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2023: 2023: 19 October @ 0730
   Must be true: Israel told Sullivan,
   Jake told CNN: the water is ON
2023: 19 October @ 0415
   Ramzy Baroud is the closest thing
   Palestine has to an Edward Said, today
2023: 18 October @ 1015
   Editor of the Jewish Chronicle is
   a weakling who wants his mommy
2023: 18 October @ 0930
   Making housing scarce to drive up
   prices is criminal, should be punished
2023: 18 October @ 0745
   Shani Louk: Jewish attention whore,
   'Jewish tattoo artist' is an oxymoron
2023: 18 October @ 0715
   Wanda Geter-Pataky is just the tip
   of a much larger iceberg - but whose?
2023: 17 October @ 1845
   Brave Jews 'feel threatened', riddle
   yet another family's car with bullets
2023: 17 October @ 1630
   Jewish people adept at stealing
   homes, destroying lives for profit
2023: 17 October @ 1445
   Jews hold Palestinian educations
   hostage by punishing thought crimes
2023: 17 October @ 0430
   Jews assert 'right' to kill all
   who question their 'right' to kill
2023: 16 October @ 1845
   Settlers murder West Bank worshippers,
   preemptively shooting boys & men
2023: 16 October @ 1730
   Settlers murder West Bank funeral goers,
   steal Palestinian cadavers, too
2023: 16 October @ 0615
   Jews: 'animals', 'beasts', 'retaliate',
   'exterminate'; don'cha feel the love?
2023: 16 October @ 0445
   That's not a "kibbutz", you morons;
   that's a castle
2023: 15 October @ 2200
   IPSO (Independent Press Standards
   Organisation) exposing mockingbirds
2023: 15 October @ 1800
   West Bank settlers go ape shit;
   morons can't tell Fatah, Hamas apart
2023: 15 October @ 0615
   Keir Starmer is a shapeshifter - Al
   Jazeera documented the takeover
2023: 15 October @ 0445
   David Ben Zion is a nice Jewish boy
   who dreams of killing children
2023: 14 October @ 2045
   Israel's genocidal high command
   ignores Sun Tzu at its own risk
2023: 14 October @ 1045
   Michelle Bushnell owns more
   rental properties than you think
2023: 14 October @ 0900
   IOF soldier who lived in Berkeley
   16 years ago learns a new lesson
2023: 14 October @ 0715
   London infested by bloodsuckers;
   also, a problem with bedbugs
2023: 13 October @ 2245
   Peace activist, Vivian Silver, no
   use as Gaza war breaks out
2023: 13 October @ 2030
   Candidate for Knesset calls out
   fellow Jews for ethnic cleansing
2023: 13 October @ 1845
   Israelis go hog wild, murdering
   innocent West Bank protesters
2023: 13 October @ 1600
   Israeli siege of Gaza should
   be answered with a blockade
2023: 12 October @ 2315
   'Beheaded babies' fable traced
   to murderous extremist lunatic
2023: 12 October @ 2115
   IOF: no evidence supporting
   crazy 'dead babies' fable
2023: 12 October @ 1830
   Wall Street Journal is Israel's
   mouthpiece; it always was
2023: 12 October @ 0400
   Texas kills man on death row,
   despite being God's Chosen
2023: 11 October @ 2200
   Rabbi's US loyalty questioned
   after nephew killed in Israel
2023: 11 October @ 2130
   Bloodthirsty, flag-wrapped Jews
   calling everyone nasty names
2023: 11 October @ 1900
   California county ordered to
   pay political activist $85,000
2023: 11 October @ 1745
   Riverside County fires their
   bungling Registrar of Voters
2023: 10 October @ 1945
   Israelis counter-attack unarmed
   civilians w/ banned munitions
2023: 10 October @ 1800
   Half-naked attention whores
   get more than they expected
2023: 10 October @ 0745
   Eva Bartlett tells it like it is
   for fishermen in Gaza
2023: 10 October @ 0630
   Eva Bartlett tells it like it is
   in Samaria and Judea
2023: 09 October @ 1400
