Archive for the ‘Media Control’ Category

Syrian Election Shows The Extent Of Assad’s Power – NPR

Syrian President Bashar Assad and his wife, Asma, vote at a polling station during the presidential election Wednesday in Douma, near the Syrian capital of Damascus. Hassan Ammar/AP hide caption

Syrian President Bashar Assad and his wife, Asma, vote at a polling station during the presidential election Wednesday in Douma, near the Syrian capital of Damascus.

It was a decision as symbolic as the Syrian presidential election itself.

On Wednesday morning, Syrians woke to local television footage of President Bashar Assad and the first lady, Asma Assad, casting their ballots. The pair were not in a loyalist stronghold but in Douma, the satellite town of Damascus whose residents proved some of the staunchest opponents to Syria's authoritarian regime.

In the early days of Syria's decade-long civil war, people from Douma formed some of the first armed groups against the regime. Civilians there also held mass protests, risking live bullets from government soldiers to call for an end to the regime.

They paid a heavy price. In 2013, the regime placed Douma and other satellite towns in these eastern suburbs of Damascus under a tight siege, blockading food, medical equipment and aid supplies. For five years, civilians survived on mostly scraps and some starved. The regime and its ally Russia hit the area with airstrikes and shellfire that rights groups say targeted homes, bakeries and hospitals.

A chemical weapons attack on Douma prompted then-President Donald Trump in 2017 to take the most concerted direct action of the war against the regime with airstrikes in government-held Syria.

Now, with Assad back in control of large parts of Syria, Wednesday's presidential election was a chance for the regime demonstrate the extent of its power.

"Assad casting his ballot in Douma is sending a message telling the opposition that we are celebrating through your demise. We are in power here, we are in control," says Danny Makki, a Syrian British journalist and analyst in Damascus. "It's a message about who is top dog within Syria."

This show of strength is visible in Damascus, where giant posters of Assad daub the walls of high-rise buildings, roundabouts and roadsides. In recent weeks, dinners and dances have been held in support of the Syrian president's campaign.

Many of these events are organized by Syrian businessmen and other citizens who see this presidential election the first in seven years as a way to ingratiate themselves with the regime. Assad's government, with its sprawling security apparatus, once again tightly controls almost every aspect of Syrian life from whom you can do business with to what you can say.

The U.S., along with Britain, France, Germany and Italy, released a joint statement calling the Syrian presidential election "neither free nor fair" and voicing support for civil society and Syrian opposition groups who have condemned the process.

Assad's two challengers in the presidential race are Abdallah Saloum Abdallah, a former deputy Cabinet minister, and Mahmoud Ahmed Marei, who leads a small opposition party approved by the government.

Meanwhile, known political opponents to Assad remain in exile, or are among the tens of thousands of people that the United Nations says have been arrested, tortured and disappeared into regime prisons since the start of the conflict in 2011.

The presidential candidates in this election have lacked both the funds and time to campaign. That means they have been unable to mount any significant challenge to Assad, whose family has ruled Syria with an iron fist for some five decades.

Makki says Syrian law allowed the candidates only 10 days to campaign, so many Syrians barely knew who Assad's challengers were. Instead of a serious presidential race, he says, the run-up to the election has been a "celebratory kind of pro-Assad great spectacle that has been played and replayed in every part of the country."

This fealty was also seen at the polls, with some voters pricking their fingers with needles at polling stations so that they could sign their support for the president with their blood. This was often coupled with the popular pro-Assad chant: "With our blood and soul we sacrifice our lives for you Bashar."

The vote took place only in parts of Syria that are back under government control. It excluded the millions of citizens living in the rebel-held province of Idlib and in the northeast of Syria that is controlled by U.S.-backed Kurdish forces, which together make up almost a third of the country.

After 10 years of war, more than half of Syria's population has fled the country or been internally displaced. The war in Syria has left an estimated half a million people dead and has devastated entire cities.

Just as Syrians try to start to piece back together their lives in government-held parts of the country, they have been sent back into spiraling poverty by an economic crisis caused by the war, Western sanctions and the effect of the economic collapse in neighboring Lebanon.

