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Giuliani Compares Biden to ‘Kay Corleone’ as Impeachment Drama Unfolds

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“He says, ‘I don’t know my own family’s business’ — some of it sounds like Kay Corleone,” Giuliani continued, a reference to willful ignorance. “He’d have to be a fool.” Photo Credit: Pinterest

“It’s like a poor imitation of The Godfather,” former New York City mayor and personal attorney for President Donald Trump Rudy Giuliani told Fox News recently.

He was referring to former vice president and current Democratic candidate Joe Biden’s insistence that he knew nothing of his son Hunter’s business dealings in Ukraine.

By Andy B. Mayfair

And the fur is still flying.

“He says, ‘I don’t know my own family’s business’ — some of it sounds like Kay Corleone,” Giuliani continued, a reference to willful ignorance. “He’d have to be a fool.”

For his part, Biden managed to get his foot out of his mouth long enough to tell CNN that he felt “embarrassed” for Republican Senator Lindsey Graham, who serves as chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee and wants to investigate the Bidens. “Lindsey is about to go down in a way that I think he’s going to regret his whole life.”

Like a pebble tossed into a pond, the fracas is inevitably causing ripples. “Scrutiny is increasing on the president’s personal attorney, as his indicted former associate Lev Parnas begins to tease information involving the former New York Mayor,” MSNBC reported yesterday. “Meanwhile, Giuliani is asking Sen. Lindsey Graham to investigate Bill Taylor for declining to give visas to people he says are witnesses to a grand conspiracy he’s uncovered.”

Politics being what it is in 2019, trust is a rare commodity, even between the president and his personal attorney. Speaking to Fox News once again, Giuliani sought to protect himself from even his client. “You can assume that I talk to him early and often,” he stated, adding that the two have a “very, very good relationship.”

Still, the former prosecutor knew enough to protect his back. “I’ve seen things written like (Trump) is going to throw me under the bus. When they say that, I say he isn’t, but I have insurance. This is ridiculous. We are very good friends. He knows what I did was in order to defend him, not to dig up dirt on [former Vice President Joe] Biden.”

Soon after, Giuliani “took to Twitter to elaborate on his statement, claiming the “insurance” comment he made was both “sarcastic” and “relates to the files in my safe about the Biden Family’s 4 decade monetizing of his office,” reported slate.com. “The president’s lawyer added that if he were to “disappear’ then the files “will appear immediately.”

The former mayor elaborated during a conversation on “America’s News HQ” with host Ed Henry, pointing out that the “case has been really simple from the day that Joe Biden confessed to committing bribery in 2018. Although, he said precisely what was attributed to President Trump a year and a half later… Basically, they’ll prove that he committed bribery.”

Coney Island Pol Tried to Swindle $100K from State Funds for Fake Think Tank

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Assemblywoman Mathylde Frontus (D-Brooklyn) tried to land $100K from New York State coffers for the Southern Brooklyn Community Think Tank, which she promised to set up days after her November 2018 election to “change the face of politics” in the area. Photo Credit: nyassembly.gov

Assemblywoman Mathylde Frontus (D-Brooklyn) tried to land $100K from New York State coffers for the Southern Brooklyn Community Think Tank, which she promised to set up days after her November 2018 election to “change the face of politics” in the area, Fox News reported. 

By: Justin Credible 

Mathylde Frontus is a member of the New York State Assembly, representing the 46th district since 2019. The 46th district encompasses portions of southern Brooklyn, including Coney Island and Brighton Beach.  

Frontus ironically was voted in her district after the preceding Assemblywoman of the same district 46 resigned over pure corruption. 

In 2018, Assembly member Pamela Harris resigned ahead of indictments stemming from stolen Hurricane Sandy funds . 

Pamela Harris was indicted in January 2018 following allegations she pocketed $25,000 in federal funds by falsely claiming the storm chased her from her Coney Island home. Authorities said the Brooklyn Democrat committed other frauds, including cheating the New York City Council out of discretionary funds meant for nonprofits, NY 1 reported. 

Harris   pleaded guilty to two counts of wire fraud, one count of making false statements to the Federal Emergency Management Administration (FEMA), and one count of witness tampering, NY 1 reported. 

 She was later was sentenced to six months in jail followed by three years of supervised release, 400 hours of community service, and restitution of $45,600 to the City of New York for the money stolen from Coney Island Generation Gap and $24,800 to the U.S. government for the money stolen from FEMA, Brooklyn Eagle reported.

Frontus won the Democratic primary over Ethan Lustig-Elgrably by only 51 votes. In the general election, Frontus defeated Republican Steven Saperstein with 56% of the vote. 

Frontus said she couldn’t understand all the fuss over her failed political-pork request. “It’s not an entity, it’s just a name,” said Frontus, who previously founded two Coney Island-based social services nonprofits. “It’s not something real”, N.Y Post reported. 

However,  she never filed paperwork with state or federal authorities to establish the group — despite asking Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie for the funding, which he refused, according to Fox News. 

“How do you ask for $100,000 in funding for a group that doesn’t exist and think it’s OK?” said one Brooklyn legislator. “This request reeks of corruption and raises many legal and ethical questions.”

“Elected officials should not [try to] direct public money to groups they are affiliated with because it creates an appearance of favoritism,” Alex Camarda, senior policy advisor for the good government group Reinvent Albany told Fox News. 

Frontus’ Republican opponent Steve Saperstein wanted to take a page from HBO’s “Game of Thrones” by forcing disgraced lawmakers convicted of corruption to be paraded in handcuffs through their home districts, TJV previously reported

Convicted statewide politicians would be subject to the same walk of shame near the Capitol in Albany, according to Steve Saperstein.

Did WeWork’s Adam Neumann Help Jared Kushner Craft Middle East Peace Plan?

