• Is the tide turning even in Ireland?

  • From the Daily NK:

    South Korea’s unique custom of couples and friends exchanging pairs of stick-shaped snacks on Nov. 11 has arrived in Pyongyang. Aware of this, the Pyongyang branch of the Socialist Patriotic Youth League issued an order ahead of so-called Pepero Day—as the Nov. 11 “holiday” is called in South Korea—urging young people to be on guard and highlighting the need to prevent “capitalist ideological infiltrations.”

    According to a Daily NK source in Pyongyang, the Pyongyang branch of the Socialist Patriotic Youth League issued an order to schools calling for people to be “thoroughly on guard against decadent capitalist ideas like Pepero Day permeating among young people.”…

    The order the city branch of the Socialist Patriotic Youth League sent to the league’s school organizations and Korean Children’s Union branches said that the practice “was an ideological problem that harmed socialist ethics and spirit,” warning that “if we let Pyongyang’s future generations become imbued with decadent capitalist customs, it could lead to the collapse of our ideological stronghold.”

    When the only permitted culture involves worship of the Kim dynasty, any slight break, however trivial, comes as a welcome change. Which is why any cultural movement not involving Kim worship is swiftly denounced as capitalist decadence, and forbidden. “It could lead to the collapse of our ideological stronghold”.

    Schools held emergency struggle sessions after the order was issued, but students instead shared plans to enjoy Pepero Day in secret, counseling one another to “simply secretly exchange gifts between ourselves” or to “avoid bringing gifts to school.”

  • At MEMRI TV – Palestinian Academics Discuss End of Zionism on U.K. Hiwar TV.

    In a November 13, 2025 show on Muslim Brotherhood linked Hiwar TV (U.K.), Palestinian academics and activists discussed what they described as the coming end of Zionism. Hassan Khreisheh, the Hamas-supported deputy speaker of the Palestinian Legislative Council, said that all of Palestine belongs to the Palestinians “from the River to the Sea,” and not only the West Bank and Gaza. U.K.-based academic Azzam Al-Tamimi said that Palestinians are united on eliminating the Zionist enterprise, which he called an anti-human movement. Birzeit University media professor Nashat Aqtash, who had been hired by Hamas as a consultant in 2006, claimed that Zionism was built on an artificial sense of victimhood, asserting that its trigger was an alleged 1932 agreement between Theodor Herzl and Adolf Eichmann in Haifa to stage “Nazi massacres” in order to win global sympathy.

    Whoops.

    When Al-Tamimi noted that Herzl had died decades earlier, Aqtash attributed the alleged meeting instead to Chaim Weizmann.

    Whatever. Maybe it was Golda Meir. Or Ze’ev Jabotinsky. Or Groucho Marx. Just pick any Jewish name…it doesn’t matter. This is Palestinian scholarship: it operates by different rules.

    Aqtash added that Israel is only one part of a larger Zionist enterprise that includes the World Bank, the IMF, and the making of world leaders, and cautioned Palestinians to frame their slogans in ways that do not clash with international opinion. Former Al-Jazeera director-general Wadah Khanfar argued that Benjamin Netanyahu has been attacking the institutions of the post-World War II world order – such as the World Bank, IMF, and ICJ – by stating that these were originally created to protect Zionists but now accuse them. Khanfar added that that the unraveling of this world order will ultimately benefit the Palestinians, because other world orders will emerge.

    These people are clowns. But, happily for them, their views are widely respected in certain intellectual circles.

  • Other suggestions: Handmaids Half Hour; Non-Binary Hour…

  • In this context, the British, through the Balfour Declaration of 1917, planned to return the land of Israel to the Jews.

    Aware of the Arab populations also living in the region, the British first allocated the land of Jordan to the local Arabs, who could today be considered the Palestinian people.

    I repeat: the British facilitated the creation of an Arab country specifically for the indigenous Arab populations, two years before returning the land of Israel to the Jews.

    For reference, Jordan covers 90,000 km2, four times the size of Israel.

  • So what happened at that Oxford Union debate? – the one about Israel being a greater threat than Iran to stability in the Middle East. Well, of course:

    The Oxford Union has voted “overwhelmingly” in favour of a motion declaring Israel a greater “threat to regional stability” than Iran.

    At a debate on Thursday night between Hillel Neuer, the director of UN Watch, and Mohammad Shtayyeh, a former Palestinian Authority prime minister, the latter claimed that “Israel is an expansionist colonial state that has been established by colonial powers”.

    Mr Shtayyeh went on to describe Israel as a “pariah state” that “should be stopped”….

    “Brutal occupation, crimes and genocide. [Israel is] dragging the region into repeated conflicts… Israel is causing misery, genocide. [It has an] expansionist, colonial mentality.”

    They lap this stuff up, the idiot academic left. Islamists are freedom-fighting heroes: Jews (“Zios”) are pariahs.

    Mr Neuer later posted on X: “In my debate tonight at the Oxford Union, I said that their proposition – ‘Israel is a greater threat to regional stability than Iran’ – struck me as deep satire, but then I recalled that 501 of their members voted to back the student chair who cheered the killing of Charlie Kirk.”

    Last month, George Abaraonye, the president-elect of the Oxford Union, was ousted following outrage over his apparent celebration of Kirk’s shooting.

    Last year, the Oxford Union voted that “Israel is an apartheid state responsible for genocide” by a majority of 278 to 59.

