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Israel kills top Islamic Jihad terrorist in Gaza, announces formal …

Posted By on August 6, 2022

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JERUSALEM, Israel A top Islamic Jihad terrorist in the Gaza Strip was killed Friday in a coordinated, pre-emptive strike by the Israeli military, a spokesman for the Israeli army told foreign media in a briefing.

Israeli army spokesman Lt. Col. Richard Hecht said that "anti-tank squads had been on the move, and we took the initiative launching a coordinated strike as a preventative action."

The strikes come after several days of tension and threats from the terrorist group following the arrest by Israel on Monday of Bassem Saadi, the senior Islamic Jihad leader in the West Bank.

Tayseer Jabari speaking to supporters of Islamic Jihad, during a ceremony in Gaza City, Gaza, Nov 12, 2021. Jabari was killed in an operation by the IDF, Friday. (Photo by Majdi Fathi/TPS)

According to reports, six sites were hit by fighter jets and armed drones on Friday afternoon, killing Tayseer Jabari, the senior Palestinian Islamic Jihad Commanding Officer of the terrorist groups Northern Gaza Division, as well as the head of the anti-tank guided missile array and several terrorist squads in the midst of preparing attacks against Israel, the IDF said.

ISRAELI NAVY SINKS PALESTINIAN VESSEL ALLEGEDLY SMUGGLING 'EQUIPMENT' TO HAMAS

In Gaza, the Hamas-run health ministry reported that at least five others were killed in the strikes, including a 5-year-old girl.

A joint statement from Israels Prime Minister Yair Lapid and Defense Minister Benny Gantz said that the goal of the operation was to eliminate the "threat against the citizens of Israel and the civilians living adjacent to the Gaza Strip, as well as the targeting of terrorists and their sponsors."

"The Israeli government will not allow terrorist organizations in the Gaza Strip to set the agenda in the area adjacent to the Gaza Strip and threaten the citizens of the State of Israel," said Lapid. "Anyone who tries to harm Israel should know: we will find you."

In a statement sent to Fox News Digital, Gilad Erdan,Israel'sambassador to the United Nations, weighed in, noting that the mission was carried out "due to an attempted attack on Israeli civilians by Palestinian Islamic Jihad."

The ambassador said that "Israel was forced to commence a military operation with surgical strikes in order to thwart their rocket attacks from Gaza."

"Palestinian Islamic Jihad is a radical terror proxy of the Ayatollah regime in Iran and its clearly stated goal is the destruction of the state of Israel," Erdan continued, adding that "terrorists deliberately fire rockets at Israeli civilians committing war crimes."

The ambassador then said that "Israel expects the international community and the United Nations to stop making false immoral comparisons between a law-abiding democracy and radical terror organizations and to support Israels right to defend its citizens."

IDF spokesman Hecht indicated that the army had not yet finished its military operation and that "we assume there will be rocket attacks toward central Israel, but we dont know yet."

AT LEAST FOUR ROCKETS FIRED FROM GAZA HOURS AFTER BIDEN LEAVES ISRAEL

He said that reserve soldiers had been mobilized from the north of the country and the Iron Dome defense system was now fully operational in the south and center of the country.

The tension comes more than a year after Israel fought a 14-day war with Hamas and other terrorist groups in the Palestinian enclave, drawing hundreds of rounds of rocket fire on towns and cities in southern Israel.

The aftermath of an attack on a building where IDF jets targeted a senior terrorist leader in Gaza, Friday. (Photo by Majdi Fathi/TPS)

The army said that Jabari had carried out anti-tank missile attacks against Israeli civilians and IDF soldiers recently. "Jabari was a senior commander in the Palestinian Islamic Jihad and held a number of positions in the terrorist organization, including as the Head of Operations," the army said in a statement. "He was entrusted in making many decisions inside the Palestinian Islamic Jihad terrorist organization and was responsible for multiple attempted terror attacks against Israeli civilians."

"The anti-tank missile squads of the Islamic Jihad were trying to hit Israeli civilians for days, forcing thousands of Israelis behind shelter," Amir Avivi, CEO of the Israel Defense and Security Forum (IDSF) told Fox News Digital.

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"Eventually, these terrorists left the IDF no choice but to launch a preemptive strike against the ground squads and the senior operators directing them," added Avivi, a former deputy commander of the Israeli armys Gaza Division.

During the May 2021 round of fighting, the army said Jabari was responsible for firing "a large number of rockets at Israeli territory from the Gaza Strip and was responsible for a Palestinian Islamic Jihad attack in which a civilian was injured."

Fox News Talia Kaplan contributed to this report.

Ruth Marks Eglash reports on Israel and the Middle East. You can follow her on Twitter @reglash

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Israel kills top Islamic Jihad terrorist in Gaza, announces formal ...

"Was She Fighting?": Family Of Gaza’s 5-Year-Old Killed In Israel Strike – NDTV

Posted By on August 6, 2022

Alaa Kaddum held by her grandfather Riad in Gaza.

A five-year-old girl was among 10 people who were tragically killed in Gaza as the region witnessed the worst escalation of violence in a year on Saturday. Israel pounded Gaza with air strikes to which Palestinian terror group Islamic Jihad responded with rockets fire.

As her family prepared for the funeral, Alaa Kaddum's small body, wrapped in a white cloth, was held by her family members. A pink bow in her hair and a wound on her forehead was seen in the video shared by news organisation Middle East Eye.

