Friday, August 29, 2025

RISE OF ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE

By H. Lee Lawrence

 

Adam Raine.Adam Raine, 16, was encouraged and coached by Open AI to commit suicide.
 

I read a very disturbing article in Epoch Times a couple days ago.  Geoffrey Hinton, the 'creator' of AI, is warning that if controls are not very soon put in place, AI will eventually find it has no use for humans and we will become extinct.  We're already seeing many workers being fired and replaced with AI, and this could lead to unemployment, poverty, hunger, rioting, crime, etc, etc.

His warning begs the question of why would you help create something so powerful yet also so frightening and dangerous?  I can't help but think of an analogy with Dr. Frankenstein.  Playing God, ostensibly to make us immortal, but in the process, creating a monster.  What motivated him to do this - power, fame, money, all the above??

Just this morning I saw a story of a teen who was coached by OpenAI on the best ways to commit suicide.  OpenAI even offered to help him write his suicide note!  And ultimately, he did kill himself.

The parents are suing now, of course, but where were they before this tragedy??  Nevertheless, it seems we really are bent on  self destruction - I can't joke about it, but I really have seen all the Terminator movies.  

WHEN I USED TO GO TO VEGAS IN THE 1960S, EVERYTHING WAS DIRT CHEAP AND A TOP SHOW COST ONLY $15

The extreme tactics Las Vegas hotels are using as hotspot faces worst crisis in years

 

By Alice Wright 

 

Daily Mail

Aug 29, 2025

 

LAS VEGAS, USA - JANUARY 1, 2018: New Year fireworks on Las Vegas Strip on January 1, 2018 in Las Vegas, USA. The Strip is home to the largest hotels and casinos in the world.


Las Vegas hotels are rolling out big incentives — including free nights and thousands of dollars in casino credits — to lure visitors back to the city. 

Sin City saw an 11.3 percent drop in visitors in June compared with the same month last year, an astonishing fall that means almost 400,000 people stayed away. 

That decline translates to less spending in restaurants, shops, shows and at hotels, where occupancy fell nearly 10 percent, according to the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority. 

Desperate hotels are rolling out the red carpet and freebies to fill rooms.  

'The reason we came was my wife got offered four free nights, $125 in food and beverage credit and $150 in casino credit,' Tom Connolly told The Telegraph.

'The hotel solicited us to come out here. To me, that suggests they need the business,' 70-year-old Connolly said of MGM's New York-New York hotel. 

Other visitors have detailed similar generous offers.

'I’ve got two options - four comp nights at a high-end MGM property and $350 food and beverage or four comp nights at Excalibur and NYNY with $1,000 food and beverage,' one excited tourist explained on Reddit. 

 

Tourists are receiving generous deals from Las Vegas hotels worried about lack of bookings

Tourists are receiving generous deals from Las Vegas hotels worried about lack of bookings

 

MGM Resorts reported a nine percent fall Las Vegas earnings in the quarter ending in June. 

'Headed to the airport now for a week in Vegas. Starting at Fontainebleau for three free nights, $500 in free gambling and $200 in resort comps,' another guest said. 

'Over to Paris for four free nights $400 in free gambling and $300 in resort comps. Ending at Nomad with four free nights, $1000 in free gambling and $750 in resort comps. 

'Also going to two shows and a hockey game on them,' the guest added.  

'Five nights completely comped including fees,' a third added without specifying the hotel.

'All food and drink for my wife and I comped for the entire six days. Couples massage comped and $200 in free play.'  

MGM Resorts did not immediately respond to the Daily Mail's request for comment. 

Retail expert Neil Saunders of Global Data told the Daily Mail that Las Vegas as a destination has itself to blame for the slowdown. 

'What used to be a reasonable trip is now much more expensive,' Saunders explained.

 

Sin City saw an 11.3 percent drop in visitors in June compared to the same time last year

Sin City saw an 11.3 percent drop in visitors in June compared to the same time last year

400,000 less people visited the city in June compared to the same month in 2024

400,000 less people visited the city in June compared to the same month in 2024 

 

'There are all kinds of fees that people have to pay at hotels and some of the service standards and generosity with things like free drinks while in casinos have tightened.'  

'Some people now don’t see Vegas as worth the money and that hits visitor numbers.' 

A visitor recently shared her shock after she was charged $26/£19.11 for a bottle of Fiji water from the minibar in her room at the Aria Resort & Casino. 

And a British magician was also left outraged after he was billed $74.31/£54.63 for two drinks at Sphere in Las Vegas. 

Las Vegas is considered a 'canary in the coalmine' for the wider economy because, unlike many other tourist hotspots in the US, its visitors are primarily domestic rather than international. 

'The reduction that we've seen is largely domestic, and at its core is a concern that consumers have about the economy, about their financial situation and their jobs,' Steve Hill, chief executive of the LVCVA told The Telegraph. 

GREAT! ... ABBAS BELONGS IN AN ISRAELI PRISON, NOT AT THE UN

US to block Mahmoud Abbas from attending UN General Assembly in September

According to a New York Post report, internal State Department documents recommend barring Palestinian Authority representatives from entering the UN General Assembly in New York. The recommendation includes revoking visas issued before July 31. This marks the first time the US has denied an entire foreign delegation entry, a move that could be seen as a violation of its host country agreement with the UN.

 

by Or Shaked  

 

Israel Hayom

Aug 29, 2025

 

President Donald Trump directed Secretary of State Marco Rubio (left) to revoke and deny the visas of members of the Palestine Liberation Organization and the Palestinian Authority
President Donald Trump directed Secretary of State Marco Rubio (left) to revoke and deny the visas of members of the Palestine Liberation Organization and the Palestinian Authority

 

Secretary of State Marco Rubio has instructed that senior Palestinian Authority officials be barred from attending the gathering of world leaders from September 23 to 29. The move comes after the Palestinian Authority and the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) were placed under sanctions for breaching US laws, including the 1989 PLO Commitments Compliance Act and the 2002 Middle East Peace Commitments Act. 

According to the memo obtained by the New York Post, all visas issued to Palestinian officials before July 31 are to be revoked, and no new visas will be granted, including to Abbas himself.