  • Turkey has already replaced Iran as the hidden power behind the new Syrian regime, with Turkish politicians claiming, for instance, that the Syrian city of Aleppo “is Turkish and Muslim to its core”. It’s all part of Erdogan’s vision of a new Ottoman Empire, under the banner of Sunni Islam. Now, as Jonathan Spyer tells it in the Spectator, the new battleground is over the future of Gaza. Israel, naturally, is very much opposed to Turkish involvement:

    The Israeli system considers that Turkey’s consistent pattern of anti-Israel activities forms part of a larger, assertive and expansive regional strategy. It fits comfortably with Turkey’s military incursions into Iraq and Syria over the last half decade, its deployment of drones and proxy fighters in Azerbaijan and Libya in support of allies’ wars, its efforts to build influence in Lebanon, the West Bank and Jerusalem, its burgeoning alliance with Qatar, and its ‘mavi vatan’ (blue homeland) strategy in the Mediterranean, in which it seeks to lay claim to expanded exclusive economic zones (EEZs) in the eastern Mediterranean, Aegean and Black Seas.  

    In all this, Israel sees a combination of political Islam and Neo-Ottoman revanchism, exemplified by a statement by Erdogan earlier this year that Turkey’s ‘spiritual geography’ extends to ‘from Syria to Gaza, From Aleppo to Tabriz, From Mosul to Jerusalem’.

    Israel suspects that Turkey wishes to make use of the ISF in Gaza as a platform by which it can reinsert Turkish troops into the Israeli-Palestinian context and use their presence in turn to leverage influence, probably through tacit cooperation with its Hamas ally.  

    Unfortunately, Trump sees things differently.

    The current US administration shares little or none of Israel’s perception of Turkey. Rather, it sees Ankara as a strong, stable and welcome partner, able and willing to play an important role in securing the region. President Trump describes Erdogan as a ‘great leader’. The White House has rushed to embrace the new Sunni Islamist president of Syria. As Trump has noted, the victory of Ahmed al-Sharaa and his rebel group Hayat Tahrir al-Sham in the Syrian civil war was equally an achievement for Turkey, which created the conditions for the Sunni Islamist fighters to prepare before they marched on Damascus late last year.  

    The administration appears to have taken Turkey as a kind of guide on regional matters, accepting the notion that Turkish power can guarantee Syria and continue to prevent an Isis resurgence. In a recent briefing to the Middle East Forum thinktank, Turkish researcher Sinan Ciddi also noted that, during his September visit to the White House, Erdogan committed to giving the US access to Turkey’s deposits of lithium and other critical mineral deposits in the country.  

    The combination of strong, authoritarian rule, an apparent ability to achieve goals and a willingness to make available natural resources appear to have won Trump’s favour. Turkey’s close alliance with Qatar, which similarly backs Sunni political Islam across the region, forms part of the same general orientation. 

    It’s Trump’s love-of-the-strong-man syndrome. And his belief – seemingly undented by his dealings with Putin – that a deal can be struck. He entirely misses – just doesn’t get – the role of ideology: for Putin, a rancid Russian fascism based on a fantasy history of ancient Rus, and for Erdogan a neo-Ottoman dream underscored by political Islam.

    The view of Middle Eastern affairs diplomacy as a real estate deal so prevalent in Trump’s White House is programmed to regard such elements as politicised religion or nationalist revanchism as surely verbiage only, perhaps to be used to fire up the base, but hardly likely to motivate or direct behaviour at the state level. Here is the gap in understanding. Prior to 7 October, many in Israel also dismissed these elements, convinced that the shared motivation of self-interest would solidly undergird relations and that, therefore, for example, the Hamas leaders in Gaza could be bought off with money and material inducement.

    For now at least, in Israel, no one believes that any more. But that is the principle that appears to be underlying much of the current US orientation in the pivotal Middle East region. The problem is that the Middle East is notably different from the real estate world in a number of key details. Recent experience suggests that those who try to ignore this may eventually learn it through bitter experience.

    We’ve come a long long way from Ataturk.

  • At The Glinner Update, a top 40 from ripx4nutmeg “from just the last 12 months, which show how slanted the BBC has been on this issue. It could easily have been 80 – there was no space, for example, for BBC Reporting Scotland’s promotion of a furry convention or BBC News describing a violent group of trans activists as a ‘vegan cult’. It’s also only the last year – the propaganda was actually far worse every year from about 2015 to 2024, but that project would have been too big.”

    Worth a read.

  • We heard from Tavistock whistle-blower Sue Evans the other day, complaining about her treatment by the BBC. She now elaborates, at the Telegraph:

    The BBC has been captured by activists who peddle trans “propaganda”, the woman who blew the whistle on the Tavistock clinic has claimed.

    Sue Evans helped expose the medical centre’s use of puberty blockers on child patients, which eventually led to it being shut down.

    However, she claims the BBC had been “infiltrated by activists”, saying the broadcaster was biased in its coverage of the Tavistock saga and would allow misinformation to “dominate” discussions by letting statements go unchallenged.

    The problem for Evans, in a nutshell, was that it was insisted upon by BBC managers that the last word must always be with the trans activists.

    “On this particular occasion, I said I would come on if I was allowed to respond to Mermaids,” she said.

    A BBC staffer initially agreed to this before they were overruled by a senior producer who decided Mermaids would speak last.

    After learning of the order change of guests, the junior producer texted Ms Evans: “They won’t give you ability to respond to Mermaids. It will be awful – I am so sorry.”

    Apologising again some weeks later, the producer added: “I think many of us are very embarrassed at the current state of things. I am so sorry about it all.”

    Speaking now about her experience, Ms Evans said: “They would always let Mermaids or Tavistock have the final say, it was a constant washout.

    “It always made me look like I had been lying. I felt like I was on to be the fall guy, so they could say, ‘She’s a bigot.’ Where’s the balance?

    “There’s a very serious malpractice going on in medicine. It’s very, very frustrating to feel you get edged out of the picture and be cast as out of touch.”

  • By popular demand. Queen’s Wood and Highgate Wood this morning: