This fooled them false allies: Magnificant Moon God @viollessa · Apr 4, 2024 It will end bad for Berkeley unless Pro Hamas ends first. Magnificant Moon God @viollessa · May 10, 2024 When they say you became rabid pro hamas they are being sincere. Don't be an idiot. Magnificant Moon God @viollessa · Jun 2, 2024 Pro Hamas is not Peaceful Protest no matter what you say.. Magnificant Moon God @viollessa · May 8, 2024 Hamas is pro genocide, most Palistinians are pro Hamas, most pro Palististians are pro genocide. Logic. Magnificant Moon God @viollessa · Jul 22, 2024 NO PRIVILAGE FOR BEING A PRO HAMAS PRIVALAGED NUT CASE. Magnificant Moon God @viollessa · Jul 26, 2024 She was a pro hamas trans reptile and I wasn't going to move. Magnificant Moon God @viollessa · Jul 17, 2024 I got protestors confused enough to start calling themselves Pro Hamas, and it was masks off for real. Magnificant Moon God @viollessa · Jul 24, 2024 When some Americans are more Pro Hamas than most Palistinians, you would think that's crazy talk, not anymore! Magnificant Moon God @viollessa · Jul 14, 2024 Harvard paper found admitted not only racism and antisemitism, but "Immorality." Examples: Plagerism, Black lives promoted to the exclusion of attendence of Jews and Asians. No SAT or Merit needed. Also incredible evidence of indoctrinazion. Woke somehow pro Hamas. WTF? Magnificant Moon God @viollessa · Aug 10, 2024 I honestly think most pro palistinians like the evil of it, while palistinians have another reason, but know their connection to Hamas is evil, and say so. Magnificant Moon God @viollessa · Jul 14, 2024 Pro Palistians where fools to say for a few months that they were Pro Hamas. Hamas killed 12,000 in the most brutal massace ever, taking over 300 hostages, quickly using human shields including Children. Before much time Americans chanting "Stop the Genocide?" Aggressive lies. Magnificant Moon God @viollessa · Aug 17, 2024 I say we send the pro hamas americans to Gaza. Magnificant Moon God @viollessa · Aug 18, 2024 Pro Hamas anti baby group seen in Aulstralia. Magnificant Moon God @viollessa · Aug 17, 2024 HOW WILL SHE MAKE HER PRO HAMAS PROTESTORS HAPPY? Magnificant Moon God @viollessa · Sep 8, 2024 Pro Hamas Protesters, it is not your time, this time. Magnificant Moon God @viollessa · Aug 17, 2024 At this point being pro hamas is startling to muslims in most of the world that whites act as such imbicils. Magnificant Moon God @viollessa · Aug 30, 2024 There is not much silver lining for a pro hamas hate movement. But they did give away a horrible detail. They tried to hide it, but some of the core was to be found in Anglo Countries. The internet shows such a community has existed for a while. It shows intentions. Magnificant Moon God @viollessa · Sep 8, 2024 I will go through the process of getting pro hamas agitators expelled. If you don't mind. Magnificant Moon God @viollessa · Sep 24, 2024 LGBTQ can't be pro hamas without wanting to be killed. Magnificant Moon God @viollessa · Jan 11, 2024 Does a better world include pro Hamas protests around the world? Magnificant Moon God @viollessa · Feb 1, 2024 Being pro hamas is not worthy of anyone, even if you are a nazi.
