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The Iowa Hawkeyes will continue their pursuit of another Big Ten tournament title when they face Michigan in the conference tournament semifinals on Saturday.

The second-seeded Hawkeyes are the tournament’s highest seed remaining after Ohio State was ousted by Maryland in the quarterfinals.

In the teams earlier matchup on Feb. 15, Caitlin Clark broke the NCAA’s women’s basketball record all-time scoring record when she poured in 49 points in a 106-89 win over the Wolverines.

Clark scored 24 points with 10 rebounds and seven assists in Iowa’s 95-62 victory rout over Penn State on Friday in the quarterfinals. She missed her first 11 three-point attempts before hitting two in the fourth quarter to give her 164 3-point makes for the season, breaking Stephen Curry’s record of 162 set in his sophomore season at Davidson.

Iowa has won this tournament each of the last two years, and Clark has been named the Most Outstanding Player both times.

What time does Iowa women’s basketball vs. Michigan start today?

When: March 9, 4:30 p.m. ET

Where: Target Center in Minneapolis, Minnesota

How to watch Iowa vs. Michigan

The game will be broadcast on the Big Ten Network.

Who are the announcers for Iowa women’s basketball vs. Michigan?

Sloane Martin is the play-by-play announcer, with Meghan McKeown as the analyst. Autumn Johnson will be on the sideline reporting duties.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

When Vegas traded for Noah Hanifin on Wednesday, a condition in the deal stated what the Calgary Flames would receive if the Golden Knights no longer had their 2025 first-round pick by Sunday.

That meant the Golden Knights had another deal in the works and their Friday trade for San Jose Sharks All-Star Tomas Hertl shocked the hockey world.

Hertl is currently hurt but is due back before the playoffs. He, coveted defenseman Hanifin and big-bodied 20-goal scorer Anthony Mantha will make the Golden Knights a tough opponent as they try to repeat as Stanley Cup champions. If injured Mark Stone and Alec Martinez return for the first round, the team is even more formidable.

The Golden Knights get an A- for their trade deadline work. Here are other notable teams’ grades:

Carolina Hurricanes: A-

Jake Guentzel and Evgeny Kuznetsov are proven playoff performers. Guentzel has 34 career playoff goals and Kuznetsov was dominant during the Washington Capitals’ 2018 Stanley Cup run. There are some risks. The Hurricanes gave up Michael Bunting, three prospects and picks for a player who could choose to leave in free agency. Kuznetsov is going through a tough season and he entered the NHL/NHLPA Player Assistance Program in February. But the Hurricanes’ additions should make a difference after they lost four consecutive one-goal games in last season’s conference final.

Florida Panthers: B+

The Panthers stood pat last year and reached the Stanley Cup Final as the second wild-card team. The No. 1 overall team could have stood still this year, but the Panthers boosted their top six forwards with Vladimir Tarasenko and their bottom six with Kyle Okposo. Tarasenko is a former Cup winner and Okposo will be motivated as he’s now set to reach the playoffs for the first time since 2015-16.

Colorado Avalanche: B

They landed a No. 2 center in Casey Mittelstadt and found a buyer for Ryan Johansen, who didn’t work in that role. Defenseman Bowen Byram was a tough loss but newly acquired Sean Walker is having a strong season. Brandon Duhaime and Yakov Trenin make the Avalanche more physical. Plus, they’re getting Valeri Nichushkin back from the assistance program. The one quibble: A more-experienced backup would help, but Justus Annunen has been impressive in his last three appearances.

Winnipeg Jets: B

Adding Tyler Toffoli on Friday and Sean Monahan earlier is a big boost to their top six forwards. Colin Miller joins the defense.

Edmonton Oilers: B

Adam Henrique can move up and down the lineup, Sam Carrick provides toughness and Troy Stecher kills penalties.

New York Rangers: B-

Considering they were rumored to be seeking a big-name winger, their acquisitions seemed underwhelming. Last year’s big splashes of Tarasenko and Patrick Kane didn’t lead to a playoff run, so maybe subtle is better. Alex Wennberg can be a shutdown player, Jack Roslovic is on a roll and Chad Ruhwedel will help with defensive depth while Jacob Trouba is out of the lineup the next 2-3 weeks. They also held onto former No. 2 overall pick Kaapo Kakko and their top prospects.

Pittsburgh Penguins: B-

They got a big haul in the Guentzel deal. The hope is Bunting can fill Guentzel’s spot on Sidney Crosby’s line because he played alongside elite players in Toronto. The true test of this deal is how prospects Ville Koivunen, Cruz Lucius and Vasily Ponomarev develop.

Boston Bruins: C

You can’t argue with adding a three-time Stanley Cup winner (Pat Maroon), especially when the projected first-round series with the Toronto Maple Leafs could be feisty. But their moves seemed underwhelming compared with last year.

Tampa Bay Lightning: C

Forward Anthony Duclair and defenseman Matt Dumba are fine additions, but the team didn’t do more to replace injured Mikhail Sergachev. It was also strange that they took on part of Henrique’s salary to help facilitate his trade to the Oilers.

New Jersey Devils: C-

They made their long-awaited goaltending moves by acquiring Jake Allen and Kaapo Kahkonen, but it’s too late. Perhaps if they had pulled off a move earlier, Lindy Ruff wouldn’t have been fired and Toffoli might still be with the team. General manager Tom Fitzgerald told NHL Network he’ll still be looking for goaltending in the offseason. Getting Vitek Vanecek, who has an extra year on his contract, off the books will help that pursuit.

