Looking to Blame Anyone But Israel for Youth’s Anti-Israel Turn


Younger Americans are turning against Israel. “On both the left and the right, young Americans are growing more skeptical of offering unconditional US support to Israel,” Politico (9/29/25) reported. Brookings (8/6/25) ran the headline “Support for Israel Continues to Deteriorate, Especially Among Democrats and Young People.” According to the Forward (11/21/25), “Younger Jews are more than twice as likely to identify as anti-Zionist than the overall population.”

Pro-Israel media are looking for blame. It’s often easy to paint youth opinion that is out of sync with official state policy as emotionally driven social justice warriorism, the result of hearts not yet hardened by life’s cold realities. The Zionist media narrative is looking for the culprits who have apparently miseducated our youth, turning them not just into Israel critics, but Jew haters.

‘Panicked’ by young people

Atlantic: ‘The More I’m Around Young People, the More Panicked I Am’

“Younger Americans…are likely to trust and get their news from lightly moderated social-media platforms,” writes Yair Rosenberg (Atlantic, 12/15/25), “which often advantage the extreme opinions, conspiracy theories, and conflict-stoking content that drive engagement.”

At the Atlantic (12/15/25), Yair Rosenberg wrote a piece headlined “The More I’m Around Young People, the More Panicked I Am,’” with the subhead, “Anti-Jewish prejudice isn’t a partisan divide—it’s a generational one.” To his credit, Rosenberg starts off reporting on very real instances of antisemitism, but then watch carefully what he does in the middle:

Young people also tend to be more critical of Israel than their elders, leading a minority to excuse or even perpetuate anti-Jewish acts in America in the name of Palestine. These critics are likely to consume anti-Israel content on their social-media apps of choice. The platforms then funnel some of those users toward antisemitic material—a sort of algorithmic escalator that ends up radicalizing a percentage of them.

In the first sentence, the only evidence Rosenberg cites is a link to his own article (Atlantic, 5/22/25) about how “Elias Rodriguez allegedly shot and killed two people as they were exiting an event at the Capital Jewish Museum,” with the headline “A Dangerous Disguise for Antisemitism.” Rosenberg said the “assailant used the Palestinian struggle as a pretext to harm Jews.”

But as I have previously written (FAIR.org, 5/29/25), much of the media framed this attack as antisemitic without any factual basis. While there was plenty of evidence that the act was political, with Rodiguez’s manifesto denouncing Israel as a “genocidal apartheid state,” there wasn’t any evidence that the attacker held antisemitic views, or targeted the event because of the faith of the victims. If someone obsessed with Saudi Arabia’s aggression in Yemen killed two Muslim workers at the Saudi embassy, that would certainly be anti-Saudi political violence, but not necessarily anti-Muslim terror.

‘Sewer of filth and lies’

Elon Musk giving a stiff-armed Nazi-style salute at Trump's inauguration (from a New York Times video)

The root of the antisemitism problem at X is not criticism of Israeli war crimes (FAIR.org, 1/23/25).

Rosenberg doesn’t quite say that today’s young critics of Israel are necessarily antisemites, but argues that by putting anti-Israel content on social media, they’re helping to drive traffic to actual antisemitism. This is a framing that lets Elon Musk—who famously gave a Nazi salute at Donald Trump’s second inauguration—off the hook for overseeing the rise of this antisemitic content on X (CNN, 9/29/25).

Nor does he recognize that Meta is aggressively policing against criticism of Israel, even as it ends efforts to proactively screen out hate speech like antisemitism (Washington Post, 2/25/25). Last year, Meta announced “that it will expand its policies to classify the misuse of the term ‘Zionist’ as a proxy for ‘Jews’ as antisemitic and Tier 1 hate speech” (World Jewish Congress, 6/9/24). Al Jazeera (10/24/24) also reported on “testimonies of routine deletion of Palestine-related posts and a deep-seated pro-Israel bias” at Meta.

Rosenberg is rightly concerned that there are too many far-right extremists promoting white nationalism and antisemitism on social media networks (Wired, 5/2/24; PBS, 8/13/24), and these corporate regimes are too tolerant of such activity on their sites. But Rosenberg manages to twist this into an argument that young people need to shut up about Gaza.

Of course, many people are upset about anti-Israel content on social media not because it leads to antisemitism, but because it’s anti-Israel: The reason for the shift in youth opinion isn’t Israel’s behavior, the argument goes, but social media’s influence. Hillary Clinton blames youth criticism of Israel on TikTok (Hollywood Reporter, 12/2/25). The Australian (12/12/25) wrote: “Young people live now on social media. And social media is an unregulated sewer of lies and filth.” The Israeli government has reportedly recruited social media personalities and public relations firms to tell its version of the story (Jerusalem Post, 10/3/25; Al Jazeera, 10/30/25).

‘Brainwashed’ into opposing sex pests

Free Press: The Jewish Parents Who Raised Mamdani Voters

“Younger Jews have shifted away from Israel,” Free Press (12/17/25) reported. “That has put some of them on a collision course with their more traditional parents, many of whom view Mamdani as a totem of the anti-Zionist movement and a threat to the safety of Jews in New York City.”