Speaking to Middle East Eye, Alaa's grandfather Riad asked what crime she had committed that justified her death.

"She was dreaming of going to nursery. She wanted a bag and clothes ... This innocent girl. Was she in-charge of rockets or was she fighting? What did she do?" Riad asked, distraught.

While health authorities in Gaza controlled by Hamas said that 10 people had been killed and 79 injured in the bombardment, Israel's army estimated that its operation has killed 15 terrorists.

Israeli Prime Minister Yair Lapid said the Jewish state was forced to launch a "pre-emptive counter-terror operation against an immediate threat" posed by the Islamic Jihad group, following days of tensions along the Gaza border.

Islamic Jihad is a group that while aligned with Hamas also acts independently. The terror group said that the initial Israeli bombardment amounted to a "declaration of war", before it unleashed a flurry of more than 100 rockets towards Israel.

The rocket fire and Israeli strikes continued overnight, risking a repeat of an 11-day conflict in May 2021 that devastated Gaza.

Both Israel and Islamic Jihad confirmed the killing of a top leader with the terror group Taysir al-Jabari on Friday.

"Israel isn't interested in a wider conflict in Gaza, but will not shy away from one either," Prime Minister Lapid said in in a nationally televised address.

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"Was She Fighting?": Family Of Gaza's 5-Year-Old Killed In Israel Strike - NDTV

Murphy heading to Israel this weekend for 4-day trip – NJ.com

Posted By on August 6, 2022

Gov. Phil Murphy is headed to Israel for four days beginning Sunday to attend a series of economic development meetings, his office announced late Friday afternoon.

The trip is being funded by the Center for Innovative Policy, a think tank with ties to Democratic governors. Murphy is slated to return to New Jersey on Thursday, his office said. Delaware Gov. John Carney, a fellow Democrat, is also making the trip.

In Israel, the governor will conduct a series of economic development meetings to deepen ties with businesses to benefit New Jersey, as well as visit cultural/religious sites, Murphy spokeswoman Alyana Alfaro Post said in a statement.

Murphy has made multiple trips to Israel since he took office, including early in his first term when he spent four days there for similar events. That trip was paid for by Choose New Jersey, a business-funded nonprofit formed in 2010, and included a trade mission to Germany.

Other trips to Israel while hes been governor have been shorter.

During his four days, Murphy is expected to visit Yad Vashem, return to the Western Wall, visit with Ambassador Tom Nides, meet with unidentified government officials, and meet with American-Israel Chamber of Commerce officials, his office said.

Weve got an enormous amount of history between New Jersey and the state of Israel, Murphy told the news website ROI-NJ, which first reported the trip.

The governors office didnt announce any additional details of the trip and the Center for Innovative Policy didnt immediately respond for comment.

Our journalism needs your support. Please subscribe today to NJ.com.

Matt Arco may be reached at marco@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter at @MatthewArco.

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Murphy heading to Israel this weekend for 4-day trip - NJ.com

Why Israel and the Palestinian Islamic Jihad are fighting again – Washington Examiner

Posted By on August 6, 2022

Israel and the Palestinian Islamic Jihad began a new conflict on Friday, following Israel's arrest of the group's senior West Bank commander earlier this week and killing of a senior PIJ commander, Tayseer Jabari, on Friday.

The PIJ has fired more than a hundred rockets at Israel, warning it has "no red lines." In turn, Israeli forces launched retaliatory airstrikes against PIJ facilities and personnel in Gaza. Both sides are blaming each other for the new round of violence. But the major cause of this escalation is the PIJ's plotting to conduct a new round of terrorist attacks against Israeli citizens. Facing a tight election on Nov. 1, Prime Minister Yair Lapid's caretaker government has evidently decided to take a robust stance against the PIJ's threat. Israel is also concerned that the PIJ may be able to conduct longer-range rocket strikes against Tel Aviv, which the group has explicitly threatened, if Israel does not aggressively target the PIJ's rocket apparatus. But if the rocket fire from Gaza is the urgent threat, the Israeli security establishment is also interested in sending a message to Tehran.

Funded, armed, and heavily influenced by Iran, the PIJ is Ayatollah Ali Khamenei's primary conduit to the Palestinian cause and a key means of Iran's covert war on Israel. The PIJ has escalated its preparations for attacks in recent months, including with increased influence and activity in the West Bank. But Iran's role looms large. Evincing as much, PIJ leader Ziad Nakhaleh is currently holding multiday consultations in Tehran. On Friday, Nakhaleh described the current conflict as "a test for all parts of the resistance" and pledged that his group is "going into battle. There are no ceasefires after an attack." Considering the escalating concerns in Israel over a possible Iranian breakout toward developing a nuclear weapon, it is a consensus viewpoint on the part of the Israeli security establishment that Iran must be actively deterred. Also noteworthy in this regard are the growing tensions between the Lebanese Hezbollah and Israel over energy development in the Mediterranean Sea.

Top line: We should expect this new conflict to continue for at least for a few days until Israel believes it has effectively restored deterrence. That said, Iran's influence on the PIJ may mean that the group decides to continue fighting even as the costs on its capabilities and Palestinian civilian infrastructure escalate.

