Saturday, March 14, 2026

THE LIKES OF TUCKER CARLSON AND EVEN JD VANCE HAVE JEWISH BLOOD ON THEIR HANDS

Drawing some conclusions about antisemitic incitement

Podcasters like Tucker Carlson—and other apologists for neo-Nazis and Islamists who incite hatred against Jews and scapegoat Israel—have blood on their hands. 

 

By Jonathan S. Tobin 

 

JNS

Mar 13, 2026 

 

 

Colarado Firebomb Attack: Was pro-Palestine attacker Mohamed Sabry Soliman an 'illegal alien'?
Mohamed Sabry Soliman firebombs a march for Israeli hostages in Boulder, Colo. on June 1, 2025
 

No one can be surprised by the surge in antisemitic violence currently sweeping across the United States. Still, it’s time to draw some conclusions about those who have actively contributed to the atmosphere of incitement against Jews, as well as those who have enabled or remained neutral about it. 

The question is: Will those in leadership positions in government, the media, civil society, Jewish communities and their organizations begin connecting the dots to the growing toll of incidents and the way that Jew-hatred has been normalized in public discourse? 

Since the Hamas-led Palestinian Arab terror attacks in southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, the demonization of the Jewish state and its supporters has become commonplace. Yet the problem has long since ceased to be one in which Jews are merely dealing with hostile environments. Large numbers of people have routinely expressed support for violence that happens elsewhere, including Rama Duwaji, the wife of New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani, who did with respect to the atrocities of Oct. 7.

Or think of the mobs of university students and faculty who chanted for Jewish genocide (“From the river to the sea”) and terrorism against Jews (“Globalize the intifada”). The notion that these were simple slogans and not calls for violence against Jews in the United States wasn’t just naive. It was the product of a mindset that refused to understand that when you foment and legitimize hate against a particular population, that population will have a target on its back. 

A growing toll of violence

 

WXYZ - PHOTO: Law enforcement agencies respond to Temple Israel in West Bloomfield, Michigan, March 12, 2026.
Smoke billows from Temple Israel in West Bloomfield, Michigan after Lebanese immigrant crashed his truck into it on March 12, 2026.

 

The attack at Temple Israel in West Bloomfield, Mich., in the center of the state’s Jewish community, by a Lebanese immigrant-turned-U.S. citizen who drove his truck into the building and opened fire on security guards before being killed, was just the latest situation where Jewish institutions or individuals have been targeted. It comes after a laundry list of other incidents, some of which were highly publicized and many that were not. But they all follow a similar pattern in which perpetrators with grudges against Jews or Israel or who claim to support “Palestine” have made the leap from rhetoric to attempts to shed Jewish blood. 

Whether it was the firebombing of a march for Israeli hostages in Boulder, Colo., in which an 82-year-old Holocaust survivor was murdered or the cold-blooded slaughter of two Israeli embassy staffers in Washington, D.C., or less “serious” crimes like the assault this past week on two Israeli-American men in a San Jose restaurant because they were heard speaking Hebrew, the list of attacks in which Jews have been singled out for violence continues to grow. That doesn’t even take into account violence that is happening abroad, such as the murder in December of 15 people at a Chanukah celebration on Bondi Beach in Australia. And it must be placed in the same context as the many incidents in which those who claim to be acting on behalf of ISIS, or other Muslim terrorist and hate groups, like this week’s fatal shooting at Old Dominion University in Virginia, or the attempted bombing of an anti-Mamdani demonstration in New York City. 

While it is axiomatic that the only ones guilty of such crimes are the assailants, it is long past the point of doubt that they are either inspired by or made more likely to act by those who engage in public rhetorical Jew-baiting. They are further enabled by reflexive accusations of “Islamophobia” against anyone who calls attention to Muslim antisemitism and/or violence against Jews and others committed by those who claim to act on behalf of that community. 

A drumbeat of incitement

While such attacks are invariably condemned across the board, the drumbeat of incitement from public figures linked to hatred for Israel, Zionism and Jewish rights steadily rises. The blood libels about Israelis committing “genocide” in Gaza and accusing American Jews of enabling this fiction, coupled with the more recent accusation that Israel has dragged America into a war on Iran against U.S. interests, have exponentially increased over the past 30 months. 

Mainstream media regularly platforms biased news coverage of the Middle East that often echoes the lies emanating from the Hamas terrorist groups and their Iranian paymasters. These are often repeated by politicians on the far left, such as Mamdani, or members of Congress like Sens. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) and Chris Von Hollen (D-Md.), and Reps. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.) and Rashida Tlaib (D-Mich). Those doing this often claim to oppose antisemitism. They nevertheless repeatedly elevate age-old tropes about dual loyalty and Jews buying influence, which are inextricably tied to such hatred. These same media sources and politicians downplay or deny the hatred of Jews that flows from the Arab and Muslim community, as well as Islamist nations like Qatar that spend billions promoting that agenda in academia, government and throughout American society. 

Meanwhile, far-right podcasters like Tucker Carlson, Candace Owens and neo-Nazi groyper Nick Fuentes spin conspiracy theories about Jewish plots and alleged crimes to vast audiences of often ignorant viewers and listeners who seek a scapegoat that can explain everything that is wrong with the world and their own lives. 


Nick Fuentes when interviewing with Tucker Carlson, said he was 'an admirer' of Joseph Stalin. (X/@NickJFuentes)
Neo-Nazi groyper Nick Fuentes (L) and Tucker Carlson
 

None of this is new. But what is disturbing about it is that too many otherwise decent people tolerate this sort of discourse or simply shrug their shoulders in its wake. 