The issue of this generational divide is the center of a piece at Free Press (12/17/25) by Olivia Reingold, called “The Jewish Parents Who Raised Mamdani Voters.” For the unacquainted, Free Press was bought by Paramount (10/6/25), now controlled by oligarch David Ellison, thus turning the once-marginal publication into the closest thing the right has to the New Yorker. (The acquisition also elevated Free Press co-founder Bari Weiss, noted right-wing pundit, to CBS News editor-in-chief.)

Free Press quoted one parent in particular, Sagra Maceira de Rosen, whose bio describes her as “chair of SIO Global, an investment and advisory firm working with private equity and investment.” She said she was “horrified” that Mamdani won the election. What’s worse for her was that her grown child campaigned for him. “I fear that kids I care for—my children—are brainwashed.”

Parents looked for answers. Reingold reported:

They wondered if they should have parented differently. Did their children get enough Jewish education? Were they brainwashed by their elite private schools? Where did they go wrong?

“Maybe I failed in the sense that the kids didn’t go to Israel enough,” a 63-year-old physician in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, told me. He said his daughter, a civil rights attorney, holds anti-Zionist views and refused to vote for former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo due to his alleged sexual harassment. “It would’ve been better if they went more, just to see the lies they’re being told.”

It’s not clear if the doctor or Reingold knows what they’re saying here. Jewish kids need to 1) go to Israel to get indoctrinated and 2) stop being appalled by sexual harassment. These issues are more connected than one might think, as a Jewish Currents (4/18/18) investigation by Lilith executive editor Sarah Seltzer found widespread problems of sexual violence within Birthright, the program offering young Jews free guided trips to Israel.

Lacking ‘a capacity for critical thinking’

B'Tselem: A regime of Jewish supremacy from the Jordan River to the Mediterranean Sea: This is apartheid

It’s hard to accuse B’Tselem (1/12/21) of not going to Israel often enough.

Another parent, Lisa Fields Lewis, lamented that her grown children liked Mamdani:

Lewis was raised by an Israeli mother; her father survived Bergen-Belsen concentration camp. She said the rise of Mamdani awakened a “generational trauma” in her. Now, she can’t shake the feeling that history is repeating itself. And kids don’t seem to realize just how dangerous Mamdani’s views are, Lewis said.

With Mamdani set to be sworn in just after midnight on January 1, Lewis doesn’t know if their relationship can return to normal any time soon. “I feel sad,” Lewis said. “I feel envious of my friends whose kids are proud Zionists, or at least have the capacity for critical thinking.”

It’s not FAIR’s job to comment on others’ parenting skills, but Lewis just told the world she thinks her children don’t have a “capacity for critical thinking”; the tension in this household might have to do with a lack of respect, rather than just differing politics. What’s really dangerous here is that the author doesn’t challenge the absurd suggestion that “Mamdani’s promise of providing free buses and righting the city’s widening income gap” is the first step in sending the Jews to the camps.

By what measure does the Free Press think Mamdani is dangerous for Jews? It pointed out that he “has consistently denied Israel’s right to exist as a Jewish state,” saying instead that “Israel should exist ‘with equal rights for all’—a bar the nation already meets.”

Reingold can’t decide what she wants here: a Jewish state or a state that doesn’t discriminate.  Maintaining the former requires preventing the latter, as Palestinians that have been under Israeli control for nearly 60 years need to be denied the right to vote in Israeli elections. Jews from anywhere in the world have a “right to return” to Israel, but non-Jewish refugees from pre-1948 Palestine do not. A number of human rights groups, including an Israeli one, have found that the legal separation of peoples in Israel proper and the Occupied Territories amounts to apartheid (B’Tselem, 1/12/21; Human Rights Watch, 4/27/21).

Reingold went on, “More recently, the mayor-elect has caught flack for his controversial appointments to his transition committees, which include fringe anti-Zionist rabbis.” Again, there’s nothing here that represents antisemitism–instead, there’s inclusion of Jews. The problem is that Mamdani is close to clergy whose politics don’t align with the Weiss editorial regime. To put things into perspective, Mamdani won a third of the city’s Jewish vote (Jewish Telegraphic Agency, 11/5/25)—not a majority, but not exactly a “fringe” either.

‘A problem of disobedient children’

Conversation: 30 years after Arafat-Rabin handshake, clear flaws in Oslo Accords doomed peace talks to failure

Though the Oslo Accords produced great optimism in the West, Maha Nassar (Conversation, 9/12/23) noted, “life for Palestinians became worse during the post-Oslo years, not better,” as “Palestinians lost further control over their lands, homes and resources.”

These pieces spend a lot of ink displaying anxiety for this generational divide, but never really ask why it exists. If they did that, they might find out that while many in the older generation could indulge the fantasy that a pre-Netanyahu Israel was engaged in a peace process, when mainstream Israeli leaders paid lip service to the idea of a two-state solution, younger Jews only know a place of extreme bellicosity.

