Saturday, December 30, 2023

ANS -- In harrowing detail, NYT reports on weaponization of rape, sexual violence on Oct. 7

This article is about the atrocities Hamas has visited on Israelis, because the news here mostly tells Hamas' side of the story.  It's a long article, and I didn't read it all because of the gory details. 



If you dare,
--Kim


WARNING: GRAPHIC CONTENTONE WOMAN FOUND WITH NAILS DRIVEN INTO HER THIGHS, GROIN

In harrowing detail, NYT reports on weaponization of rape, sexual violence on Oct. 7

Publication uncovers new information, devastating testimony, on systemic targeting of women and girls, use of sexual assault and mutilation during savage Hamas onslaught in Israel

A Supernova party survivor at the Secret Forest retreat center in Cyprus, in an undated photo. Her bracelet is the entrance token from the party, on the date of the massacre. In the October 7, 2023 onslaught, 3,000 Hamas-led terrorists burst through the Gaza border and murdered 1,200 people in southern Israel, most of them civilians, some 360 of them at the Supernova outdoor music festival. (Courtesy)
A Supernova party survivor at the Secret Forest retreat center in Cyprus, in an undated photo. Her bracelet is the entrance token from the party, on the date of the massacre. In the October 7, 2023 onslaught, 3,000 Hamas-led terrorists burst through the Gaza border and murdered 1,200 people in southern Israel, most of them civilians, some 360 of them at the Supernova outdoor music festival. (Courtesy)

In a comprehensive, horrifying exposé published on Thursday, The New York Times detailed the systematic sexual violence against Israeli women and girls employed by Palestinian terrorists during Hamas's unprecedented October 7 rampage through southern Israel.

The two-month investigation includes interviews with more than 150 witnesses, medical personnel, first responders, soldiers, rape counselors, and government officials, along with the scanning of video footage, photographs and GPS data from cell phones.

The piece begins with the description of a harrowing video that circulated widely in the days after Hamas's monstrous assault on southern Israel that Saturday morning. The footage, filmed in the early hours of October 8, shows the partially charred remains of a woman whose face is burned beyond recognition, and who is naked from the waist down, legs spread, her black dress hiked up. Her body is lying beside a car that was set alight on Route 232, which runs parallel to the Gaza Strip, where many people trying to flee the outdoor Supernova festival near Kibbutz Re'im were massacred by Hamas terrorists. Some 360 of the 1,200 people slaughtered that day were from the rave.

The woman in the video was later identified as Gal Abdush, a 34-year-old mother of two from central Israel, who attended the Supernova festival with her husband, Nagi Abdush, 36. Police say they believe Abdush was raped before she was murdered and her body set alight. It took about a week to identify her, according to the report. Her husband's body was found days later, and was so badly burned that authorities needed DNA testing to identify him.

The New York Times said it identified at least seven locations across southern Israel where women and girls were apparently sexually abused or mutilated. Those the paper interviewed described finding the bodies of more than 30 women in and around the Supernova rave site and in two nearby kibbutzim in a similar state as Abdush's — "legs spread, clothes torn off, signs of abuse in their genital areas."

Photographs viewed by The Times included ones of a woman in a besieged kibbutz who was found with dozens of nails driven into her thighs and groin. Footage viewed by the newspaper showed two dead Israeli soldiers at an overrun military base apparently shot directly in their vaginas.

A screenshot from a video filmed on October 8 shows the burned remains of a woman by the side of the road, with no underwear and her legs spread. Police officials believe the woman, identified as Gal Abdush, 34, from central Israel, was raped. (Screenshot, Telegram, used in accordance with Clause 27a of the Copyright Law)

A paramedic from a commando unit told the newspaper he had found the bodies of two teenage girls, sisters aged 13 and 16, in a room in Kibbutz Be'eri with their clothes ripped. One was lying on her side with "bruises by her groin," and the other "was sprawled on the floor face down," the paramedic said, "pajama pants pulled to her knees, bottom exposed, semen smeared on her back."

Another medic, Jamal Waraki, a volunteer for the nonprofit ZAKA emergency response team, told The Times that he could not get an image out of his head of the body of a woman he found at the rave.