Conservative podcasters like Megyn Kelly still claim to be middle of the road. But by refusing to take sides against the likes of Carlson and Owens, and leaning into the canard that Israelis and Jews are trying to silence dissent or are responsible for Americans being killed by Iran, they are as much part of the problem as more extreme voices. 

It also applies to those like Vice President JD Vance, whose public stance of neutrality about his friend Carlson’s hate sent a disturbing message to the faction of the Republican Party that looks to him for leadership. 

What must be done in response to the surge of antisemitism and attendant violence? 

First, Americans of all religions, races and political beliefs must unite not merely to condemn individuals who commit these crimes but also to recognize that the enabling of the post-Oct. 7 surge of antisemitism on both the left and right must stop at once. 

Those who spread blood libels against Jews, whether in the media or in politics, must be ostracized from decent society, as they might have been in a different time before memories of the Holocaust faded and such ethnic hatred slipped back into mainstream discourse. 

In a country like the United States, with First Amendment protection for speech, even Nazis have the right to say or publish what they like, so long as they do not directly call for violence. So what is needed now is a concerted effort by responsible persons to push the conspiracy-mongers and haters back into the fever swamps of the far right and far left, and out of mainstream society. 

Doing so requires a sea change on the left, in which those who peddle toxic neo-Marxist theories about race that label Jews and Israelis as “white” oppressors are no longer considered part of the prevailing orthodoxy among political liberals, academics and those who dominate popular culture. 

Media coverage of antisemitic violence should cease valorizing or treating Islamist hate as an understandable reaction to events. As the Honest Reporting group noted in a social-media post this week, when The New York Times reacts to the Michigan attack with an article focusing on the Zionist origins of the synagogue that was assaulted—thus implying that it was a legitimate target of protest if not violence—or in humanizing a would-be ISIS murderer, they are reporting about crimes against Jews or targets of Islamist hate in a way they would never do were the targets other minorities like African-Americans or Hispanics. 

‘Gatekeeping’ against hate

While no one should be subjected to prejudice or discrimination because of their ethnicity or faith, honesty is needed about the source of much of this violence within Muslim and Arab communities. The fear of accusations of “Islamophobia,” which are mainly employed to silence those who condemn antisemitism, must be overcome and replaced by courageous truth-telling by Muslims and non-Muslims. 

It will also require those on the right to forget their phobias about “gatekeeping” that were the product of the moral panic about race that spread across the country during the Black Lives Matter summer of 2020 and led to the shutting down of conservative dissent. Anyone who spreads smears against Jews must be contained, and, yes, “canceled” from platforms where decent persons appear. Those who tolerate such hate in the name of free speech must recognize that the lies they enable are not cost-free efforts to gain Internet clicks and views, but paths to bloodshed. It isn’t too much to ask that antisemitism should not be treated as just another opinion about which people should be expected to agree to disagree. 

Trump took an important step in the right direction with his recent disavowal and condemnation of Carlson. But it can’t end there. The former Fox News host and his maniacal accusations about Jews, Israel and even the Chabad movement have helped put a target on the back of every Jew in the United States, as well as evangelical Christians who support Israel. He should be persona non grata in the White House, at Republican events and as part of activist groups like Turning Point USA, where he has been welcomed in the past. 

And as important as efforts to turn back the tide of hate in society as a whole may be, it is just as, if not more vital, that the Jewish communal leadership stops acting as if they can deal with this crisis without changing the way they think and act. 

Assertive self-defense needed

There must be an end to a general spirit in which the Jewish community believes it can cope with attacks by merely hardening Jewish targets (as important as that is) or by reflexive calls for Jews to “shelter in place.” Those who are responsible for the safety of children, students, families and seniors, or who lead groups tasked with defense of the community, need to model a different kind of behavior than the business-as-usual strategies they have employed for generations. That approach, which relied on the help of erstwhile allies in minority communities or traditional liberal constituencies, has clearly failed. Jews should respond to hate speech that enables violence by reclaiming the streets, the campuses and public platforms with assertiveness, pride and a willingness to go on offense against those who spread antisemitism. 

And, as much as this goes against the grain for most American Jews, a national campaign promoting self-defense, including the large-scale exercise of Second Amendment rights that will make Jewish venues less inviting targets for terrorists, should be on our national agenda. 

Jewish Democrats and Republicans also need to set aside the partisanship that is so pervasive throughout all of American society by making it clear to their respective political allies that the safety of Jews, in America as well as Israel, which remains under assault by Iran and its allies, is a higher priority than partisan loyalties. 

If those who claim to speak for Jews don’t wake up and act on these priorities, they and their often outdated and obsolescent organizations should be scrapped and replaced by those who are not encumbered by the groupthink of the past. 

We must not treat this last week of violence as if it is just one more trial to be endured, and instead draw the necessary conclusions about it and change our stance from one of ineffectual complaints to action.

REMOVING CHURCHILL FROM UK BANKNOTES IS LIKE REMOVING WASHINGTON FROM US ONE DOLLAR BILLS ..... CHURCHILL DESREVES BETTER THAN BEING REPLACED BY A BADGER

Outcry as Churchill and others set to be removed from UK banknotes

Bank of England says new bills will feature local wildlife instead of historical figures; critics scoff that man who led UK to victory in WWII will be replaced by ‘an otter’

 

The Times of Israel

Mar 12, 2026 


Portrait of Winston Churchill on 5 pounds banknote.
 