Any voter in their 20s doesn’t remember the Oslo Accords or Yitzhak Rabin shaking hands with Yasser Arafat (Conversation, 9/12/23). Instead, what they know is a country that has mostly been under the control of the right-wing Likud party and its extremist allies, an anti-democratic slide into authoritarianism (Haaretz, 10/30/25; Committee to Protect Journalists, 12/11/25), government corruption (New York Times, 11/30/25), settlement expansion (UN News, 9/29/25), alliances with the European far right (CNN, 3/26/25; Foreign Policy, 5/9/25) and several lopsided wars against Gaza.

But neither the Atlantic nor the Free Press can say this. The answer can’t be that Israel’s actions against Palestinians and its decaying political system are turning people off. No, the problem is that young people are led astray by social media and distance from real education.

“While Israel’s actions have always been structured by apartheid and ethnic cleansing, the scale and the visibility of its structural violence has been placed at the center of American political discourse,” said Benjamin Balthaser, author of Citizens of the Whole World: Anti-Zionism and the Cultures of the American Jewish Left. “Americans, not just Jews, are compelled to respond.”

He added, “That the Free Press sees this as a problem of disobedient children or a lack of Torah school is not unlike Hillary Clinton blaming outrage at Israel on TikTok videos and social media.”

[…]

Via https://fair.org/home/looking-to-blame-anyone-but-israel-for-youths-anti-israel-turn/

 

Florida Plans to Become First State to Eliminate All Vaccine Mandates

Florida Plans To Become First State To Eliminate All Childhood Vaccine ...

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) — Florida plans to become the first state to eliminate vaccine mandates, a longtime cornerstone of public health policy for keeping schoolchildren and adults safe from infectious diseases.

State Surgeon General Dr. Joseph Ladapo, who announced the decision Wednesday, cast current requirements in schools and elsewhere as “immoral” intrusions on people’s rights that hamper parents’ ability to make health decisions for their children.

“People have a right to make their own decisions, informed decisions,” Ladapo, who has frequently clashed with the medical establishment, said at a news conference in Valrico. “They don’t have the right to tell you what to put in your body. Take it away from them.”

Florida’s move, a significant departure from decades of public policy and research that has shown vaccines to be safe and the most effective way to stop the spread of communicable diseases, especially among schoolchildren, is a notable embrace of the Trump administration’s agenda led by Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a longtime anti-vaccine activist.

[…]

In Florida, vaccine mandates for child day care facilities and public schools include shots for measles, chickenpox, hepatitis B, diphtheria-tetanus-acellular pertussis, polio and other diseases, according to the state Health Department’s website.

[…]

Under Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis, Florida resisted imposing COVID vaccines on schoolchildren during the pandemic, requiring “passports” for places that draw crowds, school closures and mandates that workers get the shots to keep their jobs.

“I don’t think there’s another state that’s done as much as Florida. We want to stay ahead of the curve,” the governor said.

DeSantis also announced the creation of a state “Make America Healthy Again” commission Wednesday modeled after similar initiatives that Kennedy established at the federal level.

The commission would look into such things as allowing informed consent in medical matters, promoting safe and nutritious food, boosting parental rights in medical decisions about their children and eliminating “medical orthodoxy that is not supported by the data,” DeSantis said. The commission will be chaired by Lt. Gov. Jay Collins and Florida first lady Casey DeSantis.

The commission’s work will help inform a large “medical freedom package” to be introduced in the Legislature next session, which would address the vaccine mandates required by state law and make permanent the recent state COVID decisions relaxing restrictions, DeSantis said.

[…]

Via https://hellboundanddown.com/2026/02/07/florida-plans-to-become-first-state-to-eliminate-all-childhood-vaccine-mandates/

ICE Secretly Deports Palestinians to Israel in Trump Ally’s Private Plane

Private jet owned by Florida property tycoon has twice flown Palestinian men from Arizona to Tel Aviv.

Press TV

A private aircraft owned by a businessman close to US President Donald Trump was reportedly used to transport Palestinian detainees to the Israeli-occupied territories.

According to The Guardian, the aircraft—owned by Florida property developer Gil Dezer—was chartered as part of a secretive deportation effort run by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).

Public records cited in the report show that the Dezer family has longstanding business ties with Trump and has donated significant sums to his political campaigns.

The jet has twice flown Palestinians from Arizona to Tel Aviv. Each time, the flights carried Palestinian men detained by ICE from a deportation facility in Phoenix to Tel Aviv, where they were later transferred by armed Israeli forces and released at a military checkpoint in the occupied West Bank.

Each flight is estimated to cost between $400,000 and $500,000.

Witness accounts described detainees arriving disoriented, wearing prison-issued clothing, and carrying their belongings in plastic bags.

“They were not wearing jackets or coats, and the weather was very cold and windy that day,” said a local resident who helped the men.

“They stayed at my place for two hours, during which I fed them, and they called their families, who either came to pick them up or arranged transportation for them.”

Some had not been allowed to contact their families for many months and were believed to be missing, the report said.

Israeli newspaper Haaretz reported that the deportations followed “an unusual request from Washington to Israel,” and were conducted with the approval of Israel’s internal security agency, Shin Bet.

