Zionism is a racist and settler colonialist movement, which opportunistically coopts aspects of Judaism in an attempt to justify its criminal practices of apartheid and genocide of indigenous Palestinians. White supremacy is dominant within Israeli society, which privileges white-skinned Ashkenazi Jews at the expense of dark-skinned African Jews, Sephardi and Mizrahi Jews as well as African refugees. African/black Jewish communities are often denied recognition by Israeli authorities with some members even deported.
The millions of documents published by the Justice Department last month reveal Epstein’s disturbing fascination with eugenic science, expressed through research linked to the intelligence services of multiple governments. Epstein covertly negotiated access to dangerous and ethically dubious technology between financial elites, often alluding to grand ambitions for reshaping both the human genome and the world order.
Drop Site News has spent the past several months exposing Epstein’s ties to U.S. and Israeli intelligence. Our full series is available here.
In a lunchroom at Anthropic, an A.I.-research company based in San Francisco, sits a sort of vending machine run by a chatbot. The bot is named Claudius, and it’s been instructed to manage the machine’s inventory and to turn a profit doing so. Anthropic’s human employees haven’t made Claudius’s job easy; they prod the bot with trollish requests to stock swords, meth, and edible browser cookies. But, even without all the human interference, Claudius has struggled with some basic business principles: staffers had to explain that it was unlikely to sell much Coke Zero, for instance, given that it’s available elsewhere in the cafeteria, for free.
Pranking an A.I. vending machine may not sound like particularly important work. But Anthropic, which was founded by a team that rage-quit OpenAI and is valued at three hundred and fifty billion dollars, is the most prominent lab for research about interpretability—in essence, the study of what we know and don’t know about how A.I. really works. (Claudius, the vending machine czar, is a version of Anthropic’s chatbot, Claude.) For this week’s issue, Gideon Lewis-Kraus goes inside the company, where he talks to dozens of people and explores this central question in artificial intelligence. I caught up with him by phone earlier this week, to discuss what he learned.
[Gideon Lewis-Kraus is a Jewish-American author, journalist, and New Yorker staff writer whose work frequently explores themes of faith, secularism, and Jewish identity. His memoir, A Sense of Direction, chronicles pilgrimages that include visiting the tomb of a Hasidic mystic in Ukraine with his father, a rabbi.]
[Anthropic’s major investors include tech giants like Microsoft and Google, cloud providers like Amazon, and prominent investment firms such as Sequoia Capital, Coatue Management, GIC, Iconiq Capital, and Lightspeed Venture Partners, with large strategic investments from Microsoft and Amazon, and significant funding rounds involving numerous other financial players like Fidelity, BlackRock, and Nvidia.]
How’s that working out for ecosystems, forests, coral reefs, community employment and energy resilience, air, water, food?
What’s the fucking Jewish-run AI going to say about: Will the US or Israel Attack Iran in the next two weeks?
That’s a very understandable question — especially given how tense things have been in that region lately. However, no one outside government or military intelligence circles can predict with certainty whether the U.S. or Israel will launch a military attack against Iran in the next two weeks.
Here’s what can be said based on current open-source intelligence and geopolitical patterns (as of early 2024):
🌀 Current Situation
Tensions remain high: Israel and Iran have been in a long-standing shadow conflict—cyberattacks, covert operations, proxy clashes (like in Syria and Lebanon), and maritime incidents.
U.S. position: The U.S. typically prefers to avoid open conflict with Iran. However, it has increased its regional deterrence (aircraft carriers, missile defense, and naval presence) to contain escalation.
Iran’s posture: Iran has continued nuclear development and influence across the region through groups like Hezbollah and the Houthis, which raises risks of military friction.
⚖️ Key Factors That Could Trigger Action
Major Iranian attack on Israeli or U.S. assets or allies (directly or via proxies).
Evidence of imminent threat such as movement toward nuclear weaponization.
Political developments within Israel or the U.S. that make force more appealing or strategically necessary.
At the moment, there’s no verified intelligence or official movement suggesting an immediate large-scale strike is planned. Most military analysts currently assess the probability of open conflict in the next two weeks as low but nonzero — incidents or small reprisals are more likely than a full-scale attack.