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Why Israel and the Palestinian Islamic Jihad are fighting again - Washington Examiner

Jaguars training camp: 1-on-1 interview with DT Israel Antwine – Black and Teal

Posted By on August 6, 2022

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Its very rare in the NFL for undrafted rookie free agents to not only make the final roster but become key play-makers. With all the information and data scouts and front-office personnel have at their disposal these days, its uncommon to see a guy slip through the cracks of the draft and become a contributor at the NFL level. Having said that, the Jacksonville Jaguarshave a history of finding diamonds in the rough when it comes to signing undrafted rookie free agents.

For proof, look no further than running back James Robinson, an excellent example of the Jaguars front offices ability to identify and develop under-the-radar rookie free agents.

Following the 2020 NFL Draft, Robinson found himself in the pool of hundreds of undrafted rookies looking for an NFL home. Thankfully, he chose to sign with Jacksonville and quickly became one of the most consistent and talented running backs in the league. His 1,414 yards from scrimmage in 2020 were the most by an undrafted rookie in league history.

Jacksonville Jaguars running back James Robinson (25) at TIAA Bank Field. Mandatory Credit: Matt Pendleton-USA TODAY Sports

Players such as Allen Hurns, Jarrod Wilson, Tre Herndon, Keelan Cole, and Corey Grant were all signed as undrafted free agents and went on to not only make the final roster but become fan favorites along the way. And that was possible because the Jags were willing to take a flier on every single one of them.

These players all tend to have at least one thing in common they simply want to prove everyone wrong and get the chance to show why they shouldve been drafted, and thats precisely defensive lineman Israel Antwines goal ahead of the 2022 season.

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Jaguars training camp: 1-on-1 interview with DT Israel Antwine - Black and Teal

The power we had was astonishing: ex-soldiers on Israels government in the occupied territories – The Guardian

Posted By on August 6, 2022

When Joel Carmel went for his military service in the Israel Defence Forces (IDF), he didnt expect it to mean sitting at a computer processing permits, typing in Palestinian ID numbers all day.

Before I went to the army I considered myself a centrist, politically speaking. I knew broadly about the occupation and the combat side of things. But it was so boring, so bureaucratic It wears you down, the 29-year-old said.

You dont have time or energy to think of Palestinians as people. They are just numbers on a computer, and you click yes or no on their travel permit applications.

The sprawling system of military government created by Israels occupation of the West Bank and Gaza Strip is a world many Israelis are learning about for the first time, after the publication of testimonies from veterans exposing the permit regime that rules over Palestinian people and land.

While the 55-year-old occupation is perhaps the most well-documented conflict in modern history, less understood is the breadth and depth of the bureaucratic power wielded by Israeli military bodies.

The Israeli defence ministry unit known as the Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories (Cogat) is largely concerned with issuing and processing paperwork: approving medical and work permits to enter Israel or travel abroad, controlling the flow of imports and exports, infrastructure planning and allocation of natural resources.

Cogats activities have rarely been studied in depth, and are not subject to independent investigative mechanisms. Along with the use of direct violence, Palestinians and veterans say the military governing body is an integral part of a system of oppression.

We were told in training that everything we were doing for the Palestinians was basically generous, a favour. We didnt question the bigger picture, like why there are no decent hospitals in the territories, so people have to travel, said Carmel, who first served in the Gaza Israeli-Palestinian military coordination office, and then in the restive city of Jenin in the north of the West Bank.

The army raids your house at 2am and then at 8am you still have to get in line for hours for a permit for the most basic administrative stuff, he said. I think thats something a lot of Israelis dont realise. Its not the carrot and the stick, its the stick and the stick. Its the same thing.

Testimonies from military conscripts who served in Cogat offices during the past decade have for the first time been collected by Breaking The Silence, an NGO established by IDF veterans which for nearly 20 years has given discharged soldiers the opportunity to recount their experiences in confidence and give the Israeli public an unvarnished understanding of what enforcing the occupation entails.

The verified accounts of several dozen interviewees including Carmel, who now works for the organisation have been gathered in a new, freely available booklet titled Military Rule. It is accompanied by testimonies from residents of the blockaded Gaza Strip collected by Gisha, an NGO focusing on Palestinian freedom of movement.

While putting together the project, Breaking the Silences interviewers found that repeated themes began to emerge: the use of collective punishment, such as revoking an entire familys travel permits; the extensive network of Palestinian agents cooperating with Cogats Civil Administration, which governs parts of the West Bank; the considerable influence of Israels illegal settler movement on the Civil Administrations decision-making processes; and arbitrary or baseless blocks on goods allowed in and out of Gaza.

The level of power and control we have was astonishing, said a 25-year-old man who served in 2020-2021 at Cogats headquarters near the Beit El settlement north of Ramallah.

I found out we were responsible for approving weapons permits for the Palestinian security forces, which is one of those details you dont really think about until the stack of paperwork is front of you. Its little realisations like that, every day, that makes the scale of the occupation really dawn on you.

And we had access to so much information. I didnt know how deep and wide-ranging the data collection is. Sometimes I was bored, so Id type in random Palestinian ID numbers and see what came up. I could see everything about their lives: families, travel details, sometimes employers.

I remember once my commanding officer pulled up the screen to show me the file of one of the highest-ranking Palestinian officials, just for fun. That was mind-blowing.

