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A Thank-You Note to the Campus Protesters

By Bret Stephens
Opinion Columnist
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Dear anti-Israel campus protesters:
Though it may take a few years before you realize it, supporters of Israel like me have reasons to give thanks to militant anti-Zionists like you.
Recently, a friend asked what I would have made of your protests if they had been less fervently one-sided. If, for instance, pro-Palestinian student groups at Harvard and Columbia hadn’t castigated Israel immediately following the worst massacre of Jews since the Holocaust. Or if Jewish students and professors hadn’t faced violence, harassment and antisemitic imagery from you or your allies from Harvard to Columbia to Berkeley to Stanford. Or if you had made a point of acknowledging the reality of the Oct. 7 rapes or the suffering of Israel’s hostages and their families while demanding their safe return. Or if you consistently condemned and distanced yourselves from Hamas. Or if all of you had simply followed rules that gave you every right to free expression without trampling on the rights of others to a safe and open campus.
In short, what if your protests had focused on Israel’s policies, whether in Gaza or the West Bank, rather than demanding the complete elimination of Israel as a Jewish state? What if you had avoided demonizing anyone who supports Israel’s right to exist — which includes a vast majority of Jews — as modern-day Nazis?
In that case, I told my friend, I would have disagreed with your views but I wouldn’t have despised them. Nor would a broad plurality of Americans, including many to my left. The result could have been a movement that would have had stronger arguments and greater impact. You would have been able to win over undecideds to your cause. And I would have had to fight harder to make my case that Israel must get rid of Hamas.
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I realize this isn’t how some of you see it. The most hard-line among you want to “sharpen the contradictions,” as the Marxists say. Your real goal was not to shape U.S. government policy, at least in the near term. What you really want to do is normalize anti-Zionism, particularly on elite college campuses, while hoping that the bigger payoff will come in 20 or 30 years, when those you’ve converted to your cause become senators and governors and university presidents.
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But the problem with sharpening the contradictions is that the contradictions being sharpened are your own. For every student who became ardently pro-Palestinian during the protests, another one, perhaps a Jewish student with previously indifferent feelings about Israel, finally saw the connection between antisemitism and anti-Zionism. For every professor who’s shown up to your encampment to lend support, you’ve lost a fair-minded liberal with your Maoist-style sloganeering and your arrogant disdain for the genuine fears of some of your Jewish peers.

And for every commencement ceremony whose cancellation you’ve effectively forced, or which you intend to spoil, thousands of apolitical students — who didn’t get to have a proper high school graduation thanks to Covid — have taken an intense and permanent distaste to you and everything you stand for.
In short, if sharpening the contradictions is the game you’re playing, it’s paying bigger dividends for my side than it is for yours. It’s also nothing new. Those 1968 protests you’re trying to emulate? What they mainly helped achieve was the election of Richard Nixon followed by nearly 40 straight years of right-of-center governance in the United States.
Nor is this the only help you’re giving my side.
I am a Zionist not only because I support Israel’s right to exist as a Jewish state — an abstract point about another country. I am also a Zionist for the most personal of reasons: because I see Israel as an insurance policy for every Jewish family, including mine, which has endured persecution and exile in the past and understands that we may not be safe forever in our host countries. For anyone with a historical memory of France until Dreyfus, Germany until Hitler or Iran until Khomeini, that kind of insurance is one Jews can’t afford to lose.



What happened on Oct. 7 shook my faith in the quality of that insurance: What else does the Israeli state exist for, after all, if not to protect its people from the kind of butchery they endured that day? But what happened on Oct. 8 — the moment your protests began — renewed that faith, because it gave me a glimpse into what America might yet become for Jews, at least if people like you were to gain real power.
I get that many if not most of you see yourselves as dedicated idealists who want to end suffering for Palestinians, champion equality and oppose all forms of bigotry. There are ways you could do that without making common cause with people who hate Jews, want to kill us and often do. Supporting a two-state solution would be one such way. Insisting that Palestinians deserve better leaders than Hamas is another. Building bridges with Israelis is a third.
Instead, without knowing it, you are my daily reminder of what my Zionism is for, about and against. For that, if nothing else, thank you.

