World
Jewish groups call for action against radical anti-Israel organization: 'openly embraces Hamas'
Within Our Lifetime (WOL), a radical anti-Israel group based in New York City, is among numerous organizations making headlines for open support of terrorist groups in the aftermath of Hamas’ Oct. 7 terror attacks.
WOL’s online messaging outlines the radical beliefs uniting its members since the group’s founding in 2015. “We are anti-zionists (sic),” WOL states, elaborating that the “liberation of Palestine requires the abolition of zionism (sic).” WOL also supports resistance to “the violence of the U.S. empire at home and abroad,” advocates for “Palestinians’ right to return to their homeland in all of historic Palestine from the Jordan River to the Mediterranean Sea,” and believes Palestinians have the right to “resist the zionist (sic) occupation by any means necessary.”
While WOL stridently believes that it is anti-Zionist and not antisemitic, experts say that the group’s actions have harmed and endangered Jews.
“WOL Palestine has, for years, engaged in what amounts to a conspiracy to deprive Jewish people of their civil rights through acts of violence and intimidation,” with numerous WOL members and supporters being “convicted of hate crime attacks against Jewish New Yorkers,” Brooke Goldstein, a human rights attorney and founder and executive director of The Lawfare Project, told Fox News Digital.
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“Long Live Oct 7th” banner (FNTV)
Despite “a significant escalation of aggression towards Jews by WOL Palestine and its adherents” in the aftermath of Oct. 7, Goldstein lamented that “we see no action by law enforcement or prosecutors. Manhattan DA Alvin Bragg treats WOL Palestine’s criminal acts as misdemeanor property crimes not worthy of pursuing, instead of the terroristic activity it is.”
In an April interview with Fox News Digital, former White House Middle East Envoy Jason Greenblatt discussed misinformation and hate emanating from two protests promoted by WOL at synagogues in Teaneck, New Jersey.
On Mar. 10, WOL urged followers to assemble in protest of an alleged auction of “occupied Palestinian land” at Teaneck’s Keter Torah Congregation. “They lied,” Greenblatt said, “and they’re claiming that ‘us rich Jews’ are buying stolen Palestinian land.” As media outlets like the Jerusalem Post reported, the synagogue was hosting an information session about purchasing Israeli real estate. Several pro-Palestinian groups attended the protest, during which two protesters were arrested for spray-painting passing cars.
On April 1, WOL called for followers to join their protest against Israeli organization ZAKA at Teaneck’s Bnai Yeshurun synagogue. Greenblatt explained that Israeli emergency response organization ZAKA provides a “kindness that you can’t even repay” by trying “to bury the little pieces of the Jewish bodies that were the targets of this Hamas terrorism.” WOL alleged that ZAKA has put forward “false claims and fabricated evidence” that have “fueled the Gaza genocide.”
While protesting against ZAKA, ADL’s Center on Extremism team told Fox News Digital that WOL founder Nerdeen Kiswani wore a pin bearing the face of Abu Obaida, Hamas’ spokesman.
Oren Segal, Vice President of the Anti-Defamation League’s Center on Extremism, told Fox News Digital that WOL has demonstrated “very explicit support for violence against Israeli civilians in support of terrorist organizations like Hamas, Hezbollah, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), and the Houthis at some of the nearly 100 anti-Israel rallies they have sponsored around New York City since Oct. 7.” Hamas, Hezbollah and PFLP are listed by the U.S. as foreign terrorist organizations.
Nerdeen Kiswani, co-founder and leader of Within Our Lifetime-United for Palestine (WOL), speaks at a demonstration near Columbia University on February 2, 2024, in New York City. (Photo by Alexi J. Rosenfeld/Getty Images) (Photo by Alexi J. Rosenfeld/Getty Images)
The group is “really in your face, really blatant,” Segal said. He added that “groups that tend to legitimize terror organizations, glorify violence, and otherwise create an atmosphere where antisemitism is normalized . . . those are the characteristics of a movement that leads to violence.”
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Following synagogue protests, WOL was among the outside agitators participating in and encouraging university encampment protests throughout New York City. In a treatise about their role in the encampments, WOL urged escalation. “We have a choice in what we prioritize and a responsibility to adapt to meet the moment,” WOL told followers. “We can choose to prioritize de-escalation trainings, or we can choose to prioritize escalation trainings. We can choose to learn how to build effective barricades, how to link arms most effectively to resist police attacks, or what type of expanding foam works best on the kind of doorknobs present in our universities. This is not rhetoric — this is an urgent need.”