San Jose Sharks: D

The return for Duclair and Hertl wasn’t impressive, especially since San Jose sent two third-round picks to Vegas. They weren’t able to move pending UFA Alexander Barabanov. The Sharks better hope they win the draft lottery and are able to pick Macklin Celebrini.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

It’s been teased for weeks but now it’s official: The Rock will be in the ring at WrestleMania 40.

He will team up with Undisputed WWE Universal Champion Roman Reigns for a match against Cody Rhodes and World Heavyweight Champion Seth Rollins.

The match, which will take place during night one of the two-day event, will have a stipulation: If Rhodes and Rollins win, The Bloodline will be barred from being ringside on night two for the main event match between Reigns and Rhodes for the Undisputed WWE Universal Championship. If The Rock and Reigns win, then it will be Bloodline rules, which means The Rock will do ‘everything’ to make sure Rhodes doesn’t win the title.

The two-vs.-two match was made official Friday during ‘Smackdown’ as Rhodes and Rollins appeared on the program and accepted the conditions, which were initially proposed by The Rock on last week’s episode of ‘Smackdown’ in response to Rhodes declaring at Elimination Chamber he wanted a match against The Rock. Rollins then added he would have Rhodes’ back if a match took place.

A WrestleMania match has been brewing for weeks, ever since it appeared The Rock would challenge Reigns at WWE’s flagship event, even though Rhodes won the 2024 Royal Rumble and had already said he would pick Reigns as his WrestleMania opponent. The abrupt decision was met with backlash from WWE fans. Then, at the WrestleMania 40 kickoff in Las Vegas, Rhodes invoked his title match after Reigns said he and The Rock would face off in the ring. Words were exchanged, and the event ended with The Rock slapping Rhodes.

Rhodes got a little revenge Friday, slapping The Rock during the ‘Smackdown’ broadcast.

This will mark The Rock’s first WWE match since 2016, when he quickly defeated Erick Rowan in six seconds at WrestleMania 32. Before that, he last competed in WrestleMania 29 in 2013, when he lost to John Cena.

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Deiondra Sanders, 31, is expecting the baby with R&B singer Jacquees. She called the pregnancy a ‘miracle’ and noted her pregnancy comes with health risks after having four myomectomy surgeries to remove fibroid non-cancerous growths in the uterus. She said she has seven current fibroids and was warned about a high-risk pregnancy.

“Even though this was not planned nor expected, this is still something God allowed to happen,” she wrote on Instagram. “I’m not having my baby to keep a man. I am having my baby for all the times I was told I wouldn’t be able to. I’m having my baby for the 4 myomectomy surgeries I have had. I am having my baby for all the years I stayed on birth control even though it gave me breast tumors. I’m having my baby for all the Doctors that told me I wouldn’t make it out the first trimester.”

She described it all as a “divine blessing.”

“I’m having a baby for all the high risk moms that was scared everyday thinking they would miscarry,” she wrote. “I’m keeping my baby for the 3 Months I continued to bleed everyday after I found out I was pregnant. I’m having this baby to give hope to all the other women that may be in my situation. No matter what Doctor’s say, GOD HAS THE FINAL SAY!”

Deion Sanders, the head football coach at Colorado, reacted to the news on Instagram.

“PREACH BABY PREACH, and u having this baby to make me a darn GRANDDADDY even though I’m YOUNG!” wrote Deion Sanders, also known as Coach Prime. “Love u baby and I’m glad u said u ain’t having a baby to keep a man. You’ve always had a MAN in your life that u call DADDY & ain’t gon ever ever let u DOWN especially when I’m UP.”

Jacquees, 29, is known for the 2016 single “B.E.D.” among other R&B songs. He also responded to Deiondra’s post on Instagram and posted a photo of him apparently kissing Deiondra’s pregnant stomach.

“I love you and I got you,” he wrote.

Deion Sanders has three sons and two daughters, with his three youngest currently playing sports at Colorado. His other daughter Shelomi is a non-scholarship player for the women’s basketball team. His sons Shedeur and Shilo play quarterback and safety on the football team. His eldest son Deion Jr., a former football player at SMU, now runs Well Off Media, which promotes Colorado football with daily insider videos on YouTube.

Follow reporter Brent Schrotenboer @Schrotenboer. Email: bschrotenb@usatoday.com

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Caitlin Clark’s list of superlatives keeps growing. Already the best scorer in the history of NCAA Division I basketball, she broke Steph Curry’s single-season record for 3-pointers Friday. 

After missing her first 11 shots from 3-point range, Clark connected with 8:39 left in the fourth quarter of the Big Ten tournament quarterfinals against Penn State. That gave her 163 for the year, one more than Curry made during his sophomore season at Davidson.

‘Steph’s amazing,” she said after the game. “Somebody I grew up idolizing, so a cool moment.”

Clark has had a lot of them this season.

With a free throw late in the first half vs. Ohio State on March 3, Clark passed Pete Maravich of LSU with her 3,668th point to become the all-time leading scorer in NCAA Division I, regardless of gender. It happened in front of her childhood hero, former WNBA MVP Maya Moore, and numerous celebs took to Twitter to congratulate her on the milestone.

This comes after Feb. 15 vs. Michigan, when Clark broke the women’s NCAA Division I record set in 2017 by Washington’s Kelsey Plum. Fittingly, it came when Clark hit a logo 3 with 7:48 left in the first quarter. She finished with a career-high 49 points, and congratulations poured in from all over the sports world.

