Just a few days ago, U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee posted of photo of hundreds of trucks of aid for Gaza just sitting there in a parking lot, rotting. According to the U.N., any convoys of aid into Gaza must be guarded, but not by the IDF. Which leaves …?
As I reported yesterday, (mostly) women around the world joined Rep. Rashida Tlaib in banging spoons against empty pots to protest the starvation in Gaza. I saw video of (mostly) women banging pots in Scotland, France, and Spain. The deal is that at 6 p.m., wherever you are globally, you're supposed to go out on your terrace or just lean out a window and bang on an empty pot for a few minutes. It's entirely performative and the worst kind of virtue signaling. How about a protest to release the hostages? Did that ever occur to anyone?
Earlier Monday, our own Amy Curtis published a post on Pallywood, and how they're using photos and videos of children who aren't even in Gaza to prove that they're starving. No, that's a video taken from a premature moms group on Facebook. And five-year-old Mohammed isn't starving: he's suffering from cerebral palsy, hypoxemia (a lower-than-normal blood oxygen level), and a genetic disorder.
As we also reported, Israel has resorted to air-dropping aid into Gaza. However, the United Nations condemned the air drops, saying they could kill Palestinians:
Explainer | The United Nations has condemned airdrops on Gaza, warning they risk killing the starving Palestinians they are intended to helphttps://t.co/m85IAx39e8
— Sky News (@SkyNews) July 28, 2025
How grateful are the Palestinians to have this aid dropped into their laps? Not at all, according to CNN.
Now they're complaining about how "inhumane" the aid airdrops are.
— Joel Berry (@JoelWBerry) July 28, 2025
Just an incredible headline. pic.twitter.com/F3vyac2RuF
That is an incredible headline. And story:
In the central Gazan town of Al-Zawayda, scores of Palestinians rushed to collect boxes of aid that were dropped from the sky on Monday. For many, the food in these boxes will be the only meal they eat today. But many say that having no choice but to chase after airdropped aid is an insult to their dignity. Others were grateful to receive food, but said the method of airdropping aid only risked more violence.
"An insult to their dignity" is the very last thing I'm worried about.
ok... pic.twitter.com/AdbbeTyqPK
— Joel Berry (@JoelWBerry) July 28, 2025
Yeah, f**k you, Ahmad.
I had no idea that when all of our MREs were dropped out of C130s at the Joint Readiness Training Center that I was being treated like a dog.
— Cynical Publius (@CynicalPublius) July 28, 2025
Correct. Dogs are loyal, trustworthy, and fun to have around.
— RVaitor 🫳🫸🤜🤜🫱 (@Toornburg) July 28, 2025
Clearly they are not dogs. Dogs would be very grateful for receiving airdropped food.
— Likely (@Practika5) July 28, 2025
Sounds like… they’d rather… starve…?
— Grace (@ArcturusGrace) July 28, 2025
What are their expectations during full-on wartime?
This comes after stories — debunked by security video — that the IDF fired into a crowd of Gazans waiting in line for aid from a truck.
Take it or leave it. They insult dogs making that comparison.
— MAGA Martin (@MagaMartinJr) July 28, 2025
I'm done with these losers, both the Palestinians and the pot-bangers.
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