By Bob Walsh

Tumbler Ridge Secondary School
Published by an old curmudgeon who came to America in 1936 as a refugee from Nazi Germany and proudly served in the U.S. Army during World War II. He is a former law enforcement officer and a retired professor of criminal justice who, in 1970, founded the Texas Narcotic Officers Association. BarkGrowlBite refuses to be politically correct. (Copyrighted articles are reproduced in accordance with the copyright laws of the U.S. Code, Title 17, Section 107.)
By Bob Walsh

Tumbler Ridge Secondary School
By Bob Walsh
By Bob Walsh

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt on Tuesday may have inadvertently got President Donald Trump caught in a lie when she didn't push back on an assertion that it was Trump's idea to rename Penn Station after himself
An answer provided by White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt at Tuesday's press briefing may have unintentionally outed President Donald Trump for telling a brazen lie.
Leavitt was grilled on why Trump asked Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer to help him rename New York's Penn Station to Trump Station.
On Friday, Trump told reporters on board Air Force One as he traveled to Florida for the weekend that it was Schumer's idea for the train station rebrand.
The New York Democrat quickly snapped back and said it wasn't.
'Absolute lie. He knows it. Everyone knows it,' Schumer posted to X.
Four days later, Leavitt didn't even bother correcting the framing of the question - that changing the name of the train station was, in fact, the president's idea.
'To your first question about the renaming, why not?' she responded.
'It was something the President floated in his conversation with - with Chuck Schumer,' she added - cementing Schumer's version of the story.
The New York Times reported earlier on Friday that top administration officials had told Schumer that he could get Trump to unfreeze the federal dollars meant to fund the Gateway Tunnel project if he agreed to help the president get the Trump name attached to Penn Station and Washington Dulles International Airport.
The Gateway Tunnel has been a long-needed infrastructure project to build a new rail tunnel to connect New York City and New Jersey.
It would replace - for a time - the current North River Tunnel, which was put into service in 1910, so it could be rehabilitated for modern rail travel.
The $16 billion project was halted on Friday - and won't resume until federal funds are released.
The Trump administration said the funds were paused over DEI - diversity, equity and inclusion - initiatives.
Trump and Schumer met at the White House in January to discuss the frozen funds.
Sources told the Times that Schumer refused Trump's request to help him with the name change.
If Schumer did acquiesce, even as the top Senate Democrat, he doesn't have direct oversight over either locale.
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer pushed back on President Donald Trump's assertion that it was the New York Democrat's suggestion to rename Penn Station after Trump in a Friday night post on X
'Only one man can restart the project and he can restart it with the snap of his fingers,' Schumer said in his Friday X post.
To a question about whether it was appropriate for Trump to hold up the funds to get Penn Station named after him, Leavitt responded, 'as for the funding, the President has addressed that separately himself.'
New York's Democratic Governor Kathy Hochul said Tuesday at a press conference that the funds had been stopped 'because Donald Trump is throwing a temper tantrum,' amNewYork reported.
Trump has gone to great lengths to cement his legacy as a two-term president, even with nearly three years left in his term.
He's putting his mark on the White House by constructing a ballroom, which has been made more controversial by ordering the East Wing demolished before it went through an oversight process.
Trump had his name added to the Kennedy Center in mid-December - and then announced that the performing arts venue in Washington, DC would close for two years after July 4th festivities for renovations that would have a Trumpian flair.
He already showed off designs for marble to be added to the Kennedy Center's seats.
Trump has also green-lit Trump $1 coins to be minted to mark the country's 250th birthday, with detractors saying that it's un-American for a living president to be depicted on U.S. currency.
Police outside Tumbler Ridge Secondary School
At least 10 people, including a suspected shooter, are dead after a woman opened fire at a high school in the northeast part of the province of British Columbia, Canada, according to police.
A total of six victims were found inside the Tumbler Ridge Secondary School, two at a connected residence, and another died while being transported to a hospital, Royal Mountain officials said.
Authorities said the suspected shooter appeared to have died from a self inflicted gunshot wound at the scene.
Another 25 people are being evaluated for injuries at a local medical center, with two of those injuries being life-threatening and needing to be airlifted.
RCMP Superintendent Ken Floyd told reporters that officials who identified the shooter are not disclosing the name at this time. The suspect's motive remains unclear at this time.
'I think we will struggle to determine the 'why', but we will try our best to determine what transpired,' Floyd said at a press conference.
The superintendent did confirm that the suspect found dead at the school is the same person described as a woman in a dress with brown hair in the active shooter alert sent out earlier today.
'Officers are conducting further searches of additional homes and properties to determine whether anyone else may be injured or otherwise linked to today's events,' officials said.