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Former WeWork CEO Adam Neumann and his wife, Rebekah, are reportedly in search of a luxury apartment in the Big Apple’s Upper East Side. Photo Credit: Wikipedia.org

According to a recent Vanity Fair bombshell report, it appears that President Trump’s son-in-law and chief advisor, Jared Kushner had some hands on assistance in crafting the enigmatic plan for the Middle East peace. The peace plan, which ostensibly focuses on having the Israelis and the Palestinians reach a permanent accord for long range serenity between the warring factions has not been rolled out, as of yet.

By: Carol Icksley

The delay is due, is no small part, to the fact that no new government in Israel has been cobbled together after two elections within the span of a year. A third election is in the works as longtime Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu faces criminal charges in a recently handed down indictment from Israel’s attorney general.

Vanity Fair has reported that the person who has purportedly been working with Kushner is none other than former WeWork CEO Adam Neumann. Earlier this year, Neumann was forced out of the company he built up that was valued by investors at $47 million. He left with a $1.7 billion golden parachute after WeWork faced bankruptcy. Vanity Fair reported that sources told the reporter that Neumann’s “egomaniacal glamour and millennial mysticism” led the former CEO to believe that he could solve “the world’s thorniest problems,” such as the protracted hostilities between Israel and the Palestinians.

In related matters, new executives and a hopeful, just-released five-year plan are designed to put smiles on the faces of those who have invested in WeWork.

Top management at the work-share company said they expect the firm to begin turning a profit in 2023, according to an insider report.

Newly named leaders include Maurice Levy, the one-time chief executive and chairman of Publicis Groupe SA, who takes over in the role of interim chief marketing and communications officer. A pair of execs from SoftBank Group Corp. — Ralf Wenzel and Mike Bucy come aboard as chief product officer and chief transformation officer, respectively.

“Marcelo Claure, the executive chairman, told employees that the current pair of co-chief executive officers, Artie Minson and Sebastian Gunningham, will stay on,” Crain’s New York Business reported. “In an apparent acknowledgment of the all-male group of leaders, Claure reiterated that the company would take diversity into account and add a female board member in the future. A spokeswoman for WeWork parent We Co. declined to comment.”

The company has shed management over the past several months, as its IPO became the butt of jokes. “The New York-based company received a rescue package from SoftBank, which will get a majority stake, and is in the process of cutting 2,400 jobs globally,” Crain’s added.

The WeWork story has proven a slow-motion train wreck that verges on low comedy. “The rise and catastrophic downfall of WeWork founder and former CEO Adam Neumann has been chronicled in gleeful detail across the international financial press in the wake of his company’s ill-fated attempt at a public offering — which resulted in disastrous revelations about the company’s mismanagement, its devaluation and, ultimately, Neumann’s resignation,” according to haaretz.com.

“But a new Vanity Fair article by Gabriel Sherman, titled “Inside the Fall of WeWork,” asserts that Neumann’s “millennial entitlement gone insane” and guru-like “egomaniacal glamour” extended beyond the business world and into the world of Middle East diplomacy,” the piece continued.

The company’s decline has even become grist for the mill of desperate presidential hopefuls. Sen. Elizabeth Warren “has blasted Adam Neumann’s $1.7 billion golden parachute, criticizing the WeWork cofounder and former CEO’s lavish leaving package as the troubled coworking startup prepares to slash its global headcount by about a fifth,” reported businessinsider.com. “WeWork is laying off 2,400 employees — while its founder walks away with a massive $1.7 billion golden parachute,” the Democratic presidential candidate tweeted on Friday. “This is another example of a rigged and corrupt system.”

NYPL Bans Cell Phones at JD Salinger Exhibit; Rare Artifacts on Display

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All cell phones will be banned at this exhibit so nobody can capture any pictures of these rarely seen JD Salinger artifacts. Photo Credit: NYPL

An exhibit, titled “JD Salinger,” is running through January 19th at the historic Fifth Avenue branch of the New York Public Library in Manhattan. The iconic writer died in 2010 and avoided publicity and media most of his life, A.P reported. 

By: Harvey Wassenstein 

The N.Y Post reported, all cell phones will be banned at this exhibit so nobody can capture any pictures of these rarely seen Salinger artifacts.

Library workers are stationed outside the gallery where more than 200 of Salinger’s artifacts are on display, telling patrons they have to check their coats and bags — and tuck their phones inside.

 His literary estate approved new print editions for the first time in decades of the four books he allowed to come out in his lifetime — “The Catcher in the Rye,” ″Franny and Zooey,” ″Nine Stories” and “Raise High the Roof Beam, Carpenters and Seymour: An Introduction.” And for the first time ever, the literary estate authorized e-book editions.

Visitors can se an actual manuscript of “Catcher In The Rye”. 

Salinger’s estate is overseen in part by his son, Matt Salinger, who has also said that readers will, at some point, see the books his father worked on after he stopped publishing in the 1960s. In announcing the exhibit last week, the younger Salinger cited the public’s lasting curiosity, A.P reported.

“When my father’s longtime publisher, Little, Brown and Co., first approached me with plans for his centennial year, my immediate reaction was that he would not like the attention,” Matt Salinger wrote. “He was a famously private man who shared his work with millions, but his life and nonpublished thoughts with less than a handful of people, including me. But I’ve learned that while he may have only fathered two children there are a great, great many readers out there who have their own rather profound relationships with him, through his work, and who have long wanted an opportunity to get to know him better.”

Salinger published several short stories in Story magazine in the early 1940s before serving in World War II. In 1948, his critically acclaimed story “A Perfect Day for Bananafish” appeared in The New Yorker, which became home to much of his later work.

The Catcher in the Rye was published in 1951 and became an immediate popular success. Salinger’s depiction of adolescent alienation and loss of innocence in the protagonist Holden Caulfield was influential, especially among adolescent readers. The novel was widely read and controversial. 

In the 1970s, several U.S. high school teachers who assigned the book were fired or forced to resign. A 1979 study of censorship noted that The Catcher in the Rye “had the dubious distinction of being at once the most frequently censored book across the nation and the second-most frequently taught novel in public high schools”  The book remains widely read; in 2004, the novel was selling about 250,000 copies per year, “with total worldwide sales over 10 million copies, Washington Post explained.