The escalation WOL called for was on display at the Brooklyn Museum on May 31. After the museum refused to comply with WOL’s demands that it disclose and divest from any financial ties to Israel, protesters swarmed outside the museum. Some protesters entered the lobby. NBC News reported that protesters “physically and verbally assaulted and harassed” museum staff and damaged art installations. Ultimately, Kiswani and 33 other protesters were arrested by the NYPD.
Taylor Maatman, the Brooklyn Museum’s Director of Public Relations and Communications, did not answer questions about the harm caused during protests but told Fox News Digital that the museum was “dismayed by any violence that occurred.”
The radical anti-Israel organization Within Our Lifetime (WOL) organizes a rally outside the AirTrain at Jamaica station, during the National Day of Action in Queens, New York on Saturday, January 27, 2024. (Photo by Selcuk Acar/Anadolu via Getty Images) (Photo by Selcuk Acar/Anadolu via Getty Images)
On June 7, WOL Tweeted a warning to the Brooklyn Museum: “If you take peace from the people, we take peace from you.” The Tweet was marked with the inverted red triangle Hamas uses to identify military targets.
On June 12, four leaders of the Brooklyn Museum awoke to red paint sprayed across their homes, including large inverted red triangles. Vandals left a sign at the home of the museum’s Jewish director, calling her a “White Supremacist Zionist.” In response to inquiries about the vandalism, Maatman stated that “for two centuries, the Brooklyn Museum has worked to foster mutual understanding through art and culture,” and “violence and vandalism have no place in that discourse.”
New York City Mayor Eric Adams said of the vandalism that it was “not peaceful protest or free speech,” adding that the crime was “overt, unacceptable antisemitism.”
WOL has not taken explicit responsibility for the vandalism. Kiswani has Tweeted about it, explaining that “execs were targeted for unleashing police violence on Palestine protests” and calling the vandalism “pretty peaceful, compared to what the Brooklyn museum did to peaceful protesters.”
WOL has not responded to questions from Fox News Digital about responsibility for the aforementioned incident, its support for terror groups, or the misinformation it espouses. It also did not answer questions about the antisemitism inherent in many of its protests, including a June 5 protest against Hillel, an institution that provides Jewish students with religious resources on campus. On X, WOL said that Hillel “stands with genocide.”
ANTI-ISRAEL PROTESTERS LIGHT FLARES BY NYC EXHIBIT FOR OCT 7 MUSIC FESTIVAL VICTIMS: ‘LONG LIVE THE INTIFADA’
Escalation in WOL’s protests continued on June 10, when the organization hosted a “Day of Rage” at a New York City exhibit about the Nova Music Festival, where 370 innocents were killed and 44 were taken hostage on Oct. 7. WOL protesters explained on X that they had “flooded the streets, took over the trains, and shut down [the] Zionist propaganda exhibit.”
Rabbi Moshe Hauer, Executive Vice President of the Orthodox Union, told Fox News Digital that the “horrific” Nova protest occurred within walking distance of his office. “We have to tell our employees when stuff like that is happening that they can’t come in, that we advise them not to come.” Hauer elaborated, “that protest was dangerous. It was dangerous for Jews to be there.”
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En route to the exhibit, protesters in the 14th Street-Union Square subway station issued a call-and-response chant, telling riders, “Raise your hand if you’re a Zionist . . . this is your chance to get out.” At the event itself, protesters shouted “long live the intifada,” and “Israel go to hell.” One protester waved a Hezbollah flag while another carried a banner reading “Long Live Oct. 7.” WOL Tweeted video from the Nova protest showing a sign stating that “Zionists are not Jews & not humans.”
Segal said that the event and signage were troubling. “When you start dehumanizing people, whether you’re calling them Zionists or whether you’re more explicitly calling them Jews, that’s not just antisemitic, that’s dangerous.” Citing ADL studies, Segal said that “most American Jews identify with the State of Israel and believe it has the right to exist. When you start talking about Zionists as your enemies, that includes a whole bunch of Jews.”
Anti-Israel protest (FNTV)
ILLINOIS HIGH SCHOOL APOLOGIZES AFTER PRINTING QUOTE FROM STUDENT ‘HAPPY’ ABOUT OCT. 7 IN YEARBOOK
WOL’s Nova protest garnered condemnation from White House spokesperson Andrew Bates. The Times of Israel reported that Bates called protesters’ conduct “outrageous and heartbreaking,” adding that “profane banners of terrorist organizations should not be flown anywhere, especially not on American streets.”
Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez Tweeted on June 11 that the “callousness, dehumanization, and targeting of Jews on display at last night’s protest outside the Nova Festival exhibit was atrocious antisemitism,” and “has no place in our city nor any broader movement.”
WOL subsequently issued a statement defending their protest of the Nova exhibit. It contains the claim, debunked in the media, that Israel itself was “burning down cars with the missile strikes” at the Nova festival. Calling the music festival a “rave next to a concentration camp,” WOL implied that Israel keeps Palestinians in Gaza as a form of ethnic cleansing. In closing, WOL stated that it will “not condemn October 7th” or the “people’s resistance forces,” and urged supporters to “escalate – both in words and in action.”
WOL protests continue apace. A June 29 protest of a Biden fundraiser, in which WOL urged followers to “confront genocide Joe,” resulted in 38 arrests. The New York Post reported that a July 4 WOL protest throughout New York City led the NYPD to handcuff 37 individuals. In Washington Square Park, where WOL members including Kiswani led protesters in chants, two protesters burned the American flag.
Fox News Digital reached out to Bates and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer for comment about efforts to protect the institutions and people endangered by WOL protests. Fox News Digital received no response.
Westchester People’s Action Coalition (WESPAC) Foundation, which fundraises for WOL according to the Jerusalem Post, did not respond to inquiries from Fox News Digital about whether it will continue funding WOL, given its support of terrorism and harmful protests.
columbia university demonstrators protest together (Alex Kent)
Fox News Digital also reached out to Donorbox, which WOL claims to use to raise funds. A Donorbox employee responded that “Within Our Lifetime does not have an active fundraising account with Donorbox.”
WOL also purports to use GPay to fundraise. A Google spokesperson told Fox News Digital that “merchants using the Google Pay API must follow the Google Pay API Terms of Services, including the acceptable use policy. When we discover violations, we take action against them, which may include removing Google Pay as a payment option.”
Neither the FBI nor the Department of Justice answered specific questions about efforts to monitor or sanction WOL’s activities. In response to questions about the limits of peaceful protest and endangerment of targeted individuals, the NYPD told Fox News Digital that it will “never tolerate violence or property damage” and is “ready and available to respond to protests and will ensure everyone is able to peacefully exercise their first amendment rights.”
Leaders protecting Jewish Americans against an onslaught of antisemitism that has followed in the wake of Oct. 7 expressed ongoing concern about WOL. According to Hauer, “the movement which we are seeing is not attacking just Jews in Jewish communities. They have a stated intent to impact the country, to change the country, even sometimes expressed as to destroy the country.”
As Goldstein added, “there is no doubt that WOL Palestine promotes — and commits acts of — violence and extremism, and openly embraces Hamas, a government-designated foreign terrorist organization. But without a thorough investigation by federal authorities into the connections between WOL, Hamas, and other terror groups, we cannot know for certainty whether WOL is a domestic terrorist organization or the cell of a foreign one,” Goldstein added “Sanctioning WOL as a terrorist organization would be an important action for the government to take, but even more crucial is prosecuting the group for its conspiracy to commit antisemitic hate crimes and to deprive Jewish citizens of their civil rights.”
World
Meta slashes 8,000 jobs, or 10% of its workforce, as Microsoft offers buyouts
Meta is laying off about 8,000 workers, or about 10% of its workforce, the company said Thursday as it continues to ramp up spending on artificial intelligence infrastructure and highly paid AI-expert hires.
The company said it was making the cuts for the sake of efficiency and to allow new investments in parts of its business, as first reported by Bloomberg, which also said the company will leave about 6,000 jobs unfilled.
Also Thursday, Microsoft said it was offering voluntary buyouts to thousands of its U.S. employees.
The software giant plans to make the offers in early May to about 8,750 people, or 7% of its U.S. workforce, according to two people familiar with the plan who were not authorized to speak about it publicly.
While an alternative to the sudden layoffs removing tech workers from peers like Meta and Oracle, the savings are likely tied to a similar industry upheaval that is requiring huge spending on the costs of artificial intelligence. Meta has already warned investors that its 2026 expenses will grow significantly — to the range of $162 billion to $169 billion — driven by infrastructure costs and employee compensation, particularly for the artificial intelligence experts it’s been hiring at eye-popping pay levels.
