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Monday, October 30, 2023

Antisemitism Madness > Dr Phil on America's attitude toward the Hamas Massacre; Islamic Hysteria in Dagestan; Madness at Columbia U.

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While the October 7th massacres by Hamas assassins and rapists stand as one of the darkest hours in the history of the world, America's top universities have quickly forgotten that Israel is our ally, and Hamas and Palestine Islamic Jihad are terrorist organizations.

Universities celebrate the horrific massacre, more fitting for the 7th century than the 21st. Top universities in the country are proving that they are not 'fit for purpose' as they become propaganda tools for dark ages ideologies and practices. 

Dr Phil is right on with this analysis. 





Dagestan: Jews describe horrors as Muslims screaming

‘Allahu akbar’ hunted, chased and menaced them at airport


Horror in Makhachkala: passengers from Tel Aviv spoke about their experience


Translated from “Ужас в Махачкале: пассажиры из Тель-Авива рассказали о пережитом,” 
by Daria Gershberg, Detaly, October 30, 2023:


Yesterday at the Makhachkala airport the world saw what seemed to be a recurrence from the times of Nazi Germany – a Jewish pogrom. An angry crowd of rioters broke into the terminal and onto the airfield, looking for passengers from a flight from Tel Aviv. “Defenders of Gaza Children” burst into all the premises, besieged passengers on other planes – the commanders closed the doors, fearing, as the Pobeda airline pilot put it, “getting caught.”



The police tried to control the crowd, but to no avail. The special forces of the Russian Guard arrived only more than an hour later. With great difficulty, the passengers were saved from the raging crowd – they were taken out by helicopter.

“Detaly” spoke with A., a passenger from Tel Aviv. Together with her son, she found herself in the midst of angry rioters. The woman and child were injured by shards of broken glass. Another passenger, N., arrived alone.

With their help, we reconstructed the picture of how those arriving from Israel were rescued.

Landing in the apocalypse


The flight from Tel Aviv landed at Makhachkala airport at 19:17. Unfortunately, it was not diverted to another airport as reported.

There were about 50 passengers on board, mostly women and children. One child was in a wheelchair, connected to a ventilator. He, too, was forced to hide, confirmed the general director of the airport, Said Ramazanov.

The passengers were put on a bus and taken to the terminal for passport control. But a raging crowd had already burst into the airport.

“We had already gone through passport control, and then they burst in,” recalls A. “We ran back to the bus.”

The bus appeared to be accompanied by several airport security guards. The passengers climbed inside. The driver pressed the gas pedal. The bus drove down the runway, the crowd chasing it, shouting “Allahu Akbar!

In the video sent by passenger N., the bus is leaving the terminal. Children are crying in the cabin. Passengers shout to the driver to close the doors. One rioter managed to stay on the bus outside – he rides and waves his hand at the others.

“The bus drove along the runway, then turned into a field. And there the crowd caught up with us. They had Palestinian flags. They started breaking windows. The fragments hit me and my son,” A. told Details. “They broke into the bus, I showed my Russian passport, they checked that I didn’t have [Israeli] citizenship.” There were a lot of people, they surrounded the bus, beat it, and shook it.”

N. sent Detaly a video in which the attackers can be heard demanding that people get off the bus. One of the rioters obscenely abuses the passengers, shouting: “What are you doing to Palestine, you f… oh!” They shout in response that they are Russians. One shouts that he has a Belarusian passport.

“We thought it was all over. We took out Russian passports and shouted: “We are Russians, we are Russians!” We told them: “There are no Israelis on the flight here. What are they, fools, to go anywhere at all in such a situation?” They looked at our passports, but still continued to storm the bus. It was a mad crowd that couldn’t be stopped,” another passenger from this flight, Oksana, told msk1.ru.

“Then we finally broke out. The driver stepped on the gas. We drove across the field again. They ran and caught up. They were shooting,” A. told Detaly. According to her, the pogromists may have taken several people from the bus (Detaly’s note: the information has not been verified; there have been no reports of abducted Israelis yet).

The bus arrived at the airport complex again. Airport employees hid passengers with Israeli citizenship in a technical room in one of the buildings (most, if not all, also had Russian passports, which saved their lives on the bus). At that moment there were police at the airport, but there were still many rioters around. They searched the premises, trying to find Jews.

According to A., passengers, including women and sick children, hid in the room for several hours until the Russian Guard forces arrived. A helicopter was sent for the besieged.

Passengers began to be taken out onto the field and led to the helicopter. The raging crowd, which the security forces had pushed behind the fence, saw that women and children were being taken away and began to try to break through to them. The security forces opened fire in the air. People were put into a helicopter to the sound of machine gun fire. According to A., some of the rioters managed to break through to the helicopter, and they clung to the landing gear.

This is another example of the sheer madness of Islamic Hysteria. Muslims are so easily triggered into hysteria. What does Dagestan have to do with the Middle East? Europeans will soon be asking themselves that question - what do France, Germany, and the UK have to do with Hamas?

