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Today’s Politically INCORRECT Cartoon by A.F. Branco


A.F. Branco Cartoon – Bad Connection

A.F. Branco | on September 19, 2024 | https://comicallyincorrect.com/a-f-branco-cartoon-bad-connection/

Hezbollah Pagers Blowing Up
A Political Cartoon by A.F. Branco 2024

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A.F. Branco Cartoon – Thousands of Hezbollah terrorists’ pagers and walkie-talkies are literally blowing up, killing and injuring hundreds. They were booby-trapped by Israel in an effort to fight against terrorism.

BREAKING: Hezbollah’s Walkie-Talkie Explosions Rock Lebanon, Killing 14 and Injuring Over 400, Just One Day After Deadly Pager Blasts

By Jim Hoft – The Gateway Pundit – Sept 18, 2024

UPDATE: Lebanon’s Health Ministry reports 14 dead and over 450 injured in Wednesday’s explosions.

In a brutal second wave of explosions, at least nine people were killed and over 300 injured Wednesday when Hezbollah’s walkie-talkies detonated across Lebanon.
This attack follows closely on the heels of Tuesday’s pager blasts, which claimed the lives of 12 and left nearly 4,000 wounded in what is rapidly becoming an unparalleled security nightmare for the terrorist organization. READ MORE…

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A.F. Branco has taken his two greatest passions (art and politics) and translated them into cartoons that have been popular all over the country in various news outlets, including NewsMax, Fox News, MSNBC, CBS, ABC, and “The Washington Post.” He has been recognized by such personalities as Rep. Devin Nunes, Dinesh D’Souza, James Woods, Chris Salcedo, Sarah Palin, Larry Elder, Lars Larson, Rush Limbaugh, and President Trump.

Life Hack: If You Don’t Want To Be Killed, Don’t Take Hostages


BY: DAVID HARSANYI | JUNE 10, 2024

Read more at https://thefederalist.com/2024/06/10/life-hack-if-you-dont-want-to-be-killed-dont-take-hostages/

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The reaction to the rescue of four Israeli hostages from Gaza is a microcosm of the past 70 years of this conflict. Every time Palestinians pay the price for acting out in some horrific, irrational, self-destructive, violent way, their defenders want to rewind history to a more convenient moment — this time to Oct. 6, 2023.

Sorry, that’s not how life works. Hamas, the chosen political entity of Gaza — the overwhelming choice of Palestinian civilians, in fact — launched this round of the conflict by massacring, sexually torturing, and kidnapping Israelis whose only sin was attending a music festival. Palestinians took hundreds of these hostages back to the Gaza Strip — a place Arabs have political autonomy over for nearly 20 years — and held them in the middle of densely populated areas hoping to dissuade Israel from liberating them, or, if it did, to create as many martyrs as possible.

Critics of Israel now ask the usual dishonest question: Are four lives worth the alleged 200-plus Arabs that were lost rescuing them?

Israel is the only nation on earth that is tasked with protecting its own people and its enemies. Every innocent lost life is, of course, a tragedy. But if you don’t want to be placed in harm’s way, don’t hold hostages in your homes and neighborhoods, and don’t cheer and support a government that puts your life in constant danger for a lost cause. This is the reality of the world.

Now, if reports are correct, Hamas — and perhaps “civilians” (it’s difficult to tell because terrorists are often dressed as noncombatants) — opened fire on the rescuers. The Israelis, who do not indiscriminately target civilians, fired back, as they should. Whatever the specifics, every lost life is Hamas’ fault.

But, as always, it also needs to be stressed that the casualty numbers that are endlessly repeated by the establishment media are fiction — as everyone in those newsrooms is surely aware. So, we must assume outlets like The Washington Post and CNN — which also detestably contends that the hostages had been “released” — are fellow travelers. One BBC interviewer even asked an IDF spokesman if Israel had warned Palestinians of their sting operation.

Then again, even if there were over 200 dead, it is also surely the case that many of the dead were members of Hamas or holding hostages of their own volition or helping those holding hostages. Avoid doing so if you value your life.

The “Health Ministry” makes no distinction between terrorists and civilians, and in this case there might be little difference. Among those holding the Israelis hostage in their homes in Nuseirat, for instance, were a “journalist” (who apparently worked for Al Jazeera and the U.S.-based Palestine Chronicle, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit) and a “doctor.” The entire neighborhood was ostensibly under UN control. We already know that UN workers had likely participated in the Oct. 7 kidnappings and UNRWA schools are used by Hamas bases of operation.