"Her hands were tied behind her back," he said. "She was bent over, half naked, her underwear rolled down below her knees."

Yinon Rivlin, a member of the rave's production team who lost two brothers in the attack but managed to survive after hiding, told The New York Times that after he emerged from his hiding place, he made his way along Route 232 — where Abdush was found — and came upon the body of a young woman lying on her stomach, unclothed from the waist down, legs spread, and who appeared to have been sliced open in her vaginal area, "as if someone tore her apart."

Similar scenes were discovered in at least six different houses in the Be'eri and Kfar Aza kibbutzim, where at least 24 bodies of women and girls were found either stripped, tied up with zip ties or mutilated — sometimes all three — according to eight volunteer medics and two Israeli soldiers who spoke to The Times.

One witness from the rave told the publication that roughly 100 terrorists congregated along the road where the festival took place, passing weapons and badly wounded women amongst one another.

The witness said she saw at least five women raped in front of her while she tried to hide.

FILE – An aerial picture from October 10, 2023, shows the abandoned site of the October 7, 2023, assault by Hamas terrorists on the Supernova music festival near Kibbutz Re'im in the Negev desert, southern Israel. Some 360 people were slaughtered at the outdoor event, among 1,200 people murdered by the terrorists that day in southern Israel. (Jack Guez/AFP)

Another witness, who agreed to be identified as Raz Cohen, told The Times that as he was hiding in a dried-up streambed near Route 232, he saw a white van pull up and men in civilian clothes jump out, dragging a woman out of the vehicle.

"They all gather around her… She's standing up. They start raping her. I saw the men standing in a half circle around her. One penetrates her. She screams. I still remember her voice, screams without words."

"Then one of them raises a knife," he said, "and they just slaughtered her."

Shoam Gueta, a friend of Cohen's who was hiding with him, told the newspaper that he saw that the men were "talking, giggling and shouting," and then one of them stabbed the victim repeatedly, "literally butchering her."

At least 10 bodies of female soldiers from a Gaza observation post were found with signs of sexual violence, said a military dentist, identified as Captain Maayan, who works at the Shura military base in central Israel where the bodies were brought for identification.

The vast majority of the women raped were subsequently murdered, but at least three women and one man who were sexually abused survived, according to Welfare Ministry spokesman Gil Horev.

"None of them has been willing to come physically for treatment," he said.

Two therapists treating a woman who was gang raped at the Supernova rave told The Times that she was in no condition to speak with reporters or investigators about what she endured.

A member of Zaka at the forensic center in the Shura military base near Ramle, on October 13, 2023. where hundreds of dead bodies have arrived since Hamas-led terrorists rampaged through southern Israel on October 7, 2023, killing some 1,200 people. (Nati Shohat/Flash90)

The Times reported, as did The Times of Israel previously, that police are painstakingly putting together the extensive documentation of rape.




It also noted, as did The Times of Israel, how medical personnel and security forces were so focused on gathering the unprecedented number of dead for identification and burial that there was no orderly or systematic gathering of rape and sexual assault evidence.

In Judaism, people are buried as soon as possible and funerals are held quickly to start the shiva mourning period. "The result was that many bodies with signs of sexual abuse were put to rest without medical examinations, meaning that potential evidence now lies buried in the ground," the report said.

Mirit Ben Mayor, a police chief superintendent, told The New York Times she believed the brutal atrocities committed by Palestinian terrorists against Israeli women and girls on October 7 marked a combination of "the hatred for Jews and the hatred for women."


ANS -- Suddenly, Trump Is Interested in Democracy

This is a kind of fun article about Trump trying to cry "democracy!!!" to defend his lack of care for democracy. It's fairly short. 
I commented that if they can ignore the 14th amendment, we can ignore the 2nd amendment and ban all guns.
--Kim


30 december 23

As Maine throws him off the ballot, the president who betrayed democracy is now pleading for democracy's protections.

Donald Trump won the presidency with fewer votes than his opponent?

We're a republic, not a democracy.

State Republican parties in Wisconsin, North Carolina, and other states gerrymandered themselves into supermajorities?

