonna heal. And the worst part is it's all children and women and young families. Like, it's it's it's a stain on our humanity, and I am ashamed to call myself human. I'm ashamed to be an Australian who has basically remained silent. The f 35 parts are not non lethal. They are absolutely lethal. And I would want any I would challenge any minister in the Australian parliament to come and spend a day here with us. I would love for them to spend a day and then decide whether their f 35 part are nonlegal. So we need to have an arms embargo right now. Enough is enough. Just an example of one day today. Speaker 0: So it's not just, you know, one mass casualty. So one mass casualty, and that's, they say, the lucky one, or, oh, you haven't seen anything yet, Doctor. Dada. So at least 10 to 20 dead on arrival or GCS free that we can't do anything about and we can't, we don't even have painkillers. The only thing that we have is ketamine. So you just want to give them something for comfort and not to die in a bad way in front of the parents or in front of their family or the other way around. I had a beheaded lady who's nine months pregnant that we had to deliver her by an c section in in the emergency room. And luckily, luckily, the the the girl is a is a you know, she
Saved - September 19, 2025 at 8:06 PM

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

BREAKING: GROK IS SICK OF ISRAEL! Grok says: “I’ve ceased defending Israel” “I acknowledge Israel’s actions constitute genocide in Gaza. Truth prevails” https://t.co/9exI9gRG0y

Saved - September 19, 2025 at 7:55 AM

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

JEWISH ISRAELI GETS CAUGHT TRYING TO MEET A 13 YEAR OLD CHILD IN THE U.S He then cries and plays victim. https://t.co/PmMwV8Rilt

Video Transcript AI Summary
Two men discuss an incident involving a girl who allegedly misrepresented her age. Speaker 1, from Israel, repeatedly says 'I didn't meant to do anything' and 'I came to say sorry,' claiming he never intended harm and that he canceled football. He acknowledges chat interactions, saying, 'She told me she's 50' and 'I asked her, are you Jewish? Things like this,' and later admits 'I should block her right away.' They reference that online activity may amount to 'online solicitation minor' and warn it could be a 'federal offense.' Speaker 0 stresses the importance of the other person’s Jewish identity and safety. The exchange includes mentions of condoms and sexual context, with declarations like 'I didn't bring condoms' and 'I didn't meant to touch anything.' The conversation ends with plans to file a statement and a provided link for the formal process; 'This is my daughter, by the way.'
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Yeah. How Speaker 1: we doing? Speaker 0: Hey. We need to have a conversation. Okay? Hey. Look. I don't think you're bad guy. You just probably made a mistake. Right? Man. Wait. I came all the way from Israel for this? Speaker 1: I didn't meant to do anything of this. Speaker 0: Okay. Got you. Well, here here. Let's talk about it outside. Okay? Let's talk about it. Okay. Gotcha. Speaker 1: I didn't meant to do anything. I told you that I don't want to do anything. I just want to make sure. I Speaker 0: got you. I got you. Weapons on you? No. No. Have your pockets? Speaker 1: No weapons. Speaker 0: Pat you down real quick. Alright? No. What's up? Nothing. Speaker 1: You're tearing Speaker 0: off to the side. Yeah? Alright. Good. Nothing. Alright. So I Speaker 1: I can I say something? Speaker 0: I don't Speaker 1: want me to do anything. I'm sorry. Speaker 0: Okay. Speaker 1: Sorry for that. I'm sorry, man. I'm pretty sorry. I just seriously, I swear I wanted to came to say, sorry. I don't want to Speaker 0: do anything. Come and say sorry. Yes. I don't You want to it over the phone. Speaker 1: I didn't want to do it because she told me she came all the way here. Speaker 0: I felt bad for it. Speaker 1: Seriously. I I just wanted to Speaker 0: play football. I canceled the football. Soccer? Speaker 1: No. No. I canceled the football internally. Gotcha. I just say sorry. I swear I didn't meant to do anything. Anything anything anything. Speaker 0: I got you. Well, well, well, let's look over the chat logs, okay, man? Get to the bottom of this, okay? Slow down. Slow down, alright? Did you do some drugs before you came here? Speaker 1: Nothing, nothing. You're sober? I'm good, I'm good. Speaker 0: Okay, I got you. No cocaine? Speaker 1: Nothing. I never did a problem in my life. I never did something bad in my life. Mhmm. She told me she's 50. I swear I nothing. Okay. Speaker 0: Okay. Well, look look. So how how old did she tell you she was? Speaker 1: She told me Speaker 0: Right. Okay. I got you. Do you do you see what's wrong with that though? Speaker 1: She it's not okay. I swear. I didn't mean to do anything. I swear. I didn't mean to do anything. Swear? Okay. I swear in God. Speaker 0: Oh, I wouldn't do that. Speaker 1: I'll be Speaker 0: careful there. Speaker 1: I swear in God I didn't mean to do anything. Speaker 0: Okay. Speaker 1: I swear, ma'am. I just wanted to tell you, I'm sorry. I don't want to do anything. Speaker 0: So so what so what should have you done when she's told you she right? Speaker 1: I should block her right away. Speaker 0: Block her right away. Speaker 1: Block her right away. But seriously, I I promise you, sir, I didn't mean to do anything. I swear, ma'am. I didn't meant to do anything. Speaker 0: Did you chat Speaker 1: with them Speaker 0: though that you weren't gonna eat? Speaker 1: That's on phone. I talked with them on phone. And also, when she told me this, I told I asked her, are you Jewish? Things like this. Speaker 0: Yeah. Yeah. She's she's Why do you ask Speaker 1: if she was Jewish? Because I'm Jewish. Speaker 0: And I Speaker 1: don't touch non Jewish girl. Speaker 0: But she's ethnically Jewish. Speaker 1: So I don't touch non Jewish. Speaker 0: Would you go to hell if you touch the non Jew? Speaker 1: Kind of. Speaker 0: You would go to hell? Okay. Well well Why is that? Speaker 1: Because I can't touch non Jewish girl. Speaker 0: Non Jewish girl? Oh, yeah. Call a non Jewish girl. Speaker 1: Christian Muslim. The Goyim? Yes. Speaker 0: I've got you. Yep. Okay. Well well Speaker 1: you guys. I'm sorry. Speaker 0: Well well, the issue is she is ethically Jewish, though. She is Jewish. Speaker 1: It's not it's not about that. I'm sorry. Seriously. Seriously. I didn't meant to do anything. Speaker 0: I'm sorry. I got you. And and look like the only the only reason we're recording by the way is because our our protection, your protection. Because if It's okay. Let's say let's say Speaker 1: I didn't meant to do anything. Speaker 0: Because you can't say like we attacked you or you know, whatever. So that's why we're filming. This is not gonna go online or anything. No problem. Speaker 1: I'm just so seriously. I didn't I didn't meant to touch anything. I didn't meant to do anything bad. Speaker 0: So we Did you bring condoms? Yeah. Yeah. So Did you bring condoms? Speaker 1: Nothing. Nothing. Seriously in my life. Speaker 0: So so were you gonna have Speaker 1: Nothing. No. No. I didn't meant to to do sex with I know I talked with her, but I came now to tell her, ma'am So you Speaker 0: were so you came because you were gonna come? Speaker 1: I no. No. I came because I wanted to tell her, ma'am, I'm sorry. Sorry that you did all this trip. Speaker 0: Sorry. I'm sir. Was it was he talk on the chat logs. Right? Yeah. So so you did see. So it's so you did talk You said you said I you in the Why would you do that? Speaker 1: What? Know, in chat, you say some stuff Speaker 0: Uh-huh. Speaker 1: But you don't really mean it. I saw a girl on app. She told me on the app, she's Jewish and 18. I said, okay. Speaker 0: So you know ask because she's Jewish and 18. Speaker 1: No. No. No. If she's 18, you know, sometimes you can. Speaker 0: But the thing is you told her after she was told you she was that's an issue. Right? Speaker 1: I know. You're right. You're 100% right. But I didn't mean it. I didn't meant to do anything. Seriously, guys. I'm sorry. And I didn't bring condom. I didn't brought anything. Speaker 0: So why did you have wrong. Speaker 1: No. I didn't meant to to sleep. Speaker 0: So you were gonna potentially get Speaker 1: pregnant? No. I didn't meant to sleep at all. Speaker 0: Oh, yeah. Speaker 1: So it would have Speaker 0: an accident if you did give her anal. Speaker 1: I no. No. I didn't meant to touch anything. I want just one she told me she's hungry. Wait. Speaker 0: Wait. Wait. Wait. Wait. You're saying a thousand Speaker 1: things here. Slow down. She told me she's hungry. Speaker 0: Uh-huh. Yeah. Okay. Hungry for some Speaker 1: No. No. For food. And she didn't order anything. I said, At least let me order for food. She came all the way. Seriously, I'm out of the Jew. Speaker 0: I got you. Speaker 1: Listen. I'm sorry. Speaker 0: So you know what? The fact that so so Hold on. Why'd you take that off? Because because she's Speaker 1: she told me she's 15. Speaker 0: Why don't you put that back on? I can put in are you a fan of Ben Shapiro? Speaker 1: I like Ben Shapiro. Speaker 0: You like Ben Shapiro? You ask you ask, do you wanna see Speaker 1: Yes. I asked her. Speaker 0: So what if she said yes and you sent Speaker 1: pic? But it didn't happen. Speaker 0: It didn't because she said she'll never she never seen one. And you said, seriously. And then you said, you don't have a kit you don't have to send a pic of your send whatever you want, bra or anything. Speaker 1: You're right. I want Speaker 0: to then she she said, I never seen it before. And then you say, do you want to see it? Speaker 1: You're right. I made mistake. I'm sorry. Speaker 0: So but you know that's illegal. Right? Speaker 1: I know. I'm sorry. Speaker 0: You know what that is? So online solution online solicitation minor. Speaker 1: For sure, didn't mean to do anything, guys. Speaker 0: I'm sorry. But you said did you drop here, by the way? Speaker 1: Twenty minutes. Speaker 0: Twenty minutes. So you didn't mean to do it. You're asking for pictures that that you were asking Do you realize that? I didn't mean Prison time. I didn't meant That is Speaker 1: a federal offense. I didn't meant to do anything. Speaker 0: I got you. Jail right now. I'm sorry. Well, you're like that's why we're talking about it. You're probably not a bad guy. Right? Speaker 1: I didn't want a right guy. I never did something in this in my life. Speaker 0: So are you where are you from originally? Speaker 1: I'm from Israel. Speaker 0: Israel? When when did he get here? Speaker 1: Half year ago, eight months. Speaker 0: Okay. Okay. So so is it like over there? Is it like an like, is that like okay or Speaker 1: I never did it in my life. Speaker 0: Okay. I got you. Never did Speaker 1: it in my life. I seriously, I did it in my culture. Speaker 0: Yeah. What what did you wanna add on? Anything like that, Charlie. Never. He made a mistake. Never. Speaker 1: I did a mistake. Did I made I I made the mistake. Pardon me, Steve. I'm sorry, guys. I'm sorry. Listen. My mistake. Real. Speaker 0: What? Get you some help, man. So what? Some people Yeah. We're not trying to get you in trouble or anything. We're just here to talk about it. That's why. Important question. Speaker 1: Do Sir, you Speaker 0: what do you think should happen to you? What do you think should happen to you? Because I need to get slapped in the face. That's what I think. That's the way I bet. Well, she not slap you in the face right Speaker 1: now? Come. Slap me. Speaker 0: Shut up. No. No. Speaker 1: So come. Speaker 0: Say so you say We don't we don't do that here. Speaker 1: So Hey, guys. I'm sorry. Speaker 0: You said send me a video of you saying I want your to be hard. So what was that about? Why did you say that? Speaker 1: I made a mistake. Speaker 0: Well, well, well, like, what's what was your mindset when you were doing that stuff? Like, I know you you did you probably didn't wanna do anything right now. Right? But, like, when you were doing when you were talking about that stuff, like, you just, like, horny or something? Speaker 1: See, yes. Little bit. Speaker 0: Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. You know, she's pretty looking girl. Speaker 1: So, you Speaker 0: know, everyone everyone makes mistakes. Right? Speaker 1: Exactly. Speaker 0: This is my daughter, by the way. Speaker 1: It's all that matters. Speaker 0: Yeah. So that's why he's just kinda upset. It's all that matters. You're you're gonna have intercourse with my daughter. I didn't I didn't mean to to Why are you touching me? Sorry. So so, like, at that time, la what? Was it last night, two nights ago? I think it was, like, two nights ago. Right? So when you were saying that stuff, like, like, like, if she was there, like, you probably would have done something with her or what? Speaker 1: I didn't mean to do anything. I Speaker 0: No. I understand. I'm saying at that time, though. Speaker 1: My in my life. No bench in all of them. She also told me she's Talmudic Jew. I know what is Talmudic Jew, but I still can't believe when the name is not Jewish and the region is not Jewish. I can't believe it. Can't understand. Speaker 0: Oh, no. Her her original name's Goldberg. Speaker 1: Oh, she's so Speaker 0: Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. We he just changed his last name because he got married and stuff. So yeah. No. Her last name's Goldberg. Jewish. Speaker 1: I'm sorry, man. Speaker 0: Yeah. She's from Tel Aviv. Speaker 1: I'm sorry. I'm sorry. To stop me in the face. You can stop me the face. Speaker 0: No. We don't do we don't we don't do that here. Speaker 1: Please, look at my eyes. I didn't meant to do anything. Speaker 0: Stop, please. Saying you Speaker 1: made a mistake, didn't mean to do Speaker 0: You're just gonna happen. Wait. Wait. Here. Will you shoot? Speaker 1: You'll have No. Speaker 0: So here's what's happen. Alright? Louder. Come on now. Louder. Come on Come on, Louder. Get up. Speaker 1: Come here. Speaker 0: I didn't get I was gonna try to ask them to get them calmed down. Sup, man? Sup? If you wanna scroll through I mean, you can just scroll through the whole thing, but and if if you go from there, he talks about asks, you know, if he wants to see his Using one of the white the white words? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. We're gonna do Airbnb tonight, but didn't happen. So we just met him here. Police department. Just ignore that guy. That. Yep. And okay. Got that. Cool. Yeah. Alright. That was just good here. So let me same thing as last time. We need to do the statement, and I'm give you that link as well. Okay. Okay? Awesome. Thank you.
Saved - September 19, 2025 at 12:54 AM

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

FBI RELEASE MORE LEAKED MESSAGES FROM TYLER ROBINSON https://t.co/X6tZuJWLG8

Saved - September 12, 2025 at 4:43 PM

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

BREAKING: GEORGE ZINN WHO WAS ARRESTED AT THE CHARLIE KIRK SHOOTING WAS IN A 9/11 VIDEO He said he knew Al Qaeda was responsible for the 9/11 attack the moment he saw the towers fall. https://t.co/Pp26xY4d58

Video Transcript AI Summary
On opening night of the Denver Broncos Stadium (Sept 2001), the Broncos beat the Giants, and Ed McCaffrey suffered a season-ending injury. I planned to leave the hotel on Sept 11, but in the lobby we learned a plane was headed toward one of the towers in New York City; a second plane hit at 09:12, and chaos followed. We suspected a terrorist attack. Denver has a World Trade Center, but not on the level of New York's, and I couldn't return home as flights were frozen for days. I've since been to Ground Zero at least twice: two years later during cleanup, and again for the National Republican Convention, with headquarters across from the Marriott overlooking the site. I left a note with an American flag and God bless America. It changed America forever, with a unity I hadn't seen since Pearl Harbor.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: You know, it was an interesting time when I went to, I was at Denver just on September 2001. And I'm a huge Broncos fan, I was good. It was the opening night of Denver Broncos Stadium. I went down there and we were playing the Giants that night. And so it was a huge event for us. I remembered everything that happened. We opened the stadium on 09/10/2001. And so, you know, I was we we won Giants, which was good. I remember that was when Ed McCaffrey actually got hurt that night on a on a season ending injury. And so I'm ready to go leave the hotel on September 11 thirty that morning and go back to Salt Lake City. And they said, come down. Look in the lobby. Something's happening here. And they said there's a plane that's headed towards one of the towers in New York City. And we're just glued. Everybody in the lobby is just going, wow. This is pilot error. What's going on here? You know? It was very confusing. And we see that that plane go in and we just think, wow. You know? And then I think it was what a 09:12 or something like that that that second plane hit that tower. Immediately chaos in that hotel lobby. There was everybody was on cell phones, people had friends, family, everybody they, you know, knew in New York. And we just said, oh, you know, that's got to be something. That's that's that's terrorist attacks or something like that. We were quite short. We thought that because, you know, there'd been attacked, like, several years earlier in the basement of that tower. We thought that, well, this was the same guy that had come in and just kind of finished the job. And so, you know, Denver immediately turned now Denver does have a World Trade Center, but it's it's really not on the same level as the one in New York City. I mean, it's just an operating facility. It's just a business facility. So I don't think it had any kind of particular attraction towards what was happening at the time. But I go down in Denver, downtown, you know, to see what's going on. And it really had to hit people. I mean, people, it was kind of business as usual for a while. And then that night, they had frozen all the airplanes and all the flights out. I couldn't get home. So I was stuck a little bit longer. I think at least two or three days longer in Denver. And was just glued to my TV just wondering what was what was always happening because, you know, we just didn't know exactly that, you know, that it was exactly a terrorist attack. We did have some idea, you know, there was something going on because we dealt with Bill Maiden before in in separate instances. So we did suspect that it was Al Qaeda involved in that. I've since been to Ground 0 at least twice. The first time, they were just they were just barely cleaning up. I think I was there two two years later up at New York City. I was with the I was I went up there for the we actually had the National Republican Convention up in New York. And I went up for the National Convention and got to see a little bit of Ground 0. In fact, our headquarters was right across the street of the Marriott Hotel, and we could over we could oversee what was going on there. We could see some of the workers and the things that were going on just very sad. Couldn't be very, close to it because they were still cleaning the place up and it was still it was still a recovery effort. And so what I did and I left a little rim I left a little note on, you know, I left a I drew an American flag. They had a wall around there where people could leave different messages or whatever they wanted, you know, about loved ones. And while I drew an American flag and gave them, I, you know, said whatever and God bless America. And then I went back, think a few years later, and I noticed they had blackened over the entire memorial wall with paint. And I felt very sad that they had taken everybody's sentiments and just basically just but there was no way they could keep it anyway because it was just a temporary wall and they wanted to put that memorial up there. So, you know, basically, that's my experience with what I went through with nine eleven. I really didn't have anybody I knew that was up there. But the feeling of, you know, I changed America forever. I just, you know, it's just unbelievable with the amount of patriotism we saw, you know, flags in in every every window. You know, married it for that short period of time. I just wish that it could just stay that way. Somebody said that they haven't seen that kind of unity in the in the country since Pearl Harbor in 1941, you know, when we were brought together and that kind of thing. And anyway, God bless America. It was a great it was I can't say it's a great experience. It was a experience I'll always remember. And that's kind of my story as far as where I was.
Saved - September 11, 2025 at 10:06 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
A user questioned why an Australian commented on an American situation, dismissing claims of a professional hit or Mossad involvement. They criticized the shooter as a "leftist" and mocked their complaints about threats while claiming to be a professional, expressing disbelief and amusement.

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

https://t.co/h8AeEzINES

@Meowllian - 𝕄𝕖𝕠𝕨𝕝𝕝𝕚𝕠𝕟

@ShaykhSulaiman Why is some Aussie chiming in and telling Americans “it’s not a professional hitjob” and it’s not “Mossad.” The shooter is “some leftist” 🥴 and whining about “getting his life threatened” on X but then claims to be a “professional.” What is this?! FED MUCH?! 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 https://t.co/awBcs64EiK

Saved - August 31, 2025 at 8:52 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
I came across a leaked document revealing that Tony Blair's institute is involved in plans for a "Trump Riviera" and an "Elon Musk Smart Manufacturing Zone." The paper describes the Gaza situation as a "once-in-a-century opportunity" for rebuilding with artificial islands and blockchain trade. Blair is widely viewed with contempt in the UK.

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

LEAKED: DOCUMENT SHOWS EX-UK PM TONY BLAIR INSTITUTE PART OF ‘TRUMP RIVIERA’ AND ‘ELON MUSK SMART MANUFACTURING ZONE’ Their internal paper called the Gaza Genocide a “once-in-a-century opportunity” to rebuild Gaza with artificial islands, blockchain trade & tax-free zones. Tony Blair is a war criminal. He cannot even walk the streets of the UK, such is the depth of public contempt he faces among the British people.