   Gazans explode into occupied
   Palestine like angry bees
2023: 09 October @ 1030
   Hamas takes captives, calls
   it 'administrative detention'
2023: 08 October @ 1415
   Nearly one thousand Jews
   take over Al-Aqsa mosque
2023: 07 October @ 1430
   El Cerrito city council may
   need a psilocybin enema
2023: 07 October @ 0330
   Scientists say, psilocybin is
   good for your mental hygiene
2023: 06 October @ 1145
   Israel plays bait-and-switch
   with US State Department
2023: 06 October @ 1030
   Jews offer free exchange of
   bodily fluids to passing Xtians
2023: 06 October @ 0715
   Paris infested by bloodsuckers;
   also, a problem with bedbugs
2023: 06 October @ 0445
   British Foreign Secretary
   helps Israel obscure crimes
2023: 05 October @ 1745
   Jewish cyber-stalkers are
   a threat to freedom of speech
2023: 05 October @ 1145
   Jew busted planning to
   sacrifice lamb at Al-Aqsa
2023: 05 October @ 0915
   CA Governor Nuisance declares
   other states' laws null & void
2023: 05 October @ 0830
   Jews vs Jew: Ultra-Orthodox
   are taking over Tel Aviv, too
2023: 04 October @ 1900
   Anthropologists mobbed, bullied
   by gang of transphiliacs
2023: 04 October @ 0930
   Israel ambushes 17-year-old kid,
   smells like premeditated murder
2023: 04 October @ 0715
   UN Security Council:
   Israel threatens us all
2023: 04 October @ 0415
   IAEA about as much use
   as tits on a boar hog
2023: 03 October @ 1115
   CA Legislature sabotaging
   county's ballot integrity efforts
2023: 03 October @ 0930
   Half of Jewish population
   diagnosed as mentally ill
2023: 03 October @ 0615
   Would Paul Craig Roberts be
   censored by Aaron Peskin?
2023: 03 October @ 0445
   Aaron Peskin wants to
   kill free speech in SF
2023: 02 October @ 2115
   Ramzy Baroud: Israel wants
   to rewrite history
2023: 02 October @ 1445
   Eric Rozenman: Palestinians
   aren't Semites, 'cuz he said so
2023: 02 October @ 1130
   Rabbi Pilichowski says,
   Anti-Zionism is BAD, m'kay?
2023: 02 October @ 0945
   US Supreme Court mulls over
   whether homeless are citizens
2023: 02 October @ 0515
   Israel's brand damaged by
   racism, bigotry & mobbing
2023: 01 October @ 2245
   Israeli psychological torture
   goes back to Abu Ghraib
2023: 01 October @ 1930
   Do Israeli weapon sales
   depend on terrorism?
2023: 01 October @ 1145
   Twitter blocks Ramzy Baroud;
   but dude has his own website
2023: 01 October @ 0715
   Jewish News Service addicted
   to words 'antisemitism' & 'Nazi'
2023: 30 September @ 0445
   British Jews using OfCom to
   bankrupt Islam Channel
2023: 29 September @ 2215
   Who is a Jew? Who is not?
   Oy vay.
2023: 28 September @ 1430
   President of Iran meets with
   anti-Israel, pro-Palestine Jews
2023: 27 September @ 1445
   Jews accuse Labour Party
   of harassing non-Zionist Jews
2023: 26 September @ 0945
   School nurses giving kids
   Zoloft like it's candy
2023: 25 September @ 1915
   Jews mob, bully UC faculty:
   cuz 'they called us "funded"'
2023: 24 September @ 2220
   Democratic ballot stuffer
   caught on camera
2023: 23 September @ 1810
   Is Sacto DA a landlord?
   Reminds us of Matthew 7:5
2023: 22 September @ 2145
   BANG! POW! Jews kill
   15-year-old to shut him up
2023: 21 September @ 1030
   California school boards:
   AG Bonta can fuck off
2023: 20 September @ 1000
   Jews: No Palestine events
   allowed on our holidays
2023: 17 September @ 2130
   'Jews' want dictionary to
   only say nice things
2023: 15 September @ 2130
   California legislators are
   coming for your children
2023: 05 September @ 1255
   Humboldt County IT staff
   accused of incompetence


