Hamas attacks Israel

Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
Apr 9, 2008
23,264
8,082
113
Regina, Saskatchewan
Apparently Iran hit an airbase pretty hard.
Nevatim air force base in the Negev desert in southern Israel. Everybody will be pumping out propaganda today, so who knows what to believe beyond “yes, it was hit” at this point.

While a list of sites Iran tried to hit has not been publicized by Tehran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps — which launched the drones and missiles — the main target of the attack appeared to be a sensitive airbase in southern Israel, home to the F-35 stealth fighter jet, the military’s most advanced aircraft.

On Sunday, Iran said a “new equation” in its adversarial relationship with Israel had been opened, and warned of a “much bigger” assault on the country should Netanyahu decide on a tit-for-tat attack.

“We have decided to create a new equation, which is that if from now on the Zionist regime attacks our interests, assets, personalities, and citizens, anywhere, and at any point we will retaliate against them,” the Commander of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) Hossein Salami told Iranian state TV.

(The “Zionist regime” is a term Iran uses to refer to Israel)

Earlier Sardar Bagheri, the Chief of Staff of Iran’s Armed Forces, said: “If the Zionist regime responds, our next operation will be much bigger.”

Iran’s attacks targeted the Israeli airbase from which, it said, the strike on the Iranian consulate in Damascus was launched from. Iranian ballistic missiles that reached Israel fell on the airbase located in southern Israel, and caused only light structural damage, Israel Defense Forces (IDF) spokesperson Daniel Hagari said.

Bagheri said that from Iran’s perspective, the military operation against Israel “has concluded.” But he emphasized that Iranian armed forces remain on high alert and are prepared to “act if necessary,” according to an interview on state IRINN TV on Sunday.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
109,462
11,480
113
Low Earth Orbit
Nevatim air force base in the Negev desert in southern Israel. Everybody will be pumping out propaganda today, so who knows what to believe beyond “yes, it was hit” at this point.

While a list of sites Iran tried to hit has not been publicized by Tehran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps — which launched the drones and missiles — the main target of the attack appeared to be a sensitive airbase in southern Israel, home to the F-35 stealth fighter jet, the military’s most advanced aircraft.

On Sunday, Iran said a “new equation” in its adversarial relationship with Israel had been opened, and warned of a “much bigger” assault on the country should Netanyahu decide on a tit-for-tat attack.

“We have decided to create a new equation, which is that if from now on the Zionist regime attacks our interests, assets, personalities, and citizens, anywhere, and at any point we will retaliate against them,” the Commander of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) Hossein Salami told Iranian state TV.

(The “Zionist regime” is a term Iran uses to refer to Israel)

Earlier Sardar Bagheri, the Chief of Staff of Iran’s Armed Forces, said: “If the Zionist regime responds, our next operation will be much bigger.”

Iran’s attacks targeted the Israeli airbase from which, it said, the strike on the Iranian consulate in Damascus was launched from. Iranian ballistic missiles that reached Israel fell on the airbase located in southern Israel, and caused only light structural damage, Israel Defense Forces (IDF) spokesperson Daniel Hagari said.

Bagheri said that from Iran’s perspective, the military operation against Israel “has concluded.” But he emphasized that Iranian armed forces remain on high alert and are prepared to “act if necessary,” according to an interview on state IRINN TV on Sunday.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Ron in Regina

Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
Apr 9, 2008
23,264
8,082
113
Regina, Saskatchewan
If 7 hit…even in open areas, I’m assuming that there would be more than light structural damage…but it sounds like it’s still fully functional? Somewhere in the middle propaganda wise from both sides.
 

Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
Apr 9, 2008
23,264
8,082
113
Regina, Saskatchewan
Egypt is predicting that the current round of negotiations between Israel and Hamas over a ceasefire and the release of hostages will end in failure.