LONDON, United Kingdom — World War II leader Winston Churchill is to be dropped from the UK £5 banknote in favor of a nature scene, sparking outrage from some lawmakers who said he should not be replaced by local fauna.

Novelist Jane Austen, artist J. M. W. Turner and mathematician and codebreaker Alan Turing are also due to be phased out on the £10, £20, and £50 banknotes respectively as part of a redesign.

The next series of banknotes due to be issued by the Bank of England will feature animals native to the UK, in a shift away from images of prominent Britons.

Possibilities, subject to a public consultation, include badgers and otters as well as frogs, hedgehogs, barn owls, and newts. Plants and landscapes will complete the scenes depicted.

“For more than 50 years, the bank has proudly showcased many inspirational historical figures who have helped shape national thought, innovation, leadership, and values on its banknotes,” the bank said.

“The change to wildlife imagery… provides an opportunity to celebrate another important aspect of the UK,” it added.

The bank will gather views later this year about the specific wildlife the public would like to see featured on the next set of banknotes.

Bank of England chief cashier Victoria Cleland said the key driver for a new series of banknotes was how to stay ahead of counterfeiters.

“Nature is a great choice from a banknote authentication perspective and means we can showcase the UK’s rich and varied wildlife on the next series of banknotes,” she noted.

‘Shaped this nation’

The new banknotes will not appear for several years.

They will continue to feature a portrait of the monarch King Charles III on the other side. Banknotes with the late Queen Elizabeth II also remain in circulation.

Previous banknotes have pictured other national figures, including novelist Charles Dickens, physicist and chemist Michael Faraday, composer Edward Elgar, nurse Florence Nightingale, and architect Christopher Wren.

The most recent series — rolled out between 2016 and 2021 — was printed for the first time on polymer rather than paper.

Ed Davey, leader of the Liberal Democrats, was among lawmakers who criticized the new nature theme.

“Let’s celebrate our wonderful British wildlife, sure, but Winston Churchill helped save our country and the whole of Europe from fascism,” he wrote on X.

“He deserves better than being replaced by a badger,” he said.

Main opposition Conservative lawmaker Alex Burghart called the decision “outrageous.”

“He [Churchill] earned his place on our five pound note. He must not be replaced with an otter,” he said on X, adding the “great people who shaped this nation” should not be forgotten.

Last month, a statue of Winston Churchill in central London was vandalized with anti-Israel graffiti, including Hamas symbols.

Police arrested one suspect, a 38-year-old man, on suspicion of racially aggravated criminal assault.

Churchill was an outspoken supporter of the Zionist movement prior to Israel’s establishment in 1948.

BECAUSE LEBANON WON'T DESTROY HEZBOLLAH, ISRAEL MUST

‘Like Gaza’: Israel said planning ‘massive’ south Lebanon ground invasion to uproot Hezbollah

After terror group’s huge rocket assault on Wednesday night, officials say Israel wants to seize entire area south of Litani River; Ron Dermer said tasked with talks with Beirut

 

TRUMP CUTTING OFF OIL SUPPLIES TO CUBA CAUSES ISLAND-WIDE BLACKOUTS

Protesters in Cuba attack Communist party office in rare riot over blackouts

A rally against power cuts and food shortages appeared to begin peacefully in the city of Moron before turning violent in the early Saturday morning, a state-run newspaper reported.

 

By  

Mar 14, 2026 

 

 

Cuba hit by total blackout 

People stand in the street at night in Havana as Cuba is hit by an island-wide blackout, 

 

HAVANA — Anti-government protesters attacked a Communist Party office in northern Cuba early on Saturday, a state-run newspaper reported, in a rare outburst of public dissent triggered by worsening blackouts that have been exacerbated by a U.S. oil blockade.

A rally against power cuts and food shortages appeared to begin peacefully in the city of Moron late on Friday then turned violent in the early hours of Saturday morning, Invasor newspaper said.

Videos on social media showed a large fire and people throwing rocks through the windows of a building as voices shouted “liberty” in the background.

Reuters was unable to confirm the authenticity of videos that posters said showed the unrest in Moron, a city on Cuba’s northern coast about 250 miles (400 km) east of the capital Havana near the tourist resort of Cayo Coco.

The ​United States has tightened the screws on Cuba this year since capturing Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro — Cuba’s most important foreign benefactor — in January.

President Trump cut off Venezuelan oil shipments to Cuba and threatened to slap tariffs on any country that sells oil to Cuba, piling pressure on the economy already struggling with shortages of food, fuel, electricity and medicine.

Trump has in recent weeks made a series of statements, saying Cuba was on the verge of collapse or eager to make a deal with the United States. Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel said on Friday his government had begun talks with Washington to try to defuse the crisis, the first time Havana has publicly acknowledged the meetings.

Public protests, particularly violent ones, are exceedingly rare in Cuba. Cuba’s 2019 constitution grants citizens the right to demonstrate, but a law more specifically defining that right is stalled in the legislature, leaving those who take to the street in legal limbo.

“What initially began peacefully, and after an exchange with local authorities, turned into acts of vandalism against the headquarters of the Municipal Party Committee,” the Invasor newspaper said.

“A smaller group of people stoned the entrance of the building and started a fire in the street with furniture from the reception area,” it added.

Vandals targeted several other state-run establishments in the area, including a pharmacy and a government market, the report said.

Over the past week, several small groups of residents across Havana have banged pots in protest against extended blackouts.

Students on Monday staged a sit-in on the steps of the University of Havana after the government suspended in-person classes, blaming the U.S. oil blockade. Fuel shortages have vastly reduced public transportation, making it difficult, if not impossible, for teachers and students to get together for classes.