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Timestamp: 05 October 2023 @ 1745 Pacific

For Palestinians, social media influence comes with the threat of prison

'Some animals are more equal than others'



The persecution of activists like Ramzi Abbassi illustrates Israel's escalating attempts to stifle Palestinian expression online since May 2021.

By Sophia Goodfriend October 2, 2023 | Edit

On the evening of April 2, 2023, Ramzi Abbassi, a prominent Palestinian journalist and social media influencer, drove back to his home in the occupied East Jerusalem neighborhood of Silwan. He had been at a nearby hospital visiting his mother, who was severely ill and would pass away just a few weeks later. It was Ramadan, and, before getting into his car, he video-chatted with his wife Shaima and his two young children, Kanan and Sanawat, promising to pick up bread on the way home to break the fast. As Abbassi neared his street, however, he encountered Israeli police at a temporary roadblock, who told him to stop driving and forced him out of the car.

According to Shaima, Abbassi was hit on the head, handcuffed, blindfolded, and pushed into a police cruiser. He would spend the next 90 days in the Russian Compound -- an Israeli prison in West Jerusalem -- facing a stack of allegations that he posed a threat to Israeli national security. In addition to his three months of detention and interrogation, Ramzi was sentenced to a year and one day in prison. And while the eventual charges were ostensibly unrelated to his online activity, Abbassi's lawyer has no doubts that this is the principal reason for his client's incarceration.

Charges against Palestinian social media users have surged in recent years -- particularly in the wake of the Palestinian uprising of May 2021 known as the "Unity Intifada" -- and Abbassi is just one of many whom Israeli authorities have surveilled, censored, detained, and incarcerated for their online activity. Usually, they are accused of inciting violence or sympathizing with a terrorist organization; however, when it comes to Palestinians, "incitement," "sympathy," and "terrorism" are often broadly defined. Legal advocates say that the crackdown on Palestinian online speech constitutes an alarming form of political persecution, resulting in a systemic restriction of Palestinian freedom of expression.

`Random people would be filming him on the street'

Abbassi was already a celebrity when I first interviewed him in September 2021. It was a few months after historic protests had erupted across Palestine in response to state-backed settler expropriation in the East Jerusalem neighborhood of Sheikh Jarrah, and Abbassi was one of a number of local influencers who played a pivotal role in broadcasting images of Israeli settler violence and police brutality to the globe. His followers -- already in the hundreds of thousands -- had skyrocketed to almost half a million that summer. Appearing frequently on Hebrew and Palestinian television, quoted in the New York Times, and reposted by international celebrities, Abbassi had become an influencer through and through.

From the outset, Abbassi's virality seemed to rub the Israeli authorities the wrong way. Police had confiscated his cameras during protests at Damascus Gate and Sheikh Jarrah. Border Police checking the IDs of Palestinian worshippers entering the Al-Aqsa compound warned Abbassi they were watching him. During our conversation in 2021, he explained that Meta, the parent company of Facebook and Instagram, had banned him from posting live footage after he streamed viral videos of police violence against protesters. Platform administrators had also threatened to delete his account if he continued to post similar content, he said.

"I'm very worried about the future," Abbassi confessed. "I have so many stories on my page. The government can use any of that content against me and say I am inciting violence." But the intimidation didn't deter him from believing social media platforms could amplify Palestinian narratives worldwide. "There is something beautiful about social media," Abbassi said, smiling. "You can share information as fast as lightning. One video can reach 1 million [viewers]. After this spring, we have CNN calling us up; we have a whole network."

When I spoke to Shaima last month, she said that surveillance and harassment by Israeli authorities only intensified in the months and years following the summer of 2021. Abbassi had worked as a physical therapist at a school for children with disabilities in East Jerusalem for years; it was where he and Shaima, who also works as an educator with disabled children, first met. Yet Abbassi was fired from his job in early 2022. In a video posted on Facebook, Ramzi said he received a letter from Israel's Civil Administration -- the bureaucratic arm of the occupation -- declaring he was "a harm to the general public and a harm to the educational process."

Without a steady income, Abbassi turned to journalism full-time. "The pages and news companies he had been working with saw his skills, his presentation, and they encouraged him to pursue it," Shaima said. He took courses to refine his documentary skills and worked with major news outlets in the Middle East. In the months before his arrest, he was filming "Jerusalem Taxi," a documentary series modeled off the American reality show, "New York Taxi," that featured interviews with prominent Palestinian Jerusalemites. All this time, Abbassi was living under heightened surveillance. "The police came to our house, and random people would be filming him on the street," Shaima said.