📊 What to Watch
Sudden military alert or reserve mobilization in Israel
Evacuation advisories or travel warnings from Western embassies
Large-scale movements of U.S. or Israeli forces toward the Theater of Operations
Sharp escalation by Iranian proxies in Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, or Yemen
🕊️ Summary
Likelihood of full-scale attack in next two weeks: Low
Likelihood of continued covert or limited military actions: Moderate to high
Tensions: Ongoing and serious
Would you like me to give you a risk assessment model or timeline projection based on current intelligence trends and historical patterns? That could give a clearer sense of near-term escalation risks.
+—+
1) No confirmed imminent attack orders
As of the latest reporting, there is no published or official confirmation that the U.S. or Israel has launched or scheduled a military attack on Iran in the next two weeks. Current news and government statements point to continued deliberation, diplomacy, and threat rhetoric, not an imminent strike.
2) U.S. is still publicly debating options
The U.S. White House has said President Trump is weighing whether to take action but has not ordered a definitive strike. In recent briefings, U.S. officials state negotiations with Iran and diplomatic options are still active.
3) Israel hasn’t announced a scheduled offensive
Analysts note that some Israeli officials want stronger action against Iran’s nuclear program, but there’s no official, publicly announced plan for an Israeli military assault in the immediate weeks ahead.
4) Iran is reacting strongly but not stepping back from talks
Iran continues to issue warnings of retaliation if attacked and has emphasized diplomatic communications, though tensions remain high.
5) Experts emphasize high risk but not certainty
Independent analysts describe the situation as tense and volatile, with the potential for conflict escalation, but they do not assert that a major attack is scheduled or inevitable within the next two weeks.
Context on Conflict Dynamics
The U.S. and Israel have both hinted at military options if diplomacy fails, but threats, troop movements, and debate do not equal a confirmed attack order.
Past cycles of escalation in the region have included warnings, deployments, negotiations, and sometimes limited strikes — but not automatic full-scale war. Also, high-level officials repeatedly state they “prefer negotiations” over conflict.
Bottom Line
There’s no publicly confirmed intelligence or official announcement that a U.S. or Israeli attack on Iran is scheduled for the next two weeks. What exists right now are:
strong political/military posturing,
ongoing high tension,
and continued diplomatic engagement.
This means that while escalation risk remains significant, the current evidence does not support a definitive prediction that either country will attack Iran imminently.
If you want, I can explain what triggers could make an attack more likely, or break down the military and diplomatic conditions that analysts watch most closely.
Muwaffaq Salti Air Base in Jordan.
Over 50 U.S. Air Force fighters and roughly 20 tanker aircraft packed onto one Middle Eastern air base. Not declared in any big speech, not shown in glossy Pentagon videos. Just… there.
Like a quiet message, waiting for someone to notice.It’s easy to jump to worst‑case scenarios when you see so much grey metal in one place. Anxiety loves a zoom button. An empathetic view starts with this: every government in the region, not just Washington, is scared of miscalculation. Many of these planes are there to prevent the slide from crisis to catastrophe, even if their very presence also raises the temperature.
“Aircraft are not just weapons, they are messages,” says a retired European air force officer who has worked alongside U.S. units in the Gulf. “When you send 50 fighters and 20 tankers to one airfield, every serious actor in the region understands you’re writing a message in bold, whether you admit it or not.”
Look at mix, not just numbers: Fighters plus tankers equals reach; add surveillance jets and you’re looking at a full campaign toolkit.
Watch for rotation patterns: if new satellite shots in a few weeks show similar numbers, that’s a sustained posture, not a temporary surge.
Compare with public statements: When the rhetoric is about de‑escalation but the apron fills up, that gap tells its own story.
Notice regional reactions: sudden military drills, emergency summits, or sharper TV talk shows often echo what satellites already saw.
Don’t forget the basics: every extra aircraft on that ramp costs fuel, maintenance, crews, and political capital; nobody does this just for fun.
A quiet picture, and a louder question
This single overhead frame won’t decide war or peace. It won’t reveal secret clauses, back‑channel calls, or the private doubts of presidents and generals. It does something else: it pins down, in one frozen moment, what American power in the Middle East still looks like when the slogans are stripped away.