A total of six victims were found inside the Tumbler Ridge Secondary School, two at a connected residence, and another died while being transported to a hospital, Royal Mountain police said on February 10
Officials said that the suspected female shooter appeared to have died from a self inflicted gunshot wound at the scene. Another 25 people are being evaluated for injuries at a local medical center, with two of those injuries being life-threatening
Solicitor General Nina Krieger said during a news conference following the tragedy that officials quick response to the scene saved lives.
The District of Tumbler Ridge said in a statement that their community experienced a distressing incident: 'Our hearts are with all those affected, and we recognize that many residents may be feeling shocked, scared, and overwhelmed.'
The district noted that both Tumbler Ridge secondary and elementary schools will be closed for the rest of the week.
Tumbler Ridge is a district municipality of roughly 2,400 people, about 736 miles north of Vancouver.
The secondary school enrolls 175 students from grades 7 to 12, according to a provincial government listing.
An earlier emergency alert asking the public to shelter in place was lifted at 5.45pm local time.
The Daily Mail has reached out to the Royal Canadian Mounted Police and Tumbler Ridge Secondary School for comment.
Prime Minister Mark Carney issued a statement following the tragedy: 'I am devastated by today's horrific shootings in Tumbler Ridge, B.C. My prayers and deepest condolences are with the families and friends who have lost loved ones to these horrific acts of violence.
RCMP Superintendent Ken Floyd confirmed that the suspect found dead at the school is the same person described as a woman in a dress with brown hair in the active shooter alert sent out earlier today
The district noted that both Tumbler Ridge secondary and elementary schools will be closed for the rest of the week due to the incident
'I join Canadians in grieving with those whose lives have been changed irreversibly today, and in gratitude for the courage and selflessness of the first responders who risked their lives to protect their fellow citizens.
'Our ability to come together in crisis is the best of our country — our empathy, our unity, and our compassion for each other.'
'I have connected with Premier Eby to express my condolences, and with the Minister of Public Safety, Gary Anandasangaree, who is coordinating the federal response.'
'Our officials are in close contact with their counterparts to ensure the community is fully supported as best we can. The Government of Canada stands with all British Columbians as they confront this horrible tragedy.'
Additionally, David Eby, the Premier of British Columbia, also wrote on X, that he is grieving for the people Tumbler Ridge.
'Government will ensure every possible support for community members in the coming days, as we all try to come to terms with this unimaginable tragedy,' Eby added.
David Eby, the Premier of British Columbia, was alongside Solicitor General Nina Krieger during a news conference following the tragedy
Krieger said during the conference that officers quick response to the scene saved lives. She added that the education ministry staff are sending trauma-informed counsellors to the area to support kids and their families
The Premier said that he spoke with Carney and RCMP leadership as he reiterated the numbers of victims.
Eby noted he wants British Columbians and Canadians to support the people of Tumbler Ridge with love as they deal with the tragedy.
'This is something that will reverberate for years to come,' he said.
Eby was stunned for a moment when asked during a news conference alongside Solicitor General Nina Krieger about what he'd say to parents afraid to send their children to school.
'This is the kind of thing that feels like it happens in other places, and not close to home in a way that this feels like for many British Columbians and Canadians,' he said.
The education ministry staff are sending trauma-informed counsellors to the area to support kids and their families, said Krieger.
Nirvana lead singer Kurt Cobain died on April 5, 1994, at age 27, from a self-inflicted shotgun wound at his Seattle home. Now, a team of scientists are hoping to reopen the case
His death shocked fans and sent ripples through the music world, but decades later, Kurt Cobain's final moments are under renewed scrutiny.
The Nirvana lead singer died on April 5, 1994, at age 27, from a self-inflicted shotgun wound at his Seattle home.
At the time, the King County Medical Examiner ruled his death a suicide by a Remington Model 11 20-gauge shotgun.
Now, an unofficial private sector team of forensic scientists has put fresh eyes on Cobain's autopsy and crime scene materials, bringing in Brian Burnett, a specialist who previously worked on cases involving overdoses followed by gunshot trauma.
Independent researcher Michelle Wilkins, who worked with the team, told Daily Mail that after just three days looking into the evidence with fresh eyes, Burnett said: 'This is a homicide. We've got to do something about this.'
She said the conclusion followed an exhaustive review of the autopsy findings, which revealed signs inconsistent with an instantaneous gunshot death.
The peer-reviewed paper presented ten points of evidence suggesting Cobain was confronted by one or more assailants who forced a heroin overdose to incapacitate him, before one of them shot him in the head, placed the gun in his arms and left behind a forged suicide note.
'There are things in the autopsy that go, well, wait, this person didn't die very quickly of a gunshot blast,' Wilkins said, pointing to organ damage associated with oxygen deprivation. 'The necrosis of the brain and liver happens in an overdose. It doesn't happen in a shotgun death.'
The Remington Model 11 20-gauge shotgun found at the scene, held by Detective Mike Ciesynski, who investigated Cobain's death
Burnett has decades of experience analyzing crime scenes and interpreting complex evidence.