`They are trying to send a message through Ramzi'

Since 2016, incitement to violence or sympathy with a terrorist organization have become increasingly common charges against Palestinian social media users. Israel passed an updated counterterrorism law that year, which broadened the legal definition of incitement to encompass not only anyone who "publishes a direct call to commit a terrorist act" but also those who "publish praise, sympathy, encouragement or support of a terrorist act, or identification with it."

According to legal experts, the definitions of both "incitement" and "terrorism" within the law are intentionally vague. "The articles of incitement and sympathy with terrorist organizations are very broad," said Adi Mansour, a lawyer for the Palestinian legal center Adalah. "The definition of terrorism does not exist in the law. The definition of incitement does not exist specifically."

In 2021 alone, Israel's state attorney's office filed 16 indictments of "incitement" or "affiliation with a terror organization," 15 of which were against Palestinian suspects. And these are only the cases civil rights organizations like Adalah can track: many Palestinian social media users are targeted for their online speech, but ultimately sentenced to lengthy jail times on other charges. Abbassi, for example, was finally sentenced to a year behind bars under Israel's penal code; the prosecution accused him of conspiracy with a foreign agent. But Abbassi's lawyer, Khaled Zabarqa, told +972 that his client was targeted because of his influential online profile.

"The charges mention his popularity -- that he has half a million followers on social media. The indictment even mentions posts with nationalistic slogans," said Zabarqa, who has worked on many similar cases over the years. "They are trying to send a message through Ramzi, a preventive message," he added.

The crackdown on Palestinian political speech comes amid an upsurge in Jewish-Israeli right-wing violence on- and offline. In May 2021, Jewish supremacists carried out brutal attacks on Palestinian citizens of Israel, coordinating meeting points on Telegram and Facebook. Since Israel's most right-wing government in history assumed power late last year, Jewish extremists have taken to social media to plan lethal pogroms in the West Bank towns of Huwara and Turmus Ayya and coordinate smaller riots through a handful of villages. According to a report released by Adalah in June 2023, the discrepancy in prosecuting Jewish Israelis for incitement to violence or terrorism "reaffirms Israel's long-standing apartheid policies in law enforcement."

Lawyers say the discriminatory application of the law amounts to nothing less than political persecution. Zabarqa, who has represented scores of Palestinian activists from Jerusalem and has been interrogated by Israeli authorities because of his own Facebook posts, told +972 that "there has been a huge increase in intimidation of influencers throughout '48 [the territories within the Green Line], Jerusalem, and the West Bank since 2021." Then, international commentators proclaimed Israel was losing its war on social media despite pumping millions into not-so-covert influence campaigns targeting Israeli citizens and international social media users.

During the Unity Intifada, Palestinian users garnered unprecedented online support for their struggles against settler expropriation and Israeli state violence. "Now it's clear there is pressure on what the Palestinian influencer voice should be," Zabarqa said. "[The authorities] want pro-Israel narratives online. They don't want a pro-Palestinian narrative."

Making Palestinians feel watched

Reports of the abuse of Israeli surveillance capabilities in Palestine have skyrocketed in recent years. From potent spyware to mass biometric databases, aerial surveillance, and drone warfare, human rights advocates say Israel's advanced surveillance apparatus is used to police and control Palestinians throughout the region.

In June, the head of Israel's Shin Bet (also known by its Hebrew acronym "Shabak") announced AI was used to comb through Palestinian social media content and determine which users should be questioned and detained, sparking concerns that AI was taking over key decision making processes. According to a 2023 report by Amnesty International, "the constant surveillance Palestinians face means they not only live in a state of insecurity, but they are also at risk of arbitrary arrest, interrogation, and detention." The point, in the words of Palestinian digital rights advocate Mona Shtaya, "is to make them feel watched no matter where they are."

Adalah's Mansour, who has worked on prominent incitement cases in recent years, said the policing of Palestinian social media users unfolds according to a certain logic. "The Shabak will invite the person for what they call a warning conversation," with the intention to create a "chilling effect, to get to a place where the person does not post anymore or share stories."

Mansour said that the authorities want Palestinians to feel like they are being monitored. "Sometimes, it ends there, and in other cases where people are not deterred, eventually it ends up with criminal charges," he added. Because these conversations take place without any legal oversight, Mansour said, it is impossible to know how many Palestinians have been subjected to these warning conversations and subsequently deleted their social media pages or engaged in self-censorship to avoid incarceration.