Some of the Palestinian men hold green cards, allowing legal residency in the United States, while several have wives, children, and other close family members in the country. Some had been detained by ICE for weeks, and at least one was held for more than a year, the report added.

The report has sparked outrage among rights advocates, who say ICE is enforcing immigration policy through secretive arrangements that separate families, evade scrutiny, and hand sensitive government functions to politically connected private interests.

Several immigration attorneys also told The Guardian that deporting Palestinians to Israel could breach international law.

According to Gissou Nia, director of the Strategic Litigation Project at the Atlantic Council, the principle of non-refoulement prohibits forcibly returning individuals to a place where there are substantial grounds to believe they could face irreparable harm, including persecution, torture, ill-treatment or other serious human rights violations.

“The United States is bound by international treaties that explicitly prohibit this, including the Convention against Torture,” she added.

Human rights groups and UN officials have documented abuse of Palestinian detainees in Israeli custody. The Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights has reported cases of arbitrary detention, prolonged incommunicado holding, and accounts from released prisoners describing torture and severe mistreatment.

Human Rights Watch has likewise said Palestinian detainees have faced degrading treatment and other forms of abuse that could amount to serious violations of international law.

[…]

Via https://www.presstv.ir/Detail/2026/02/07/763679/ICE-secretly-deports-Palestinians-Trump-ally-private-jet-Israel-Gil-Dezer

Who were the other men in the Epstein files? This is the FBI’s own list

A protester holds a sign related to the release of the Jeffrey Epstein files outside the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., November 12, 2025. SAUL LOEB AFP via Getty Images

Brian Shilhavy

Former President Clinton has apparently flipped the table by agreeing to testify on the Epstein Files, because it would expose President Trump

From the Miami Herald (https://www.miamiherald.com/news/local/crime/article314609810.html): The FBI’s Own Unclassified List of “Prominent Names” in the Epstein Files Who Were Investigated Released

After the Justice Department shut the door on releasing the Jeffrey Epstein files in July 2025, FBI agents worked on drafts of a 21-page presentation of all the evidence the FBI had gathered in the case, including a summary of allegations against 11 men [Trump, Weinstein, Prince Andrew, Jes Staley, Leon Black, Les Wexner, Alan Dershowitz, Bill Clinton, Howard Lutnick, William Barr]

One woman, who said she was abused by Epstein, told the FBI a 13-year-old friend of hers was forced by Trump to perform oral sex in the 1980s.

[…]

Via https://t.me/healthimpact/3027

Collapsing Empire: US Bows To African Revolutionaries

BBC reports a US policy shift toward Burkina Faso, Mali, and Niger, as Washington adapts to the rise of the anti-imperialist Alliance of Sahel States.

On February 2nd, the BBC published an extraordinary report on how the Trump administration “has declared a stark policy shift” towards Burkina Faso, Mali, and Niger, the governments of which have sought to eradicate all ties to Western imperial powers, and forged the Alliance of Sahel States (AES). The independent bloc is a revolutionary enterprise, with the prospect that further countries will follow its members’ lead. And Washington is under no illusions about the new geopolitical realities unfolding in Africa.

The British state broadcaster records how Nick Checker, State Department African Affairs chief, is due to visit Mali to convey US “respect” for the country’s “sovereignty”, and chart a “new course” in relations, moving “past policy missteps.” Checker will also express optimism about future cooperation with AES “on shared security and economic interests.” This is an absolutely unprecedented development. After military coups deposed the elected presidents of all three countries 2020 – 2023, the trio became Western pariahs.

France and the US sought to isolate and undermine the military governments, halting “cooperation” projects in numerous fields. Meanwhile, the Economic Community of West African States, a neocolonial union of which all three were members, first imposed severe sanctions on Burkina Faso, Mali, and Niger, before its combined armed forces prepared to outright invade the latter in summer 2023. The three countries didn’t budge, and in fact welcomed Western isolation, forging new international partnerships and strengthening their ties. ECOWAS military action never came to pass.

In January 2025, the trio seceded from the union and created AES. Western-funded, London-based Amani Africa branded the move “the most significant crisis in West Africa’s regional integration since the founding of ECOWAS in 1975,” claiming it dealt “a significant blow to African…cooperation architecture.” Meanwhile, Burkina Faso’s leader Capt Ibrahim Traoré has become a media hate figure. A disparaging May 2025 Financial Times profile slammed him as a cynical opportunist leading a “Russia-backed junta”, and his supporters a “cult”.

As the BBC unwittingly explains, such antipathy towards Traoré stems from establishing himself “as a standard-bearer in resisting ‘imperialism’ and ‘neocolonialism’.” Via “vigorous social media promotion, he has gained huge support for this stance and personal popularity among young people across the continent and beyond,” ever since seizing power in September 2022. Far from just talk, Traoré and his fellow AES “junta” leaders have systematically sought to neutralise malign Western influence locally, while pursuing left-wing economic policies for the good of their populations.

