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Sunday, December 17, 2023

Medieval 'curse tablet' summoning Satan discovered at the bottom of a latrine in Germany

Jennifer Nalewicki
Fri, December 15, 2023 

A piece of metal with an inscription. .


Archaeologists in Germany have discovered a rolled-up piece of lead that they think could be a medieval "curse tablet" that invokes "Beelzebub," or Satan.

Upon first glance, the researchers thought the "inconspicuous piece of metal" was simply scrap, since it was found at the bottom of a latrine at a construction site in Rostock, a city in northern Germany, according to a translated statement.

However, once they unfurled it, archaeologists realized that the 15th-century artifact contained a cryptic message etched in Gothic minuscule that was barely visible to the naked eye. It read, "sathanas taleke belzebuk hinrik berith." Researchers deciphered the text as a curse that was directed toward a woman named Taleke and a man named Hinrik (Heinrich) and summoned Beelzebub (another name for Satan) and Berith (a demonic spirit).

While researchers may never know who these people were, they did offer some ideas for the reasoning behind the bad blood.

Related: 'Curse tablet' with oldest Hebrew name of god is actually a fishing weight, experts argue

"Did someone want to break up Taleke and Heinrich's relationship? Was this about spurned love and jealousy, should someone be put out of the way?" the researchers asked in the statement.

Archaeologists said the finding was unique, especially since similar "curse tablets are actually known from ancient times in the Greek and Roman regions from 800 B.C. to A.D. 600," Jörg Ansorge, an archaeologist with the University of Greifswald in Germany who led the excavation, said in the statement. For instance, a 1,500-year-old lead tablet inscribed in Greek and found in what is now Israel calls on demons to harm a rival dancer, while 2,400-year-old tablets found in Greece ask the underworld gods to target several tavern keepers.

RELATED STORIES

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"Our discovery, on the other hand, can be dated to the 15th century," Ansorge said. "This is truly a very special find."

Researchers weren't surprised to find the artifact at the bottom of a latrine, considering that curse tablets "were placed where they were difficult or impossible to find" by those who have been cursed, according to the statement.

Sunday, September 27, 2020

OPINION

Someone's head is in the clouds, but it isn't LeBron'

Charita M. Goshay
The Repository Canton Ohio

Because we all could use a break from the nonstop drama, may I present the Rev. Sheila Zilinsky and her theory that LeBron James is secretly a wizard and card-carrying member of the Illuminati who conjures up demons by way of his pregame “chalk toss.”

No, really.

Someone - it wasn’t me - pointed out that James has that kind of power but he can’t regrow his fast-fading hairline?

If it truly is the case that James has the ability to conjure the Underworld, how then, to explain his leaving the Cleveland Cavaliers, not once but twice, when he simply could have used his hoo-doo to win-win?

Plus, with James being a faithful Northeast Ohioan, it only seems fair that he should have sprinkled a little magic dust on home plate at Progressive Field, and in the end zones at Cleveland Browns Stadium, commonly known as “the Factory of Sadness.”

At the very least, he could have prevented Hue Jackson from becoming the head coach in 2017, resulting in a historic 0-16 season, or are Cleveland sports teams so cursed that not even Beelzebub wants a piece of the action?

In 2016, James did carry the Cavs to the NBA World Championship, but what self-respecting wizard pulls only one rabbit out of the hat?

Zelinsky charges that James is engaging in black magic.

Well, he is Black, and he is pretty damned magical, even after 17 years.

James does have superpowers that have nothing to do with chalk.

His mantra is no spell, it’s simply this: “Nothing is given. Everything is earned.”

He has used his powers for good from the moment he was handed a cape.

Earlier this year, he used some of those powers to create More Than a Vote, an organization designed to help Americans to cast their votes.

More Than a Vote has secured Dodgers Stadium as a voting venue and is paying fines for some former felons in Florida, which has imposed a type of poll tax in the form of unpaid court fines.