Moron was also the site of significant protests during anti-government riots on July 11, 2021, the largest since Fidel Castro’s 1959 revolution.

MAMDANI THE COMMIE MOVING TOWARDS PROPERTY CONFISCATION

By Bob Walsh

 

Zohran Mamdani ran in New York City on a radical agenda. Cartoon: John Spooner


Mamdani the Commie, the communist mayor of New York City, announced today (Friday) his desire-intent to institute a 50% death tax on estates valued at more than $750,000 dollars.  That is essentially anybody who actually owns property in NYC.  It appears that he actually wants to confiscate via taxation privately held real estate in the city.  

In some places a way around this is to put the title of the property into a family trust.  The trust never dies and ownership moves from generation to generation.  I do not know if this would work in New York, but I strongly suspect people are looking hard at it.

You idiots voted this clown in.  You might not get the government you deserve but you sure as shit get the government you tolerate.

Friday, March 13, 2026

I CAME ACROSS THIS HILARIOUS CARTOON OF 2025'S 'ANTISEMITE OF THE YEAR'

By Howie Katz 

 

 


StopAntisemitism is an American pro-Israel watchdog organization. The group named Tucker Carlson its “Antisemite of the Year” for 2025, an award he truly deserves.

I just came across this hilarious cartoon of Carlson and couldn't resist posting it on BGB. My congratulations to a very talented cartoonist, whoever he/she is. 

WELCOME TO TRUMP INTERNATIONAL HOTEL IN CHICAGO

Exposed: Pest infestation among stomach-churning findings as Trump's flagship hotel FAILS health inspection

 

By Jensen Bird

 

Daily Mail

Mar 13, 2026 

 

 

Trump's Chicago Tower failed a health inspection late last year. The president has been known by staffers to be an infamous germaphobe

Trump's Chicago Tower failed a health inspection late last year. The president has been known by staffers to be an infamous germaphobe

 

Donald Trump's luxury hotel and tower in Chicago has failed a health inspection, with reports citing insects in the bar and unsanitary appliances.

It was bad news for the president who famously describes himself as a 'germaphobe' after Trump International Hotel & Tower received multiple citations for its main kitchen, room service operations and ritzy Terrace 16 restaurant.

The December 17 inspection report by the Chicago Department of Public Health found several small insects crawling about the bar and dish areas, per TMZ.

Described as a 'premier luxury hotel,' Trump Tower Chicago boasts 'world-class amenities' and 'unmatched accommodations.' 

But according to records recently obtained by People, the inspection found 'more than 10 small flies throughout [the] bar area and three small flies in [the] dish area.' 

Investigators also reported wastewater drained on to the floor by the kitchen's prep sink and a dish machine that 'was not properly sanitizing.'

Inspection reports also concluded that perishable foods were being stored at dangerously warm temperatures ranging from 46 degrees to 53 degrees. 

According to the USDA, perishable items are best refrigerated at 40 degrees or below.

 

Inspectors found built up grime and insects at s Trump International Hotel & Tower in Chicago

Many of the infractions were reported at the hotel's Terrace 16 restaurant

Many of the infractions were reported at the hotel's Terrace 16 restaurant

 

Shellfish used at the restaurant were missing expiration dates and use-by labels, debris was piled up under the sink and the prep cooler had built-up grime of its own, per the reports. 

Even the lid to the ice machine was cracked, making for a total of six issues cited by the health inspector, reported ABC7 Chicago. 

The Chicago hotspot offers sweeping views of the Chicago River and Lake Michigan.

Despite the citations, Terrace 16 advertises itself as 'an unforgettable dining experience amidst these breathtaking views.'

It was re-inspected a week later and passed. 

Chicago hotels and restaurants regularly undergo unannounced health inspections based on the 'risk level' of the business.

Priority violations, including food stored at inadequate temperatures and insect infestations, can cause immediate closure and food license suspension, per the Chicago Health Department. 

The restaurant inside of Trump's five-star hotel is understood to have failed health inspections multiple times since it opened in 2009. 

 

The inspection alleged that perishable food were not being kept at food safe temperatures

The inspection alleged that perishable food were not being kept at food safe temperatures

The restaurant describes itself as 'an unforgettable dining experience'

The restaurant describes itself as 'an unforgettable dining experience'

The hotel offers views of Lake Michigan and the Chicago River

The hotel offers views of Lake Michigan and the Chicago River

 

In January 2024, records stated that one chef was reusing oyster shells as dishes after placing them in the dishwasher.

At the time, more than 20 'small black flying insects' were spotted in the bar and kitchen. 

Ironically, Trump himself is a self-proclaimed 'germaphobe' who has described shaking hands as 'barbaric' due to the bacteria it spreads. 

Those close to the president have claimed that he uses hand sanitizer after social engagements and asks visitors to the Oval Office to wash their hands.  

The Daily Mail contacted the Trump Organization and the Chicago Health Department for comment. 

BLACK CAREER CRIMINAL REWARDED FOR BEING BLACK .... O CANADA, WE STAND ON GUARD FOR THEE

Canadian serial criminal who murdered girlfriend by stabbing her 15 times gets lighter sentence because he is black

 

By Wilko Martinez-Cachero 

 

Daily Mail

Mar 13, 2026

 

 

Everton Downey, 35, was found guilty of fatally stabbing his girlfriend Melissa Blimkie, 25, in December 2021 at the Metrotown shopping mall

Everton Downey, 35, was found guilty of fatally stabbing his girlfriend Melissa Blimkie, 25, in December 2021 at the Metrotown shopping mall

 

Prosecutors asked the court to make him ineligible for parole for 15 years, but British Columbia Supreme Court Associate Chief Justice Heather Holmes instead set the period at 12 years.