We're a republic, not a democracy.

Forty-one senators block laws favored by 59? A single senator blocks promotions across the Defense Department?

We're a republic, not a democracy.

Florida State voters restored voting rights to felons, only to see the reform disregarded by the state legislature?

We're a republic, not a democracy.

States rule that Trump is an insurrectionist under the terms of the Fourteenth Amendment, barring him from their ballots?

Let the people decide!

There's not much use in pointing out hypocrisy in the Trump era. Trump and his core supporters are governed only by the Cartman principle—"I do what I want!"—and to that principle, they are always faithful.

Yet even if it changes nothing to understand the game that's being played, the understanding is still worth having in its own right.

Trump lost the 2020 election. He plotted to overturn that election, first by fraud, then by violence. His scheme to cheat Joe Biden out of the presidency amounted to the single most spectacular effort to defy the will of the voters since the slave states started a civil war rather than accept Abraham Lincoln's election. Trump's actions appear both criminal and anti-constitutional. For the alleged crimes, he's been indicted by both state and federal prosecutors. For the constitutional offense, he now faces disqualification from the ballot in a growing number of states.

Trump was disqualified in Maine yesterday. Colorado has also disqualified him, but has for the moment stayed the enforcement of the disqualification. Minnesota ruled that Trump is not disqualified yet but may be in the future.

Will these state disqualifications survive Supreme Court review? Even if they are legal, are they prudentially wise ways to protect American democracy against Donald Trump? We all have our own opinions. (Mine was originally negative, but I am becoming disqualification-curious.)

Trump himself launched his presidential career by arguing that President Barack Obama should not have been able to run for president because Obama was not a natural-born citizen of the United States. In 2016, Trump argued that his rival Ted Cruz should be disqualified as a candidate for the Republican presidential nomination because Cruz was born in Canada. (Unlike Trump's fantasies about Obama, Trump was right on the facts about Cruz—just wrong on the law.)

In 2020, Trump tried to disqualify voters who'd exercised their right to vote by mail or whose ballots had for any reason not yet been counted by midnight on Election Day.

Trump and his supporters have conjured a series of self-serving rules. Where antique anti-majoritarian devices work for them, the antique anti-majoritarian devices prevail. Where crude gaming of filibusters and gerrymandering works for them, the crude gaming must prevail. Where fraud and violence work for them, fraud and violence must prevail. And where invoking democratic ideas works for them—well, you can complete the sentence.

How should people who are serious about democratic principles respond to this avalanche of bad faith? Democratic ideals don't cease to be true just because they can be exploited by dishonest actors. Yet democracy also cannot become an optional principle that authoritarians can use when it suits them and then discard without consequences when it becomes an obstacle to their goals. Democratic systems have constitutions and constitutional remedies precisely to protect themselves against those who toggle in this way between breaking inconvenient rules and demanding the benefit of favorable ones.

A key provision of the suddenly famous Section Three of the Fourteenth Amendment is that it applies only to those who previously swore an oath of office. It's not a general punishment for revolts against legal authority. It is a highly targeted penalty applied to those who—like Trump—try to play the system both ways, swearing to execute the laws and then rebelling against the laws they swore to enforce.

Maybe prudence genuinely does recommend leaving Trump's disgraced name on primary and general-election ballots. But remember that old joke about the man who murdered both of his parents and then asked for mercy as an orphan? It needs to be replaced by a new joke about the ex-president who trashed democracy when he had the power, and then pleaded for the protection of democracy so he could have one more chance to trash democracy again.



ANS -- NIO Generates Solid-State Battery Pack Exceeding 600-Mile Range

Here's a little tidbit about the coming changes in car batteries.  This isn't viable yet, but they are working on it. 



--Kim


NIO Generates Solid-State Battery Pack Exceeding 600-Mile Range

BEIJING – NIO, the Chinese electric vehicle manufacturer, has made a significant breakthrough in EV technology by introducing a solid-state battery pack with exceptional energy density, allowing for a range of over 930 kilometers on a single charge. This leap forward promises to address range anxiety among EV consumers and could be a game-changer in the adoption of electric vehicles worldwide.