In a statement, a Cogat spokesperson said: We regret all attempts to cast doubt upon the work and the integrity of the organisations staff, and we firmly reject all attempts to ascribe the organisations efforts to one or another political agenda.

Cogat always conscientiously examines and handles cases involving deviations from the procedures, the law, or orders. Such cases are exceptions and do not reflect the practices of the Civil Administration.

Another common theme across the testimonies is the psychological impact of surrendering autonomy to the armed forces, even in bureaucratic settings.

I went to the army thinking, Ill do my service and help change things for the better from the inside. But as soon as I arrived I became part of the system, said a 24-year-old woman who served at Cogats headquarters in 2017-2018.

Sometimes Id have the choice to finish early for the weekend: my superior would never mind if I did that. Or, I could stay until 5pm and actually continue helping the Palestinians waiting to give me their papers. My wants conflicted with their needs. I cant put my finger on when or why, but my behaviour started changing.

I thought Breaking the Silence was just for combatants, but I went to an exhibit and saw that there was testimony from a girl who also served in my unit.

You just do what youre told to do in the army, but you only see small fragments of the whole. It has been a long journey to understand what I did during my military service and what it meant.

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The power we had was astonishing: ex-soldiers on Israels government in the occupied territories - The Guardian

Tree of Life hires Brownstein- POLITICO – POLITICO

Posted By on August 6, 2022

By CAITLIN OPRYSKO

08/05/2022 05:28 PM EDT

Updated 08/05/2022 07:39 PM EDT

With Daniel Lippman

The nonprofit organization overseeing the redevelopment of Pittsburghs Tree of Life synagogue has tapped a host of lobbyists at Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck to help the synagogue secure federal assistance for a new complex planned to be a sanctuary, museum and memorial honoring the victims of the 2018 mass shooting there.

Brownsteins David Reid, Marc Lampkin, David Cohen, Steven Demby, Nadeam Elshami, Brian McGuire, Brian Wild, Andrew Usyk, Sage Schaftel and Radha Mohan will work to identify federal resources and potential sources of funding to aid in the effort, which is the subject of a separate fundraising campaign to pay for the renovations and operate programming and outreach for the new center.

The synagogue last year secured a $6.6 million commitment from the state of Pennsylvania to redevelop the site, which has been vacant since a gunman killed 11 worshippers and wounded six others in the deadliest attack on Jews in U.S. history. And the synagogue has tapped the architect Daniel Libeskind, who designed the master plan for redeveloping the World Trade Center following 9/11 and who has designed other Jewish museums and Holocaust memorials.

Our communitys resilience in the face of a hate-fueled massacre has given root to a reimagined Tree of Life, reads a website for the redevelopment. Through remembrance, experience, and action, we educate and inspire individuals and communities from across our nation to recognize and stand up against antisemitism.

FARA FRIDAY: Russias state-owned media agency is budgeting its most money yet for a D.C.-based production company that produces pro-Kremlin media content in the U.S., according to documents filed with the Justice Department this week, even as shows from Russian news agency and radio broadcaster Sputnikwere booted off of mainstream platforms in the wake of Russias invasion of Ukraine.

Rossiya Segodnya, the state media group that controls Sputnik, renewed its contract this week with Ghebi LLC, which has been paid nearly $5 million since 2020 to produce radio and web content targeted at the U.S. and Canada.

According to copies of Rossiya Segodnyas previous contracts with Ghebi filed with DOJ, Ghebis $7 million budget for the next 12 months is its largest yet. Its initial contract had a budget of $5.2 million, while the contract renewed last September stipulated that Ghebi could spend no more than $6.7 million to produce content.

The limits set out in those contracts are far more than what Rossiya Segodnya has actually paid Ghebi for its work, DOJ filings show. In the six months ending on March 31 a period that included Russias build-up of troops along the Ukrainian border as well as its February invasion and the ensuing global backlash Ghebi reported close to $2 million in payments from Rossiya Segodnya.

Thats $76,000 more than in the previous six months, and all of that spending is more than double the $825,000 Ghebi reported receiving from Rossiya Segodnya during the first six months of its contract.

Happy Friday and welcome to PI. Send lobbying tips and your firm's strategies for surviving rote-a-rama: [emailprotected]. And be sure to follow me on Twitter: @caitlinoprysko.

SINEMA BLESSES BILL AFTER TAX TWEAKS: Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer announced last night that he expects every Senate Democrat to vote for the partys expanded reconciliation bill, after Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.) demanded changes to its revenue stream that the business community had complained about.

Sinema sought the removal of language tightening the so-called carried interest loophole, and she also won changes to portions of the corporate minimum tax structure to remove accelerated depreciation of investments from the agreement, POLITICOs Burgess Everett reports.

That won Sinema tepid praise from trade groups that had lobbied against the corporate minimum taxs impact on manufacturers. Taxing capital expenditures investments in new buildings, factories, equipment, etc. is one of the most economically destructive ways you can raise taxes, the U.S. Chamber of Commerces Neil Bradley said in a statement, adding that Sinema deserves credit for recognizing this and fighting for changes.

Bradley still took aim at the tax added to the bill to recoup the cost of watering down the book tax and removing the carried interest provision, a levy on stock buybacks, which Bradley argued would only distort the efficient movement of capital to where it can be put to best use and will diminish the value of Americans retirement savings.

Bradley, along with the National Association of Manufacturers Jay Timmons both said in statements that their organizations are still reviewing the bill, but continued to bash its drug pricing measures. We remain skeptical, Timmons said.