France and the US have proven markedly powerless to hamper, let alone reverse, this seismic progress. While officials in Paris and Washington hitherto relentlessly hammered AES’ members over “democracy and human rights” concerns, the BBC reports such considerations will be wholly “absent from the agenda” when State Department officials now visit Mali. In other words, the Empire recognises it no longer has the ability to dictate the composition or policies of regional governments and must engage administrations on their own terms.

‘Despotic Governments’

While generating only occasional mainstream interest, the push by Burkina Faso, Mali, and Niger to rid themselves of Western imperialism has been remarkable in its scope and efficacy. French and US media programmes and channels have been blocked throughout AES. In August 2022, Paris’ forces were sent packing from Mali after a nine-year-long occupation. Two years later, Russian soldiers took over an airbase in Niger housing American forces at the government’s invitation, after authorities demanded Washington withdraw from the country.

These purges have had a knock-on effect in the wider region. For example, in November 2024, Chad abruptly terminated a military agreement, ending France’s long-running occupation of the country. Around the same time, Senegal demanded that the French close their military base in Dakar. The last troops departed in July 2025, leaving Paris with no permanent installations in Central or West Africa. Meanwhile, efforts by AES members to drive Britain, France, and the US out of every major sector of their economies are ongoing.

Right when Chad and Senegal were bidding bon voyage to French forces, Niger seized control of local mining firm Somaïr, a component of state-owned French nuclear company Orano. Somaïr provided a quarter of the uranium supply to European nuclear power plants. Resultantly, EU imports of uranium from Russia rose by over 70%, despite the supposedly crippling sanctions imposed over the Ukraine proxy war. In another bitter irony, Moscow has concurrently cemented itself as a close partner of AES member states in economic and military fields.

This burgeoning relationship has triggered a predictable chorus of condemnation and fearmongering from Western journalists, politicians, and pundits. Yet, a March 2024 poll published by the German Friedrich Ebert Stiftung Foundation found 98% of Malians approve of their country’s bond with Russia, with 83% being “very satisfied” and 15% “rather satisfied”. More generally, the same survey highlighted how Mali’s “junta” enjoys overwhelming public support, about which Western governments can only fantasise.

In all, 81% of respondents believed life in Mali had improved since the military administration took power. A staggering 99% expressed satisfaction with the work of security forces, 95% were optimistic about the country’s future prospects, and 87% rejected calls for an election. Similar results were found in a poll of Burkina Faso’s population in August. A stunning 66% of citizens said it was legitimate for the military to seize power, if “elected leaders abuse their power for their own interests.”

As a fascinating paper by Senegalese academic Ndongo Samba Sylla forensically details, ever since supposed independence was granted to Africa in the 1960s, France and other imperial powers have worked concertedly to ensure its constituent countries are ruled by pliant puppets. Along the way, the West has “shown no scruples in backing odious civilian or military regimes” favourable to their interests. This produces “choiceless democracies” across Africa, with “despotic governments” that come to power “through fraudulent elections and…do not create any welfare for their people.”

‘Lasting Solutions’

Sylla cites the example of Chad, where France sustained a corrupt, brutal dictator, Idriss Deby Itno, in office 1990 – 2021. Following his death, Emmanuel Macron diplomatically backed his son’s “unconstitutional succession”. The French President’s unabashed advocacy for an illiberal, nepotistic power grab is to be contrasted with Macron’s furious censure of the military coups in Burkina Faso, Mali, and Niger, demands they hold elections, and calls for “financial sanctions from African countries, the Wes,t and its financial institutions.”

France could impose sanctions directly on the trio due to Paris’ control of the Central Bank of West African States, the financial arm of ECOWAS. Membership ties states to the CFA Franc, a currency created after World War II that allowed Paris to maintain grossly iniquitous trading relationships with its African colonies, when its economy was ravaged and its overseas empire rapidly unravelling. The CFA Franc makes it cheap for members to import from France and vice versa, but prohibitively expensive for them to export elsewhere.

Such forced dependency creates a captive market for the French, and by extension, Europe, decisively blunting local development. Member states are impotent to enact meaningful policy changes, as they lack control over their own economies, forced to take orders from the IMF, World Bank, and Western investors. As Sylla remarks: “No matter who you elect, they will have to stick with the basic economic policy blueprint.” Creating a replacement currency is AES’ next major challenge – although its members have already started constructing a central bank.

AES’ continued existence and successes are anathema to Paris. Since “decolonisation” in Africa in the early 1960s, the French have launched 50 overt interventions in Africa, which doesn’t account for assassinations of anti-imperialist leaders, palace coups, rigged elections, and other skullduggery employed to maintain France’s mephitic, exploitative grip over its former holdings. Delusions of keeping the continent wedged under their heels have not faded, despite the dramatic collapse of French power locally. In April 2024, General Francois Lecointre, former French Army Chief of Staff, declared:

“What we Europeans have in common is the Mediterranean and Africa, where our destiny is at stake…Europe will have an obligation to return to Africa to help restore the state and bring back administration and development. It’s not China, Russia, or Wagner [Group] who are going to provide lasting solutions to the very great difficulties facing these African countries and their people.”

Residents of AES evidently beg to differ, and stand ready to defend their leaders from foreign destabilisation. US officials aren’t unwise to the region’s new power dynamic. In an October 2025 interview with Le Monde, Trump confidante and State Department senior advisor for Africa, Massad Boulos, rejected any suggestion Washington would criticise the Sahel’s military governments, as while “democracy is always appreciated…people are free to choose whatever system is appropriate for them.” The anti-imperialist struggle continues apace in Africa – and for now, revolutionaries are winning.

[…]

Via https://english.almayadeen.net/articles/analysis/collapsing-empire–us-bows-to-african-revolutionaries

Deploying Troops to US Cities Cost Half a Billion Dollars in 2025

National Guard troops walking scross the street | Illustration: Douliery Olivier/ZUMAPRESS/Newscom

Douliery Olivier/ZUMAPRESS/Newscom)

After threatening to invoke the Insurrection Act to put down sometime-violent protests in Minneapolis with military force, President Donald Trump appears to have backed off, standing-down the troops slated for deployment. That’s a win for domestic peace, reducing the chances of worse conflict on city streets than we’ve already seen over the past year. It’s also a boon for taxpayers, given the high price tag—a half-billion dollars to date—that comes with deploying soldiers to patrol American communities.

Military Occupation of American Cities

In response to vigorous resistance to the Trump administration’s often-brutal immigration enforcement, the federal government several times deployed National Guard and active-duty military personnel to American cities. In the name of suppressing crime (in the nation’s capital) and protecting federal personnel and property, the president sent or attempted to send troops to Democrat-led cities including Chicago, Los Angeles, Memphis, Portland, Oregon, and Washington, D.C. The deployments look as much like schemes to humiliate the president’s political opponents as they resemble enforcement of federal policy.

Judicial responses to the deployments have been mixed, though leaning toward deep skepticism. A federal judge ruled that use of the National Guard and Marines in Los Angeles violated the Posse Comitatus Act, which restricts domestic use of the military. The U.S. Supreme Court blocked military deployments to Chicago, also with reference to the limited permissible use of the military. Now, with tensions rising, the White House looks to be pausing its efforts to militarize immigration enforcement.

Given the conflict we’ve already seen related to immigration enforcement, including the shooting deaths of Renee Good and Alex Pretti by federal agents, that’s a relief to those of us hoping to avoid worse social unrest and to avert—or at least delay—what appears to be a looming national cataclysm. But at a time of rising federal deficits and debt and semi-serious attempts to slash government expenditures, stepping back from sending troops into the streets could also save money.

Deployments Come With a High Price Tag

“Since June 2025, the Administration has deployed National Guard personnel or active-duty Marine Corps personnel to six U.S. cities: Los Angeles, California; Washington, D.C.; Memphis, Tennessee; Portland, Oregon; Chicago, Illinois; and New Orleans, Louisiana,” the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) responded to a query from Sen. Jeff Merkley (D–Ore.). “The Administration has also kept 200 National Guard personnel mobilized in Texas after they left Chicago. CBO estimates that those deployments (excluding the one to New Orleans, which occurred at the end of the year) cost a total of approximately $496 million through the end of December 2025.”

The CBO analysis makes clear that calculating future costs is a bit speculative because of variables that are unknowable ahead of time. These include the size of potential troop deployments, duration of their stay, and expenses that might be greater or lesser depending on locations where troops could be sent. Also, legal challenges to the domestic use of the military might raise costs or lower them. That said, the CBO can look to costs incurred in 2025 and extrapolate to similar situations going forward.

The High Cost of Future Occupations

“The factors CBO used to estimate the costs of deployments in 2025 suggest that continuing the ongoing deployments at their size as of the end of 2025 would cost $93 million per month,” the report noted. “More generally, deploying 1,000 National Guard personnel to a U.S. city in 2026 would cost $18 million to $21 million per month, depending mainly on the city’s cost of living.”

To arrive at its figures, the CBO looked at the cost of transporting, feeding, and lodging troops while they’re deployed. In the case of National Guard troops the costs are particularly high because they are added to the federal payroll, while active-duty personnel are already being paid.

“When National Guard members are called to federal service, they are compensated at the same rate as personnel in the military’s active component,” the report explained. “Using DoD’s 2025 budget documentation, CBO estimates that the increase in military personnel costs associated with activating National Guard troops—that is, the average increase in costs when changing Guard personnel from nonmobilized to mobilized status—is approximately $95,000 per person per year, or $260 per person per day.”

Those costs aren’t just a matter of pay; they also reflect the expense of benefits for Guard personnel and their dependents—healthcare, in particular—with such costs put at $9,100 per person per year, or $25 per person per day. Mobilizations, as the CBO points out, typically last longer than actual deployments. Each day Guard troops spend on duty brings them closer to qualifying for Veterans Administration benefits including education and disability (if they’re injured while in uniform).

These costs add up. While the CBO puts the costs of new urban deployments between $18 million and $21 million per month in each city, maintaining the nearly 3,000 troops currently deployed to pricey Washington, D.C. comes in at $55 million a month.