 

Thousands of Black People Are Still Slaves. So, Why Haven’t You Heard About Them?

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Louis Farrakhan, the 85-year-old leader of the black supremacist group, was condemned by the US Senate in 1984 after he praised Nazi leader Adolf Hitler and derided Judaism as a gutter religion. Photo Credit: Facebook

Every day across the African continent, black men, women, and children are captured, bought, and sold into slavery with the Western world paying scant attention. Human rights groups have marched and battled against abuses noticeably less cruel and evil than human bondage, yet no major organization has attempted to free today’s black slaves, much less taken meaningful steps to raise awareness about their plight.

For instance, in Mauritania, although slavery has been legally banned five times since 1961, it nevertheless persists with tens of thousands of blacks continuing to be held in bondage. While it is forbidden in the Qur’an for Muslims to enslave fellow Muslims, in Mauritania, racism trumps religious doctrine — as it did in the West — as Arab and Berber Muslims enslave African Muslims.

Twenty-five years ago, Mohamed Athié, a political refugee from Mauritania, and I broke the story of a modern-day black slave trade in The New York Times. Our nascent American Anti-Slavery Group (AASG) mobilized the public, and piqued media interest. In Sudan, tens of thousands of African women and children from mostly Christian villages were being enslaved during the jihad raids of the Second Sudanese Civil War.

Americans heard stories of abduction, rape, beatings, forced conversions, and genital mutilation. Between 1995 and 2011, Christian Solidarity International, a grassroots human rights group, liberated more than 100,000 of these slaves in European- and American-funded slave buy-backs.

President George W. Bush, moved by the plight of the slaves, helped the black south split off and eventually form South Sudan, the world’s newest nation, in 2011. It was estimated then that as many as 35,000 blacks remained enslaved in the north. Nobody knows how many are there today.

The AASG, which led abolitionist campaigns from 1995 to 2005, ceased its activist work when South Sudan won its freedom. But today, the enslavement of black Africans has spread as a result of the growth of violent Islamist movements and anti-black racism. The need for human rights groups’ intervention and efforts has never been greater.

Americans first heard about Islamist slave raids in Nigeria when Michelle Obama made it a cause célèbre with her “#BringBackOurGirls” hashtag, but interest quickly faded, and Boko Haram continued to kidnap hundreds of Christian girls into jihad slavery. So cruel are the events of their captivity that some girls prefer death as suicide bombers to the life of a slave. Today, Fulani Muslim herdsmen raid Christian villages, massacring their inhabitants. President Muhammadu Buhari, a Muslim, has done relatively little to stop the assaults, even in the face of demands for action from the White House.

In Algeria, sub-Saharan Africans fleeing violence and poverty are enslaved by Algerian Arabs as they attempt to cross the Mediterranean into Europe. According to the Global Slavery Index (GSI), 106,000 black Africans are estimated to be enslaved in Algeria. Migrant women and children of both sexes risk being forced into sexual slavery, while men perform unskilled labor.

Black Africans hoping for a better life in Europe also travel to Libya, where they are caught and trafficked across the Mediterranean, often to Italy. The auction of a black man for $400 was filmed by CNN. The GSI estimates as many as 48,000 migrants are enslaved in Libya, with survivors reporting torture and sexual slavery.

Two forces hinder efforts toward freeing these slaves. First, Louis Farrakhan, who wields outsize influence in America’s black community, focuses his efforts on conversion of blacks to Islam. Thus the fact that Arab Muslims are enslaving Christian and Muslim blacks is more than inconvenient for this goal and his influence, and is easier ignored. In the 1990s, Farrakhan dismissed reports of modern-day black slavery as a “Jewish conspiracy,” intimidated African Americans from acting, and ignored evidence provided in a Pulitzer Prize-nominated news investigation that was conducted at his behest.

The second problem stems from Western rights organizations’ obsession with perceived Western crimes, which logically requires them to ignore or marginalize victims of non-Western abuses. Compare the West’s response to the crime of apartheid in South Africa and its lack of concern to end the Arab trade in African slaves. The human rights establishment seems to be moved less by human suffering than by its need to be seen as “the good whites.” Such narcissism abandons those most in need of Western concern.

These remain the challenges to those whose hearts respond to the cries of humans in bondage. They were overcome 20 years ago with the liberation of Sudan’s slaves. They can be again. Human bondage is a moral outrage. All decent people should see its victims as their own brothers, sisters, and children, and act to rescue them. It is time for human rights groups to focus on freeing Africa’s slaves. (thefederalist.com)

Charles Jacobs is President of the American Anti-Slavery Group

 

After Much Speculation, Bloomberg Officially Enters 2020 Presidential Race

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A new poll gives an indication of just how well Michael Bloomberg might do in a presidential race against Donald Trump. Photo Credit: Al Drago/Getty Images

On Sunday, former New York City mayor Michael Bloomberg officially entered the presidential nomination for 2020.  For the first time, the billionaire has actually filed the official paperwork, entering the Presidential primary in Alabama, running as a Democrat.    

By Ilana Siyance

As reported by CBS News, a Bloomberg political advisor disclosed that the new candidate was stirred to enter the race because he felt the Democratic Party needed another strong candidate.  The advisor said Bloomberg’s team has already taken polls. Bloomberg will offer a unique fusion of political experience coupled with business know-how, and experience in philanthropy. The 77-year-old CEO of his namesake media empire is the 9th richest person in the U.S. and the 14th richest person in the world, with an estimated $58 billion, as per Forbes.  

President Donald J. Trump lost no time commenting on Bloomberg’s entry.  “I’ve known Michael Bloomberg a long time. You go back, early on, he said a lot of great things about Trump. But I know Michael, he became just a nothing, he’s really a nothing,” said President Trump.  “He’s not going to do well, but I think he’s going to hurt Biden actually, but he doesn’t have the magic to do well. He will not do very well and if he did, I’d be happy. There is nobody I’d rather run against than little Michael, that I can tell you.”