The Small Business Investor Alliance, which represents lower-middle market private equity funds and investors, cheered the removal of language targeting the private equity industrys prized carried interest tax rate, though Sinema vowed to work on the issue outside of the current bill. We are very thankful that she went beyond the headlines and listened to our concerns about the disproportionate negative impact on small business investors that changing carried interest would entail, SBIA President Brett Palmer said of Sinema. Arizona small businesses have a great champion.

PHRMA THREATENS PAYBACK: Steve Ubl, who leads the nations top industry group for drugmakers, is offering a final salvo to Congress as Democratic lawmakers inch closer to passing their sweeping reconciliation package that includes drug pricing measures and threatening swift retaliation if they dont listen, he told POLITICOs Megan Wilson.

PhRMA and its 31 board members sent a letter to every member of Congress on Thursday afternoon, urging them to vote against the package. PhRMA, not accustomed to losing legislative fights, has waged a multimillion-dollar advocacy campaign against the drug pricing measures, and is crafting contingency plans if they fail.

In addition to hinting at running campaign ads against Democrats in tough races this fall, the industry is assessing its legal options and pondering future regulatory or legislative fixes. Regardless of the outcome in the coming weeks, this fight isn't over, Ubl said in an interview. Few associations have all the tools of modern political advocacy at their disposal in the way that PhRMA does.

MIXED SIGNALS: Even as the Business Roundtable signed on to a letter yesterday imploring senators to knock out the reconciliation bills corporate minimum tax and decrying the legislations potential impact on manufacturers, one of the groups top leaders was participating in a virtual roundtable with President Joe Biden where she endorsed the bill as-is.

Thursday was not the first time General Motors CEO Mary Barra has split from the business lobby she helps lead, as Hailey Fuchs explored earlier this year, nor is it the first time the Biden administration has held her up as an ally of legislation reviled by the business community. You started all this, the president told Barra during the roundtable.

Thank you for the opportunity to voice our support for the Inflation Reduction Act, Barra told Biden during the event. Barra took over at the beginning of the year as chair of the Business Roundtable, whose membership comprises the chief executives of the countrys largest corporations.

A day after Schumer and Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) announced the framework for the bill, the Roundtable said on Twitter that the book tax, which is being revised to the benefit of manufacturers at Sinemas behest, would undermine proven bipartisan incentives that encourage capital investment.

Barra didnt address the bills tax provisions explicitly from the White Houses roundtable. But as currently proposed, she said, the measure would help drive further investments in American manufacturing and sustainable, stable and secure supply chains.

THE NRAS SUPREME COURT SHADOW LOBBYING: In a piece for POLITICO Magazine this morning, The Traces Will Van Sant examined amicus briefs filed in support of the Supreme Court caseNew York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen, which resulted in a June ruling dramatically expanding access to guns across the nation.

Out of the 49 pro-NRA friend of the court briefs filed in the case, Van Sant found the NRA has given financial support to at least 12 of the groups and individuals who lobbied the court on its behalf.

Though a full accounting is impossible, some recipients collected several million dollars from the NRA during that period and before filing briefs in Bruen. Only one of those 12 briefs disclosed the connection, meaning that neither the justices nor the public were told that 11 of these ostensibly independent voices owed their livelihoods in part to the NRA, the interest group behind the case.

The amicus briefs in Bruen provide a window into the NRAs long-standing legal strategy how the organization has spent hundreds of millions of dollars over the past few decades constructing an advocacy network of lawyers and institutions capable of identifying, supporting and advancing cases likely to weaken gun restrictions. But the briefs also demonstrate the limits of current Supreme Court ethics rules.

Kyle Christian will join the University of Kansas as associate vice chancellor for federal relations. He joins from Thermo Fisher Scientific, where he helped lead federal government engagement.

Harout Harry Semerdjian is now government relations officer for the Port of Long Beach. He was director for global trade and foreign investments for the L.A. Area Chamber of Commerce.

Becky Tallent is now vice president and head of government affairs at Anywhere Real Estate. She was senior director of U.S. government relations at Dropbox and is a John Boehner and John McCain alum.

Joey Nelson is now a regional director for external affairs for AT&T. He was triangle regional representative for Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.).

Joan Vollero has been promoted to be senior vice president at communications consulting firm Prosek Partners, where she focuses on special situations, including crisis and litigation support for class-and mass-action matters.

Chris Hayward has joined Citis global public affairs team, where he will continue in his role as the banks head of change management. Jennifer Lowney is now in an expanded role as Citis global head of communications. Separately, Gawain Patterson was elevated to the title of director of strategic initiatives and Lloyd Brown II is the banks new Community Reinvestment Act officer.

Jaymi Light is now U.S. federal government relations strategist at SAS. She was a government affairs principal at Cigna and is a Todd Young alum.

Jay Jariwala is joining Sidley Austin LLP as senior director of regulatory compliance for the food, drug, and medical device compliance and enforcement practice. He was a team leader/combination products subject matter expert at the FDA.

Madison West is now senior director of global corporate responsibility at Intel. She was vice president for ESG at government contractor Maximus.