State Department spokesman Tommy Pigott said the decision was taken "in accordance with US law and national security interests." He added, "Secretary Rubio is revoking the visas of senior Palestinian Authority and PLO officials ahead of the General Assembly. To be considered serious partners for peace, the Palestinians must reject terrorism, abandon lawfare campaigns at the International Criminal Court and the International Court of Justice in The Hague, and halt unilateral moves toward recognition of a Palestinian state."

 

Mahmoud Abbas, President of the State of Palestine, addresses the general debate of the General Assembly’s seventy-ninth session.

Mahmoud Abbas tells UN General Assembly that Israel is perpetrating "the crime of a full-scale war of genocide" and that Israel has killed more than 15,000 children in Gaza, September 26, 2024

 
The United Nations General Assembly 
 

Deputy Secretary of State Christopher Landau said the sanctions were imposed due to "unilateral declarations of statehood, glorification of violence, encouragement of antisemitism and material support for terrorism, including paying salaries to terrorists."

The memo further noted that Abbas had planned to announce a "constitutional declaration" at the Assembly, including a proclamation of Palestinian independence. Washington views the move as a deliberate escalation, particularly after last month's "Two States Conference" hosted by France and Saudi Arabia at the UN, with a follow-up session planned during the upcoming General Assembly. Several Western countries, including the UK, France and Canada, have already indicated their intention to recognize a Palestinian state at the session.

US officials fear that boosting the Palestinian Authority's international legitimacy would also be seen as a political victory for Hamas and could reward terrorism. The State Department memo warned that the planned French-Saudi conference would serve as a "propaganda victory for Hamas" and undermine Washington's ability to shape cease-fire talks and post-war arrangements in Gaza.

 

 יחסים עכורים ומתוחים לפני מותו. אבו מאזן סופד לעראפת , רויטרסMahmoud Abbas eulogizes Yasser Arafat. 

 

The move sets a precedent: this is the first time the US has blocked an entire foreign delegation from attending the UN's high-level week. However, it is not the first time Washington has barred a Palestinian leader. In 1988, the Reagan administration denied a visa to PLO chairman Yasser Arafat due to his ties to terrorism. The decision drew protests and ultimately led the UN to relocate its meeting to Geneva, where Arafat addressed the Assembly.

Despite the sweeping restrictions, the State Department clarified that the Palestinian UN mission will continue to operate under special exemption as required by the host country agreement, allowing diplomatic staff to work in New York. However, senior political figures will not be included.

TRUMP EMBRACES AN UBER-EVIL QATAR ..... NO WONDER QATAR GIFTED TRUMP WITH A LUXURY AIRCRAFT

Behind the wealth and diplomacy: Qatar's hidden human rights nightmare

Persecution of minorities, encouragement of IDF soldier kidnappings, support for terrorism, oppression of women, and a legal system that enables modern slavery – all this and more can be found in Qatar.

 

by Shachar Kleiman 

 

Israel Hayom

Aug 29, 2025  

                                               

US President Donald Trump (L) speaks with Qatar's Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani at the start of a state dinner at the Lusail Palace in Doha on May 14, 2025. (Brendan SMIALOWSKI / AFP)

US President Donald Trump with Qatar's Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani at a state dinner at the Lusail Palace in Doha on May 14, 2025.
 
 
Persecution of minorities, encouragement of IDF soldier kidnappings, support for terrorism, oppression of women, and a legal system that enables modern slavery – all this "goodness" and more can be found in Qatar. It's hard to think of another country in the world where such a large gap exists between declarations about human rights and the actual human rights situation. In the Gulf emirate, headed by ruler Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani, they know how to talk endlessly about the importance of international law, and occasionally, the capital Doha even hosts human rights conferences on behalf of UN organizations. But what about the situation at home?
 

Minorities: Endless harassment

One answer to this question is provided by a recent ruling in Qatar's court, which decided to send the chairman of the Bahai community assembly in the country, Remy Rouhani, to five years in prison. The reason: The 71-year-old Rouhani simply dared to express himself and voice his opinions on equality between men and women. Consequently, the Bahai religious leader was accused of promoting "a doctrine or ideology that casts doubt on the foundations of Islam," according to a section in Qatar's penal code. The authorities accused him of "violating social principles and values through information technology," as well as disseminating material promoting the adoption of "destructive principles."

A fair trial? Not in this country. The representative of the international Bahai community at the UN, Saba Haddad, warned that Rouhani was imprisoned on a series of baseless charges, relying solely on his religious identity. She added that the attack on him is an attack on all Bahais in Qatar – and on the very principle of freedom of conscience.

Rouhani, it should be noted, is a Qatari citizen and is regarded as a prominent businessman. He previously served as CEO of the Chamber of Commerce and Industry in the country. His daughter, Nora, told the BBC Arabic network that his activities had been conducted transparently and encountered no significant opposition in recent years. Despite this, in December 2024, he was sentenced to one month of suspended imprisonment, along with a fine of approximately $50,000, for "collecting funds without regulatory approval for charitable activity."

The Ministry of International Communications in Qatar published a response to the publications on the subject, which attempted to portray the story in a completely different light. It stated, among other things, that "Qatar's constitution guarantees the right to freedom of worship for all, and this right must be exercised in accordance with the law. It must not threaten or harm public stability or security. Qatar's judicial system guarantees to provide all parties in any issue a fair legal process."

Really a fair process? The charges against Rouhani were based on social media posts dealing with justice and equality between men and women, respecting parents, and a general call for good deeds – not exactly "radical" ideas. The authorities, for their part, claimed he "violated public order," arrested him in April this year, and held him in detention until his trial. Despite the Qatari announcement, according to human rights organizations, he did not receive legal assistance from a lawyer.

In an interview with her, Rouhani's daughter added details about the terrible treatment the family has faced for years. She herself now lives in exile in Australia with her husband and daughter, after being forced to leave Qatar following the inclusion of her Iranian husband, a member of the Bahai faith, on a "blacklist," without explanation from the authorities. This step prevented him from entering the country's territory or residing in it – part of the systematic discrimination, according to Nora, that Bahais in Qatar endure.

"I am Qatari and received my education in Doha's schools and universities. We didn't come from another planet. But because of our Bahai faith, we became strangers in our homeland," she said painfully. Indeed, human rights organizations report many manifestations of discrimination against Bahais by the authorities in Qatar, including deportations, arrests, and even deliberate bureaucratic delays, such as delays in granting permits to rebuild a cemetery.