Talking with Al-Araby Al-Jadeed, a senior Egyptian source said that discussions were held over the past day, during which Egypt expressed its disappointment with the elimination of three of Hamas Political Bureau Chairman Ismail Haniyeh's sons at a time when the mediators increased their efforts to reach a deal.
1713130226932.jpeg
According to the Egyptian source, the Israeli representatives said that as long as there was no deal or initial signs of progress towards one, nothing would prevent strikes on targets in Gaza.
 

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
48,430
1,668
113
President Aladeen was asked by an Israeli who would win between Netanyahu and Ahmadinejad.

In reality "Aladeen" is the British Jewish comedy actor Sacha Baron Cohen and this was a press-conference for his 2012 movie "Dictator"..

 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
109,462
11,480
113
Low Earth Orbit
Mr. Again would be a whole new hillbilly if he lived in Sudbury. I subscribe to his channel and appreciate his opinions.

He's centerist by Canadian standard and doesn't know it.
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
35,908
3,052
113
In Toronto, vile anti-Semitism has been allowed to become normalized

Author of the article:Joe Warmington
Published Apr 15, 2024 • Last updated 1 day ago • 3 minute read

Antii-Semitism is on full display in Toronto
Toronto is a place where there are people who openly celebrate Iranian bombs being launched at Israel by igniting smoke canisters and chanting “Allahu Akbar.”


Toronto is a place where there are people who would carve a swastika into the picture on a poster of a child who is being held by Hamas.

Toronto is as place where someone was charged for allegedly directing hateful messaging at Jewish children about their parents.

Toronto is a place where police have to deploy temporary field command posts because of potential threats toward Jewish citizens.


Toronto is not an easy place to be Jewish.

Homes and businesses of Jewish people have been attacked or vandalized. Synagogues and Hebrew schools too. Jewish students don’t feel safe in universities and people concerned about the hostages taken on the Black Sabbath Oct. 7 in which 1,200 innocent people were slaughtered are cited when for wearing “Save Our Hostage” T-shirts at a Toronto Raptors game.


“The continued occurrence of inflammatory and inciting protests across the city have only validated the concerns that Jewish Torontonians have for their safety,” said Richard Robertson of B’nai Brith Canada.

“There is no place in our society for demonstrations that glorify terrorism, foment anti-Semitism, and celebrate the diabolical Iranian regime.”



But as MP Melissa Lantsman, deputy Conservative leader, said, this was not exactly surprising.

“It was never about a ceasefire,” she posted on X. “Support for terror against western democracy spilled into the streets of our country 6 months ago and governments across Canada did nothing.”

Historians will study this dark time in Toronto’s history the same way they do the Christie Pits riots.

But for Jewish people living here, that history is something they are enduring now. They live in fear.



Toronto Police understand this reality.

“In light of world events, we continue to deploy officers in dedicated patrols around places of worship, schools and community centres,” TPS said in an X post. “There is a Command Post at Bathurst near Glencairn and officers are there to speak with residents. There are no known threats for Toronto.”

But many Jewish Torontonians tell me they feel they are under threat at any time. It’s just so wrong what has happened here. There has been so much anti-Semitism it has become normalized.



None of it would be tolerated if it was directed toward any other religious or ethnic group. Nor should it be. This is something that has been pointed out for months by city councillors James Pasternak and Brad Bradford, MPP Goldie Ghamari and MP Marco Mendicino, who have all warned about this.

That said, there is appreciation for the deployment of the command post and on Sunday the one outside a Hebrew school on Bathurst was manned and operational.



“The community is grateful for the sustained presence of the Toronto Police Service,” said Robertson. “The mobile command centres serve as a strong deterrent against those who wish to cause the Jewish community harm.”

But just the fact that such an action is necessary should be something of great embarrassment for Toronto which purports to be a place of diversity. The video shot by independent journalist Caryma S’ad shown around the world offering an ugly view of the city and country was picked up by many news outlets including the Jerusalem Post, which reported “the crowd erupted in celebration, and the protest leader led them in shouts of ‘Allahu Akbar!’ and bragged “this has come as a direct response to” Israel “bombing … multiple countries including Syria, Iraq, Palestine, Lebanon.”