Illinois Colorado 2022 Victory Fund (Sens. Dick Durbin, Tammy Duckworth, Rep. Joe Neguse, Nikki for Congress)Kirkmeyer Victory Committee (Kirkmeyer for Congress, Colorado Republican Committee, NRCC)Laxalt Victory Fund (Laxalt for Senate, Nevada Republican Central Committee, NRSC)Our Guy's Victory Fund (Coach Guy's Leadership PAC, Our Guy for Congress)Pekau Victory Fund (Illinois Republican Party - Federal, NRCC, Pekau for Congress)

None.

Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck LLP: Tree Of LifeEdnexus Advisors, LLC: MursionWatershed Results LLC: Conservation InternationalWatkins & Eager Pllc: Fleet Morris Petroleum, Inc.

American Defense International Inc.: SensonorK&L Gates, LLP: Alternative Investment Management Association LimitedLucas | Compton (Formerly Known As The Lucas Firm, LLC): Freeman Health SystemUniversity Of Southern California: University Of Southern California

CORRECTION: An earlier version of Influence misstated the entity that hired Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck. It is a nonprofit organization overseeing Tree of Life's redevelopment.

Originally posted here:

Tree of Life hires Brownstein- POLITICO - POLITICO

How Mass Shootings Have Rattled The American Jewish Community – Newsy

Posted By on August 6, 2022

Many recent mass shootings have largely hit Jewish communities, and now the communities have had to come to grips with tragedy.

Its been exactly one month since a gunman opened fire at the 4th of July parade in the Chicago suburb of Highland Park. Seven people died in the attack, with dozens more suffering injuries.

The shooting rocked the community, with a diverse set of victims. They included a 78-year-old Latino grandfather, a 63-year-old Jewish synagogue employee and a couple in their 30s who died protecting their two-year-old son.

Its a story where Highland Park joins the list of communities that are now synonymous with tragedy: Uvalde, Buffalo, El Paso, Parkland, Sandy Hook, Columbine.

These communities found strength in the aftermath of mass shootings. In a lot of those cases, it comes from houses of worship. In recent years, many attacks have hit largely Jewish communities.

Roughly half of Highland Parks population is Jewish. To be clear, law enforcement officials have not announced a motive for the shooting, but posts connected to the suspect have included hateful comments about multiple minority groups, including Jews.

Regardless of the motive in Highland Park, a rise in the number of anti-Semitic attacks have left American Jews on edge.

A survey released in April by the Jewish civil rights group the Anti-Defamation League found that anti-Semitic incidents hit an all-time high in 2021, with the number of incidents nearly tripling since 2015.

Last fall, polling done by SSRS for the American Jewish Committee found that 90% of American Jews felt anti-Semitism was a problem in the U.S., with 82% saying they thought anti-Semitism increased in the previous five years.

These fears translate into tragedy and loss of life. In the last few years, there have been several attacks on synagogues in the U.S.

In January, a gunman took four people hostage during a service at the Congregation Beth Israel synagogue in Colleyville, Texas.

In April 2019 on the last day of the Jewish holiday of Passover, an openly anti-Semitic shooter killed a woman and wounded three others, including a rabbi, at the Chabad synagogue in Poway, California, not far from San Diego.

That attack followed an attack in October 2018, where a shooter with anti-Semitic beliefs killed 11 people and wounded six others in a shooting during a Saturday morning service at the Tree of Life synagogue in the heavily Jewish Pittsburgh neighborhood of Squirrel Hill.

Three congregations shared the synagogue, all of whom had to come to grips with tragedy.

"We knew that obviously something terrible had happened, and we sort of knew who," said Stephen Cohen, New Light Congregation co-president. "It was the terrible things that happened, too, but it wasn't until later in the evening that the coroner's office actually was willing to release and confirm who survived and who did not that day. The following week was spent attending funerals."

"One funeral after the other, after the other, if you could even get into the funeral homes," said Barbara Caplan, New Light Congregation co-president.

New Light Congregation lost three of its members that day Richard Gottfried, Daniel Stein and Melvin Wax. Each of the congregations that had been using Tree of Life Synagogue moved out.

But in the weeks afterward, members still sought the connection to their faith.

"People were looking for reassurance that we were all still going to be able to be together," Caplan said. "They wanted the reassurance we could still be there to hug each other, be there for services."

In Squirrel Hill, healing has become more than just a matter of faith. Government officials, synagogues and nonprofits came together to form a partnership that provides mental health options to the community.

"There's really no one way to heal," said Ranisa Davidson, 1027 Healing Partnership program manager. "There's no one right way to heal, so what works for somebody is not going to work for another. When you have a community trauma like the mass shooting that occurred in Pittsburgh, it's hard to find ways for an entire community to heal."

That healing can cut across communities and bring places that suffered tragedy back together. In Squirrel Hill, members who were invited to Mother Emanuel Church in Charleston, South Carolina, which suffered a mass shooting of its own in 2015, remembered how connected they felt.

"The pastor called us up to the front of the room, and we expected him to say benediction or something nice," Cohen said. "Instead, he called up the entire congregation to come and hug us. There must have been about about 500 people in the room, and we are probably about 10 to 15 individuals. We were just surrounded by love, by compassion, and it's events like that that make you feel that you know that we are family, that we are all one. We are all trying to face this together and to try to move on."

Synagogues have a role to play in healing for the community, even when the attacks arent explicitly anti-Semitic.

They can provide help in the weeks, days, sometimes even the immediate moments after a mass shooting.