On Feb. 28, in a blowout win over Minnesota, Clark passed Lynette Woodard, who set the all-time women’s college scoring record at Kansas from 1977-81 when she scored 3,649 points for the Jayhawks. The NCAA didn’t run women’s basketball then, which means Woodard’s record has been confined to the Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women (AIAW) record books. 

It’s an impressive run for the senior All-American, who led Iowa to the national championship game in April after being named the consensus national player of the year. Clark is expected to be the 2024 national player of the year, too. 

How many points did Caitlin Clark score in Iowa’s last game?

vs. Michigan, March 9: Clark and the Hawkeyes continued to power toward a third straight Big Ten tournament title with a 95-68 victory over Michigan in Saturday’s semifinals. Clark scored a game-high 28 points on 10-for-19 shooting, including a 4-for-11 mark from 3, and dished out 15 assists.

How many career points has Caitlin Clark scored?

Caitlin Clark has 3,737 career points (and counting!) after scoring 28 vs. Michigan.

Caitlin Clark’s next game on TV?

Clark and Iowa will return to the court Sunday when they play Nebraska in the Big Ten tournament championship. The title game will be broadcast on CBS and tip at noon ET Sunday at Minneapolis’ Target Center.

What is Caitlin Clark’s shooting percentage?

In a word: impressive. Clark is currently connecting on 46.2% of her shots and 38.4% from 3-point range, eye-popping when you consider the attention she demands from defenses. Her ability to score consistently from long-range is especially impressive considering that she takes so many 3s from 25 feet or deeper (the college 3-point line is 22 feet, 1.75 inches).

How many points does Caitlin Clark average per game?

Through 32 games in the 2023-24 season, Clark is averaging 31.9 points. Over her career, she’s averaged 28.3 points.

One of the most impressive parts of Clark’s game is that she’s averaged more points each season. Here’s how it breaks down:

Freshman year: 26.6 points
Sophomore year: 27.0 points
Junior year: 27.8 points
Senior year: 31.9 points

What is Caitlin Clark’s highest-scoring game?

Clark’s highest-scoring game came on Feb. 16, 2024, when she dropped 49 points vs. Michigan in Iowa’s 106-89 win. It wasn’t just her single-game career high, but also a program record for single game scoring. Additionally, she handed out 13 assists and grabbed five rebounds, the 58th double-double of her career.

Caitlin Clark game log

Here’s a breakdown of Clark’s scoring this season for the Hawkeyes:

vs. Michigan, 3/9/24: 28 points
vs. Penn State, 3/8/24: 24 points
vs. Ohio State, 3/3/24: 35 points
at Minnesota, 2/28/24: 33 points
vs. Illinois, 2/25/24: 24 points
at Indiana, 2/22/24: 24 points
vs. Michigan, 2/15/24: 49 points (career-high)
at Nebraska, 2/11/24: 31 points
vs. Penn State, 2/8/24: 27 points
at Maryland, 2/3/24: 38 points
at Northwestern, 1/31/24: 35 points
vs. Nebraska, 1/27/2024: 38 points
at Ohio State, 1/21/2024: 45 points
vs. Wisconsin, 1/16/2024: 32 points
vs. Indiana, 1/13/2024: 30 points
at Purdue, 1/10/2024: 26 points
at Rutgers, 1/5/2024: 29 points
vs. Michigan State, 1/2/2024: 40 points
vs. Minnesota, 12/30/2023: 35 points
vs. Loyola Chicago, 12/21/2023: 35 points
vs. Cleveland State, 12/16/2023: 38 points
at Wisconsin, 12/10/2023: 28 points
vs. Iowa State, 12/6/2023: 35 points
vs. Bowling Green, 12/2/2023: 24 points
vs. Kansas State, 11/26/2023: 32 points
vs. Florida Gulf Coast, 11/25/2023: 21 points
vs. Purdue Fort Wayne, 11/24/2023: 29 points
vs. Drake, 11/19/2023: 35 points
vs. Kansas State, 11/16/2023: 24 points
at UNI, 11/12/2023: 24 points
vs. Virginia Tech, 11/9/2023: 44 points
vs. FDU, 11/6/2023: 28 points

Who is Pete Maravich, men’s NCAA all-time leading scorer?

The NCAA’s all-time leading scorer, ‘Pistol’ Pete Maravich of LSU, was a shooting, dribbling and passing whiz who dominated the college game during his three seasons in Baton Rouge.

The son of Tigers coach Press Maravich averaged an astounding 44.2 points per game for his career, finishing with an NCAA record 3,667.

Unlike Clark, Maravich did not have the advantage of the 3-point shot, which was universally implemented by the NCAA for the 1987 season. He also accumulated his record-setting point total in just three seasons of college basketball.

Who is Lynette Woodard, women’s college basketball’s previous all-time leading scorer?

Woodard is a Wichita, Kansas, native and after her high school playing days, she arrived at the University of Kansas in 1977.

Woodard was the captain and second-leading scorer for the United States as Team USA took the gold medal in basketball at the 1984 Olympic games in Los Angeles. A year later, she became the first woman ever to play for the Harlem Globetrotters.

When Woodard started playing college basketball, the Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women was the governing body for women’s college sports. The NCAA did not start sponsoring women’s sports until 1982, holding the first NCAA women’s tournament that season.

Because Woodard’s 3,639 career points at Kansas predates the NCAA’s sponsor of women’s sports, her stats and records are not found or recognized in the NCAA’s official record books.