The judge made the decision after reviewing Downey's Impact of Race and Culture Assessment (IRCA), a report used in Canada primarily for black offenders that explains how poverty and marginalization may have shaped their life.

The report noted that Downey did not experience overt racism while growing up in Toronto, according to the National Post.

However, it claimed he later experienced disconnection, isolation and discrimination 'he had not previously encountered' after moving to British Columbia in 2016.

'Mr. Downey has a substantial criminal record involving violence and firearms,' Holmes said. 'I recognize, however, that the aggravating effect of his criminal record is offset in part by the mitigating circumstances of his background.'


Downey fled the scene after killing Blimkie (pictured). He represented himself in court and said he had 'kind of blacked out' before the murder

Downey fled the scene after killing Blimkie (pictured). He represented himself in court and said he had 'kind of blacked out' before the murder 

 

Downey was described in the assessment as a 'black man of African Nova Scotian, African American and Jamaican ancestry.'

His report was written by University of Calgary social work associate professor Patrina Duhaney.

'He grew up in Toronto in predominantly black and racially diverse neighborhoods and attended racially diverse schools,' Holmes' decision said.

Downey 'felt that he did not experience overt racism' and that 'his experience living in communities which normalized racial diversity shaped his early sense of identity and belonging.'

The convicted killer said that changed when he left his home city for British Columbia.

'He found a much smaller black population, and the cultural norms among black communities felt unfamiliar to him,' the judge wrote in her decision.

She added that Downey experienced racial discrimination 'in the community and in the institutional setting.'

 

Downey's background report said he was a 'black man of African Nova Scotian, African American and Jamaican ancestry' and claimed he had experienced some racism

Downey's background report said he was a 'black man of African Nova Scotian, African American and Jamaican ancestry' and claimed he had experienced some racism

University of Calgary social work associate professor Patrina Duhaney authored Downey's Impact of Race and Culture Assessment

University of Calgary social work associate professor Patrina Duhaney authored Downey's Impact of Race and Culture Assessment

Downey fatally stabbed his girlfriend in a stairwell at the Metrotown mall on December 19, 2021

Downey fatally stabbed his girlfriend in a stairwell at the Metrotown mall on December 19, 2021

 

Holmes acknowledged that Downey had a 'significant criminal record that includes serious offenses of violence' before killing Blimkie.

Downey had also previously served time in prison, though details of those earlier crimes were not specified.

However, the judge said his IRCA made 'clear that broader systemic, structural, and community factors relating to Mr. Downey's experience as a black person have played a part in his life experience.'

That included 'various types of trauma, negative peer influences, and mental health challenges,' the judge said.

Downey grew up experiencing domestic violence at home, shootings in his neighborhood and poverty.

His father was also described as being absent during his upbringing, all factors which contributed to Downey's apparent 'lasting sense of danger and mistrust.'

Downey's report demonstrated 'early exposure to violence, chronic instability, poverty, systemic anti–black racism and untreated mental health symptoms.'

The judge specifically pointed to Downey's 'hypervigilance, that may be trauma related.'

 

Blimkie was honored as a 'strong, intelligent and independent young woman' who died because of a 'senseless act of violence'

Blimkie was honored as a 'strong, intelligent and independent young woman' who died because of a 'senseless act of violence'

Downey claimed he thought he was being watched, followed and drugged in the months leading up to the fatal stabbing

Downey claimed he thought he was being watched, followed and drugged in the months leading up to the fatal stabbing

 

Downey fatally stabbed his girlfriend in a stairwell at the Metrotown mall on December 19, 2021.

A public obituary for Blimkie said she died due to a 'senseless act of violence' and remembered her as a 'strong, intelligent and independent young woman.'

The two had been in a relationship 'for some time' prior to the killing, per the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.

He defended himself in court and said he 'kind of blacked out' before killing Blimkie, according to Vancouver is Awesome.

Downey claimed he thought he was being watched, followed and drugged in the months leading up to the fatal stabbing.

'After we entered the sliding doors, I lost it,' he told the court, per the outlet.

'I was hearing voices, "She's going to kill you! She's going to set you up! She's going to kill you!"' Downey said. 'I just remember not being able to control myself.'

Downey fled the scene after stabbing Blimkie and interacted with nine civilians before being taken into custody.

The Daily Mail reached out to Canada's Integrated Homicide Investigation Team, which investigated Downey's killing of his girlfriend; Duhaney, who wrote Downey's IRCA; and the Supreme Court of British Columbia, where Holmes serves, for further comment.

I HAVE NO RESPECT FOR TUCKER CARLSON'S BUDDY JD VANCE

JD Vance 'fears Iran war disaster' as 2028 odds crash

 

By Ross Ibbetson 

 

Daily Mail

Mar 13, 2026

 

 

 

Vice President JD Vance speaks at the Legislative Conference of the International Association of Fire Fighters, March 9, 2026, in Washington

 

JD Vance privately fears the war in Iran will be a catastrophe, with his 2028 presidential odds now in freefall.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth have basked in the glory of Operation Epic Fury, which killed Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on February 28, while Vance has faded into the background.  

The conflict spiraled on Friday as the US death toll hit 13, Iran's security chief Ali Larijani defiantly took to the streets of Tehran, the Strait of Hormuz remained under siege and gas prices climbed to $3.60 a gallon. 

Vance is 'worried about success', a senior administration official confirmed just days after Donald Trump admitted on stage that the Vice President had been 'less enthusiastic' about the US-Israeli strikes than other cabinet members.

Vance 'just opposes' the war and remains 'skeptical', a senior official said, while a second told Politico he had offered 'a different point of view' but has since fallen in line. 'Once the decision has been made, he's fully on board,' the official said. 

Vance pushed for swift, decisive action to minimize casualties, sources said. 

He pressed Chairman of the Joint Chiefs General Dan Caine and CIA Director John Ratcliffe at a meeting ahead of the strikes, questioning them on the risks and complexities.  

He is now walking a tightrope in public as daylight emerges between himself and Trump for the first time. 


US President Donald Trump and First Lady Melania Trump arrive for a Women's History Month event in the East Room of the White House in Washington, DC, on March 12

US President Donald Trump and First Lady Melania Trump arrive for a Women's History Month event in the East Room of the White House in Washington, DC, on March 12

Black smoke rises following an airstrike, as Iranians take part in the Al-Quds (Jerusalem) Day rally, a commemoration in support of the Palestinian people on the last Friday of the Islamic holy month of Ramadan, in Tehran on March 13

Black smoke rises following an airstrike, as Iranians take part in the Al-Quds (Jerusalem) Day rally, a commemoration in support of the Palestinian people on the last Friday of the Islamic holy month of Ramadan, in Tehran on March 13

 

Then-Senator Vance, an Iraq war veteran, backed Trump's second term in a 2023 op-ed, writing in the Wall Street Journal that 'he won't recklessly send Americans to fight wars overseas.'

Vance told Fox News on March 2 that Trump would not allow the US 'to get into a multiyear conflict with no clear end in sight and no clear objective.'

He said the war would not end until Trump 'accomplishes that all-important objective of ensuring that Iran can't have a nuclear weapon.' 

Trump's stated aims had initially been unclear, vindicating some of Vance's privately expressed concerns, as he called on Iranians to rise up and overthrow the regime. 

The administration has since defined four objectives: destroying Iran's ballistic missile capabilities, annihilating its navy, eliminating its nuclear ambitions, and severing its regional proxy networks. 

But Trump remains mercurial, sending global oil prices skyrocketing last week when he demanded Iran's 'unconditional surrender' and said that he must have a role in deciding Iran's new supreme leader. 

The US death toll rose to 13 on Thursday when a refueling aircraft carrying six crew crashed over Iraq, while more than 150 American troops have been wounded. 

Hours later, Iran's top national security official Larijani marched with crowds in Tehran demonstrating against Israel on the last day of Ramadan. He taunted Trump, claiming the President 'didn't realize' Iran is 'mature and determined'. 

 

Rubio received a louder applause, sources in the room told the WSJ

Rubio received a louder applause, sources in the room told the WSJ

A KC-135 refuelling plane went down on Thursday in  'friendly airspace' and a second aircraft involved in the incident landed safely. Picture shows the second aircraft with damage to its tail

A KC-135 refuelling plane went down on Thursday in  'friendly airspace' and a second aircraft involved in the incident landed safely. Picture shows the second aircraft with damage to its tail

Four crew members have now been confirmed dead after the crash

Four crew members have now been confirmed dead after the crash

A U.S. Air Force KC-135 Stratotanker refuels a U.S. Navy F/A-18F Super Hornet over the middle east during Operation Epic Fury. The US death toll rose to 13 on Thursday when a refueling aircraft carrying six crew crashed over Iraq, while more than 150 American troops have been wounded

A U.S. Air Force KC-135 Stratotanker refuels a U.S. Navy F/A-18F Super Hornet over the middle east during Operation Epic Fury. The US death toll rose to 13 on Thursday when a refueling aircraft carrying six crew crashed over Iraq, while more than 150 American troops have been wounded

 

Iran launched fresh attacks on Dubai's International Finance Center as explosions rocked the city with thick smoke rising above its skyline.

The Strait of Hormuz, through which a fifth of the world's oil flows, remains under siege despite Hegseth telling a press briefing 'you don't need to worry about it.'

Gas prices have hit $3.60 per gallon on average, up from $2.90 before the war, according to AAA. 

Vance spokeswoman Taylor Van Kirk said 'the Vice President is a proud member of the President's national security team' and 'keeps his counsel to the President private.' 

White House spokeswoman Anna Kelly said 'efforts to drive a wedge between President Trump and Vice President Vance are totally misguided.'

Vance leads early polling to become the GOP's 2028 presidential nominee, an exclusive Daily Mail/JL Partners survey shows. 

Nineteen percent of respondents named Vance the most influential member of Trump's inner circle, with Rubio second on 12 percent. 

Vance, who enjoyed a 29-point lead over Rubio in July, now sits level with the Secretary of State, each given an 18 percent chance of winning the presidency in 2028 by prediction site Kalshi. 