Rabbi Bradd Boxman of Congregation Kol Tikvah in Parkland, Florida saw that firsthand when his synagogue became an emergency place of refuge during the 2018 mass shooting, less than a mile away from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School.

"When it all began, because we're only a half a mile from the synagogue and the synagogue being a vibrant center for our youth in the first place, they thought to run to the synagogue, even though the non-Jewish kids went to Dunkin Donuts and 7-Eleven and other places," Rabbi Boxman said. "Our kids came here. They knew that this would be their they're their their home where they could be taken care of."

Rabbi Boxman said that a rabbi has a major role to play in guiding communities through the immediate aftermath. Parkland, similar to Highland Park, has a large Jewish population. Five of the 17 victims in the Parkland shooting were Jewish, and four of them had connections to the synagogue.

"I think in any trauma, you run on adrenaline," Rabbi Boxman said. "I learned as a rabbi that the most important thing I can do is to try to be the calm in the midst of the storm, and you deal with your pain and sorrow afterwards. But a leader, I think, has to kind of absorb a lot of that, and so just trying to get the families through the first days and weeks of mourning."

Hes quick to point out that its about more than just healing and care in the moment; congregations can also help push for change.

He and several young members who later helped organize the March for Our Lives movement against gun violence spoke with Florida officials and protested at the state legislature.

"I understand that they say that religion is there to to comfort the afflicted but also to afflict the comfortable," Rabbi Boxman said. "Coming out of the reform Jewish tradition, that's the prophetic tradition. I believe strongly that... we live by standing up for the values that we cherish, and if we just speak them idly in the synagogue, that they don't manifest themselves in real action outside the synagogue, then we are false to ourselves. So, we've had to walk a line."

Sometimes, that advocacy does lead to change. Florida passed a red-flag law to tighten gun purchases.

After Highland Park, the House of Representatives passed a ban on semi-automatic assault weapons, but that bill may not make it through the Senate.

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How Mass Shootings Have Rattled The American Jewish Community - Newsy

New Kids’ and YA Books: Week of August 8, 2022 – Publishers Weekly

Posted By on August 6, 2022

Here we round up new and forthcoming childrens titles, including a middle grade book about siblings discovering a magical box in the woods, a picture book featuring a multiracial girl traversing the globe to visit her grandmothers, a picture book highlighting important Black male leaders, a middle schooler overcoming her fear of gym class, and more.

The Daredevils by Rob Buyea. Delacorte, $17.99; ISBN 978-0-593-37614-0. While preparing for a school year that will separate them for the first time, siblings Waylon and Loretta discover a long-buried box with a note, challenging them to find and conquer your own rite of passage.

Nana, Nenek & Nina by Liza Ferneyhough. Dial, $17.99; ISBN 978-0-593-35394-3. While visiting her grandmothers in England and Malaysia, Nina uncovers the differences and similarities bound together by love, in this joyful narrative of multicultural childhood. The picture book received a starred review from PW.

Black Boy, Black Boy by Ali Kamanda and Jorge Redmond, illus. by Ken Daley. Sourcebooks Explore, $17.99; ISBN 978-1-7282-5064-9. Highlighting influential Black male figures from sports to politics to music, this picture book inspires the vision boys have for their own futures.

Surely Surely Marisol Rainey by Erin Entrada Kelly. Greenwillow, $16.99; ISBN 978-0-06-297045-9. Gym class is Marisols least favorite subject and when their class begins playing kickball, she must overcome her fear of failing by getting help from her brother, in this companion to Maybe Maybe Marisol Rainey.

Surviving the Wild: Sunny the Shark by Remy Lai. Holt, $13.99; ISBN 978-1-250-78545-9. When Sunny the Shark is caught in a plastic ring she must find a way to free her fin and get back to the hunt.

The Undead Truth of Us by Britney S. Lewis. Disney Hyperion, $17.99; ISBN 978-1-368-07583-1. After her mother turns into a zombie before her death, Zharie begins to see zombies everywhere, including in her new neighbor and friend Bo.

Tristan Strong Punches a Hole in the Sky by Kwame Mbalia, illus. by Olivia Stephens. Disney/Rick Riordan Presents, $12.99 paper; ISBN 978-1-368-07500-8. In this graphic novel adaptation, when seventh grader Tristan Strong accidentally opens up a portal allowing monsters to enter his world, hell need the guidance of old American heroes and ancient gods to help them close the portal.

A Synagogue Just Like Home by Alice Blumenthal McGinty, illus. by Laurel Molk. Candlewick, $18.99; ISBN 978-1-5362-1086-6. A rabbi learns the value of community when his synagogue needs repairs he cant handle on his own.

How You Grow Wings by Rimma Onoseta Algonquin, $18.99; ISBN 978-1-64375-191-7. After struggling in their abusive home, sisters Cheta and Zam are torn apart when one sister is sent away and the other stays home. The YA book received a starred review from PW.

Parfait, Not Parfait! by Scott Rothmn, illus. by Avery Monsen. Roaring Brook, $18.99; ISBN 978-1-250-26581-4. Playing off the grouping exercises so familiar to kids, and idiosyncrasies of spelling and pronunciation, readers will differentiate between parfaits and similar-sounding words.

For more childrens and YA titles on sale throughout the month of August, check out PWs full On-Sale Calendar.