He has earned national recognition for his expert analysis in controversial cases like Marine Colonel James Sabow’s death and the investigation into Billey Joe Johnson Jr, where his meticulous forensic reconstructions challenged official findings.
A spokesperson for the Medical Examiner's Office told the Daily Mail: 'King County Medical Examiner’s Office worked with the local law enforcement agency, conducted a full autopsy, and followed all of its procedures in coming to the determination of the manner of death as a suicide.
'Our office is always open to revisiting its conclusions if new evidence comes to light, but we’ve seen nothing to date that would warrant re-opening of this case and our previous determination of death.'
A spokesperson from the Seattle Police Department told Daily Mail that they are not reopening the case.
'Our detective concluded that he died by suicide, and this continues to be the position held by this department,' the spokesperson added.
The Daily Mail reviewed Cobain's autopsy, which described how his body was found on the floor of the greenhouse above his garage.
'Examination of the miscellaneous papers in the left front pocket [of Cobain's jeans] reveals some writing in black ink, reading 'Remington 20 gauge 2-3/4 shells or shorter setup light shot 10888925,' the June 20, 1994 autopsy reads.
Wilkins said: 'To me, it looks like someone staged a movie and wanted you to be absolutely certain this was a suicide.
'The receipt for the gun is in his pocket. The receipt for the shells is in his pocket. The shells are lined up at his feet.'
The placement of Cobain's hands and the lack of blood spatter raised further questions. The scientists determined that if Cobain's left hand (pictured) was closest to his mouth, it should have been covered in blood
The area where Cobain had his hand is also clean of blood, suggesting his hand should have been covered
The new forensic report noted that Cobain's sleeves were rolled back and the heroin kit was found several feet away, containing capped syringes, cotton buds and pieces of black heroin of roughly equal size.
'We're supposed to believe he capped the needles and put everything back in order after shooting up three times, because that's what someone does while they're dying,' Wilkins said. 'Suicides are messy, and this was a very clean scene.'
Police on the investigation said Cobain injected himself with ten times the normal amount, even a heavy heroin user would have done.
Cobain’s autopsy showed fluid in the lungs, bleeding in the eyes and damage to the brain and liver.
These findings, according to the forensic report, are unusual for a quick gunshot death but are common in deaths from heroin overdoses, which cause slow breathing and low blood flow.
The eye bleeding and organ damage suggested his body may have been starved of oxygen, which likely did not happen from the gunshot alone, the team concluded.
In most head gunshot deaths, blood is often drawn into the airways, but Cobain’s autopsy did not mention this.
While brain injuries can sometimes stop breathing, this usually happens shortly after the trauma, and with such a severe injury, some blood in the airways would normally be expected.
The autopsy report suggested his brainstem, which controls breathing, was likely not damaged, and his arm position also indicated he did not have the rigid posturing usually seen with brainstem injury.
The forensic paper underwent peer review through the editorial process at the International Journal of Forensic Science before being accepted for publication.
Wilkins argued that Cobain may have been physically incapacitated before the fatal gunshot.
Cobain's body was found in an atrium above a two-car garage connected to his home in Seattle
The scientists noted how organized Cobain's heroin kit was found, with syringes capped
'He's dying of an overdose, and so he can barely breathe, his blood isn't pumping very much,' she said.
'So that means the brain and liver aren't getting oxygen, and they're starving, and they're dying.'
She added that the size and mechanics of the gun made it improbable that a comatose Cobain could have handled it.
'If you look at the crime scene photos, you can see how big that gun is,' she said. 'Imagine he's comatose and dying, and also the way that he would have had to hold it… it's six pounds.'
The placement of Cobain's hands and the lack of blood spatter raised further questions.
His left hand was tightly wrapped around the muzzle end of the gun's barrel, yet the shotgun shell was found on top of a pile of clothes opposite the expected ejection direction.
'So he's dying of an overdose. I mean, he's in a coma, and he's holding this up to be able to reach the trigger to get it in his mouth. It's crazy,' Wilkins said.
The team replicated the weapon and found, 'If your hand is on the forward barrel, where Kurt's hand was reported to be in the SPD report, the gun wouldn't eject a shell at all,' Wilkins said.
'So not only is there a shell where it shouldn't be, there shouldn't even be a shotgun shell.'
She also highlighted that Cobain's left hand was unusually clean. 'If you ever look at photos of shotgun suicides, they are brutal. There is no universe where that hand is not covered in blood. You could eat off of… well, I mean, gross, but, like, his hand is so clean.'
According to the report, the homicide scenario is that Cobain's left hand was placed on the weapon after death, explaining the thumbprint-like mark observed on his hand
In forensic investigations, such a stain can help reconstruct events by showing what the individual touched or how a substance was transferred.
