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February 26, 2018

Palestinian Bitten By Dog While Throwing Stones At IDF Soldiers to Sue Dutch Dog Breeder

A Palestinian who was bitten by a dog after throwing stones at Israel Defense Force (IDF) soldiers is now suing the Dutch dog breeder who supplied the dog to the IDF.

According to Jewish Telegraphic Agency (JTA), 19-year-old Hamze Abu Hashem was bitten by an IDF dog in 2014 as he was throwing stones at IDF soldiers. Abu Hashem is suing the Dutch dog breeding company Four Winds K9 for $13,500 in emotional damage he sustained from being bitten.

“My client bears serious scars that will remain with him for the rest of his life,” Liesbeth Zegveld, Abu Hashem’s Netherlands attorney, told a Dutch newspaper. “He is also deeply traumatized by the attack. He shakes when he hears dogs barking, he is too afraid to sleep and suffers from sleepwalking.”

Zegveld is also hoping for a Dutch court to prevent dogs from being sold to the IDF. Four Winds K9 defended itself by claiming that they’re not liable for what their dogs do once they’re given to the IDF.

The 2014 riot where the bite occurred stemmed from “a pre-approved ambush to catch firebomb throwers,” according to Haaretz. The IDF investigated the incident and concluded “that while the use of dogs in confrontations could be justified, in the case in question, the youth could have been arrested using other means.” Abu Hashem was jailed for three months following the incident for his stone-throwing.

Abu Hashem is not the first Palestinian to be bitten by an Israeli dog; in 2012 during a riot in which Palestinians threw stones at IDF soldiers a German shepherd bit Ahmad Satwi in the hand. The IDF eventually decided to only use dogs for ambushes.

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David Liebowitz of Everipedia Transforms from a Consumer of Information to a Producer of it

A year and a half after moving out to Los Angeles, Dave Liebowitz went from recent college grad to an integral part of an ambitious startup that recently made national headlines for raising $30 million. Liebowitz is an Executive Editor and Founding Team Member of Everipedia, a two-and-a-half-year-old website that aims to disrupt Wikipedia, not only with cutting through Wikipedia’s notorious bureaucratic red-tape, but by moving the encyclopedia to the blockchain. Alongside his work at Everipedia, Liebowitz also runs the website Bitcoin for Plebs where he writes pieces demystifying cryptocurrencies to the masses, in addition to publishing interviews with prominent people in blockchain.

But before his cross-country move to Los Angeles and recent good fortune, Dave was a kid from North Jersey. Commenting on his early life, “I grew up in a Jewish household. I wouldn’t say we were that religious but my parents instilled in my sister and I good values such as humility and respecting others. I attended Hebrew school, had a Bar Mitzvah, went to sleepaway camp for a bit, and celebrated the high holidays with my family.”

In high school, Liebowitz was a successful athlete, being captain of his football team and winning the state championship in shot put. But there was more to him than just his athletic feats: “I’ve always been an extremely curious person and in my high school years, I found myself going down rabbit holes on the internet. I’ve always been particularly interested in the news, music, and politics, and would consume information about anything ranging from the life story of my favorite artist to the latest updates in a Presidential election year.”

While attended the University of Massachusetts in Amherst, Liebowitz decided to study what he was passionate about, majoring in political science and minoring in history and philosophy. It was during this time that Liebowitz transformed from a consumer of information to a producer of it.

“I really honed my writing skills down in college. By the time it was late in my junior year, I had enough inspiration and confidence in myself to start my blog, Frequency of the Unknown.” The website, or “FOTU” as he called it, became Dave’s public journal for his thoughts about politics, philosophy, and his own personal experiences. He grew a small but dedicated following of readers. Commenting about his blog, “I wrote pretty consistently until the end of college. For me, the best part about writing was how people would come up to me saying that my writing inspired them to take action in their lives. I couldn’t believe it.”

It was right after graduating college that Dave discovered Mahbod Moghadam’s status about looking for interns for Everipedia. He took advantage of the opportunity and eventually earned the graces of the Everipedia team members to be invited to work full-time.