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Conservatives are outraged that two members of the ‘Squad,’ Reps. Pramila Jayapal, D-Wash., and Ilhan Omar, D-Mich., made a secret visit to Cuba to meet with its socialist leadership. I’m not outraged in the least. In fact, I wish they would have stayed a little longer. Let me explain why.  

Half a century ago, when President Richard Nixon visited China, one of his congressional opponents cracked, ‘I have no problem with President Nixon going to China. I just have a problem with him coming back home.’   

I wouldn’t go that far, and I respect the members’ right to fight for their political agenda, no matter how much I may disagree with it. But had they stayed a little longer in Havana, they might have seen what a socialist ‘workers paradise’ really looks like, and perhaps they might change their politics as a result. 

Had they extended their visit by a week or two and asked to meet with duly elected members of the opposition to the socialist regime, they would have discovered that such opposition is nonexistent … behind bars … or in the cemetery. The Cuban dictatorship would never allow opposition members to serve in the government, let alone campaign for office, or even remain out of prison. 

Had they stayed a little longer, they might also have discovered that the living wage policy for which they fight here in the United States would be nothing more than a grim joke for Cuba’s workers.  

The entire country (except for the leadership, of course) lives in dire poverty, just 90 miles from Miami, where Cuban exiles are one of the greatest engines for entrepreneurship the world has ever known. But you won’t find anyone from one side of Cuba to the other making anything close to $15 an hour.  

Had any member of the members’ traveling party fallen ill while in Cuba, they would have discovered just how embarrassingly poor the Cuban medical system remains. Just one visit to a Havana emergency room would have caused both congresswomen to thank their lucky stars for the gold-plated healthcare they enjoy as members of the House. 

With a longer visit, they might also have learned more about Cuba’s close ties with China and Russia, the two countries, along with Iran, that foment more terror and economic disruption than any other nation on Earth.  

If they had some downtime in their hotel rooms, they could have watched the funeral service of Russian dissident Alexei Navalny, murdered by Putin’s regime, because he dared to do what the members do every day — express opposition to his nation’s political system.  

An extra week or so in Havana might have found the members missing their loved ones — children, siblings, parents and grandparents. Of course, they got to fly home when they felt like it, unlike Cuban citizens, who are denied the right to travel and have been separated, some for more than half a century, from loved ones they may never see again.  

The great Cuban pitcher Orlando ‘El Duque’ Hernandez famously smuggled himself out of Havana on a small boat to travel the treacherous 90 miles to the American coastline. It practically took an act of Congress for his father to receive permission from the Cuban government to come to the United States to see his son pitch. Oh, wait, the representatives are members of Congress! So, they could arrange visits for their loved ones whenever they felt like it.  

A little extra time on Cuban soil also might have allowed the two of them to learn more about the collapse of the once proud and successful Venezuelan economy, under the twin forces of socialism and corruption. Socialism sounds great in theory, but when you have a chance to see the effects of socialism on a country with the resources and human capital of Venezuela, it makes you wonder whether socialism can work anywhere.  

Before Barack Obama became president, he says that he read countless books about socialism while a graduate student at Columbia University. My sense is that he, like the two recent visitors to Cuba, may indeed have started to read any number of books about socialism, but I don’t think any of the three got to the end of any one of those books.  

Finally, if the members are so desirous of leading a socialist government, they could simply have stayed in Havana and run for office there. Their politics would no doubt have been appealing to the leadership, who would have been able to guarantee them election and reelection for as long as they chose to serve.  

Had they stayed a little longer, they might also have discovered that the living wage policy for which they fight here in the United States would be nothing more than a grim joke for Cuba’s workers.  

There would only be one problem, however. If the members had become Cuban citizens so that they could serve in the Cuban government, they would lose the freedom of travel that they, as American citizens, take for granted. And then they would be stuck, like the rest of the unfortunate souls in Havana’s ‘workers’ paradise.’ 

Of course, they could always try to get a message out to El Duque.  

Maybe he could lend them his boat.   

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Sen. Ed Markey, D-Mass., and Marco Rubio, R-Fla. made a new push Friday on bipartisan legislation that would make daylight saving permanent. 

S. 582, also coined the Sunshine Protection Act, would make daylight saving permanent and add an hour to the day. The Senate unanimously passed the legislation in March 2022, but it has been stalled since. 

The bill would allow Arizona and Hawaii, which do not observe daylight saving time, to remain on standard time, as well as American Samoa, Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands, Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

‘The antiquated biannual ritual of toggling between times isn’t just an inconvenience—it also has very real impacts on our economy, our energy consumption, and our health,’ Markey said in a statement released. ‘We know the sun will come out tomorrow, so let’s make that sun stay out an hour later by making Daylight Saving Time permanent and passing the Sunshine Protection Act. You can bet your bottom dollar that tomorrow there’ll be sun … and smiles.’

‘We’re ‘springing forward’ but should have never ‘fallen back.’ My Sunshine Protection Act would end this stupid practice of changing our clocks back and forth,’ Rubio also said in the announcement. 

Florida Republican Sen. Rick Scott also called to ‘lock the clock,’ calling upon Congress to move forward with the legislation. 

‘Floridians are sick of changing their clocks because we all want more sunshine,’ Scott said in a statement released. ‘It’s time for Congress to act and I’m proud to be leading the bipartisan Sunshine Protection Act with Senator Rubio to get this done. When I was Governor of Florida, I signed this bill into law on the state level. Now it’s Washington’s turn and we should finish the job by passing this good bill today.’