Wedbush analyst Dan Ives welcomed Meta’s cuts in a note to investors Thursday.
He said he sees it as part of a strategy of using AI tools to “automate tasks that once required large teams, allowing the company to streamline operations and reduce costs while maintaining productivity driving an increased need for a leaner operating structure.”
Microsoft, based in Redmond, Washington, has spent billions of dollars operating an ever-expanding global network of data centers powering cloud computing services, AI systems and its own suite of productivity tools, including the AI assistant Copilot.
CNBC reported earlier Thursday on a memo from Microsoft’s chief people officer, Amy Coleman, announcing the voluntary retirement plan.
“Our hope is that this program gives those eligible the choice to take that next step on their own terms, with generous company support,” Coleman wrote, according to CNBC.
World
Iran escalates Hormuz ‘tit-for-tat,’ seizes ship tied to billionaire close to Trump, Macron
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Tensions escalated in the Strait of Hormuz April 22 after Iran’s IRGC seized two vessels in what analysts describe as “tit-for-tat” retaliation against the U.S. And one ship is linked to a billionaire shipping family tied to Presidents Donald Trump and Emmanuel Macron.
Video aired on Iranian state TV purportedly shows IRGC soldiers seizing the container ships in the Strait, Reuters said Thursday.
One vessel, the MSC Francesca, is owned by MSC Mediterranean Shipping Company, which was founded by Italian billionaire Gianluigi Aponte and is now controlled by his two children, Fox News Digital has learned.
“Some 20 Iranians armed to the teeth stormed the ship. Sailors are under Iranian control, their movements on the ship are limited but the Iranians are treating them well,” a relative of one of the MSC Francesca seafarers told Reuters.
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Soldiers take part in the seizure of the container ships MSC Francesca and Epaminondas in the Strait of Hormuz, according to footage broadcast on Iranian state TV and released April 22, 2026. (IRIB/Handout/Reuters)
“The ship is anchored 9 nautical miles from the Iranian coast. Negotiations between MSC and Iran are ongoing, our sailors are fine,” Montenegro’s minister of maritime affairs, Filip Radulovic, told state broadcaster RTCG.
Maritime intelligence firm Windward AI pointed to IRGC “tit-for-tat” tactics given the recent MSC vessel seizure.
This followed a U.S. naval blockade imposed on April 13, with Tehran warning of retaliation after U.S. forces also seized an Iranian vessel.
“The IRGC attacked three ships. It also captured and took in two of them — the MSC Francesca and the Epaminondas — while the Euphoria managed to get away,” Windward AI co-founder Ami Daniel told Fox News Digital.
IRAN FIRES LIVE MISSILES INTO STRAIT OF HORMUZ AS TRUMP ENVOYS ARRIVE FOR NUCLEAR TALKS
Soldiers take part in the operation seizing the container ships MSC Francesca and Epaminondas in the Strait of Hormuz, according to Iranian state TV April 22, 2026. (IRIB/Handout/Reuters)
“This is a ‘tit-for-tat’ exercise by the IRGC, which, along with the Houthis, has long claimed MSC is connected to Israel.
“Aponte, owner and chairman, has a Jewish wife, and MSC calls in Israel; however, so do all major liners.”
Diego Aponte, Gianluigi’s son, had been making “inroads with Trump’s circle,” Bloomberg reported April 13.
He also helped arrange a November 2025 White House meeting with Swiss business leaders that led to a preliminary deal to reduce the 39% tariffs imposed on Switzerland over the summer.
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The MSC executive chairman has been photographed with French President Emmanuel Macron. (Reuters/Stephane Mahe)
Over the last year, MSC’s relationship with the White House also positioned father Gianluigi Aponte as a key player in a $19 billion deal with Li Ka-shing, as MSC and BlackRock moved to acquire two Panama Canal ports under pressure from Trump to place them in “friendly” hands, according to the outlet.
With a net worth of at least $37 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, it is Gianluigi Aponte and his wife, Rafaela Aponte-Diamant, who appear to mingle with world leaders.
The MSC executive chairman and Rafaela have been photographed with French President Emmanuel Macron.