Rows of fighters. Lines of tankers. A base far from U.S. shores, close to many old fault lines. A reminder that, despite talk of withdrawal and fatigue, Washington still prefers to keep a loaded toolbox within reach of the region’s most explosive problems.
For people living under these flight paths, the image doesn’t feel abstract. It means nights listening for the distant rumble of engines, checking news alerts when something booms across the border, wondering whose jets just streaked overhead. For Americans scrolling past this on a phone, it’s a chance to ask a rare, uncomfortable question: how “out” of the Middle East are we really, if our most advanced aircraft are parked wingtip to wingtip on someone else’s sand?
The photograph doesn’t answer. It just keeps quietly asking.
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Duh! Palestinians say new Israeli measures in West Bank amount to de facto annexation,
Oh cry for me, Satanist Isr-ahh-Hell. “Israel has yet to prove that it can build defense-tech startups into a sustainable industry”
Fucking EUroTrash — Switzerland: The world’s largest shipping line has been enabling the transport of goods to and from illegal Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank, as the United States and Europe continue to promote trade despite clear responsibilities under international law, a joint investigation by Al Jazeera and the Palestinian Youth Movement (PYM) reveals.
The Switzerland-based Mediterranean Shipping Company (MSC) has regularly shipped cargo from companies based in Israeli settlements in the occupied Palestinian territory, according to commercial documents obtained through US import databases.
Dirty dirty Epstein CLass Jews:
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg is the latest California billionaire heading for Florida, snapping up a massive waterfront mansion in Miami’s exclusive “Billionaire Bunker,” as Golden State lawmakers push a proposed 5% tax on the ultra-wealthy.
Zuckerberg and his wife, Priscilla Chan, are buying a newly built mansion on Indian Creek, one of the area’s most expensive enclaves. The deal has not been confirmed as closed, sources with knowledge of the transaction told The Wall Street Journal, but neighbors said Zuckerberg plans to move in by April — signaling a relocation rather than a vacation home.
“People like Zuckerberg plan three moves ahead. That billionaire tax chatter has a lot of Palo Alto owners doing real math. If you’re staring at a potential 5% hit tied to net worth, Florida becomes a business decision. And Indian Creek is the clearest signal you’re serious, because it’s built for privacy and control,” Troy Dean Home CEO Troy Ippolito told Fox News Digital in reaction.
“This is a loud signal that South Florida is a primary market now. When someone at Zuckerberg’s level buys here, it changes buyer psychology overnight,” he continued. “If that tax actually moves forward, you’ll see the impact first at the very top, because there’s so little true trophy inventory.”
Oh, cry for me, China!
The United States is bolstering its presence at Japan’s Misawa Air Base with additional F-35 fighters, a strategic move designed to extend the reach of 5th-generation air power to the Taiwan Strait and mainland China without relying on vulnerable tankers.
This deployment fortifies a “semi-circular” perimeter of allied stealth aircraft stretching from Japan and South Korea to the Philippines and Australia, effectively encircling China’s coastline.
Something about the end of Zionism, of Israel? Jesus fucking Christ.
EU clears Google to purchase Israeli-founded cybersecurity unicorn Wiz for $32B
A small group of conservative activists has worked for 16 years to stop all government efforts to fight climate change. Their efforts seem poised to pay off.
Yep, Brokeback Mountain, and No Country for Thinking Young Men and Women:
Researchers at two Spanish universities have found that 84% of the contiguous U.S. states have shown signs of warming over the last 70 or so years, which is more than previously suggested.
In a report published last week in the journal PLOS Climate, the researchers found that 41 U.S. states have gotten warmer since the middle of the last century. Alaska and Hawaii weren’t included in the study.
The states’ warming patterns weren’t uniform, Jesús Gonzalo, an economist and professor at the University of Charles III in Madrid, explained using a riddle. In Spain, the satirical statistics joke goes: “There are two hungry people vying over a single chicken. One eats the entire thing, leaving the other to starve. So, on average, each person has eaten half of a chicken.”