 

Black smoke rises after an airstrike as Iranians take part in the Al-Quds (Jerusalem) Day rally, a commemoration in support of the Palestinian people on the last Friday of the Islamic holy month of Ramadan, in Tehran on March 13

Black smoke rises after an airstrike as Iranians take part in the Al-Quds (Jerusalem) Day rally, a commemoration in support of the Palestinian people on the last Friday of the Islamic holy month of Ramadan, in Tehran on March 13

An Iranian security force officer stands guard next to a huge billboard of Iran's newly nominated supreme leader Ayatollah Mojataba Khamenei during Al-Quds (Jerusalem) Day rally, a commemoration in support of the Palestinian people on the last Friday of the Islamic holy month of Ramadan, in Tehran on March 13

An Iranian security force officer stands guard next to a huge billboard of Iran's newly nominated supreme leader Ayatollah Mojataba Khamenei during Al-Quds (Jerusalem) Day rally, a commemoration in support of the Palestinian people on the last Friday of the Islamic holy month of Ramadan, in Tehran on March 13

An Iranian woman reacts as she takes part in the Al-Quds (Jerusalem) Day rally, a commemoration in support of the Palestinian people on the last Friday of the Islamic holy month of Ramadan, in Tehran on March 13

An Iranian woman reacts as she takes part in the Al-Quds (Jerusalem) Day rally, a commemoration in support of the Palestinian people on the last Friday of the Islamic holy month of Ramadan, in Tehran on March 13

 

California Governor Gavin Newsom trails by just one point as a potential Democratic Party challenger. 

Hegseth was asked about Vance at the press briefing Friday, telling reporters he is 'an incredible member [and] leader of this team as well, alongside the President and Secretary of State.'

He added, 'I can't say enough great stuff about this team, how it works together, how it provides options to the president. The vice president every single day is a key voice in that, an indispensable voice in that.'

THE NEW SUPREME LEADER SEEKS REVENGE

Mojtaba Khamenei vows to avenge father’s killing

Tehran’s vengeance “is not limited to the martyrdom of the great leader of the [Islamic] Revolution alone,” the newly minted supreme leader wrote. 

 

JNS

Mar 12, 2026

 

 

A banner depicting Iranian Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei is displayed at Revolution Square in Tehran, March 11, 2026. Photo by Khoshiran/Middle East Images/AFP via Getty Images.

A banner depicting Iranian Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei is displayed at Revolution Square in Tehran, March 11, 2026.
 

Iranian Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei on Thursday published his first written statement since assuming office on March 8, vowing to avenge “the blood of the martyrs,” including his father, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

Tehran’s revenge “is not limited to the martyrdom of the great leader of the [Islamic] Revolution alone,” the newly minted supreme leader wrote in his remarks, which were read on state TV and posted to X.

Khamenei, 56, told Iranians he “learned at the same time as you,” through a television broadcast, that the Assembly of Experts had decided to appoint him as his father’s successor on Sunday.

“To sit in the place where the two great leaders—the great Khomeini and the martyred Khamenei—once sat is a difficult task,” explained Mojtaba.

 

Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, right, and his predecessor Grand Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini with the logo of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (Khamenei.ir/Wikimedia Commons)

Martyred Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei (left) and his predecessor Grand Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini with the logo of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.
 

He emphasized that the “lever of blocking the Strait of Hormuz must certainly continue to be used.”

Khamenei in the statement expressed “sincere thanks” to the Axis of Resistance, which includes Hezbollah, the Houthis, Hamas and other Iranian-backed terrorist groups across the Middle East and beyond.

“Cooperation between the components of the Axis of Resistance will shorten the path to overcoming the Zionist sedition,” he stated. “Brave and faithful Yemen has not ceased defending the oppressed people of Gaza; Hezbollah, despite all obstacles, has aided the Islamic Republic; and the Iraqi resistance has courageously pursued the same course.”

The regime is considering “opening other fronts where the enemy has little experience and would be highly vulnerable,” Khamenei warned, adding, “Activating them—should the state of war continue—will be undertaken in accordance with the relevant considerations.”

The younger Khamenei sustained leg wounds in the opening strikes of “Operation Roaring Lion/Epic Fury” on the morning of Feb. 28, several Iranian and Israeli officials told The New York Times this week.

The report cited three Iranian and two Israeli officials as saying that Khamenei’s legs were hurt, but that the circumstances as well as the extent of the new supreme leader’s injuries remained unclear.

An Israeli official told Reuters that Khamenei was “lightly wounded.” The official cited Israeli intelligence assessments as saying that the injury could explain why the supreme leader has yet to appear in public.

A Tehran ceremony to pledge allegiance to Mojtaba Khamenei on Tuesday reportedly featured a cardboard cutout of the new leader, with the state-run Tehran Times reporting that “pictures of both Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and his son were prominently displayed.”

WHEN THE US REFUSED TO LET JEWISH REFUGEES FROM THE NAZIS ENTER THE COUNTRY

A refuge on the equator: The Jewish story of Ecuador

In the 1930s, as Nazi persecution spread across Europe and countries slammed their doors shut to fleeing families, this Latin American nation became an unlikely sanctuary. 

 

By Michael Freund 

 

JNS

Mar 13, 2026

 

 

Quito, Ecuador. Credit: hbieser/Pixabay.

Quito, Ecuador
 

Sometimes, the most remarkable chapters of Jewish history unfold in the most unlikely places. One such place is Ecuador, a small country straddling the equator on South America’s Pacific coast that quietly played a role disproportionate to its size in offering refuge to Jews during one of the darkest chapters of the 20th century. 

At a time when nation after nation shut its doors to Jews fleeing Nazi persecution, Ecuador, despite limited resources, became an unexpected haven. In doing so, it joined a small group of Latin American countries, including Bolivia and the Dominican Republic, that provided limited but vital refuge during the Holocaust era. 

Like much of Latin America, Ecuador’s earliest encounters with Jews date back to the colonial era. Following the expulsions from Spain and Portugal at the close of the 15th century, conversos—Iberian Jews forced to convert to Catholicism —made their way to the New World. Some settled in territories that would later become Ecuador, though the reach of the Spanish Inquisition ensured that any lingering Jewish identity remained hidden and precarious. 