Bloomberg has been going back and forth in his decision to run for presidency more than four times so far, now to have filed ahead of the Alabama primary deadline which is Friday.   On the one side, the billionaire will have a difficult time divesting himself of his business, to avoid conflicts of interest. On the other hand, it seems he has a strong aversion for President Trump and wills to personally make sure he is not re-elected.  “I’m a New Yorker and I know a con when I see one,” Bloomberg has said. “We cannot afford four more years of President Trump’s reckless and unethical actions. He represents an existential threat to our country and our values,” Bloomberg says on his election website.

The question which remains unanswered is, will Bloomberg have a good chance of winning nomination.  His moderate positions, pragmatic sense and ability to finance his own campaign will certainly work for him.  Political analyst Hank Sheinkopf says Bloomberg may have a shot, but that his status as a billionaire may impede him.  “Some people will attack him because he’s rich, others will say wait a second, I want to be a billionaire too,” said Sheinkopf.

We have already seen that even the other Democratic candidates are making snide comments.   Senator Elizabeth Warren took to twitter, saying “welcome to the race” Mike Bloomberg, but she therein attached a link to a calculator for billionaires that summarizes her proposed wealth tax plan.  Bernie Sanders also took a stab, tweeting “The billionaire class is scared and they should be scared.”

Introducing Israeli Figure Skating Ice Dancers, Galit Chait-Moracci & Sergei Sakhnovsky

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https://en.wikipedia.org/

Galit Chait-Moracci was a competitive ice dancer; she is currently a coach, technical specialist, wife and mom, according to an October 2019 article on the Ice Dance web site. 

Edited by: TJV News

She was born in Israel, but moved to New Jersey, USA at a young age. Her first ice-skating experience was a trip to the outdoor rink at Rockefeller Center in New York City, as was reported by the IceDance.com web site.  

“My parents told me that I went straight to the middle even though I didn’t know how to skate,” Chait-Moracci explained. “Right after that I started group [freestyle] lessons at the old Sky Rink in Manhattan, NYC. Many years later, we performed at Rockefeller Center on the Today Show.”

Russian coach Natalia Dubova introduced her to ice dancing several years later during a visit to Russia with her father, an international businessman.

“My father took me to Russia to try out with a partner and to try Ice Dancing,” Chait-Moracci said. “From the first second, I knew that’s what I wanted to do! I loved to dance and perform, and although it wasn’t an easy transition, my parents didn’t give up on me, and they helped me persevere to reach my dreams,” she told the IceDance.com web site.

Chait-Moracci sson began a partnership with Sergei Sakhnovsky who was representing Israel.

The Ice Dance web site reported that the couple trained with many great ice dance coaches, and each of them taught something important. Since they were all from the Russian schools, the basic technique was similar, but their methods and teaching styles were so different.

Sergei Sakhnovsky is an Israeli ice dancer. Along with Galit Chait, he is the 2002 World bronze medalist for Israel. With previous partner Ekaterina Svirina, he is the 1993 World Junior champion for Russia.

Wikipedia reported that Sakhnovsky began skating at age four and took up ice dancing when he was eight. Early in his career, he skated with Marina Anissina and Ekaterina Svirina. With Svirina, he won the World Junior Championships in 1993 and took the silver medal in 1994.

He teamed up with Galit Chait in 1995. They initially trained in Russia with Ludmila Buytskova and Elena Maslenikova and then moved to Monsey, New York. In 2002, they were the first Israeli ice dance team to win a medal (bronze) at World Championships. They competed in three Olympics, finishing 14th in 1998, 6th in 2002, and 8th in 2006. Their coaches included Natalia Dubova, Tatiana Tarasova, Evgeni Platov, Natalia Linichuk and Gennadi Karponosov.

Officials: NYS to Grapple with $6.1B Budget Shortfall in 2020

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The dire forecast, courtesy of the state’s Division of Budget in its mid-year budget report, came late – weeks, in fact, after it was required to have been by state law. Photo Credit: Wikipedia

Budgetary agita for New York State Governor Andrew Cuomo, as his bean counters are predicting a shortfall of $6.1 billion in 2020 – the largest since he took office in Albany.

By: Tobias Marcus

The dire forecast, courtesy of the state’s Division of Budget in its mid-year budget report, came late – weeks, in fact, after it was required to have been by state law.

According to state officials, two-thirds of that shortfall, or $4 billion, stems from a precipitous jump in the cost of Medicaid. Some in Albany say they want to cut payments made to hospitals and nursing facilities both this year and next.

“Savings may include across the board reductions in rates paid to providers and health plans, reductions in discretionary payments, and other actions that can be executed administratively in the current fiscal year,” according to the report.

“This is the toughest budget that Cuomo has faced partly because he had bigger gaps when he took office, but he also had more political capital,” Bill Hammond of the Empire Center, told the New York Post. “He kind of owns this crisis because it’s not driven by the economy, it’s driven by the shortcomings of his own management of the Medicaid program in particular.”

The report outlines “increases in the minimum wage, a phase out of added funding by the federal government and an increase in enrollment and costs for managed long-term care and payments to cash-distressed hospitals,” according to spectrumlocalnews.com. It also “indicates the Cuomo administration is developing a savings plan with the Department of Health to avoid piercing the global cap for Medicaid.

“Savings may include across the board reductions in rates paid to providers and health plans, reductions in discretionary payments, and other actions that can be executed administratively in the current fiscal year,” the report reads.

Legislators are already braced for the fallout. “What we expect to be dealing with in the coming fiscal year is on the scale of billions,” Assemblyman Richard Gottfried, a Democrat from Manhattan who chairs the chamber’s health committee, told the Wall Street Journal. “Paying for health care in New York is expensive. So when you talk about a 5 or 10% cut in the program, you really can’t do that without causing serious damage.”

Once he was elected in 2011, Cuomo “established a cap on the allowable growth in the Medicaid program and won legislative approval for the state Department of Health to reduce spending if outlays exceeded the set limit,” the Journal added. “According to Bill Hammond, health-policy director for the fiscally conservative Empire Center for Public Policy, this year’s cost overruns were first disclosed in a May fiscal plan update.”

Police: No Evidence that Stabbing of Orthodox Man in Monsey was Hate Crime

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An Orthodox Jewish man from Monsey lies in the hospital in critical condition after he was brutally stabbed multiple times on Wednesday morning. Photo Credit: YWN

Police in upstate Rockland County said Friday they were not treating a stabbing that left a 29-year-old Orthodox Jewish man in critical condition as crime motivated by anti-Semitism. 

Edited by: TJV Staff

The victim — identified as a teacher and father of four was attacked by two men who jumped out of a vehicle at approximately 5:40 am in front of 2 Howard Drive; early Wednesday morning. The man was walking to synagogue for the morning services. The victim was then stabbed repeatedly before Rockland County Hatzalah brought him to the hospital where he underwent emergency surgery. The attack occurred in Monsey, a heavily Orthodox area in the town of Ramapo.

The Times of Israel reported that the assailant fled the scene before police and first responders arrived, according to Aaron Hershkowitz, an assistant to the synagogue’s rabbi. 

“Although there are those who believe that this was a hate crime, the official position of the Town of Ramapo Police Department is, that at this time, there is no evidence to support that contention,” the department wrote on its Facebook page, was reported by the Times of Israel. 

“If anyone has facts that this is a hate crime… we strongly encourage them to come forward and report this information to our agency,” it added.

“It was in fact an assault and a very violent and vicious one at that,” Chief Brad Weidel said in a press conference Wednesday. “Our victim was walking to synagogue, he was approached from behind by at least one and maybe more individuals, and he was assaulted and stabbed, and stabbed more than once.”

“We are outraged by this terribly violent incident,” said Evan R. Bernstein, ADL NY/NJ Regional Director. “This is truly horrifying. A peaceful walk to shul in the early morning hours is how this man started the day and now he in serious condition in a hospital because of this attack. There is absolutely no room in our communities for violence. We must come together and stand shoulder to shoulder, not only to condemn this despicable act, but also work as a community to stem the tide of hatred and violence. We wish for the speedy and full recovery of the victim and hope this reward facilitates the swift apprehension of those responsible for this attack.”  

The ADL (Anti-Defamation League) announced last Wednesday that it is offering a reward of up to $10,000 for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the individual or individuals responsible for the attack on the man in Monsey. 

MKs Aryeh Deri & Yaakov Litzman to Possibly be Indicted in Coming Weeks

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After the dramatic announcement that he is going to file criminal indictments against Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, Attorney General Dr. Avichai Mandelblit in the near future is expected to make a similar announcement regarding Interior Minister Aryeh Deri and Deputy Health Minister Yaakov Litzman, according to a Yeshiva World News report.
Edited by: TJV News
Litzman will face charges of bribery, breach of trust and fraud and Deri’s charges will include money laundering, fraud and breach of trust, as was reported by YWN.
According to a report released by KAN News11 correspondent Mordechai Gilit, the attorney general delayed the decisions regarding Deri and Litzman until completing his work on the cases involving Prime Minister Netanyahu, according to the YWN report.
State Prosecutor Shai Nitzan has recommended indictments against both Litzman and Deri. According to the report, the announcement by Mandelblit is expected in the coming weeks.
In August of this year, JTA reported that Litzman could face bribery charges for allegedly helping to prevent the shutdown of a food business that the health ministry determined had serious sanitation violations. He is also accused of offering special benefits to Health Ministry employees in exchange for their preventing the Jerusalem-area restaurant and catering service from being closed.
The Israeli police recommendation that Litzman be charged with bribery, fraud, witness tampering and breach of trust was announced in August.
JTA reported in August that in the ongoing case of Malka Leifer, Litzman is accused of pressuring Jerusalem district psychiatrist Jacob Charnes to say that Leifer was mentally unfit to stand trial. She is accused of molesting several girls while the principal of a haredi Orthodox girls’ school in Australia.
Litzman denies the accusations.

DeBlasio Angered at Uber & Lyft for Anti-Worker Response to City Wage Rules

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New York City’s Mayor, Bill de Blasio, is angry at ride-share companies Uber and Lyft. Specifically, he doesn’t care for their decision to slam the brakes on subcontractors when business is slow. Photo Credit: YouTube

New York City’s Mayor, Bill de Blasio, is angry at ride-share companies Uber and Lyft. Specifically, he doesn’t care for their decision to slam the brakes on subcontractors when business is slow.

By Pat Savage

For their part, Uber and Lyft place the blame on a recently implemented minimum-wage requirement by the city.

A radio caller complained to the mayor that he and his colleagues were responsible for his being unable to get work during portions of the day. But de Blasio passed the buck to the ride share firms for keeping too many subcontractors in place in the wake of recent rules limiting those numbers.

“They created a reality where they flooded the market on purpose so that they could get the biggest possible marketshare,” de Blasio told the caller. “They didn’t care how much pollution it caused. They didn’t care how low the wages of their workers were. They didn’t care how many workers, like Al, invested in vehicles and then were left high and dry.”

He added, “Why on earth is the call not for these companies to give fairness to these workers they exploited for so long, and they used to increase their market share and to prepare for their IPOs? They have the money to pay their workers decently. They have the money to create a fair transition for folks in this situation. They don’t have to use these sort of punitive approaches. But these are antiworker companies.”

“Lyft maintained that any negative ramifications for drivers are entirely the fault of de Blasio and his Taxi and Limousine Commission, which has sought to stop drivers from cruising in Manhattan without passengers on board,” noted Crain’s New York Business. “The company urged the mayor and the City Council to reconsider the contentious policies, which have been the subject of multiple lawsuits.”

“Lyft has had no choice but to change the driver experience by not allowing drivers to come online at times of low demand,” a Lyft spokesperson told Crain’s. “We welcome the opportunity to engage with the mayor and council to revisit these rules, which have had negative consequences on so many New Yorkers.”

The tussle didn’t appear to harm Uber in the eyes of investors. Shares of Uber Technologies Inc. “gained ground again Friday, to extend their bounce off last week’s record low, after Stifel Nicolaus analyst Scott Devitt turned bullish on the ride-sharing company, citing “reasonable” valuation and signs that fundamentals are “turning the corner,” noted marketwatch.com. “SunTrust Robinson Humphrey’s Youssef Squali also recommended investors buy, saying valuations and recent disclosures suggest the stock has probably “bottomed out.”

Landlord-Bashing Anti-Semitic Council Candidate Slapped with Campaign Finance Violations

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Thomas Lopez-Pierre, who ran unsuccessfully for New York City Council in 2017, is in trouble for his campaign finances. The candidate, who rapidly became known for his anti-Semitic slurs and for disparaging speech about "greedy Jewish landlords", is being fined in connection to a probe by the Campaign Finance Board. Photo Credit: YouTube

Thomas Lopez-Pierre, who ran unsuccessfully for New York City Council in 2017, is in trouble for his campaign finances.  The candidate, who rapidly became known for his anti-Semitic slurs and for disparaging speech about “greedy Jewish landlords”, is being fined in connection to a probe by the Campaign Finance Board.

By: Hadassa Kalatizadeh

As reported by Crain’s NY, Lopez-Pierre will have to pay back $54,107 of the $99,180 in matching funds the Campaign Finance Board gave him for his failed bid against City Councilman Mark Levine of Manhattan.  Lopez-Pierre has also been assessed $6,182 in fines for assorted forms of malfeasance. The panel charged him with a long list of wrongs including: neglecting to report over $12,000 in contributions; failing to cite over $10,000 in transactions; exceeding the $100 limit on individual cash expenditures; using campaign funds for personal use; and making campaign expenditures after the election was already over.

Lopez-Pierre’s treasurer testified to the board that he had manipulated her, and not kept her fully informed of the financial activities. She further alleged that he had purposely recruited her for the job in spite of her admitted inexperience, specifically so that he could manipulate the system.  “In hindsight, I believe the candidate knowingly targeted me to become treasurer to take advantage of the campaign finance process and my lack of knowledge so that he might commit fraud when possible,” Sandra Monperousse told the board. Lopez-Pierre did not appear at the hearing, and he did not respond to requests for comment.  

The controversial Democratic candidate was infamous for having said that it is the “greedy Jewish landlords” who force out longtime residents in order to gentrify NYC neighborhoods.  He was also known to have made racial slurs to African Americans who showed support for his political opponents. He had also in the past admitted that “he didn’t tell the truth”, when he had said that he was behind a GoFundMe campaign to stop his rants.  He admitted he just lied to cause confusion and dissention on the other side and thwart their efforts to hinder him. He has also invited controversy as the former co-owner of a Harlem singles club which set up professional men with young, attractive ladies.  In the 2017 city council election, Lopez-Pierre had received only 25.36 percent of the votes while Levine received over 74 percent of the votes as the incumbent.  

All this, however, has not discouraged Lopez-Pierre from affirming that he will be running in 2021 for City Council once more for the 7th district in Northern Manhattan, representing Washington Heights, Hamilton Heights, Morningside Heights, West Harlem and a portion of the Upper West Side.  Levine is currently in his second and final term and will be vacating his seat.

Bklyn Gynecologist Arrested for Soliciting Sex from a 14-Year-Old Boy

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Dr. Aaron Weinreb. (Photo via NY Community Hospital)

A director of the gynecological department at NYU Langone Hospital was arrested several weeks ago by the FBI for soliciting sexual favors from a a 14-year-old boy.

By: TJV News

NY Community Hospital told News 12 in Brooklyn in a statement, “Based on the information we received, Dr. Aaron Weinreb was immediately suspended and has since been terminated.”  It is a criminal offense to persuade, coerce, or have sex with anyone younger than 18 years old. It is unclear how the doctor and the boy met.

Officials say Dr. Weinreb was released on $1.5 million bond.

According to court records, Weinreb conducted the relationship through text messages but it is unclear how he met the boy to begin with ,

The news outlet Bklyner.com reported that the relationship began in May of 2019. Weinreb’s text to the unnamed minor continued throughout their relationship; from May until early October. It was on October 9th, that the FBI took over and began texting Weinreb from the boy’s phone number; giving Weinreb the distinct impression that it was the boy who was communicating with him. 

Weinreb’s text to the boy were sexually explicit and quite graphic as he exhorted the boy to meet with him in various locations for the express purpose of engaging in a multitude of sex acts. The FBI, (acting as though they were the boy) asked Weinreb through a series a texts, if he was all right with him being only 15 years old and Weinreb said that it was. Weinreb also asked the boy if he was 14 years of age when they first engaged in a sexual encounter and the boy answered in the affirmative.

Weinreb’s arrest came on October 29, at the Kings Hotel in the Sunset Park neighborhood in Brooklyn, as it was there that Weinreb asked the boy to meet him.  

Bklyner.com reported that According to court documents, Weinreb initially said he was a doctor and was at the hotel taking a nap. When he was questioned about a 15-year-old boy, he requested a lawyer. Later on, Weinreb confessed to having oral sex with the 15-year-old boy but admitted that he thought he was 16. He also admitted to having sex with another 16-year-old boy. According to court documents, “He indicated that he has a sex addiction to males who are much younger than him.”

Meyer Seewald, the director of Jewish Community Watch, an organization combating child sexual abuse in the Jewish community, released the following statement:

“We are horrified by the alleged crimes committed by Dr. Aaron Weinreb against a child and we are gratified that the victim and his family had the courage to report the abuse to law enforcement. We are further grateful to the quick and professional investigation launched by the FBI which resulted in the arrest of Weinreb,” Seewald said.”Recent revelations have made it clear that child sexual abuse exists in every religion, society, and community.”

“We need not be ashamed that someone from our community is an abuser rather the only source of shame should be if as a community, we cover up abuse rather than facing this epidemic head-on and working together until every person who wishes to harm a child is off our streets.”