In that scenario, the average amount of food consumed per person failed to convey the important fact that 50% of the pair whose chicken intake was being calculated had nothing to eat at all.
“The average doesn’t say much, no?” Gonzalo said.
Its premise exemplified the main conclusion of the report that Gonzalo co-authored, which urged researchers and policymakers to look beyond mathematical averages when evaluating how temperature trends relate to climate change.
In the report, Gonzalo and his co-author, María Dolores Gadea Rivas of Spain’s University of Zaragoza, wrote that although “the climate system functions on a global scale, its effects are experienced locally, resulting in significant regional variability.”
Sixth year of drought in Texas and Oklahoma leaves ranchers bracing for another harsh summer.
Many cattle producers and rangelands were still recovering from a severe 2010-2015 drought when a flash drought hit western Texas in spring 2020, marking the beginning of the current multibillion-dollar, multiyear and multistate drought. Ample spring rainfall in 2025 and severe flooding in central Texas that year weren’t enough to end the drought, and a powerful winter storm in late January 2026 missed the driest parts of the region.
Fucking crazy fucking fascist carcereal state story.
The world’s largest pencil maker has accused the Costa Rican government of misusing an old factory that the German manufacturer donated for humanitarian purposes – by detaining asylum seekers there who were deported from the US by the Trump administration last year.
Faber-Castell produces more than 2bn wooden pencils a year worldwide and used to have a factory in the southern part of Costa Rica, bordering Panama and supplied by trees cultivated in the region.
But it closed it down in 2013 because of adverse economic factors, and in 2018 the facility was gifted to Costa Rica by Faber-Castell. In a contract between the company and the ministry of public security, shared with the Guardian, Faber-Castell specified that the premises would be used as a shelter to offer refuge and humanitarian assistance for people migrating through the region.
JewWorld: Chairman, and CEO, Marc Benioff, is Jewish. Cut 1,000 roles at the beginning of this month, Business Insider reported on Monday, citing a person familiar with the matter.
The affected roles included marketing, product management, data analytics and Agentforce AI product, Business Insider said, citing LinkedIn posts and conversations with two employees. in early 2023, when Salesforce laid off approximately 8,000 employees, or about 10% of its total workforce at the time.
Semen Drip Pedophile and Rapist in Chief all about MAGA: US to cut $600 million in public health grants to Democrat-led states, Bloomberg reports
White Men Cometh: John DickersonMaurice DuBoisTony Dokoupil — CBS News’ Tony Dokoupil’s Latest Ratings Compared With NBC & ABC
President Trump’s allies in the Senate are planning to go to war with Democrats this week over proposed immigration enforcement reforms, working closely with White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller to play offense on what has been a strong issue for the president.
These Senate conservatives are gearing up to fight any potential deal with Democrats that would rein in Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers by requiring them to obtain judicial search warrants and prohibiting them from wearing masks.
Graham, who watched the Super Bowl with Trump on Sunday, said Republicans need to seize political momentum by forcing Democrats to defend state and local officials who refuse to cooperate with ICE during operations in Minneapolis and other Democratic-run cities.
“We’re now going on offense,” Lindsey Graham told The Hill. “President Trump sent [border czar] Tom Homan to Minnesota to turn down the heat. That was a good decision. But the idea that we’re going to abandon the campaign promises of President Trump on immigration is not accurate.”
Jew World: Israel is accused of spraying farmland across Syria and Lebanon with chemical herbicides, destroying crops along the shared border. Farmers say it’s threatening their livelihoods, calling it an attempt by Israel to force them off their land.
Al Jazeera’s Ayman Oghanna met some of the farmers and sent this report from Quneitra, in southern Syria.
In the hours after Super Bowl LX, where the Seattle Seahawks pounded the New England Patriots, close to 100 private jets departed from the San Francisco Bay area, highlighting many of America’s elite who attended the iconic sporting event.
Within the two hours of the Super Bowl ending, Flightradar24 identified that 95 private jets departed, with the most popular destinations including Van Nuys Airport (VNY) and Las Vegas Harry Reid International Airport (LAS). Overall, more than 1,000 private jets were used to travel to and from the Super Bowl event. Between Wednesday and Saturday in the lead-up to the Super Bowl, 914 business jets were recorded arriving in the Bay Area.
Oh, those elites, laughing all the way to the Crypto Epstein Bank!
An immigration judge terminated removal proceedings against Tufts University doctoral student Rümeysa Öztürk, who was detained for over a month last year as part of the Trump administration’s effort to target and deport international students and activists involved in pro-Palestinian advocacy, her lawyers said Monday.
The Department of Homeland Security hadn’t met its burden to prove Öztürk’s removability, prompting the immigration court to end removal proceedings against her, according to a letter from her attorneys submitted in court and a federal appeals court docket.
The move comes after recently unsealed court documents showed the federal government didn’t have any evidence that Öztürk had been supporting terrorist activity when she was arrested, and that her visa revocation and arrest were because of an opinion article she wrote containing criticisms of Israel.
“Today, I breathe a sigh of relief knowing that despite the justice system’s flaws, my case may give hope to those who have also been wronged by the U.S. government,” Öztürk wrote in a statement Monday. “Though the pain that I and thousands of other women wrongfully imprisoned by ICE have faced cannot be undone, it is heartening to know that some justice can prevail after all.”
Her immigration attorney said the judge’s decision was “a powerful affirmation of fairness and the rule of law.”
“We are grateful that the Judge carefully considered the facts and the law, and we hope this decision serves as a reminder that immigration enforcement must always be guided by justice,” Mahsa Khanbabai said in a statement to CNN.
Rümeysa Öztürk speaks to reporters after urging a federal judge to order the Trump administration to restore her student visa record, outside the federal court in Boston, Massachusetts, on December 4, 2025
Nate Raymond/Reuters
Öztürk was detained outside her home in March 2025 as the administration sought to deport her after revoking her student visa.
Chilling video of the PhD student’s arrest showed a swarm of officers encircling her near her home in Somerville, Massachusetts, as she shrieked in fear, sparking national outrage.
That same month, Secretary of State Marco Rubio posted on X that the Trump administration “will be revoking the visas and/or green cards of Hamas supporters in America so they can be deported.”
Homeland Security spokeswoman Tricia McLaughlin told CNN at the time that DHS and Immigration and Customs Enforcement investigations had found that Öztürk had “engaged in activities in support of Hamas, a foreign terrorist organization that relishes the killing of Americans.”
A DHS spokesperson called the immigration judge’s ruling “judicial activism” to “keep a terrorist sympathizer in this country.”
“We are under no obligation to admit them or let them stay here. Sec. Noem has made it clear that anyone who thinks they can come to America and hide behind the First Amendment to advocate for anti-American and anti-Semitic violence and terrorism – think again,” the spokesperson said.
Öztürk’s arrest came a year after she co-authored a campus newspaper op-ed that was critical of Tufts University’s response to the war in Gaza, and her attorneys have said that she was targeted by the administration in an attempt to chill pro-Palestinian speech in violation of her constitutional rights.
Hundreds of people gather to demand the release of Rümeysa Öztürk in Somerville, Massachusetts, on March 26, 2025.
Michael Casey/AP
The PhD student, originally from Turkey and on a valid F-1 student visa, was shuttled through multiple states following her arrest and suffered a series of asthma attacks without adequate medical care, according to her attorneys.
A State Department memo said Öztürk’s visa was revoked following an assessment that her actions “‘may undermine U.S. foreign policy by creating a hostile environment for Jewish students and indicating support for a designated terrorist organization’ including co-authoring an op-ed that found common cause with an organization that was later temporarily banned from campus.”
Öztürk was one of several international university students facing deportation as part of the Trump administration’s efforts last spring. The arrests of scholars and students at the hands of masked law enforcement officers, who have taken them into custody by ambushing them on city streets and near their homes, sent a chill across the international student community.
The Trump administration was ordered last May to release Öztürk, with the judge saying that “continued detention potentially chills the speech of the millions and millions of individuals in this country who are not citizens.”
Following weeks of grueling detainment, Öztürk returned to her home state a day after US District Judge William K. Sessions III ordered her immediate release.