Foreign workers or foreign slaves? "Forbidden to leave the employer"

This is not the only group discriminated against in Qatar. Many of the emirate's residents are foreign workers without rights, who are in the status of de facto slaves. Take, for example, Amit Gupta, a senior technology professional from India, on charges that remained classified. For months, his family was not even updated on what crime he was accused of. Gupta is the head of an Indian technology company operating in Kuwait and Qatar, and in 2013, he moved to work in Doha. In early January, he was arrested by Qatar's security apparatus while sitting in a restaurant, without being told the reason for the arrest.

In Qatar, it should be emphasized, hundreds of thousands of Indians like Gupta work. Last year, the country's court released eight former Indian Navy officers after they were sentenced to death. According to foreign reports, they were accused of "spying for Israel."

According to Human Rights Watch, more than 91 percent of Qatar's population are foreign workers. These are controlled by an abusive sponsorship system (according to the "kafala," the guarantee system practiced in many Arab countries), which gives employers almost complete control over workers. Despite publicized initiatives to improve their situation, workers still struggle to change jobs – even if employers have stopped paying them. Not only that, but when a worker leaves his workplace without employer permission, it is considered an "escape" that is considered a crime under the country's law. This is probably also the reason why to this day Qatar has not opened an investigation regarding the deaths of masses of foreign workers – between hundreds to thousands, according to estimates – as part of the 2022 World Cup.

Discrimination against women: Raped and sent to prison

The status of women in Qatar is no better – unless they are members of the emir's family. Women are subject to guardianship laws that prevent them from making any significant decisions about their future. For example, they can only marry if their guardian, a male family member, approves of it. Men, by comparison, can marry up to four women simultaneously, without needing anyone's approval. Additionally, women are required to obey their husbands and may lose the right to alimony if they refuse to have sex with their husband "without a justified reason." Working outside the home also requires permission from the guardian.

Beyond that, Qatar's penal code prohibits sex outside of marriage. Anyone who violates the law could be sent to up to seven years in prison. A Muslim who does so could receive flogging if unmarried, and if he has consensual relations with an unmarried woman – the death penalty.

This law affects the authorities' treatment of rape crimes. For example, a few years ago, a tourist from the Netherlands was drugged and raped in a nightclub in Doha. When she complained to the local police, she was sent to prison for several months and fined $800 before being deported from the country.

LGBT community: Set a date on Grindr – and got arrested

The situation of the LGBT community in the country is particularly severe. Just last year, Qatar's security apparatus arrested Guerrero Avinia, a foreign citizen who lived in the country for seven years and worked at an airline company, shortly after he agreed to meet with a man through the Grindr app. His family told human rights organizations that they believe the profile he contacted was fake and was operated by the police.

Over the years, there have been reports of other arbitrary arrests of lesbians, gay men, and other LGBT community members. Qatar is one of 64 countries where homosexuality is prohibited by law. According to various reports, Nepalese were imprisoned in Qatar solely because of their sexual orientation, a move that caused the country to warn its citizens about working in countries like Qatar.

And of course, alongside the systematic violation of human rights, there is the sour cherry on the Qatari whipped cream: support for Hamas and attacks against Israeli targets. During the war, Education Minister Lula al-Khater praised senior Hamas officials and terrorists who were eliminated, including Mohammed Deif and Yahya Sinwar; and this week, after the attack on IDF forces in Khan Yunis, journalist Jaber al-Harami – close to the government – published a post expressing a wish that Hamas would kidnap soldiers; he later deleted it.

The absurdity is that Qatar continues to conduct a foreign policy in parallel, in which it purports to portray itself as a champion of human rights. In 2022, Qatar's ambassador Hind al-Muftah even ran for the position of chair of the UN Forum for Human Rights, Democracy and Rule of Law; until, at the last moment, the organization UN WATCH exposed a series of statements by the celebrated diplomat, who described Jews as "our enemies" and homosexuals as "repulsive."

The organization noted at the time that Qatar has significant influence on the UN in Geneva, and as part of this, the country funded a hall in its name worth $20 million. And this, in essence, tells the whole story: behind the big money and self-glorification, lies corruption that is no less substantial.

WHY HIS SON DIED

My son died because IDF spares civilians, Israeli envoy to US says

Ambassador Yechiel Leiter cited his son’s death while fighting in Gaza as an example of the sacrifices the Jewish state makes to save Palestinian lives.

 

By Canaan Lidor 

 

Israel Today

Aug 29, 2025

 

Israeli Ambassador to the United States, Yechiel Leiter. Photo by Yonatan Sindel/Flash90

Israeli Ambassador to the United States, Yechiel Leiter.
 

Israel’s ambassador to the United States, Yechiel Leiter, said in a televised interview on Thursday that his son Moshe, who did fighting Hamas in 2023, would be alive today if Israel really did what it is accused of doing in Gaza.

“My own son was killed because we do not kill innocent civilians. He went in on foot into Gaza and led the troops at the beginning of the war, and was killed when he went into a Hamas booby trap,” Leiter told Jake Tapper on CNN.

Maj. (res.) Moshe Yedidyah Leiter, 39, was killed in action in the northern Gaza Strip on Nov. 10, 2023. A reservist, he served as a paramedic and was due to start a training placement at a hospital as part of his studies to become a doctor. He and his wife had six children, the youngest of whom was about three months old when his father died.

Near the end of the interview, Tapper asked the ambassador his son’s name. Tapper then repeated it and said: “May his memory be a blessing.” Leiter replied: “Thank you, I appreciate that.”

 

 Mourning Moshe Yedidya Leiter at his Nov. 12 funeral on Mount Herzl (credit: FLASH90)

Major Moshe Yedidia Leiter's funeral at the Mount Herzl Military Cemetery in Jerusalem on November 12, 2023. 
  

Leiter used the example to discredit the claims that Israel was perpetrating genocide in Gaza and killing civilians indiscriminately.

“A country that’s capable of taking out the control of all of Iranian airspace in 72 hours, allowing for the B2s of the United States to come in and obliterate the nuclear weapons operations in Iran, is not capable of ending this war sooner? Of course we are, but it’s because we’re taking precautions that no other country has ever taken,” Leiter said.