-
-
-
-
AntisemitismCanada In 2026, Tulsa And Panama Are Courting Canadian Jews As Antisemitism Redefines The Cost Of Staying As antisemitism reaches unprecedented levels across Canada, Jewish families and professionals are quietly reassessing their futures, and some are being actively courted elsewhere. Ron East By: Ron East December 31, 2025 SHARE A growing number of Canadian Jews are exploring relocation options A growing number of Canadian Jews are exploring relocation options as antisemitism intensifies and confidence in public protection erodes. (Image: Illustration.) TORONTO — For generations, Canada sold itself as a country where Jews could thrive without constantly looking over their shoulders. That assumption no longer holds for a growing number of Canadian Jews, particularly in the aftermath of October 7 and the months that followed. What has changed is not only the number of antisemitic incidents. It is the atmosphere. Public hostility has been normalized. Jewish schools, synagogues, and community centres operate under permanent security protocols. Anti-Jewish intimidation is increasingly framed as political expression. Enforcement is inconsistent. Accountability is rare. When Jewish life requires constant risk assessment, mobility stops being a luxury. It becomes a rational act of self-preservation. That reality helps explain why, in 2026, two very different destinations, Tulsa, Oklahoma, and Panama, are appearing with growing frequency in serious conversations among Canadian Jews who have the means and flexibility to move. This is not a panic migration. It is a strategic recalculation. Canada’s new warning lights Jewish Canadians represent a small fraction of the population, yet account for a vastly disproportionate share of reported hate crimes. This is not a perception problem. It is a documented pattern. More troubling than the statistics themselves is the message many Jews hear in response: concern, sympathy, and context, but little deterrence. Protests that spill into harassment are tolerated. Jewish institutions are targeted repeatedly. Antisemitism disguised as antizionism is parsed endlessly rather than confronted directly. The result is a slow erosion of confidence in the state’s willingness or ability to enforce equal protection. When a community moves from assuming it belongs to hoping nothing happens today, the social contract has already been fractured. It is within this context that Tulsa and Panama are not merely attracting attention but actively courting. Lech Le’Tulsa and intentional Jewish welcome Tulsa is not presenting itself as a refuge city. It is presenting itself as a place that wants Jewish life to grow. In 2026, that effort has taken concrete form through Lech Le’Tulsa, a Jewish-focused relocation initiative designed to attract Jewish families, professionals, and entrepreneurs to the Tulsa area. The program combines relocation assistance with intentional community building and access to Jewish infrastructure. The name is deliberate. Lech Lecha, the biblical call to go forth and build a future, is not branding by accident. It speaks directly to a Jewish historical instinct that understands movement not as retreat, but as agency. Lech Le’Tulsa offers what many Canadian Jews increasingly feel is missing at home: A clear signal that Jewish presence is welcomed, not merely accommodated Immediate access to synagogues, schools, and Jewish communal life A civic environment where Jewish identity is not treated as a liability The financial incentives matter, but the social architecture matters more. Tulsa is offering a landing ramp. It is saying, we are prepared for you to arrive. That clarity stands in stark contrast to the ambiguity Canadian Jews experience when their safety concerns are acknowledged but endlessly deferred. Panama and the appeal of optionality Panama represents a different but equally rational response to insecurity. For Canadian Jews with international mobility, Panama offers residency pathways tied to investment, business activity, or long-term economic contribution. It also offers something increasingly valuable: optionality. Panama has an established Jewish community, a comparatively lower cost of living, and an immigration framework that openly courts skilled and capital-carrying residents. For some, it is a permanent relocation. For others, it is a second base, a contingency plan, or a future passport pathway. What matters is not the destination itself, but the logic behind the choice. When Jews seek second options, they are not rejecting diaspora life. They are applying historical lessons. Jewish continuity has always depended on redundancy, resilience, and the ability to move before crisis becomes catastrophe. The Zionist lens Canadians prefer to ignore Zionism does not deny the legitimacy of diaspora life. It insists that Jews must never be dependent on the goodwill of others for safety or equality. That lesson was written in blood long before the modern State of Israel existed. Israel institutionalized it at a national level. Individual Jews apply it on a personal level. When Canadian Jews explore Tulsa or Panama, they are not abandoning Canada in anger. They are responding rationally to warning signs. They are building leverage. They are ensuring their children have options. This is what Zionist consciousness looks like outside Israel. It is quiet, pragmatic, and unsentimental. An indictment Canada should take seriously Tulsa and Panama are not superior societies. They are intentional ones. Tulsa is saying, we want contributors, and we are prepared to integrate them. Panama is saying, we want residents and investment, and we have clear legal pathways. Canada, too often, is saying something else entirely: we are sorry you feel unsafe, but the politics are complicated. A serious country does not treat antisemitism as a public relations challenge. It treats it as a threat to civic order. That requires enforcement, deterrence, and moral clarity, including the willingness to name antisemitism even when it hides behind fashionable political language. Until that happens, Canada should not be surprised when Jews quietly explore exit ramps. The bottom line In 2026, the fact that Tulsa and Panama can plausibly court Canadian Jews is not an oddity. It is a warning. When antisemitism reaches levels that fundamentally alter how Jews calculate their futures, movement becomes strategy. History teaches Jews to act before apologies arrive too late. Canada still has time to reverse this trajectory. But time matters. And Jews, having learned this lesson repeatedly, are no longer inclined to wait.
-
-
-
-
-
-
No comments:
Post a Comment