The Evolution of Electric Vehicle Batteries

Electric vehicles have traditionally used lithium-ion batteries owing to their high energy density and reliability. However, these batteries have limitations, including relatively shorter range capacities and longer charging times when compared to conventional petrol and diesel vehicles. The introduction of solid-state batteries is viewed as the next step in EV technology, offering higher energy density, longer life spans, and potentially faster charging times.

What are Solid-State Batteries?

Solid-state batteries use a solid electrolyte instead of the liquid or gel polymer found in traditional lithium-ion batteries. This solid electrolyte is typically made from ceramics, glass, or solid polymers. The advantages of solid-state batteries include increased safety, as they are less prone to catching fire than liquid electrolyte batteries, and greater energy efficiency.

NIO's Technological Breakthrough

NIO has reportedly overcome some of the key challenges that have previously hindered the development of solid-state batteries, such as temperature sensitivity and manufacturing complexity. By successfully deploying this technology in its EVs, NIO has set a new benchmark for electric vehicle range capabilities.

Impact on the Electric Vehicle Market

Experts believe that the adoption of solid-state batteries could significantly enhance the attractiveness of electric vehicles by providing longer ranges, shorter charging times, and extended battery life. This, in turn, would address range anxiety and could accelerate the shift away from fossil fuel-dependent transportation.

Potential Challenges and Future Outlook

While the introduction of solid-state batteries is a major stride forward, there are still challenges to overcome before they can be produced at scale for the mass market. The cost of manufacturing solid-state batteries needs to be reduced to make them commercially viable. Additionally, the infrastructure for charging these new batteries efficiently and at scale must be further developed.

To read more, click on TSA

By Staff Writer|December 16th, 2023|Auto Tech

Fwd: Freed hostage: There are no innocent Gazans * ’Genocide’: S Africa takes Israel to ICJ * US students tour Israel; cite violent antismitism on campus *The rush to buy guns



---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Joyce Segal <joyceck10@gmail.com>
Date: Sat, Dec 30, 2023 at 7:45 AM
Subject: Fwd: Freed hostage: There are no innocent Gazans * 'Genocide': S Africa takes Israel to ICJ * US students tour Israel; cite violent antismitism on campus *The rush to buy guns
To: Kim Cooper <kimc0240@gmail.com>, Laurie Livingston <livlaurie@gmail.com>


maybe the other side of the story - for change!

---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Times of Israel Daily Edition <newsletter@timesofisrael.com>
Date: Sat, Dec 30, 2023 at 7:14 AM
Subject: Freed hostage: There are no innocent Gazans * 'Genocide': S Africa takes Israel to ICJ * US students tour Israel; cite violent antismitism on campus *The rush to buy guns
To: <joyceck10@gmail.com>


Times of Israel
The daily edition

Saturday, December 30, 2023

 
Freed hostage Mia Schem: 'I experienced hell. There are no innocent civilians in Gaza'
By Amy Spiro and Michael Horovitz
French-Israeli says she was instructed on what to say in videos; was held by a family that played mind games, withheld food, taunted her; man who operated on her arm told her 'You're not going home alive'
 
 
Live updates
LIVE: IDF strikes in Lebanon after Hezbollah rocket fire, reportedly targets Aleppo airport
By Jacob Magid
Army says forces eliminated dozens of gunmen in Gaza City, destroyed infrastructure * Gaza ground op toll at 168 * Israeli wounded in car-ramming at military post near Hebron
 
'Blood libel': Israel slams South Africa for filing ICJ genocide motion over Gaza war
By ToI Staff and Reuters
Pretoria bids for an order declaring Israel in breach of 1948 Genocide Convention; Jerusalem accuses South Africa of 'collaborating with terror group' that seeks Israel's destruction
 
Argentine President Milei expresses solidarity with Israel at Jewish sports event
By Juan Melamed
 
 
Inside Story
US students touring Israel: Campus antisemitism is palpable, violent — and inescapable
By Canaan Lidor
Jews from top-tier American universities describe their experiences with hatred unleashed by the war with Hamas and its galvanizing effect on their communities
 