Israeli authorities have pressed charges against a handful of prominent Palestinian journalists, politicians, and community leaders for their online activity. The list includes Mohammad Kana'neh, a leader of the secular Arab nationalist Abnaa el-Balad movement who has been under house arrest since 2021, and Sheikh Kamal Khatib, a Palestinian community leader arrested in 2021 and subjected to a travel ban after his release. Regular Palestinian social media users have also been detained and charged with prison or house arrest terms stretching for more than a year within the Green Line and across Jerusalem. This includes a dentist from Lyd imprisoned for over a year for allegedly endorsing Hezbollah in Facebook comments, and a journalist from Sheikh Jarrah who served almost a year under house arrest for her Facebook posts, among others.

Although Israeli law criminalizes Palestinian speech, social media companies are equally complicit in surveilling and censoring Palestinian content. Israel's cyber unit, a small yet potent body within the Justice Ministry, is responsible for requesting that social media platforms remove supposedly incendiary content. Journalists and advocates have long said the cyber unit mainly targets Palestinian users.

Since its founding in 2015, the unit has successfully petitioned Meta to delete tens of thousands of posts, pages, and accounts created by Palestinian users. Tamer Almisshal, an Arabic news presenter for Al Jazeera, was the most recent victim of such censorship; Almisshal's page was taken offline the day Al Jazeera aired his investigation into Meta's censorship of Palestinian content.

`We have the ability to reach the people'

Abbassi will finally return home next summer, more than a year after being stopped by Israeli authorities that night last April. In the meantime, Shaima is allowed to visit him once a month, bringing their two young children along so that they can hug their father during the last 10 minutes of visitation. She does not want them to forget what he looks like. Abbassi insists on remaining in high spirits, Shaima said, and is preparing to return to journalism full time when he is released.

When we spoke in 2021, Abbassi knew dragnet surveillance and criminalization of Palestinian political speech by Israeli authorities made his arrest likely. But he also emphasized that none of the established avenues of political dissent -- from the empty promises of peace made by the Palestinian Authority to the international community's futile warnings -- had stopped the settlers from moving into his neighbors' homes or prevented Israeli authorities from throwing his friends into jail. "I didn't ask to be an activist," he said. "But now we have the ability to educate the people and to reach the people. It's our responsibility."

Despite the surge of political persecution and criminalization, Israeli and international commentators alike say Palestinian social media users are more influential than ever. Yet, as Shaima noted when she spoke to +972, "Ramzi is only a journalist because he isn't able to work as a physical therapist anymore. It's due to [the Israeli authorities'] actions that they force Palestinian people into roles they didn't necessarily want in the first place."



Keywords: Humboldt California US STEM MGTOW Ziosphere free speech democracy economic sabotage unlawful termination economic terrorism homelessness hunger insecurity





Source: https://www.972mag.com/palestinian-influencers-social-media-persecution/





Comment: Democracy requires freedom of speech.

It is axiomatic. How do we know we are representing the will of the people when we refuse to let the people speak freely?

Also, self-government requires free speech so that we, the people, can learn about problems, so that we can address them proactively - before they become problems.

It follows logically that people who do not allow free speech are not democrats and do not support freedom.

We should be applying this as a litmus test in our relations - with other countries, but also with one another.

We personally think that democratic relationships begin at home.

Israel is constantly interfering with the freedom of speech of people around the world. And American Jews invest enormous amounts of time, energy and money in tampering with the freedom of speech of their fellow Americans - it is a source of income for Jews on the dole and a source of pleasure and entertainment for those more highly placed - a competition, to see who can get more Palestinian supporters fired from their jobs and, hopefully, rendered homeless.

It follows, logically, that Israel is no bastion of freedom. Just the opposite.

What sorts of opinions does Israel not want to see discussed in public?

How about, the only reason the United States is still giving billions of dollars to Israel is because Israel uses those same billions to attack everyone who disagrees.

Or, how about, we really ought to cut Israel loose to fend for itself - and rebuild the Gaza Airport, and the Port of Gaza, and start repairing all the damage that we caused by giving and selling weapons to the Israelis these past fifty or seventy-five years.

Food for thought.





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