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History Will Not Yield to Power For decades, Israel and the Palestinians have tried to bend reality to their will. But reality does not yield to force, memory does not fade on command, and justice cannot... Continue reading

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Turkey’s Egregious Human Rights Violations Are Beyond The Pale

Turkey’s human rights record has crossed from troubling to indefensible. Behind the language of counterterrorism and national security lies a systematic campaign that has dismantled the rule of law, criminalized dissent, and stripped hundreds of thousands of their most basic rights In the aftermath of the 2016 attempted coup, Turkey’s President Erdogan embarked on a…

The Global Epidemic Of Violence In An Age Of Impunity

Violence has metastasized into humanity’s baseline condition. Yet international institutions remain paralyzed by vetoes and rivalry, offering hollow declarations while dehumanization becomes normalized. Coordinated action, not gestures, is desperately needed Global violence today is metastasizing, not contained; over 180,000 violent events reported globally by the International Institute for Strategic Studies signal a world in which…

The Shattered Covenant

As Israel celebrates its 78th anniversary Israel! I speak not in anger, but in mourning. What unfolds here is not prophecy— It is a confession. A lament for a nation that lost its way. A reckoning with faith betrayed, with justice undone. The dream of Israel, once radiant, redemptive, now stands fractured— its soul adrift…

Trump, Iran, And The Folly Of Demanding Surrender

Trump’s threats and maximalist demands ignore Iran’s history, security fears, and distrust of Washington. A durable agreement requires time, restraint, and professional diplomacy—not bombast, coercion, and calls for unconditional surrender that guarantee only resistance Iran is not a transient power that can be coerced into submission; it is a civilization with over 2,500 years of…

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RTVI – Trump’s Statement on Iran

RTVI – Trump’s First 100 Days

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On the Issues Episode 148: Jane Olson

Alon Ben-Meir · On the Issues Episode 148: Jane Olson

On the Issues Episode 147: Katrina Fotovat

Alon Ben-Meir · On the Issues Episode 147: Katrina Fotovat

On the Issues Episode 146: Asaf Romirowksy

Alon Ben-Meir · On the Issues Episode 146: Asaf Romirowsky

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Will Saudi Arabia Become a Peace-Maker? – LA Jews for Peace

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Alon Ben-Meir

alonbenmeir

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Retired Professor at @nyucga, Senior Fellow at World Policy Institute.

When governments criminalize protest, undermine expertise, and weaken democratic institutions, climate action becomes harder and climate disasters become deadlier. Those paying the highest price are often the most vulnerable communities already facing war, poverty, displacement, and environmental collapse.

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When governments criminalize protest, undermine expertise, and weaken democratic institutions, climate action becomes harder and climate disasters become deadlier. Those paying the highest price are often the most vulnerable communities already facing war, poverty, displacement, and environmental collapse.

In my latest podcast episode with humanitarian Jane Olson, we delved into the question of what is behind the horrific rise in human rights abuses. Jane notes that leadership is the answer, which is sadly moving us in the wrong direction.⁠
Listen to this and more from our full episode, available at the link in my bio as well as all major podcasting platforms.⁠
⁠
#HumanRights #Leadership

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Open
In my latest podcast episode with humanitarian Jane Olson, we delved into the question of what is behind the horrific rise in human rights abuses. Jane notes that leadership is the answer, which is sadly moving us in the wrong direction.⁠
Listen to this and more from our full episode, available at the link in my bio as well as all major podcasting platforms.⁠
⁠
#HumanRights #Leadership

The Justice Department under Trump has become an extension of his personal and political whims, not an independent arbiter of law. It serves as an instrument for targeting his perceived enemies while shielding allies from accountability, including by dropping sensitive corruption and white collar investigations. Everybody must remember that where there is no justice, tyranny reigns.

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The Justice Department under Trump has become an extension of his personal and political whims, not an independent arbiter of law. It serves as an instrument for targeting his perceived enemies while shielding allies from accountability, including by dropping sensitive corruption and white collar investigations. Everybody must remember that where there is no justice, tyranny reigns.