In regime-held Syria, now mostly home to loyalists or people who lack the political or economic freedom to leave, it was expected that most of those going to the polls would cast ballots for Assad.

"The people inside Syria right now believe that the best solution for them is the current president," a Syrian businessman in Damascus tells NPR, asking not to be named because he fears that speaking with Western media could upset the regime.

He says Syrians want to use this election to be a starting point to "build a better Syria," and are desperate for stability and a new era of peace, even if it means living under the current regime. "People want hope."

The election result is a foregone conclusion, and does little to build relations with Western governments. But it is a useful tool for the Syrian regime to project legitimacy with governments in the region.

There are new signs of rapprochement between Syria and Saudi Arabia, which backed opponents of Assad in the war. Saudi's intelligence chief reportedly met with his Syrian counterpart in Damascus this month. Syrian state media say the country's tourism minister, Muhammad Rami Martini, is visiting Saudi Arabia for the first time in what is reportedly the first trip there by a Syrian regime minister in a decade.

Beyond the pomp and demonstrations of support for Assad, there are other Syrians for whom the election is symbolic of everything they have lost.

"The regime stole our lives. They destroyed our lives," a Syrian from the city of Homs tells NPR from the U.K., where he now lives. He fled there in 2011 after seeing his friends killed and arrested in government crackdowns on peaceful demonstrators.

He didn't want NPR to use his name for fear it could endanger his family members who still live in Syria.

"If you look at Syria's cities, they are in ruins, and these are really the ruins of our lives and dreams and hopes," he says. "People just wished for a better future to live in dignity, freedom and justice."

He says the regime has won at the cost of the country. In this collapsed economy, his family in Syria, like so many others, struggles even to put meals on the table. "The regime turned Syria into a society that is built on despair."

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Trio of USO Service Members of the Year go above and beyond – NASCAR

The 2021 NASCAR Salutes Together with Coca-Cola campaign is more than just a military appreciation platform its a campaign that salutes heroes next door. Each week, NASCAR.com will highlight multiple individuals who have made a difference with their service both in the military and to their communities.

In the latest profiles, NASCAR.com is highlighting three 2020 USO Service Members of the Year: SGT Mary Ehiarinmwian (USO Soldier of the Year), PO2 Andrew J. Fleming (USO Coast Guard Guardsman of the Year and Sgt Nolan P. McShane (USO Marine of the Year).

RELATED: Learn more about NASCAR Salutes | Archer, Rahmans actions save lives

SGT Ehiarinmwian was driving to conduct Physical Readiness Training (PRT) at Schofield Barracks in Hawaii. On her way to PRT, she was unknowingly driving behind a vehicle of a soldier from the same unit when that vehicle suddenly lost control and rolled over several times before coming to a rest, upside down, on a steel property gate almost impaling the driver.

She pulled her vehicle over and rendered assistance, seeing if the driver was injured before pulling the driver from the smoking vehicle and getting him to safety. Ehiarinmwian stayed with the driver until medical assistance arrived on site. She currently serves with the U.S. Armys 523rd Engineer Support Company and is from St. Robert, Missouri.

PO2 Fleming was conducting on-water booming operations off the coast of Georgia in his role as a marine science technician when a report of a capsized recreational finishing vessel came over his radio. He quickly directed his workboat to respond to assist in the recovery of two mariners from the capsized vessel. Upon his arrival at the scene, Fleming was able to pull the mariners from the water. One was unconscious and he successfully performed CPR and was able to resuscitate. While everyone was en route to Station Brunswick, he noticed the second mariners was showing signs of hypothermia and shock. Fleming moved quickly to remove the mariners soaked outer clothing and wrapped him in his own jacket to retain body heat as they made their way to the station.

During the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, Fleming led the efforts to establish protocols for Sector New Yorks remote facility inspection program. This helped to safeguard branch personnel from exposure to the virus and planned operations to ensure that the 200 facilities within the area of responsibility remained compliant with protocols. He serves in the U.S Coast Guards Sector New York and is from Lawrenceville, Georgia.