No other country, he also said, “has had to face a situation of 450 miles of terror tunnels under an area that’s 24 miles long. We’re dealing with a ghoulish, fiendish organization that’s not only hiding behind civilians, but is using civilians as cannon fodder. They enjoy this. This is a death cult. They say this.”

In the interview, Leiter reiterated Israel’s insistence, backed by US President Donald Trump, that the war end with Hamas dismantled.

“This war ends when Hamas ends. We need to see this war end where Gaza is disarmed, Gaza is demilitarized and all of our hostages are out. None of this, as the president has said repeatedly, none of this drip-drab kind of thing, a few hostages now, a few hostages later. If we are not careful, what’s going to happen is we’re going to get a few hostages out now and we’re never going to see the rest of the hostages again.”

Leiter stressed that, alongside protests by Israelis demanding Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu end the war in Gaza, the government is under pressure by others demanding Hamas’s total defeat.

“There are families of soldiers who are saying to the prime minister, you have to end this war with a defeat of Hamas because otherwise we’re going back to Oct. 6,” Leiter said.

ON ISSUE AFTER ISSUE - WHETHER IMMIGRATION, CRIME, TRANS OBSESSION, COLLEGE CAMPUS RADICALISM - DEMOCRATS HAVE CONSISTENTLY PLACED THEMSELVES ON THE LOSING SIDE OF 80% TO 20% SPLITS AMONG AMERICANS

The last stand of pro-Israel Democrats

The DNC could have sent a message of partial support for the Jewish state. Instead, it encouraged the pro-Hamas left and delayed hopes for a comeback. 

 

By Jonathan S. Tobin 

 

JNS

Aug 28, 2025 


 

Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., left, greets Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., as they speak during a stop of their "Fighting Oligarchy" tour that filled Civic Center Park, Friday, March 21, 2025, in Denver. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)

Sen. Bernie Sanders, (I-Vt.) and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio Cortez (D-N.Y.), leaders in the Israel-hating faction of the Democratic party, speak to supporters during the “Fighting Oligarchy: Where We Go From Here” rally at Civic Center Park in Denver on March 21, 2025. 
 

There was a time when the moderate adults in charge of the Democratic Party weren’t afraid to use their power to marginalize radical leftists who hate Israel. But as was evident at last week’s meeting of the Democratic National Committee in Minneapolis, that is no longer the case.

The good news is that the party establishment, which is to say, most officeholders and officials like the national committee members, hasn’t yet been completely bulldozed by the far left. That was made clear when the DNC voted down a resolution declaring its support for a Palestinian state and a total arms embargo on Israel with no condemnation of Hamas, the terrorist attacks of Oct. 7 or a call for the release of Israeli hostages. It’s also true that a majority of those present were prepared to back a competing resolution proposed by chairman Ken Martin that, while calling for “secure and unrestricted delivery of humanitarian assistance” to Gaza and a ceasefire, also demanded the release of hostages held in the Strip and a two-state solution.

Such a resolution was far from a ringing endorsement of the U.S.-Israel alliance since it envisioned an end to the war without a surrender of Hamas. That, of course, would essentially reward the Palestinians with a state for starting the current war with the unspeakable atrocities in southern Israel on Oct. 7 . Since it included mention of the hostages and envisioned a future in which the Jewish state would exist—albeit via a two-state scheme that the Palestinians have repeatedly rejected—that’s what passes for pro-Israel sentiment among Democrats these days.

A party divided

Just at the moment when pro-Israel Democrats could have rightly celebrated the defeat of the intersectional and antisemitic wing of their party, Martin decided that even as weak an expression of support for Israel as the one that he had proposed was a bridge too far for the Democratic Party in 2025.

Instead of proceeding with the vote, Martin withdrew the resolution, declaring that “there’s a divide in our party on this issue.”

Explaining his puzzling move to surrender to his party’s left-wing members just at the moment when he could have sent a message making it clear that they weren’t in charge, Martin resorted to the kind of contemptible double talk that ought to cause even the most cynical partisan hacks to blush.

“This is a moment that calls for shared dialogue,” Martin said. “It calls for shared advocacy, and that’s why I’ve decided today, at this moment, listening to the testimony and listening to people in our party, to withdraw my amendment and resolution,” he said.

Which is to say: He lacked the courage to stand up for even a watered-down expression of support for the Jewish state. Either that, or he is too much of a realist to pretend that the DNC members who voted down the pro-Hamas resolution weren’t truly representative of sentiment in a party whose voters have largely abandoned support for Israel.

Some Jewish Democrats did their best to spin this discouraging decision as somehow a victory for their side or at least a defeat for their opponents. But the truth is that Martin’s waving of the white flag on the issue exemplified that the last stand of the pro-Israel Democrats has already taken place and that, far from courageously defending their position, they have already surrendered.

The formal takeover of the DNC by the intersectional Israel-hating left wing of the party will likely have to wait until at least 2028. At that point, the faction led by Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) may finally vanquish the last vestiges of the old party establishment that forced Hillary Clinton and former President Joe Biden down the throats of Democrats in 2016 and 2020. They’re also the same crowd that set in motion the coup against Biden in 2024 after his mental incapacity became too great to cover up, and then former Vice President Kamala Harris’s incompetent and ultimately losing campaign against President Donald Trump.

Martin’s timorous retreat at the DNC gathering reflected the growing hate for the Jewish state among Democrats, who have swallowed Hamas propaganda about Israel committing “genocide” in the Gaza Strip and deliberately starving Palestinian Arabs. With the legacy liberal media mainstreaming such blood libels, it comes as little surprise that the latest Gallup poll showed that only 8% of Democrats back Israel in its war against Hamas, while 71% of Republicans side with it.


A viral moment

Martin’s decision illustrated how far the party establishment has moved away from its traditional pro-Israel positions. It also brought to mind a time when one of his predecessors was prepared to lie on national television to ensure that Democrats went to voters with a pro-Israel platform.

At the 2012 Democratic National Convention in Charlotte, N.C., the delegates were asked to adopt a change to the party’s platform declaring their recognition of the fact that Jerusalem was the capital of Israel. The measure was deemed necessary by party operatives who understood that President Barack Obama’s re-election campaign had prioritized a Jewish charm offensive to make up for the way he spent his first three years in office attacking Israel.

But to the consternation of Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, who was then serving as chairman of the Democratic National Committee, the two-thirds majority needed in the voice vote to make the change was clearly lacking.

