🇮🇱 Dad, papa, Jew, Zionist, techie, news junkie

Joined December 2008
6 Photos and videos
Brian Stein retweeted
You’re darn tootin’, as the kids say, that Israel needs to make sure its nuclear deterrent is up to spec. Is that racist? It’s funny, because throughout the Arab and Muslim world, Israel’s nuclear deterrent never made anyone fear it might actually use a nuke in a fit of ideological pique. No one‘s fundamental policies changed when they believed Israel had developed nukes. Because everyone understands in the region that it’s actually a deterrent, and nothing more. Whereas Iran’s nuclear program caused a great shifting of Arab loyalties and fears, a reordering of regional power dynamics. Because no one in the region is ever really sure they won’t use it. Mehdi wants you to believe this difference reflects Western racism. Or something. Easier to shout “racism” than to deal with the simple truth — that the Iranian regime is an imperialist martyrdom cult that its own neighbors think might actually use a nuke. Mehdi doesn’t actually think I’m racist. It’s just the only cheap shot he has left to cover for the butchers of Syria and demolishers of Yemen, for mass-murdering religious fanatics who have driven their own country into the ground in pursuit of nukes that maybe, just maybe, it is perfectly capable of using offensively.
This is Israeli columnist for Bari Weiss’s Free Press is calling for Israel to “Dust off the nukes. Maybe test one.” Insane, unhinged, extremist stuff from a supposedly centrist publication run by a woman now in command of CBS News and soon CNN too.
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Brian Stein retweeted
Europeans and American patriots! Tomorrow, the courts of my country, France, may decide to send me to prison for daring to say on television that “the main danger to women in France is Black African and Arab immigrant men.” Meanwhile, my own attacker, a Tunisian migrant, is still at large. I need your help to generate media pressure and hope to be acquitted. They cannot silence the truth! Thank you for your support 💪🏻🇫🇷
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Brian Stein retweeted
Jun 16
This guy is running a campaign on X to get revenge for Austin Franco after he said, "I don't work for Jews." He's not only doxxing the person who offered him a job, but is now targeting his parents' business as well. This should not be allowed. @nikitabier @X @elonmusk
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Brian Stein retweeted
He was offered a job and turned it down because he was “not interested in working for a Jew.” Replace the word “Jew” with any other religious or racial group, and the outrage would be immediate and universal. Antisemitism has become dangerously normalized on some of our most elite campuses and institutions. What should be condemned without hesitation is too often excused, ignored, or rationalized. If you think this isn’t your fight because you’re not Jewish, think again. Hate never stops with one group. It may begin with the Jews, but history has shown that it never ends there. nypost.com/2026/06/13/us-new…
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Brian Stein retweeted
When a college student (Austin Franco) at an ivy league university (@Cornell) can write to a potential employer, "I'm not interested in working for a Jew," and this employer is then viciously attacked online for sharing Franco's Jew hatred as an example of antisemitism, we're well past the tipping point of social acceptance of antisemitism in the U.S. If you ever wondered what you would have done in 1933 Berlin, you're doing it now.
Meet Austin Franco. He’s a rising junior at Cornell’s School of Industrial and Labor Relations who reportedly turned down an internship interview with a real estate startup because he was “Not interested in working for a jew.”
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Brian Stein retweeted
This video by @rehoov is the most important ever. Here’s why: We’ve been inundated by propagandists shouting Nakba Nakba Nakba. The Islamic world has manufactured the term to try invert the Holocaust the Jews suffered and claim one of their own. But the Palestinians never had Nakba. The real Nakba was that of the Jews of the Middle East. And the UN, Europe and entire Arab Muslim world have tried everything possible to bury this truth for nearly 80 years. Before, during and after the 1948 war of independence, Israel absorbed nearly one million people who were forced out of Arab lands with nothing. They were given no right of return. No compensation. The world simply forgot and discarded them. But Israel didn’t. We took them in and gave them everything. We had very little, but every Israeli citizen gathered whatever they could to help. We had no special UN agency set up for them. No support. Nobody cared. We did. Today, there are no Jewish refugees. We did it on our own. No UN. No international community. Yet there are 5.5 million Palestinian refugees today because the UN and Arab world intentionally chose to keep them as eternal refugees and use them as weapons against Israel. Please watch and share this most incredible documentary. The longer full version is available on YouTube.