Sgt McShane (pictured above) was honored for his quick thinking during a training exercise in Twentynine Palms, California. In the course of the exercise, a Marine become severely wounded and McShane moved quickly to control the chaotic site, while confirming tourniquet placement and inspecting the pressure dressings on the wounded Marine. His calmness, leadership and tactical knowledge were vital in stabilizing the Marine prior to the air medical evacuation to the local hospital. He currently serves with the U.S. Martine Corps 1st Light Armored Reconnaissance Battalion and hails from Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

The details of the honorees brave actions were provided by the USO.

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Trio of USO Service Members of the Year go above and beyond - NASCAR

They tried to overturn the 2020 election. Now they want to run the next one. – POLITICO

The campaigns set up the possibility that politicians who have taken steps to undermine faith in the American democratic system could soon be the ones running it.

Someone who is running for an election administration position, whose focus is not the rule of law but instead the ends justifies the means, thats very dangerous in a democracy, said Bill Gates, the Republican vice chair of the Board of Supervisors in Maricopa County, Ariz. This is someone who is trying to tear at the foundations of democracy.

The secretary of state campaigns will also be tests of how deeply rooted Trumps lies about the election are in the Republican base. Sixty-four percent of Republican-leaning voters in a recent CNN poll said they did not believe Biden won enough votes legitimately to win the presidency.

Hice and Marchant are running to replace sitting Republican secretaries of state, while Finchem and Karamo are seeking the GOP nomination in states with Democratic incumbents. None of the four campaigns responded to interview requests.

Trey Grayson, a former Republican secretary of state in Kentucky, said there are two ways to look at the risk posed by the campaigns: Theres a symbolic risk, and then theres functional risk.

Grayson noted that, depending on the state, secretaries of state often play ministerial roles in election certification and vote counting, with more direct oversight of the process falling to local county and city election clerks. That means that functional risk of electing pro-Trump election truthers as secretaries of state could be lower than many perceive.

But the symbolic risk could be much higher. Any secretary of state who is a chief elections official is going to have a megaphone and a media platform during the election, Grayson said. A lot of the power is the perception of power, or that megaphone.

As candidates and officials, the quartet of Republicans have used their megaphones to promote claims of widespread fraud in the 2020 election.

Finchem, the Arizona state representative, has been a major proponent of the audit of the results in Maricopa County. The Republican-run state Senate is running the process in the states largest county, which Biden narrowly won. The audit has been a lightning rod, attracting heavy criticism from GOP officials in Maricopa County who say the auditors are doing shoddy, conspiracy-fueled work but nevertheless building up hope among Trump supporters who believe that he won the election.

Finchem appeared on the Twitch stream of Redpill78 which The New York Times reported promotes the QAnon conspiracy theory earlier this month, and said he has talked to Trump about the 2020 election. The mainstream media keep[s] using this term baseless, Finchem said on the Redpill show. I hate to break the news to you, but just in case you news people havent been paying attention, theres a lot of evidence thats already out there. Weve got the proof, weve got the receipts, he continued, calling the press a propaganda machine.

His appearance on the show was first reported by the Arizona Mirror, which also previously reported that Finchem had marched to the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6.

Finchem has also frequently promoted claims of fraud on social media. They won by cheating, now they want to make cheating legal. WTH this Stalinization of America has to come to an end, he wrote on Parler, the social media site popular on the right. Former Vice President Mike Pence now cares about election integrity? This reveals that he must acknowledge that there was fraud, he wrote on Gab, another site that caters to the far-right.

A screenshot of a Parler post from Mark Finchem is pictured. | POLITICO

Last week, the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors which includes Gates and is controlled 4-1 by Republicans lashed out at the Arizona state Senate over the audit, calling it a sham that has rented out the once good name of the Arizona State Senate to grifters and con-artists. The supervisors were flanked at a press conference by various county officials, including Sheriff Paul Penzone, a Democrat, and Recorder Stephen Richer, a Republican who was recently elected the countys chief elections officer.

Unprompted, Richer closed the press conference by tearing into Finchem, mocking the false conspiracy theories that voting machinery from the company Dominion Voting Systems was used to change election results.