Today’s podcast guest is Jane Olson, a noted humanitarian who has worked many decades as a volunteer promoting international peace and justice and humanitarian work. She has chaired the International Board of Trustees of Human Rights Watch, from 2004 to 2010, and chaired the board of Survivor Corps for 12 years since its founding as Landmine Survivors Network.⁠
⁠
In this episode, we discuss the current rise in human rights abuses globally, what roles international organizations have played in combatting human rights abuses, and the importance of educating people about their basic universal human rights, including starting in schools.⁠
⁠
Listen now; link in bio.⁠
⁠
Full bio⁠
Jane Olson has worked many decades as a volunteer promoting international peace and justice and humanitarian work. She chaired the International Board of Trustees of Human Rights Watch, the largest US-based international human rights organization, from 2004 to 2010, having worked on behalf of HRW since 1988. She also chaired the board of Survivor Corps for 12 years since its founding as Landmine Survivors Network. LSN and HRW were among the five organizations to receive the Nobel Peace Prize in 1997for the International Landmine Ban Treaty.⁠
⁠
Jane is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Science and a board member of both the National World War II Museum in New Orleans and Direct Relief, based in Santa Barbara, CA. She is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations and Pacific Council on International Policy. She served as co-chair of the Women’s Refugee Commission in New York and continues to support the WRC as a commissioner.⁠
⁠
Jane has received numerous awards, including the 2010 inaugural Alison Des Forges Award from Human Rights Watch, and the inaugural Eleanor Roosevelt Award from Feminist Majority in 2005. California Senator Barbara Boxer presented the “Women Making History” Award to Jane in 2010. She received Public Counsel’s Community Achievement Award and the Silver Achievement Award from the Los Angeles YWCA.

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Today’s podcast guest is Jane Olson, a noted humanitarian who has worked many decades as a volunteer promoting international peace and justice and humanitarian work. She has chaired the International Board of Trustees of Human Rights Watch, from 2004 to 2010, and chaired the board of Survivor Corps for 12 years since its founding as Landmine Survivors Network.⁠
⁠
In this episode, we discuss the current rise in human rights abuses globally, what roles international organizations have played in combatting human rights abuses, and the importance of educating people about their basic universal human rights, including starting in schools.⁠
⁠
Listen now; link in bio.⁠
⁠
Full bio⁠
Jane Olson has worked many decades as a volunteer promoting international peace and justice and humanitarian work. She chaired the International Board of Trustees of Human Rights Watch, the largest US-based international human rights organization, from 2004 to 2010, having worked on behalf of HRW since 1988. She also chaired the board of Survivor Corps for 12 years since its founding as Landmine Survivors Network. LSN and HRW were among the five organizations to receive the Nobel Peace Prize in 1997for the International Landmine Ban Treaty.⁠
⁠
Jane is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Science and a board member of both the National World War II Museum in New Orleans and Direct Relief, based in Santa Barbara, CA. She is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations and Pacific Council on International Policy. She served as co-chair of the Women’s Refugee Commission in New York and continues to support the WRC as a commissioner.⁠
⁠
Jane has received numerous awards, including the 2010 inaugural Alison Des Forges Award from Human Rights Watch, and the inaugural Eleanor Roosevelt Award from Feminist Majority in 2005. California Senator Barbara Boxer presented the “Women Making History” Award to Jane in 2010. She received Public Counsel’s Community Achievement Award and the Silver Achievement Award from the Los Angeles YWCA.
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Alon Ben-Meir
9 hours ago
Alon Ben-Meir

As Mental Health Awareness Month unfolds, immigrant communities across the United States are facing growing fear, trauma, and uncertainty. Reports of deaths in detention centers, medical neglect, and rising anxiety among families highlight the human cost of aggressive immigration enforcement policies. Children fear losing their parents, while many families live under constant psychological pressure and instability. At the same time, lawmakers are considering billions more in funding for detention and enforcement while proposing cuts to healthcare and food assistance programs that millions depend on. Human rights, accountability, and mental well-being are inseparable. A society that ignores human suffering in the name of enforcement risks losing its moral foundation. ... See MoreSee Less

As Mental Health Awareness Month unfolds, immigrant communities across the United States are facing growing fear, trauma, and uncertainty. Reports of deaths in detention centers, medical neglect, and rising anxiety among families highlight the human cost of aggressive immigration enforcement policies. Children fear losing their parents, while many families live under constant psychological pressure and instability. At the same time, lawmakers are considering billions more in funding for detention and enforcement while proposing cuts to healthcare and food assistance programs that millions depend on. Human rights, accountability, and mental well-being are inseparable. A society that ignores human suffering in the name of enforcement risks losing its moral foundation.
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Alon Ben-Meir
23 hours ago
Alon Ben-Meir