ADL’s 2019 Survey of Global Anti-Semitism: 1 in 4 Europeans Harbor Intense Dislike of Jews 

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About one in four Europeans polled harbor pernicious and pervasive attitudes toward Jews, according to a new global survey on anti-Semitism commissioned by ADL (the Anti-Defamation League). Photo Credit: NPR

About one in four Europeans polled harbor pernicious and pervasive attitudes toward Jews, according to a new global survey on anti-Semitism commissioned by ADL (the Anti-Defamation League). While anti-Semitic attitudes held mostly steady in Western Europe, the poll found hateful notions about Jews are rising in Eastern and Central European countries polled, where long-held tropes about Jewish control of business and finance and of “dual loyalty” remain widespread.

Edited by: TJV News

The poll of 18 countries, which is part of the ADL Global 100: An Index of Anti-Semitism, was fielded between April and June 2019 in Eastern and Western Europe, Canada, South Africa, Argentina and Brazil. European and other countries with significant Jewish populations were selected for the 2019 survey. Using an 11-question index that has served as a benchmark for previous ADL polling around the world since 1964, the survey of more than 9,000 adults found that anti-Semitic attitudes in Argentina, Brazil, Poland, Russia, South Africa and Ukraine have seen marked increases since the last ADL Global 100 survey.

In the Eastern and Central European countries surveyed, the trope of “Jewish power” in business and the “dual loyalty” canard are especially widespread, and many people in those countries also believe that Jews still talk too much about the Holocaust.

In Poland, where restitution of Holocaust-era Jewish property and a controversial law on Holocaust speech were widely debated in recent years, anti-Semitic attitudes rose to 48 percent of the population, up from 37 percent in 2015. Roughly three out of four respondents in Poland agreed that “Jews still talk too much about what happened to them in the Holocaust.”

In Hungary, where a nationalist government ran anti-immigrant billboard campaigns featuring Jewish financier George Soros, 25 percent of the population believes “Jews want to weaken our national culture by supporting more immigrants coming to our country.” Hungary had an overall index score of 42 percent, compared to 40 percent in 2015.

“It is deeply concerning that approximately one in four Europeans harbor the types of anti-Semitic beliefs that have endured since before the Holocaust,” said Jonathan A. Greenblatt, ADL CEO. “These findings serve as a powerful wake-up call that much work remains to be done to educate broad swaths of the populations in many of these countries to reject bigotry, in addition to addressing the pressing security needs where violent incidents are rising.”

Since the ADL Global 100 Index survey conducted in 2015, anti-Semitic attitudes have significantly increased in Ukraine (up 14 percent), Poland (up 11 percent), South Africa and Brazil (both up 9 percent), Russia (up 8 percent) and Argentina (up 6 percent). Meanwhile, anti-Semitic attitudes saw significant declines in Italy (down 11 percent), Austria (down 8 percent) and Canada (down 6 percent).

Negative attitudes toward Jews are one part of ADL’s overall assessment of levels of anti-Semitism in a country. ADL also considers the number and nature of anti-Semitic incidents annually, polls of Jewish communities about their experiences of anti-Semitism in their communities, government policies, and other factors.

Among the 2019 ADL Global 100 Index’s key findings:

  • Anti-Semitic attitudes remain pervasive in Europe. Roughly one out of every four residents of the 14 European countries polled by ADL fall into the most anti-Semitic category, subscribing to a majority of the anti-Semitic stereotypes tested in the index.
  • Stereotypes about Jewish control of business and the financial markets are among the most pernicious and enduring anti-Semitic beliefs. These are especially widespread in the Central and Eastern European countries surveyed. Asked whether they agreed with the statement that “Jews have too much power in the business world,” a staggering 72 percent of Ukrainians agreed, as did 71 percent of Hungarians, 56 percent of Poles, and 50 percent of Russians.
  • Jewish “disloyalty” is a widespread anti-Semitic stereotype in the Western European countries surveyed. In Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, and Spain, more than 40 percent of the public believes that Jews are more loyal to the State of Israel than to their own country. This canard also scored high in Brazil (70 percent), South Africa (60 percent), and relatively high in Canada (25 percent) compared to its overall index score of 8 percent.
  • “Jews still talk too much about what happened to them in the Holocaust” was a statement supported by large segments of the populations of many of the European countries polled, even in Germany, where 42 percent of the population agreed. This sentiment was also prevalent in Austria (44 percent), Belgium (40 percent) Italy (38 percent) and Spain (37 percent).
  • Political discourse influences anti-Semitism. Holocaust remembrance and restitution issues have been prominent political topics in Poland over the past few years. Asked whether “Jews still talk too much about what happened to them in the Holocaust,” the number of Poles who agreed rose from 61 percent in 2015 to 74 percent in 2019. By comparison, on the same question, Sweden registered 15 percent, the U.K. 18 percent, and the Netherlands 31 percent.
  • Muslim acceptance of anti-Semitic stereotypes was substantially higher than among the national populations — on average almost three times as high — in the six countries tested: Belgium, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, and the U.K.  At the same time, the scores for European Muslims were significantly lower than for respondents in the Middle East and North Africa region polled in 2014, possibly reflecting the impact of Holocaust education, exposure to Jews, and societal values of acceptance and tolerance. 

The poll found significant decreases in Italy and Austria. In Italy, anti-Semitic attitudes fell 11 percent; in Austria, they decreased 8 percent. Overall, such attitudes remained virtually unchanged in Belgium, at 24 percent; Germany, at 15 percent; and Denmark, at 10 percent.

In most European countries, few blame Jews for immigration problems. However, the poll found that many respondents feel their country’s traditions are being threatened by an influx of immigrants. This was particularly true in Austria, Denmark, Hungary, and the Netherlands where roughly half or more of the population believe that the culture and traditions of their country are being threatened by immigration.  In South Africa, 41 percent agreed with the assertion that “Jews want to weaken our national culture by supporting immigrants coming to our country.”  

Support for BDS Campaign is Extremely Low

Across all the countries surveyed – except for South Africa – support for the campaign of boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS) against the State of Israel was found to be extremely low. In most European countries, support for the boycott of Israel was less than 15 percent.           