Rep. Vern Buchanan, R-Fla., introduced similar legislation in the House of Representatives in March 2023. H.R. 1279, also called the Sunshine Protection Act, seeks to make daylight saving permanent as well. 

President Joe Biden has not yet taken a stance on the issue, while former President Donald Trump tweeted back in 2019 he was ‘O.K.’ with making daylight saving permanent. 

‘Making Daylight Saving Time permanent is O.K. with me!’ Trump wrote on Twitter at the time, now known as X. 

Approximately 30 states have introduced legislation to permanently end the changing of clocks twice a year since 2015, according to Reuters. Some states have also only proposed to make the change so long as neighboring states do the same, per the outlet. 

Daylight saving time has been in place in nearly all the United States since the 1960s after initially being tried in 1918.

Year-round daylight saving was used during World War II and adopted once again in 1973 in an effort to reduce fuel use.

Daylight saving starts on Sunday, March 10. 

Reuters contributed to this report. 

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Since the Hamas terror massacre of Israeli Jews Oct. 7, the U.S. has been hit with record levels of antisemitic incidents. While authorities are getting to grips with how to effectively deal with it, Western democracies are also dealing with an explosion of antisemitism not witnessed since the Holocaust. 

Across the Atlantic, the United Kingdom has been rocked by unprecedented antisemitism.  

‘In the 68 days inclusive between the Hamas terror attack on Israel (Oct. 7) and Wednesday, Dec. 13, CST recorded at least 2,093 antisemitic incidents across the U.K.,’ according to the Community Security Trust (CST), the organization responsible for the security of British Jews.

‘This is the highest ever total reported to CST across a sixty-eight-day period. CST has been recording antisemitic incidents since 1984.’

‘I think people are feeling tense and nervous, particularly with marches taking place every Saturday,’ Jake Wallis Simons, editor-in-chief of the London-based Jewish Chronicle, told Fox News Digital from England.

Mass pro-Palestinian marches have blanketed the heart of London. 

‘The marches had a lot of antisemitism and criminality in them, and there are placards supporting Hamas,’ Wallis Simons said.

Former British Home Secretary Suella Braverman decried the mass protests as ‘hate marches’ and wanted to ban the mass antisemitic spectacles. Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, fired the outspoken Braverman after her calls for the need to rein in public Jew hatred. Braverman accused the police of double standards at pro-Palestinian marches in an unauthorized newspaper article, according to Reuters. 

‘Jewish children are being told to hide their school blazers, Jewish students are terrified on campus, synagogues are guarded, kosher shops are being attacked, business owners are being threatened’

The demonstrations in the U.K. have been largely populated by leftists and British Muslims. 

‘The police are not cracking down on antisemitism,’ said Wallis Simons. He noted that the police are claiming that ‘if they enforce the law, it will lead to disorder.’  He stressed the absurdity of the police reasoning because ‘that allows space for antisemitic hate to go on. There have been some arrests.’

He termed a late February march outside parliament, where the antisemitic slogan ‘from the river to the sea,’ was projected on Big Ben, a ‘real expression of mob power and intimidated politicians.’

The full slogan, ‘From the river to sea, Palestine will be free,’ is widely interpreted to mean the abolition of the Jewish state and its replacement with a Palestinian nation.

Antisemitism Exposed

Just last week The Board of Deputies of British Jews wrote on X about the election of pro-Hamas and firebrand socialist politician George Galloway to Parliament.

‘George Galloway is a demagogue and conspiracy theorist, who has brought the politics of division and hate to every place he has ever stood for Parliament. His election is a dark day for the Jewish community in this country, and for British politics in general.’ 

‘This is for Gaza,’ Galloway said of his special election victory.

‘Jewish children are being told to hide their school blazers, Jewish students are terrified on campus, synagogues are guarded, kosher shops are being attacked, business owners are being threatened,’ a spokesperson for Campaign Against Antisemitism in the United Kingdom told Fox News Digital.

‘The effect is that, as our polling shows, a majority of Jewish people in this country are afraid to show their Jewishness in public, and we are aware of some Jews who have left the country altogether. This is not the tolerant Britain that we cherish It is a Britain succumbing to a racist mob.’

The spokesperson for the Campaign Against Antisemitism added, ‘At the epicenter of this societal disaster are the weekly anti-Israel marches, which feature antisemitic signage, genocidal rhetoric and intimidation. They have made London a no-go zone for Jews. Brave officers are outnumbered and cannot properly police these marches, which therefore continue to infect our public discourse. Our country is at a tipping point. The situation for Jews in Britain is desperate.’

The Hamas terrorist movement’s lethal antisemitic ideology has entered into many walks of life in advanced democratic countries across the world.

‘Hamas is losing on the battlefield, but its narrative was successfully exported from those tunnels [in the Gaza Strip] to Germany, France, the United Kingdom, Australia, the U.S. and Canada, to name just a few. The scope and nature of Jew hatred has reached epic levels,’ Rabbi Abraham Cooper, associate dean of the LA-based Simon Wiesenthal Center, told Fox News Digital.

‘The largest mass murder of Jews after the war [World War II and the Holocaust] leads to the largest worldwide antisemitic campaign,’ author and journalist Henryk M. Broder, a leading German expert on antisemitism, said in a recent interview. ‘That can’t be explained with logic.’ 

While the United Kingdom is widely viewed as one of the ground zeroes of the mushrooming antisemitic movement, America’s northern neighbor, Canada, has been engulfed by probably the worst outbreak of antisemitism in its country’s history.