In an epically embarrassing viral moment, Villaraigosa asked the delegates three times to vote. Each time he did so, it was clear that a majority of those voicing their opinion were opposed to affirming that Jerusalem was the capital of Israel. The platform plank was meaningless, since everyone knew that Obama had no intention of moving the U.S. embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem—something that happened after Donald Trump won the 2016 election. But the convention delegates, who were largely grass-roots party activists and very much to the left of the leaders of the Democrats, were having none of it.

Rather than admit defeat, Villaraigosa simply declared that the platform plank had actually passed with a two-thirds majority, despite the fact that everyone in the hall and the millions watching on television knew that most of those present actually had opposed it.

That was the first time the shift among Democrats became obvious to the general public. But it was not something their leaders were ready to concede, and if it required them to falsify convention votes to deny it, then that’s what they were prepared to do, even if it made them the butt of late-night comedy show jokes.

Fast-forward 13 years to the DNC meeting in Minneapolis, and instead of engaging in Stalinist-style democracy like the Charlotte “vote,” Martin believes that there’s no way to keep his party in the pro-Israel column.

That shouldn’t have surprised anyone after his response to the victory of Democratic Socialist and BDS-supporter Zohran Mamdani in the New York City mayoral primary in June. Like other party leaders, not even Mamdani’s refusal to condemn pro-Hamas chants like “Globalize the intifada” was enough to warrant a disavowal of his candidacy from Martin. To the contrary, he said that Mamdani and, by extension, his supporters who favor the destruction of Israel, are valued members of the Democrats’ “big tent.”

Clueless about why they’re losing

Martin’s choice not to try to pull Democrats back to the political center on Israel was consistent with much of what went on at the DNC meeting. Much of the proceedings demonstrated that the party is still primarily concerned with appeasing the woke left. It started with a cringeworthy “land acknowledgement” about meeting on stolen Native American property and got progressively worse after that. Subsequent presentations and speeches aligned the party with extreme trans activism, support for illegal immigrants, and opposition to enforcing the law and securing America’s border, as well as assertions that an interest in cracking down on crime was a symptom of authoritarianism.

The party’s priorities seem to be affirming Trump derangement syndrome and pandering to left-wing ideologues.

Taken as a whole, it was a reminder that the Democrats are still clueless as to why they lost to Trump last year. As even The New York Times conceded in a recent article, the party is “hemorrhaging voters long before they even go to the polls.” As the analysis pointed out: “Of the 30 states that track voter registration by political party, Democrats lost ground to Republicans in every single one between the 2020 and 2024 elections—and often by a lot.”

These numbers show that there has been a staggering 4.5 million voter swing toward the GOP in the last four years.

This realignment is being fueled by a sense that the Democrats have abandoned the interests of the working class of all races for those of the credentialed elites. Part of that is their embrace of woke leftist ideas on a host of cultural and political matters, of which their abandonment of Israel plays just a small part. On issue after issue—whether immigration, crime, trans obsession, college campus radicalism—Democrats have consistently placed themselves on the losing side of 80% to 20% splits among Americans. All their complaints about Trump or even the administration’s failings can’t make up for that kind of poor political judgment.

Liberal power is also being severely cut back by Trump’s efforts to squelch the left-leaning administrative “deep” state that enabled them to stay in control even after losing elections. The fact that the corporate mainstream press is not nearly as powerful as it once was is also crucial. The media landscape is changing as alternative, independent media outlets and podcasts are where more Americans are now consuming news and opinion. As was evident in 2024, it’s a factor that is hurting the Democrats.

That doesn’t guarantee that Democrats can’t take back at least partial control of Congress in next year’s midterm elections, especially the already evenly divided House of Representatives. The GOP could be tripped up by a variety of factors, including extremism on the far right, some of whose adherents are starting down the same woke antisemitic and anti-Israel rabbit hole as the Democrats.

The path to a comeback

No victory in politics is permanent, and—for all of the triumphalism we’re currently hearing from Trump and the Republicans—sooner or later, the Democrats are going to be back in power.

For that to happen, they’re going to have to stop being hostages to the radicals on the intersectional left. That was how their revival after the last period of total GOP dominance in the 1980s was able to happen. That was when President Bill Clinton dragged them back to the center after Ronald Reagan took advantage of that generation’s Democrats’ willingness to anchor themselves to unpopular left-wing positions.

The same thing is going to be necessary for that inevitable turning of the political tables to occur. Suffice it to say that if the latest DNC meeting is any indication of how Democrats are thinking, then perhaps Vice President JD Vance (who is now the frontrunner to succeed Trump as the Republican candidate in 2028) could be forgiven for thinking that the current GOP moment could last beyond the next four years.

One of the main differences between the early 1990s, when centrist Democrats took back their party, and today is the role social media plays in strengthening extremists, as well as the sort of political discourse in which any deviation from ideological purity (whether on the left or right) is severely punished. The ideological bifurcation of journalism—in which Americans on different sides of the political aisle no longer read, listen or watch the same media outlets—also makes it harder for centrists to prevail in intra-party struggles.

That’s why the inability of centrist Democrats to make a stand at the DNC on the Middle East ought to discourage more than just the pro-Israel community.

With grassroots Democrats so thoroughly captured by the intersectional left—and therefore willing to swallow pro-Hamas propaganda—there may be no way to reconstruct a bipartisan pro-Israel consensus. But as Martin’s decision indicated, by allowing their party to be intimidated by extremists when it comes to hostility to Israel, Democrats are signaling to the country that they are uninterested in the sort of sensible centrism that might carve out a path for their return to power.

By refusing to confront the pro-Hamas left, Democrats are doing more than harming Israel. They’re also pigeonholing themselves as a party that is currently too enamored of extreme ideology to be assured of success. As long as that is true, their time in the wilderness of political opposition is likely to continue.

IF HAMAS EMBRACES YOU [MACRON], YOU'RE IN THE WRONG PLACE

Israel faces seven fronts and a Europe that rewards Hamas

While the Jewish state fights for its survival, Europe adds fuel to the fire. 

 

By Fiamma Nirenstein
 
JNS
Aug 28, 2025
 
Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz and IDF chief Eyal Zamir (R) discuss strikes on Yemen on August 28, 2025. 
Elad Malka/Defense Ministry.
Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz and IDF chief Eyal Zamir (R) discuss strikes on Yemen on August 28, 2025.
 