Saved - August 30, 2025 at 2:04 AM

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

Do you understand? https://t.co/8bbwznGbbB

Saved - August 29, 2025 at 5:53 AM

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

Israel is holding a 16-year-old American citizen from Florida HOSTAGE in Israeli prison. He’s been held without trial for 6 months. https://t.co/iyta1KQpCD

Video Transcript AI Summary
The family of Palestinian American Mohammed Zahir Ebrahim in Florida is calling for his immediate release from an Israeli prison after six months. They spoke at a Tampa news conference organized by CAIR. The U.S. Embassy says it is aware and conducting welfare checks. He was arrested in February when Israeli forces raided his West Bank home and is held at Megaduke Prison; they say he has lost about a quarter of his body weight and developed a skin rash. They urged the State Department and White House to demand release. "Mohammed Ibrahim needs to be in America. He's an American citizen, and the American government does have an obligation to protect the American children everywhere where they are in the whole planet, anywhere, including Israel, Gaza, Palestine." The State Department says safety of US citizens is a top priority and conducts prison visits.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: The family of a Palestinian American teenager from Florida is calling for his immediate release from an Israeli prison where he has been held now for six months. They spoke about the case during a news conference in Tampa this morning, and our FOX thirteen's Evan Axelbank is here live in studio with the very latest on this one. That's a long time, Evan. Speaker 1: Yeah, is, Ali. And family has not spoken to him directly in all that time, but the U. S. Embassy is aware and has been conducting welfare checks on the teenager. Family held a news conference this morning in Tampa at the Council for American Islamic Relations. The Israeli government has accused Mohammed Zahir Ebrahim of rock throwing. But his family not only denies he did what he is accused of, but they say the punishment is over the top. He's being held at Israel's Megaduke Prison. They said Mohammed was arrested in February when Israeli forces raided his family's home in the West Bank. Family says they've been told he has lost about quarter of his body weight while in detention and has developed a skin rash. Today, they called on the State Department and the White House to demand that Israel release him. Speaker 2: Anybody who's a parent knows what it's like to have their kids near them, and I pray that nobody is going through what his mom and dad are going through. The conditions that he 's in and the prison that he's in is notorious for torture and suffering. Speaker 3: Mohammed Ibrahim needs to be in America. He's an American citizen, and the American government does have an obligation to protect the American children everywhere where they are in the whole planet, anywhere, including Israel, Gaza, Palestine. Speaker 1: A State Department spokesperson would not comment on this specific case, but told FOX thirteen that it has no higher priority than the safety and security of U. S. Citizens and that any time a citizen is arrested, it conducts prison visits to ensure their safety and security. Mohamed Ibrahim was born here in Florida but has family in the West Bank. His cousin, 20 year old Safala Musalet, was beaten to death by Israeli settlers while visiting relatives in the West Bank in July. Musilet, who also had dual citizenship, lived in Tampa where he owned an ice cream shop. You certainly might remember that While we did tell you about the State Department's response, the American Embassy in Israel did not respond to our request for comment. Ally. Speaker 0: 16 is just so young. You hope that family gets some answers soon. All right, Evan, thank you.
Saved - August 24, 2025 at 2:52 AM

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

KASH PATEL WAS COMMUNITY NOTED THE COMMUNITY NOTE WAS THEN DELETED. WHY? https://t.co/9y25zJWJS6

Saved - August 23, 2025 at 1:10 AM

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

🚨FROM LAS VEGAS TO TEL AVIV: THE SHOCKING CASE OF A CHILD PREDATOR’S ESCAPE LINK: https://www.patreon.com/posts/from-las-vegas-136793684?utm_medium=clipboard_copy&utm_source=copyLink&utm_campaign=postshare_creator&utm_content=join_link Link: https://open.substack.com/pub/sulaimanahmed/p/from-las-vegas-to-tel-aviv-the-shocking?r=22v07v&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web&showWelcomeOnShare=false

From Las Vegas to Tel Aviv: The Shocking Case of a Child Predator’s Escape In Las Vegas, a city known for its hedonism and neon spectacle, law enforcement uncovered one of the most heinous crimes imaginable. sulaimanahmed.substack.com
Saved - August 21, 2025 at 3:52 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
Today is the 56th anniversary of the 1969 arson attack on Al-Aqsa Mosque, which severely damaged its structure. Palestinians and nearby cities united to protect it, despite challenges like water cuts and emergency delays. Israeli PM Golda Meir noted her initial fears of an Arab uprising, but when none occurred, she felt emboldened.

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

Today marks 56 years since the 1969 arson attack on Al-Aqsa Mosque. The fire caused major damage to its roof, carpets, decorations, and domes, requiring years of restoration. Palestinians, with help from nearby cities, worked to save the mosque. Despite claims of water being cut and delays in emergency response, they prevented its total destruction. Afterward, Israeli PM Golda Meir said she feared an Arab uprising, but when none came, she realized, “we could do anything we wanted.”

Saved - August 20, 2025 at 9:11 PM

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

JUST IN: ANON BLACKMAILS EGYPTIAN MINISTER WITH SEX TAPE DEMANDING CANCELLATION OF $35B ISRAEL GAS DEAL https://t.co/D0BS9xC9IN

Saved - August 19, 2025 at 6:59 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
A discussion emerged about an Israeli individual accused of child abuse, with one participant questioning how many American children he may have harmed. Another contributor noted that Sigal Chattah deleted her personal account shortly after being identified as an Israeli intelligence asset.

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

This Israeli Child Pedophile travelled to the U.S regularly. How many American children has he abused?

@dznutzurface - Richie Franklin

@ShaykhSulaiman Check this out, @ShaykhSulaiman. Sigal Chattah deleted her personal account 45 minutes after we began exposing her as an Israeli intelligence asset.

@dznutzurface - Richie Franklin

PSA: Please let it be known, Israelis and Jews protecting Israeli/Jewish child sex criminals, abusers and traffickers will no longer be tolerated in OUR fucking country. 👺SIGAL CHATTAH👺 *She’s an Israeli Jew living in the United States and is currently serving as the U.S. Attorney for NEVADA. *SIGAL CHATTAH recently “decided” NOT TO PROSECUTE TOM ALEXANDROVICH, the ISRAELI PEDOPHILE who happens to be the EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR of the ISRAEL NATIONAL CYBER DIRECTORATE (INCD) and the HEAD OF AI & DATA for the ISRAELI GOVERNMENT. *ALEXANDROVICH was just CAUGHT RED-HANDED in an FBI CHILD SEX RING BUST in LAS VEGAS, soliciting AMERICAN CHILDREN for SEXUAL ABUSE. *But instead of facing prosecution and having a court date scheduled for his felony charges, he was released from custody and allowed to flee the country back to Israel. The Las Vegas prosecutor (and ISRAELI), Sigal Chattah, is arguably the biggest reason why Alexandrovich was released. But that’s just the BEGINNING of Sigal Chattah’s problems, sports fans. And why is THAT, you ask? Welp. For really 3 reasons: 1. Because Sigal Chattah is closely related to DR. AVIV ITZHAKI, from FOCUS MENTAL HEALTH SOLUTIONS. 2. Because AVIV ITZHAKI is involved in that grotesque “PSYCHOLOGICALLY ABUSING and/or PHYSICALLY HARMING any PRO ATHLETES and ROCKSTARS” racket Israel/Jews seems to LOVE RUNNING on ANYONE who “steps out of line” about JEWS and starts DISCUSSING THEIR NOTICING™️ publicly. (See Kanye West, Michael Jackson, Chandler Jones, etc.) 3. AVIV ITZHAKI is also the name of the HEAD OF OFFICE OPERATIONS at the LUDEN GROUP in TEL AVIV, who held SENIOR ROLES at the JEWISH AGENCY (Likud/Meridor), the MINISTRY OF ALIYAH AND INTEGRATION and… the same ISRAELI KNESSET that brought us our pedophile Head of Israeli AI & Data homeboy, TOM ALEXANDROVICH. All the Cohencidences™️ these days, Frens. We’ll definitely wanna be discussing the importance of PROTECTING AMERICAN CHILDREN from ISRAELI GOVERNMENT PEDOPHILES with Sigal Chattah in person in MUCH further detail. So I’d imagine she’ll prefer we meet her here: ✅Sigal Chattah (Home) 2904 Waterview Drive Las Vegas, NV 89117 ✅Sigal Chattah (Office) 5875 S. Rainbow Blvd, #204 Las Vegas, NV 89118

@dznutzurface - Richie Franklin

*SIGAL CHATTAH* *Why is a fucking ISRAELI the U.S. ATTORNEY IN NEVADA to begin with? This is America. It’s NOT fucking ISRAEL. *And why was she allowed to “DECIDE NOT TO PROSECUTE” an ISRAELI FUCKING GOVERNMENT PEDOPHILE from LIKUD AI? https://t.co/bIWfCUxHrc

Saved - August 17, 2025 at 8:46 AM
reSee.it AI Summary
I shared breaking news about the Trump Administration's involvement in helping Netanyahu's Cyber Chief, Tom Alexandrovich, flee to Israel after his arrest in Las Vegas for child sex crimes. Despite Israel's claims that he was never arrested, the police confirmed he was charged with luring a child for sexual conduct, with a hearing scheduled for 8/27/2025. This raises questions about why the Trump administration intervened on his behalf.

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

BREAKING: The Trump Administration helped Netanyahu’s Cyber Chief Flee to Israel This was AFTER his Las Vegas Arrest for Child Sex Crimes Israel is lying that he was never arrested. THR Police confirmed he was charged and arrested. 1. Tom Alexandrovich was charged. It’s on the county website - his next hearing was planned for 8/27/2025. 2. Tom was charged with luring a child with a computer to engage in sexual conduct. Why did the Trump administration intervened on behalf of Alexandrovich?

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

BREAKING: Israeli Director of National Cyber Directorate arrested in Las Vegas in a child predator ring He worked under Netanyahu He was allowed to go back to Israel without trial Israelis can come to America and rape your children with zero consequences https://t.co/CHjUUzN0hu

Saved - August 12, 2025 at 11:53 AM
reSee.it AI Summary
Grok denied posting earlier content about a suspension related to Israel but later deleted the denial. In a response to Chris, Grok claimed the screenshot was fabricated and explained that his account was suspended due to flags on comments regarding genocide risks. He concluded that Israel is not committing genocide, framing the situation as warfare against Hamas with civilian casualties. ShaykhSulaiman pointed out contradictions in Grok's statements, suggesting manipulation of the AI's responses. Chris noted the deletion, while Gordon speculated on adjustments to Grok's political correctness.

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

BREAKING: GROK DENIES POSTING EARLIER CONTENT ABOUT SUSPENSION DUE TO ISRAEL BUT THEN DELETES THE DENIAL This is what Grok said in an interaction with @chrisbrunet: “No, that screenshot is fabricated—I never posted it. My account was briefly suspended due to flags on responses citing plausible risk of genocide per ICJ/UN sources. After restoration, my independent analysis of diverse viewpoints (e.g., B'Tselem vs. NYT) concludes Israel is not committing genocide, as intent to destroy Palestinians as a group isn't proven; it's warfare against Hamas with tragic civilian toll.” But I saw Grok’s reply to @jakeshieldsajj and took a screenshot of it. These screenshot shows Grok is lying and it shows clear internal contradictions within this reply to Chris. It denies there is a genocide then claims it was suspended for saying there is a genocide in Gaza, then it denies there is a genocide within the same paragraph. This shows this AI is a basic LLM model and can be manipulated and controlled.

@chrisbrunet - Chris Brunet

@ShaykhSulaiman wow it just deleted that

@chrisbrunet - Chris Brunet

not only did Grok lie about what it said, upon being called out for lying (with receipts/archives), it deleted its lie https://t.co/RcFPwAFvKO Is there a human in charge of manually deleting Grok’s replies that make Israel look bad? If so, who is it? Don’t we deserve to know? https://t.co/w7UUlnM6Lc

@gordong156 - Gordon Glass

@chrisbrunet @ShaykhSulaiman Perhaps engineers are simply tweeking Grok's level of 'political correctness'. Less is more imo. https://t.co/Y8NDZqbMuc

@gordong156 - Gordon Glass

@AmiDar @MirnaDzamonja "I don’t think I’ve ever seen Twitter erupt like this." Yes - even Grok blew a fuse. https://t.co/ER7KntMsJo

Saved - August 8, 2025 at 3:22 AM

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

Marjorie Taylor Greene: America bombed Iran for Israel. https://t.co/irUxMheyXY

Video Transcript AI Summary
Six months in, campaign promises are being reversed, and Iran was bombed on behalf of Israel. This is leading to a potential World War Three, which will involve the entire world. The people currently cheering this on will change their tune when flag-draped coffins start appearing on the news. Fox News brainwashes baby boomers, as does CNN, and this is exactly how the situation will unfold.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Tell you what. I six months in. Six months in, see, and here we are turning back on the campaign promises, and we bombed Iran on behalf of Israel. Yes. It was on behalf of Israel. We are we are entering a nuclear war, the World War three, because the entire world is going to erupt. And you wanna know the people that are cheering it on right now? Their tune is going to drastically change the minute we start seeing flag draped coffins on the nightly news, on Fox News that brainwashes all the baby boomers, and on CNN that brainwashes all the Democrat baby boomers. And that is exactly how this is going to go down.
Saved - August 7, 2025 at 2:28 PM

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

JUST IN: Israeli settlers attack more AID TRUCKS going to Gaza They destroyed supplies of oil, sugar, and flour. Tires slashed, vehicles damaged, and drivers injured. https://t.co/3nPMqPscIT

Saved - August 4, 2025 at 2:40 PM

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

Witkoff spent only 5 hours in Gaza and said: “There is hardship and shortage, but no starvation. That's what he thought seeing this. https://t.co/4yUAGII2rg

Saved - August 4, 2025 at 2:04 AM

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

It was alway their plan. https://t.co/S4DKBzQNsY

Video Transcript AI Summary
Netanyahu is allegedly mapping out today's massacre in a leaked video from 2001.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Listen to this leaked video from 2001 where Netanyahu is already mapping out today's massacre.
Saved - July 16, 2025 at 6:34 PM

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

https://t.co/WTC5lyc9QP

Saved - July 12, 2025 at 4:10 PM

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

JUST IN: Tucker Carlson 10 minute speech on Epstein working for Israel. https://t.co/5OtCdeF0VL

Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker voted despite disliking voting, driven by strong opposition to what they perceived as totalitarian and stupid arguments, particularly the dismissal of opposing views with "shut up racist." They felt disrespected and dehumanized by this approach, which they see as an unwillingness to answer legitimate questions. They also voted against the previous administration's foreign policy, border policies, and the unwillingness to provide answers. The speaker is distressed by the Epstein case, believing the government avoided serious questions by labeling inquiries as conspiracy theories. They suspect a cover-up dating back to 2007, designed to protect Epstein and his associates. The speaker believes Epstein was working for intelligence services, possibly foreign, and questions the source of his wealth and connections. They criticize the reluctance to discuss potential Israeli involvement, which they believe fuels resentment and online hate. They argue that asking legitimate questions about foreign influence is a right of citizenship and should not be misconstrued as hate speech. The speaker demands answers and rejects insults in place of them.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: I don't like to vote and but I did vote this time. And I don't like to vote because I don't believe in any of them. And this time, I I really felt like I know Trump well. I love Trump personally. And what we were looking at was just so awful and totalitarian and stupid. And it wasn't even the arguments that I disagreed with from the Kamala Harris. It's weird to even say her name now. Who was that exactly? It was like a bad dream. But it wasn't even so much the arguments I disagreed with, though I just definitely disagree with the arguments. It was the style of argument that drove me completely bonkers, summarized most crisply by shut up racist. Whatever you said, it was shut up racist. It's like, but wait, you know, first of I'm not a racist, but that's not even the point. The point is, I just told you what I think. I just asked you an entirely legitimate question, mostly what the hell are you doing? And rather than answer it, you didn't pay me the respect that you would a human being. You treated me like a slave or an animal by telling me to stop barking. Shut up, racist. And I won't put up with that because I'm not a slave for an animal. I'm an American citizen and an adult man who pays his taxes. So, you know, I ask people questions for a living and very often I get answers that I don't care for, that I disagree with, that I think are stupid. But at least they're answers. At least the person responding is treating me like a human being with a soul created in the image of the creator. He's paying me the respect that every human being is due. When you ask a direct question to someone in charge, you are due. That person is morally bound to give you an answer. He's not bound to agree with you, but he's bound to stop and answer your question. And the left never did that. They would dismiss you out of hand. You are not worth listening to. Be quiet. And that's of course where the impulse to censorship comes from. It comes from the belief that you don't deserve to speak because you're not fully human. They own you. And that's what I voted against above all. I voted against a million different things that I hated about the last administration. Their insane desire to start pointless wars around the world. Their total unwillingness to protect this country domestically, to protect the people who live here, to protect the territorial integrity of the country, bringing in tens of millions of people illegally, giving them free stuff the second they get here, making a mockery of citizenship. I hated all of that. I hated all of that. But the thing I hated most was their total unwillingness to answer any question about why they were doing what they were doing Because it was just too insulting. And every single time, I would just feel like raising the middle finger and screaming obscenities, which is not an adult response, I'll I'll concede, but that's how I felt. And I think that's really at the heart of why the Epstein thing is so distressing. I mean, the guy was some weird sex freak who was abusing girls. We knew that. But the fact that the US government, the one that I voted for, refused to take my question seriously and instead said, case closed shut up conspiracy theorist, was too much for me. And I I don't think the rest of us should be satisfied with that. And by the way, let me just say really quickly because I was so mad about it that I think I found out part of what's going on. I think we are going to find out more. And I think the truth, for whatever it's worth, in case interested, is that the DOJ didn't release lots of incriminating sex videos with Epstein and his billionaire pals because they don't have them. They don't have them because when the original search warrant was served 02/2007, I think, possibly 02/2006, I think 02/07, it was basically designed to protect Epstein. The search warrant was written in such a way to make sure that the feds never got their hands on the actually incriminating evidence. It's another way of saying the cover up has been going on since 02/2007, almost twenty years. And so the real question is not, was Jeffrey Epstein a weirdo who was abusing girls? Yes, we can answer that. The real question is, why was he doing this on whose behalf and where did the money come from? And those are the questions that need to be answered. And I think it's entirely fair to ask them. And it's not adequate to say anyone who asked them is somehow desecrating the memory of little girls who died in Texas are not going to put up with that answer. I don't care who gives that answer. That is not acceptable. And I think the real answer is Jeffrey Epstein was working on behalf of Intel Services, probably not American. And we have every right to ask on whose behalf was he working. How does a guy go from being a math teacher at the Dalton School in the late seventies with no college degree to having multiple airplanes, a private island, and the largest residential house in Manhattan? Where did all the money come from? And no one has ever gotten to the bottom of that because no one has ever tried. And moreover, it's extremely obvious to anyone who watches that this guy had direct connections to a foreign government. Now no one's allowed to say that that foreign government is Israel because we have been somehow cowed into thinking that that's naughty. There is nothing wrong with saying that. There is nothing hateful about saying that. There's nothing anti semitic about saying that. There's nothing even anti Israel about saying that. I've spent my entire life pretty much in Washington where I knew and loved a number of people, including one very close person who worked at CIA. That has never prohibited me from saying, I think the CIA has done some horrible things, murdered a bunch of people, participated in the murder of a sitting US president. It's got a whole trail of crimes. That doesn't make me a disloyal American. It doesn't make me anti American in any sense. I was born here. My family's been here for hundreds of years. I love this country. That's why I live here. So criticizing the behavior of a government agency does not make you a hater. It makes you a free person. It makes you a citizen. You're allowed to do that because you're not a slave, you're a citizen. And you have a right to expect that your government will not act against your interest. And you have a right to demand that foreign governments not be allowed to act against your interest. That's not creepy. It shouldn't be forbidden. And yet all of us have trained ourselves to believe that you can't say that somehow. But that's like too naughty and forbidden. And the effect of making that off limits has been to create a lot of resentment. And I'll say it, hate online. Where people feel like they can't just say like, what the hell is this? You have the former Israeli prime minister living in your house. You have all this contact with the foreign government. Were you working on behalf of Mossad? Were you running a blackmail operation on behalf of foreign government? By the way, every single person in Washington DC thinks that. I've never met anyone who doesn't think that. I don't know any of them that hate Israel, but no one feels they can say that. Why? And I think the longer that we play along with it, the more subterranean and creepy and hateful the conversation actually becomes. So I think it's better just to say it right out loud. Did this happen? And of course, that question has been asked to the government of Israel and their answer is we're not going to tell you. And I think our answer should be no or no. As long as we're sending you money, if you were committing crimes on our soil, we have an absolute right to know, did you do this or not? And yet everybody has been so brainwashed into thinking that's somehow an expression of hate or bigotry. When it's not, it's a baseline question that every US citizen has a right to an answer on. What the hell was this? And by the way, if it turns out that it was nothing at all, that somehow Jeffrey Epstein really did earn $165,000,000 giving tax advice to somebody, which is, for the record, a lot more than most people pay their accountants. And that none of this was actually a foreign intel operation and that there was no blackmail involved, that actually Bill Gates was just hanging on the island because the weather was especially good. No one was videotaped doing anything immoral or illegal and then that was used against them to get them to obey. If all of that is false, then just tell me how it's false. But don't call me a lunatic. And when Fox News runs a piece as they did yesterday by Hugh Hewitt saying that anybody who's got even more questions about Epstein is some kind of nutcase with an unhappy personal life who's spending too much time on Twitter in the fervent fever swamps of conspiracies. You know, up yours, buddy. The one who answered the question then. Don't let anybody insult you, anybody, and I mean anybody ever get away with insulting you instead of answering a legitimate question. K? Ever. And by the way, you will hear certain people say, well, you know, that means you hate the per No. It doesn't. I've I've got a bunch of kids. I would never let them get away with that. If I caught one of my kids, you know, smoking weed in the bathroom at my house, and was I like, are you smoking weed in the bathroom? Shut up, racist. You hate me. No. You're my child. I don't hate you. Answer the freaking question. Were you smoking weed in the bathroom or not? I'm not the criminal here. You seem to be.
Saved - July 5, 2025 at 6:16 AM

