murderers and martyrs. How nice. Also think it's
child abuse of course. Their lives could have been
great, instead they got Hamas.
Haifa is on the "front line" in any action in the north but this blog looks at life in the shadow of danger to all of Israel
(With thanks to Khalid Abu Tomeh)
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Reporter עמית סגל Amit Segal, just before Shabbat, about Israel’s fundamental change of attitude towards its enemies since October 7th - no more accomodation; it's up to the world to appease US. (This translated from the Hebrew.)
"There’s been a sudden reversal: instead of Israel begging for
information, offering concessions, and shouting “everyone now!” regarding the
hostages in Gaza, Hamas is the one demanding proof of life and the immediate
release of its members, who are of course vile murderers, not innocent
civilians. (this referring to the terrorists trapped in a tunnel and whom Israel insisted must be disarmed before being sent back to the hands of Hamas) The real number is apparently below 200—much lower—and life in
tunnels under the boots of the IDF is not exactly a recipe for longevity.
The Rafah story is a critical test—a turning point in Israel’s
relationship with its enemies. For decades, Israel normalized a protection
racket culture—paying the bully so that he won’t bully. Hamas and Hezbollah
invented countless forms of extortion—border marches, balloons, Qassam rockets,
tunnels, tents—and Israel was willing to pay dearly, just for quiet.
That equation flipped on October 7. From that moment, and for the past
two years, Israel was the one saying, “hold me back.” We remember the
campaigns: “just not a ground maneuver,” then “just don’t enter Lebanon,” “just
don’t strike the Dahieh,” and “just don’t enter Rafah.” Every time Israel
initiated an attack, the world had to pay to make it stop.
So it was too with the strike in Qatar. The mediators, Hamas, and the
entire axis were sure Israel had lost control. They were ready to pressure
Hamas in ways they hadn’t for two years—just to calm down “the Zionists.”
That’s how the deal bringing 20 hostages home was cooked up.
Now, following the ceasefire, the whole world is trying to push Israel
back into a defensive stance. The same country that once adopted a doctrine of
keeping wars within its borders fought on seven fronts simultaneously. The
world doesn’t like that. Jews, after all, are expected to defend, not attack.
And so we arrive at the 200 terrorists in Rafah. The mediators demand
Israel releases them in exchange for quiet, for some grand peace plan. And this
is the test: will Israel revert to what it was two years ago, or has the lesson
been learned? Will the world pay Israel to calm down, or will it be the other
way around?"
For full article go to https://honestreporting.com/3-lies-in-1-week-how-anti-israel-falsehoods-go-viral-and-stay-there/
CNN, ABC News, and the
BBC.
Three of the largest and
most influential news organizations in the world – with a combined reach in the
hundreds of millions across television, radio, and digital platforms – and a
responsibility to match. When outlets of that size make mistakes, it doesn’t
just distort a single news cycle; it brainwashes public understanding of an
entire conflict.
Within the span of a
single week, all three organizations published or aired egregious, deeply
consequential errors. Honest Reporting has exposed throughout the war: misinformation
travels at full speed, while corrections limp in far too late – if they
actually arrive at all.
This is not an isolated problem. It is a cumulative one. After two years of audiences being bombarded with misleading reports, mistranslations, euphemisms, and fabrications, these mid-October errors offer indicate damage done – and why media accountability remains essential.
The Three Mistakes – and What They Reveal
1. CNN: Amanpour Makes Light of
Hostage Torture
On October 13, CNN’s
chief international anchor Christiane Amanpour claimed Israeli hostages had “probably
been treated better than the average Gazan,” describing them as “pawns” Hamas
had an incentive to care for. Honest Reporting exposed the comment, prompting
widespread outrage.
Amanpour later issued an
on-air apology, admitting her remarks were “insensitive and wrong” after
learning the hostages had reported being starved, electrocuted, held in chains
and cages underground, forbidden from crying, and forced to dig their own graves.
This was not a slip of
the tongue. It was a worldview – one that reflexively downplays Israeli
suffering even in moments where facts should be indisputable.
2. ABC News: Terrorist Given a Hero’s Edit
That same week, ABC News aired footage presenting a Hamas operative as
a heroic rescuer during the ceasefire, without identifying him as a member of a
U.S.-designated terror group.
Honest Reporting
revealed the man’s affiliations and role in Hamas terrorism. ABC has not used
him in any subsequent reporting since.
Sources tell us this
story was filed outside ABC News’ normal editorial process and was produced
solely by a Gaza-based cameraman – with no ABC reporter involved.
This was more than a
lapse in judgment. It was a breakdown in due diligence: allowing material
sourced entirely inside Hamas-controlled territory to transform a terrorist
into a supposed rescuer – and broadcasting it to millions. This is a
fundamental failure to verify by ABC News.
3. BBC News: Calling Prisoner Releases a “Hostage Exchange”
Also on October 13, the
BBC described the release of Israeli hostages – kidnapped civilians held
underground for two years – as part of a “hostage exchange” with Palestinian
prisoners.
This false equivalence
has become a persistent media trope, flattening the distinction between
abducting civilians and incarcerating individuals accused and convicted of
violent crimes.
The BBC did not issue a
clarification. Instead, the journalist who wrote it later insisted the phrasing
was not meant to equate Israeli hostages with Palestinian prisoners.