Even now, there’s a (terrible) ceasefire deal on the table being pushed by Joe Biden (still chumming for antisemitic votes) that Hamas continues to reject. Would we not expect the United States to act the same way as Israel if some homicidal cult had our people?

In the end, of course, this could all end today if the hostages were returned and Hamas would unconditionally surrender. Israel haters, who fashion themselves peaceniks, will blame everyone — Netanyahu, Biden, colonialism, racism, etc., etc. — but the Islamists who are the cause of this war.

Then again, the entire conflict could end if the Palestinians would stop turning to nihilistic theocrats to lead them and accept Israel’s existence.  


David Harsanyi is a senior editor at The Federalist, a nationally syndicated columnist, a Happy Warrior columnist at National Review, and author of five books—the most recent, Eurotrash: Why America Must Reject the Failed Ideas of a Dying Continent. Follow him on Twitter, @davidharsanyi.

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May 22, 2024

‘Ask God for their protection’: Demonstrators march through the rain to stand with persecuted Christians


By Nicole VanDyke, CP Reporter | Monday, April 29, 2024

Read more at https://www.christianpost.com/news/demonstrators-march-through-the-rain-for-persecuted-christians.html/

Dozens marched at the fourth annual March for Martyrs in Washington, D.C. on April 27, 2024. | The Christian Post/Nicole Alcindor

WASHINGTON — Pouring rain didn’t stop demonstrators from marching in the nation’s capital on Saturday to stand in solidarity with persecuted Christians globally, with some asking why the American Church isn’t doing more to spread awareness. Dozens gathered for the fourth annual March for the Martyrs on the National Mall, with many carrying flags representing the countries they are supporting in the mission to overcome global brutality against believers. 

After worship and speeches encouraging Christians from all denominations to advocate for their persecuted brothers and sisters, the crowd marched from 17th Street and Constitution Avenue to the Museum of the Bible. 

“I think that with all that’s going on in the world and with Christianity, I just had to be here to hear the speakers,” D.C. resident Carrol Monaco told The Christian Post, adding this was her first time at the March for Martyrs.

“I was expecting more people to be here. Maybe it’s because of the weather. I just think it’s very important that we bring awareness to this. Christians are being persecuted, even today.”

“It’s just something that we need to be more aware of and more sensitive to,” she added. “I think events like this are vital because it raises sensitivity. I think it’s possible that people just don’t realize what’s going on.”

According to the global persecution watchdog organization Open Doors, which monitors persecution in over 60 countries, over 360 million Christians live in areas of the world where they face high levels of persecution or discrimination for their faith in Christ. In some countries, owning a Bible or converting to Christianity can send someone to prison or put them on death row. 

March for Martyrs founder Gia Chacón told CP she was inspired by the March for Life, the annual pro-life rally in Washington, D.C., launched after the Supreme Court’s 1972 Roe v. Wade ruling to call for an end to abortion. Today, the March for Life is attended by tens of thousands each year. March for Martyrs started in 2020 in Long Beach, California, during the height of COVID-19 pandemic.

“I thought we should be doing the same thing for our persecuted brothers and sisters around the world and show them our solidarity and advocate on their behalf,” she said. “We need to pray for persecuted Christians and ask God for their protection and for their comfort.”

As a devout Catholic, Monaco said events like March for Martyrs help make people more aware of persecution impacting Christians globally and helps spread the Gospel of Jesus Christ. 

“We have to try to counter the persecutions that are occurring. My faith is a journey, and I’m still on this journey. It really is about living the way, the truth, and the life of Jesus Christ each and every day. I know it’s a struggle for a lot of people,” Monaco said. 

“I struggle with it sometimes. I ask the question: ‘Why? Why is this happening?’ I don’t understand it. But you have to have faith. The Christian faith is about helping each other along on that journey.”  

Monaco believes one way that Christians can begin to alleviate persecution is to help spread the Word of God as love.

“That’s what He is. God is love. And it’s about spreading the love of God each and every day. And I think that is a message that gets missed a lot, and I think that needs to be emphasized everywhere, Church outside of church. God is love, and He gives us His love. It’s up to us to spread His love in any way we can,” she said. 

