News Round-Up
19 May 2024
by Will Jones
BBC Comes to Terms With Collapsing EV Market
17 May 2024
by Sallust
Allegations of anti-Israel bias have prompted calls for a parliamentary inquiry into the BBC's handling of complaints and coverage of the Israel-Gaza conflict.
Thousands have gathered in London's Trafalgar Square for a 'Stand with Israel' event, demanding the release of hostages from Gaza and marking 100 days since the October 7th attacks.
Hamas uses antisemitic Sesame Street-style children’s programming to indoctrinate Gazan children, alongside summer camps where kids are trained in weaponry and suicide tactics by members of Hamas's military wing.
Andrew Neil has written a powerful column about Owen Jones's bizarre, 25-minute video about the footage of Hamas’s atrocities on October 7th. His aim appears to be to paint Hamas as no worse than the IDF.
Douglas Murray's critics are wrong, says Robert Kogon: it's not a "trivialisation of the Holocaust" to suggest that gleefully burning Jews alive or beheading them is an atrocity of a similar kind.
Hamas likes nothing better than an Israeli strike that kills civilians, says Jake Wallis Simons, which is why its tunnels wind under civilian towns and villages, with operation rooms under hospitals.
There has never been a class of people who are freer to express their opinions than Left-leaning academics in 2023. So why do they think the Government is trying to censor them, asks Dr David McGrogan.
Israel's Prime Minister has dismissed leaked proposals for expelling the Gaza Strip's entire population to Egypt’s Sinai peninsula as hypothetical.
Israel's robust response to the recent Hamas atrocity has produced cries of 'war crimes' and demands for immediate ceasefire. Law expert David McGrogan takes a look at how the response shapes up under international law.
China gets a lot wrong, but a few things right, says Dr Roger Watson, who finds the country moving ahead in some ways but still lamentable in others.
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