'This was not about freeing Palestine': Former Miss Iraq tours decimated southern towns
By ToI Staff
Running for US Congress, Sarah Idan, whose Iraqi citizenship was revoked in 2019 after she backed Israel at the UN, says she plans to be an 'anti-squad' Democrat
 
IDF says it carried out strikes in Syria after two rockets fired at Golan Heights
By AFP and ToI Staff
Israeli targeting of Syrian sites comes less than two days after it struck area around Damascus airport and four days after IDF reportedly killed IRGC general
 
IDF repeatedly strikes south Lebanon after several rounds of Hezbollah rockets
By Emanuel Fabian and Agencies
 
 
Top Ops
 
Julie Fishman Rayman
The Jewish community's first line of defense
US Law enforcement must rebuild trust by facing the menace of antisemitism and cultivating relationships with Jewish communities
 
Henry Greenspan
Sleeping with Kafka
There is nothing I can do. It doesn't matter what sin I committed. Or didn't. It has been decided. I have to leave.
 
US bypasses congressional review for month's second fast-tracked arms sale to Israel
By Jacob Magid and Agencies
Move suggests that growing discomfort in Washington with Israel's prosecution of war not yet influencing its near-daily supply of weapons used by the IDF in Gaza
 
PM said to bar Mossad and Shin Bet heads from an operational meeting with Gallant
By ToI Staff
 
 
Israeli wounded in car-ramming at military post near Hebron; attacker 'neutralized'
By Emanuel Fabian
Injured man fully conscious, taken to hospital for treatment; attack takes place near site of similar assault Friday, where 5 soldiers were hurt
 
 
Israeli forces push deeper into central and southern Gaza amid airstrikes
By Emanuel Fabian, ToI Staff and Agencies
Palestinian residents report heavy air and artillery fire; IDF says it killed dozens of terror operatives in strikes and gunfights, raided Hamas intelligence HQ in Khan Younis
 
IDF: Troops raze Gaza City hideout belonging to Sinwar, large tunnel system below it
By Emanuel Fabian and ToI Staff
 
Israel hoping to push UNRWA out of Gaza post-war — report
By ToI Staff
 
Inside story
Shocked by Oct. 7 failures, Israelis rush to buy guns, with government encouragement
By Mati Wagner
In the months since the Hamas massacre, there were 6 times as many license requests for handguns as in all of 2022, causing some to worry that untrained people will soon wield them
 
Hamas said to 'agree in principle' to resume talks with Israel on hostage deal
By ToI Staff
Hebrew media reports pile up about terror group retreating from permanent ceasefire demand, but Hamas official says Israel leaking false information to fend off domestic pressure
 
Senior Hamas delegation set to arrive in Cairo for Egypt-backed ceasefire talks
By Agencies and ToI Staff
 
Those We Have Lost
 

Those We Have Lost

Civilians and soldiers who have fallen since Oct. 7

Read Here
 
 
9-year-old boy and his 20-year-old uncle shot dead in Lod
By ToI Staff
Third person moderately wounded as shooting brings total number of Arab Israelis slain in violent crime so far in 2023 to 232
 
IDF had no plan for responding to a Hamas attack of October 7's magnitude – NY Times
By ToI Staff
Paper's investigation focuses on the Israeli military's disorganized, lackluster response to the deadly Hamas murderous invasion as it was unfolding
 
Those We Are Missing
 

The hostages and victims whose fate is still unknown

Read Here
 
 
Maine sect. of state who blocked Trump from ballot is past head of Holocaust center
By Andrew Lapin
Shenna Bellows has taken Trump off primary ballot – the second state, after Colorado, to rule the former president ineligible – based on 14th Amendment's Insurrection Clause
 
CRM
 
Exhibition
Resurrected exhibit provides insight into Jewish artists during, after the Holocaust
By Bernard Dichek
'Munich Displaced,' at the Munich Jewish Museum through March 17, portrays the city when it was a hub for 200,000 displaced Jews who survived the war
 
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Joyce Cooper
CEO SunSmartPower
650-430-6243
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