The Truth These Three Incidents Reveal
These three errors did not happen in a vacuum.
They are part of the same ecosystem of misreporting that has shaped public perception since October 7, 2023. In the fog of war – and the political pressure that follows – legacy news organizations have repeatedly rushed out unverified claims, adopted activist language, platformed extremists, and framed Israeli self-defense as aggression.
Corrections, if they appear at all, are muted, delayed, and reach only a fraction of the audience.
The result?
Two years of global
opinion shaped not by facts, but by a steady stream of skewed, inaccurate, and
sometimes, outright false reporting. The mid-October ceasefire week is not an
outlier but a case study, a compressed timeline showing just how quickly anti-Israel
misinformation can spread, embed, and harden into “truth.”
And if three such
egregious mistakes can appear in a single week – from three of the world’s most
influential newsrooms – it gives a sense of what Honest Reporting has been up
against for the past two years. This is the scale of the problem: tens of
millions of people encountering distortions in real time, while corrections –
if they appear at all – arrive quietly, too late to matter.
Because if that week in October proved anything, it’s that misinformation about Israel isn’t by chance. It’s systemic. It’s influential.
And unless challenged, it becomes the
story.
(With thanks to Amit Segal)
(written by Fiamma Nirenstein)
The orgy of blood on Oct. 7, 2023, and everything that followed should have inspired a dream of peace. For anyone with a conscience, the horror would be enough to say: “Never again.”
Yet that isn’t what happened. When you ask Israelis how they are, their
automatic “Fine, thank you” is no longer true; it’s merely a social convention.
Their souls remain shaken.
But across the divide, in the Palestinian territories, the picture is far more disturbing. According to a recent survey by the Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research, 59% of Palestinians living under the Palestinian Authority—that is, in Judea and Samaria—believe that the decision to carry out the Oct. 7 massacre was “correct.” In Gaza, 44% agreed.
Even more shocking, 54% blame Israel for Palestinian suffering, while
only 14% blame Hamas. And so, we must ask: what peace are we talking about? The
one preached endlessly by the U.N., by Europe, and by French President Emmanuel
Macron — “two states for two peoples”? Not only does it lack realism; a
majority of Palestinians reject it outright.
The same survey shows that 40% of Palestinians believe an independent
state must come through armed struggle, not negotiation; in Gaza, 35% say the
same. These are not marginal numbers—they represent a society still enthralled
by the myth of “resistance,” not the idea of coexistence.
As Israeli journalist Amit Segal has noted, Shany Mor’s essay “Ecstasy and Amnesia” explains this phenomenon well: the intoxication of violence, the inability of parts of the Islamic world—and the Palestinian one in particular—to separate history from religious emotion.
The “ecstasy” of jihad was visible on Oct. 7, in videos of young men
calling their parents to boast about killing Jews with their own hands, and in
the mobs cheering as kidnapped Israeli girls were paraded through Gaza’s
streets.
Even academics in the West, such as Cornell’s Russell Rickford, revealed
the same moral sickness when he called the massacre “exhilarating.”
Arab–Palestinian wars have always followed this script: an initial
eruption of homicidal and suicidal ecstasy, followed by crushing defeat—the War
of Independence (1948), the Six Day War (1967), the Intifadas, and now the war
of Oct. 7. Yet from each failure, what remains in memory is the thrill of
violence, not the price of it.
A leaked BBC dossier acknowledges serious editorial failures in BBC Arabic coverage, confirming and overlapping with years of research by the Committee for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting & Analysis (CAMERA).
The 19-page internal memo by Michael
Prescott, a former adviser to the BBC’s Editorial Guidelines and Standards
Committee, accuses BBC Arabic of systemic anti-Israel bias, platforming
extremist voices, and amplifying Hamas propaganda. The memo was reported
by The Telegraph yesterday.
Prescott’s findings mirror and
expand upon documentation first publicly exposed by CAMERA UK and CAMERA Arabic
researchers throughout the two years that followed October 7, 2023. See full
report at https://www.camera.org/article/press-release-cameras-complaints-of-bbc-bias-vindicated-by-bombshell-dossier/
These new revelations follow calls
by Leader of the Opposition Kemi Badenoch MP for wholesale
reform of BBC Arabic after the publication of CAMERA’s
widely-read March
2025 report examining the network’s promotion of extremist voices,
whitewashing of violence against Israelis, and failure to enforce editorial
standards over the past 5 years.
We are satisfied that people close
to the BBC seem to be paying attention to our criticism and hope this will lead
to real change in the corporation’s coverage of Israel and the Middle East
after decades of failures, but it would be unwise to get our hopes up just
yet.”
The mounting body of evidence
against BBC Arabic is something we have been warning the BBC about for years,
but management repeatedly chose to ignore it. They have failed to act against
journalists who publicly celebrated the October 7 attacks and even assigned
some of these individuals to cover Israel and Gaza.
CAMERA calls on the BBC Board to
launch a full and transparent inquiry and to ensure that the BBC’s
international services finally meet the impartiality standards required of a
publicly funded broadcaster. We also call on the UK Foreign, Commonwealth and
Development Office, which co-funds BBC Arabic, to do likewise.