Mark Finchem is running for secretary of state. Process that, he said. If the election was completely fraudulent, as he says, why would you run for secretary of state? What, do you think Dominion is going to rig it in your favor this time?

Why are you running if you do not believe in these elections? he closed. I would suggest that his actions speak a lot louder than his words.

In a subsequent interview with POLITICO, Richer analogized it to revealed preference, an economics theory: All these people, their true preferences and their true beliefs regarding the election system are more readily determined by their actions, which is to continue to run, he said, suggesting that if people really thought it was rigged, they wouldnt bother to run.

When asked whether he was considering a run for secretary of state in 2022, Richer quickly and flatly gave a one-word answer: No.

The most prominent candidate in the group is likely Hice, who is challenging Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, a Republican whom Trump has repeatedly attacked for defending the 2020 election as free and fair.

In a recent letter circulated to conservatives in Georgia and obtained by The Atlanta Journal Constitution, Hice wrote that the election was full of systemic voting irregularities and fraud, and that he was running to stop Democrats before they rig and ruin our democracy forever.

He is running his campaign with Trumps endorsement: Jody will stop the Fraud and get honesty into our Elections! Trump proclaimed the day Hice launched his campaign. Raffensperger is facing significant anger within his own party, but he recently reaffirmed that he would run again.

The danger is youre lying to either yourself or to millions of people when you try to run for these large, statewide elected offices, Georgia Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan, a Republican, said of the false electoral fraud claims.

Duncan, a vocal critic of Trump and other Republicans who push the election fraud myth, recently announced he would not seek reelection and instead focus on his GOP 2.0 initiative. He said a fixation on it will only hurt Republicans in the long term.

There is a vacuum of leadership, and folks wanting to put themselves into even higher leadership positions, continuing to carry on with the lies and misinformation, continues to create an even bigger vacuum around our party, he said.

Duncan, who was in Washington D.C. last week to take meetings about GOP 2.0 (he declined to say with whom) said he believed the party would come around: Theyre just going to get tired of losing. Theyre going to get tired of running people out there that just are unelectable.

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They tried to overturn the 2020 election. Now they want to run the next one. - POLITICO

Packers Jordan Love Off To An Impressive Start – Forbes

With Aaron Rodgers wanting out of Green Bay, Jordan Love could be the Packers' starting quarterback ... [+] in 2021.

The future of Aaron Rodgers is undoubtedly the talk of the football world.

But while the Green Bay Packers and their disgruntled quarterback figure whether a reconciliation is possible, life goes on for everybody else. Right now, that means organized team activities, which were open to the media Tuesday.

And heres what we learned.

Second-year quarterback Jordan Love, the Packers first round draft pick in 2020, appears to have taken a step forward this offseason.

Green Bay head coach Matt LaFleur said, the ball is really jumping out of (Loves) hands well right now.

Nose tackle Kenny Clark said Love looked far more comfortable than a year ago.

Yeah, he definitely looks more comfortable, Clark said of Love. You know, Im excited to see him grow, know what Im saying. Im excited to see him just come out and just commanding his huddle and leading the guys and doing what he do. Cant wait to see him play in the preseason and all that kind of stuff and get some live action. That will be for a later time, but right now, you can tell hes a lot more comfortable, talking more in the locker room. Hes enjoying himself out there and thats good to see.

When Brett Favre retired, unretired, then tried coming back to the Packers in the summer 2008, it was an enormous distraction for everyone inside the organization.

When asked about Rodgers Tuesday, several players downplayed the potential disruption. But if the Rodgers-saga drags on, it will be a similar commotion to the one the Packers experienced 13 years ago.

That team went 6-10 just one year after finishing 13-3 and reaching the NFC Championship Game.

Im not worried about what other people are doing right now or whats going on, running back Aaron Jones said. Im just focused on myself and controlling what I can control. Ive got a lot going on myself and trying to make sure Im straight myself. Im not too worried about other people right now.

Clark agreed.

