Not after a ceasefire. Not after disarmament. Not after peace talks. In the middle of a war. Just months after the most gruesome attempted genocide since the Holocaust—October 7, 2023—when Jewish men and women were raped, children were burned and orphaned, hostages were taken and families were slaughtered in their homes by Hamas.
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A pro-Palestinian demonstrator in New York City holds a sign calling for armed resistance, during a rally opposing Israeli military action
(Photo: Angela Weiss / AFP)
The world’s response? Recognition for the perpetrators. This is not diplomacy. This is diplomatic antisemitism. It is the reward of murder with legitimacy. The institutionalization of Jew-hatred under the banner of human rights. These decisions came without any requirement for Hamas to disarm, for the Palestinian Authority to hold elections or for any fundamental democratic reforms.
In each of these countries, a growing Muslim and pro-Palestinian demographic is reshaping the political landscape—influencing elections, guiding university policy and steering diplomatic decisions. Politicians now fear alienating a vocal base if they refuse to endorse Palestinian recognition. And the media has followed suit, adopting pre-approved narratives that assume the legitimacy of a Palestinian state, while ignoring the total absence of infrastructure, unity, governance or peace-seeking intent. The result is a coordinated illusion: a state invented in headlines, funded by appeasement and baptized in Jewish blood.
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A protester in Australia holds a sign equating Zionism with Nazism during a pro-Palestinian demonstration against Israel
Let’s be clear: there is no Palestinian state. Not in law. Not in practice. Not in reality. What exists are two governments: in Gaza, a genocidal terrorist regime and death cult—Hamas—that initiated the attempted genocide that sparked this war and in the West Bank, an unelected kleptocratic dictatorship—the Palestinian Authority—that hasn’t held an election since 2005, cannot sustain itself, survives on foreign aid and pays salaries to convicted terrorists without investing in infrastructure or civil services.
There is no constitution other than anti-Zionism. No control of borders or airspace. No rule of law. No functioning economy or currency. They don’t even pretend to seek peace or coexistence. There is only chaos and corruption. What they have are hashtags, martyr posters and Western diplomats desperate to appease angry mobs in their own capitals. They chant “From the river to the sea.” And for that, they are offered a flag at the United Nations. It’s not about statehood. It’s about surrender.
Across college campuses in the United States, Canada, the UK and Europe, antisemitism has not only returned—it has been institutionalized. What began as protests in the wake of the October 7 attacks rapidly metastasized into sprawling encampments, mob takeovers of student centers and the normalization of open hatred. Jewish students have been barricaded in libraries, spat on in cafeterias, and silenced in classrooms. They have had to remove their Stars of David, hide their identities and in many cases leave campus for their own safety. But this wave of hatred is not only coming from the usual sources—it is being carried by their classmates, their professors, their deans.
This is not a fringe movement. It is the self-declared justice crusade of an entire generation—Jewish and non-Jewish students alike—who have been radicalized into believing that the eradication of the Jewish state is a moral obligation. They think they are standing up for justice, for liberation, for the oppressed. In truth, they are the conscripts of a century-old ideological war—soldiers of a death cult, pawns in the hands of Islamist movements and Western radicals who have repackaged ancient Jew-hatred as post-colonial virtue. They chant slogans forged by Hamas propagandists. They raise banners designed by terror sympathizers. They demand the erasure of the one Jewish homeland while parroting the same blood libels their grandparents’ generation fought to bury.
We are trapped in a hundred-year cycle. The Jewish people—history’s smallest, most demonized minority—are again being cast as the world’s source of evil. These students, many of whom could not place Gaza on a map, now march in outrage manufactured for them. They were not simply misled. They were programmed. TikTok lied to them. Instagram radicalized them. Professors flattered them. Celebrities rewarded them. And the media sanctified them—publishing doctored photos of children who were not starving, reciting Hamas talking points as fact and portraying every Israeli attempt to survive as aggression.
The result is not protest. It is a genocide in progress. It is the intellectual collapse of Western academia. It is a generation so ignorant of history, so malleable in its outrage, that it cannot see that it has become the very force it claims to resist. If this generation is taught that Jewish blood is cheap, then they will inherit a society where Jewish existence is expendable.
Twenty-four Jewish Democratic members of Congress issued a rare rebuke after Carlson’s Holocaust denial interview. ADL CEO Jonathan Greenblatt issued a warning — one that came too late, as always. His legacy is not one of protection, but performance. The louder antisemitism grows, the less relevant he becomes. The Jewish people deserve leaders who don’t speak only when it’s safe.
From campus to Congress, from TikTok to Bella Hadid to Tucker, from left to right, the Jew is once again the villain of history. The scapegoat. The Shylock. The greedy banker. The hook-nosed schemer. The troll beneath the system. The rat beneath the floorboards. It doesn’t matter if you’re dark or light, tall or small, religious or secular, Brooklyn-born or Ethiopian, Tel Aviv-raised or Paris-educated. Man, woman, or something in between, it makes no difference. You are “The Jew.” And the Jew must be punished.
We are not being disagreed with. We are being dehumanized. We are being turned into a concept — a symbol — an abstraction of evil. The same way the Nazis turned us into lice, into viruses, into parasites — today’s “justice movement” turns us into colonizers, conspirators and war criminals by birthright. This is not criticism. This is not a protest. This is preparation. The slogans, the memes, the blood libels — they are all tools. They are building a world where our murder can be justified, where our disappearance can be rebranded as liberation, where genocide against us can be marketed as moral.
So when the UN votes to recognize a Palestinian state—a state that doesn’t exist—what they are recognizing is not peace. They are recognizing the mob. They are telling Jewish people everywhere: Your children’s safety is secondary. Your death doesn’t matter. Your right to defend yourselves is temporary—and always punishable. They are telling the world: Terrorism works—barbarism pays. If you chant loud enough, riot long enough, the diplomats will bow.
This is the same sickness that haunted 1948, 1967 and 1973: Every time the Jews win militarily, they are forced to lose diplomatically. But this time is worse. Because this time, we didn’t start the war. This time, they invaded our homes. Filmed our dead. Boasted of rape. And the world’s answer was: Give them a state.
Never again was a warning, not a memory. This is not a call for vengeance. It is a call for clarity. You cannot make peace with a people who won’t recognize your right to exist. You cannot give a flag to a government with two heads—both of which want you dead. You cannot reward a culture of martyrdom with diplomatic legitimacy. And you cannot pretend this is about helping Palestinians. If it were, the world would demand democracy in Ramallah, disarmament in Gaza and human rights in Jenin. They would fund peace, not incitement.
But they don’t. Because this was never about Palestine, it was always about the Jews. Break the spiral. Do not recognize a lie. Do not fund your funeral. Do not let the chant—“From the river to the sea”—echo in the halls of diplomacy. It starts with a vote. Then a slogan. Then a billboard. Then a boycott. Then a bullet. We’ve seen this film before. And we will not play the victim again.