The items found on Cobain's body at the time of his death in 1994
The alleged suicide note was also scrutinized. 'The top of the note is written by Kurt,' Wilkins said. 'There's nothing about suicide in that. It's basically just him talking about quitting the band'
Wilkins also cited blood patterns suggesting the body may have been moved.
'There's also blood on the bottom of his shirt,' she said. 'The only way the blood would get on his shirt is if Kurt was lifted and his head was down.
'There's no blood on his hand. There's no blood on the rest of his shirt, but there's a big blood stain on the bottom of his shirt.'
The alleged suicide note was also scrutinized. 'The top of the note is written by Kurt,' Wilkins said.
'There's nothing about suicide in that. It's basically just him talking about quitting the band.'
She added, 'Then there are four lines at the bottom. If you even look at the note, you can see that the last four lines are written in different… the text is a little bit different. It's bigger, it's… looks more scrawly.'
Wilkins emphasized that the team is not seeking arrests but wants transparency and a reexamination of the evidence.
'We weren't saying, arrest people tomorrow,' she said. 'We were saying, you have these… the extra evidence that we don't have.'
Wilkins also noted that she has spoken to families whose loved ones took their lives because of Cobain's suicide.
'In 2022, a kid took his life because he believed Cobain did. The copycat suicides have never stopped.'
Requests to reopen the case have been declined. 'They both came back with, "No,"' Wilkins said. 'Like, we're not even looking at your evidence.'
For her, the goal remains simple: 'If we're wrong, just prove it to us. That's all we asked them to do.'
The Daily Mail has contacted the King County.

Tapes containing the original, high-quality transmission of the Apollo 11 moon landing were wiped after being quietly shelved in an unmarked storage area by NASA.
While other recordings of the historic 1969 mission survived, the revelation that at least some moon landing video disappeared has fueled wild conspiracies that NASA has been covering up what astronauts saw or even that the whole mission was faked.
Now, the truth about these 'erased' tapes has been revealed by Tim Dodd, better known as the 'Everyday Astronaut' on YouTube, who said the lost footage was only a set of backup magnetic tapes containing the raw transmission from space.
Dodd explained that the backup tapes were considered by NASA to be less critical since all the essential data, video, and radio signals were successfully transmitted to Houston and broadcast live on TV.
The backup copies of Apollo 11's historic mission were mistakenly taped over when NASA reused older magnetic tapes due to a shortage of those specific film reels in the 1970s and 1980s.
Speaking on the Danny Jones Podcast, Dodd said no one at the time anticipated future technology would be able to upscale or enhance the resolution (upres) of the raw footage for better quality, which is now possible today.
However, NASA still possesses thousands of hours of data proving the first moon landing really took place, including lower-quality versions of telemetry data, audio, and video from Houston's recordings.
Dodd added that the space agency also still has shockingly clear 70 millimeter film from the cameras the Apollo astronauts used on the moon, a grade of film that is still used in IMAX movies 57 years later.
Crystal clear images taken by the Apollo 11 astronauts during the original 1969 moon landing, captured on 70 millimeter film and shared in a 2019 documentary by director Todd Miller
Tim Dodd, known as the 'Everyday Astronaut' on YouTube, revealed the fate of the original backup recordings of the Apollo 11 moon footage on the Danny Jones Podcast
Dodd, who creates educational videos about rockets, space exploration, and NASA's history, broke down exactly what happened to the erased moon landing tapes, starting with how the signal was sent back from Apollo 11 to Earth.
The live transmission from the moon was sent to receiving stations, including one in California's Mojave Desert, and then split into two feeds.
One feed went to Mission Control in Houston for real-time monitoring, where all telemetry on the spacecraft's condition, audio, and video were recorded.
The video at Mission Control was converted from the moon's 'slow-scan' format to standard NTSC TV format using a 'kinescope' method, which means the space agency filmed a monitor with a camera to make it usable on TV broadcasts.
This converted version was what the public saw at home in 1969, which was of lower quality than the video on the magnetic tapes but 'good enough' at the time, according to Dodd.
The other feed contained the raw backup, recorded directly onto the large magnetic tapes, which were roughly a foot wide and looked similar to giant cassette tapes.
NASA viewed the tapes as a safety net in case the link between Apollo 11 and Houston failed. During a crisis, the space agency might have needed to analyze raw data to understand what went wrong, but none of that happened.
'They had the broadcast. It's not like the broadcast went cold and they lost signal,' Dodd explained during the February 9 interview.
Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin unfurl the US flag on the moon in 1969
Neil Armstrong (Pictured) captured on 70 millimeter film before the Apollo 11 mission. This grade of film is still used to produce IMAX-quality movies six decades later
'They're like, "It would be great if we had that still, you know, hold on to those tapes. Make sure we have those backups. We had this 45-minute blackout because our dish went down or something." They didn't have that,' he continued.
'They didn't imagine a world where we could take and rescan and up you know upres the hell out of that that footage as well because it would have been a lot cleaner in that raw format.'
