Saturday, September 13, 2025

Top News | ​Global Condemnation for Israeli Attack in Qatar

 

CAUGHT IN SPAM FOLDER!

Tuesday, September 9, 2025

■ Today's Top News 


'We Won't Be Silent': 1,000+ Students Protest Trump's DC Takeover

"The students leading today's walkouts are showing the entire nation what it means to resist authoritarianism with strength and solidarity," said Rep. Pramila Jayapal.

By Jessica Corbett



Progressives Blast MAHA Report That 'Echoes the Pesticide Industry's Talking Points'

One critic called the report "a slap in the face to the millions of Americans, from health-conscious moms to environmental advocates to farmers, who have been calling for meaningful action on pesticides."

By Brad Reed



Global Condemnation for Israeli Attack on Hamas Negotiators as Qatar Suspends Ceasefire Mediation

One policy expert called the bombing "an attack on diplomacy itself" that could do long-term harm to US credibility.

By Julia Conley

Following Israel’s assassination attempt against members of Hamas’ negotiating team in Doha, Qatar on Tuesday, Qatari officials announced the country’s mediation efforts aimed at reaching a ceasefire deal to end Israel’s bombardment of Gaza would be suspended—suggesting the Israeli military is now entering “full ethnic cleansing mode,” according to one academic.

The total breakdown of the ceasefire talks comes after Israel’s bombing in Doha, which Israeli officials claimed responsibility for on Tuesday and said was aimed at assassinating the negotiators—but ultimately killed six people who were not involved with Hamas’ team.

The Trump administration said Tuesday it had been aware of the attack before it was carried out and claimed it had warned Qatari officials—which Qatar denied.

Analysts suggested the lead-up to the bombing—with the US securing Hamas and Israeli support for a vague ceasefire proposal that was to be discussed in Doha—pointed to a scenario in which the US helped orchestrate the attack and aided “an attack on diplomacy itself,” as Center for International Policy executive vice president Matt Duss said.

Duss, a former foreign policy adviser to US Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), warned the assassination attempt could cause long-lasting harm to the United States’ reputation.

“This is an attack in the capital of a major non-NATO US ally in the midst of US-supported negotiations—against officials who were originally hosted there at the United States’ request,” said Duss. “If it was conducted with the approval of the US, it’s the latest nail in the coffin of [President Donald] Trump’s claim to be a ‘peacemaker.’ This will have disastrous consequences for future peace efforts, and for US security.”

“This collaboration is evidenced by the blatant plan to lure ceasefire negotiators into a single location under the pretense of peace talks, only to attempt to assassinate them.”

The Trump administration’s response to the attack was ambiguous, with press secretary Karoline Leavitt saying the bombing did not ”advance Israel or America’s goals” but adding that “eliminating Hamas... is a worthy goal.”

The attack, said Duss, makes clear that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu intends to see Israel’s accelerating campaign of ethnic cleansing in Gaza through to the end,” and has no intention of reaching a ceasefire deal.

Gregg Carlstrom of The Economist said that as far as countries in the Gulf region are concerned, the question of whether Trump knew about the attack ahead of time “is somewhat irrelevant.”

“If yes, he approved a strike on a country under an American security guarantee,” said Carlstrom. “If no, he couldn’t prevent said strike. Either way, the question for Gulf leaders is the same: What is the value of American security guarantees?”

Condemnation of the attacks poured in from global leaders including United Nations Secretary General António Guterres, who said Israel’s actions were “a clear violation of [Qatar’s] sovereignty and territorial integrity” and accused Israeli officials of “destroying” efforts for a permanent ceasefire.

Other countries including Algeria, Jordan, and Egypt also decried the attack on Qatar’s “sovereignty” and accused Israel of undermining the talks.

The peace group CodePink asserted that “the US is fully aware of Israel’s intentions and actively collaborates with it” to reach the “true objective” of “the ethnic cleansing of Palestinians.”

“This collaboration is evidenced by the blatant plan to lure ceasefire negotiators into a single location under the pretense of peace talks, only to attempt to assassinate them,” said CodePink. “This is a complete rejection of a diplomatic solution—something Israel has no intention of reaching. This attack on foreign soil also serves as a direct challenge to Qatar, proving that neither its borders, laws, nor financial influence can deter Israeli strikes.”

The assassination attempt proves, said the group, that “peace negotiations are essentially antithetical to Israel and a trap for more assassinations and attacks on sovereign nations.”