In Europe, support for Israel boycotts was found to be highest in Belgium, where 18 percent said they supported BDS; and in Denmark, Sweden and the U.K., where support for the boycott hovered around 15 percent. In South Africa, where divestment and boycotts were used against the apartheid-era government, 38 percent of the population supports the BDS campaign against Israel. 

ADL commissioned First International Resources to update attitudes and opinions toward Jewish people in 18 countries around the world. Anzalone Liszt Grove Research conducted and coordinated fieldwork and data collection for this public opinion project. A total of 9,056 adults were interviewed between April 15 – June 3, 2019.

ADL gratefully acknowledges Volkswagen Group and The ADL Lewy Family Institute for Combating Anti-Semitism for its support of the ADL Global 100 Index and ongoing commitment to fighting anti-Semitism. ADL also thanks its individual, corporate and foundation advocates and contributors, whose vote-of-confidence in our work provides the resources for our research, analysis and programs fighting anti-Semitism and hate in the United States and around the globe.

Supreme Court: Ruth Bader Ginsburg Hospitalized for Fever and Chills

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wikimedia

On Saturday, the Supreme Court issued a statement saying that Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg had been admitted to a hospital after experiencing chills and fever.

By: TJV News

Last week, it had been reported that Justice Ginsburg had a bout of the flu. 

In a statement, the court’s public information office said Ginsburg was admitted Friday night to Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, as was reported by the AP.  She was initially evaluated at Sibley Memorial Hospital in Washington before being transferred to Johns Hopkins for further evaluation and treatment of any possible infection. 

AP reported that with intravenous antibiotics and fluids, her symptoms abated and she expected to be released from the hospital as early as Sunday morning, the statement said. 

Justice Ginsburg missed oral arguments before the high court on Nov. 13 — which she almost never does — due to a stomach bug. She did, however, return for the court’s next public meeting on November 18.

“Justice Ginsburg is unable to be present today. She is indisposed due to illness, but she will participate in the consideration and decision of the cases on the basis of the briefs and the transcripts or recordings of the oral arguments,” Chief Justice John Roberts said from the bench on November 13th.

She has been treated for cancer twice in the past year and two other times since 1999. Over the summer she received radiation for a tumor on her pancreas. Last winter Justice Ginsburg underwent surgery for lung cancer. 

Ginsburg, the second of only four women to serve on the high court, was appointed to the bench by President Bill Clinton in 1993. Before that she made her mark in the legal arena as the director of the Women’s Rights Project of the American Civil Liberties Union. During her tenure, she argued six landmark cases on gender equality before the Supreme Court, winning five of them.

In 1980, President Jimmy Carter appointed Ginsburg to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit.

Carrying on her work for gender equality, Ginsburg wrote the majority opinion in United States v. Virginia, which ended the males-only admissions policy at the Virginia Military Institute. Ginsburg wrote that the state-run institution could not use gender to deny women the opportunity to attend the prestigious school.

She was also instrumental in the court’s ruling in Safford Unified School District v. Redding, in which the court said a school went too far when it strip-searched a 13-year-old girl while looking for drugs.

Ginsburg’s dissenting opinion in the case of Bush v. Gore garnered her a lot of attention when she set aside her usually restrained style. Breaking from the majority opinion, which effectively decided the 2000 presidential election between George W. Bush and Al Gore, Ginsburg ended her decision with the words, “I dissent,” markedly omitting the adverb “respectfully” that is traditionally included.

 

Israelis Demonstrate For & Against Netanyahu Throughout Country

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Supporters of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Nov. 23, 2019. (Flash90/Olivier Fitoussi)

As the nation braces for a bitter fight following Netanyahu’s indictment, Israelis took to the streets to voice their opinions.

By: WIN Staff

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s indictment has sharpened the battle lines in Israel’s already deadlocked political system and could test the loyalty of his right-wing allies, Israeli commentators said Friday.

Meanwhile, Israelis from different ends of the political spectrum took to the streets on Saturday evening to register either support for or outrage over Netanyahu.

Demonstrations and protests took place in Jerusalem, Tel Aviv and Haifa, according to Times of Israel, just two days after the attorney general’s decision was announced regarding Netanyahu’s indictment in three corruption cases.

According to the Times, activists gathered in Tel Aviv at Habima Square, demanding Netanyahu step down. Simultaneously, supporters of the prime minister demonstrated in the Haifa suburb of Kiryat Bialik, calling for “justice” for the Israeli prime minister.

The serious corruption charges announced Thursday appear to have dashed already slim hopes for a unity government following September’s elections, paving the way for an unprecedented repeat vote in March, which will be the third in less than a year.

In an angry speech late Thursday, Netanyahu lashed out at investigators and vowed to fight on in the face of an “attempted coup.” But in a Facebook video posted Friday, he appeared at ease as he thanked supporters.

“This whole process will at the end of the day be decided in court and we will accept the court’s decision, there is no doubt about that,” he said. But he also said anyone in the police or the state prosecutor’s office who broke the law should also be held accountable.

His main opponent, Benny Gantz of the Blue and White party, called on him to “immediately resign” from all his Cabinet posts, citing a Supreme Court ruling that says indicted ministers cannot continue to hold office. Netanyahu also serves as minister of health, labor and Diaspora affairs, as well as acting minister of agriculture.

He is not legally required to step down as prime minister, but Netanyahu faces heavy pressure to do so, and it is unclear whether an indicted politician could be given the mandate to form a new government. Netanyahu has already failed to form a majority coalition of 61 seats in the 120-seat Knesset after two hard-fought elections this year.

“This will not be an election, it will be a civil war without arms,” columnist Amit Segal wrote in Israel’s Yediot Ahronot newspaper. “There is a broad constituency that believes what Netanyahu said yesterday, but it is far from being enough for anything close to victory.”

Netanyahu will be prosecuted on charges of bribery, fraud and breach of trust stemming from three long-running corruption cases. He has denied any wrongdoing and accused the media, courts and law enforcement of waging a “witch hunt” against him. (World Israel News)

Read more at: worldisraelnews.com