‘There have been multiple instances of Jewish day schools in Montreal being hit with gunfire, public calls for the killing of Israelis, vandalized homes and synagogues, antisemitic graffiti, large-scale antisemitic disruptions on our university campuses and appalling instances of antisemitic activities outside the country’s most well-known Jewish-founded hospital, among countless other things,’ Casey Babb told Fox News Digital.

Babb teaches courses on terrorism and international security at the Norman Paterson School of International Affairs in Ottawa.

‘Statistically, hate crimes in Canada have increased north of 132%, with the vast majority of those crimes targeting the Jewish community,’ Babb added. ‘Indeed, this may be the most antisemitic time in our country’s history. I’d go as far as suggesting Canada, for a variety of reasons, has become one of the most hostile nations in the West for Jews.’

Just last week, hundreds of anti-Israel protesters surrounded the Montreal Holocaust Museum and blocked access to a group of Israeli army reservists who were slated to speak. The antisemitic mob reportedly chanted ‘Death to Israel, death to the Jews.’

Germany is another European ground zero of the post-Oct. 7 antisemitic movement. Last month, the country’s premier film festival, Berlinale, turned into an anti-Israel hate festival, according to Israel’s government and a number of German newspapers.

The filmmakers termed the Mideast’s only democracy, Israel, an ‘apartheid’ state and accused Jerusalem of carrying out a genocide against the Palestinians in the Gaza Strip.

Hamas’ mass murder, systematic rape of Israelis and taking of over 130 hostages still held by terror groups in Gaza were nonissues for the packed film audience that cheered the delegitimization of the Jewish state in the capital city, Berlin, that planned the Holocaust. 

Reports noted that Germany’s federal culture minister, Green Party politician Claudia Roth, and Berlin’s mayor, Kai Wegner, from the Christian Democratic Union Party, were caught on camera applauding the anti-Israel agitation. 

‘You see the unleashing into the mainstream of not just antisemitism, but the Hamas narrative, which turns reality on its head,’ Cooper said. 

The Hamas Covenant calls for the genocide of the Jews. According to Article 7 of the Covenant, ‘The Day of Judgment will not come about until Moslems fight Jews and kill them. Then, the Jews will hide behind rocks and trees, and the rocks and trees will cry out: ‘O Moslem, there is a Jew hiding behind me, come and kill him.’

Israel and experts on Jew hatred argue the genocide charge should be attributed to Hamas. Israel has launched surgical-style urban warfare to root out Hamas terrorists in the Gaza Strip.

Ron Prosor, Israel’s ambassador to Germany, who previously served as his country’s envoy to the U.N., wrote on X about the Berlinale, ‘Under the guise of freedom of expression and art, anti-Semitic and anti-Israel rhetoric is celebrated. You don’t need seven professors to state the obvious: this is blatant anti-Semitic discourse.’

‘We have seen the biggest antisemitic wave in Denmark since 1943’

Critics say the problem of state-sponsored antisemitism has repeatedly played out in Germany, where the Berlinale receives generous state funding.

In January, the German taxpayer-funded University of Tübingen hosted a speaker, Michael Blume, who two German courts ruled can be called antisemitic. Blume is the civil servant in charge of fighting antisemitsm in the state of Baden-Württemberg. He blamed Israel’s government for the Hamas massacre and said Israel is ostensibly preventing the fight against antisemitism because the Jewish state opposes ‘renewable energies.’ 

Blume didn’t respond to press queries. 

Antisemitism has also engulfed Denmark. 

‘We have seen the biggest antisemitic wave in Denmark since 1943,’ when Denmark was occupied by Nazi Germany, Henri Goldstein, head of the 1,800-strong Jewish Community, said in late February. 

In Norway, Oslo Chief Rabbi Joav Melchior echoed the comments of experts and leaders of Jewish communities across the globe that the levels of antisemitism have not been seen since the Holocaust. 

‘It manifests in statements made against Israel, Zionists and Jews — comments that were not made in the past and would not have been accepted in public discourse without a very strong reaction,’ he told the Israeli news outlet Ynet.

France, home to Europe’s largest Jewish community of 440,000, saw a soaring increase of Jew hatred, with 1,676 antisemitic acts in 2023, compared to 436 in 2022. 

Jerusalem has long viewed Norwegian governments as strongholds of anti-Israeli policies. Ynet noted that at the Cairo Summit for Peace two weeks after Hamas kidnapped over 240 hostages, including Americans, the Scandinavian country’s foreign minister, Espen Barth Eide, was ‘the only Western foreign minister who condemned Israel without calling for the release of hostages held in Gaza.’

The French media reported in late January that a report from the Council of Jewish Institutions in France (CRIF) said, ‘We are witnessing a rejuvenation of the perpetrators of anti-Semitic acts. Schools are no longer a sanctuary of the Republic.’ 

France, home to Europe’s largest Jewish community of 440,000, saw a soaring increase of Jew hatred, with 1,676 antisemitic acts in 2023, compared to 436 in 2022. The Council of Jewish Institutions in France said 25% of the antisemitic acts were ‘calls to murder’ Jews and a third glorified Hamas’ ideology of jihad.

‘The explosion of antisemitism globally points to a failure of leadership in higher education, the media of record and in government policy, especially in democratic countries,’ said Charles Asher Small, director of the Institute for the U.S.-based Study of Global Antisemitism & Policy (ISGAP). 

‘For the past several decades, the threat posed by anti-American and anti-democratic social movements has not been addressed, and we keep kicking the can down the road.’