Before you say that sounds reasonable and fair, ask yourself many Florida millionaires who have welched and dodged on their taxes and child support will be prevented from voting.

Now, does evil exist? Your answer probably depends on your belief system, your culture, even your politics.

If you believe in it, there’s no need to search for it in clouds of chalk.

Zilinsky, whose website describes her as a former top Canadian government official in the area of environmental policy, writes books and runs a podcast which she uses to spread her particular brand of Chrisitanty.

Among her other contentions are accusations that the Freemasons are fanboys of Satan, and that the Disney Co. uses “ Illuminati mind control” which has contributed to America’s spiritual demise. By positioning itself as a positive source of entertainment, Disney, Zilinsky argues, is manipulating Americans in plain sight.


Zilinsky has every right to worship and believe as she pleases. What she doesn’t have the right to do is impugn another person with baseless and scurrilous accusations.

There is a saying in evangelical circles that can be so spiritual that you are no earthly good.

James has used his power to ensure that hundreds of kids in Akron can attend the University of Akron tuition-free, and his LeBron James Family Foundation has helped numerous Akron families acquire safe and decent housing.

He and his business partner, Maverick Carter, have launched a media company to produce positive stories about the Black experiences which might not otherwise see the light of day.

He could just shut up and dribble as some have suggested he do. Instead, he has exercised his celebrity to speak truth to power.

October is around the corner, that time of year when the horror stories start to ramp up.

Clearly, we’re ahead of schedule.


Sunday, December 19, 2021

THE BIG THINK INTERVIEW
The 3 ancient demons that bend and break the laws of nature
Darwin, Descartes, and Maxwell all believed in these science ‘demons.’


7 min

Jimena Canales
WHO'S IN THE VIDEO
Jimena Canales is an expert in 19th and 20th century history of the physical sciences, working for a better understanding of science and technology in relation to the arts 

If one opens any dictionary and you go to the entry of demon, one of the entries refers to the scientific demons. Descartes’ demons, Laplace’s demon, Maxwell’s demon, they’re not considered to be real when they’re first mentioned, they’re considered to be possibly real.
 
They’re trying to find a hole in theories. What they are, in the most literal sense, are little creatures that are concocted by scientists. When they’re confronted with something that they don’t really understand, these creatures that we have always thought of as little entities that can bend or break the laws of nature continue to be very useful and very common ways of thinking in advancing our knowledge and understanding of the natural world.

These demons share similar characteristics to those other demons in the past, like Beelzebub and Lucifer. They can break the laws of nature, they’re not necessarily evil, but they create power imbalances. They can be helpful or they can be mischievous to science.

 



Thursday, October 08, 2020

THE WINNER OF THE US VP DEBATE?

BEELZEBUB!!! 

LORD OF THE FLIES





Twitter is abuzz: Fly on Mike Pence's head during US Vice Presidential debate
8 Oct, 2020 

Fly on Mike Pence's head during US Vice Presidential debate. Video / CBSN
NZ Herald

There seems to be a fly on the wall at the US Vice Presidential debate and it has taken a liking to Vice President Mike Pence.

While Republican Pence and Democratic challenge Senator Kamala Harris were discussing debate topics, a fly swooped in and landed on top of Pence's head.

The fly set up shop on the Vice President's head for a few minutes.

Twitter was quick to react, and the fly became an internet sensation, even having its own twitter account.

Which now has over 2.4k followers and is now verified on Twitter.

A fly has landed in the spotlight during the VP debate. Photo / AP

Democratic presidential contender Joe Biden turned to Twitter to comment on the star of the show.

