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It's Monday, May 6.
Tonight: The war in Ukraine, like the war in Gaza, drags on and on and on. And while there is no progress on the battlefield except for some moderate gains by Russian forces over the last several months, the serious risks from this war, which involve the world's largest nuclear power, continue to grow. Over the past weeks, several Western leaders, becoming increasingly desperate about the obvious futility of their war aims, are now explicitly threatening to deploy NATO or other Western armies into Ukraine to fight against Russia. As a predictable and obvious response, Russia announced this week that they were scheduling tasks for the use of tactical nuclear weapons, the kind of radiological bombs that are intended for the battlefield. Whenever countries involved in war begin explicitly musing about the use of nuclear weapons, and worse, when they begin accompanying those statements with actual nuclear tests, it is inherently a gravely dangerous situation. Yet for whatever reasons, the war fanatics and both parties in the U.S. and the leading liberal parties throughout the West continue to scoff at and trifle with this grave risk to humanity. We'll examine the latest events and what is driving them.
Then: Israel's army, as it has long vowed to do, invaded Raffa, where over 1 million Gazan refugees have been living as the only place in Gaza where they can go. Despite the fact that Joe Biden several months ago warned Israel against doing so, calling it a red line, now we'll show you what the latest is there.
But as all of that is happening, on Friday night, we devoted our program to examining the similarities between the post 9/11 climate in the U.S., driven by expansive and reckless terrorism discourse. Everything was terrorism and a terrorist, and that justified everything and the increasingly similar climate emerging in the U.S. to protest or punish and silence. The protesters marching against the Israeli war in Gaza last week saw the approval in the house of one of the most extreme legislative assaults on free speech in years, the incorporation of a radically expanded definition of anti-Semitism into federal anti-discrimination law, an expanded definition that includes a wide range of obviously valid and constitutionally protected opinions about the actions of the State of Israel and the actions of various Jewish individuals. Since that program, just three days ago, the threats posed to the core civil liberties of the United States in order to shield Israel from criticism and activism have only intensified. And we'll show you why and how.
Finally: Batya Unger-Sargon is a friend of our program. She was one of the pro-Israel supporters we had on our show after October 7. We had her on twice, in fact, to present both sides of the Israel debate and allow our viewers to hear each view subjected to debate and critical scrutiny so they could make up their minds. Tonight, we'll talk to her again, this time about her new book entitled “Second Class: How the Elites Betrayed America's Working Men and Women,” which uses numerous interviews with members of the American working class to understand how and why they, in their belief systems, are being systematically excluded from elite American liberal institutions. Some of her findings are ones you'd likely predict, others are not, and we'll also use the opportunity to discuss some of the controversies in the U.S. over the last several weeks involving free speech, campus protests and the Israeli war in Gaza.
For now, welcome to a new episode of System Update, starting right now.