“For me during that summer, I had the mindset: Everipedia or bust. I did everything I could to get myself out there.” Liebowitz has been living and working at the Everipedia HQ since September 2016 and assumes a number of responsibilities ranging from trying to find breaking news stories to researching “evergreen” content (Everipedia pages that have repeat visitors over a long period of time). In addition, he is the mastermind behind the Everipedia+ service where people hire him to make pages about themselves and their business. “Not everyone has time to make their own pages and I have the experience to conform to the standards of Everipedia. The people I work with are always very pleased with the final result.”

If one thing is clear, it’s that Everipedia is a culmination of what Dave has been doing throughout his life; he applied the values his parents taught him, followed the “rabbit holes” he went through in high school, and continued to perfect his writing ability as he did in college to be a part of one of the most exciting projects in the blockchain space.

“The future is definitely bright for Everipedia” he says, and continues by stating that “information is always evolving, there are always new things being revealed about people and subjects. To that respect, Everipedia will become the most efficient arbitrators of consensus of that information when it moves to the blockchain. In a world of fake news, now more than ever we need an immutable source of content that people can trust and Everipedia is leading the way to do just that.”

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Lawfare Project Mulling Spain Lawsuit Against Yahoo, Google and Twitter

The Lawfare Project has announced that they are considering filing a lawsuit against Google, Yahoo! and Twitter in Spain in an effort to pressure them into taking down anti-Semitic content from their websites.

According to a press release sent to the Journal, The Lawfare Project has already filed cease and desist letters to Google and Yahoo warning them that they will face legal action if they do not “take down anti-Semitic and defamatory content,” which includes “the proliferation of Holocaust denial websites.”

“Google, Yahoo, and Twitter are all hosting anti-Semitic websites and content on their platforms, which is a clear violation of Spanish law,” Lawfare Project Spanish counsel Ignacio Wenley Palacios said in the press release. “This cannot be allowed to continue. If they do not respond positively to the cease and desist letters sent last week, we will file lawsuits against them.”

Iglesias told the Journal in an email that Google, Twitter and Yahoo have deleted comments deemed racist when pressured to do so “but the application of their policies is very erratic.”

“Politically incorrect comments may be squashed without consideration while complaints about blatant racism and anti-Semitism are ignored,” Iglesias wrote. “How difficult is it to assess whether this tweet is racist or not: ‘The difference between a pizza and a Jew, is that the pizza does not scratch the walls inside the oven’”?

However, Iglesias is “very confident” that their lawsuit would hold up in court if they decide to launch it.

“Our actions are very nuanced, and meet the highest of European standards on free speech, and on liability of Internet providers, matching closely the reasoning of the case-law of both the Supreme Court of Spain, and the European Court of Human Rights,” Iglesias wrote.

There have been multiple efforts of late to crack down on anti-Semitic content online, including Israel developing a system that alerts Internet companies of such content on their sites and the need for them to be taken down. There is also an app that alerts users to online anti-Israel content.

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Neo-Nazi Group Connected to Bernstein’s Alleged Killer Praised Bernstein’s Death

The neo-Nazi organization that is connected to the man who allegedly murdered 19-year-old Blaze Bernstein lavished praise for Bernstein’s death in a series of chat messages obtained by Pro Publica.

The chats among Atomwaffen Division (AWD) members showed them making “jokes about his slaying and used slurs to describe” Bernstein.

One member gushed, “I love this” in response to Bernstein’s death and another praised Woodward as a “one man gay Jew wrecking crew.”

Another member, identified as Sean Michael Fernandez, who leads the AWD chapter in Texas, hoped that Bernstein’s death would only be the beginning.

“We’re only going to inspire more ‘copycat crimes’ in the name of AWD,” Fernandez said. “All we have to do is spread our image and our propaganda. The growing fear is what we set out to do and it’s working EXACTLY how I wanted it to since we took over ‘leadership.’ I couldn’t have planned this better, seriously.”

However, one member stated that he thought Samuel Woodward, Bernstein’s alleged killer, “did something stupid.”

“Not that the f­––––– k––– didn’t deserve to die,” the member said. “Just simply not worth a life in prison for.”

Others were angry that the media wasn’t celebrating Woodward.

Woodward’s chats in the group show him denigrating Jews and gays while praising Mein Kampf and the German terror group National Socialist Underground. He liked the idea of people raping women who are minorities in order to “force them to carry around the spawn of their master and enemy.”

Other messages from Woodward’s Kik account show him praising ISIS:

Following Bernstein’s murder, Woodward’s chats “became highly sentimental,” as one of his messages stated, “hey everyone, i just wanted to let you all know i love you so much.”

As the Journal has previously reported, AWD celebrates Adolf Hitler and Charles Manson and calls for a violent race war. Four other people associated with AWD have been charged with murders and another plead guilty to owning explosives. Other chat messages obtained Pro Publica show one AWD member discussing the possibility of launching a terror attack on America’s power grid.

There are around 80 AWD members in 23 states across the country.

Woodward was arrested for murdering Bernstein after DNA evidence connected him to the crime; Woodward has plead not guilty.

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Episode 78 – Why Isn’t the Arab World Interested in Peace?

“You promised a dove.” Those words were written by the Israeli poet, Shmuel Hasfari, in his song “Winter ‘73”. Some interpreted them as a sort of eulogy to peace. A peace which was promised to a generation of Israelis who only found themselves disappointed time after time at the ever eluding prospect of peace with the Arab world.

The song was written around the same time as the Oslo Accords were signed between Israel and the PLO – a time of great hope for this generation – the kids of ‘73. But soon they were devastated once again. With the outbreak of the second intifada, many gave up hope for the prospect of peace. Some pointed their fingers at the Israeli leadership who failed them. Some blamed the settlement movement and others pinned the failure to attain peace on the Palestinian’s lack of determination.

Dr. Einat Wilf, a former Member of Knesset, grew up as a member of the Labor Party and was an ardent advocate of the two state solution. She believed that if only Israel and its leaders would propose the right deal, at the right time, we would have peace. We would have that allusive and elusive “dove”.

The kids of ‘73 had a childhood full of hope and aspirations. They grew up to peace treaties with Egypt and Jordan, and the Oslo Accords. However, the failure of those Accords, the atrocities of the second intifada, and stalemates upon stalemates in the peace process caused many in that generation to abandon hope.

Dr. Wilf join us today to talk about how her experiences both in and out of politics shaped her perspective on the peace process.

Einat Wilf on Twitter and her official website 

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I signed an Amicus Brief on behalf of Faith Leaders for DACA Rights

I have agreed to sign onto the Amicus Brief in support of nation nationally-recognized immigrant rights leader Ravi Ragbir’s lawsuit against the Department of Homeland Security, challenging the unlawful targeting of immigrant rights activists nationwide in violation of the First Amendment.

In the lawsuit Ragbir et al. v. Homan et al., nationally recognized immigrant rights leader Ravi Ragbir, along with the New Sanctuary Coalition, CASA de Maryland, Detention Watch Network, National Immigration Project of the National Lawyers Guild, and the New York Immigration Coalition, are challenging the unlawful targeting of immigrant rights activists nationwide in violation of the First Amendment. Represented by attorneys at Arnold & Porter and the NYU Immigrant Rights Clinic, Plaintiffs have filed a motion for a preliminary injunction, which seeks an order (1) staying Mr. Ragbir’s removal pending adjudication of the case, and (2) restraining federal immigration officials from taking any adverse immigration enforcement action against any noncitizen on the basis of protected speech or expressive conduct, or, in the alternative, preliminarily enjoining federal immigration officials from opening an investigation into, surveilling, accelerating proceedings against, detaining, or altering the provisions of any order against any noncitizen on the basis of protected speech or expressive conduct.

The law firm of Patterson Belknap Webb & Tyler, LLP, is drafting an amicus brief on behalf of faith leaders in support of the plaintiffs. The brief is tentatively due March 1, 2018. The brief will describe the sanctuary movement and argue that the targeting of immigrants, faith leaders, and places of worship affiliated with the sanctuary movement – through retaliation and surveillance – raises serious First Amendment concerns.

Amicus briefs from faith leaders are often filed in major litigation across the country, including in Gloucester County School Board v. GG to oppose discrimination against transgender individuals, and in Masterpiece Cakeshop, Ltd. v. Colorado Civil Rights Commission to oppose discrimination against same-sex couples.

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