‘Opened my eyes’

Another D.C. resident, Patrick Jordan, attended the event to support persecuted Christians in Lebanon. He told CP that no weather — rain or shine — would have stopped him from attending.

“I saw this as a very important event and it called to me, and here I am. When I sailed back from Europe to America, my dad’s friend was Lebanese, and he actually opened my eyes to what happened to that corner of the world during the civil war, and how just beng Christian you’d get rounded up and killed,” Jordan said.

Jordan said his father’s friend told him about one occasion when a group of Lebanese Christian friends organized a garbage cleanup as a way to maintain God’s green earth, and many were murdered due to their faith. 

“It was pretty shocking as a 12-year-old to hear that. This was a very nice guy, and I couldn’t imagine anyone doing that just for your faith. This guy had no ill will towards others,” he said. “That just opened my eyes to certain dark areas. It’s great to see that people at this event want to shine a light on that.”

Jordan said that events like the March for Martyrs are crucial to raise awareness. 

“I was very fortunate to have met my dad’s Lebanese friend. How many people are going to have that opportunity to have their eyes opened wide to the atrocities taking place across the globe when it comes to persecuted Christians?” Jordan said.  

“These events are so important to let other people know that there are people hurting out there, and they need your help to survive. That’s why everyone is here today. I would love to keep being a part of this every year.” 

Jordan said he allows his faith to inform how he treats others. He cited Matthew 5:44, where Jesus advises followers to “love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you.” 

“It’s a pretty confusing world. I like to reflect on what God wants me to do, and that helps me temper whatever part of my humanity that may not be good to others. But, once I give myself over to the Lord, it brings more light to the world,” Jordan said. 

Although he hasn’t been severely harmed for his faith in Christ like some people have faced overseas, he said societal opposition to the Christian faith made him think twice about becoming a teacher. 

“I was training to become a high school teacher in public schools. The persecution I faced made me feel guilty about being a Christian as someone training to be a teaching professional. We were advised not to bring our faith into the classroom,” Jordan said. 

“This dissuaded me from becoming a teacher at all. I knew that I couldn’t really represent that part of me. It felt like I couldn’t really be myself, and it dissuaded me from my whole career. I would have loved to be a teacher.”

Jordan now works as a nurse, where he is better able to express his faith when helping treat his patients back to good health. 

“I think the persecution against Christians can be alleviated by just sort of notifying someone that there’s a bear outside your cave. The correct thing to do is to say: ‘Hey, this exists.’ And should you be afraid of the bear? Yeah, maybe. But how do you prepare for that?” Jordan said. 

“I hope that these organizations can tell these people. ‘Hey, there are hostile militants that are against you due to your faith.’ How do you overcome this issue?” 

Christians are not doing nearly enough as they should be doing to combat anti-Christian hate crimes nationally, Jordan contends. 

“I mean, if you look at every church, [this issue] is not on their site. They have the rainbow flag. They don’t have Christ on the front. Churches are totally gone now. I think churches need to start to realize we are Christians,” Jordan said. 

“They keep focusing on these little political issues. You have to be above that and say: ‘No, we’re trying to build something that’s for a church for eternity,’ not something to get us through the next election year.” 

‘Why is the Church not paying more attention?’

Chacón hopes the march brings “attention to the global crisis of Christian persecution.”

“During that [first year in 2020], we saw an increase in Christian persecution. And after my extensive travels overseas working with the persecuted, I just couldn’t help but wonder why is the Church in the United States not paying more attention to what’s happening to our brothers and sisters? Why is the world turning a blind eye to the human rights abuses against Christians because of their faith.” 

March for Martyrs founder Gia Chacón speaks at the fourth annual March for Martyrs in Washington, D.C., on April 27, 2024. | The Christian Post/Nicole Alcindor

As a Christian, Chacón said her faith inspires her to stand with those suffering globally for following Christ. 

“My faith is everything to me. And I really have the persecuted to thank for their inspiration and their boldness and their willingness to lay down their lives for Christ inspired my own faith so deeply. Through my personal relationship with Jesus and the witness of the persecuted, nothing is more important to me than my faith,” Chacón said. 

“I have never faced persecution myself. I pray that the Church in the United States of America never faces persecution. Although we do face intimidation. I have sat with people who have firsthand suffered persecution and to hear their stories and what they have suffered for their faith in Christ, and they remain faithful and hopeful in such a huge way, can motivate us in the United States to stand strong no matter the costs.”