Pitch in $5 to help this campaign fly. https://t.co/CqHAId0j8t pic.twitter.com/NbkPl0a8HV— Joe Biden (@JoeBiden) October 8, 2020


Til I die-ie-ie-ie, ie-ie, ie-ie pic.twitter.com/bWCbXQncUo— Mike Pence's Head Fly (@Kno) October 8, 2020

I think the fly won this debate— Ana Cabrera (@AnaCabrera) October 8, 2020

Give that fly a SAG Award.— dan levy (@danjlevy) October 8, 2020

A fly landed on Vice President Mike Pence's head during the debate pic.twitter.com/2oViyQfHAX— SnapStream (@SnapStream) October 8, 2020

Shout out to that fly. The hero we all needed.— Clint Smith (@ClintSmithIII) October 8, 2020

During the debate, the candidates were separated by plexiglass barriers in an auditorium where any guest who refuses to wear a face mask would be removed, an extraordinary backdrop for the only Vice-Presidential debate of 2020.

The debate was held at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City.

Harris, 55, is the daughter of a Jamaican father and an Indian mother. She is also a former prosecutor whose pointed questioning of US President Donald Trump's appointees and court nominees helped make her a Democratic star.

Pence is a 61-year-old former Indiana governor and ex-radio host, an evangelical Christian known for his folksy charm and unwavering loyalty to Trump. And while he is Trump's biggest public defender, the VP does not share the President's brash tone or undisciplined style.





A fly landed on Mike Pence's head during the debate and rested there for nearly two minutes

BY CAITLIN O'KANE

UPDATED ON: OCTOBER 7, 2020 / 11:50 PM / CBS NEWS

Senator Kamala Harris and Vice President Mike Pence took the stage Wednesday night for the only vice presidential debate with moderator Susan Page of USA Today – but a fourth, uninvited guest briefly joined the group, too. Toward the end of the debate, a fly landed on Pence's head and stayed there for about two minutes.

The vice presidential candidates were in a serious moment when the black bug landed on Mr. Pence's stark white hair. Most viewers' attention then turned to the fly – and stayed there until the pest flew away. Viewers joked about the fly that just wouldn't buzz off. 
Vice President Mike Pence listens to Democratic vice presidential candidate Senator Kamala Harris during the vice presidential debate on Wednesday, October 7, 2020, in Salt Lake City.PATRICK SEMANSKY / AP

"Not Pence's fault, but that fly is becoming the story of the evening," wrote Los Angeles Times legal affairs columnist Harry Litman. 

Author and journalist Taffy Brodesser-Akner tweeted "pretty fly for a white guy!" 

Within minutes, the Biden Campaign jumped in on the fly jokes, tweeting a photo of the Democratic presidential nominee with a fly swatter. "Pitch in $5 to help this campaign fly," the tweet on Biden's page read. 

He also obtained the flywillvote.com domain within minutes of the viral moment.

Pitch in $5 to help this campaign fly. https://t.co/CqHAId0j8t pic.twitter.com/NbkPl0a8HV— Joe Biden (@JoeBiden) October 8, 2020

Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi also made a fly joke on her Twitter, as did countless others.

In the post-debate coverage, "CBS This Morning" anchor Gayle King also took a moment address the fly in the room. "At one point, when they were talking about systemic racism, I think it's very interesting timing that a fly would land on Mike pence's headed at that particular time, when he said there wasn't systemic racism. I saw the fly say, 'Say what?' It was very interesting," King said.

"I don't want to call that a highlight, but that was certainly a memorable moment," she continued. 

This is not the first time a fly has landed on a candidate during a debate. During a 2016 presidential debate, a fly landed on Hillary Clinton's forehead. Like Pence, the Democratic nominee also continued with what she was saying, seemingly unfazed.

During a primary debate in 2019, former 2020 presidential candidate Pete Buttigieg also appeared to have an unidentified and very distracting smudge on his face. The spot also gained widespread attention on social media, as viewers debated what it was exactly. 

Much like other viral inanimate objects, Pence's fly soon had his own parody Twitter accounts. Following "Angelina Jolie's Leg" and "Obama's Tan Suit," the "Mike Pence's Fly" Twitter accounts began instantaneously serving snarky commentary. 

First published on October 7, 2020 / 11:21 PM
© 2020 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Caitlin O'Kane

Caitlin O'Kane is a digital content producer covering trending stories for CBS News and its good news brand, The Uplift.