I don't think it's going to be that much of a distraction, he said. Weve got to control what we can control as a team and weve just to come out, practice, handle business and play ball. You know, weve got to leave that situation to the organization and Aaron. But as far as us up here, we only can control what we can control and handle our business.

Rodgers said Monday that communication was a problem inside Green Bays organization. For example, Rodgers was angry that management didn't give him a heads up that they were drafting Love in 2020.

Green Bays current power structure calls for team president Mark Murphy, general manager Brian Gutekunst, executive vice president Russ Ball and LaFleur to all meet regularly. When asked about any communication breakdowns Tuesday, LaFleur seemed to feel differently than his MVP quarterback.

I think the communication, especially as weve all kind of grown together, has gotten better and better, LaFleur said. We meet regularly. I dont think theres a day that goes by that I dont have communication with all three of those guys.

While OTAs are voluntary, ESPN reported that 79 of the Packers 89 players were on the field Tuesday. Interestingly, Green Bay was missing five wide receivers Davante Adams, Marquez Valdes-Scantling, Allen Lazard, Devin Funchess and Equanimeous St. Brown.

I think as a coach you always want as many guys that choose to show up here, LaFleur said. You talk about, I think theres a lot of team chemistry, which is so important in winning and losing in this league and just learning how to play together, learning how to practice together, setting the standards for this football team, so certainly, yeah, youd love to have everybody here.

With left tackle David Bakhtiari recovering from an ACL tear last December and Pro Bowl center Corey Linsley now a member of the Los Angeles Chargers, the Packers offensive line is in flux.

On Tuesday, Green Bays No. 1 unit consisted of left tackle David Bakhtiari, left guard Jon Runyan, center Josh Myers, right guard Lucas Patrick and right tackle Billy Turner.

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Packers Jordan Love Off To An Impressive Start - Forbes

Youth Activists Are Reframing the Palestinian Cause as the Palestinian Authority Stays Silent – Foreign Policy

May 25, 2021, 11:22 AM

RAMALLAH, West BankAs Israel pummeled Gaza with airstrikes for 11 days before a cease-fire went into effect on May 21, the Palestinian Authority (PA) was eerily absent from the scene, doing little beyond issuing pro forma statements of condemnation of the Israeli bombing campaign and the staggering death toll it caused.

But on the ground, civic leaders, especially Palestinian youth, have taken over the vacuum left by this rudderless leadership. Last week, they, together with Palestinian civil society groups, held a general strike throughout the occupied West Bank and Israel. The strike was significant in that it was strictly adhered to on both sides of the Green Line, essentially erasingalbeit temporarilythe pervasive geographical and political divide between Palestinians who are citizens of Israel and those who are not.

Before the current crisis, Palestinians frustration with their leadership had already reached unprecedented levels. The potential of Palestinian democracy has long been limited by Israels control of every facet of daily life in the occupied Palestinian territories, including of the electoral system. The last time a Palestinian legislative election was held, in 2006, Israel heavily obstructed voting in East Jerusalem. When Hamas then won a decisive victory, the United States and Israel destabilized the new government, installing PA President Mahmoud Abbas and his party, Fatah, into power in the West Bank.

In January, Abbas called for parliamentary and presidential elections to be held this spring and summerbut few were surprised when he ultimately indefinitely postponed them on April 29. Though Abbas blamed the decision on Israeli authorities refusal to allow voting in East Jerusalem, many believe he was in fact responding to a schism within Fatah, which threatened to complicate his reelection and weaken his iron grip on PA institutions.

The elections might have offered Palestinian voters the chance to put their support behind independent electoral lists. Though repressive legal restrictions prevented some groupssuch as the Generation for Democratic Renewal, a youth-led political initiativefrom running, polls showed growing support for a new list led by Nasser al-Qudwa, the late Palestinian leader Yasser Arafats nephew, which campaigned on a promise to fight rampant corruption, support the rule of law, and hold regular elections.

The election postponement contributed to growing disillusionment among Palestinians, who had registered to vote in large numbers despite polling showing deep skepticism that elections held under the current circumstances would be free and fair. Many Palestinians view the PA as preventing them from choosing representatives who speak to their needs and aspirations.