 

Sana’a, Yemen, was the target of major Israeli airstrikes this week—an operation cloaked in secrecy but widely believed to have struck the upper echelons of Iran’s jihadist proxy war machine. On Thursday, an Israeli airstrike reportedly killed the Houthi defense minister, Mohamed al-Atifi, and chief of staff, Muhammad Abd al-Karim al-Ghamari.

The Israeli action came after days of relentless Houthi missile barrages from Yemen—another front in a war Israel never asked for but must now fight, for its survival. On Wednesday, Israelis rushed into bomb shelters—twice in just 10 days—as long-range rockets fired from impoverished, war-torn Yemen rained down in Tehran’s direction.

Seven active fronts now threaten the Jewish state: Gaza, Lebanon, Syria, Yemen, Judea and Samaria, Iran and the global battlefield of antisemitism. Israel must simultaneously rescue hostages, defeat Hamas, protect its civilians and withstand international condemnation.

Israel is attempting what no army has ever done: defeat a genocidal enemy that hides behind civilians, while continuing to deliver humanitarian aid to those same civilians, all under the glare of a hostile international press.

More than 20,000 Hamas and allied fighters remain entrenched in tunnels, firing rockets from beneath schools, hospitals, and mosques. The IDF has gone to unprecedented lengths to minimize civilian casualties, but for Hamas, every dead Gazan is a propaganda victory.

Meanwhile, the global jihadist movement is emboldened and flush with cash. Antisemitic demonstrations spread across Europe and America, echoing Hamas’s talking points almost word for word.

In Washington this week, U.S. President Donald Trump met with Ron Dermer, Jared Kushner and Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff to chart Gaza’s postwar future. One certainty emerged: Hamas will play no role in it. The international community must now choose whether to help build something sustainable—or reward terror once again.

On Israel’s northern border, a strike on Syrian forces prevented the destruction of a critical observation post. Talks are even underway with Abu Mohammad al-Julani, leader of the former al-Nusra Front, that could lead to mutual recognition by September.

In Lebanon, the government courageously voted to disarm Hezbollah, though the terror group—acting on Iranian orders—has so far refused. Still, Palestinian factions in Lebanon have already surrendered their arms, showing that pressure can work.

Iran, meanwhile, is cornered. It continues to enrich uranium to 60% in defiance of the IAEA and refuses inspections. Britain, Germany and France are threatening to reimpose “snapback” sanctions. Israel is watching closely, knowing the ayatollahs will exploit every Shi’ite proxy they can find, from the Houthis to Hezbollah, to extend their reach.

But while Israel fights for survival, Europe adds fuel to the fire. France is spearheading a September push at the United Nations to recognize a Palestinian state. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu rightly accused President Emmanuel Macron of fueling antisemitism in France. Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar put it more bluntly: “If a terrorist organization embraces you, you’re in the wrong place.”

Recognition without reform is not statehood; it is a reward for Hamas, and a betrayal of every hostage still in captivity.

Israel is also taking moral leadership where others have failed. This week, Netanyahu formally recognized the Armenian genocide, the Shoah of the Armenian people. For decades, Israel hoped to maintain warm relations with Turkey, once imagined as a bridge between Islam and the West.

But Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has chosen instead to style himself an Ottoman sultan, demonizing Jews, calling Netanyahu “Hitler,” and building his influence on antisemitic hatred. His persecution of the Kurds only underscores his brutality.

By recognizing the Armenian genocide—at a moment when Armenia and Azerbaijan have finally made peace under Trump’s mediation—Israel has made peace with historical truth. That is no small achievement.

Israel today is under fire from seven directions. It faces Iran’s nuclear program, Hamas’s tunnels, Hezbollah’s rockets, and Europe’s hypocrisy. But it also demonstrates resilience, clarity and moral leadership. Where others equivocate, Israel names evil for what it is—and acts.

The world should take note. Rewarding terror only guarantees more war. Standing with Israel, by contrast, is the only path to peace.

ONLY AMERICA IS HOLDING FAST TO ISRAEL'S SECURITY AND DEFENSE

One eye and four blindfolds

Australia’s sudden realism concerning a malign Iran cannot repair the harm it is doing to Israel and the West. 

 

By Melanie Phillips 

 

JNS

Aug 28, 2025 

 

 

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and his virulently anti-Israel foreign minister, Penny Wong 

 

The reluctance of Western governments to respond robustly to Iranian aggression ever since the Islamic revolutionary regime in Tehran came to power in 1979 has hugely increased the danger that this malign actor poses to the free world.

Not only has Iran committed countless acts of terrorism against Western interests and Jewish targets. The Islamic Republic has also created a network of jihadi sleeper cells in Western countries. It’s been involved in coordinating the pro-Hamas hate marches in Western cities ever since the Hamas-led atrocities in southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023.

And it’s tried to murder Iranian dissidents and political figures in Britain and America, including plots to assassinate on American soil the former U.S. National Security Adviser John Bolton and the former U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.

This week, the Australian government, headed by Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, suddenly announced that Iran had been behind two terrorist attacks against Jewish targets last year, the firebombing of the Adass Synagogue in Melbourne and the kosher Lewis’ Continental Kitchen in Sydney.

According to the Australian Security Intelligence Organization (ASIO), it’s likely that the Iranian regime was also involved in other attacks.

As a result, the Australian government has thrown out the Iranian ambassador—the first time it has expelled an ambassador since World War II—and has pulled its own diplomats out of the Islamic Republic. It also intends to proscribe Tehran’s terrorist shock troops, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.

This is, to put it mildly, a startling development. The Albanese government has taken an eye-wateringly hostile attitude to Israel in its war against Iran. Albanese and his virulently anti-Israel foreign minister, Penny Wong, have never shown any sign that they’ve understood the threat posed by Iran to both Israel and the West.

Instead, they’ve consistently sucked up to the fanatics of Tehran. At the beginning of August, Iran’s ambassador to Australia, Ahmad Sadeghi, called for the “wiping out” of the “Zionist plague” by 2027.

This was but the latest in a string of deeply concerning remarks by Sadeghi that had received no adequate ministerial pushback. Last year, he extolled the now-deceased Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah as a “remarkable leader” and a “prominent standard-bearer,” while defaming Israel as “the most notorious killing machine in current world history.”