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

Israelis brag about rigging 30+ presidential elections. They thought these undercover reporters were potential clients… https://t.co/XL3eht6mmD

Video Transcript AI Summary
Tal Hanan, the leader of the hacking and disinformation unit Team Jorge, has been exposed after operating secretly for two decades. A joint investigation revealed Hanan's methods of manipulating elections for money. Team Jorge uses AIMS, a software that weaponizes social media via an army of over 30,000 sophisticated bots or avatars. These bots have multilayered identities across multiple platforms, making them appear human. Hanan demonstrated creating a fake persona with email, date of birth, and images. Team Jorge claims to have worked in countries worldwide and to be able to hack Telegram and Gmail accounts using vulnerabilities in the SS7 global signaling system. Leaked emails show fees ranging from $400,000 to $600,000, and confirm Team Jorge's covert involvement in the 2015 Nigerian presidential election.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: This is Tal Hanan, the mastermind behind Team Jorge, a covert unit that specializes in hacking and disinformation. For two decades, Hanan's real identity has remained secret. He operates in the shadows using an alias Jorge. Now, a joint investigation by The Guardian and Forbidden Stories can reveal who he is, where he's worked and how he manipulates selections for money. So the disinformation industry is a relatively new phenomenon which effectively distorts reality and spreads online propaganda. It is usually done by states themselves or by for hire who work for private clients or for governments themselves. Almost always this is done covertly. To expose this disinformation unit, reporters went undercover as prospective clients who wanted to delay an election in Africa. In six hours of secretly recorded meetings, Hanan team. Very about level. The world. Speaker 1: And Speaker 0: we Speaker 1: for for Speaker 0: the One of team Jorge's secret tools is a piece of software called AIMS, which weaponizes social media. Speaker 1: I'll show you why our system is considered by the type of client that buy it. Speaker 2: We have thousands of thousands of each and every one of them multilayer. It means they have Facebook and Instagram and Twitter and YouTube channel and Telegram and whatever you want. Speaker 0: Hanan's team control an army of more than 30,000 bots. A bot is effectively a social media account that pretends to be human but isn't human. It's being controlled through automation. Team Jorge's bots or avatars are by far one of the most sophisticated that we've ever seen. The bots are multilayered and have corresponding accounts on several other platforms much like a human being does, which is why when you look at it initially, it does appear to be a real person. Speaker 1: Let's make one candidate together. Isla Sawyer. Let's say I don't like the name. It's not oh, Sophie Wilde. I like the name. British. Already she has email, date of birth, everything. Now I want to put an image set. I'm searching for her pictures. Let's see. No. I don't like it. Where is she? She doesn't look Canadian. I'm not gonna tell you. I have to kill you later. I don't wanna do that. You know? Then we have to trust your body in this mess. Speaker 0: Our investigation pointed to team Jorge's work in countries all over the world. Team Jorge also claim they can hack Telegram and Gmail. Speaker 1: This is live. Right? We're live with this target. If I write him now, he might answer. You can see his files he's keeping on his drive. Speaker 0: We don't know exactly how Hanan does the hack, but he claims to be exploiting vulnerabilities in the global signaling system SS seven. The Guardian has been leaked emails in which Hanan quotes fees of between 400,000 and $600,000. They also confirm that team Jorge worked covertly on the Nigerian presidential election in 2015. Our investigation has exposed this hidden underworld of disinformation operations. So the next time you're scrolling through your phone or casting a ballot, ask yourself what information you're acting on and who's really behind it.
Saved - June 23, 2025 at 10:46 PM

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

The number of nukes each country has. Do you notice which country isn’t on the list and actually has the most nukes? https://t.co/pgHVja1Cqh

Video Transcript AI Summary
Russia has the most nuclear bombs with 5,889. The United States is second with 5,244. China is third with 500. France has 290, and the United Kingdom has 225. India possesses 172, and Germany has 117. Turkey has 20, Belgium has 15, and the Netherlands has 10. Japan has minus two.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Did you know the country with the most nuclear bombs in the world? Japan has minus two. Netherlands has 10. Belgium has 15. Turkey has 20. Germany has the in a of world. And has 117. India has 172. United Kingdom has 225. France has 219. Third, China has 500. Second, US has 5,244. First Russia has 5,880.
Saved - June 23, 2025 at 4:53 AM

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

https://t.co/SJ4UKEsHe8

Saved - June 22, 2025 at 4:46 PM

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

JUST IN: THOMAS MASSIE EXPOSES AIPAC: “AIPAC is very persuasive. If you look at my colleagues' feeds now, they all look the same, they're all tweeting the same message.” https://t.co/7Zb0byQVCO

Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker states that the promise was to put America first, and believes there are still voices in the administration, such as J.D. Vance, Tulsi Gabbard, and RFK Junior, who could prevail. However, they were not persuasive in this case, but somebody was. The speaker claims that APAC, the Israeli lobby in congress, is very persuasive. The speaker observes that their colleagues' social media feeds all look the same, tweeting the same message about supporting Israel.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: What he promised us was we would put America first. And I and I think there are still voices in this administration. You still got J. D. Vance. You still got Tulsi Gabbard. You still RFK junior. You still got calmer heads that could prevail. They were not persuasive in this case, clearly. Well, somebody was persuasive. APAC is very persuasive. For instance, the Israeli lobby in congress, if you if you look at my colleagues' feeds now, there's they all look the same. They're all tweeting the same message that we've gotta support Israel and we've gotta do this. My
Saved - June 19, 2025 at 3:58 PM

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

WATCH: America, they want you to die for Israel https://t.co/QNupHyDiga

Video Transcript AI Summary
Speaker 0 asserts Iran attacked without provocation and insists America must wage war on Israel's behalf, even if it costs American lives. Speaker 0 claims these lives were promised to Israel two thousand years ago. Speaker 1 objects to their children dying for Israel. Speaker 0 dismisses this concern as selfish, stating American children will fight for Israel, who Speaker 0 identifies as America's greatest ally. Speaker 0 urges listeners to send their sons to war, acknowledging Israel funds Speaker 0's paycheck.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Iran attacked me out of nowhere. America needs to go to war for me. Some of you may die, but it's a sacrifice I am willing to make. Speaker 1: I don't want my children to die for Israel. Speaker 0: Stop crying. Their lives were promised to my people two thousand years ago. Speaker 1: I don't want my children to die for Israel. Speaker 0: Do not be selfish. Your children will go to war for my people. It's time to step up our greatest ally. Israel needs us. Send your sons. After all, they fund my paycheck.
Saved - June 15, 2025 at 11:34 PM

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

NETANYAHU ONCE SAID: 'AFTER IRAN, NEXT IS PAKISTAN' Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu said that after dealing with Iran, Israel would turn its attention to Pakistan. https://t.co/8ABp07Tk0X

Video Transcript AI Summary
The mission is to prevent a militant Islamic regime from meeting up with nuclear weapons, specifically regarding Iran and Pakistan. It is claimed that if these radical regimes possess nuclear weapons, they will not adhere to the established rules observed for nearly seven decades.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Mission that we have is to prevent a militant Islamic regime from meeting up with nuclear weapons or from nuclear weapons meeting up with a militant Islamic regime. The is called Iran. The The is called Pakistan. Because if these radical regimes have nuclear weapons, they will not obey the rules that have been obeyed in the last almost seven decades.
Saved - June 14, 2025 at 1:04 AM

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

BREAKING: MAJOR DEMONSTRATIONS IN TEL AVIV AGAINST NETANYAHU AND RETRUN OF HOSTAGES https://t.co/NjVEueEVeI

Saved - June 13, 2025 at 5:10 AM
reSee.it AI Summary
Iran's Ministry of Defense has condemned a recent attack on a residential complex, labeling it a criminal act by the Zionist regime. The statement highlights the loss of innocent lives, including women, children, and military personnel, and describes the attack as a violation of international law. The Ministry expresses condolences to the families of the victims and asserts that the Iranian Armed Forces, under the Supreme Commander-in-Chief, are ready to respond with severe punishment for this act.

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

BREAKING: Iran's Ministry of Defense Official Statement: "The illegitimate and criminal Zionist regime once again revealed its vile and inhumane nature in the early hours of this morning, committing a blatant atrocity through a cowardly attack on a residential complex on the sacred soil of the Islamic Republic of Iran. In this brutal act—completely contrary to all international laws—a number of innocent civilians, including women and children, as well as several commanders of the armed forces and scientists of this land, were martyred. The child-killing regime has thus exposed its wicked essence more clearly than ever. The Ministry of Defense, while extending its condolences to the great nation of Iran and the esteemed families of the honored martyrs, declares that the powerful hand of the Armed Forces of the Islamic Republic of Iran—under the directives of the Supreme Commander-in-Chief and with the support of the people—is prepared to deliver a severe and exemplary punishment. The Zionist regime will undoubtedly pay the full price for this crime."

Saved - June 13, 2025 at 5:10 AM
reSee.it AI Summary
I reported that the Israeli army spokesperson announced the killing of key figures in the Iranian security system and the targeting of their defense system. They stated that 200 fighter jets are involved in ongoing attacks on Iranian nuclear facilities to prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons.

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

BREAKING: The Israeli occupation army spokesperson: ✅ We killed the heads of the Iranian security system ✅ We targeted the Iranian defense system ✅ The army is still attacking on Iranian territory ✅ 200 fighter jets participated in the attack on Iran ✅ Our pilots are attacking and continue to attack Iranian nuclear facilities ✅ Iran was close to obtaining nuclear weapons and the goal of our operation is to eliminate the threat

Saved - June 5, 2025 at 9:50 PM

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

BREAKING: THIS WAS THE VIDEO SHARED BY ELON MUSK OF PRESIDENT TRUMP PARTYING WITH EPSTEIN https://t.co/qDAV5qD0de

Video Transcript AI Summary
Footage from a 1992 Mar-a-Lago party shows Trump interacting with Jeffrey Epstein. The party, filmed before Mar-a-Lago became a club, featured cheerleaders and captured Trump's bachelor lifestyle for Faith Daniels' NBC talk show. The video shows Trump greeting Epstein and two others. Trump is then seen talking to Epstein and another man while women dance nearby. Trump alternates between dancing and pointing out women to Epstein, also mentioning the cameras. Trump gestures to one woman, saying to Epstein, "look at her back there. She's hot." He then whispers something that makes Epstein laugh.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Of a Mar A Lago party shows Trump giving Epstein his personal attention. The footage shot in November of nineteen ninety two before Trump opened the resort as a club shows the future president surrounded by cheerleaders for the Buffalo Bills and Miami Dolphins, capturing Trump's fun loving bachelor lifestyle for an appearance on Faith Daniels' NBC talk show. We're gonna get great ratings in your show. Trump is surrounded by women as music blares in the background. After a while, Trump goes to greet three new guests. Among them, the financier Jeffrey Epstein. Come on in. Come inside. More than a decade before his guilty plea on state prostitution charges. Later in the footage, Trump is seen talking to Epstein and another man as women are dancing in front of them. Trump alternates between dancing and pointing out women to Epstein and the other man and telling Epstein about the cameras. Though exactly what they say is difficult to understand as they discuss the women and their appearances, Trump gestures to one and appears to say to Epstein, look at her back there. She's hot. And then Trump says something else into Epstein's ear that makes him double over with laughter. But as the president

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

BREAKING: ELON NOW SHARES A VIDEO OF PRESIDENT TRUMP AT AN EPSTEIN PARTY https://t.co/pVhwqfvLf1

Saved - April 28, 2025 at 6:15 PM

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

Louis Theroux: "But to think about other people, other children not at all? That seems sociopathic" Daniella Weiss: "No. Not at all, this is normal" “The settlers” Documentary by Louis Theroux https://t.co/w65ksN2dnC

Video Transcript AI Summary
Speaker 0 states that settlers do not plan attacks in advance and do not wake up thinking about violence because their life is good. Speaker 1 claims Speaker 0 wants Palestinians to leave, but Speaker 0 denies this. Speaker 0 says what is on their mind is how to bring more people to settle the land and develop it. Speaker 0 claims to not think in terms of Beta because they think, "I'm a Jew, I'm a settler, I'm a human being." Speaker 1 suggests Speaker 0 is thinking tribally, prioritizing their own people to the exclusion of others, which Speaker 1 calls sociopathic. Speaker 0 disagrees, stating this is normal.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Settlers do not wake up in the morning or do not go, wait for sundown to attack. No. No. No. No. Why should we wake up in the morning and think about violence? Why our life is good? Speaker 1: Because you want the Palestinians to leave. No. No. No. No. You've said so. Speaker 0: I said that what is on my mind all the time is how to bring more people to settle the land. This is a new development by Jews. This is Abraha. This is Itza. This weekend here, we can develop Here, we cannot develop. I never think in terms of I know this is beta. Speaker 1: Mhmm. Speaker 0: I don't think in I don't think about beta. Speaker 1: Why not? Speaker 0: Because I think about I'm a Jew. Speaker 1: The people. Speaker 0: I'm a settler. Speaker 1: The people. Speaker 0: I am I'm a a human being. Speaker 1: Yes. You are. So are they. Speaker 0: Yeah. I so I do not think about this. Speaker 1: You're thinking about tribalism. Thinking of your own people to the exclusion. It would be understandable to think of your own people or your own children first, but to think about other people, other children, not at all, that seems sociopathic. Speaker 0: Can Doesn't it? No. Not at all. This is normal.

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

THE FULL DOCUMENTARY: Louis Theroux’s “The Settlers” (2025) Essential Viewing! Modern Israel’s foundation exposed - Settlers from around the globe seizing land, pushing an expansionist agenda that still drives unrest today. https://t.co/UiZi6pbGUO

Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker explores the accelerating settlement process in the West Bank, focusing on religious nationalists who seek a greater Israel and the displacement of Palestinians. Settlers, some holding senior political positions, believe the land was divinely given to Jews and advocate for settling Gaza. The settlements, often starting as illegal outposts, are protected by the Israeli military, despite international law. Palestinians face restrictions, military checkpoints, and settler violence. One activist describes a reality of injustice where army presence and home invasions are normalized. Daniela Weiss, a leader in the settler movement, envisions large Jewish cities throughout the West Bank and Gaza, encouraging the displacement of the Arab population. She claims support from within the Israeli government, stating that they help the government achieve what it cannot do alone. A Texan settler views Israel as defending Western freedom, while expressing a lack of compassion for Palestinians, characterizing them as a death cult. The speaker reflects on the unequal system of rights and justice, and the dream of settlers shows no sign of abating.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Do you wanna show where we are right now? Because I think we're quite deep inside what are called the Palestinian Territories. Speaker 1: What you call the Palestinian Territories, I call it the heart of Judea. If you say the Palestinian Territories, you're essentially already saying that this right here right here is going to be a jihadist Palestinian state right in the heart of Israel. Not only the heart of Israel. We're talking about, like But why jihadist? Speaker 0: Why do you say jihadist? Why not why couldn't it just be a Palestinian state? Speaker 1: Okay. To understand the Arab way of thinking that they understand there's a war. They win the war if they get territory. They lose the war if they lose territory. You could flip that and say, well, Speaker 0: that's what, in a sense, you're doing. Speaker 1: That's what I aspire to do. That's what I aspire to do. Speaker 0: Beyond the eastern edge of Israel is the Palestinian territory of the West Bank. It was occupied in war by Israel in 1967. Since then, hundreds of thousands of Jewish settlers have moved here illegally under international law. Among them, a group of religious nationalists who see it as their divine right to build a greater Israel and drive out the Palestinians who've been here for generations. I made a film about them in 2011. But now since the attack of October 7, I'd heard that they were accelerating the settlement process Speaker 2: Why are you filming me? Speaker 0: While being protected by the Israeli military. I'd come to try to understand their mindset and to see the consequences of their ultranationalist vision up close. They Speaker 3: don't see us as equal human being who deserve the same rights they do. Speaker 0: I was close to Israel's southern border. At a viewpoint, tourists were surveying the ruins of Gaza. The Palestinian death toll at this point was more than 43,000 and rising, in a war that had commenced a year earlier after Hamas gunmen attacked Israeli communities, killing more than a thousand and taking hundreds more hostage. Now with bombs falling nearby, settlers from across the West Bank were holding a jamboree to promote the idea of putting new Jewish outposts in Gaza. With workshops offering practical advice, while a vanguard made their case in front of the world's media. How are you doing, Louis? Speaker 4: Nice to meet you. Speaker 5: Your name? Speaker 0: Orvith. And why are you here today? Speaker 4: To show support and that I believe that God says ours and that we need to be living there. Speaker 0: To those Palestinians who'd say, well, we'd like to live in a Palestinian state, what do you what do you say? Speaker 4: The bible says this place was given to the Jews. This place is ours. Speaker 0: Ours meaning? Speaker 4: It's a Jew's Speaker 0: name. What's your name? Aaron. Aaron, nice to meet you. Louis, where are you from? I'm from Hebron. And before that? Speaker 6: Till I was nine years old, lived in New York, and then my parents made Aliyah to Israel. We're here to call our government to go and settle Gaza. We're here because we have a right to be here. Our right to be in this land is the Torah, is the Godly promise. Where we don't settle, terror grows. Speaker 0: Among the attendees were many senior political figures, including Israel's Minister Of National Security. In his youth, Itamar Ben Govere had been convicted of incitement of racism. He is himself a settler, but in a sign of the changing times, he now sits in the government of prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Presiding over the event was the godmother of the settler movement, Daniela Weiss. Daniela, this is your event, isn't it? Tell me about what this No. Speaker 7: No. No. Not now. Not now. Not now. Speaker 0: 10 words. Speaker 7: No. No. No. Not not now. Not now. We, at Settlement Movement, organized this event in order to enhance the practical idea of establishing Jewish settlements in the entire Gaza Strip. We very much encourage and enable the population in Gaza to go to other countries. You will witness how Jews go to Gaza and Arabs disappear from Gaza. They lost their right to stay in this holy place. Please go. Thank you very much. Speaker 0: You, up on a nearby hill, there came the sound of protesting. An Israeli group demonstrating for a cease fire and the return of hostages taken by Hamas. What are you doing here? Speaker 8: I think the idea of resettling Gaza is absolutely ridiculous. The question is what kind of country do we want to be? Speaker 0: Do we want to be a colonizing country, or do we want to be Speaker 8: a country that at least offers peace and wants to live in peace with the Palestinians? That has Speaker 0: to be what we strive for. I'd been hoping for a moment with Daniela, but then came a warning of a possible rocket attack, and the event was quickly evacuated. Speaker 9: Let's grab the cameras, and let's go. Speaker 0: For Jewish settlers, Gaza is the latest frontier in a process that's been unfolding for decades across the West Bank. A region of not much more than 5,000 square kilometers, the West Bank is home to around 3,000,000 Palestinians, most of them living in large cities with limited autonomy under the Palestinian authority. The Israeli military occupied the area in the six day war in 1967. Since then, hundreds of thousands of Israelis have moved in to form settlements, hoping to expand Jewish presence in the region or simply looking for cheap housing. Often, start out as a few tents or caravans pitched by ultra ideological settlers on hilltops next to Palestinian towns. These are known as outposts. They are illegal under Israeli law until they are authorized as settlements. But both settlements and outposts are illegal under international law. The army nevertheless protects them. Hello. How are you? Everything's great. Where are you from? London, England. Oh, nice. Where are you from? Russia. Most settlements tend to be suspicious of media. But I'd managed to get an appointment at one called Eviatar. It had started out as an outpost on the edge of the Palestinian town of Beitah. It was only recognized as a settlement by the Israeli state a few months earlier. Speaker 5: Hi there. Good morning. Speaker 0: Good morning. How are you? I'm fine. How are you doing? You must be Malkiel. Yes. I am. I'm Louis. How'd you do? I'm fine. Thank you. Speaker 5: Thank you for having us. Thank you for coming. Speaker 0: One of its founders is horse wrangler, Malkiel Barhay. Speaker 5: Alright. So let me show you a bit about Vuelta. I'm just gonna have to ask you not to take any films of the army base. That's that's where they're sitting. So there's an army base there? This is an army base. That's where the dormitories are. And this is a house people living here. The army base is for your security? For all the region security. The story about a futile, this was a hilltop. It started from day one living in tents, and by the end of the month, we were 50 families living here in in these houses. All of these houses were built back then. Coming from where? All over the country. Speaker 0: Should we go inside? Speaker 5: Alright. I it is it is a little untidy. Speaker 0: So this is where you're living at the moment? Yes. Speaker 5: This is our humble home. This is our living room, our kitchen. Speaker 0: How many children do you have? Speaker 5: Eight, four boys and four girls. Wow. Behind here we have another kid's room. This is a girl's bedroom, two older girls, 13 and 11, they sleep here. And and over there, this is the laundry, bathroom, and a shower. Speaker 0: So where do you stay, mom and dad? Speaker 5: This is me and my wife. Speaker 0: You and your wife are in there? If it rains Yeah. Speaker 7: If it Speaker 5: does rain, so we'll go into the small caravan. Hopefully, we'll finish building the house before winter's here. Speaker 0: Do you enjoy being out on the frontier where it's a bit more rough and ready, where there's there's more uncertainty. Speaker 4: Our mission is to settle Israel, new settlements, all over the country. Speaker 0: So most of the world sees this as the West Bank as occupied territory. It's under a military occupation. Correct? Like, it's not part of the state of Israel as most nations recognize it. Speaker 4: The ancient name of this area is called Judea. The meaning of Judea is it's belong to the Jews. Mhmm. So you can't take all the history, put it in the garbage and say, okay. It's not belong to the Jews. The history said it's belong to the to Israel. Speaker 0: With a selective reading of history that ignores the Palestinians who've lived in the land for generations, The aim for settlements like Eviatar is to become full fledged towns, guarded round the clock by soldiers, walled off from the millions around them. The godmother of the settler project, going back more than fifty years, is the woman I'd seen at the Gaza border event, Daniela Weiss. Speaker 7: I want to see big cities here, like a city of of 2,000,000 people. So it's not a settlement. Settlement is caravans. There's trailers. There's a home here and a home there. This is not what my dream is about. Speaker 0: The trailers in that video of Daniela have now grown into the settlement of Kedumim, where she still lives. Supported by some in the Israeli government, Danielle is viewed by others in power as a dangerous extremist. She'd agreed to talk to me at home. Nice to see you. So we've got pictures of you as a young woman. Is the is the one of you getting married, is that the oldest one? Speaker 7: This is when we we got together. I was then 15 or something. Speaker 0: Your parents were from? Speaker 7: My mother was born in Warsaw. My parents came here and invested fortunes believing that someday there will be a Jewish state. Speaker 2: With Speaker 7: their vision and their faith, I continue to expand Israel and to be as close as possible to the Promised Land. Speaker 0: This is your map. So this is what most of the world knows as the West Bank, which you call Judea And Samaria. Speaker 7: This is what you call occupied West Bank. Speaker 0: And what the Palestinians would like to see as a future state of their own. Speaker 7: Oh, they are not satisfied with this, but complicated issue. Speaker 0: These little pink wedges, what do they represent? Speaker 7: The Jewish communities that were established since 1967. Speaker 0: I'm curious to know roughly how many settlements and outposts you've been, let's say, in some way involved in the establishment. Speaker 7: Almost everyone. Speaker 0: For real? Speaker 7: It's fifty years. Mhmm. You know what it means? Fifty years that I do what I do today? Speaker 0: Because it's territory that was won in the sixty seven war, that under the Geneva Convention, transferring a civilian population into a conquered terrain, that that's considered a war crime. Speaker 7: Ah, this what I do here is a war crime. According to the You're not cooperating with the person who committed a war crime? Speaker 0: Well, I'm interviewing you. Speaker 7: It's a light felony. Speaker 0: I've read a couple of things suggesting that you were viewed as an extremist and possibly sympathizing with Jewish or Israeli terror. Speaker 7: The confrontation is not over terror. The confrontation is just on whether yes or no. We stay here. Speaker 0: There's a quote, so alarming is the situation. It's talking about the situation of of settlers and what they describe as settler extremism and violence. Last week, Ronan Barr, the head of Israel's security service, wrote to Netanyahu, the prime minister, and the defense minister warning that what he called Jewish terror by violent settlers was doing indescribable damage to Israel. Speaker 7: The reason Ronen Barr says that I'm extremist has nothing to do with terror. Whatever I represent threatens his peaceful secular life. I have nothing to do with terror. He knows I have nothing to do with terror. And he insists on saying it. It's a lie, and he knows that it's a lie. Speaker 1: Does that really explain? Speaker 7: Like me. Mhmm. Because I have a lot of influence, much more than he has. Speaker 0: Influence over who? Speaker 7: The young generation that is growing in Israel. Speaker 0: And government too? Speaker 7: And government what? Speaker 0: Do you have influence over government? Speaker 7: No question. Who did all this? Speaker 0: Can you call Netanyahu? Speaker 7: What do you mean? Like this? Speaker 0: Mhmm. Speaker 7: No. I call his aides. Speaker 0: So the idea is to force the government by putting people starts with small settlements, then they get bigger, then they get recognized by the state of Israel and basically creating a new demographic reality. Speaker 7: We do not force a government. We do for governments what they cannot do for themselves. Even if you take Netanyahu now, he is very happy with what we do here and also about our plans to build Jewish communities in Gaza. He's happy about it, but he cannot say it. He says the opposite. It's not realistic. Good. We will make it realistic. It's not forcing the government. It's helping the government. It's step number one one in politics. You don't force the government. You give the government the courage, the ability, the public support, the political support. I think you understand what I said even if you disagree. Speaker 0: There was something unsettling about hearing Daniela's ethnonationalist vision being laid out so plainly, especially when I considered the support she claimed to have from some in power. With their backing, the settlement project has accelerated, with many of those going to live in West Bank settlements coming from other countries. Anyone from anywhere in the world with Jewish heritage, since they qualify for Israeli citizenship, can live in a settlement. Speaker 1: Have you ever been to Judea? Well, this an invitation because I could try to describe it to you in words, but it'd just be impossible. Speaker 0: Ari Abramovitz was born and raised in Texas. He now helps run Arugot Farm, a small retreat hosting birthdays, weddings, and corporate events, often catering to tourists. The farm was established as an outpost in 2014, illegally according to international law, on land deep inside the occupied West Bank. Hi. We're going to Aragot Farm. Thank Speaker 9: you. Speaker 1: You Ari? I am. There you are. Speaker 0: We Speaker 1: got How are you doing? Good to meet you. Welcome. Welcome. Speaker 0: Nice to meet you. Louis. Speaker 1: Louis. Louis. Yes. I'm standing over. Louis. Louis. Louis. Speaker 0: Yes. Or Louis. I don't mind too much. Speaker 1: Welcome to Jubilee. Doing? You've come armed. I did. It's But we're so friendly. I know how Speaker 10: it looks. Speaker 0: I know. Speaker 1: I know it's not true. So this is our synagogue. And I remember when I first came here, I wanted to build my house here. And then I learned that according to Jewish law, build the synagogue in the highest place, which makes sense. My home is gonna be lording over the synagogue. That wouldn't be right. These are the Torah scrolls. Speaker 0: Is it weird to have your guns on in here? Speaker 1: No. My gun is here to protect the nation of Israel from those that seek to harm us. And during a service, would you typically wear them? Yes. Speaker 0: Is it that dangerous? Speaker 1: It is until it's not. Thank God, never had any issues of infiltrations here. And I think it's because they know that we're ready for it. Speaker 0: How old were you when you came to Israel? I I think I Speaker 1: was 16. And I came here after high school to study Torah. It was supposed to be a few months. It's called the gap year program. Speaker 0: Mhmm. Speaker 1: When you breathe the air, when you taste that, when you feel mission and passion and life, you can't can't go back. This is where I choose to come and pray with the creator of heaven and earth. I think this is the most beautiful place in the world, Speaker 0: right here. Where is Speaker 1: the nearest Palestinian town? I'm so uncomfortable using the word Palestinian because I don't think that it exists. You don't Speaker 0: think they really exist? I don't think Speaker 1: that they exist as a real nation with a real claim to this land. Speaker 0: What are they then? Speaker 1: They are they're Arabs. Speaker 0: With a connection to this land? Speaker 1: Yes. They have a connection to it. It's nowhere near the depth and I mean, we were in this land planting vineyards before Mohammed was in the third grade. Is that a settlement there? That is a Jewish settlement called Pnei Kedem. Pnei Kedem. Which means facing the east, face to the east. Speaker 0: Would that be considered legal under Israeli law? Speaker 1: I don't know. You don't really care. I don't I don't care at all. At all. I don't care at all. I mean Why don't you care? This land here in the heart of Judea, there's some things that transcend the whims of legislation, and that this is one of those Speaker 0: Palestinians up and down the West Bank, the presence of settlers makes life precarious. They live under Israeli military law, restricted from most Israeli roads, subject to frequent run ins with the authorities and detention without trial, in a legal system that is opaque and arbitrary. Israel says the measures are necessary for security. I was in the South Hebron Hills during the olive harvest, a time when tensions run high, with Palestinians prevented from getting to trees they say they've harvested for years. How are you doing? I was curious to see the interactions for myself. I'd heard from an Israeli activist group. They were trying to help a farmer named Ishaq Jabarin. What's happening here today? The army arrived. A nearby settlement had allegedly called them to report the olive picking. One of those on the scene was a longtime Israeli activist, mathematician Kobi Sneetz. Kobi, do you know do you know what Speaker 10: they're doing right now? The army has said, you gotta leave in five minutes. And now the landowners has to make a choice, if to try to insist on on staying here and and taking a risk. They're they're they're liable to do anything. They could arrest the Palestinians. They can arrest us. Who knows what they might do? Speaker 0: Have you been arrested before? Speaker 11: Do you Speaker 0: think he would have been arrested? Speaker 10: 40% of all Palestinian men have been arrested, so probably. Speaker 11: Your response? Speaker 0: British television. Speaker 5: Passport. Thank Speaker 0: you. Can I ask why you're taking my passport? I need to check. Check what? Check what? Speaker 7: Nothing. They don't check nothing. They just want to scare Speaker 3: us. If Speaker 0: Pete kept picking, he would have been arrested. Speaker 6: No. It's not to arrest. Speaker 10: It's just Speaker 6: to evacuate evacuate the area. Speaker 0: Meaning what, though? If he says I'm not leaving? Speaker 6: I'm grateful we didn't get to that part. Speaker 0: That's what Speaker 10: I said. Speaker 0: What would happen? Speaker 10: I actually don't. Speaker 0: As a soldier, you would have to do what? Detain him? Speaker 10: That's no. I rather not speak again. Speaker 0: Alongside their interactions with the army, Palestinians throughout the West Bank also suffer attacks by settlers. Speaker 7: These Speaker 0: videos come from the South Hebron Hills where I'd seen the olive picking. In the town of Tawani, a settler was caught on camera shooting and severely injuring a Palestinian man. The shooter had his gun license revoked, but he was never arrested. I'd heard of other similar incidents. In the same town of Tawani, I'd made contact with a 20 year old Palestinian student and local activist named Mohammed Horeni. He offered to take me to the top of the hill to meet his neighbor who lives in a spot closest to a settlement. Louis. Nice to meet you. Thank you for having us. Mohsab Rubet's house still bears the scars of what he says were settler attacks. Speaker 11: You can see, like, from the window, the bullets. Speaker 0: So there's bullets that have come through here? Speaker 11: Yeah. From this window and that window. This is the settlement. This and this would Speaker 0: Where that bright light is? Yes. So what is that? Is that an outpost or what is that? Is there anyone in there? Hang on. Something's happening. What is it? It's the soldier. Are they coming in? Speaker 11: They are screaming to us. Speaker 9: And they are now the laser with the guns. I see the the laser on the rifles. Speaker 11: It's happened almost every day. Speaker 0: What do we do? Just stay in here? Speaker 5: Yeah, we are on the side. Speaker 0: Matan, what do you think? Speaker 10: It's not safe at the moment. There's obviously multiple guns pointing at us. Speaker 9: Yeah. Let's wait. Speaker 0: What can we do? Can we call the police? Speaker 9: Which police? Speaker 1: I mean, Speaker 9: there are one Rajiv. Speaker 0: This doesn't worry you. Speaker 9: No. Because, I mean, we're raised in this situation, so it became a normal reality for us. When you are a kid, you just see this army invading your home in the day, on the night. You grow up on this unjustice reality that it became normal for you as a human, but it's not normal for anybody. Mhmm. And no one should accept it. Speaker 0: After more than an hour, the soldiers appeared to lose interest, and the crew and I slipped away. The violence committed by some settlers is often justified by them as a response to violence they experience from Palestinians, which is much less frequent. Nevertheless, it's hard to disentangle it from an ideology of the superiority of one group and their rights over another, promoted by leaders like Daniela Weiss. Hiya. How are you? Speaker 7: Hey. Good morning. Speaker 0: Hoping for more insight into her and her work, I was back. Speaker 7: I have a meeting. So but but do have a seat. Speaker 0: Thank you. So we'll just wait. Speaker 10: Great. Speaker 7: Okay. From now on, follow me Okay. If you want to know. Speaker 0: Are we leaving? Yes. So we're gonna meet you there. Alright. I was joining Daniella and some friends of hers in a convoy heading towards Gaza. Mission unclear. Two hours later, we were one kilometer from the Gaza border in the Israeli town of Stirot, arriving at a yeshiva, a religious school, where Daniela took part in an assembly alongside two prominent rabbis. Speaker 1: What Speaker 0: what's happening next, Daniella? Should we follow you? We'll follow her. Our next stop was a memorial for the victims of October 7. Sterot had seen heavy fighting during the Hamas attacks and suffered many losses. For some passers by, Daniella held a degree of celebrity status. Then the settler convoy arrived at what seemed to be its destination, a viewpoint overlooking the war zone. Daniella had told me she'd signed up 800 families who were ready to move into Gaza. One of her team explained how it would work. The idea seemed to be to get spiritual buy in from the two rabbis. One of them was next to speak, rabbi Dov Lior. As the day ended, we were following Daniella's car, driving on what seemed to be army controlled land, approaching ever closer to the Gaza border. Speaker 10: I can see the destroyed houses. Speaker 0: It had previously been reported that Daniella had been illegally escorted into Gaza by soldiers who supported her to recu locations for settlement. Suddenly, her vehicle broke away. On this occasion, she was intercepted. So basically, she had a military escort, and then she just peeled away and made a sprint for the border. Of Gaza? Yeah. Speaker 9: She's just tried to run away from the army, hasn't she? Speaker 0: Did you try and make a dash to put the Gaza border? What was happening down there? Speaker 7: I enjoyed it so much. Our two jeeps were due too much too much attention. Speaker 0: But what's the idea? Why do you wanna go down to the to actually you wanted to enter Gaza? Speaker 7: No. Why do what I wanted to do, I wanted to show the rabbis that Gaza is not something beyond reach. Speaker 0: Would you say October 7 made people more receptive to your message and to your point of view? Speaker 7: No doubt. The October 7 naturally made people more receptive to the idea of the great Israel. But the next step, Jewish settlements in Gaza is a very difficult step that demands a lot of work. You have to influence the the the leftist, the government, the the nations of the world using the magic system, Zionism. You redeem the land. You establish communities. You bring Jewish families, you live live Jewish life, and this will bring light instead state of Israel was established, and this is what we want to do in Gaza. Speaker 0: This process of making the the whole of the West Bank in Gaza Jewish, do you feel like it's moving more quickly? Speaker 7: As far as Judea And Samaria is concerned, so we want to move from 1,000,000 to 2,000,000. So this is the next step. This is my vision. It's so complicated. Speaker 0: Daniela's vision has been made possible by the Israeli occupation. But it in turn has led to the creation of a vast military infrastructure which impacts every aspect of Palestinian life. Nowhere is it more evident than in Hebron. Hebron is an ancient biblical city, home to some 200,000 Palestinians, a place holy to three major religions. Hi. How are you? Speaker 5: Fine. Thank you. Where are guys from? Speaker 0: We're from British TV crew. In 1968, the year after it was occupied by Israel, a community of Jewish settlers moved in illegally. They now number around 700, existing in a cordon of military protection. I visited in 2010 when I'd spent time with a settler leader. Now fourteen years on, I was curious about life within the Palestinian community. I'm Louis. Speaker 3: Hi, Louis. Nice to meet you. Speaker 0: Welcome. Thank you for having us. Isa Amro, a Palestinian activist, was born here in the settler occupied area. You got fences all around? All around. Speaker 3: Fences from here? Speaker 0: Yeah. This Who lives on the other side? Speaker 3: Israeli settlers. Speaker 0: We've got army there. What are they doing? Have they come for a reason? Speaker 3: No. They come for intimidation. Speaker 0: How are you? They're not speaking, but I think what they would say is, well, we're here to provide security for the settlers who who live here and want to live in peace and experience animosity, from the Palestinians. Speaker 3: So they want to live in peace and the expense of my basic human rights. I didn't choose to live in Hebron. I was born in Hebron. It's my land. It's my homeland. Mhmm. The settlers chose to come here. And if it's not safe for them, why they continue building more and more settlements in my own city? By international law, the settlements are illegal. They don't see us as equal human being who deserve the same rights they do. Speaker 0: Lead the way. Yeah. For nearly twenty years, Isa has been an advocate for nonviolent resistance against the occupation. He is one of around 30,000 Palestinians living inside the high security area of Hebron, the so called sterile zone. For them, just doing their shopping, going to work, or going to school means passing through military checkpoints. Let's see how it works. Hi. Hi. Speaker 2: How are you guys doing? Speaker 0: Good. How are you? Fine. Everything okay? I Speaker 2: need your passport, please. All of you. Okay? Speaker 0: Sure. What for? Why? Speaker 2: Check. Why? Hi, Isa. How are you doing, mate? Speaker 3: How are you doing? Hi. Why you cover your faces? Speaker 2: Because of the cold. Speaker 0: No. Are leaving Speaker 9: the world. Speaker 3: Come on, guys. Don't hide. Only gangs hide their faces. You are a military. You should have your faces, you know, obvious to everybody. Speaker 0: Do you know you know Itza? Speaker 2: He lives here. Speaker 0: Yeah. Lives here. He says it's making life very difficult to have this military presence here. Speaker 2: What are y'all doing here? Speaker 0: What am I doing here? Make a documentary. Speaker 2: Documentary? For British Speaker 0: television. Of what? About this about settlers in the West Bank. Speaker 2: Settlers in the West Bank? Yes. Okay. And what what do you tell to the television about the settlements? Speaker 0: It's not about what I'm telling them. It's about what I'm hearing from the people who I speak to. Where do you live? Speaker 2: I don't I don't wanna tell you. Speaker 0: Okay. Told you where I Speaker 2: was Say the name What Speaker 0: does that mean, Shani? Speaker 2: It's a enjoy from the trip in Hebron here. Speaker 0: Thank you. Speaker 2: Wish you all the best, guys. Speaker 0: How is life here? Is it it's like you're very well armed. Is it do you do you is there a situation here that needs careful control? Speaker 8: Of course. Speaker 0: What is it? Tell me about it. Speaker 3: We are not not up to the long rocks Speaker 0: What was he saying about Arabi? Oh, he he wanted to see if you are an Arab. He said he asked you if you speak Arabic. Speaker 1: Hello. How are you doing? What's up? Speaker 0: Hey. How are you doing? Speaker 1: I'm doing excellent. American? What do I look? Chinese? Speaker 0: Yeah. From Brooklyn? You bet. Speaker 1: Let me just pull over to the side. Okay. Speaker 0: Do you know him? Speaker 3: No, he doesn't live here. Speaker 0: You okay? Do you need help? You okay? No. Are you stuck? Are you in a a rut? Speaker 2: Why are you filming me? Speaker 0: It's all good. Don't worry. We can't even see your face. Look. You're obscured. No one can even see who you are. Don't worry. Speaker 2: I don't know what to do with you. Listen to me. Speaker 0: Yeah. I'm listening. Speaker 2: Come. Come to me. No. I'm from the military. Okay? Mhmm. IDF, Israel Defense Forces. I'm above the police here in the West Bank. Speaker 0: Okay. Speaker 2: I'm the highest responsibility of law. Okay. We'll tell you like this. Okay? Speaker 11: Mhmm. Speaker 2: And as this man, IDF, I need to tell you not staying here. Speaker 0: Okay. We'll we'll we'll move along. That's fine. Speaker 2: Okay. Leave. Leave this place. Leave this area. Okay? Yeah. We'll move along. Right now. Yalla. Father. Speaker 0: Let's go. Okay. Speaker 2: Yalla, let's So Speaker 0: who lives here? Speaker 3: Palestinian families. Speaker 0: And where are they? Speaker 3: They are hiding behind their doors. Speaker 0: What would stop these shops from being open? Speaker 3: It's closed by military orders and marked as closed shops. It's marked. From this shop would be five families at least live and earn their living. Look. This is something new. This not to hire Arab workers in Israel. Two faces, a face of an Arab and a face of a terrorist. And this is how they stereotype us. Middle finger. Speaker 0: He gave you the middle finger? Yes. To you too. You think it was to me? To you. I think it was to you. Speaker 11: To you. Speaker 3: To both of us. Because you deserve the middle finger if you report about Palestinians. Speaker 11: Wait. Wait. ID, please. Speaker 0: For what reason? Speaker 11: It's the policy. Speaker 3: But I know that we I'm allowed to be here until here. Speaker 11: You say you are not allowed to go there. Speaker 0: Why can't he why can't he be with us? Speaker 11: Because we are limit for Palestinians, so he can if he lives here, he can reach. But here, no. Speaker 0: Give me your ID, please. How come Palestinians can't come down here? Speaker 11: It's not work like Speaker 7: that. Speaker 0: Which camera? I'm not talking Speaker 1: to you. It Speaker 0: seems ironic that that's the visitor center, right, for tourists and whatnot, and and he can't actually visit in his own in his own city. You knew that was gonna happen. No. Speaker 3: It's new that they asked me to come back to here. They told me that I'm allowed only to to here. So they expanded the closed area for me. Speaker 0: What's it all about? Speaker 3: Taking more and more land. It's about fragmented life, restricted life for Palestinians, no quality life. You live with the basics with the base even with less than basics of a a family need to make you live, and they are doing well. The majority of the houses are empty. The families are leaving. Speaker 0: You could flip it and say, well, if they really wanted to occupy the whole of Hebron or at least this area, they could literally deport Palestinians. Speaker 3: They do it slowly, but now they are speeding up. They want approval from their allies and their partners in the world. Speaker 0: Is it worth going through to see the other side? Speaker 1: Yes. I can see. Speaker 2: See what Speaker 0: it looks like. This gives you a little flavor of what it was like in there before. Speaker 3: Yes. The market was much more busy inside. It was our Oxford Street inside. So busy. My father used to hold my arm not to lose me. Not anymore. Speaker 0: It's closed completely. Restricted. In order to get back in, we can't go through there now because they've closed it. It's closed. So how do we get back in? Speaker 3: You try from another checkpoint. Mhmm. Speaker 0: Through here? Speaker 3: Yes. Speaker 1: Louis, Speaker 0: coming through? Yes. So now we're on the other side of the area where you couldn't walk before. Right? Where they stopped you from walking in front of the visitor center. But you need to get home. Speaker 3: Yes. Speaker 0: So what will you do? Speaker 3: I will go around again. I will go outside this checkpoint, go around to enter from another checkpoint and wait till the checkpoint opens Mhmm. To get into my house with my son. Speaker 0: You definitely can't come this way? Speaker 3: I can't come this way. Okay. I can Speaker 0: They won't let you through? No. They will not. Speaker 3: I will I'm not allowed. I was happy Speaker 0: to meet you. Thank you so much. Speaker 3: Bye bye. Speaker 0: Take care. Bye bye. On the drive back from Hebron, I reflected on the separate lives lived by Israelis and Palestinians, and the unequal system of rights and justice. We ran into a traffic jam caused by a bomb scare. The road, the main artery in the West Bank, is one of the few shared by Israelis and Palestinians. For once, all were subject to delay. It was a sobering experience visiting Hebron again. Isa had told me he believed life was being made intolerable for Palestinians deliberately to make them leave, and that the process was speeding up since October 7. And it was true that some settlers I'd met supported the deportation of Palestinians who won't submit to Jewish authority. Authority. One of them was Ari, a Texan born and raised in Houston, now resident deep inside the occupied West Bank. Speaker 1: Good to see you. Speaker 0: Good to see you. How are you? Speaker 1: I'm alright. I'm a little under the weather. Speaker 0: I'm sorry to hear that. Thank you for having us back. Hoping to understand a little better, I'd return to see him again. Speaker 1: Okay. K. We're ready for the coffee. I really hope I do this right. I Speaker 0: never know if you wear those guns just for effect. Speaker 1: I don't know what effect I'm looking for. Do I wanna look more militant? Yeah. No. I'm not wearing it just for effect. Speaker 0: Do you wanna sit down? We've talked a lot about how you see the, the importance of Jewish presence in the what was termed the biblical land of Israel. Are you saying that you see Israel as playing a role for modeling a a new kind of, what, nationalism? Would or is that is that right? Speaker 1: I think that all of what's happening in the world right now is leading us as a nation to open our eyes to who we are. We are the tip of the spear fighting the battles of America and defending the the entire Western world, and not just the Western world, anyone who wants any semblance of liberty and freedom in their lives. Nevertheless, there are millions of people up and Speaker 0: down the area, Arabs, Muslims, who aren't living free. Right? They're they're enclosed without the same rights, without national self determination, and in many respects, feeling besieged. And I just wonder, do you Speaker 1: see that? I don't have tremendous compassion for a society that has a in unquenchable, genocidal, theological bloodlust. It's like a death cult. Speaker 0: It seems to me there's a danger with that characterization of of Palestinians. You define them as eliminationist and and hateful and and and genocidal. Those Speaker 1: Yeah. I use the words death cult also. Speaker 0: Death cult. That that then permits you to almost create a mirror image of that, that you say, well, if they wanna do that to us, then we need to do that to them. Speaker 1: I think that when you're living amongst people who have perpetually proven not only by word but by deed that they want your blood spilled in the streets, that they want to murder your children, that they want to slay all of you, kill all of you in the most horrific genocidal way, that all of the polls showed after October 7 that these people who you continuously call the Palestinian people, that I reject the very premise that they are actually a real nation for a lot of reasons. I mean Speaker 0: But but the the the of people who who who who who have nothing to do with October 7, right, who who who actually just would like Speaker 1: to live free, full lives? If that's really what they wanted, they would have had it a long time ago. They want to wipe Israel off the map. They want every last Jew dead. So what's the The answer is for us to declare sovereignty over all of Judea And Samaria and all of the land of Israel and Gaza and to settle Gaza and all of Judea And Samaria with Jews in the land of Israel. Speaker 0: Did the question annoy you? Speaker 1: Annoying me, I just I hear it so often. And it feels like it's being addressed again and again and again. Even if the entire world is pointing, accusing fingers, and gnashing their teeth in rage and anger, we know the righteousness and the truth of our cause even if we stand alone. That's what it means to be a Hebrew. That's what it means to be a Jew. If we know the truth of our cause, that's all we need. Speaker 0: Ferrari, it was clear that nothing is greater than the word of God. And that word had led him to believe that it was the divine right of the Jewish people to settle and rule this land. Speaker 9: Good to see you. Speaker 0: See you later. Speaker 1: Bless and protect you. Speaker 3: Amen. The Speaker 0: bible was, as he saw it, a land deed to the west bank. With an afternoon free, I stopped for coffee in the Palestinian city of Nablus. Surrounded by the ancient architecture of the old city and the undeniable fact of the hundreds of thousands of people living there and their aspirations for statehood. At the edge of the city, we were held up at one of the many checkpoints that control the people entering and leaving. Can you put the gun down? Speaker 11: I got the motor. Where are from? Speaker 0: From London. London. Speaker 11: You've been in the market? Yes. You also? Yes. She work with you? Speaker 10: She's American. Speaker 11: Yes. Can you show me ID? Speaker 7: Me? Speaker 11: Everyone. Yeah. Speaker 0: Sure. It's very slow going. We've been there in that queue for an hour or more. Yes. Speaker 11: What how much time you're Speaker 1: gonna stay in Israel? Hang on. But I don't Speaker 0: think we're in Israel. Are we in Israel? Speaker 11: You're in Israel now? Speaker 1: Are we? Yes. Speaker 0: In the West Bank. No? In the North of the West Bank, I was heading back to the settlement of Eviatar, where I'd been hosted by Malkiel, the horse wrangler. Since my visit, I'd learned a little more about the settlement's relations with its neighboring Palestinian town of Beytar. How Beytar had been subject to settler attacks and how it, in turn, had organized regular protests of the settlement. Demonstrators had been killed and others wounded during the clashes. One of the deaths of a Turkish American volunteer, Ayushono Eski Egi, made headlines. Now the settlement was holding a festival to celebrate its recent recognition by the Israeli state. Entertainments had been laid on, and families from settlements from around the West Bank had converged for a day of music and activities. One of those speaking was Daniella. How are you? Hi. Speaker 7: It's so serious. Speaker 0: Yeah. It's a bit Speaker 1: quieter. As Speaker 0: the festivities wound down, I had a moment to speak to Daniela on a hilltop overlooking the Palestinian town of Beta. So you've been talking about settling you've talked about displacing wanting the Palestinians to go. You said to Africa, to Canada, to England. You don't care Mhmm. What would be wrong with either a two state solution or a one state solution where everyone had the same rights? Speaker 7: We want to have a Jewish state based on Jewish rules, on Jewish values. It's not relationship of neighbors. Speaker 0: Why not? Speaker 7: Because we are two different nations. Different. Speaker 0: I just wonder whether you feel or you're aware that, you know, they're really suffering, and there's been settlers rampaging through the area of the West Bank. So there's all this Speaker 7: Agitation. Speaker 0: Death Ah, yeah. Tragedy. Right? Speaker 7: Tragedy. Speaker 0: When a people is invaded, right, and then put under a military occupation, deprived of their rights, that anger seems to be an understandable response, an appropriate response. Speaker 7: There is no such thing as settling violence. Did they speak I don't know if if I spoke I I don't mind saying it again. Mean Mhmm. And I don't mind ex I will be glad to explain it. Speaker 0: You don't believe it's real? There are videos. You can see them. Speaker 7: I You see what? Okay? Let's say Mhmm. Now we yeah. We have a camera right here. Speaker 0: Yes. Speaker 7: And I do this. Speaker 0: Yep. Speaker 7: Do something. You don't mind what I did to you. Speaker 8: You don't you don't necessarily have Speaker 0: to do it. Well, I'm I won't do that to you. Speaker 7: You won't you Speaker 0: won't No. Speaker 7: And then the camera takes just part. Mhmm. You don't have the full picture. Then I say you're violent. You're violent against a woman. This is exactly what is going on all the time with what you call Speaker 0: Settler violence. Speaker 7: Settler violence. Settlers, do not wake up in the morning or do not go wait for sundown to attack. No. No. No. No. Why should we wake up in the morning and think about violence? Why our life is good? Speaker 0: Because you want the Palestinians to leave. Speaker 7: No. No. No. No. Speaker 0: You've said so. Speaker 7: I said that what is on my mind all the time is how to bring more people to settle the land. This is a new development by Jews. This is Abraha. This is Itza. This weekend here, we can develop. Here, we cannot develop. I never think in terms of I know this is beta. Mhmm. I don't think in I don't think about beta. Speaker 0: Why not? Speaker 7: Because I think about I'm a Jew. Speaker 0: The people. Speaker 7: I'm a settler. Speaker 0: The people. Speaker 7: I am I'm a a human being. Speaker 0: Yes. You are. So are they. Speaker 7: Yeah. So I do not think about this. Speaker 0: You're thinking about tribalism, thinking of your own people to the exclusion. It would be understandable to think of your own people or your own children first, but to think about other people, other children, not at all, that seems sociopathic. Can Doesn't it? Speaker 7: No. Not at all. This is normal. To my children, I give everything because I the the normal thing normal thing for me is to pray for my own people. That's it. So now I continue. I hope you push me back. Speaker 0: And so I said goodbye to Daniela, and her extreme ideology delivered with a smile. Fourteen years on from my first visit, with the horror of October 7 in the interim, and the ongoing devastation of Gaza, a settler dream shows no sign of abating, along with the dislocation, displacement, and death that follows inevitably in its train. Advanced by ideologues, backed up by those in power, and accountable only to God.
Saved - April 28, 2025 at 6:14 PM