For young Palestinians in particular, fresh elections had presented a rare opportunity. Abbas is 85 years old and has been president since he was elected to what was supposed to be a four-year term in 2005. Many Palestinian youth born after the Oslo Accords were signed in 1993 have never cast a ballot. The United States has chosen to ignore this paradox, which sits in stark contrast to purported American values of human rights and democracy promotion.

The canceling of the elections ramped up the frustration and anger, said Nadia Hijab, co-founder and board president of Al-Shabaka: The Palestinian Policy Network. Elections under occupation are not as meaningful because you really have no control whatsoever, but losing the opportunity to vote was still disheartening, Hijab conceded.

Just before Abbas issued his decree, protests in Jerusalem began to draw international attention when Israeli authorities placed barriers at Damascus Gate, a meeting spot for mostly young Palestiniansespecially during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan. The police claimed that sitting in the area has been forbidden for over a decade.

A short walk away, in the Sheikh Jarrah neighborhood, Palestinian families were protesting looming eviction from their homes by right-wing Israeli settler organizations. The demonstrations swelled after an Israeli lower court in Jerusalem ruled in favor of the settlers earlier this year. The Israeli Supreme Court announced May 9 that it would delay hearing an appeal for one month.

Against this backdrop, Israeli police entered the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound and assaulted worshippers during the holiest night of Ramadan, triggering further outrage and anger that reverberated across the rest of the occupied Palestinian territories and throughout Israel. Hamas-launched rockets began to rain down on Israel from the besieged Gaza Strip, only to be followed by intense aerial attacks by Israeli forces. The assaults killed 248 Palestinians and 12 Israelis.

Along with destruction and fear, the crises in Gaza and East Jerusalem have produced new levels of unity in a Palestinian polity that has long been fragmented. For more than a decade, the schism between the rival factions of Fatah, which administers the occupied West Bank, and Hamas, which controls Gaza, has left Palestinians geographically and politically divided.

East Jerusalem, which Israel captured in the 1967 war and has controlled since, has largely been left without political representation; Gaza is isolated under a blockade that began in 2007; and Palestinian citizens of Israel are caught between seeking representation from the traditional Arab parties and participating in an Israeli political system that refuses to see them as equals. In the last week, however, Palestinians have demonstrated as oneon both sides of the Green Line. They were united by Sheikh Jarrah, which has become a symbol of common struggleone that has overcome traditional factional squabbles to translate into real action.

Without a political manifesto to which they must adhere, young Palestinians have taken to social media to raise awareness about the Israeli attacks on Gaza and the looming eviction of their fellow Palestinians in East Jerusalem.

Despite having been denied formal participation in Palestinian elections, and their oppression at the hands of Israeliand sometimes Palestiniansecurity forces, these young Palestinians have been campaigning on the ground, setting up support groups in places like Sheikh Jarrah, attending Israeli court hearings, and making their voices heard through protests and by speaking to the media. These activists communal solidarity, which had no prior coordination, has managed to hurl the Palestinian cause back into the political mainstream.

The people who claim to be leaders of the Palestinian people have failed to provide a national strategy, said Rashid Khalidi, a historian and professor at Columbia University. The Palestinian leadership is Palestinian civil society.

The demonstrations have gathered particular force in Israeli-controlled East Jerusalem, where the PA has neither access nor the political authority to restrain them. For Palestinians here, the last 10 years have been marked by increasing marginalization by the state. Poverty and crime have risen sharply, bringing with them disaffection, drugs, and the rage heard in nihilistic hip-hop forged behind the separation wall in neighborhoods like Issawiya and Kufr Aqab, and in the crumbling refugee camps of Qalandia and Shuafat.

Palestinian youth in East Jerusalem live a much different life than their counterparts in the occupied West Bank and Gazaenjoying freedom of movement and the right to work within Israel. At the same time, they are largely not assimilated into Israeli society.