Additional Costs to Life, Liberty, and Political Culture

Basically, maintaining a domestic security force to enforce locally unpopular policies and to intimidate political enemies is really expensive. It’s an expense that raises tensions in a country already simmering with partisan hatreds, in which people openly discuss “national divorce” and don’t debate whether America’s near-term political future will be violent, but just how violent.

[…]

Via https://reason.com/2026/02/04/deploying-troops-to-u-s-cities-cost-half-a-billion-dollars-in-2025/

Big Tech stocks plummet on record AI spending

Big Tech stocks plummet on record AI spending

RT

Skyrocketing AI infrastructure outlays have raised investor concerns over future returns and the potential for a bubble

US technology stocks tumbled sharply after Amazon, Microsoft, Google, and Meta announced plans to spend a combined $660 billion on artificial intelligence in 2026. Investors worried the companies’ capital expenditures could outpace the technology’s earnings potential.

Amazon, Google, and Microsoft have lost a combined $900 billion in market value since reporting quarterly results last week. The companies’ spending plans exceed the GDP of Israel and overshadow strong growth in the companies’ cloud businesses.

“AI bubble fears are settling back in,” Brent Thill, an analyst at Jefferies, told the Financial Times on Friday. “Investors are in a mini timeout around tech, and nothing the companies say fundamentally matters.”

Amazon shares fell 7.8% in premarket trading on Friday after the company said its 2026 capital spending would reach about $200 billion, $50 billion more than expected. The shares later stabilized. CEO Andy Jassy said the funds were needed to expand AI, robotics, chips, and satellite projects.

Alphabet said it plans to nearly double its capital expenditures next year, with much of the increase going to cloud and AI projects, putting pressure on its stock despite posting over $400 billion in revenue in 2025. Microsoft shares fell 18% after reporting large data center spending and disclosing that 45% of its $625 billion book of future cloud contracts is tied to OpenAI. Meta initially rose on AI-driven advertising growth but later fell amid wider tech weakness.

Apple, which has kept AI infrastructure spending low, gained 7.5% after reporting record quarterly revenue of $144 billion. Its capital expenditure fell 17% in the fourth quarter to $2.4 billion.

Markets were also unsettled after confirmation that OpenAI’s $100 billion investment and infrastructure deal with Nvidia did not proceed.

The spike in AI spending has raised concerns about a potential financial bubble. OpenAI has secured computing agreements with Nvidia, AMD, and Oracle worth over $1 trillion. Nvidia alone completed more than 100 AI-related venture deals in 2024. Analysts warn that much of the investment flows within a small group of closely linked companies, creating what they describe as circular financing that inflates market values beyond the industry’s actual profits.

According to a recent Price Waterhouse Cooper survey, most CEOs say their companies have not yet seen financial returns from AI, with only 12% reporting both higher revenue and lower costs.

[…]

Via https://www.rt.com/business/632111-big-tech-stocks-plummet-on/

Iran FM declares ‘good start’ as US–Iran talks conclude in Muscat

Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi speaks to Iranian media following the conclusion of Iran-US talks in Muscat, Oman, on February 6, 2026.

Press TV

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi says the new round of indirect nuclear talks with the United States in the Omani capital Muscat was a “good start” and can be continued.

“The decision on how to proceed with the negotiations will be made after consultations with the capitols,” he told IRIB following the conclusion of the Omani-mediated talks on Friday.

He added that regarding the continuation of the negotiations, “it seems that a consensus exists.”

He emphasized that the continuation of talks is contingent upon consultations in the capitals and a decision on how to proceed.

The top Iranian negotiator said the indirect negotiations began after hours of intensive consultations in a “positive atmosphere.”

During some six hours of talks, several indirect meetings and rounds of consultations were held and Omani Foreign Minister Sayyid Badr Al Busaidi played an “active” role in hosting and conveying the messages and viewpoints of both sides, said Araghchi.

“During these talks, [which took place] after a long period of interruption, Iran’s positions and concerns were fully conveyed and our interests, the rights of the Iranian people, and all matters that needed to be stated were conveyed in a very positive atmosphere, and the views of the other side were also heard,” he explained.

He noted that the timing and way of the next round of talks will be determined in subsequent consultations through the Omani foreign minister.

The sides agreed to once again begin a process of talks eight months after Israel’s war against Iran led to immense distrust and a significant challenge to negotiations, he added.

“We must first overcome this prevailing atmosphere of distrust, and only then can we design a framework for a new dialogue, one that can… secure the interests of the Iranian people,” Araghchi pointed out.

He said good discussions were held between the two sides, and it was agreed that the process will be continued.

Talks focus only on nuclear issue

“Our talks are focused solely on the nuclear issue, and we are not engaging with the Americans on any other subject,” the minister said.

The Iranian team emphasized that nuclear negotiations “must take place in a calm environment, free from tension and threats,” he added.

“We raised this point clearly today as well, and we expect it to be observed so that the continuation of the talks will be possible,” he added.

Araghchi led the Iranian negotiating team. He was aided by his deputies, Majid Takht-Ravanchi, Kazem Gharibabadi, and Hamid Qanbari, in addition to Foreign Ministry Spokesman Esmaeil Baghaei.