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

THE FULL DOCUMENTARY: Louis Theroux’s “The Settlers” (2025) Essential Viewing! Modern Israel’s foundation exposed - Settlers from around the globe seizing land, pushing an expansionist agenda that still drives unrest today. https://t.co/UiZi6pbGUO

Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker explores the Israeli settlement movement in the West Bank, focusing on religious nationalists who seek to expand Israel and displace Palestinians. Settlers view the land as their divine right, citing the Bible. Following the October 7th attack, there's been a push to establish Jewish outposts in Gaza, supported by political figures like Minister Of National Security, Itamar Ben Govere. Daniela Weiss, a leader in the settler movement, envisions large Jewish cities throughout the West Bank and Gaza, advocating for the relocation of the Palestinian population. These settlements, while illegal under international law, are protected by the Israeli military. Settlers often come from other countries, drawn by the promise of Israeli citizenship. Palestinians face restrictions, military occupation, settler violence, and limited autonomy. Activists report increased pressure and displacement, especially after October 7th. Some settlers justify their actions as a response to Palestinian violence, while others believe in Jewish superiority and the divine right to the land.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Do you wanna show where we are right now? Because I think we're quite deep inside what are called the Palestinian Territories. Speaker 1: What you call the Palestinian Territories, I call it the heart of Judea. If you say the Palestinian Territories, you're essentially already saying that this right here right here is going to be a jihadist Palestinian state right in the heart of Israel. Not only the heart of Israel. We're talking about, like But why jihadist? Speaker 0: Why do you say jihadist? Why not why couldn't it just be a Palestinian state? Speaker 1: Okay. To understand the Arab way of thinking that they understand there's a war. They win the war if they get territory. They lose the war if they lose territory. You could flip that and say, well, Speaker 0: that's what, in a sense, you're doing. Speaker 1: That's what I aspire to do. That's what I aspire to do. Speaker 0: Beyond the eastern edge of Israel is the Palestinian territory of the West Bank. It was occupied in war by Israel in 1967. Since then, hundreds of thousands of Jewish settlers have moved here illegally under international law. Among them, a group of religious nationalists who see it as their divine right to build a greater Israel and drive out the Palestinians who've been here for generations. I made a film about them in 2011. But now since the attack of October 7, I'd heard that they were accelerating the settlement process Speaker 2: Why are you filming me? Speaker 0: While being protected by the Israeli military. I'd come to try to understand their mindset and to see the consequences of their ultranationalist vision up close. They Speaker 3: don't see us as equal human being who deserve the same rights they do. Speaker 0: I was close to Israel's southern border. At a viewpoint, tourists were surveying the ruins of Gaza. The Palestinian death toll at this point was more than 43,000 and rising, in a war that had commenced a year earlier after Hamas gunmen attacked Israeli communities, killing more than a thousand and taking hundreds more hostage. Now with bombs falling nearby, settlers from across the West Bank were holding a jamboree to promote the idea of putting new Jewish outposts in Gaza. With workshops offering practical advice, while a vanguard made their case in front of the world's media. How are you doing, Louis? Speaker 4: Nice to meet you. Speaker 5: Your name? Speaker 0: Orvith. And why are you here today? Speaker 4: To show support and that I believe that God says ours and that we need to be living there. Speaker 0: To those Palestinians who'd say, well, we'd like to live in a Palestinian state, what do you what do you say? Speaker 4: The bible says this place was given to the Jews. This place is ours. Speaker 0: Ours meaning? Speaker 4: It's a Jew's Speaker 0: name. What's your name? Aaron. Aaron, nice to meet you. Louis, where are you from? I'm from Hebron. And before that? Speaker 6: Till I was nine years old, lived in New York, and then my parents made Aliyah to Israel. We're here to call our government to go and settle Gaza. We're here because we have a right to be here. Our right to be in this land is the Torah, is the Godly promise. Where we don't settle, terror grows. Speaker 0: Among the attendees were many senior political figures, including Israel's Minister Of National Security. In his youth, Itamar Ben Govere had been convicted of incitement of racism. He is himself a settler, but in a sign of the changing times, he now sits in the government of prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Presiding over the event was the godmother of the settler movement, Daniela Weiss. Daniela, this is your event, isn't it? Tell me about what this No. Speaker 7: No. No. Not now. Not now. Not now. Speaker 0: 10 words. Speaker 7: No. No. No. Not not now. Not now. We, Speaker 8: at Settlement Movement, organized this event in order to enhance the practical idea of establishing Jewish settlements in the entire Gaza Strip. We very much encourage and enable the population in Gaza to go to other countries. You will witness how Jews go to Gaza and Arabs disappear from Gaza. They lost their right to stay in this holy place. Please go. Thank you very much. Speaker 0: You, up on a nearby hill, there came the sound of protesting. An Israeli group demonstrating for a cease fire and the return of hostages taken by Hamas. What are you doing here? Speaker 9: I think the idea of resettling Gaza is absolutely ridiculous. The question is what kind of country do we want to be? Speaker 0: Do we want to be a colonizing country, or do we want to be Speaker 9: a country that at least offers peace and wants to live in peace with the Palestinians? That has Speaker 0: to be what we strive for. I'd been hoping for a moment with Daniela, but then came a warning of a possible rocket attack, and the event was quickly evacuated. Speaker 10: Let's grab the cameras, and let's go. Speaker 0: For Jewish settlers, Gaza is the latest frontier in a process that's been unfolding for decades across the West Bank. A region of not much more than 5,000 square kilometers, the West Bank is home to around 3,000,000 Palestinians, most of them living in large cities with limited autonomy under the Palestinian authority. The Israeli military occupied the area in the six day war in 1967. Since then, hundreds of thousands of Israelis have moved in to form settlements, hoping to expand Jewish presence in the region or simply looking for cheap housing. Often, start out as a few tents or caravans pitched by ultra ideological settlers on hilltops next to Palestinian towns. These are known as outposts. They are illegal under Israeli law until they are authorized as settlements. But both settlements and outposts are illegal under international law. The army nevertheless protects them. Hello. How are you? Everything's great. Where are you from? London, England. Oh, nice. Where are you from? Russia. Most settlements tend to be suspicious of media. But I'd managed to get an appointment at one called Eviatar. It had started out as an outpost on the edge of the Palestinian town of Beitah. It was only recognized as a settlement by the Israeli state a few months earlier. Speaker 5: Hi there. Good morning. Speaker 0: Good morning. How are you? I'm fine. How are you doing? You must be Malkiel. Yes. I am. I'm Louis. How'd you do? I'm fine. Thank you. Speaker 5: Thank you for having us. Thank you for coming. Speaker 0: One of its founders is horse wrangler, Malkiel Barhay. Speaker 5: Alright. So let me show you a bit about Vuelta. I'm just gonna have to ask you not to take any films of the army base. That's that's where they're sitting. So there's an army base there? This is an army base. That's where the dormitories are. And this is a house people living here. The army base is for your security? For all the region security. The story about a futile, this was a hilltop. It started from day one living in tents, and by the end of the month, we were 50 families living here in in these houses. All of these houses were built back then. Coming from where? All over the country. Speaker 0: Should we go inside? Speaker 5: Alright. I it is it is a little untidy. Speaker 0: So this is where you're living at the moment? Yes. Speaker 5: This is our humble home. This is our living room, our kitchen. Speaker 0: How many children do you have? Speaker 5: Eight, four boys and four girls. Wow. Behind here we have another kid's room. This is a girl's bedroom, two older girls, 13 and 11, they sleep here. And and over there, this is the laundry, bathroom, and a shower. Speaker 0: So where do you stay, mom and dad? Speaker 5: This is me and my wife. Speaker 0: You and your wife are in there? If it rains Yeah. Speaker 7: If it Speaker 5: does rain, so we'll go into the small caravan. Hopefully, we'll finish building the house before winter's here. Speaker 0: Do you enjoy being out on the frontier where it's a bit more rough and ready, where there's there's more uncertainty. Speaker 4: Our mission is to settle Israel, new settlements, all over the country. Speaker 0: So most of the world sees this as the West Bank as occupied territory. It's under a military occupation. Correct? Like, it's not part of the state of Israel as most nations recognize it. Speaker 4: The ancient name of this area is called Judea. The meaning of Judea is it's belong to the Jews. Mhmm. So you can't take all the history, put it in the garbage and say, okay. It's not belong to the Jews. The history said it's belong to the to Israel. Speaker 0: With a selective reading of history that ignores the Palestinians who've lived in the land for generations, The aim for settlements like Eviatar is to become full fledged towns, guarded round the clock by soldiers, walled off from the millions around them. The godmother of the settler project, going back more than fifty years, is the woman I'd seen at the Gaza border event, Daniela Weiss. Speaker 7: I want to see big cities here, like a city of of 2,000,000 people. So it's not a settlement. Settlement is caravans. There's trailers. There's a home here and a home there. This is not what my dream is about. Speaker 0: The trailers in that video of Daniela have now grown into the settlement of Kedumim, where she still lives. Supported by some in the Israeli government, Danielle is viewed by others in power as a dangerous extremist. She'd agreed to talk to me at home. Nice to see you. So we've got pictures of you as a young woman. Is the is the one of you getting married, is that the oldest one? Speaker 7: This is when we we got together. I was then 15 or something. Speaker 0: Your parents were from? Speaker 7: My mother was born in Warsaw. My parents came here and invested fortunes believing that someday there will be a Jewish state. Speaker 2: With Speaker 7: their vision and their faith, I continue to expand Israel and to be as close as possible to the Promised Land. Speaker 0: This is your map. So this is what most of the world knows as the West Bank, which you call Judea And Samaria. Speaker 7: This is what you call occupied West Bank. Speaker 0: And what the Palestinians would like to see as a future state of their own. Speaker 7: Oh, they are not satisfied with this, but complicated issue. Speaker 0: These little pink wedges, what do they represent? Speaker 7: The Jewish communities that were established since 1967. Speaker 0: I'm curious to know roughly how many settlements and outposts you've been, let's say, in some way involved in the establishment. Speaker 7: Almost everyone. Speaker 0: For real? Speaker 7: It's fifty years. Mhmm. You know what it means? Fifty years that I do what I do today? Speaker 0: Because it's territory that was won in the sixty seven war, that under the Geneva Convention, transferring a civilian population into a conquered terrain, that that's considered a war crime. Speaker 7: Ah, this what I do here is a war crime. According to the You're not cooperating with the person who committed a war crime? Speaker 0: Well, I'm interviewing you. Speaker 7: It's a light felony. Speaker 0: I've read a couple of things suggesting that you were viewed as an extremist and possibly sympathizing with Jewish or Israeli terror. Speaker 7: The confrontation is not over terror. The confrontation is just on whether yes or no. We stay here. Speaker 0: There's a quote, so alarming is the situation. It's talking about the situation of of settlers and what they describe as settler extremism and violence. Last week, Ronan Barr, the head of Israel's security service, wrote to Netanyahu, the prime minister, and the defense minister warning that what he called Jewish terror by violent settlers was doing indescribable damage to Israel. Speaker 7: The reason Ronen Barr says that I'm extremist has nothing to do with terror. Whatever I represent threatens his peaceful secular life. I have nothing to do with terror. He knows I have nothing to do with terror. And he insists on saying it. It's a lie, and he knows that it's a lie. Speaker 1: Does that really explain? Speaker 7: Like me. Mhmm. Because I have a lot of influence, much more than he has. Speaker 0: Influence over who? Speaker 7: The young generation that is growing in Israel. Speaker 0: And government too? Speaker 7: And government what? Speaker 0: Do you have influence over government? Speaker 7: No question. Who did all this? Speaker 0: Can you call Netanyahu? Speaker 7: What do you mean? Like this? Speaker 0: Mhmm. Speaker 7: No. I call his aides. Speaker 0: So the idea is to force the government by putting people starts with small settlements, then they get bigger, then they get recognized by the state of Israel and basically creating a new demographic reality. Speaker 7: We do not force a government. We do for governments what they cannot do for themselves. Even if you take Netanyahu now, he is very happy with what we do here and also about our plans to build Jewish communities in Gaza. He's happy about it, but he cannot say it. He says the opposite. It's not realistic. Good. We will make it realistic. It's not forcing the government. It's helping the government. It's step number one one in politics. You don't force the government. You give the government the courage, the ability, the public support, the political support. I think you understand what I said even if you disagree. Speaker 0: There was something unsettling about hearing Daniela's ethnonationalist vision being laid out so plainly, especially when I considered the support she claimed to have from some in power. With their backing, the settlement project has accelerated, with many of those going to live in West Bank settlements coming from other countries. Anyone from anywhere in the world with Jewish heritage, since they qualify for Israeli citizenship, can live in a settlement. Speaker 1: Have you ever been to Judea? Well, this an invitation because I could try to describe it to you in words, but it'd just be impossible. Speaker 0: Ari Abramovitz was born and raised in Texas. He now helps run Arugot Farm, a small retreat hosting birthdays, weddings, and corporate events, often catering to tourists. The farm was established as an outpost in 2014, illegally according to international law, on land deep inside the occupied West Bank. Hi. We're going to Aragot Farm. Thank Speaker 10: you. Speaker 1: You Ari? I am. There you are. Speaker 0: We Speaker 1: got How are you doing? Good to meet you. Welcome. Welcome. Speaker 0: Nice to meet you. Louis. Speaker 1: Louis. Louis. Yes. I'm standing over. Louis. Louis. Louis. Speaker 0: Yes. Or Louis. I don't mind too much. Speaker 1: Welcome to Jubilee. Doing? You've come armed. I did. It's But we're so friendly. I know how Speaker 11: it looks. Speaker 0: I know. Speaker 1: I know it's not true. So this is our synagogue. And I remember when I first came here, I wanted to build my house here. And then I learned that according to Jewish law, build the synagogue in the highest place, which makes sense. My home is gonna be lording over the synagogue. That wouldn't be right. These are the Torah scrolls. Speaker 0: Is it weird to have your guns on in here? Speaker 1: No. My gun is here to protect the nation of Israel from those that seek to harm us. And during a service, would you typically wear them? Yes. Speaker 0: Is it that dangerous? Speaker 1: It is until it's not. Thank God, never had any issues of infiltrations here. And I think it's because they know that we're ready for it. Speaker 0: How old were you when you came to Israel? I I think I Speaker 1: was 16. And I came here after high school to study Torah. It was supposed to be a few months. It's called the gap year program. Speaker 0: Mhmm. Speaker 1: When you breathe the air, when you taste that, when you feel mission and passion and life, you can't can't go back. This is where I choose to come and pray with the creator of heaven and earth. I think this is the most beautiful place in the world, Speaker 0: right here. Where is Speaker 1: the nearest Palestinian town? I'm so uncomfortable using the word Palestinian because I don't think that it exists. You don't Speaker 0: think they really exist? I don't think Speaker 1: that they exist as a real nation with a real claim to this land. Speaker 0: What are they then? Speaker 1: They are they're Arabs. Speaker 0: With a connection to this land? Speaker 1: Yes. They have a connection to it. It's nowhere near the depth and I mean, we were in this land planting vineyards before Mohammed was in the third grade. Is that a settlement there? That is a Jewish settlement called Pnei Kedem. Pnei Kedem. Which means facing the east, face to the east. Speaker 0: Would that be considered legal under Israeli law? Speaker 1: I don't know. You don't really care. I don't I don't care at all. At all. I don't care at all. I mean Why don't you care? This land here in the heart of Judea, there's some things that transcend the whims of legislation, and that this is one of those Speaker 0: Palestinians up and down the West Bank, the presence of settlers makes life precarious. They live under Israeli military law, restricted from most Israeli roads, subject to frequent run ins with the authorities and detention without trial, in a legal system that is opaque and arbitrary. Israel says the measures are necessary for security. I was in the South Hebron Hills during the olive harvest, a time when tensions run high, with Palestinians prevented from getting to trees they say they've harvested for years. How are you doing? I was curious to see the interactions for myself. I'd heard from an Israeli activist group. They were trying to help a farmer named Ishaq Jabarin. What's happening here today? The army arrived. A nearby settlement had allegedly called them to report the olive picking. One of those on the scene was a longtime Israeli activist, mathematician Kobi Sneetz. Kobi, do you know do you know what Speaker 11: they're doing right now? The army has said, you gotta leave in five minutes. And now the landowners has to make a choice, if to try to insist on on staying here and and taking a risk. They're they're they're liable to do anything. They could arrest the Palestinians. They can arrest us. Who knows what they might do? Speaker 0: Have you been arrested before? Speaker 12: Do you Speaker 0: think he would have been arrested? Speaker 11: 40% of all Palestinian men have been arrested, so probably. Speaker 12: Your response? Speaker 0: British television. Speaker 5: Passport. Thank Speaker 0: you. Can I ask why you're taking my passport? I need to check. Check what? Check what? Speaker 8: Nothing. They don't check nothing. They just want to scare Speaker 3: us. If Speaker 0: Pete kept picking, he would have been arrested. Speaker 6: No. It's not to arrest. Speaker 11: It's just Speaker 6: to evacuate evacuate the area. Speaker 0: Meaning what, though? If he says I'm not leaving? Speaker 6: I'm grateful we didn't get to that part. Speaker 0: That's what Speaker 11: I said. Speaker 0: What would happen? Speaker 11: I actually don't. Speaker 0: As a soldier, you would have to do what? Detain him? Speaker 11: That's no. I rather not speak again. Speaker 0: Alongside their interactions with the army, Palestinians throughout the West Bank also suffer attacks by settlers. Speaker 7: These Speaker 0: videos come from the South Hebron Hills where I'd seen the olive picking. In the town of Tawani, a settler was caught on camera shooting and severely injuring a Palestinian man. The shooter had his gun license revoked, but he was never arrested. I'd heard of other similar incidents. In the same town of Tawani, I'd made contact with a 20 year old Palestinian student and local activist named Mohammed Horeni. He offered to take me to the top of the hill to meet his neighbor who lives in a spot closest to a settlement. Louis. Nice to meet you. Thank you for having us. Mohsab Rubet's house still bears the scars of what he says were settler attacks. Speaker 12: You can see, like, from the window, the bullets. Speaker 0: So there's bullets that have come through here? Speaker 12: Yeah. From this window and that window. This is the settlement. This and this would Speaker 0: Where that bright light is? Yes. So what is that? Is that an outpost or what is that? Is there anyone in there? Hang on. Something's happening. What is it? It's the soldier. Are they coming in? Speaker 12: They are screaming to us. Speaker 10: And they are now the laser with the guns. I see the the laser on the rifles. Speaker 12: It's happened almost every day. Speaker 0: What do we do? Just stay in here? Speaker 5: Yeah, we are on the side. Speaker 0: Matan, what do you think? Speaker 11: It's not safe at the moment. There's obviously multiple guns pointing at us. Speaker 10: Yeah. Let's wait. Speaker 0: What can we do? Can we call the police? Speaker 10: Which police? Speaker 1: I mean, Speaker 10: there are one Rajiv. Speaker 0: This doesn't worry you. Speaker 10: No. Because, I mean, we're raised in this situation, so it became a normal reality for us. When you are a kid, you just see this army invading your home in the day, on the night. You grow up on this unjustice reality that it became normal for you as a human, but it's not normal for anybody. Mhmm. And no one should accept it. Speaker 0: After more