Joe Biden posed with a swatter after a fly landed on Mike Pence's head during the VP debate

Tom Porter 
Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden holds a fly swatter in a campaign photo published on October 7, 2020. Biden campaign

Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden's campaign was quick to capitalize from the bizarre moment in Wednesday's vice-presidential debate when a fly landed on Mike Pence's head for about two minutes.

Shortly after, Biden tweeted out a picture of himself holding a fly swatter, with the caption: "Pitch in $5 to help this campaign fly."

The Biden campaign also released a $10 fly swatter with the slogan "Truth Over Flies" — a play on the Biden slogan "Truth Over Lies." It sold out within hours.

The Trump and Biden campaigns are vying to influence the online conversation with memes and spin capitalizing on viral moments. 


Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden wasted no time in fundraising off the bizarre moment during Wednesday's vice-presidential debate, when a fly landed on Vice President Mike Pence's head and sat there for nearly two minutes as he continued to speak. 

"Pitch in $5 to help this campaign fly," Biden tweeted, with a link to his campaign fundraising page and a picture of himself holding a fly swatter. 
—Joe Biden (@JoeBiden) October 8, 2020

During the debate Pence and Biden's running mate, Kamala Harris, discussed the issues that have defined the presidential campaign — but it was the moment the fly landed on Pence's head that attracted most attention on social media. 

Within minutes someone had made a Twitter account for the fly, and people started sharing memes and jokes under the #PenceFlyHead hashtag.


The Biden campaign was also quick to seek political advantage from the moment, with Biden's tweet shared 234,000 times at the time of publication. 

It followed up with campaign merchandise, with Biden tweeting out a link to a $10 fly swatter, with the slogan "Truth Over Flies" — a play on one of Biden's campaign slogans, "Truth Over Lies" — on the handle. At time of publication, it has sold out.

Quipping on the moment Biden also tweeted out a link to voter registration site IWillVote.com with the message "FlyWillVote.com."

Republicans and Democrats have been seeking to influence the online conversation about the presidential election with memes and spin about viral campaign moments, conveying campaign messages in an irreverent way to reach out to voters.

Read more:
The biggest moment of the Pence-Harris debate was a fly landing on Pence's head, which sums up how calm it was without Trump

Friday, July 23, 2021

Friday essay: Satan is back (again) — 
the Devil in 5 dark details

July 15, 2021 

His title is the Devil, but he goes by a number of names — Satan, Lucifer, Beliar, Beelzebul or Beelzebub.

He was big in 1970s pop culture (The Exorcist, The Devils) and continues to feature on screen today. A sixth season of the TV show Lucifer is in production and new film The Conjuring 3: The Devil Made Me Do It is showing in cinemas.

Conservative Christianity has a long commitment to the idea of a personal devil. Our Pentecostal Prime Minister Scott Morrison believes the misuse of social media is the work of the Devil. Pope Francis, meanwhile, maintains Satan still exists.

The Devil’s modern resurgence might explain a reported increase in apparent demonic possessions in both conservative Catholic and Protestant churches. The rise has fuelled the growth of church ministries that claim to drive out demons. And the conspiracy theorists of QAnon have notoriously created baseless moral panic about the imagined sexual abuse of children in Satanic cults.

Given the amount of publicity the Devil is currently attracting, it’s worth reviewing his history. Here are five things worth knowing.

1. His story is paradoxical

After the Divine Trinity itself (the Father, Son and Holy Spirit — three identities in one God), the Devil plays the most important role in the Christian story.

He is there before the beginning of the world and he survives its end. He is first and chief among the angels. He is the first to disobey God and, along with his fellow fallen angels, to be expelled from Heaven.

From this moment on, religious history records the conflict between God and his angelic forces and the Devil and his demonic army.

Within the Christian tradition, it was the Devil — in the form of a serpent after his own fall from heaven — who brought about the Fall of humanity in the Garden of Eden. Christ’s death and resurrection signalled the victory over Satan and death.