GULF SHIPPING OPERATIONS GRIND TO HALT NEAR IRAN; US QUIETLY PREPARES FOR POSSIBLE STRIKE: ‘HEIGHTENED RISK’
The Panama-flagged MSC Francesca vessel docked in Long Beach, Calif., April 16, 2025. (Efrain Morales/Reuters)
Rafaela is also reportedly related to Alexis Kohler (his mother is said to be her cousin), who served as Macron’s secretary-general from May 2017 to April 14, 2025, and was described as “Macron’s second brain.”
The Aponte family’s vessel, carrying about 40 crew members, was taken toward Iran’s port of Bandar Abbas by the Iranian navy, sources told Reuters Thursday.
Four crew members, including the captain, are from Montenegro, officials said, while Croatia’s foreign ministry confirmed two Croatian nationals are also aboard.
MSC declined to comment, Reuters confirmed.
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The IRGC Navy claimed both vessels captured “were operating without the necessary permits.”
According to Lloyd’s List, the 2008-built MSC Francesca “normally operates in service between the U.S. West Coast, Asia and the Middle East Gulf.”
World
US professors sue university over arrest during pro-Palestine protest
Published On 23 Apr 2026
Three professors at Atlanta’s Emory University in the United States have filed a lawsuit over their arrests during a 2024 campus protest over Israel’s genocidal war on Gaza.
Their lawsuit on Thursday argued that the university broke its own free-speech policies when it called in police and state troopers to aggressively disband the protest, making 28 arrests.
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“The judicial system would find that Emory failed to protect its students, to protect its staff, to protect the educational mission of the university,” said philosophy professor Noelle McAfee, one of the plaintiffs.
“So this isn’t just about people’s individual rights. It’s our educational mission to train people in free and critical inquiry, to be able to learn how to engage with others, to be fearless.”
Laura Diamond, a spokesperson for Emory, responded that the university believes “this lawsuit is without merit”.
“Emory acts appropriately and responsibly to keep our community safe from threats of harm,” Diamond said in a statement. “We regret this issue is being litigated, but we have confidence in the legal process.”
The suit is just one example of how the nationwide wave of protests from 2023 and 2024 continues to reverberate on elite campuses.
There have been multiple instances where students and faculty have filed lawsuits against universities, arguing they were discriminated against because of the protests.
But the Emory suit is unusual. McAfee and her fellow plaintiffs — English and Indigenous studies professor Emilio Del Valle-Escalante and economics professor Caroline Fohlin — all remain tenured faculty members. None were convicted of any charges.
The civil lawsuit in DeKalb County State Court demands that the private university repay money the three spent defending themselves against misdemeanour charges that were later dismissed, along with punitive damages.
McAfee said she’s suing her employer “to try to get them to be accountable and to change”.
All three say they were observers on April 25, 2024, when some students and others set up tents on the university’s main quad to protest the war. They say Emory broke its own policies by calling in Atlanta police and Georgia state troopers without seeking alternatives.
McAfee was charged with disorderly conduct after she said she yelled “Stop!” at an officer roughly arresting a protester. Del Valle-Escalante said he was trying to help an older woman when he was arrested and charged with disorderly conduct.
Fohlin said that, when she protested against officers pinning a protester to the ground, she herself was thrown face-first to the ground and arrested, suffering a concussion and a spine injury. Fohlin was charged with misdemeanour battery of an officer.
Emory claimed that those arrested that day were outsiders who trespassed on school property. But 20 of the 28 people arrested were affiliated with the university.
The professors said that, after their arrests, they were targeted by threats and harassment, part of a pushback by conservatives who said universities were failing to protect Jewish students from anti-Semitism and allowing lawlessness.
Nationwide, however, advocates say there is a “Palestine exception” in which universities are willing to curb pro-Palestine speech and protest. Palestine Legal, a legal aid group supporting such speech, said Tuesday that it received 300 percent more legal requests in 2025 than its annual average before 2023, mostly from college students and faculty.
McAfee served as president of the Emory University Senate after her arrest. The body makes policy recommendations and has helped draft the university’s open expression policy.
She said she asked then-President Gregory Fenves in fall 2024 why Emory police weren’t dropping the charges against her and others. McAfee said Fenves told her that he wanted “to see justice”.
The open expression policy was revised after 2024 to clearly prohibit tents, camping, the occupation of university buildings and demonstrations between midnight and 7am.
Whatever the policy, McAfee said students are afraid to protest at Emory, saying the university has turned its back on what Atlanta civil rights icon John Lewis called “good trouble”.
“Students know right now that any trouble is not going to be good trouble at Emory, that they could get arrested,” she said. “So students are afraid.”
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