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Brian Stein retweeted
Jun 13
Eli Sharabi, ex rehén en Gaza, le dice la verdad en la cara a la ONU: "NADIE en Gaza me ayudó. Me trataron peor que a un animal. Los civiles nos vieron sufrir y vitorearon a nuestros secuestradores." Comparte esto. Los medios no lo harán.
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Brian Stein retweeted
It Was Supposed to Be History I'm a Polish filmmaker living in London. I wasn't raised to care about antisemitism. Quite the opposite. Like many Poles of my generation, I grew up with a version of history that focused heavily on Polish suffering during the Second World War. I visited Auschwitz as a teenager, yet somehow left without truly understanding the scale of what had happened to Europe's Jews. That changed when I was 19 and worked on Schindler's List. For the first time, I was confronted with parts of history that had been missing from my education. Later, living in Paris and spending time in New York, I met Jewish people whose understanding of Poland, Europe and history was very different from my own. Some conversations were uncomfortable. A few were life-changing. The more I learned, the more I realised that antisemitism didn't disappear after the Holocaust. It adapted. Today it often arrives dressed as political activism, conspiracy theories, selective outrage, historical revisionism, or simply a double standard applied to the world's only Jewish state. I am not Jewish. I have no family connection to Israel. What I do have is a deep distrust of propaganda, mob thinking, and people who demand that history be simplified into slogans. My work on antisemitism began with a simple realisation: if I could be misled about history, so could millions of others. That is why I make films, conduct interviews, and challenge narratives. Not because I have all the answers. Because I spent too many years believing things that weren't true.
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Brian Stein retweeted
🇺🇸🇮🇱 Stephen A. Smith: "I love Israel. The folks in Israel are great people, great basketball fans. One day I am going to make it there. Everybody I have met from Israel is wonderful. They are going through a lot. People in America have love for you all"

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Brian Stein retweeted
Even Arab leaders admit it. Everyone is sharing the Bill Clinton clip where he describes how Yasser Arafat rejected a generous peace offer at Camp David that would have given the Palestinians a state on 96 percent of the West Bank, land swaps, and a capital in East Jerusalem. Clinton says Arafat lied to him and that the Palestinian leadership never actually wanted a two-state solution. They wanted to destroy Israel. It’s a video often shared by people like @VividProwess, and it’s an important one for people to see. Of course, critics immediately dismiss it. They claim Clinton is biased or he’s pro-Israel. They’ll tell you that you cannot trust the American perspective. Ok, so let us set that aside. Now watch this. In this powerful interview, former Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, a major Arab leader who was directly involved in negotiations, says exactly the same thing from the Arab side. He talks about the Mena House Conference in Cairo as well as the Camp David negotiations of 1978. All failed because of the Palestinians repeatedly rejecting any offer. The Oslo accords were signed but because Hamas and the Palestinian Islamic Jihad were not involved, they derailed the accords and any chance for peace by initiating 4 years of terrorist suicide attacks in Israel. Then came the second Camp David negotiations in 2000 which Arafat agreed to, then rejected and instead initiated the Second Intifada. Mubarak explains how the Palestinians refused to even participate in the Mena House conference of 1977. He describes repeated opportunities they were given, including a detailed document that called for Israeli withdrawal from the Samaria, Judea and Gaza, security arrangements during a transitional period, and other major concessions. The Israelis were willing to negotiate on difficult issues like who would control security. The Palestinians, according to Mubarak, kept saying no and wasting chance after chance. He speaks with clear frustration about how for decades the Palestinian side has rejected peace initiatives and realistic compromises. The video further shows footage from the PLO representative in 1977, as well as old footage of Egyptian president Sadat who was involved in the Mena House and first Camp David negotiations of 1978. This perhaps is far more impactful than Clinton’s account because it is not a Western or Israeli voice. It is prominent Arab leaders who lived the negotiations, who represented the broader Arab world, and who had zero incentive to defend Israel. When leaders from both sides of the table describe the same pattern of Palestinian rejectionism and violence, it becomes much harder to dismiss as bias. The pattern is clear across decades and across different voices… generous offers, repeated refusals, and continued demands for everything while giving nothing in return. This is not ancient history. It is the core reason the conflict continues today. If you value the truth, please share.