Christ refused a banquet offered by Satan. William Blake (circa 1816–1820). Wikiart

Yet this story is deeply paradoxical. For in spite of Christ’s apparent win, the Devil remains for Christians a real and present source of cosmic evil and human suffering. “We should not think of the devil as a myth, a representation, a symbol, a figure of speech or an idea,” declared Pope Francis in 2018, lest we “let our guard down”.

On the one hand, the Devil is God’s most implacable enemy, granted the freedom to rebel against him. Thus, Saint Paul advised the Ephesians “to put on the whole armour of God so that you may be able to stand against the wiles of the Devil” (Ephesians 6.11).

But on the other hand, the Devil is also God’s faithful servant who acts only at God’s command, or at least with his endorsement. So God sends Satan to kill Job’s animals, servants and children and to afflict Job with “loathsome sores” in order to test his faith in God (Job 1-2).

‘The court accepts the existence of God every time a witness swears to tell the truth […] It’s about time they accept the existence of the Devil.’





2. He is a master magician

Within the Christian tradition, Satan was a master of illusion. Unlike God, he could not perform miracles because he was bound by natural laws.

Satan was seen as a master of magic. In early Christianity, magic was reprehensible because demons were at the heart of it. For Saint Augustine (354-430), the demonic was present within all magic and superstitious practices in other religions.

For Isidore, bishop of Seville (c.569–636), “the foolery of the magic arts held sway over the entire world for many centuries through the instructions of evil angels […] all of these things are to be avoided by a Christian and entirely repudiated and condemned”.

Thus, witches, magicians, and sorcerers (whether acting benevolently or malevolently) were seen as in league with the Devil.

Thus “demonology”, which developed from the middle of the 13th century, was the “science” of determining the powers of the Devil within nature. From the middle of the 15th century, their research was written up in text books for demon hunters — Demonologies.

Modern conservative Christianity still views magical practices along with a range of popular occult practices — tea leaf reading, horoscopes, seances, tarot cards, and ouija boards — as dangerous dabbling with the Devil.
‘Conjecture is useless. We need a professional witch hunter.’




3. He can be sexy

The Devil has been imagined (and pictured) in many forms. In the television series Lucifer he is a handsome, well-built man.

This tradition goes back to John Milton’s depiction of him as a handsome man in the poem Paradise Lost: “From his lips/Not words alone pleased her”. Poet and painter William Blake depicted the devil as a chiselled Greek god.

In the medieval period, however, because he dwelt on the boundaries between the human and the bestial, he was often depicted in animal form. In Dante’s Inferno (1265-1321) he was imagined like a dragon with “two mighty wings, such as befitting were so great a bird, sails of the sea I never saw so large. No feathers had they, but as of a bat”.

He was often imagined as goat-like and depicted with animal features: cloven hooves, talons, horns, tail, webbed hands.


Satan with creature features. Detail from Jacob de Backer’s The Last Judgement (circa 1580s). Wikiart

In demonological literature he was portrayed as a spiritual being without any bodily form. A master of illusion, he was a shape shifter. It was believed he could change gender and assume a male (incubus) or a female body (succubus).

As a spiritual being, the Devil was unable to create children. But he could assume a female form, steal semen from a man and then, in a male form, deposit it in a woman.

According to that most famous of all the Demonologies, Malleus Maleficarum (1486), the pleasure to be gained by a woman from sex with the Devil was equivalent or better to that with a man.

But the Devil and his angels gained no such pleasure. For them, it was just part of the job of inciting people to evil. Demons transformed themselves, Malleus authors declared, “not for the sake of pleasure, since a spirit does not have flesh or bones,” but “that humans will become more inclined to all faults”.
‘Lucifer’s come a long way. He does his best when you put a little faith in him.’


4. He gets around


As a spiritual being, it was believed the Devil could enter into human beings and possess them. Demonologist Henri Boguet (circa 1550–1619) told of a nun who, in eating a lettuce, swallowed the Devil hidden within it.