Olympic Spotlight: Iowa Baseball Sweeps Northwestern

Iowa baseball (28-18, 13-8) put together a 3-1 week last week, losing 21-14 (!) to North Dakota State on Wednesday before sweeping a three-game series against Northwestern (13-30, 2-16) over the weekend 4-3, 9-2, and 6-5. Brody Brecht was brilliant again on Saturday, adding to an impressive month-long heater. It's been a near-perfect month for Brecht, who has an ERA below 1.00 over his last three starts, and a strikeout-to-walk rate over 4.00.

You can follow along with all things Hawkeye Olympic sports here.

Hamsters Dead After Chinese Scientists Engineer Horrific Ebola-Enhanced Virus

A group of Chinese scientists have engineered a new virus in which they took a common animal disease (vesicular stomatitis virus, or VSV) and added parts of Ebola in order to mimic Ebola symptoms in a lab setting using animals.

The result? A group of Syrian hamsters that received the lethal injection "developed severe systemic diseases similar to those observed in human Ebola patients, including multi-organ failure, the Daily Mail reports, citing the team's study.

The team studied five female and five male hamsters that were three weeks old - all but two of which died between two and three days. The females - all of which died, showed decreased rectal temperature and up to 18% weight loss, the males lost 15% of their weight and died - except two, which survived and gained 20% more weight than they started with.

Some of the infected hamsters developed disgusting secretions in their eyes, which impaired vision and resulted in scabs on the surface of their eyeballs.



Upon harvesting the organs from the deceased animals, they found the virus in various organs - including the heart, liver, spleen, lung, kidney, stomach, intestines and brain tissues - with the highest concentrations found in the liver, and the lowest found in the brain.

The group of female hamsters also had multi-organ failure
According to the scientists, "It is a sign that 3-week-old Syrian hamsters infected with VSV-EBOV/GP have the possibility of playing a role in the study of optic nerve disorders caused by EVD."

The team concluded that the infected hamsters showed a rapid onset of symptoms, shock liver, systemic infection, and developed severe systemic diseases similar to those observed in human EBOV patients.

They also noted that the experiments provided a rapid preclinical evaluation of medical countermeasures against Ebola under BLS-2 conditions, concluding the study was a success. -Daily Mail

According to Dr. Richerd Ebright, a Rutgers University chemical biologist, it's unlikely that a lab leak involving VSV would lead to widespread infection in the public.

"[It] will be imperative to verify that the novel chimeric virus does not infect and replicate in human cells, and does not pose risk of infectivity, transmissibility, and pathogenicity in humans, before proceeding with studies at biosafety level 2," he said.

Iowa Gov. Reynolds threatens lawsuit over new Title IX protections

More LGBTQ hate and fear mongering from our Governor:

Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds threatened legal action Monday over new federal Title IX rules that seek to protect students from discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity, saying the new rules are a threat to women’s rights.



Reynolds, a Republican, said in a statement she had asked Republican Attorney General Brenna Bird to litigate the new rules. Iowa would join at least 15 other GOP-led states in challenging the regulations, which are set to take effect Aug. 1.


Democratic President Joe Biden's administration announced the final rule in April, expanding the scope of the 1972 law that prohibits sex-based discrimination at K-12 schools and higher education institutions. The new rules extend those protections to prohibit discrimination based on sexual orientation, gender identity and sex characteristics.




The changes also expand the type of sexual harassment and assault claims a school must respond to and change the grievance process for those claims.


“These final regulations build on the legacy of Title IX by clarifying that all our nation’s students can access schools that are safe, welcoming and respect their rights,” U.S. Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona said in a statement.


In her statement, Reynolds said the Biden administration is “marginalizing girls and women” by expanding the definition of sex discrimination to include gender identity and sexual orientation.


“There are undeniable and important biological differences between males and females,” Reynolds said. “It's a fact that cannot be denied, no matter how inconvenient it is for the president during an election year. While he caves to the radical left, I will continue to protect the rights of women of all ages.”





At least 15 other states have sued the Biden administration attempting to stop the rule from taking effect. The lawsuits, supported by conservative civil rights organizations, argue that the education department overstepped its authority and submitted arbitrary, unworkable rules.


The U.S. Education Department has warned any states that do not follow the law will risk losing federal education funding, according to K-12 Dive.


The rules do not weigh in on how educational institutions should approach the participation of transgender girls and women in sports, which has been a focus of Reynolds and Republicans nationally. The Department of Education proposed a separate rule relating to athletics last year, and it still is formulating the final version.


Reynolds signed a law in 2022 that banned transgender girls and women in Iowa from competing on a sports team corresponding with their gender identity at the high school and college levels.