“It is time world leaders take a principled stand in defense of the people of Gaza,” said the group. “The more the international community fails to hold Israel accountable, the more brazen it becomes in their war crimes.”



Mamdani Holds Huge Lead in NYC Mayor's Race, But Top Dems Still Won't Back Him

Voters trust Mamdani more on issues from affordability to crime to Israel-Palestine, but one strategist says party leadership is likely still refusing to back him due to "donor pressure."

By Stephen Prager



'What Other Country Gets Away With All of This?': Israel Bombs Hamas Ceasefire Negotiating Team in Doha

"The whole point was to gather people together to discuss the peace offer to kill them," said one journalist.

By Julia Conley



'Gaza Is Being Obliterated,' Says Top UN Official, as World Leaders Stand Aside

"There is no safe place in Gaza, let alone a humanitarian zone," said UNRWA chief Philippe Lazzarini. "It is a large and growing camp concentrating hungry Palestinians in despair."

By Brad Reed


JOIN THE MOVEMENT


As a people-powered nonprofit news outlet, we cover the issues the corporate media never will.

Your contribution supports this bold media model—free, independent, and dedicated to reporting the facts every day. Stand with us in the fight for economic equality, social justice, human rights, and a more sustainable future.

■ Opinion


Democratic Senators Should Refuse to Fund Trump’s Fascist Government

Keeping the US government funded now is to participate in the most atrocious misuse of the power of the United States in modern times.

By Robert Reich


Trump and Wright Are Turning America Into a Gas Station Masquerading as a Nation

Much of what they’ve been doing—from cutting funding for the arts to cancelling major renewable projects—seems designed to insure that fracked gas will be our central legacy.

By Bill Mckibben


Breaking: the Earth! So Where Are the Headlines?

Thanks to both Donald Trump and the media, most of the time all too many of us barely sense that, as I write this and you read it, the slow-motion equivalent of atomic weapons is going off on this planet of ours.

By Tom Engelhardt


I Rescued 4 Chickens From Abuse; Now I’m the One Facing a Felony Trial

Poppy, a rescued chicken.

The rescued chicken Poppy is shown. 

(Photo by Direct Action Everywhere)

I refuse to accept that helping a few baby birds makes me a criminal, let alone a dangerous one.

By Zoe Rosenberg


As I write this, a GPS ankle monitor shows law enforcement exactly where I am. This invasive device has been strapped to my leg for nearly two years. It has come with me to family dinners, to doctors’ appointments, to university classes, and more. I have been forced to wear it in order to remain free pending a criminal trial, which begins next week. I face nearly half a decade in jail.

My trial is expected to last several weeks, though there is no doubt that I did what prosecutors say. My alleged crime? Taking less than $25 worth of chicken. This wouldn’t normally lead to felony charges or a government-monitored GPS tracking device. But, you see, the four chickens I took were alive.

In the city of Petaluma, about an hour north of San Francisco, nestled between a Subway and a Starbucks, lies a heavily guarded fortress. Nearly every night of the week, more than 40,000 live birds are driven through its gates. In the mornings, their deceased and dismembered bodies are wrapped in plastic, decorated with claims about sustainability, animal welfare, and a lack of antibiotics. Finally, they’re stamped with the brand names “Rocky the Free Range Chicken” and “Rosie the Organic Chicken.” By the time their bodies reenter the outside world, shipped to grocery stores like Safeway and Trader Joe’s, the birds have been thoroughly objectified, their suffering repackaged as ethical consumption.

This fortress is the Petaluma Poultry slaughterhouse, a subsidiary of Perdue, one of the nation’s largest poultry producers. In important ways, Perdue’s Petaluma Poultry represents the worst of animal agriculture. Its branding is frighteningly deceptive, the company a master of manipulative marketing. Petaluma Poultry touts the supposed “luxuries” its chickens enjoy, posting seemingly staged videos of birds frolicking in the grass while, in reality, the birds live and die in factory farm conditions. Factory farming is widely known to be horrific, and companies like Petaluma Poultry represent a major obstacle to stopping it: They advertise animal suffering and slaughter as moral goods.

I know how birds at Petaluma live and die because I have been inside its facilities. In 2023, as an investigator with Direct Action Everywhere, I entered multiple Petaluma Poultry facilities. On these factory farms, I found chickens crowded together in filthy barns. One facility had mortality rates more than double the industry standard. Birds were suffering from severe neglect and dying from blood infections caused by multidrug-resistant bacteria. An investigation of the slaughterhouse found similar trends. One night, in April 2023, over 1,000 chickens from one shipment were condemned post-slaughter when workers opened them up and found their bodies full of infection.

