Anarchy Across America: How Did UN Newsletter Fuel Anti-Israel 4/15 Agenda

By Lisa Pelgin | Tuesday, 23 April 2024 01:45 AM
Views 2.5K
Image Credit : Fox News - Anti-Israel demonstrations block traffic

Fox News Digital has revealed that the United Nations Division for Palestinian Rights' NGO Action News, a platform that provides updates on civil society organizations focused on Palestinian issues, has directed its readers to the U.S. Campaign for Palestinian Rights' list of "5 Ways to Take Action for Tax Day."

The list reportedly includes guidelines for protesters who do not wish their tax dollars to contribute to what they perceive as genocide, offering ways to "disrupt for a free Palestine." One of the suggestions on the list directs users to a link for those interested in participating in a "coordinated multi-city economic blockade to free Palestine." However, the impact of such disruptions within the U.S. on the situation in the Middle East remains uncertain.

The website provides detailed instructions on how participants can maximize the effectiveness of their disruptions.

 WATCH:ELON MUSK TALKS ABOUT THE FUTURE OF SELF DRIVING CARSbell_image

Anne Bayefsky, president of Human Rights Voices and director of the Touro University Institute on Human Rights and the Holocaust, accused the U.N. of aiding pro-Hamas anarchists in American cities. She told Fox News Digital that the U.N. was "distributing a newsletter, in multiple languages and to a worldwide network, that contains links to radical anti-American and anti-Israel agitators, their agendas and plans."

 WATCH ALAN DERSHOWITZ: "THERE IS NO CRIME IN MANHATTAN"bell_image

 PUTIN'S LATEST POWER MOVE: RUSSIA DISPLAYS "WAR WINS" IN EYE-OPENING EXHIBITIONbell_image

On April 15, blockades were reported at several locations across the U.S., including Seattle-Tacoma International Airport in Washington, O'Hare Airport in Chicago, the Golden Gate Bridge in California, and the I-5 in Eugene, Oregon. There were also reported gatherings outside the New York Stock Exchange, Philadelphia's City Hall, San Antonio's Valero headquarters, and in several other cities.

X