Though Palestinian Jerusalemites sometimes take on Hebrew slang or even Israeli social norms, they are formally marginalized by both state and municipal laws. Over the years, Israel has enacted a raft of discriminatory policies within its civil and military judicial systems, curbing Palestinians access to building permits while rendering them subject to land expropriation and family separation at the hands of the Israeli state and settler organizations. The policies are part of Israels attempts to establish a Jewish majority in the cityin many ways the nexus of its approach to the larger territory it rules between the Mediterranean Sea and the Jordan River.

Ironically, the absence of a PA presence in East Jerusalemlong a source of the areas political isolationhas now become an opportunity for a grassroots movement to take shape and even garner international support for the families facing expulsion in Sheikh Jarrah. In the occupied West Bank, where the PA has shown strict adherence to its security coordination agreement with Israel, Palestinian security forces are often dispatched to sites of protest, where they quash demonstrations or detain Palestinians at the behest of Israeli authorities. In the past two weeks, there has been one such incident in Hebron.

The way Palestinians on both sides of the Green Line have turned out in support of the protests in East Jerusalem also reflects a changing Palestinian political consensus.

Previous political mobilizationssuch as the intifadascame at a moment in which Palestinian political energy and focus was framed within the effort of statehood, the two-state framework, said Yousef Munayyer, a Palestinian American writer and political analyst based in Washington. That consensus has now disappeared. People have woken up to the reality that were living in a one-state apartheid system.

This awakening has produced mass mobilization of unprecedented scale and scope. People who started out demonstrating against the Sheikh Jarrah expulsions moved on to protest the Israeli airstrikes on Gaza and the existing system of repression affecting Palestinian citizens of Israel. In mixed Jewish-Palestinian cities across Israel, intercommunal violence has soared in recent weeks. Though the rioting went both ways, the 750 arrests and 170 charges made by Israeli police were disproportionately of Palestinians.

While legacy media organizations have traditionally deferred to accounts presented by the Israeli government, Palestinian youth on TikTok, Instagram, WhatsApp, and other apps are now promulgating an alternate narrativereporting on, sharing, and disseminating live cellphone footage of events, pictures, and memes. This technology has given disparate voices a way to find solidarity throughout the diaspora, both online and in the streetswhere social media has played a prominent role in marshalling protesters in Israel, the occupied Palestinian territories, and around the world. Supporters of the Palestinian cause have also traded tips on how to beat censorship on social media platforms.

Im amazed to see the support [between Palestinians] from the West Bank, cities within Israel proper, and in Gaza, said Ins Abdel Razek, an advocacy director for the Ramallah-based Palestine Institute for Public Diplomacy. You can see messages of solidarity between people who cannot even meet and be with each other.

On May 8, several buses carrying Palestinians from Israeli cities were prevented from entering Jerusalem by Israeli police, so the Palestinians decided to carry on by foot. When cellphone photos and videos began to emerge on social media platforms, many Jerusalemites drove and picked them up.

Some Palestinians believe it is only a matter of time before new leadership emerges outside of the traditional Palestinian power brokers and political parties.

This generation that runs things has failed, and it should leave the stage, Khalidi, the historian, said. Until that happens, that vacuum necessarily is filled by people like the young people in Jerusalem.

These young people include Mohammed and Muna al-Kurd, who have become the go-to sources for media seeking voices from Sheikh Jarrah. Their active social media presence has helped shape the narrative on the neighborhood, which in recent weeks has become a closed-off, militarized zone.

It is youth uprisings that are saving this place, Muna told +972 magazine earlier this month. The issue of Sheikh Jarrah is their issue as well, our homes are their homes, what is happening to the homes here will happen to their homes in the future.

Time and time again over the past monthwhether during the Damascus Gate protests or the ensuing collective response to Sheikh Jarrah and, now, GazaPalestinians have defined their own space and narrative in spite of Israeli efforts to delegitimize them. Though the scale and intensity of Israels aerial assault in Gaza has in some ways overpowered the medias attention on Sheikh Jarrah, it is clear that a corner has been turned within the Palestinian national movement. Palestinian youth know that they hold power, agency, and keys to the futureeven under occupation or bombardment.

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Youth Activists Are Reframing the Palestinian Cause as the Palestinian Authority Stays Silent - Foreign Policy