Since 1993, Perdue has claimed its chickens “grow up healthy.” Nothing could be further from the truth. Of the multiple facilities I’ve been inside, I haven’t seen a single chicken I’d describe with such a word. Chickens in the meat industry are systemically unhealthy. They’ve been genetically manipulated to grow three times faster and larger than natural. Their legs collapse as they struggle to hold their own weight. Their hearts fail, and their feet develop pressure sores. The poor health of the birds in Petaluma Poultry facilities is exacerbated by their poor housing conditions and lack of medical care.

In court, I will view myself simply as a representative, a body and a voice, for all of the chickens who have been wronged by Perdue, and by the animal agriculture industry as a whole.

Much of what I have documented at Petaluma Poultry’s facilities is criminal animal cruelty in the state of California. However, repeated reports to law enforcement, over multiple years, have not resulted in any enforcement. Haunted by the knowledge of the immense violence within, I entered Perdue’s Petaluma Poultry slaughterhouse on June 13, 2023. Partially disguised as a worker, I stepped into the cool night and approached a truck stacked high with crates crammed full with baby chickens. I rescued four of them, including one I named Poppy, who had an injured toe, a body covered in scratches, and intestines filled with parasites. I got all four birds veterinary care and shared their stories, asking members of the public to join me in calling for immediate action from law enforcement.

The rescue of four little hens finally sparked law enforcement intervention. However, instead of investigating years of reported criminal animal cruelty, law enforcement set off on a mission to gather evidence on what was likely the first act of compassion to be carried out within the slaughterhouse’s carefully constructed walls—and to charge me with crimes.

Months after the rescue, as I was walking toward the Sonoma County Sheriff’s Office to once again file a report of documented animal cruelty at Petaluma Poultry, I was placed in handcuffs and arrested on seven counts of felony conspiracy. I was told about warrants obtained to access my cell-phone data and other records. Though some charges have since been dismissed or consolidated, I still face one felony, three misdemeanors, and nearly five years in jail. I have been forced to wear a GPS ankle monitor and adhere to other harsh pretrial release conditions for nearly two years because the government is afraid I might rescue more birds.

Why? It’s certainly not the monetary value of the birds. The value of a relatively healthy chicken raised in agriculture is only a few dollars, and the routine deaths of thousands before they even reach slaughter is deemed the cost of business. Moreover, there are so many animals in these facilities, it is unlikely anyone would have even noticed four chickens were gone if I had not publicized it. Instead, what is threatening is the idea inherent in my actions: that animals are individuals with lives worth living.

I’m a 23-year-old university student. I’ve been rescuing animals from abuse since the age of 11, when I founded my nonprofit, Happy Hen Animal Sanctuary. In the past, I’ve been able to work with law enforcement. Together, we’ve rescued roosters from illegal cockfighting rings and placed farmed animals in loving forever homes. But now, for saving four chickens, my entire future is at stake.

As I’ve gone to court over the past 20 months, represented by the Animal Activist Legal Defense Project, it has become obvious that the prosecutors are trying to make an example out of me to scare other concerned members of the public. But that’s okay. Let me be an example. Let me be an example of courage in the face of repression and of compassion in the face of violence. Let me be an example of just how impossible it will be to stop the movement for animal rights.

I will not apologize for my actions. I will not hang my head in shame. I refuse to accept that helping a few baby birds makes me a criminal, let alone a dangerous one. To apologize would be to say that Poppy, Ivy, Aster, and Azalea deserved the cruelty inflicted on them. It would be to say they deserved to shiver in a crate, covered in scrapes and bruises, as they were eaten alive by parasites. Any apology would be a lie. I am not sorry I saved their lives.

Next week, I will be taking this case to trial. In court, I will view myself simply as a representative, a body and a voice, for all of the chickens who have been wronged by Perdue, and by the animal agriculture industry as a whole. I will tell the jury about the birds I rescued, and the birds failed by Sonoma County law enforcement.



No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.

BRIDGEWATER TRAFIC STOP: ‘Just skin and bones’: Routine traffic stop in Mass. town leads to heartbreaking discovery

  ‘Just skin and bones’: Routine traffic stop in Mass. town leads to heartbreaking discovery NOW PLAYING ABOVE Dog found 'barely alive...