Before I get to today’s essay, I must note three recent Supreme Court rulings. I will likely follow up with future essays on some or all of these, but I want to make note of them here.
Agency Independence and Executive Power. In a 6-3 ruling, the Supreme Court significantly expanded presidential authority by ruling that the president may remove leaders of most independent federal agencies at will, overturning the 1935 precedent that had protected many regulators from dismissal without cause. The majority concluded that officials exercising executive power must remain accountable to the president, strengthening the Unitary Executive theory. However, the Court preserved the independence of the Federal Reserve, recognizing its unique constitutional and economic role. To clarify, this is not an expansion of presidential authority. I used that framing because that is the way the legacy media frames the matter. It overturns a precedent limiting executive power. This is good news.
Title IX and Transgender Bans. The Court upheld state laws in Idaho and West Virginia that prohibit males from participating on female school sports teams. It ruled that these laws do not violate Title IX because the reference to sex in statute permits classifications based on biological truth in athletics. While the justices were divided over the constitutional equal protection analysis, the decision allows states to continue enforcing similar bans and establishes an important precedent for future Title IX disputes involving transgender athletes. The vote was unanimous. This is good news.
Birthright Citizenship. Now for the very bad news. In a 5-1-3 decision, the Supreme Court ruled that President Trump’s executive order restricting birthright citizenship violates the Fourteenth Amendment, reaffirming the longstanding principle that nearly everyone born in the United States is a US citizen regardless of their parents’ immigration status. Chief Justice Roberts wrote that the Constitution does not impose a parental legal-status requirement, preserving more than a century of constitutional interpretation and rejecting the administration’s effort to narrow citizenship by executive action.
Two conservative judges joined with progressives in betraying the Fourteenth Amendment—the Chief Justice John Roberts and Associate Justice Amy Coney Barrett. They rewrote the damn thing, scratching out a major clause of an amendment that plainly intended to grant citizenship to freed black slaves. “All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the state wherein they reside.” Justices Roberts and Barrett ignored the italicized clause to rewrite the purpose of the amendment.
This is not only an insult to black Americans and to all those who died freeing their ancestors. This is an insult to all Americans, who by the lights of the Constitution have an inherent collective right to national self-determination. When Democrats get in power and open the America’s gates to the world, they will change the demographic composition of the nation and achieve one-party rule. I have to be grim here: the Republic is effectively over.
Now on to today’s essay.
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One must always consider the source, they say, so let’s talk about the United Nations Independent International Commission of Inquiry on the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem, and Israel, established by the UN Human Rights Council (HRC) in 2021. The dictum is especially true when it comes to the UN, which has been colonized and corrupted by Third Worldism. The three-member panel of “independent experts” on the UN commission ostensibly investigates alleged violations of international humanitarian and human rights law by all parties to the conflict. The reality is that the UN works from an anti-Western standpoint.

In November 2025, I published an essay, “Trump and the Battle for Western Civilization,” I wrote the following,
“I have lost confidence in the United Nations and the efficacy of international law to defend freedom and human rights. When the United Nations was founded, it was established on Western values of international cooperation and law. The Universal Declaration of Human Rights emerged from this framework. But not all member states endorsed it in substance, even if they formally signed onto it. Moreover, Muslim-majority nations developed their own declarations of rights—most notably the Cairo Declaration on Human Rights in Islam—which is founded on Sharia rather than the Enlightenment principles that gave rise to democratic republicanism and human rights.
As a result, the UN includes a wide array of states whose commitments to democracy and rights are not aligned with the Western standards that originally shaped the institution. These Western standards are not arbitrary; they are the product of reason in the context of European culture, made possible by the Protestant Reformation and the broader intellectual currents of Christian civilization.
If the UN or its agencies are asked to adjudicate whether Israel is responsible for genocide after the massacre of Jews in Israel on October 7, 2023, the judgment would ostensibly rest on the legal definition of genocide—a Western juridical concept. In practice, however, the judgment rendered would be heavily influenced by the political alignments and value systems of states that do not share the underlying philosophical commitments from which those legal definitions arose. Many of these states are openly hostile to Israel and to the West. Perhaps the UN won’t make this determination. But one has reason to worry it will. (And then what?)”
In its June 2026 report, which highlights that approximately 30 percent of those killed in Gaza were children, the commission has given ammunition to antisemites who frame Israel’s defensive war against Hamas terrorists as a “genocide.” While the commission is mandated to examine conduct by Israel, Palestinian armed groups, and others, its reports have consistently emphasized Israeli actions as the primary focus. This has led Israel, the United States, and several Western governments to accuse the commission of politicization and systemic bias.
This has everything to do with who is on the commission. As of 2026, the commission is chaired by Srinivasan Muralidhar of India, a former Supreme Court and Delhi High Court judge. The other members are Florence Mumba of Zambia, a judge known for her work on the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, and Chris Sidoti of Australia, a human rights lawyer and former Australian Human Rights Commissioner. Sidoti in particular is well-known for his obsession with Israel, accusing Israeli authorities of committing war crimes, crimes against humanity, and acts amounting to genocide in Gaza. He has called the IDF one of the most criminal armies in the world.