For centuries thereafter, overt Jewish life in Ecuador was minimal. It was not until the late 19th and early 20th centuries that a small number of Jewish merchants and entrepreneurs began arriving, laying the groundwork for what would eventually become an organized community. 

In the 1920s, a handful of Ashkenazi Jews from Eastern Europe arrived, often as merchants or peddlers, establishing small businesses in urban areas. By the late 1930s, Ecuador’s government began issuing visas more liberally to Jewish refugees, frequently requiring applicants to obtain visas nominally tied to agricultural work, though in practice most ultimately settled in cities and entered commerce or the professions. 

 

 Guayaquil, Ecuador

equator monument middle of the world, mitad del mundo ecuador 

The equator at Mitad del Mundoin in Ecuador. (I straddled the equator there on August 9, 2002 with my right foot in the South and my left foot in the North - ed.)

 

The true turning point came in the 1930s as Nazi persecution spread across Europe. With country after country slamming its doors shut to desperate Jewish refugees, Ecuador became an unlikely sanctuary. 

Beginning in 1933, Jews from Germany, Austria and other parts of Central Europe began seeking refuge there. By the end of World War II, approximately 2,500 to 3,000 European Jews had found haven in Ecuador, and by the early 1950s, the community numbered around 4,000 people. 

Their journey to Ecuador was rarely easy. Immigration policies fluctuated, bureaucratic hurdles abounded and economic conditions in a developing nation were often uncertain. Yet compared with the near-total closure of much of the world, Ecuador still offered something invaluable: a chance to survive. 

Most of the newcomers settled in Quito, the country’s capital high in the Andes Mountains, and in the coastal port city of Guayaquil. There they began the difficult task of rebuilding their lives.

Gradually, the foundations of organized Jewish communal life took root. Synagogues were established, social organizations were formed, and Jewish schools began educating the next generation. Institutions such as the Comunidad Judía del Ecuador worked to help organize religious and communal life, ensuring that Jewish identity could endure even far from traditional centers of Jewish life. 

Among those who rebuilt their lives in Ecuador was the Hungarian-Jewish artist Olga Fisch, who arrived in Quito in 1939 after fleeing Nazi persecution. Fascinated by Ecuador’s indigenous culture, she later founded a gallery that helped introduce Ecuadorian folk art to international audiences. Like many Jewish refugees who found shelter in Ecuador, she rebuilt her life far from home while contributing meaningfully to the society that had given her refuge. 

Ecuador’s contribution to Jewish survival during the Holocaust era was not limited to providing refuge on its own soil. 

In one remarkable episode, an Ecuadorian diplomat demonstrated extraordinary moral courage in the face of Nazi barbarity. Manuel Antonio Muñoz Borrero, Ecuador’s consul in Stockholm during World War II, issued dozens of Ecuadorian passports and documents to try and protect Jews from deportation and death. 

Possession of such documents could transform a Jew from a target of deportation into a foreign national eligible for internment or prisoner exchange rather than immediate extermination. For his actions, Muñoz Borrero was recognized in 2011 by Yad Vashem as a Righteous Among the Nations, the first Ecuadorian to receive that honor. 

In the decades following World War II, Ecuador’s Jewish community continued to develop and contribute to economic and cultural life. Jewish immigrants established businesses, entered professions such as medicine and engineering, and integrated into Ecuadorian society while maintaining their religious and cultural heritage. 

Yet like many Jewish communities in Latin America, Ecuador’s began to shrink in the latter half of the 20th century. Fiscal challenges, political instability and the attraction of larger Jewish centers prompted many to emigrate, particularly to Israel, the United States and Canada. 

These days, Ecuador’s Jewish population is estimated at between 600 and 800 people, mainly concentrated in Quito with a smaller presence in Guayaquil. Despite its modest size, the community maintains synagogues, educational institutions and communal organizations that preserve Jewish life in the country.

Ecuador’s relationship with the Jewish people is also reflected in its diplomatic ties with Israel. In November 1947, the Latin American country voted in favor of the U.N. partition plan that paved the way for the establishment of the Jewish state. Diplomatic relations between the two countries were formally established in 1950, and cooperation has since developed in fields ranging from agriculture to technology. 

In recent years, bilateral ties have deepened. In May 2025, Ecuadorian President Daniel Noboa made a historic visit to Israel—the first by an Ecuadorian president—where he met with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, and opened an innovation and trade office with diplomatic status in Jerusalem. Ecuador has also designated Hamas, Hezbollah and Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps as terrorist organizations, aligning closely with Israeli security priorities. 

At the same time, renewed interest in Jewish heritage has emerged in Ecuador. Families tracing their ancestry have uncovered connections to converso roots dating back centuries, echoing a broader phenomenon across Latin America in which descendants of forced converts are rediscovering Jewish identity. 

Recent developments have also brought recognition to Ecuador’s wartime history. In 2018, the country posthumously restored the diplomatic credentials of Muñoz Borrero, which had been revoked in 1942 after he issued passports to help save Jews from Nazi persecution. 

Taken together, these threads form a remarkable tapestry. Ecuador may never have been home to a large Jewish population, but at a crucial moment in history, it offered refuge when it was desperately needed. 

When so much of the world turned its back on Jews fleeing Nazi persecution, Ecuador chose a different path. Thousands of lives were saved as a result, and the story of Ecuador’s Jews deserves to be remembered not as a footnote in Jewish history but as a testament to the enduring power of refuge, resilience and moral courage.