| Meanwhile, Hamas-controlled Gaza Health Ministry officials claim that the IDF’s operation has destroyed critical areas of the hospital, crippling its operations and harming displaced people who were sheltering there.
Both could be true, and Israel must continue weighing whether raids like these are worth the cost—a situation it’s been forced into in part due to Hamas’ callous disregard for human life.
Meanwhile, on the Israel-Lebanon border, things are heating up. Israel reportedly killed 10 Lebanese civilians in strikes overnight, while Iran-backed Hezbollah has been launching more and more rockets (including one that killed an Israeli soldier on Tuesday).
Climate activists wreaking havoc on D.C. this week: In case you missed it—and I dearly hope you did—climate activists dumped red powder on the case holding the U.S. Constitution, in the rotunda of the National Archives, yesterday. “We are determined to foment a rebellion. We will not be held account to laws in which we have no voice or representation,” said one of the activists . “This country’s founded on the conditions that all men are created…and endowed with the unalienable rights of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness,” said the other. “We’re calling for all people to have all these rights, not just wealthy white men. We all deserve clean air, water, food, and a livable climate.”
They were promptly arrested, but they weren’t the only vandals on the loose.
Climate activist group Declare Emergency has activated several groups this week (the Constitution-desecraters are purportedly affiliated), with one set of protesters blocking traffic on D.C.’s George Washington Parkway. Some drivers got confrontational with them, including one woman who said her son was in the hospital. “I don’t got time for this shit,” she added.
In recent years, climate activists have seemingly grown emboldened, throwing cans of soup on the Mona Lisa at the Louvre; gluing themselves to Johannes Vermeer’s Girl With a Pearl Earring at Mauritshuis museum in The Hague; and gluing themselves to Vincent van Gogh’s Peach Trees in Blossom at London’s Courtauld Gallery. Just yesterday, climate protesters targeted Sandro Botticelli’s Birth of Venus in Florence’s Uffizi Gallery : |