Meanwhile, Rabbi Cooper warned, ‘If not met with a strong, definitive response from those in power, you will see it [antisemitism] spreading to elementary schools.’

Traditionally, Ireland has been classified as one of the most hostile European countries toward the Jewish state, according to Israeli diplomats. Irish discrimination against Jews appeared on the basketball court in February when the Irish women’s basketball team refused to shake hands with Israeli opponents because of the war in Gaza. The Israeli team defeated Ireland 87-57. 

Spain, with a tiny Jewish population of 45,000 out of a total population of over 48 million, has also been embroiled in rising antisemitism. In October, The Jewish Chronicle reported a synagogue in Barcelona canceled events. 

‘We’re scared, particularly for our sons and daughters,’ a Jewish resident of Barcelona told El Periodico. ‘Antisemitism is in the air.’

Maxo Benalal, secretary general of the Federation of Jewish Communities in Spain, said soaring Spanish antisemitism was ‘truly terrifying.’

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The Pentagon found no evidence of aliens, alien technology or secret government-run reverse engineering programs.

‘The aggregate findings of all USG investigations to date have not found even one case of UAP representing off-world technology,’ according to the report, which was released Friday, and ‘authentic sensitive national security programs’ were ‘mistaken’ with UFO programs.

‘AARO (All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office) has no evidence for the USG reverse-engineering narrative provided by interviewees and has been able to disprove the majority of the interviewees’ claims,’ the report says, although ‘some claims are still under evaluation.’

Jeremy Corbell, an investigative journalist and pivotal figure in the fight for UFO transparency, told Fox News Digital in an exclusive statement, ‘If the U.S. won’t fess up, other nations will.’

‘The reason AARO was formed in the first place was because of the mishandling of the UFO problem by our government agencies in the past,’ Corbell said. ‘It was instated to address the UFO reality, the cover-up, as a defense against the dangerous and real possibility of strategic surprise. 

‘The historical review is an attempt to rewrite history and obscure the basic fundamental facts about the UFO phenomenon.’

The purpose of the 63-page report ‘is not to prove or disprove any particular belief set, but rather to use a rigorous analytic and scientific approach to investigate past USG-sponsored UAP investigation efforts’ and claims the government and private contractors are hiding alien technology and biological material. 

A ‘vast majority’ of reported UFOs, or UAPs (Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena), are ‘the result of misidentification,’ according to the report. 

The Pentagon acknowledged an Intelligence Community Control Access program was expanded in 2021 ‘without sufficient justification’ to protect UAP reverse-engineering.

But the program never recovered an extraterrestrial craft and was disestablished ‘due to its lack of merit,’ the report says. 

Canada to release own report: ‘Quite fascinating … so stay tuned’

As the debate rages in the U.S., Canadian officials addressed the UAP phenomemon earlier this week.

Mona Nemer, the country’s top scientific advisor, told lawmakers they’re close to finishing their report, which should be released late summer or early fall. 

‘I think our report is going to be quite fascinating on the historic front, so stay tuned,’ Nemer told the Canadian Parliament’s science and research committee on Tuesday. 

Nemer said they’ve been in contact with their counterparts in the U.S. and France, and ‘enthusiasm for the responses have been uneven.’

‘The historical review is an attempt to rewrite history and obscure the basic fundamental facts about the UFO phenomenon.’

— Investigative journalist Jeremy Corbell

‘Sometimes the information is more complete or, you know, more cryptic than we’d like it to be,’ Nemer said, ‘which is why in some cases I will be engaging directly with the deputy ministers to make sure that we have the information that we need.’

Highlights of Pentagon report

Other conclusions put forth in the report include the public’s general mistrust of the government and ‘perceived bureaucratic barriers,’ intense secrecy related to military programs and growing interest in UFOs. 

To put the rapidly growing interest in UFOs into perspective – a once-considered taboo subject that destroyed careers, like Bob Lazar’s after he was essentially forced to hide in exile, had its own Super Bowl commercial. 

Air Force Brig. Gen. Pat Ryder, a Department of Defense spokesperson, said there was no evidence that any information was ‘illegally or inappropriately’ withheld from Congress.

‘What we found was that claims of hidden programs are largely the result of circular reporting by a small group repeating what they heard from others and that many people have sincerely misinterpreted real events for mistaken sensitive U.S. programs as UAP or being extra-terrestrial exploitation,’ he said.

In a statement released with the report, the DoD said the conclusions are based on ‘verifiable evidence.’

‘All investigative efforts, at all levels of classification, concluded that most sightings were ordinary objects and phenomena and the result of misidentification,’ the statement says.

Reactions to the UFO report

The report didn’t sit well with many whistleblowers and elected officials, as they sounded off on social media or during interviews. 

Rep. Tim Burchett, R-Tenn, who’s been one of the most outspoken members on the UFO subject, wrote on X, ‘So the people doing the cover up of #ufo #uap say they find no cover up. Classic self fulfilled prophesy.’

Burchett warned in a previous interview that humanity ‘can’t handle’ the technology he’s seen in videos. 

‘If they’re out there, they’re out there, and if they have this kind of technology, then they could turn us into a charcoal briquette,’ Burchett said on the ‘Event Horizon’ podcast. 

‘And if they can travel light years or at the speeds that we’ve seen, and physics as we know it, fly underwater, don’t show a heat trail, things like that, then we are vastly out of our league.’

Lue Elizondo, the former director of the Pentagon’s advanced aerospace threat identification program, told The Good Trouble Show that it’s ‘inconceivable that the Pentagon continues to go down this road of obfuscation and denial.’