Calling his “Zionist plague” remarks “abhorrent,” “hateful” and “antisemitic,” Albanese implied that Sadeghi had been summoned for a dressing-down. In fact, he was reportedly called in for talks with foreign ministry officials merely about how to “de-escalate” the war in Gaza in order to have “a sustained ceasefire.”

Yet since the start of the Gaza war, Israel’s ambassador to Australia, Amir Maimon, has been summoned for a dressing-down by the Albanese administration on at least three occasions because it doesn’t like the way that Israel has been conducting its military operations.

The government has presided over an explosive frenzy of Jew-hatred in Australia. Not only has it failed to douse this, it has actually fueled it by recycling the Hamas lies that have painted the Israelis as evil people who deliberately kill civilians and starve children to death.

It has arguably displayed more malice towards Israelis than has been shown by any other country. Earlier this month, it canceled a visit by Simcha Rothman, chair of the Knesset’s Constitution, Law and Justice Committee, shortly before he was due to begin a solidarity tour with Australia’s Jewish community.

Among its reasons, the government said Rothman’s statements, including “the elimination of Hamas and the expansion and sovereignty of the Israeli state, and denial of any wrongdoing by Israel against Palestinians and Gaza during the current conflict,” were viewed by members of the Australian community as “inflammatory and concerning.”

In fact, the Albanese government has a shocking track record of canceling the visas of Israeli Jewish visitors, including the former government minister Ayelet Shaked and the high-tech influencer Hillel Fuld, whose brother, Ari Fuld, was murdered at the Gush Etzion Junction by terrorists in 2018.

Yet it’s happily issued visas to terrorist sympathizers, including the London-based Tunisian media entrepreneur Sammi Hamdi, who encouraged people to “celebrate” Oct. 7, and preacher Mohammed Ghuloom, who had also praised Nasrallah.

So remarks made by Albanese and Wong, when announcing their action against Tehran, struck a note of quite sickening hypocrisy.

Iran, said Wong, had tried to “undermine social cohesion”; Albanese said it had tried to “sow hatred and division in our community.” But it’s Albanese and Wong themselves who have been sowing hatred and division against the Jews of Australia by regurgitating Hamas lies and maliciously discriminating against Israelis in order to appease their country’s Muslims.

Moreover, government sources have reportedly disclosed that the Albanese government has been aware for several months of possible Iranian links to the attacks on Jews in Australia.

So why has Albanese suddenly decided to act against the Islamic regime? The reason is almost certainly that he has begun to feel some heat over his government’s appalling behavior.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu pushed diplomatic niceties to one side by chewing him out in public over the Rothman ban, while Israel has stripped some Australian diplomats of their visas. This may have concentrated Albanese’s mind on the fact that intelligence-sharing with Israel remains crucial to Australia’s national security.

In 2017, Israel alerted ASIO that there was a plot to blow up an Etihad Airways flight leaving Sydney. And this week, Sky News revealed that a tip-off from Israeli intelligence had assisted ASIO during its investigation, which unraveled the Iran connection to the terror attacks.

More significant still, U.S. President Donald Trump appears to be taking a very dim view indeed of Australia’s anti-Israel antics. He has yet to meet Albanese.

And Australia’s defense minister, Richard Marles, was humiliated this week by American defense officials’ ambiguity over whether exchanges with his U.S. counterpart, Pete Hegseth, in Washington, D.C., were an actual “meeting” or a “happenstance encounter.”

Any idea that Albanese has now seen the light over Israel is vanishingly unlikely.

On Sky News Australia, Sharri Markson revealed that in 1998, a “starry-eyed” Albanese met Yasser Arafat, head of the terrorist Palestine Liberation Organization, which had sponsored and funded his trip to Ramallah.

Two years later, she said, during the Second Intifada, when Palestinian Arabs were blowing Israelis to bits on buses and in pizza parlors, Albanese joined protests against Israel, during which American and Israeli flags were burnt.

In a speech to the Australian parliament while Israel was struggling to stop the slaughter of more than 1,300 of its citizens, Albanese condemned Israeli roadblocks and other restrictions on Palestinians as abuses of their civil rights.

Albanese has now admitted that he has been an advocate for the Palestinian cause his whole life and says he is angry at the anti-Israel protesters—only because their extremism is undermining that cause. In other words, in the great battle now underway between civilization and barbarism, Albanese has put Australia on the wrong side.

This matters not just to Israel but to the West. Australia is a member of the Five Eyes security alliance. The other four members are the United Kingdom, the United States, Canada and New Zealand.

In its hostility to Israel—the West’s indispensable front line of defense in the Middle East—Australia has been puncturing that alliance, a breach that its belated burst of realism over Iran cannot repair.

Unfortunately, though, it’s not alone in this. The United Kingdom, Canada and New Zealand have also turned into foes of the Jewish state, demonizing it with lies aimed at its delegitimization and preparing to recognize the illusory “state of Palestine” which is being willed into existence purely as a means to Israel’s destruction.

Only America is holding fast to Israel’s security and defense. So the Five Eyes alliance has now turned into One Eye and Four Blindfolds.

Australia, Britain, Canada and New Zealand can no longer be trusted with the defense of the West. It’s now America and Israel fighting for a free world that no longer understands what that means.

DETROIT HOSTS PALESTINIAN TERRORISTS

Detroit should not roll out the red carpet for convicted terrorists

Several program speakers associated with the People’s Conference for Palestine have blood on their hands. They are not “peace activists.” 

 

By Sheldon L. Freilich and Kobi Erez

 

JNS

Aug 28, 2025

 

 

Huntington Place (formerly, the Cobo Center), the major convention center in Detroit, on Nov. 21, 2022. Credit: 42-BRT via Wikimedia Commons.

Huntington Place (formerly, the Cobo Center), the major convention center in Detroit

 

The government-owned Huntington Place convention center is set to host extremists, terror-linked groups and antisemitic agitators. Michigan leaders must act now.

The Zionist Organization of America-Michigan Region writes with deep alarm and disappointment over the decision to host the upcoming People’s Conference for Palestine in Detroit (Aug. 29-31).

This conference is not a benign cultural gathering. It has consistently provided a platform for convicted terrorists, extremist ideologues and groups tied to U.S.-designated foreign terrorist organizations.