Dodd called the claims that NASA deliberately erased the moon landing recordings 'misconstrued.'
However, the podcaster and YouTube host admitted that skeptics have one difficult argument to counter when it comes to debating whether the moon landings were real - that being the mystery of why the missions stopped in 1972.
Dodd told Jones the real reason America's moon missions stopped was the massive economic cost of building and launching Saturn V rockets to the moon.
'I understand the frustration of, you know, we did this thing 54 years ago, and we lost that ability to do it. But we also spent $300 billion in today's money to get us there,' he said.
'We had three other rockets and hardware built and the crew to do so, and we just said, "Eh, not worth it." Like that's what I'm frustrated with.'

During the debate, Boller confronted Jewish witnesses who shared experiences of antisemitism following the Hamas attack on October 7 and argued that the term "antisemitism" is, in her view, defined too broadly. At one point, she even noted that she counted the number of times Israel was mentioned in the debate and demanded that participants "condemn what Israel did in Gaza."
Another statement that sparked sharp reactions was Boller's defense of right-wing influencer Candace Owens, whom she said is not antisemitic. "I have never heard anything antisemitic from her," she said. In the past, Owens referred to Kabbalah, the Jewish mystical tradition, as "pedophilia, demons, and child sacrifice... that is their religion," and called Israel a "satanic nation" while noting that it "controls our government." Owens was also previously removed from a Trump campaign event following public criticism over antisemitic content she published.
Former Miss California USA Carrie Prejean was pictured embracing the Republican U.S. presidential candidate in May 2016.
In response to her statements, Rabbi Meir Soloveichik, the only Jewish member of the committee, replied that "I certainly would not presume to speak on behalf of all Jews on any issue... the same thing must be said when speaking on behalf of Catholics in the United States." Soloveichik then quoted Secretary of State Marco Rubio, "who is also a very devout Catholic," who spoke during his visit to Jerusalem about the Jewish people's historical connection to the Land of Israel.
Karen Paikin Barall, chief policy officer at the Louis D. Brandeis Center, shared on X that she attended the hearing. According to her, "It became clear that Commissioner Carrie Prejean Boller arrived with an agenda—often disengaged, reading questions off her phone, and giving the impression they were coming from elsewhere, while struggling to respond when challenged."
Alongside her statements at the committee, an examination of her social media activity indicates a sharply critical line toward Israel. In a post she published on Instagram this past January, she accused Israel of a "campaign of extermination," "deliberate starvation," and "murdering children," and attacked Zionist Christians who, according to her, "distort scripture to justify violence." In the post, she noted that as a Catholic, she "refuses to whitewash evil or call it peace." The post's image showed Netanyahu painted in red with a quote bubble allegedly stating, "I did it!"
Meliora Raz, CEO of the StopAntisemitism organization, told Israel Hayom, "Boller's disturbing anti-Israel rhetoric and the encouragement she provides to antisemites like Candace Owens constitute a red line – she has no place on the White House Religious Freedom Commission, and we call on the chairman, Texas Lieutenant Governor Dan Patrick, to remove her."
The interview was arranged after Carlson published a series of videos and footage from the Middle East in which he harshly criticized Israel and what he called "the failure of American Christian leaders to defend Christians in Jerusalem." One video claimed that Huckabee "failed Jerusalem's Christians" and that Israel discriminates against Christians, sparking furious reactions in the pro-Israel camp.
In videos filmed during his visit to Jordan, Carlson presented the Hashemite Kingdom as a positive model for preserving religious freedom and the existence of Christian communities in the Middle East. Carlson visited churches and Christian sites, met with local clergy, and claimed that Christians in Jordan enjoy "a freer and safer environment" compared to their situation in Israel.
Huckabee chose to respond directly and publicly. In a post on X, he wrote to Carlson, "Instead of talking about me, why don't you come talk to me? You seem to be generating a lot of heat about the Middle East. Why be afraid of the light?" Carlson responded quickly, "Thanks for this. I'd be happy to. We'll reach out to your office to set up an interview," and Huckabee replied, "I look forward to the conversation."
But beyond the public exchange, the tension between the two runs much deeper. In a podcast interview, the ambassador addressed harsh remarks Carlson had made about him. When asked if he thinks Carlson is antisemitic, he responded, "If he's not, he's hiding his love for Jews very carefully. This is not the Tucker Carlson I've known since 1991."
Huckabee added that while Carlson is "a smart man, he's ignorant when it comes to Israel," and made it clear he doesn't know what drives his positions. "I can't point and say he's receiving money from a foreign country or from pro-foreign country elements. I don't know that. But I saw his interview in Doha with Qatar's prime minister – soft questions and outrageous statements."
According to him, Carlson even attacked him personally. "He said I have 'a virus in my brain,' and that there's no person in the world he despises more than Christian Zionists. I thought to myself, 'That puts me in a very special category. Worse than a serial killer? Than a terrorist?'"