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by Jonathan Fisher, MD, FACC I am a Jewish physician, and I have never written about that here. I am going to, because of a surgeon I have never met. Emmanuel Moss, chief of cardiac surgery at Montreal’s Jewish General Hospital, is leaving for Atlanta in September.He is one of the few surgeons in Canada routinely performing robotic mitral valve and coronary bypass procedures. People close to him say the deciding factor was not Quebec’s strained healthcare system, which had been strained for years, but a growing sense that he was no longer safe in the city as a Jew. The hospital he is leaving opened in 1934 with the first official non-discrimination policy of any hospital in Canada. It was founded in response to an era when many Jewish physicians faced discrimination in medical training and hospital appointments. The historical echo is difficult to miss. When a clinician leaves because of who they are, a health system does not lose a statistic. It loses a specific person who held specific knowledge, relationships, judgment, and expertise developed over decades. A 2024 survey of Canadian Jewish physicians found that reported antisemitism in hospitals rose from near zero before October 2023 to 39 percent after, and that nearly a third of respondents were considering leaving the country. The association’s chair warned that the consequences could include the loss of hundreds of physicians at a time when the healthcare system can least afford it. That mechanism is not unique to Jews. It is what happens whenever people feel unsafe because of their identity. Experts leave. Communities become poorer in ways that are difficult to measure. Eventually, patients and their families pay the price. I am writing this as a Jewish physician because this story landed personally. I am writing it as a physician leader because I have spent decades thinking about what allows caring people to do their best work, and what it costs when they cannot. When any clinician feels unsafe because of who they are, something is lost long before they decide to leave.This time, the story touched my own community. That does not make it less relevant to anyone else. It does make it harder for me to stay silent.
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Brian Stein retweeted
The most important rabbi at Yeshiva University never gets political. Today he broke that rule urging thousands of his students to register and vote @RepEspaillat. That’s how important this election is. Register now. Vote June 23rd. Shabbat Shalom!

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Brian Stein retweeted
Let's make him famous! RT a billion times! @realDonaldTrump @POTUS @DAGToddBlanche @ASGWoodward
New Haven, CT: a man approached three Orthodox Jewish men standing at the corner of Crown and Temple Streets, shouted, “Get out of my city,” “Go back to where you belong,” and “baby killers,” before slapping the kippah off one of the men’s heads in an apparent antisemitic act of harassment and intimidation. Recognize this monster? DM us.
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Brian Stein retweeted
On This Day — June 3, 1948 Over half a million Arabs poured into Mandate Palestine in just 12 years to take advantage of the economic opportunities created by Jewish development — the only place in the entire Middle East with a growing Arab middle class. Robert F. Kennedy, then only 22, made that striking observation in his reporting from British Mandate Palestine in April 1948 (just weeks before Israel’s independence). His dispatch was published this day in the Boston Post. RFK wrote: “The Jews point with pride to the fact that over 500,000 Arabs ... came into Palestine to take advantage of living conditions existing in no other Arab state. This is the only country in the Near and Middle East where an Arab middle class is in existence.” He described how the Jews had transformed arid desert into flourishing orange groves through relentless labor and ingenuity. Tel Aviv had grown from a small village into a modern metropolis of over 200,000 in a single generation. RFK noted that the Jews had already built a thriving community with its own institutions, language, and national characteristics — and were determined to reclaim their ancient homeland “as of right and not on sufferance.” A young Bobby Kennedy saw the truth clearly: a people returning home, rebuilding their land with their own hands, and refusing to live as guests in their own country.
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Brian Stein retweeted
Slightly different
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Brian Stein retweeted
🇺🇸 NYC, May 31, 2026: A 23 year old Jewish woman sent CAM footage of her assault on a subway train. Around 2:15 PM, a woman told her she could “smell the babies” she had eaten and yelled that “Jews eat babies” before choking her, throwing her to the ground, and beating her.
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Brian Stein retweeted
What an incredible display of unity, love, and resilience as tens of thousands of New Yorkers turned out for the Israel Day Parade in NYC! Today, we boycotted antisemitism and sent a powerful message: New York will always stand with its Jewish community, and New Yorkers will always stand with Israel. 🇺🇸🇮🇱 עם ישראל חי 🇺🇸🇮🇱
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Brian Stein retweeted
Can’t stop laughing 😂😂😂

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Brian Stein retweeted
For over two years, the UN laundered Hamas propaganda, manufactured fake aid statistics, and called it "authoritative data." Today, the curtain comes down. The systematic information manipulation machine operating under the UN is now exposed. See the evidence for yourself: 👇 govextra.gov.il/mda/un-agenc…
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Brian Stein retweeted
Visited the Rebbe’s Ohel last night to pray for my family, for the people of New York City, and for a safe, joyful, and successful parade today. See you there!
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