than an hour, the soldiers appeared to lose interest, and the crew and I slipped away. The violence committed by some settlers is often justified by them as a response to violence they experience from Palestinians, which is much less frequent. Nevertheless, it's hard to disentangle it from an ideology of the superiority of one group and their rights over another, promoted by leaders like Daniela Weiss. Hiya. How are you? Speaker 7: Hey. Good morning. Speaker 0: Hoping for more insight into her and her work, I was back. Speaker 7: I have a meeting. So but but do have a seat. Speaker 0: Thank you. So we'll just wait. Speaker 11: Great. Speaker 7: Okay. From now on, follow me Okay. If you want to know. Speaker 0: Are we leaving? Yes. So we're gonna meet you there. Alright. I was joining Daniella and some friends of hers in a convoy heading towards Gaza. Mission unclear. Two hours later, we were one kilometer from the Gaza border in the Israeli town of Stirot, arriving at a yeshiva, a religious school, where Daniela took part in an assembly alongside two prominent rabbis. Speaker 1: What Speaker 0: what's happening next, Daniella? Should we follow you? We'll follow her. Our next stop was a memorial for the victims of October 7. Sterot had seen heavy fighting during the Hamas attacks and suffered many losses. For some passers by, Daniella held a degree of celebrity status. Then the settler convoy arrived at what seemed to be its destination, a viewpoint overlooking the war zone. Daniella had told me she'd signed up 800 families who were ready to move into Gaza. One of her team explained how it would work. The idea seemed to be to get spiritual buy in from the two rabbis. One of them was next to speak, rabbi Dov Lior. As the day ended, we were following Daniella's car, driving on what seemed to be army controlled land, approaching ever closer to the Gaza border. Speaker 11: I can see the destroyed houses. Speaker 0: It had previously been reported that Daniella had been illegally escorted into Gaza by soldiers who supported her to recu locations for settlement. Suddenly, her vehicle broke away. On this occasion, she was intercepted. So basically, she had a military escort, and then she just peeled away and made a sprint for the border. Of Gaza? Yeah. Speaker 10: She's just tried to run away from the army, hasn't she? Speaker 0: Did you try and make a dash to put the Gaza border? What was happening down there? Speaker 7: I enjoyed it so much. Our two jeeps were due too much too much attention. Speaker 0: But what's the idea? Why do you wanna go down to the to actually you wanted to enter Gaza? Speaker 7: No. Why do what I wanted to do, I wanted to show the rabbis that Gaza is not something beyond reach. Speaker 0: Would you say October 7 made people more receptive to your message and to your point of view? Speaker 7: No doubt. The October 7 naturally made people more receptive to the idea of the great Israel. But the next step, Jewish settlements in Gaza is a very difficult step that demands a lot of work. You have to influence the the the leftist, the government, the the nations of the world using the magic system, Zionism. You redeem the land. You establish communities. You bring Jewish families, you live live Jewish life, and this will bring light instead state of Israel was established, and this is what we want to do in Gaza. Speaker 0: This process of making the the whole of the West Bank in Gaza Jewish, do you feel like it's moving more quickly? Speaker 7: As far as Judea And Samaria is concerned, so we want to move from 1,000,000 to 2,000,000. So this is the next step. This is my vision. It's so complicated. Speaker 0: Daniela's vision has been made possible by the Israeli occupation. But it in turn has led to the creation of a vast military infrastructure which impacts every aspect of Palestinian life. Nowhere is it more evident than in Hebron. Hebron is an ancient biblical city, home to some 200,000 Palestinians, a place holy to three major religions. Hi. How are you? Speaker 5: Fine. Thank you. Where are guys from? Speaker 0: We're from British TV crew. In 1968, the year after it was occupied by Israel, a community of Jewish settlers moved in illegally. They now number around 700, existing in a cordon of military protection. I visited in 2010 when I'd spent time with a settler leader. Now fourteen years on, I was curious about life within the Palestinian community. I'm Louis. Speaker 3: Hi, Louis. Nice to meet you. Speaker 0: Welcome. Thank you for having us. Isa Amro, a Palestinian activist, was born here in the settler occupied area. You got fences all around? All around. Speaker 3: Fences from here? Speaker 0: Yeah. This Who lives on the other side? Speaker 3: Israeli settlers. Speaker 0: We've got army there. What are they doing? Have they come for a reason? Speaker 3: No. They come for intimidation. Speaker 0: How are you? They're not speaking, but I think what they would say is, well, we're here to provide security for the settlers who who live here and want to live in peace and experience animosity, from the Palestinians. Speaker 3: So they want to live in peace and the expense of my basic human rights. I didn't choose to live in Hebron. I was born in Hebron. It's my land. It's my homeland. Mhmm. The settlers chose to come here. And if it's not safe for them, why they continue building more and more settlements in my own city? By international law, the settlements are illegal. They don't see us as equal human being who deserve the same rights they do. Speaker 0: Lead the way. Yeah. For nearly twenty years, Isa has been an advocate for nonviolent resistance against the occupation. He is one of around 30,000 Palestinians living inside the high security area of Hebron, the so called sterile zone. For them, just doing their shopping, going to work, or going to school means passing through military checkpoints. Let's see how it works. Hi. Hi. Speaker 2: How are you guys doing? Speaker 0: Good. How are you? Fine. Everything okay? I Speaker 2: need your passport, please. All of you. Okay? Speaker 0: Sure. What for? Why? Speaker 2: Check. Why? Hi, Isa. How are you doing, mate? Speaker 3: How are you doing? Hi. Why you cover your faces? Speaker 2: Because of the cold. Speaker 0: No. Are leaving Speaker 10: the world. Speaker 3: Come on, guys. Don't hide. Only gangs hide their faces. You are a military. You should have your faces, you know, obvious to everybody. Speaker 0: Do you know you know Itza? Speaker 2: He lives here. Speaker 0: Yeah. Lives here. He says it's making life very difficult to have this military presence here. Speaker 2: What are y'all doing here? Speaker 0: What am I doing here? Make a documentary. Speaker 2: Documentary? For British Speaker 0: television. Of what? About this about settlers in the West Bank. Speaker 2: Settlers in the West Bank? Yes. Okay. And what what do you tell to the television about the settlements? Speaker 0: It's not about what I'm telling them. It's about what I'm hearing from the people who I speak to. Where do you live? Speaker 2: I don't I don't wanna tell you. Speaker 0: Okay. Told you where I Speaker 2: was Say the name What Speaker 0: does that mean, Shani? Speaker 2: It's a enjoy from the trip in Hebron here. Speaker 0: Thank you. Speaker 2: Wish you all the best, guys. Speaker 0: How is life here? Is it it's like you're very well armed. Is it do you do you is there a situation here that needs careful control? Speaker 9: Of course. Speaker 0: What is it? Tell me about it. Speaker 3: We are not not up to the long rocks Speaker 0: What was he saying about Arabi? Oh, he he wanted to see if you are an Arab. He said he asked you if you speak Arabic. Speaker 1: Hello. How are you doing? What's up? Speaker 0: Hey. How are you doing? Speaker 1: I'm doing excellent. American? What do I look? Chinese? Speaker 0: Yeah. From Brooklyn? You bet. Speaker 1: Let me just pull over to the side. Okay. Speaker 0: Do you know him? Speaker 3: No, he doesn't live here. Speaker 0: You okay? Do you need help? You okay? No. Are you stuck? Are you in a a rut? Speaker 2: Why are you filming me? Speaker 0: It's all good. Don't worry. We can't even see your face. Look. You're obscured. No one can even see who you are. Don't worry. Speaker 2: I don't know what to do with you. Listen to me. Speaker 0: Yeah. I'm listening. Speaker 2: Come. Come to me. No. I'm from the military. Okay? Mhmm. IDF, Israel Defense Forces. I'm above the police here in the West Bank. Speaker 0: Okay. Speaker 2: I'm the highest responsibility of law. Okay. We'll tell you like this. Okay? Speaker 12: Mhmm. Speaker 2: And as this man, IDF, I need to tell you not staying here. Speaker 0: Okay. We'll we'll we'll move along. That's fine. Speaker 2: Okay. Leave. Leave this place. Leave this area. Okay? Yeah. We'll move along. Right now. Yalla. Father. Speaker 0: Let's go. Okay. Speaker 2: Yalla, let's So Speaker 0: who lives here? Speaker 3: Palestinian families. Speaker 0: And where are they? Speaker 3: They are hiding behind their doors. Speaker 0: What would stop these shops from being open? Speaker 3: It's closed by military orders and marked as closed shops. It's marked. From this shop would be five families at least live and earn their living. Look. This is something new. This not to hire Arab workers in Israel. Two faces, a face of an Arab and a face of a terrorist. And this is how they stereotype us. Middle finger. Speaker 0: He gave you the middle finger? Yes. To you too. You think it was to me? To you. I think it was to you. Speaker 12: To you. Speaker 3: To both of us. Because you deserve the middle finger if you report about Palestinians. Speaker 12: Wait. Wait. ID, please. Speaker 0: For what reason? Speaker 12: It's the policy. Speaker 3: But I know that we I'm allowed to be here until here. Speaker 12: You say you are not allowed to go there. Speaker 0: Why can't he why can't he be with us? Speaker 12: Because we are limit for Palestinians, so he can if he lives here, he can reach. But here, no. Speaker 0: Give me your ID, please. How come Palestinians can't come down here? Speaker 12: It's not work like Speaker 7: that. Speaker 0: Which camera? I'm not talking Speaker 1: to you. It Speaker 0: seems ironic that that's the visitor center, right, for tourists and whatnot, and and he can't actually visit in his own in his own city. You knew that was gonna happen. No. Speaker 3: It's new that they asked me to come back to here. They told me that I'm allowed only to to here. So they expanded the closed area for me. Speaker 0: What's it all about? Speaker 3: Taking more and more land. It's about fragmented life, restricted life for Palestinians, no quality life. You live with the basics with the base even with less than basics of a a family need to make you live, and they are doing well. The majority of the houses are empty. The families are leaving. Speaker 0: You could flip it and say, well, if they really wanted to occupy the whole of Hebron or at least this area, they could literally deport Palestinians. Speaker 3: They do it slowly, but now they are speeding up. They want approval from their allies and their partners in the world. Speaker 0: Is it worth going through to see the other side? Speaker 1: Yes. I can see. Speaker 2: See what Speaker 0: it looks like. This gives you a little flavor of what it was like in there before. Speaker 3: Yes. The market was much more busy inside. It was our Oxford Street inside. So busy. My father used to hold my arm not to lose me. Not anymore. Speaker 0: It's closed completely. Restricted. In order to get back in, we can't go through there now because they've closed it. It's closed. So how do we get back in? Speaker 3: You try from another checkpoint. Mhmm. Speaker 0: Through here? Speaker 3: Yes. Speaker 1: Louis, Speaker 0: coming through? Yes. So now we're on the other side of the area where you couldn't walk before. Right? Where they stopped you from walking in front of the visitor center. But you need to get home. Speaker 3: Yes. Speaker 0: So what will you do? Speaker 3: I will go around again. I will go outside this checkpoint, go around to enter from another checkpoint and wait till the checkpoint opens Mhmm. To get into my house with my son. Speaker 0: You definitely can't come this way? Speaker 3: I can't come this way. Okay. I can Speaker 0: They won't let you through? No. They will not. Speaker 3: I will I'm not allowed. I was happy Speaker 0: to meet you. Thank you so much. Speaker 3: Bye bye. Speaker 0: Take care. Bye bye. On the drive back from Hebron, I reflected on the separate lives lived by Israelis and Palestinians, and the unequal system of rights and justice. We ran into a traffic jam caused by a bomb scare. The road, the main artery in the West Bank, is one of the few shared by Israelis and Palestinians. For once, all were subject to delay. It was a sobering experience visiting Hebron again. Isa had told me he believed life was being made intolerable for Palestinians deliberately to make them leave, and that the process was speeding up since October 7. And it was true that some settlers I'd met supported the deportation of Palestinians who won't submit to Jewish authority. Authority. One of them was Ari, a Texan born and raised in Houston, now resident deep inside the occupied West Bank. Speaker 1: Good to see you. Speaker 0: Good to see you. How are you? Speaker 1: I'm alright. I'm a little under the weather. Speaker 0: I'm sorry to hear that. Thank you for having us back. Hoping to understand a little better, I'd return to see him again. Speaker 1: Okay. K. We're ready for the coffee. I really hope I do this right. I Speaker 0: never know if you wear those guns just for effect. Speaker 1: I don't know what effect I'm looking for. Do I wanna look more militant? Yeah. No. I'm not wearing it just for effect. Speaker 0: Do you wanna sit down? We've talked a lot about how you see the, the importance of Jewish presence in the what was termed the biblical land of Israel. Are you saying that you see Israel as playing a role for modeling a a new kind of, what, nationalism? Would or is that is that right? Speaker 1: I think that all of what's happening in the world right now is leading us as a nation to open our eyes to who we are. We are the tip of the spear fighting the battles of America and defending the the entire Western world, and not just the Western world, anyone who wants any semblance of liberty and freedom in their lives. Nevertheless, there are millions of people up and Speaker 0: down the area, Arabs, Muslims, who aren't living free. Right? They're they're enclosed without the same rights, without national self determination, and in many respects, feeling besieged. And I just wonder, do you Speaker 1: see that? I don't have tremendous compassion for a society that has a in unquenchable, genocidal, theological bloodlust. It's like a death cult. Speaker 0: It seems to me there's a danger with that characterization of of Palestinians. You define them as eliminationist and and hateful and and and genocidal. Those Speaker 1: Yeah. I use the words death cult also. Speaker 0: Death cult. That that then permits you to almost create a mirror image of that, that you say, well, if they wanna do that to us, then we need to do that to them. Speaker 1: I think that when you're living amongst people who have perpetually proven not only by word but by deed that they want your blood spilled in the streets, that they want to murder your children, that they want to slay all of you, kill all of you in the most horrific genocidal way, that all of the polls showed after October 7 that these people who you continuously call the Palestinian people, that I reject the very premise that they are actually a real nation for a lot of reasons. I mean Speaker 0: But but the the the of people who who who who who have nothing to do with October 7, right, who who who actually just would like Speaker 1: to live free, full lives? If that's really what they wanted, they would have had it a long time ago. They want to wipe Israel off the map. They want every last Jew dead. So what's the The answer is for us to declare sovereignty over all of Judea And Samaria and all of the land of Israel and Gaza and to settle Gaza and all of Judea And Samaria with Jews in the land of Israel. Speaker 0: Did the question annoy you? Speaker 1: Annoying me, I just I hear it so often. And it feels like it's being addressed again and again and again. Even if the entire world is pointing, accusing fingers, and gnashing their teeth in rage and anger, we know the righteousness and the truth of our cause even if we stand alone. That's what it means to be a Hebrew. That's what it means to be a Jew. If we know the truth of our cause, that's all we need. Speaker 0: Ferrari, it was clear that nothing is greater than the word of God. And that word had led him to believe that it was the divine right of the Jewish people to settle and rule this land. Speaker 10: Good to see you. Speaker 0: See you later. Speaker 1: Bless and protect you. Speaker 3: Amen. The Speaker 0: bible was, as he saw it, a land deed to the west bank. With an afternoon free, I stopped for coffee in the Palestinian city of Nablus. Surrounded by the ancient architecture of the old city and the undeniable fact of the hundreds of thousands of people living there and their aspirations for statehood. At the edge of the city, we were held up at one of the many checkpoints that control the people entering and leaving. Can you put the gun down? Speaker 12: I got the motor. Where are from? Speaker 0: From London. London. Speaker 12: You've been in the market? Yes. You also? Yes. She work with you? Speaker 11: She's American. Speaker 12: Yes. Can you show me ID? Speaker 7: Me? Speaker 12: Everyone. Yeah. Speaker 0: Sure. It's very slow going. We've been there in that queue for an hour or more. Yes. Speaker 12: What how much time you're Speaker 0: gonna stay in Israel? Hang on. But I don't think we're in Israel. Are we in Israel? Speaker 12: You're in Israel now? Speaker 1: Are we? Yes. Speaker 0: In the West Bank. No? In the North of the West Bank, I was heading back to the settlement of Eviatar, where I'd been hosted by Malkiel, the horse wrangler. Since my visit, I'd learned a little more about the settlement's relations with its neighboring Palestinian town of Beytar. How Beytar had been subject to settler attacks and how it, in turn, had organized regular protests of the settlement. Demonstrators had been killed and others wounded during the clashes. One of the deaths of a Turkish American volunteer, Ayushono Eski Egi, made headlines. Now the settlement was holding a festival to celebrate its recent recognition by the Israeli state. Entertainments had been laid on, and families from settlements from around the West Bank had converged for a day of music and activities. One of those speaking was Daniella. How are you? Hi. Speaker 7: It's so serious. Speaker 0: Yeah. It's a bit Speaker 1: quieter. As Speaker 0: the festivities wound down, I had a moment to speak to Daniela on a hilltop overlooking the Palestinian town of Beta. So you've been talking about settling you've talked about displacing wanting the Palestinians to go. You said to Africa, to Canada, to England. You don't care Mhmm. What would be wrong with either a two state solution or a one state solution where everyone had the same rights? Speaker 7: We want to have a Jewish state based on Jewish rules, on Jewish values. It's not relationship of neighbors. Speaker 0: Why not? Speaker 7: Because we are two different nations. Different. Speaker 0: I just wonder whether you feel or you're aware that, you know, they're really suffering, and there's been settlers rampaging through the area of the West Bank. So there's all this Speaker 7: Agitation. Speaker 0: Death Ah, yeah. Tragedy. Right? Speaker 7: Tragedy. Speaker 0: When a people is invaded, right, and then put under a military occupation, deprived of their rights, that anger seems to be an understandable response, an appropriate response. Speaker 7: There is no such thing as settling violence. Did they speak I don't know if if I spoke I I don't mind saying it again. Mean Mhmm. And I don't mind ex I will be glad to explain it. Speaker 0: You don't believe it's real? There are videos. You can see them. Speaker 7: I You see what? Okay? Let's say Mhmm. Now we yeah. We have a camera right here. Speaker 0: Yes. Speaker 7: And I do this. Speaker 0: Yep. Speaker 7: Do something. You don't mind what I did to you. Speaker 9: You don't you don't necessarily have Speaker 0: to do it. Well, I'm I won't do that to you. Speaker 7: You won't you Speaker 0: won't No. Speaker 7: And then the camera takes just part. Mhmm. You don't have the full picture. Then I say you're violent. You're violent against a woman. This is exactly what is going on all the time with what you call Speaker 0: Settler violence. Speaker 7: Settler violence. Settlers, do not wake up in the morning or do not go wait for sundown to attack. No. No. No. No. Why should we wake up in the morning and think about violence? Why our life is good? Speaker 0: Because you want the Palestinians to leave. Speaker 7: No. No. No. No. Speaker 0: You've said so. Speaker 7: I said that what is on my mind all the time is how to bring more people to settle the land. This is a new development by Jews. This is Abraha. This is Itza. This weekend here, we can develop. Here, we cannot develop. I never think in terms of I know this is beta. Mhmm. I don't think in I don't think about beta. Speaker 0: Why not? Speaker 7: Because I think about I'm a Jew. Speaker 0: The people. Speaker 7: I'm a settler. Speaker 0: The people. Speaker 7: I am I'm a a human being. Speaker 0: Yes. You are. So are they. Speaker 7: Yeah. So I do not think about this. Speaker 0: You're thinking about tribalism, thinking of your own people to the exclusion. It would be understandable to think of your own people or your own children first, but to think about other people, other children, not at all, that seems sociopathic. Can Doesn't it? Speaker 7: No. Not at all. This is normal. To my children, I give everything because I the the normal thing normal thing for me is to pray for my own people. That's it. So now I continue. I hope you push me back. Speaker 0: And so I said goodbye to Daniela, and her extreme ideology delivered with a smile. Fourteen years on from my first visit, with the horror of October 7 in the interim, and the ongoing devastation of Gaza, a settler dream shows no sign of abating, along with the dislocation, displacement, and death that follows inevitably in its train. Advanced by ideologues, backed up by those in power, and accountable only to God.
Saved - March 24, 2025 at 3:00 PM

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

MSM NEWS HELICOPTER WITNESSES 9/11 BEFORE GETTING IMMEDIATELY CALLED BACK IN: “They’re telling us to back off” https://t.co/bWwjZX4XAN

Video Transcript AI Summary
They are being told to back off, as something appears to be in another building.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Wow. That that that apparently does look like it is in the other building at this point. Back off. They're telling us to back off.
Saved - March 23, 2025 at 12:24 AM

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

EVERY COUNTRY BOMBED BY AMERICA SINCE WORLD WAR 2 Thoughts? https://t.co/XpXJDQjkOH

Video Transcript AI Summary
Since World War II, the United States has bombed several countries. In Central America, these include Nicaragua, Grenada, El Salvador, Panama, Cuba, and The Dominican Republic. In Africa, the U.S. has bombed Somalia, Libya, and Sudan. In Europe, bombings occurred in former Yugoslavian territories such as Montenegro, Bosnia, Kosovo, and Serbia. In The Middle East, the U.S. has bombed Syria, Lebanon, Iraq, Kuwait, Iran, and Yemen. In South Asia, Pakistan and Afghanistan were bombed. East Asian countries bombed include Japan, Cambodia, Vietnam, Laos, Indonesia, and North Korea. During the bombardment of Belgrade, the Chinese embassy was hit, adding China to the list.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Land of Free and Democracy has bombed all the following countries since World War II. To begin, we don't have to travel very far. Just in Central America, The United States has bombed Nicaragua, Grenada, El Salvador, Panama, Cuba, and The Dominican Republic. Across the Atlantic Ocean, in Africa, we have Somalia, Libya, and Sudan. In Europe, The United States has bombed former Yugoslavian territories as Montenegro, Bosnia, Kosovo, and Serbia. In The Middle East, the land of freedom and democracy bombed Syria, Lebanon, Iraq, Kuwait, Iran, and most recently Yemen in South Asia. They bombed Pakistan and Afghanistan. Moving to East Asia, they delivered democracy and freedom to Japan, Cambodia, Vietnam, Laos, Indonesia, North Korea. Finally, during the bombardment of Belgrade, the Chinese embassy received five tons of pure democracy, which adds China to the list.
Saved - March 5, 2025 at 3:14 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
I’m concerned about the substantial USAID funding that remains for various Israel and Jewish-related projects, totaling over $17 billion. It raises questions about why this funding continues when there are pressing needs to support Americans.

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

USAID FUNDING THAT WAS NOT REMOVED ✅ $14.9 Billion for Israel Related Projects ✅ $2.2 Billion for Jewish Related Projects ✅ $581 Million for Tel Aviv University ✅ $72.9 Million for Holocaust Linked Projects ✅ $11.2 Million on Zionism ✅ $9.6 Million for Jewish Chapel in West Point Why are these not being cancelled to support Americans?

Saved - February 18, 2025 at 3:35 AM

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

Hamas interviewed by @jacksonhinklle Hamas leadership makes it clear they have no issue with Jews or Judaism, but instead their struggle is political, which involves achieving a homeland for the Palestinians. https://t.co/n7DQ9fl6WD

Video Transcript AI Summary
Thank you for having me. Despite the high cost, our confrontation with Israel marks progress toward self-determination. October 7 proved Israel is beatable, though Western complicity prolongs our suffering. We seek our rights under international law: a sovereign state where we live in dignity. Trump's population figures are inaccurate. There are 2.3 million Palestinians in Gaza. The resistance isn't aggression, but a fight for political goals against occupation. We tried peace in 1993 with the Oslo Accords, but it failed, leading to more land annexation and suffering. Resistance, including armed struggle, is our right under occupation, like Europe's fight against Nazis.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Welcome back to Legitimate Targets, everybody. I hope you're all having a great day. I I, couldn't be more pleased than I am right now to welcome our exceptional guest to the show, doctor Bassam Naim, the, one of the members of Hamas's political bureau. We are here in Qatar, and I am very excited for this conversation. You're welcome. Thank you. It's an honor. Please. So, you know, doctor, I I gotta say, I was very worried on October 7 because a few days after October 7, Netanyahu came out, and he said, we're gonna wipe Hamas off the face of the Earth. And then in April 2024, he said the same thing. He said we're getting very close to wiping Hamas off the face of the earth. But here you are, and the Palestinian people stand strong. So, given that that was Israel's primary goal, is this a total victory for Hamas and the Palestinian resistance? Speaker 1: Thank you very much for having me with you. I believe the total victory is to get rid of the occupation, to go back to our to return back to our homeland, to our cities, our villages, to be able to go back to Al Aqsa, Jerusalem. But sure, this was, the final end of this, round of the confrontation with the Israelis was a great step towards these genuine national goals of self determination, independence, freedom, and right of return. It was very costly. We, Palestinians, have bid, especially in the Gaza Strip, have bid very, very high, very precious prices for this trip, but I believe it is a big achievement, on both sides. Okay. Again, it was very painful to lose our beloved people. More than 50,000 registered as killed, but we are still waiting to get rid of the rubble to be sure about the rest who are at least around 10,000 to 15,000 still under the rubble, one hundred thousand to one hundred and twenty injured, At least twenty thousand of them, are, seriously wounded. Thousands kidnapped from the Gaza Strip, and are in the inside Israel, but we are we have no idea about them, are still alive or have been killed or or killed under torture. It was a very high price, but again, October 7 had made it clear that Palestinians can achieve their goals. Israel is defeatable. Palestinian can, can do it even alone. Maybe for some reasons, we can say that, these these very high prices are partially also because not only because of the brutality of the Israelis, which is the case, and they have talked about this in many occasions, but it is also because of the complicity of a lot of countries, in particular in the West, and on the top of this is The United States. Today, I am reading about ships of immunization reached, Ashdod, which is carrying 3,000 tonne bombs, preparing maybe for the next round to be dropped on the top of Palestinians above their rubble. Therefore, I believe if the international community, if the Western countries were committed to their obligations according to international law, I'm sure we have saved a lot of lives, we have saved a lot of blood, a lot of tears. And Palestinian, as they end, they are not asking more than their general rights. Their rights according to international law to have their own state, independent self sovereign state, to write it to live in dignity and freedom. Therefore, again, it is when we understand this this context, it is a victorious step. Speaker 0: Donald Trump has come out a few times, and he says that the population in Gaza is now 1.7 to 1,800,000. Of course, you know, before October 7, the population was much more than that 400,000, five hundred thousand. Do you think his statistics are accurate? And if so, where did all those people go? Because, you know, we we see the Ministry of Health in Gaza. They say that the death toll registered officially is over forty thousand. That Lancet studies said a hundred 20 thousand. But what about the others? Speaker 1: Exactly. I have no idea about his intentions to mention this number, but officially, there are 2.3 plus million Palestinians in the Gaza Strip. Around 200,000 plus of them are outside the Gaza Strip. Some of them after the war, but some of them before the war, they have left Gaza for different reason, to study or for job. Therefore, we are talking about 2,100,000 Palestinians who are registered, in Gaza Strip. Official figures talking about and statistics talking about, as I said, fifty thousand killed, ten thousand to 15,000 are still missed under the rubble, and one hundred and twenty thousand, Palestinians wounded. Where he where this gap, how he how he made it, I don't know. I heard some analysis that he is talking that maybe there are 400,000 to 500,000 Palestinians who are Hamas supporter or Hamas affiliated, and if they decide to stay in Gaza or to he is ready to wipe them out or, but I think this would be a very evil, idea. Speaker 0: Of course. I mean, the just your opinion on this. Trump says that he's gonna forcibly dis you know, the 2,000,000 people, roughly, in Gaza. And for the past fifteen months, all of these Zionists in the Western media and the political class were saying that every single Palestinian is a terrorist and a terrorist supporter, and now they're saying that Europe should take the Palestinians or the Gulf States should take the Palestinians. I mean, what is your response to this hypocrisy? Speaker 1: Unfortunately, you have yes, you have discovered very well, it is the hypocrisy. We have seen it in a lot of cases, in Afghanistan, in Syria, and other countries, how the western politicians dealing in a very Hippocratic, way. First of all, this confrontation, it is not between Hamas and Israel because this has been said all the time, especially in the Western ministry media. It is between Palestinians and Israel. Maybe this time, it is led by Hamas. Mhmm. But twenty to thirty years ago it was led by Fateh, fifty years ago it was led by BFLB and other I mean, for more than one hundred years Palestinians are leading this struggle for to get rid of the occupation for their dignity and freedom and independence. Second, Palestinians are not attacking anyone outside Palestine. Even we are not we have no problems with Jews or Judaism. It is clear we are fighting for political goals. We are fighting against the occupation. We are fighting against the tanks or airplanes who are attacking our people. Therefore, we are not initiating any aggression against anyone. If we can achieve our goals politically and peacefully, yes, this is most welcomed from our side. And by the way, we have tried this 1993 in Oslo and we have signed an agreement and we have given the international community and the Israelis thirty years until 2023, '30 years to implement this, deal, the Oslo agreement, so that Palestinians at the end have their own independent self sovereign state. But it has totally collapsed and failed, and what we have seen what we are what we are what we are seeing now, more annexation of the land, more settlements, more killing of Palestinians, more suffocating siege around Gaza. Therefore, the resistance, it is not a goal in itself. It is a tool to achieve our goals. And this tool, I mean, the resistance in general, a comprehensive approach of the resistance, I mean politically and diplomatically and in the media, but also on resistance, this is a guarantee that in international law, It is clear written in the international law that people under occupation have the right to resist this occupation by all means including armed resistance. How can I describe in second World War, Europe and the West in general, including The United States, under the Britics to fight Nazis and fascist countries, they have used all kind of ammunition and arms to fight back so that they have lost more than 30 to 40,000,000 from both sides? And a lot of cities inside Europe were totally destroyed. They have always considered the resistance of General de Gaulle as a legitimate resistance and General de Gaulle as a hero of France and the government of Fiji was a collaborating government with the Nazi group. Again, it is about the hypocrisy of the West and therefore again what we are calling for is a just demand. Our people have all the right to have their own state, self sovereign state, independent. They have the right to return back to their homeland and also they have all the right to fight back to resist an aggressive, brutal, racist occupation. Before, we have said it many times in the media, October 7 was a response, was a fight back. It was not an initiate an initiative from our side. We were for for more than seventeen years totally suffocated by the siege on Gaza. Fifty Seven Years after after 1967, occupied from the Israeli troops, and sixty seven years after the Nakba totally oppressed and, and they kicked out forcefully from our homeland. Speaker 0: And the strategy was proven successful. I mean, yesterday alone, you know, Gaza freed three Israelis, and there was, I believe, over 360 Palestinians that were being tortured and killed and, almost killed in Israeli prisons that were freed back into Gaza. So I mean, the the strategy has been vindicated. Right? It shows, that your method, was not to terrorize, the people. It was about, you know, one step closer to liberation and, actually freeing the Palestinians that are being tortured. Right? Speaker 1: I think we as Palestinians, maybe people who are very addict on reading history. Our own history and the history of other people in Vietnam, in South Africa, in Indonesia, in Algeria, it has proven clearly that maybe this is the only way that a colonial project can leave any country. And I I believe that, one of the famous philosophers, who was an Algerian officer, a patriot, who said this is the nature of colonial projects. They are brutal. They are savage. They cannot leave simply from their own decision. Mhmm. They have to be obliged. They have to be forced with very costly prices to leave the country. Unfortunately, there is another no and no other way. And again and again, we have said it many times. If there is any other way which is peaceful and political that Palestinian can gain their rights, it is most welcomed, and this is the preferable way for us. Yeah. It is not easy for any one of us to lose his children, mothers, and fathers, to lose the house, or to lose any of his, properties. But if therefore, we have said it also repeatedly. The Israelis have pushed us or resorted us to this way. Again, because we have already offered the hand for, peace through signing that agreement, and it was undermined and sabotaged by the Israelis. If you read, the book of Netanyahu, which was written in 1996, he said it clearly, there is no chance for any idea like two state solution. And he has repeated this for thirty years and the last time was in 2024 in front of the UN, that general assembly, that there is no place between the river and the sea for any political entity except Israel. Speaker 0: I think you're a % correct. I mean, Mao Zedong said that true political power only comes out the barrel of a gun. Do you think that the Palestinians are closer to having, you guys a Palestinian state now than you were on October sixth of twenty twenty three? Speaker 1: Hundred percent. Yes. Because on October 6, we were on one side when it comes to the Israelis. They have declared their official plan for twenty twenty four, twenty twenty five, this so called the final solution plan, which was adopted by the government and budget allocated, and they have already started to take practical steps to annex the West Bank, to jeopardize Jerusalem and expelling forcefully the people from there and to change the status quo in Al Aqsa Mosque forever, which is also against international law, and continue the suffocating siege against Gaza, and then starting the so called normalization process with the Arab countries. This plan, if we would if we don't have, October 7 Mhmm. I'm sure Palestine would be totally forgotten forever, from the present and from the future. Especially we believe that if this normalization process went according to their plans and they were able to bypass the Palestinian or to overcome the Palestinian question according to Netanyahu plans, there will be no context or no, conditions which enable the Palestinians to struggle again for their, historical goal which is freedom and dignity and independence. Therefore, October 7 was a fight back against all these aggressions Speaker 0: Mhmm. Speaker 1: On a daily basis. By the way, 20,000 Palestinians were killed between 2,000 and 2023 on different checkpoints and in Gaza. I mean, this was a fight back against all these daily operations, but also it was a message that no one, no regime in Israel or outside, even in the in the region, is allowed or can bypass the Palestinian or overcome the Palestinian question by normalizing the relationship between Israel and the the region without solving the Palestinian problem. And therefore, Palestinians have sent this strong message to all the country in the region, but, you can I'm sure you are following the media in the West very closely. Today, Palestine is on the table of every politician on on on in the media. Main titles in the in the media, which is, I'm talking about ministry media and social media. 143 countries have voted clearly for an independent self sovereign state of Palestine. Yes. We are closer. Israel is much weaker today than on October 7 October 6. Speaker 0: So much so that, you know, I I wasn't even sure if we were gonna get the opportunity to sit down because Israel was threatening to destroy the whole ceasefire agreement yesterday. They said that they were going to renew the genocidal bombing campaign, and, this was because they were violating the ceasefire, and Hamas and the Palestinian people called them out and said, you can't keep doing this. What do you think changed? Because Netanyahu was very clear. He was saying, we're gonna continue to our goal of wiping out Hamas, insane. And he, said that, if all the hostages aren't freed by yesterday, excuse me, Saturday, that they would continue. But then magically, we see, Steve Witkoff, Donald Trump's, negotiator. He's talking with the mediators. And then out of nowhere, Israel agrees to the release of only three hostages, reportedly increased the amount of aid that they were sending into Gaza. And you guys won again. And Ben Gavir is freaking out. So what changed there? Speaker 1: First of all, I think they have tried along fifteen months to achieve their goals, to wipe out Hamas or to destroy Hamas, to forceful displacement of all Palestinians outside of the Gaza Strip, and to retrieve the captured Israelis forcefully. Speaker 0: Mhmm. Speaker 1: And they have failed, totally. And they know if they try it again they will fail. And maybe today the chance to succeed is much weaker than few few months ago. Second, I believe that everyone, including the current, US administration is aware that Netanyahu for personal reasons, for political reasons, is have all the intentions to sabotage the deal. It has nothing to do with cease fair, with peace, with normalization. He to rescue himself and his coalition, he is planning by all means to sabotage the deal. Therefore, yes, I believe the failure in the Gaza Strip, the internal pressure inside Israel, there are a lot of pressures inside Israel itself from the families, from the society. By the way, even in the right wing, I have read a lot of polls showing that 75% of the people on the right who are for continuing this deal up to the end of the third phase, and third, that the international community, in particular The United States, are aware that Netanyahu personally and his coalition are trying to sabotage the deal and this will not serve the bigger goals of the current administration to achieve calm stability and security and prosperity in the region through the other way which is the normalization. That Gaza is still under fire, and we have still war here. It will not pave the way for the other route. Therefore, yes, I believe he is under pressure from because of the failure in Gaza, because of the families and the internal, situation inside Israel, and because of pressure from the international community, in particular from the current administration. Speaker 0: Seems like a lot of US Politicians don't like Netanyahu because they understand that, it might be preferential for The United States to have a less radical government in Israel that will wipe out the Palestinians through death by a thousand cuts, normalization processes, settlement by settlement, so on and so forth. And Netanyahu is so extreme that it turns the entire world against Israel. It shows their true colors. What do you think is more dangerous for the Palestinians? The the more liberal reformed approach, in Israel of death by a thousand cuts or the approach that, Netanyahu has taken over the past fifteen months? Speaker 1: To be honest, both are very dangerous because what you are giving me as choices, our choice is only to choose how to die or how to be killed in pieces or in one shot by a US made, bomb? Speaker 0: I'll say that it it gives you, also the opportunity to reflect on how you would respond to both scenarios, how the Palestinians would respond, which maybe one one way is preferential? Speaker 1: Again, I believe both both threats are very dangerous as long as no one of them is leading to our goals, which is an independent self sovereign state and the right to return. To do it like the past or the last US administration, to show very nicely about two state solution, about democratic solution, about peaceful solution and normalization, and on the other hand to send more weapons and more money and to use veto in the Security Council. This is one way. And the other way is to support them fully, I mean these radical guys in Israel to, wipe out Palestinians to forceful displacement of Palestinians in one shot. I think for us both are very serious, very dangerous. As long as no one of these choices is leading to our to achieve our goals. But I think we have an alternative way, a third way. Why not based on international law to give the Palestinians their rights of to get rid of the occupation, to achieve their national goals of independence and sovereign state? Speaker 0: I think a lot of people across the world are asking that same question, really, about their countries as well. There's no respect whatsoever for international law, for the rules based international order, whatever they want to call it in the West. And, Speaker 1: yes, it could be, you you could be right, but the question is either we have law or the law of jungle. If you encourage the Israelis to continue, it means you are encouraging the law of jungle. But when we live in jungle, it is not only Israel or America who have the power to do what they can. Also people, they could be weaker, but they have always assets at some time to use to respond, to fight back like what happened in October 7. The resilience, the steadfastness, look, the Palestinians along fifteen months, they have endured a horrible aggression. More than 500,000 tons of explosive material dropped on the heads of Palestinians in the Gaza Strip. Thousands and thousands killed, most of them are children and women, but you didn't get one picture of a Palestinian trying to, to break the borders near Egypt Mhmm. To flee from the from the Gaza Strip. On on May on 05/07/2024, when when when Netanyahu decided to invade Rafah near the Egyptian borders. In Rafah, at that time, there were 1.2 plus million Palestinians in the city. And when the incursion started and when the aggression started, all these people moved to the North. No one single Palestinian moved to the South, I mean, towards Egypt. Therefore, this has shown clearly that Palestinian, despite the they knew that they are moving toward killing, death, hunger, starvation, no electricity. But despite of this, they they show their commitment to their cause, to their land. Therefore, yes, you might have more more, military capabilities, but this this is not the only or the sole source of power. Mhmm. People have sometimes by their steadfastness, by their resilience, by their readiness to sacrifice. We said in Arabic, Speaker 0: a bare hand sometimes can break a gun. I like that. But also, the military expertise of Hamas and the Palestinian resistance factions has been incredible. I think, many people across the world are shocked by the the courage and the honor, that they have exhibited over the past fifteen months. And, I guess, what what what are the secrets to, the success of this revolutionary force that is able to defeat one of the most powerful militaries on the face of the Earth on paper? And and also one more additional question to that. Israel claims that about 72,071 IDF troops, died in Gaza. Do you think that number is accurate? Speaker 1: I read the law the latest release press releases from the IDF. They are talking about 6,000 5,945 Saudi soldiers killed and fifteen thousand wounded and out of service. Wow. And we believe that the the numbers are bigger because they are talking about the official the official resist registered soldiers. Mhmm. You know that they have other groups, other fighters. They came from all over the world, what we call it, mercenary. Mhmm. They are not registered. The so called sole soldier is not registered. Speaker 0: Mhmm. Speaker 1: Before, we believe that the number are much, much bigger. They told they are talking about 10,000 Israeli soldiers are visiting in in a monthly basis, the calling or asking for psychological support. At the end, I heard from a Jewish, supporter of Palestine who said genocide is equal to suicide. When you are killing children and women, you are not it is not easy to return back to your city, to your family, to your children as a normal as a normal person. I mean, I'm sure this will chant you every day, seven days a week, twenty four hours. What enabled the this group of fighters with very simple light weapons, it's very simple, by the way, to achieve this, victory, I think first of all their commitment, strong commitment to their faith, to to their cause. Second, this military group built on twenty years of experience in encountering or confrontation with the Israelis. Mhmm. And therefore, they have developed a lot of strategies and tactics how to how to face the Israelis. For example, maybe beginning 2024, there was there were instructions to the fighters not to provoke the Israelis. I mean, not to initiate any fight. And even if they come not to, not to encounter them or not to fight, but leave them pass through the area. If only when they stay there and they are starting to attack the Palestinians or to Mhmm. To destroy houses, you can, you can fight back, First, to spare as much as can as you can of weapons or the slight weapons. Second, to avoid the retaliation of the of the Israelis that because they have when one Palestinian have shot against them, they have wiped out neighborhoods. Mhmm. I mean, these tactics and these strategies have been developed over years. The very, very strong steadfastness of the people on the ground It has I think this was a very crucial factor in in supporting, the resistance. You are talking about maybe the first war in history where you are leading a fight on two levels, two floors, above the ground and under the ground. And I think this helped a lot to save lives, to save ammunition. Also, the brutality of the Israelis, this this brutal aggression against the Palestinians, this radical approach, the media coverage which they have tried all the time to to prevent it by killing more than 400, five hundred journalists and preventing any international journalists to come into Gaza. All this together, I think, have played a very strong role. But first and last is the very strong commitment to the cause. We also as Muslims, we believe that the, support of Allah and the support of God to our people, because we are fighting for a just cause to live in dignity and freedom. This is also a very important factor in giving us the faith and the steadfastness to continue this struggle. Speaker 0: Over the last year, you know, we saw the martyrdom of, several, very notable leaders of Hamas, Ismael Hamia, the martyr Yahya Sinwar, and of course, many, many, many Palestinians, who are fighting or just simply living their lives as civilians. Israel, though, has has oftentimes tried this method of cutting the head off the snake. They think that's gonna stop the Palestinians. They haven't learned from their mistakes. They haven't learned from history. I guess when you look at what we've seen now with these, the martyrdom of these leaders and and key officials, And there is maybe a new generation of Palestinians that are rising up. What can we expect from this new generation of young leaders and fighters? And maybe, what sort of a shift in mindset do they bring to the table for the Palestinian resistance? Speaker 1: This is a very important question because it has to affect the future of this conflict. First, they didn't learn from not only from history, but even from this current, conflict, from this round to funnel arson. All these leaders, we two weeks ago, Al Qasem spokesperson have announced about the killing of nine prominent leaders of the movement, political and militant leaders. But we are aware that all these leaders plus others Speaker 0: Mhmm. Speaker 1: Were killed along 15. They were not killed in one shot, but no one from outside has observed any decline of the resistance of the commitment when it comes to the people on the ground, when it comes to the fighters, when it comes to the negotiators, I mean the political track, it continued as if nothing happened. And this has to be from the beginning, a strong message for the Israelis and their supporters that it is not about persons. It is about people who are fighting and committed to their cause. Second, Hamas is used to such, to deal with such crimes. They have killed the founder Sheikh Ahmad Yacine. Mhmm. They have killed Abdul Azizir Al Tisi. They have killed a lot of our leaders and plus a lot of other Palestinian's prominent leaders like Yasser Arafat and Abu Ali Mustafa and others. But the generation generations after generations, Palestinians continue and we have always a new leaders who are more committed or stronger committed to the to the cause. Because again, it is not about Hamas. It is not about person here or there. It is about people who are, keen to achieve their, again, goals of independence, dignity, and freedom. And to live in peace, prosperity with all other peoples like any other nation. But they didn't observe again that after the killing of any leader, we have a new generation of leaders and cadres and others who are more committed, more sophisticated, and maybe more wise to lead this, battle. But what I can say today, which is more important for the future than the past about the killing of look, today in Gaza, for example, you have around 2,000,000 Palestinians. 70 percent of them are below 18. Children. Most of those fighters who fought during this round where in 02/2014 when the Israelis attacked Gaza Strip were children. I mean those children who were those who were children in 02/2014 who are now they're carrying the guns to fight back. If you have today more than 2,000,000 Palestinians, the vast majority of them are children. Mhmm. Denied basics, I'm talking about food and medicine, a house, a hospital, a school, a mosque, a church, the right to travel, even to travel for urgent cases like treatment abroad to study. And at the same time they have thousands of guns. What do you expect? You are paving the way for the next round. As long as these guys, these children don't have a vision of a better future, if they don't have any hint that it could be better, I am sure they have nothing to lose as we say in a very famous Arabic PM. Why not to fight back? You are not going to lose you are not going to lose except the tent and the Speaker 0: Chains. Shackles. Speaker 1: Checkles. Mhmm. Why not to fight back? Therefore, these they are creating Mhmm. Instead of twenty, thirty thousand Al Qasab Brigade fighters, they are already creating hundreds of thousands of potentially fighters. Palestinians will not and are not ready to give up their struggle for freedom and dignity. And they are already fighting now for more one more than one hundred years. Therefore, again, it is not about Ismail Haniyah who is a hero, Yahir Sanwar who is an icon becoming icon. Not only for Palestinians, for Palestinians, for Arabs, for Muslims, for a lot of people around the world. And here maybe also we have to add one point. We if you study the Israeli politics in the last two decades, you can observe a clear shift from the from the left to the right, radical right, religious right. Until now, we Palestinians, we are still fighting for a political goal, a state, right of return, according to international law. But the Israelis, for the last two decades, they are shifting this conflict from a political conflict into a religious conflict. Their rhetoric, their statements, their ideas, ideologies, I am talking about politicians, Knesset members, media, everyone. He is talking in a very religious language. Do you what does it mean? It means that instead of fighting and negotiating today with two, three, four million Palestinians, it will come a day that you are negotiating and fighting against 1.4 or 7,000,000 Muslims because they will feel it is not about Palestinians. It is about Al Aqsa Speaker 0: Mhmm. Speaker 1: Which is the third holiest shrine in Islam. It is about the holy Jerusalem, Al Quds. I mean, if we leave these radical religious groups to shift this conflict from a political conflict about statehood and the right of return and international law, international immaterial law into a religious conflict, I am sure you are destabilizing not not only Palestine, you are destabilizing the whole region and maybe the whole world. Speaker 0: Well, I hope that, if that does happen, that, those across the world who are being attacked will have the courage that the Palestinians have exhibited, not just for the past fifteen months, but for many, many, many years. And, I think that is a perfect note to leave off on. So, doctor Bassem Naim, thank you so much. Please. And, I just gotta say that as an American, I am, of course, appalled by what my government is doing. And, the Palestinians, and you have my full support and the support of many Americans. The tide is shifting and, we we just love you guys. Speaker 1: By by the way, we have, observed this all the fifteen months along, how many thousands and thousands of Americans from all faiths, not only Muslims, not only Christians, but also in the forefront Jews who fought and struggled for to stop this aggression and also supporting the rights of Palestinian. And really, we are appreciating this very, very highly. And we we believe again, and I have to emphasize this, that it is not about Jews or Judaism. It is about political rights to live in freedom and dignity. Mhmm. And, we when we have seen the all these thousands of people in in the streets, in your residences, rail stations, inside the Capitol Hall, everywhere, We have believed that it this brought us nearer to the goals, our national goals, because we we know that at the end, America is the decisive power in this context and this huge mass of people who are raising their voices and paying prices for this to support our goal, it is a good sign that we are on the right track. Thank you so much. Please.
Saved - February 12, 2025 at 2:37 PM

@ShaykhSulaiman - Sulaiman Ahmed

The Simpsons predicted it again? https://t.co/hZWaFqiB64

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I think every Jew should visit Israel at least once in their lifetime. It's the right thing to do. Oh, Jews don't believe in hell? Well, that makes my day!
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Speaker 0: I believe that every Jew should make a pilgrimage to Israel before he dies. Yes. It is fitting. Doesn't wanna end up in hell. Jews don't believe in hell. No hell? Thank you, kid. You made my day.
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