It’s interesting that what doesn’t get as much coverage is how respectful Toronto’s Jewish community is in their support rallies. You don’t hear hate there — something MP Kevin Vuong noted in his X post following attending a gathering at Sheppard and Bathurst on Sunday.

“Proud to stand in solidarity with Toronto’s Jewish community after the Islamic Regime in Iran’s attack on Israel … shame on those ‘peaceful protesters’ who romanticize terrorism and cheered for the Islamic regime on the streets of Toronto yesterday. This is what a peaceful rally looks like.”

jwarmington@postmedia.com
1713345196227.png
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
35,908
3,052
113
Peel District School Board goes political with Nakba Day on calendar
PDSB has added a day set up to denounce the creation of Israel to the official school board calendar


Author of the article:Brian Lilley
Published Apr 15, 2024 • Last updated 1 day ago • 3 minute read

Trustees at the Peel District School Board have been inundated with more than 1,000 emails asking them to do their jobs.


Specifically, parents and community members are requesting that the board remove Nakba Day from their official calendar of days to commemorate at the board.


Nakba Day is a highly contentious, highly political commemoration against the establishment of Israel in 1948. The day is marked on May 15, the day after Israel’s Independence Day, and was started in the Arab world as a protest against Israel’s existence.

The name of the day comes from the phrase Dhikra an-Nakba, which means Memory of the Catastrophe. We now have a school board officially recognizing the establishment of the State of Israel as a catastrophe.

“Peel District School Board failed to follow its own policies when it added the ‘Nakba Remembrance Day’ to the Days of Significance calendar,” reads the form email that is being sent again and again.


“Including the ‘Nakba Remembrance Day’ marks the first time a school board in Canada has officially adopted a day of significance that is in objection to the independence of a sovereign, democratically elected country (one of the only of its kind in the Middle East), and one of Canada’s long-standing allies.”

A request for comment to board members receiving the email was sent on Friday and as of this writing, no response has been received. A statement was issued last week by the Peel District School Board before this campaign started.

“We value the diversity of the communities we serve in the Peel District School Board. The board has a Months of Recognition/Days of Significance committee to review applications from PDSB community, students, staff and families for new days for each school year,” the board statement read.


“Applications for this day were reviewed and it was identified as a Community Observance day for this year. Community Observance days recognize the diversity of PDSB communities with no specific actions for schools.”

Make no mistake, while the board says there are “no specific actions for schools” associated with this day, this is still significant and inappropriate.

There will undoubtedly be several teachers willing to use Nakba Day to tell their students that Israel’s very existence is a catastrophe. They won’t tell the full story, that with the United Nations creation of Israel, which Canada voted in favour of, that a state was offered to Palestinian Arabs who rejected the idea and demanded all the land for themselves.


Nor will the teachers who jump on this “opportunity” to bash Israel relay to the students that instead of accepting the two-state solution in 1948, that Palestinians — backed up by surrounding Arab countries — started the first of several wars to try to destroy Israel.

In the current context, students will be taught that Israel is an occupier and an oppressor and therefore illegitimate. It’s the full extension of DEI identity politics into the classroom and it is outrageous.



“School boards need to get back-to-basics on: Reading, writing, and math,” Ontario’s Education Minister Stephen Lecce said in a statement in response to questions about Nakba Day being added in Peel.


“Over the past months, I made my expectations clear to all school boards that there is no room for politics or the influence of personal opinions in Ontario classrooms. At a time when so many young Canadians are divided, it is critical that schools bring people together.”

Sadly, Peel District School Board isn’t listening. Neither is the York District School Board where a group of teachers are selling “Chips for Gaza” to students at lunch and recess to send money to the Gaza Strip.

Would the board allow sales reps for Israel Bonds into the school? Not likely.

“When too many students are not meeting provincial standards of literacy and math, school boards should leave politics outside of the classroom, and focus on the academic achievement of students,” Lecce said.

He’s right, but the boards aren’t listening and as so many parents have said in those emails, the boards also aren’t doing their jobs.

blilley@postmedia.com
 
  • Like
Reactions: petros