The panelists are appointed by the HRC president, a position currently held by Sidharto Reza Suryodipuro of Indonesia. He is Indonesia’s Permanent Representative in Geneva. Indonesia is firmly pro-Palestinian and has no diplomatic relations with Israel. Suryodipuro is well-versed in the language of left-wing anti-colonialism. His role is framed as procedural, but he appoints members, chairs sessions, and facilitates consensus. His country’s longstanding stance shapes perceptions of the Council’s priorities, particularly its disproportionate attention to Israel under Agenda Item 7 compared to other global conflicts.
The HRC is notorious for including member states with questionable human rights records and for selective enforcement. The commission is well-known for its hostility toward Israel and for undermining the credibility of UN human rights efforts. The report’s “findings” are not worth the paper they’re written on.
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The commissions findings are wrong because all the assumptions are wrong. The claim that Israel has perpetrated a genocide in Gaza requires the assumption that it is the intention of Israel to eliminate in whole or in part an ethic group. The claim makes no sense since the ethnic group in question, Arab Muslims, live, work, and thrive in Israel. The charge of war crimes and crimes against humanity ignore historical reality.
Take the modern paradigm of genocide: the Judeocide. Germany rounded up Jews in Germany and systematically exterminated them. This situation is the diametric opposite of the Israel-Gaza situation. Arab Muslims are citizens of, participants in, and protected by the Israeli state. Why isn’t Israel rounding up Arab Muslims internal to the state? Where is the genocide?
Germany also rounded up Jews in the countries they occupied. Indeed, a motive in occupying countries was expanding the reach of the genocidal project. To be sure, the primary stated motive for Nazi expansion was to acquire territory (Lebensraum), destroy perceived enemies, and establish German hegemony in Europe. However, once Germany had conquered a territory, the expansion greatly facilitated the implementation and eventual radicalization of the genocidal project against Europe’s Jews.
Conquest brought millions more Jews under Nazi control. Before the war, Germany had about 500,000 Jews. The annexation of Austria, occupation of Czechoslovakia, invasion of Poland, and later the invasion of the Soviet Union placed millions of additional Jews under Nazi rule. Israel is not an expansionist state. There is no Zionist project to conquer Arab territories and exterminate Muslims. And, if the disputed territories ever become part of a greater Israel (which I think they should), Arab Muslims who integrate with the state will become Israeli citizens.
As I have written about before in numerous essays, sharing pictures of the destruction of Gaza’s buildings and dead Arabs to sustain a claim that of Israel is the aggressor must assume that the situation is analogous to that of WWII with Israel representing German belligerence. Here, again, the situation is the diametric opposite of the historical case. The Israeli government is not analogous to the Nazi regime. Zionism is not analogous to National Socialism. Hamas is. The analogue is not only analogous positionally, but also ideologically. Both the Nazis and Hamas worked from genocidal intent.
The upshot is that one cannot oppose Nazism and at the same time support Hamas. Hamas was the elected government in Gaza when its soldiers invaded Israel and massacred thousands of Jewish civilians. Hamas is the aggressor. Hamas’s goal is the elimination of Jews from the river to the sea. Israel is defending itself against an aggressor pursuing the genocide of Jews. Sovereign nation states have an inherit right to defend their peoples. The commission could not be more wrong.
Those condemning Israel and defending Hamas have stood the situation on its head. Siding with Hamas is the moral equivalent of siding with the Nazis in WWII. That the situation has been flipped in so many minds cannot be attributed to a rational disagreement about the cause of the war and its entailments. It is a rationalization. The rationalization is entirely ideological.
If Mexico invaded the United States and killed American citizens, the United States would be completely justified and raining holy hell on Mexico City. Pictures of a devastated Mexico City and dead Hispanics would not be evidence of genocide, but the consequences of Mexico’s aggression against the United States. The Mexican state brought hell to its people. They fucked around and found out. If the US invaded and occupied Mexico in this scenario, it would be entirely justified in doing so.
There is one reason that the Israel-Gaza war is stood on its head: Jew-hatred. One must assume that Jews have no right to defend themselves from aggression, a double standard that necessarily sees Jews as a lesser or a wicked people. What Hamas did on October 7—and in many other acts of aggression over the years—is justified in the minds of the antisemite: the antisemite believes Israel is bad not merely because of what it did in retaliation; Israel is already judged bad because Jews are presumed evil. Therefore, in the antisemite’s mind, October 7 was justified. When a man takes that position, he becomes the advocate of genocide, since the Hamas project is the extermination of Jews in the region and, if it had its way, everywhere in the world.
Jews are not only unsafe in Israel, but everywhere they reside if Muslims sharing the genocidal intent are present. And not just Muslims—the non-Muslims who ally with them. This is not Israel’s struggle alone. It’s our struggle. It is a struggle to save Western Civilization. And the source of the threat, aside from an ascendant China, is the Islamic Republic of Iran. This threat must be eliminated.