‘Our adversaries have already stated for the record they have their own UAP programs. Is this not important to the Pentagon?’ Elizondo said. ‘This report is not only inaccurate, but also misleading in many of its assertions.

‘Furthermore, this is yet another example of a long list of missteps by the Pentagon in recent history. It’s a sad day for democracy when the American public is being fed misinformation under the guise of truthfulness and transparency.’

Fox News Digital’s Louis Casiano contributed to this report. 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

The Pentagon found no evidence of aliens, alien technology or secret government-run reverse engineering programs.

‘The aggregate findings of all USG investigations to date have not found even one case of UAP representing off-world technology,’ according to the report, which was released Friday, and ‘authentic sensitive national security programs’ were ‘mistaken’ with UFO programs.

‘AARO (All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office) has no evidence for the USG reverse-engineering narrative provided by interviewees and has been able to disprove the majority of the interviewees’ claims,’ the report says, although ‘some claims are still under evaluation.’

Jeremy Corbell, an investigative journalist and pivotal figure in the fight for UFO transparency, told Fox News Digital in an exclusive statement, ‘If the U.S. won’t fess up, other nations will.’

‘The reason AARO was formed in the first place was because of the mishandling of the UFO problem by our government agencies in the past,’ Corbell said. ‘It was instated to address the UFO reality, the cover-up, as a defense against the dangerous and real possibility of strategic surprise. 

‘The historical review is an attempt to rewrite history and obscure the basic fundamental facts about the UFO phenomenon.’

The purpose of the 63-page report ‘is not to prove or disprove any particular belief set, but rather to use a rigorous analytic and scientific approach to investigate past USG-sponsored UAP investigation efforts’ and claims the government and private contractors are hiding alien technology and biological material. 

A ‘vast majority’ of reported UFOs, or UAPs (Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena), are ‘the result of misidentification,’ according to the report. 

The Pentagon acknowledged an Intelligence Community Control Access program was expanded in 2021 ‘without sufficient justification’ to protect UAP reverse-engineering.

But the program never recovered an extraterrestrial craft and was disestablished ‘due to its lack of merit,’ the report says. 

Canada to release own report: ‘Quite fascinating … so stay tuned’

As the debate rages in the U.S., Canadian officials addressed the UAP phenomemon earlier this week.

Mona Nemer, the country’s top scientific advisor, told lawmakers they’re close to finishing their report, which should be released late summer or early fall. 

‘I think our report is going to be quite fascinating on the historic front, so stay tuned,’ Nemer told the Canadian Parliament’s science and research committee on Tuesday. 

Nemer said they’ve been in contact with their counterparts in the U.S. and France, and ‘enthusiasm for the responses have been uneven.’

‘The historical review is an attempt to rewrite history and obscure the basic fundamental facts about the UFO phenomenon.’

— Investigative journalist Jeremy Corbell

‘Sometimes the information is more complete or, you know, more cryptic than we’d like it to be,’ Nemer said, ‘which is why in some cases I will be engaging directly with the deputy ministers to make sure that we have the information that we need.’

Highlights of Pentagon report

Other conclusions put forth in the report include the public’s general mistrust of the government and ‘perceived bureaucratic barriers,’ intense secrecy related to military programs and growing interest in UFOs. 

To put the rapidly growing interest in UFOs into perspective – a once-considered taboo subject that destroyed careers, like Bob Lazar’s after he was essentially forced to hide in exile, had its own Super Bowl commercial. 

Air Force Brig. Gen. Pat Ryder, a Department of Defense spokesperson, said there was no evidence that any information was ‘illegally or inappropriately’ withheld from Congress.

‘What we found was that claims of hidden programs are largely the result of circular reporting by a small group repeating what they heard from others and that many people have sincerely misinterpreted real events for mistaken sensitive U.S. programs as UAP or being extra-terrestrial exploitation,’ he said.

In a statement released with the report, the DoD said the conclusions are based on ‘verifiable evidence.’

‘All investigative efforts, at all levels of classification, concluded that most sightings were ordinary objects and phenomena and the result of misidentification,’ the statement says.

Reactions to the UFO report

The report didn’t sit well with many whistleblowers and elected officials, as they sounded off on social media or during interviews. 

Rep. Tim Burchett, R-Tenn, who’s been one of the most outspoken members on the UFO subject, wrote on X, ‘So the people doing the cover up of #ufo #uap say they find no cover up. Classic self fulfilled prophesy.’

Burchett warned in a previous interview that humanity ‘can’t handle’ the technology he’s seen in videos. 

‘If they’re out there, they’re out there, and if they have this kind of technology, then they could turn us into a charcoal briquette,’ Burchett said on the ‘Event Horizon’ podcast. 

‘And if they can travel light years or at the speeds that we’ve seen, and physics as we know it, fly underwater, don’t show a heat trail, things like that, then we are vastly out of our league.’

Lue Elizondo, the former director of the Pentagon’s advanced aerospace threat identification program, told The Good Trouble Show that it’s ‘inconceivable that the Pentagon continues to go down this road of obfuscation and denial.’

‘Our adversaries have already stated for the record they have their own UAP programs. Is this not important to the Pentagon?’ Elizondo said. ‘This report is not only inaccurate, but also misleading in many of its assertions.

‘Furthermore, this is yet another example of a long list of missteps by the Pentagon in recent history. It’s a sad day for democracy when the American public is being fed misinformation under the guise of truthfulness and transparency.’

Fox News Digital’s Louis Casiano contributed to this report. 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS