The piece, entitled "I am Gazy City's Mayor. Our Lives and Culture Are in Rubble," ran on Sunday, December 24.
Even if it was not Gilad Erdan’s intention, the sign that he held up at the UN this week rhetorically turned the tables on an arch-critic of Israel, Thomas Friedman.
If we extrapolate from this “insight” of New York Times journalist Nicholas Kristof’s, the holdup man and his victim, when the latter retaliates, are moral equals.
Journalists have a moral responsibility to recognize evil for what it is and to recognize the difficulty of eradicating it. If not, they contribute to undermining the very values they espouse.
Movers and shakers in Israeli society.
ABC and Fox reported that services at the terminal were extremely limited as a result of the demonstrations.
The Times report says that “satellite imagery taken Monday morning shows the substantial scale of one of Israel’s main advances into northern Gaza."
The New York Times has issued an Editor's Note acknowledging mistakes in reporting on the Gaza hospital blast, on the same day that a Hamas official told them that the evidence 'dissolved.'
Freelance filmmaker Soliman Hijjy was rehired by the New York Times despite his history of antisemitism.
Hamas terrorists penetrated into Israel with the sole purpose of slaughtering as many Jews as possible.