While Huckabee emphasized that it's Carlson's right to express himself as he wishes due to free speech, he made it clear he's not prepared to remain silent in the face of his words. "I'm not going to stay quiet when people say Winston Churchill was the real villain of World War II, and Hitler wasn't so bad. If you stay quiet, you're agreeing."
Carlson, the former Fox News star who was fired in 2023, has become in recent years one of the most prominent anti-Israel voices in the American right. Since launching his podcast, he has given a platform to Holocaust denier and white supremacy supporter Nick Fuentes, and to a historian who presented Churchill as the villain of World War II and minimized Nazi crimes.
He conducted a sympathetic interview with Qatar's prime minister at the Doha Forum and even announced the purchase of a home in the principality, and at Charlie Kirk's memorial service, he hinted that his killers were "the hummus eaters from Jerusalem," echoing the antisemitic accusation that Jews were responsible for Jesus's crucifixion.
If it takes place, the interview is expected to be the first in which a senior Trump administration official directly confronts Carlson since the recent storms surrounding his positions toward Israel and Christian Zionism. According to reports, it's an interview expected to generate widespread interest and deepen the rift within the conservative camp over Israel, Christians in the country, and relations between Washington and Jerusalem.

When former New York City Mayor Eric Adams created an Office to Combat Antisemitism last May, it was widely interpreted as a political gesture intended to boost his failing independent run for re-election in November. Adams had always been broadly supportive of Israel and the wider Jewish community. But his move was too little and too late—both to do much about the surge of antisemitism that followed the Hamas-led Palestinian Arab terror attacks on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, and to save his mayoral campaign.
Adams dropped out of the race in September, six weeks before Zohran Mamdani was elected to succeed him. Mamdani, an avowed opponent of the existence of the State of Israel and a supporter of the pro-Hamas mobs who were the shock troops of the wave of Jew-hatred that swept across the country, hasn’t abolished Adams’s pet project. Similar to his predecessor, the motive for this is political. While Adams used it to signal his somewhat ineffectual support for the Jewish people, Mamdani seeks to employ it to provide cover for the fact that he is still doubling down on his anti-Zionism and efforts to link that noxious cause to other items on his agenda, such as opposing the Trump administration’s effort to crack down on illegal immigration.
To do this, he has appointed Phylisa Wisdom, a veteran left-wing activist, to lead it.
Serving an antisemite

Wisdom’s main qualifications seem to consist of a worldview that is sympathetic to Mamdani’s political program—with one exception. According to The New York Times, she is a “liberal Zionist,” which the paper seems to define as someone who has “criticized Israel’s conduct in Gaza” while still believing in “Israel’s right to exist as a Jewish state.”
New York City Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch is the one holdover from the former administration who seems to be motivated by a real desire to hold the line against Jew-hatred in law enforcement, as well as to possibly further her personal future political ambitions. But Wisdom’s post isn’t nearly as important as the one that controls the police. Like the situation last year, it’s far from clear what, if anything, it can do about the epidemic of antisemitism in New York, highlighted by the fact that hate crimes against Jews rose a staggering 182% in Mamdani’s first month in office.
This is hardly surprising. Avowals notwithstanding, Mamdani’s ardent anti-Zionism is indistinguishable from antisemitism since he denies Jews rights that neither he nor anyone else would think of denying to any other people.
What Phylisa Wisdom stands for
Wisdom’s significance, therefore, comes not from how much she can contribute to the effort to reverse that trend, but how it symbolizes what has happened to the idea of “liberal Zionism” in the 21st century. If acting and speaking as she has done is what it means to be a liberal Zionist today, then a real disconnect exists. It’s not merely time to realize that the phrase has lost its original meaning; instead, we must understand that those who have appropriated that label are neither Zionist nor authentically liberal.
In theory, those who identify as political liberals have an important role to play in rallying support for Israel and Zionism within the Jewish community and the non-Jewish world. Adherence to liberalism—whether in the form of the classical school of political thought that prized individual liberty above all, or even just as a label that most members of the Democratic Party applied to themselves—can be entirely compatible with Zionism. Indeed, for most of the history of the modern Zionist movement, the natural affinity between liberal economic and political ideas and the effort to facilitate the self-determination of the Jewish people in their ancient homeland was patently obvious.
But as Wisdom has demonstrated in the course of her career, in practice being an avowed “liberal Zionist” means acting as an ally of those working to undermine and even destroy the Jewish state, whose existence she says she supports. At the same time, she is also aiding a cause that is fundamentally illiberal.
Let’s start by noting that claiming to be a supporter of Israel and an opponent of antisemitism while serving in a Mamdani administration represents a contradiction in terms. There may be some who say that it is important for the Jewish community to have a voice among the mayor’s advisers. But this is no ordinary mayor of New York. The 34-year-old chief executive of Gotham is someone whose entire brief political career has revolved around his obsessive opposition to Israel’s existence and Jewish rights.