Indeed, the Devil most often entered through the mouth. But he could apparently also gain access through other bodily openings or wounds.


Satan smiting Job with boils. William Blake (1826). Wikiart

Demonologist Francesco Guazzo listed 47 signs of possession in his Compendium Maleficarum (1608). There were natural signs, like crying, gnashing the teeth, foaming at the mouth, extraordinary strength, and violence to the self and others.

There were also supernatural signs — clairvoyance, knowledge of strange languages, levitation, vomiting of strange objects, speaking without moving the mouth in different tones from the normal and the inability to feel pain when pricked.

In the “golden age” of demonic possession, from 1500–1700, experts arose within Catholicism and Protestantism who could cast out demons.

By the year 1600, do-it-yourself exorcism manuals were available. The most successful collection of these, the Thesaurus Exorcismorum (1608) promises “evil spirits, demons and all evil spells are driven from obsessed human bodies as if expelled by whips and clubs”.
5. He can be defeated (sort of)

According to the Christian understanding of history, the Devil, his son the Antichrist and his army of demons will be finally defeated on Judgement Day and sent to hell.

But within the confines of hell, the Demonic paradox continues.

The Devil and his evil angels will be tormented eternally for their rebellion against God. But they still remain God’s enforcers. There is no Biblical source for the idea of Satan and his demons torturing the damned in hell. But from the fourth century, Satan was believed to be the ruler of the underworld, as told in stories of Christ’s descent into Hell before his resurrection.


Detail from Luca Signorelli’s The Damned (circa 1500). Wikimedia Commons

Read more: Five things to know about the Antichrist

The role of Satan and his demons punishing the damned in hell was to become a common image in medieval art.

English philosopher Henry More (1614-87) wrote of gratuitous torture, with demons looking to “satiate their lascivient cruelty with all manner of abuses and torments they can imagine”.


Jack Nicholson plays a charming devil in The Witches of Eastwick. IMDB

But by the end of the 19th century, this demonic story had lost its central role in Western intellectual life. The Devil had largely become a figure of myth.

Ironically, the marginalisation of the Christian story of the Devil in the modern West and in liberal Christianity allowed for a proliferation of devils and demons in popular culture — from The Devil’s Advocate to Rosemary’s Baby to The Witches of Eastwick.

The Devil is metaphorically, if not literally, the “evil” within all of us. As a result, the Devil has new domains, new territories, and new borders in which he “walks about, as a roaring lion, seeking whom he may devour” (1 Peter 5.8).


Author
Philip C. Almond
Emeritus Professor in the History of Religious Thought, The University of Queensland



Sunday, August 31, 2025


Mike Huckabee’s Faith-Based Diplomacy



 August 29, 2025


Ireland is considering legislation, the Occupied Territories Bill (“OTB”), which would ban the import of goods from Israel’s illegal settlements in the West Bank and East Jerusalem. CNN notes that “If passed, the Irish bill would make Ireland the first EU member state to prohibit the import of goods produced in Israeli settlements in occupied Palestinian territories.”

Mike Huckabee, US ambassador to Israel, was not going to take this affront lying down. On July 15, Huckabee took to X, formerly Twitter, with some undiplomatic words for the Irish:

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Heaven’s Ambassador

President Donald Trump selected Huckabee to be US ambassador to Israel shortly after his re-election. The 70-year-old Huckabee has worn many hats during his long career: among them, governor of Arkansas, talk show host, and failed Republican presidential aspirant.

Huckabee is also an ordained Southern Baptist preacher. In a sense, Huckabee has never left the pulpit. Huckabee’s diplomacy rests on a fundamentalist reading of the Bible. This explains Huckabee’s unstinting support for the State of Israel.

On the December 6, 2024 “Truth and Liberty Show,” Huckabee declared that God has blessed Israel; it follows that people who protest against Israel “hate God.” Huckabee says that “If one is Satan, his goal is to destroy that which God loves. So that’s why we’re seeing it and to try to explain it any other way will never make sense.”