Nicole VanDyke is a reporter for The Christian Post. 

FBI director says terror threats elevated to all-time high since Oct. 7: ‘Blinking lights everywhere’


Chris Pandolfo By Chris Pandolfo Fox News | Published December 5, 2023 11:01am EST | Updated December 5, 2023 12:32pm EST

FBI Director Christopher Wray testified Tuesday that the terror threat facing the United States has reached unprecedented levels since the Oct. 7 attack on Israel. Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., asked Wray to describe the current “threat matrix” facing the United States at a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing.

“What I would say that is unique about the environment that we’re in right now in my career is that while there may have been times over the years where individual threats could have been higher here or there than where they may be right now, I’ve never seen a time where all the threats or so many of the threats are all elevated, all at exactly the same time,” the FBI director replied. 

“So, blinking red lights analogy about 9/11 — all the lights were blinking red before 9/11, apparently,” Graham continued. “Obviously, all of us missed it. Would you say there’s multiple blinking red lights out there?” he asked. 

FBI DIRECTOR PLEADS FOR CONGRESS TO KEEP PROGRAM ACCUSED OF SPYING ON AMERICANS

FBI Director Wray Appears In Senate Judiciary Hearing
Federal Bureau of Investigation Director Christopher Wray testifies before the Senate Judiciary Committee in the Hart Senate Office Building on Capitol Hill on December 05, 2023 in Washington, DC. Wray used the oversight hearing to call for a renewal the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act’s Section 702 authorities, which allow the FBI and other intelligence agencies to spy on foreigners. (Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)

“I see blinking red lights everywhere,” Wray answered. 

He later told Graham that since the Oct. 7 massacre in Israel, when Hamas terrorists brutally murdered at least 1,200 Israelis, a “veritable rogue’s gallery of foreign terrorists” has called for attacks against the U.S.

“The threat level has gone to a whole nother level since Oct. 7,” Wray emphasized.

FBI PAINTS GRIM PICTURE OF AI AS A TOOL FOR CRIMINALS: ‘FORCE MULTIPLIER’ FOR BAD ACTORS

U.S. Navy destroyer USS Carney. The Pentagon has confirmed 74 attacks by Iranian-backed proxy groups on U.S. troops stationed in the Middle East in Iraq and Syria since Oct. 17.  (U.S. Navy via Associated Press/File)

The director’s comments on Tuesday echo what he said in October, when he warned Senate lawmakers, “The actions of Hamas and its allies will serve as an inspiration the likes of which we haven’t seen since ISIS launched its so-called caliphate several years ago.

Attorney General Merrick Garland said in October that reported threats against Jewish, Muslim and Arab communities in the United States spiked in the days and weeks after the start of the Israel-Hamas war. 

The number of attacks on U.S. military bases overseas by Iran-backed proxy groups rose in November as well, with the Pentagon confirming at least 74 attacks on U.S. troops stationed in the Middle East since Oct. 17.

PUBLIC TRUST IN FBI HAS REACHED ‘THE RED ZONE,’ US INCHING CLOSER TO ‘MAYHEM, CHAOS, ANARCHY:’ WSJ COLUMNIST

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The 74 attacks on U.S. troops have taken place in Iraq and Syria and began on Oct. 17 by Iraqi militia groups. The attacks are reportedly linked to the U.S.’s support for Israel in its retaliation against the Palestinian militant group Hamas, following its attack on Oct. 7.

The attacks do not include ballistic missiles being shot in the direction of U.S. military vessels, which commanding officers on those ships have ordered to be shot down.

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At home, the FBI and Las Vegas police this week foiled an alleged “lone wolf” terror plot by a teenager who pledged support to ISIS. 

On Friday, a 16-year-old suspect was arrested, and federal agents found components to build an explosive device and terrorist propaganda, officials said. The arrest was made after the suspect allegedly made special media posts announcing his plan for “lone wolf operations in Las Vegas against the enemies of Allah.” 

Fox News Digital’s Greg Wehner, Liz Friden and Chris Eberhart contributed to this report.

Chris Pandolfo is a writer for Fox News Digital. Send tips to chris.pandolfo@fox.com and follow him on Twitter @ChrisCPandolfo. j

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