Last year, Reynolds signed a law that requires students and staff at public schools to use the bathroom and changing facilities that align with their sex assigned at birth. Schools must make a private, single-use bathroom available for anyone who requests it. That law would run afoul of the new federal regulations, which require schools to allow transgender students to use the bathroom that aligns with their gender identity.


Reynolds proposed a bill this year that would define terms like “man,” woman,” “male” and “female” to align with a person’s sex assigned at birth. The bill would have required government accommodations to be provided to a person based on their sex assigned at birth rather than gender identity. The bill advanced out of an Iowa House committee but did not pass either legislative chamber.


A spokesperson for Bird did not immediately respond to a question asking whether she would be filing a lawsuit over the rule. A White House spokesperson also did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Spencer Lee to compete in World Olympic Games Qualifier (May 11-12)







It is great to be an Iowa Wrestling fan.

Go Hawks!

5/6 Severe Weather OK,KS,NE,IA

Could be some significant tornadoes tomorrow. Potentially a high risk scenario with 3-4" hail and EF-3 + tornadoes. Mostly focused over southern Kansas through Oklahoma where potential will be maximized for discrete tornado producing cells. Areas northward into KS and Nebraska look realize a more linear mode of storms as the cold front is the main forcing mechanism.

Overnight it looks like a line may make its way out of the plains and push east into Iowa, possibly producing severe wind and hail. Possibly another round of good rainfall. Will have to monitor.


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104 killed in Gaza City, officials say; Israel cites stampede at aid drop

Officials in the Gaza Strip said more than 100 people were killed and hundreds more injured in Gaza City on Thursday, accusing Israeli forces of opening fire on a crowd of people waiting for humanitarian aid. Israel said an unspecified number of the casualties were caused by a stampede as residents scrambled to reach a convoy of trucks. Israeli forces opened fire on members of the crowd who approached soldiers in a manner deemed threatening, according to Israeli officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss an ongoing investigation.


Key updates

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Here's what to know​

At least 30,035 people have been killed in Gaza and 70,457 injured since the war began, according to the Gaza Health Ministry, which does not distinguish between civilians and combatants. Israel estimates that about 1,200 people were killed in Hamas’s Oct. 7 attack and says 242 soldiers have been killed since the start of its military operation in Gaza.
Gaza is on the brink of famine, humanitarian groups say, as the volume of aid has plummeted in recent weeks and as convoys have struggled to make deliveries amid intense bombardment and disruption at border cross

Attention: Ryan Adams is not Bryan Adams

(CNN)Yes, they are musicians who share the same last name and the same birthday, but Bryan Adams is not Ryan Adams.

This fact has become crucial in light of a report by the New York Times that includes allegations Ryan Adams engaged in sexually charged text messages and conversations with a girl who was underage at the time.

Ryan Adams denies report he had internet relationship with minor

In response, Ryan Adams said he does not recall the alleged exchanges and would not knowingly engage in explicit communication with a girl who was underage.

The story caused consternation among some fans of Bryan Adams.

"When someone said that she was sad about hearing the news about Ryan Adams, I freaked out and thought: What did Bryan Adams do?," Pultizer Prize winning writer Viet Thanh Nguyen tweeted. "Never heard of Ryan Adams until today."

Both men were born on November 5th.

But Bryan Adams is 59 and Ryan Adams is 44.

Also, Ryan Adams was previously married to "This Is Us" star Mandy Moore, while Bryan Adams was not.

https://www.cnn.com/2019/02/15/entertainment/bryan-adams-ryan-adams/index.html

Ladies of hort, please educate me.

So, I'm 38 years old, I've had 75+ sexual partners, I've enjoyed everything from casual sex to being married to my wife for damn near a decade now, I saw something today that I didn't know existed.


Upon boarding a flight to Denver the lady in the row in front of me was stretching to put her luggage in the overhead compartment which exposed the lingerie she was wearing u derneath. Black, lacy, simple. The portion I saw was from her waistline up her side to the bottom of her ribcage and triangle down to belly button. ( foe those at home lift youe right arm and notice what portion of youe shirt comes up.)


Now, my experience with lingerie is fairly minimal, basic girl puts it on for "valentines day/ bday" type stuff where it is worn for mere minutes prior to coitus.


Do ladies actually wear lingerie day to day?

Not necessarily you. But are you aware of this?
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