US Special Envoy Steve Witkoff led the American delegation, accompanied by President Donald Trump’s son-in-law and adviser Jared Kushner — and, notably, Adm. Brad Cooper, commander of US Central Command (CENTCOM). Cooper’s presence has drawn attention, as his participation had not been announced in advance and has fueled media speculation, particularly given that the Iranian delegation includes no military officials.

The Omani foreign minister was shuttling between the sides, with the talks being held indirectly as before.

In a post on X, the Omani foreign minister described the talks as “very serious.”

“It was useful to clarify both Iranian and American thinking and identify areas for possible progress. We aim to reconvene in due course, with the results to be considered carefully in Tehran and Washington,” he added.

Meanwhile, Iranian Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Esmaeil Baghaei said that the sides agreed to continue the talks.

“While explaining their viewpoints and demands, the sides agreed to decide on the next round of talks after consultations with the capitals,” he wrote on X.

Iran’s main demand in the Muscat talks is the effective and verifiable lifting of economic and financial sanctions, Iranian officials say. Tehran has repeatedly stressed that any agreement lacking tangible economic benefits would be of no practical value, making the timing and outcome of the negotiations especially important for Iran.

On the nuclear front, Iran insists on its legal right to enrich uranium on its own soil, describing the issue as a red line in the talks. From Tehran’s perspective, any potential technical measures can only be considered within a framework that recognizes this right, and any preconditions beyond it would be seen as a sign of bad faith by the other side.

Iran had held five rounds of talks on a replacement for the 2015 nuclear deal prior to the US-Israeli airstrikes on the country and its nuclear facilities in mid-June.

[…]

Via https://www.presstv.ir/Detail/2026/02/06/763611/Iran-Araghchi-US-good-beginning

Israeli airstrikes on Lebanon reach highest level since Nov. 2024 ceasefire

Flames and smoke rise from a building hit in an Israeli air attack in Ain Qana, southern Lebanon on February 2, 2026. (Photo by AP)

Press TV

The skies over southern Lebanon have seen a significant increase in Israeli aerial attacks over the past month, marking the most intense period of such activity since the last ceasefire agreement in November 2024.

The Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC), citing data from security company Atlas Assistance, reported that Israel has executed a “clear and dangerous” surge in air attacks on Lebanon, with its warplanes conducting more strikes in January than in any previous month since the ceasefire.

“We have seen a clear and dangerous surge in the number of Israeli attacks on Lebanon in the first month of the year,” stated Maureen Philippon, NRC’s country director in Lebanon.

Israeli warplanes conducted at least 50 air raids on Lebanon last month—approximately double the previous month’s count. The data only includes attacks by manned Israeli warplanes, excluding drone strikes and those occurring during ground incursions.

“These attacks and ongoing ground incursions render the ceasefire agreement little more than ink on paper,” noted an NRC official.

Reported attacks have affected numerous cities and villages in southern Lebanon and the Bekaa Valley, targeting private residences and densely populated neighborhoods.

Recent airstrikes on residential blocks in Qanarit and Kharayeb destroyed homes and displaced families.

The frequency of these raids has raised concerns among local populations and international observers about the potential for renewed all-out war and its humanitarian implications.

The continuous presence of warplanes has contributed to a climate of fear and insecurity, particularly among civilians near the border.

“Every time we hear a strike, panic takes over. We grab what we can and run, not knowing where it is safe,” said Sana, a resident of the Nabatiyeh district. “We can’t take this anymore; we live with the fear that we could be next.”

The NRC emphasized the impact of the aerial bombardment on communities already facing economic hardship and the lingering effects of past wars.

Israeli bombing undermines reconstruction efforts and leaves more families without homes this winter.

Philippon stated, “Aid agencies, including NRC, are still dealing with the aftermath of months of destructive conflict. We call on Israel’s allies to stop these attacks on civilian areas and villages.”

She noted that families and children are particularly affected, referencing a school in west Bekaa that had recently been repaired but was damaged again in a recent attack.

“This means yet another interruption in education for children,” she added.

Philippon called on Israel’s allies to do “everything they can to stop these attacks on civilian areas and villages”.

Under the terms of the November 2024 ceasefire, cross-border attacks were supposed to cease, and Israel was to withdraw troops that had invaded south Lebanon in October.

However, Israel has continued its near-daily attacks in the south and the Bekaa Valley, maintaining occupation at five points in southern Lebanon.

The Lebanese government says that Israel has committed thousands of breaches of the ceasefire agreement.

Hezbollah Secretary-General Sheikh Naim Qassem recently warned that a US-Israeli push to disarm the resistance in Lebanon is a calculated prelude to the annihilation of the Lebanese nation.

He emphasized that Israel is targeting all of Lebanon, not just specific areas or groups.

Sheikh Qassem lamented ongoing support from the US and other Western powers for Israel, while the Lebanese government pressures Hezbollah to comply with Israel’s demands.

[…]

Via https://www.presstv.ir/Detail/2026/02/05/763564/Lebanon-Israel-NRC-Maureen-Philippon