Six months after the October 2025 ceasefire, Gaza’s humanitarian catastrophe continues to deepen. Civilians are still being killed, hospitals remain barely functional, food and medical shortages persist, and humanitarian access is repeatedly obstructed. According to Human Rights Watch, Israeli attacks have killed at least 856 Palestinians and wounded thousands more since the ceasefire took effect. Aid deliveries remain far below what is needed, while displacement camps face worsening disease, collapsing sanitation systems, and severe shortages of medicine and fuel. A ceasefire without protection for civilians, accountability, and unrestricted humanitarian access is not peace. It is prolonged human suffering under another name. ... See MoreSee Less

Six months after the October 2025 ceasefire, Gaza’s humanitarian catastrophe continues to deepen. Civilians are still being killed, hospitals remain barely functional, food and medical shortages persist, and humanitarian access is repeatedly obstructed. According to Human Rights Watch, Israeli attacks have killed at least 856 Palestinians and wounded thousands more since the ceasefire took effect. Aid deliveries remain far below what is needed, while displacement camps face worsening disease, collapsing sanitation systems, and severe shortages of medicine and fuel. A ceasefire without protection for civilians, accountability, and unrestricted humanitarian access is not peace. It is prolonged human suffering under another name.
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16 CommentsComment on Facebook

Inside job

Wenn Hamas und Hisbollah den Waffenstillstand nicht einhalten, passiert genau das. Die Zivilbevölkerung leidet... Aber daran ist nicht das sich verteidigende Israel Schuld, sondern diejenigen, die jeglichen Frieden ablehnen. Hamas und Hisbollah und die sie unterstützende Zivilbevölkerung.

Have Hamas gone, then? They certainly kept that quiet.

All thanks to hamas.

According to the terms of the ceasefire, Hamas is mandated to disarm. Has Hamas disarmed yet?

This propaganda post brought to you by the Hamas Ministry of Taqiyya

STFU and get another facelift you Botox freak

Then get rid of Hamas any problem solved

Deranged Pallywood garbage.

Wow it’s almost like you shouldn’t have started a war 🤣🤣🤣 crying about it now just makes you look even more pathetic!

What ewe ignore is that Israel is responding to being attacjed.

After Gaza and Hamas attacked Israel, killed 1200 men, women, children and babies, wounded hundreds more and then took hostages to torture and kill later, followed by dancing the streets celebrating afterwards, they continue to take it in the ass, and deservedly so. Death to Hamas. Hot lead for Gaza.

As long as the Palestinians support Hamas and it remains in control there, they will have no future

Guess that picking a suicidal death cult to govern you is probably not the wisest choice really. Maybe next time decide not to attack Israel, just a suggestion

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Alon Ben-Meir
1 day ago
Alon Ben-Meir

Despite the mounting evidence of corruption, abuse of power, and reckless governance, Republican leaders in Congress continue to enable and defend Donald Trump—falling in line with a loyalty that places one man above the country. This is not principled leadership; it is willful complicity. Like the blind leading the blind, they are helping drive the nation toward deep institutional damage—eroding democratic norms, undermining accountability, and weakening America’s standing at home and abroad. They know who he is. They know what he is doing. Yet they persist. This is not merely a political failure; it is a moral one. History will not judge them kindly for placing partisan allegiance above constitutional duty. The cost of that betrayal will not only be political—it will define their legacy. ... See MoreSee Less

Despite the mounting evidence of corruption, abuse of power, and reckless governance, Republican leaders in Congress continue to enable and defend Donald Trump—falling in line with a loyalty that places one man above the country. This is not principled leadership; it is willful complicity. Like the blind leading the blind, they are helping drive the nation toward deep institutional damage—eroding democratic norms, undermining accountability, and weakening America’s standing at home and abroad. They know who he is. They know what he is doing. Yet they persist. This is not merely a political failure; it is a moral one. History will not judge them kindly for placing partisan allegiance above constitutional duty. The cost of that betrayal will not only be political—it will define their legacy.
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Alon Ben-Meir
2 days ago
Alon Ben-Meir

When governments criminalize protest, undermine expertise, and weaken democratic institutions, climate action becomes harder and climate disasters become deadlier. Those paying the highest price are often the most vulnerable communities already facing war, poverty, displacement, and environmental collapse. ... See MoreSee Less

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