Even if we assume that someone like Tisch is sincere in her desire to steer the city’s government in a way that will help protect Jews, it’s already apparent that she’s deceiving herself. Whatever checks she or someone in Wisdom’s office can try to put on the mayor’s ideological fixation about Israel and Jewish life will be outweighed by the way the mayor’s rhetoric and actions are legitimizing and mainstreaming Jew-hatred.
Though Mamdani may disingenuously pledge his desire to protect Jews, even his half-hearted statements about protecting synagogues from pro-Hamas mobs send the message that he is on the side of the attackers. Those who think they can influence him or somehow lessen the harm he will cause by serving him are deceiving themselves. To collaborate with Mamdani in any way is to commit to compromising one’s own morality far more than it could ever influence him.
Supporting blood libels
Still, it is just as important to look at Wisdom’s stands and ponder whether they are in any way compatible with a traditional definition of liberal Zionism.
A glance through Wisdom’s social-media posts, a litany of her political stands or those of the New York Jewish Agenda (NYJA) group that she has led since July 2023, reveals someone who is most interested in bashing Israel, in addition to providing aid and comfort to those who seek to take it down. Indeed, the main point of that group is to provide a platform for the “as a Jew” version of modern Jewish life. That is an all-too-common trend. It is a means to comment about Israel by using one’s Jewish identity to legitimize arguments seeking to treat virtually any effort to defend it as illegitimate or a crime.
The position of NYJA is indistinguishable from that of J Street, which started out claiming to be both “pro-Israel and pro-peace.” In practice, the group became a mouthpiece for those who were determined to impose suicidal concessions to the Palestinians that had been repeatedly rejected by the Israeli people. In the wake of Oct. 7, J Street and NYJA ultimately found themselves mainly acting to support the efforts of those who sought to prevent Israel from attacking Hamas and Iran, and thus to ensure the victory of the terrorists.
Worse than that, they were guilty of lending credibility to the blood libels about Israeli conduct that have been fueling antisemitism. In particular, Wisdom and NYJA repeatedly weighed in to support the false claims that Israel was deliberately causing starvation in Gaza, and in doing so, claimed that the Jewish state was morally equivalent to Hamas. That she did so while claiming to uphold Jewish values is no defense for this immoral and destructive stance.
In this context, her assertion that she supports Israel’s “right to exist” (something that only among all the nations in the world is considered controversial when applied to the Jewish state) is merely a way to justify opposing anything done to defend it from those who are waging a genocidal war to destroy it.
Equally helpful to understanding just how little her positions have to do with liberalism or Zionism is her consistent opposition to the Trump administration’s efforts to combat bigotry against students on college campuses. Wisdom opposed the federal government’s attempts to hold institutions like Columbia University on Manhattan’s Upper West Side accountable for their toleration and encouragement of Jew-hatred, which clearly violates the 1964 U.S. Civil Rights Act. Beyond that, she took up the cause to defend Mahmoud Khalil, a foreign student who was one of the chief organizers of the pro-Hamas demonstrations that targeted Jews at the Ivy League school for intimidation and violence, when the administration sought to deport him for violating the terms of his visa.
Like Mamdani, Khalil isn’t merely “pro-Palestinian.” He is an active supporter of the campaign to destroy Israel and has a long record of working for anti-Israel groups like the U.N. Palestinian refugee agency UNRWA. But to Wisdom, his antisemitic record and actions were not as important as the imperative to oppose Trump and back his anti-Israeli opponents.
While Wisdom and others on the left claim that this position is a defense of individuals against a repressive state authority, it puts them in the position of bolstering illiberal figures like Khalil, who support the most reactionary and repressive Islamist groups. In this manner, too many contemporary liberals have allowed themselves to be convinced to support racialist theories that undermine the defense of Western civilization and help bolster the war against Jews that Islamists seek to spread.
Illiberal Islamist imagery
Mamdani’s use of Islamist imagery in his efforts to oppose Trump’s willingness to enforce existing immigration laws ought to trouble genuine liberals. The mayor claimed that the Islamic principles and history he invoked were also a reason to support open borders policies in the contemporary United States. But they actually helped form the prelude for Muslim campaigns to persecute Jews during that religion’s conquest of the Arabian Peninsula and the Middle East.
A true liberal Zionist might disagree with President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on many issues. Yet they would support Israel’s war on Hamas and oppose the importation of Islamist radicalism into the United States.
There are still many such liberal Zionists. Still, they have allowed leftists like Wisdom to hijack that term and marginalize supporters of Israel on the political left. This is a liberalism that not only won’t support Israel, but is determined to disarm those who seek to defend America against toxic Marxist ideas that single out Jews as “white” oppressors. The rise of Mamdani to political power is a function of the way these leftist ideologues have turned the Democratic Party into a haven for anti-Zionists and those who are enabling the surge of antisemitism.
That such a person has been put into a position where their job is to defend Jews against hatred isn’t merely ironic. It’s a logical conclusion to a process by which liberalism has been subverted by those who oppose its basic precepts that are the foundation of Jewish security. We should treat Wisdom’s elevation to this role as not so much inappropriate but as a parody of efforts to combat antisemitism.
More than that, it should be a wake-up call to those liberal supporters of Israel to begin to fight in earnest against the forces that have swept to control of the Democratic Party.
Conservatives are also fighting to fend off antisemites on the right, but there is no question that such figures remain a minority, and that, at present, it is only the Trump administration and its supporters who are actively fighting antisemitism in the United States. If Jewish liberals aren’t prepared to resist Mamdani and his Jewish collaborators, like Wisdom, then they should stop calling themselves liberal Zionists and concede that the idea has become obsolete.
Rising Jew-hatred and extremism in K-12 schools in the United States is the result of a “systemic ideological capture” that has made classrooms hostile to Jews, Israel and Western values, according to a North American Values Institute white paper.
The report, released on Monday, suggests that activist ideologies are rooted in a worldview that sees oppressors and oppressed.
“The threat is accelerating,” it states. “A loosely coordinated anti-American and anti-Western ‘red-green alliance’ of radical progressive and Islamist activists is rapidly expanding its influence through aggressive political operations that influence local elections, school boards and district policy.”
Josh Weiner, chief strategy officer at the institute, told JNS that the problem is institutional.
“There’s an operating system that’s put in place throughout many aspects of K-12 institutions that really drives this extremism, which leads to antisemitism,” he said.
Academic theories—including those rooted in Marxism and Arab nationalism—see Jews as oppressors and treat Western civilization and American civic values as inherently illegitimate.
“Not only does it frame Jews and Israel as oppressors, but they are the canary in the coal mine for framing all Western civilization, America and the values that underwrite those civilizations as oppressors,” Weiner told JNS.
The white paper states that antisemitic ideas enter classrooms via schools of education that train teachers to see themselves as activists, accreditation systems that reinforce ideological requirements and teacher unions.
The National Education Association “promoted resources that removed Israel from maps, amplified groups with extremist ties and circulated narratives that defended the Oct. 7 attacks,” according to the report.
“We need to be playing the same game that the most extreme organizations of the unions are,” Weiner told JNS.
“They don’t have to create a curriculum,” he said. “They actually have organizations that are foreign-funded that come in with a whole bunch of resources that they can use, and then they just have to organize.”
“There’s foreign actors that look to influence these people to create circumstances where they get more power throughout the institutions,” he said. “I’m specifically talking about China, Qatar and other Islamist actors.”
Qatar Foundation International and China’s Confucius Institutes are examples of foreign actors that have funded curricula, teacher training and travel programs that embed anti-American and anti-Israel narratives in U.S. schools, according to the report.
Ethnic studies programs are also rooted in an anti-Western political movement, it says.
“There are 27 states and Washington, D.C., that include ethnic studies concepts in their social studies standards,” it states.
“It’s not just ethnic studies,” Weiner told JNS. “It’s jumped the shark to other parts of the education space. We even have an example in Montgomery County, Md., where they just straight out say, ‘We teach white supremacy culture framework,’ which is to say that the constructs that made Western society good—timeliness, agendas, objectivity—those are white supremacist values.”
“Many in the Jewish world understandably see today’s crisis primarily as rising antisemitism, rather than growing ideological capture,” the report states. “That view has driven much of the Jewish community’s response to the problem.”
“Major investments of funding and professional influence have been directed toward combating the symptoms of antisemitism in schools and public life,” it says.
Investments in Holocaust education, while well-intentioned, are insufficient, per the report.
“I don’t want to say that Jewish education, Holocaust education, is a mistake, but we’ve over-indexed on it,” Weiner told JNS. “Resting our laurels on ‘we got the education in place’ is just not going to work anymore.”
The report calls for reforming teacher accreditation, challenging politicized union activity, increasing oversight, enforcing curricula transparency and curbing foreign influence.
“Without confronting the political drivers, even the strongest responses to antisemitism will fall short,” it says.
“We don’t need our classrooms to be political,” Weiner told JNS. “We want our kids to come to their political point of views by reason, by knowledge, by understanding and by getting there themselves, by discussing, by having open discourse. That’s an American value.”
Weiner told JNS that parents should “log into their student portals and look and see what is going on there.”
“I have seen specific examples of those student portals going to highly politicized websites, literally PAC websites, that are promoting specific politicized views,” he said.
“Are they saying the Pledge of Allegiance in class? Is everybody standing?” he said. “Those are little symptoms and indications that some larger things might be going on.”