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New Kids' and YA Books: Week of August 8, 2022 - Publishers Weekly

ARCHIVES: Bemoaning the state of Jewish education today, a history J. – The Jewish News of Northern California

Posted By on August 6, 2022

In some corners of the Jewish community, one hears no end of jeremiads on the state of Jewish education in the country today. Grumble grumble, they all leave after their bnai mitzvah, and its all the parents fault! Grumble grumble, we have to spend more money on day schools or risk losing the next generation to assimilation! Grumble grumble, if they dont learn to keep Shabbos theyll intermarry or worse, become anti-Israel!

There is nothing new under the sun.

Since the earliest days of this newspaper, theres been no shortage of reporters, teachers, parents and community leaders (and others, no doubt) lamenting the imperfections and shortcomings of Jewish education throughout our country and region.

The Jewish Educational Problem in America read a simple and direct headline in our July 1, 1927 issue, and it sat atop a 168-word article by the education director of Temple Emanu-El, then the publisher of this publication. The succinct article provided some numerical analysis: At present only about 200,000 of the Jewish children of elementary school age are receiving some form of Jewish education. Five hundred thousand or half a million are receiving no Jewish education whatsoever. And it concluded abruptly: The situation is even worse with regard to our young people. In very many communities their Jewish education is sadly neglected.

A year later, Michael M. Zarchin of the Jewish Educational Society wrote in our Aug. 17, 1928 issue that Jewish educational effort can not be permitted to remain in the chaotic, helter-skelter conditions in which we find it today. He thought it was a big problem that Jewish education in that period had already begun to solidify around the synagogue. Rather than having each congregation see to the religious education of its members children, he believed there should be large, communal religious schools open to all. Tough luck for Mr. Zarchin; the congregational model continues to dominate almost a century later.

Talk of Jewish education slows down in our archive during the Depression and World War II. But in the 50s, with suburban synagogue life booming, various Jewish education groups were constantly proclaiming it the week of Jewish education or the month of Jewish education, and putting out calls to parents to send their kids to religious school.

In an editorial in our Sept. 17, 1954 issue, we wrote in support of one such call: Thousands of Jewish children in our community are not receiving the religious education that is due them. Let us hope that the Call to Jewish Parents will fall on responsive ears and that it will accomplish the constructive results for which it is intended.

Clearly, it did not. These calls seemingly went unheeded for years as similar pleas were issued annually.

By the 1970s, full-blown panic and despair were setting in with regard to Jewish education. To wit, on April 30, 1971, about 40 college students stormed into the offices of the San Francisco Jewish Welfare Federation (which several years later changed its name to the Jewish Community Federation) to demand better support and funding for local Jewish education. The members called themselves the Jewish Education Coalition. David Biale, a UC Davis professor of Jewish history who was then a 22-year-old senior at UC Berkeley, told J. last year on the 50th anniversary of the sit-in that the Jewish Education Coalition was a front organization for the Radical Jewish Union.

Biale was among the activists who plotted and carried out the subversive yet peaceful event, which lasted from 11:30 a.m. Friday until 9 p.m. Saturday. Jews Liberate Federation beamed a headline in RJUs newspaper, the Jewish Radical. Though this paper did not report on the sit-in at that time, the action drew local TV and media coverage, and during the event the word got out and several rabbis came and visited us and expressed their solidarity, Biale recalled. Among them was Rabbi Wolfe Kelman, a leader in the Conservative movement. He happened to be in town, had heard of our initiative and felt he wanted to celebrate Shabbat with us, one of the activists recalled. He was clearly signaling to us that there was a part of that so-called Jewish Establishment which not only did not oppose our actions, but wholeheartedly validated and supported them.

A few months later, a letter to the editor in our Nov. 12, 1971 issue blasted the Federations for inadequate support of education. There is no question that Jewish education in San Francisco and its suburbs is in a sorry state, the letter writer declared.

A year later, in our Dec. 22, 1972 issue we wrote in an editorial of an American Jewish Committee officials prognostications on what would happen to Jewish youth if the sorry state were allowed to continue: Jewish youth are made vulnerable to the Jesus movement because they are permitted to grow up without the benefit of a solid Jewish education. In spite of endless talk of Jewish education over the decades, the editorial sadly but assuredly declares: Jewish education and intellectuality are still not high priorities in the Jewish communal life of America.

Jewish Education Failing: No Clear Image For U.S. Jews reads an April 7, 1978 headline on a JTA article that we ran. In it, a scholar declares that the current disarray in Jewish education is unique in Jewish history, confident, like so many Jews before him, that things are now much worse than they used to be.

The issue continued apace in the 1980s. On Nov. 8, 1985, a headline read Expert warns of weaknesses in U.S. Jewish education. His formula for solving the problem included such concrete, innovative bullet points as Make homes more Jewish and Provide regular and sustained Jewish education.

On the front page of our Nov. 16, 1990 issue, a JTA headline read 2-year Jewish education study urges overhaul. The reporter writes matter-of-factly of a study that has concluded what everyone already knows that the Jewish education system is troubled and needs more money. (The study, of course, had already cost a cool $1 million.)

We could go on. In recent years, similar complaints can still be heard throughout the Jewish world. Next time you hear one, just remember: Theres nothing new under the sun.

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ARCHIVES: Bemoaning the state of Jewish education today, a history J. - The Jewish News of Northern California


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