It is safe to say that Huckabee’s appointment is President Trump’s reward to the staggering 80% of White Evangelicals who gave Trump their votes in 2024. “Huck” describes himself as “an unapologetic, unreformed Zionist”: a Christian Zionist. Christian Zionists—of which there are some 20 to 50 million in the US—believe that God gave the Holy Land to the Jews—and only the Jews.

Christian Zionists are set for the Second Coming of Christ, which they expect any day now. The countdown to Christ’s return began when the state of Israel was created in 1948. Zionists, whether Christian or Jewish, now await the construction of the “Third Temple” on the Temple Mount in Jerusalem. This cannot happen without Israel’s demolishing the Al-Aqsa Mosque, one of Islam’s holiest sites. Destruction of the Mosque will likely trigger a thermonuclear Armageddon, a prospect Christian Zionists welcome. 

And the Palestinians? The Palestinians have no place in the divine scheme. But don’t worry: according to “Huck,” “there’s really no such thing as a Palestinian.” (Vladimir Putin says the same thing about Ukrainians.) Huckabee said in 2017 that “There is no such thing as a West Bank. It’s Judea and Samaria. There’s no such thing as a settlement. They’re communities, they’re neighborhoods, they’re cities. There’s no such thing as an occupation.”

Huckabee said in 2015 that if a Palestinian state is created, it should be in a neighboring Muslim nation such as Egypt, Syria, or Jordan. Or France. On July 25 of this year, Huckabee sarcastically added France to the list. That was after French President Emmanuel Macron announced that his country will recognize Palestinian statehood in September. 

It will take a miracle to create a Palestinian state. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is dead set against Palestinian statehood. Netanyahu says that a Palestinian state would “be a platform to destroy Israel.”

Other highly positioned officials in the Israeli government are just as adamant in their opposition to a Palestinian state. On August 14, Israeli Finance Minister Beelzebub Bezalel Smotrich, announced that within a few months, work would begin on a massive settlement in the Israeli-occupied West Bank which will consist of roughly 3,400 housing units. The new settlement, designated “E1,” will bisect the West Bank, rendering a contiguous Palestinian state practically impossible. Smotrich says that the new settlement “buries the idea of a Palestinian state” and called E1 “Zionism at its best.” The US has given its tacit assent to the project. 

Helpful Huck says that the new settlement “does not violate international law” (the International Court of Justice disagrees). Ambassador Huckabee has said that the decision whether to build the E1 settlement will be left to Israel.

God, Grits, and Genocide

Huckabee refuses to say that Israel is committing genocide in Gaza. Huckabee tweeted on August 2 that “If Israel is committing a genocide, they’re really bad at it .. just like they’re bad at apartheid.”

Oh, I don’t know, Mike. Israel hasn’t killed or forcibly displaced everyone in Gaza (yet), but it has killed 60,000 so far with no end in sight.

Amnesty International declares that “Israel is carrying out a deliberate campaign of starvation in the occupied Gaza Strip.” An August 18 report by the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification declares for the first time that there is famine in some parts of Gaza, affecting half a million people—about one quarter of Gaza’s population at the end of 2024.

The Israeli government disagrees. In an August 22 post on X, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu slammed the IPC report as “an outright lie,” adding that “Israel does not have a policy of starvation. Israel has a policy of preventing starvation.” 

There are several steps that must be taken for there to be a hope of ending the genocide in Gaza. There must be an immediate ceasefire in Gaza; the US must end its weapons shipments to Israel; and Israel must stop blocking humanitarian agencies’ access to Gaza. There must be a return to the UN food distribution system. At present, UN agencies in Gaza have been supplanted by the so-called Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), which was created by the US and Israel and is their tool. The GHF operates a mere four food distributions centers; the UN agencies operated 400. 

And, for the love of God, could the US please recall Mike Huckabee?

Charles Pierson is a lawyer and a member of the Pittsburgh Anti-Drone Warfare Coalition. E-mail him at Chapierson@yahoo.com.