Another passenger, Oksana, recalls that the passengers in the helicopter were accompanied by the head of the Derbent administration, Khizri Abakarov. “If it weren’t for him, I don’t know what would have happened. He protected us just like a father. He calmed us down and was with us everywhere: on the bus and in the helicopter.”

Upon arrival at the base, the passengers’ mobile phones were taken away so that they would not expose the light anywhere.

Or, could it have been so they would not publish their videos?

Dagestan, officially the Republic of Dagestan, is a republic of Russia situated in the North Caucasus of Eastern Europe, along the Caspian Sea. Dagestan covers an area of 50,300 square kilometres (19,400 square miles), with a population of over 3.1 million, consisting of over 30 ethnic groups and 81 nationalities. 83% of the population of Dagestan adheres to Islam, mostly Sunni of the Shafii school.




Of course, terrorism isn't military action, it's terrorist action.



Over 100 Columbia professors sign letter defending students

who supported Hamas’ ‘military action’

By Melissa Koenig, NYPost
Published Oct. 30, 2023, 12:54 p.m. ET

More than 100 Columbia University professors signed a letter Monday defending students who supported Hamas’ “military action” in Israel on Oct. 7 and called on administrators to protect those students from “disturbing reverberations” on the Manhattan campus.

As top donors vow to stop giving money to the university amid a swell of pro-Palestinian demonstrations, professors demanded that the administration protect demonstrators from doxxing efforts from trucks dubbing them “Columbia’s Leading Anti-Semites” and halt its educational outposts in Israel.

The Ivy League staffers also demanded that the administration “cease issuing statements that favor the suffering and death of Israelis or Jews over the suffering and deaths of Palestinians.”

“As scholars who are committed to robust inquiry about the most challenging matters of our time, we feel compelled to respond to those who label our students antisemitic if they express empathy for the lives and dignity of Palestinians and/or if they signed a student-written statement that situated the military action begun on Oct. 7 within the larger context of the occupation of Palestine by Israel,” the letter reads.

“In our view, the student statement aims to recontextualize the events of Oct. 7, 2023, pointing out that military operations and state violence did not begin that day, but rather it represented a military response by a people who had endured crushing and unrelenting state violence from an occupying power over many years,” they wrote of the brutal terror attack that killed more than 1,400 Israelis, most of them civilians.




The professors wrote in the letter on Monday that the students believe peace and safety will remain elusive “unless the illegal occupation of Palestinian territory ends and accountability for that illegal occupation is achieved,” which they claim is “not a radical or essentially controversial opinion,” noting it is supported by the United Nations and several human rights organizations.

Professors also backed the university’s Palestine Solidarity Groups label of conditions in Gaza as “apartheid,” noting that groups such as Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch have agreed.

Faculty members conclude their letter by saying, “One of the core responsibilities of a world-class university is to interrogate the underlying facts of both settled propositions and those that are ardently disputed.



“As faculty, we are committed to the project of holding discomfort and working across difference[s] with our students,” it reads.

Rabbi Joseph Potasnik, executive vice president of New York Board of Rabbis, told The Post the letter from Columbia professors was beyond the pale.

“I guess the Columbia professors wouldn’t have a problem with the Ku Klux Klan or the Nazis,” he said sarcastically.

“What we expect in college is that students at some point would be taught about moral clarity.

“To describe Hamas as a legitimate group rather than as terrorists is beyond comprehension and beyond contempt.”

Columbia administrators declined to comment on the letter, but pointed to the existence of a separate faculty statement being circulated encouraging the university’s ties with Israel, which had been signed by over 200 staff by Monday afternoon.

It reads in part: “In the wake of this sobering conflict, we write to express our commitment to the University’s ties with Israel.

“Our research and teaching missions benefit from these ties, and we encourage the University to build on them.”

A spokesperson for the university told The Post last week that “antisemitism or any other form of hate will never be tolerated in our community,” as officials canceled an on-campus student group event that had disinvited Zionists.

The Monday missive came in response to backlash over a student statement that claimed Gaza is an “open-air prison.”

I wonder if the student knows of any prisons anywhere in the world that import or produce tens of thousands of rockets, and then use them on innocent civilians?



“The weight of responsibility for the war and casualties undeniably lies with the Israeli extremist government and other Western governments, including the US government, which fund and staunchly support Israeli aggression, apartheid and settler colonization,” it reads.

“The international judicial system must intervene and hold all parties, including the state of Israel, accountable for the violations it commits.”

Since the letter was written, a major New York City law firm rescinded job offers to those who signed.

A nonprofit news watchdog, Accuracy in Media, also sent a “doxxing truck” — featuring giant video screens on all sides, displaying the words “Columbia’s Leading Antisemites” in gothic script over a slideshow of the Ivy Leaguers’ headshots and names in red block letters — to the campus last Wednesday.

The display identified students allegedly involved in “a horribly hateful, antisemitic proclamation similar to the one signed at Harvard that blamed victims for their own death, rape and torture,” Accuracy in Media president Adam Guillette said in an interview with The Post on Thursday.

Jewish students had planned a rally Monday afternoon to “condemn recent acts of antisemitism displayed on campus by their fellow students and the University’s failure to act.”


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