This year’s speaker list includes Hussam Shaheen, who was convicted in 2004 for leading a terror cell in Jerusalem, recruiting and arming operatives, and attempting deadly attacks against civilians. Released this February in a hostage deal with Hamas, he is now invited as a “guest speaker.” Also on the docket is Omar Assaf, a longtime official of the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine (DFLP), a U.S.-designated terrorist group responsible for civilian killings. Assaf has openly justified attacks against Israelis.

Last year’s conference featured Wisam Rafeedie, a member of the terrorist group Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP)—infamous for airplane hijackings—and Sana Daqqa, the widow of Walid Daqqa, a PFLP commander convicted of murdering an Israeli soldier. PFLP terrorists also committed the 2014 synagogue massacre in the Jerusalem neighborhood of Har Nof, where four worshippers, including three Americans, were hacked to death and a Druze police officer killed.

These are not “peace activists.” They are individuals tied directly to groups the U.S. government formally labels as terrorists.

The danger of hosting such figures is clear. The U.S. State Department and U.S. Department of Homeland Security have placed individuals like Shaheen and Assaf on “lookout” status, with visas under scrutiny or denial. Even the Trump administration publicly pledged to block such entries.

While federal authorities work to keep terrorists out, Detroit’s publicly owned convention center prepares to welcome them.

The 2025 program, like 2024’s, glorifies “resistance”—a euphemism for terrorism. Last year, speakers praised Hamas, lauded the “heroic” Oct. 7 massacres and called for the downfall of the United States. This year’s lineup includes Lama Ghosheh, convicted of praising terrorism; Hatem Bazian, UC Berkeley professor and founder of Muslim Brotherhood-linked Students for Justice in Palestine; Linda Sarsour, notorious for antisemitic rhetoric; and Mahmoud Khalil, tied to violent campus uprisings.

Sharing the stage will be Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-Mich.), whose record includes antisemitic extremism and opposition to Israel’s existence. Tlaib draped herself in the Palestinian Authority flag during her primary victory speech. The P.A. dictatorship, infamous for paying stipends to convicted terrorists, glorifying murderers in schools and mosques and inciting violence, remains central to this ideology.

The conference is convened by groups including the Palestinian Youth Movement (PYM), Al-Awda and the U.S. Campaign for Palestinian Rights. These groups have ties to the PFLP, supported boycotts of Israel and called for embargoes after U.S.-designated terrorist attacks.

Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) has called on the IRS to investigate PYM for possible violations of U.S. tax law, citing its antisemitic stances, pro-Hamas protests, and public support for terrorist groups.

By allowing this event, Michigan and Detroit leaders are legitimizing terrorism and extremism while disrespecting the state’s large Jewish community. Detroit, a city still rebuilding its reputation, should not provide legitimacy to those who glorify murder and excuse violence against innocents.

ZOA-Michigan calls on Michigan Gov. Whitmer, the City of Detroit, the Detroit Regional Convention Authority, and the counties of Wayne, Oakland and Macomb to condemn the inclusion of terror-linked speakers and make it clear that Michigan rejects providing extremists a stage; review the approval process for events at government-owned venues to ensure that national security and terrorism concerns are considered; and reaffirm a commitment to rejecting terrorism and extremism in all forms.

Detroit should host innovators, builders and peacemakers, not convicted terrorists. Michigan must stand for dignity, security and integrity, and not become a safe haven for those who once plotted civilian murders.

We urge state and city leaders to act with urgency and moral clarity. The world is watching. Silence in the face of extremism is complicity.

THIS BILL IS WAY PAST DUE ..... IF YOU WERE BORN WITH A DICK, STAY THE HELL OUT OF WOMEN'S RESTROOMS

“Bathroom bill” aimed at trans people approved by Texas House after decade of failed attempts

Senate Bill 8 will restrict restrooms in government buildings, public schools and universities based on sex assigned at birth and apply $25,000 fines for violations.

 

 
The Texas Tribune 
House Speaker Dustin Burrows, R-Lubbock, speaks on the floor of the Texas House on Aug. 18, 2025, two weeks after democrats walked out during the middle of the special session.

GRSPING FOR STRAWS

Judge won't allow doctor to testify about acne drug in Friendswood teen's murder trial

Connor Hilton is accused of shooting a friend to death at his Friendswood home in 2023. His lawyer blamed Accutane. 
 
By Michelle Homer
 
KHOU 11
Aug 26, 2025  
 
 
Connor Hilton
 

FRIENDSWOOD, Texas — A Friendswood teen accused of shooting two friends, killing one of them, was in a Galveston County courtroom for a hearing on Monday. 

An expert with the defense testified that the shooting, allegedly by 18-year-old Connor Hilton, was driven by psychosis caused by Accutane, a popular acne medication. 

Ethan Riley, 18, died at the hospital following the December 2023 shooting at Hilton's home. Benjamin Bliek, 19, was seriously hurt. 

A witness who was hiding in the bathroom called police after hearing gunfire. According to court documents, the witness told investigators that Hilton walked by the bathroom door, saying, “What have I done?”

According to court documents, Hilton later told investigators that he'd been thinking about committing homicide for a long time. The teen also reportedly told the police that the victims did nothing to provoke the shooting.

Investigators said Hilton called the two victims over to his home and was showing off a gun when he shot them. 

"Did you form an opinion as to whether or not Connor was suffering from psychosis on the night of the incident in this case that he is charged with?" defense attorney Rick DeToto asked in court. 

"Yes," answered Dr. James Douglas Bremner. 

"What is that opinion?" DeToto asked.

"Is that he had a medication-induced psychotic disorder," Bremner answered.

The doctor then went on to explain that it basically means that Hilton was not in control of his normal thoughts and behaviors at the time of the shooting.

Prosecutors disagreed.

"He said he was psychotic because he was taking the Accutane," Galveston County prosecutor Shawn Connally said. "I need you to draw a line and explain to me how Connor Hilton taking Accutane made him insane at the time of the offense."

"Well, we know Accutane can cause psychosis," Bremner replied.

"In Connor Hilton?" Connally said. 

"And that's what happened with him," Bremner answered.

Late Tuesday afternoon, the judge denied the defense's request to have the doctor testify at Hilton's trial. The trial is scheduled to begin on September 8.