Rotten Apple: Dozens of Former Israeli Spies Hired by Silicon Valley Giant

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Original article by Alan Macleod republished from MPN under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 International License.

Apple has made headlines in recent weeks for touting its commitment to privacy and human rights, rolling out tools to limit surveillance and spyware. But behind the corporate messaging lies a much darker reality.

The company has quietly brought in dozens of veterans from Unit 8200, Israel’s shadowy military intelligence unit known for blackmail, mass surveillance, and targeted killings.

Many of these hires took place as Israel escalated its war on Gaza, and as CEO Tim Cook publicly expressed support for Israel while disciplining employees for pro-Palestinian expressions. Apple’s deepening ties to Israel’s most controversial intelligence raise uncomfortable questions, not only about the company’s political loyalties, but also about how it handles vast troves of personal user data.

A MintPress News investigation has identified dozens of Unit 8200 operatives now working at Apple. The company’s hiring spree coincides with growing scrutiny of its ties to the Israeli government, including its policy of matching employee donations to groups such as Friends of the IDF and the Jewish National Fund, both of which play a role in the displacement of the Palestinian people. The intense pro-Israel bias at the corporation has led many former and current employees to speak out.

This investigation is part of a series examining the close collaboration between Unit 8200 and Western tech and media companies. Previous investigations examined the links between Unit 8200 and social media giants like TikTokFacebook and Google, and how former Unit 8200 spies are now responsible for writing much of America’s news about Israel/Palestine, holding top jobs at outlets like CNN and Axios.

Revealed: The Former Israeli Spies Working in Top Jobs at Google, Facebook and Microsoft

Hundreds of agents from Israeli spying organization Unit 8200 are now employed in top roles at Google, Facebook, Microsoft, and Amazon.

MintPress News·Alan Macleod·31 Oct 2022

A Few (Dozen) Bad Apples

Israel’s international reputation has taken a severe hit amid multiple spying scandals and ongoing attacks against its neighbors. During this same period, Apple has ramped up its recruitment of former Israeli intelligence personnel.

The Silicon Valley giant has hired dozens of former agents from the controversial Israeli intelligence outfit, Unit 8200, raising questions about the corporation’s political direction.

Nir Shkedi is among the most prominent examples. From 2008 to 2015, he served as a commander and Chief of Learning at Unit 8200, leading a team of approximately 120 operatives who developed new artificial intelligence tools to perform rapid data analysis.

Unit 8200 is at the forefront of this technology, and is known to have used AI to auto-generate kill lists of tens of thousands of Gazans, including children. These tools helped the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) bypass what it called human targeting, “bottlenecks,” and strike huge numbers of Palestinians.

Shkedi has been a physical design engineer at Apple’s Bay Area campus since 2022.

Nir Shkedi Linkedin Bio

Noa Goor is another senior Unit 8200 figure turned Apple employee. From 2015 to 2020, Goor rose to become a project manager and head of cybersecurity and big data development team at Unit 8200, where she, in her own words, “invent[ed] creative technological solutions for high priority intelligence goals” and “manag[ed] two strategically important cyber projects” for the IDF.

One of the most important cyber projects Unit 8200 has launched in recent times is the September pager attack on Lebanon, an act that injured thousands of civilians and was widely condemned as an act of international terrorism, including by former CIA Director Leon Panetta. While Goor was not personally involved in that operation, Unit 8200 has spearheaded similarly nefarious actions for decades.

In 2022, Goor was hired by Apple as a system-on-chip design engineer.

Noa Goor Linkedin Bio

Eli Yazovitsky, meanwhile, was directly recruited from Unit 8200. In 2015, he left a high-powered nine-year career as a manager in the military unit to join Apple, where he rose to become an engineering manager. He has since moved on to tech giant Qualcomm.

Unit 8200 is Israel’s most elite—and most controversial—military intelligence unit. It serves as the backbone of both Israel’s burgeoning tech sector and its repressive surveillance apparatus. The unit has developed cutting-edge technology like facial recognition and voice-to-text software to surveil, repress, and target Palestinians.

The vast amounts of data gathered on the Palestinian population, including their medical history, sex lives, and search histories, have been used for coercion and extortion. If a certain individual needed to travel across checkpoints for crucial medical treatment, permission could be suspended until they complied. Information about extramarital affairs or sexual orientation, especially homosexuality, is exploited as blackmail material. One former Unit 8200 agent recalled that he was instructed during his training to memorize different Arabic words for “gay” so that he could listen out for them in intercepted conversations.

Internationally, Unit 8200 may be best known for its “former” agents who created the notorious Pegasus software, used by repressive governments around the world to spy on tens of thousands of prominent figures, including royals, heads of state, activists, and journalists.

Among them was Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi, who was assassinated by Saudi operatives in Türkiye in 2018.

While military service is mandatory for Jewish Israelis, few end up in Unit 8200 by accident. Described as “Israel’s Harvard,” parents spend fortunes on STEM-based extracurricular lessons for their children in the hopes that they will be selected to join the IDF’s most elite and selective unit. Those chosen are rewarded with lucrative careers in the tech industry upon completion of their service.

Given Unit 8200’s documented history of violence, espionage, and surveillance, both domestically and internationally, it is worth asking whether tech giants should be hiring its alumni in such large numbers.

Shkedi, Goor, and Yazovitsky are the most high-profile examples, but they are from alone. A closer look reveals that dozens of other Unit 8200 veterans have also secured key roles at Apple.

Engineering and Hardware Design:

Natanel Nissan, formerly head of data analysis at Unit 8200, joined Apple’s Tel Aviv office in 2022. Ofek Har-Even, a longtime officer and manager in the unit, has been a design verification engineer at Apple since 2022. Gal Sharon, a former intelligence systems operator and data analyst, has also worked as a physical design engineer since that same year.

Mayan Hochler and Shai Buzgalo, both former Unit 8200 analysts and instructors, hold roles in physical design and validation engineering, respectively.

Software and Cybersecurity:

Ofer Tlusty, who served nearly six years in Unit 8200 as a security and intelligence analyst, has worked as a software engineer at Apple since 2021. Ofek Rafaeli, who served between 2012 and 2016 and rose to project manager during Israel’s 2016 assault on Gaza, became a software engineer at Apple in 2023.

Guy Levy, a former intelligence analyst, now also works as a software engineer.

AI, Machine Learning, and Validation:

Avital Kleiman, a six-year veteran of Unit 8200, is now a machine learning algorithm engineer at Apple. Niv Lev Ari, currently a validation engineer, notes in his LinkedIn profile that he received a letter of commendation from Unit 8200 commander Aviv Kochavi for his work in the unit.

Other Technical Roles:

Shahar Moshe, who worked as an intelligence specialist at Unit 8200 from 2012 to 2015, is now a design verification engineer. Gil Avniel, who spent over five years in the unit, currently serves as a network engineer.

An Apple Rots From the Core

The growing number of former Israeli intelligence operatives working at Apple does not seem to concern the company’s senior management. CEO Tim Cook is known to hold strongly pro-Israel views and has spearheaded the Silicon Valley giant’s collaboration with the Israeli state.

Apple has acquired several Israeli tech firms and now operates three centers in the country, employing around 2,000 people. In 2014, Cook invited Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to the company headquarters in Cupertino, CA, where, in front of the cameras, the two openly embraced. The following year, Cook accepted an invitation from President Reuven Rivlin to visit  Israel. “It is a great privilege to host you and your team here,” Rivlin said, “Even for me, as one who prefers to write with a pen and paper, it is clear what a great miracle you have created when I look at my staff, and my grandchildren.”

Effusive praise for the Apple CEO has also come in the form of honors from pro-Israel organizations. In 2018, the Anti-Defamation League presented Cook with its inaugural Courage Against Hate Award at its Never Is Now Summit on anti-Semitism and Hate, where the organization described him as a “visionary leader in the business community.”

Tim Cook Benjamin Netanyahu
Netanyahu meets Apple CEO Tim Cook during a visit to Apple in 2014. Photo | Israeli GPO

In the wake of the October 7, 2023, attacks, Cook sent out a company-wide email expressing his solidarity with Israel. “Like so many of you, I am devastated by the horrific attacks in Israel and the tragic reports coming out of the region,” he wrote, My heart goes out to the victims, those who have lost loved ones, and all of the innocent people who are suffering as a result of this violence.”

Yet, according to Apples4Ceasefire—a group of former and current employees opposing Israeli actions in Gaza—he has yet to say anything publicly about the mass devastation caused by the Israeli response to October 7.

Indeed, the Silicon Valley corporation has a policy of matching employee donations to groups such as Friends of the IDF, which raises money to buy equipment for IDF soldiers, and the Jewish National Fund, an organization that participates in the theft and destruction of Palestinian land.

Under Cook’s leadership, Apple employees have been disciplined or even fired for wearing pins, bracelets, or keffiyehs in support of the Palestinian people. Nevertheless, groups such as Apples4Ceasefire continue to speak out about what they describe as Apple’s complicity in genocide.

The Unit 8200 Tech Takeover

To be fair, Apple is far from the only tech or media company to hire large numbers of former Unit 8200 operatives. A 2022 MintPress exposé revealed hundreds of Israeli intelligence veterans working at Google, Facebook, Microsoft, and Amazon.

Perhaps the most notable of these is Emi Palmor, a former Israeli justice ministry official who sits on Facebook’s 21-person Oversight Board. Described by Mark Zuckerberg as his platform’s “supreme court,” the board ultimately decides what content is allowed or removed from the world’s largest social network. Facebook has worked closely with the Israeli government to censor or deplatform Palestinian content and accounts.

Even TikTok, often seen as a more open platform, has been hiring former Israeli spies to help manage its operations, according to a November investigation by MintPress. Reut Medalion, for example, served as a Unit 8200 intelligence commander and led its cybersecurity operations team.

TikTok isn’t anti-Israel: It’s Hired Unit 8200 Agents to Run its Affairs

A MintPress News study has unearthed a network of former agents of Israeli spying agency Unit 8200 working at TikTok, a company charged with supposedly being a Chinese-owned hub of anti-Semitic content., Chinese influence TikTok, Israeli spying influence TikTok, Project Texas TikTok, TikTok anti-Palestine bias, TikTok former CIA hires, TikTok Israel content moderation, TikTok Israeli intelligence hires, TikTok pro-Palestine suppression, TikTok U.S.

MintPress News·Alan Macleod·27 Nov 2024

In December 2023, during the peak of Israel’s attack on Gaza, Medalion moved to New York City to accept a job as global incident manager for TikTok’s trust and safety division. Considering the events going on in the world at the time, it’s worth asking what sorts of “global incidents” she was brought in to manage.

After MintPress exposed Medalion’s past to a worldwide audience, she deleted her entire digital footprint from the internet.

Former Israeli intelligence operatives have also found their way into American newsrooms, shaping coverage of the Middle East. A recent MintPress investigation uncovered a network of former Unit 8200 operatives working in some of the most influential newsrooms in the United States.

Revealed: The Israeli Spies Writing America’s News

Media personalities like Barak Ravid, an ex-Israeli spy turned Washington journalist, play a key role in shaping media coverage that protects Israeli military actions and influences unwitting American audiences., Barak Ravid, Barak Ravid spy, Biden administration, Israel-Palestine conflict, Israeli intelligence, Israeli media influence, Media Manipulation, media whitewashing, pro-Israel bias, U.S.

MintPress News·Alan Macleod·16 Oct 2024

Among them is Axios correspondent Barak Ravid, whose Middle Eastern coverage won him the prestigious White House Press Correspondents’ Award. Until at least 2023, Ravid was a member of Unit 8200. CNN has also hired at least two former agents to produce their news coverage, one of whom, Tal Heinrich, now serves as the official spokesperson for Prime Minister Netanyahu.

Given this pattern, Silicon Valley’s partiality towards Israel should not come as no surprise. From tech giants like Google and Amazon to social media powerhouses like TikTok and Facebook, the field is filled with former Israeli spies. Apple is no exception, having hired dozens, if not more, Unit 8200 operatives to run its platforms and shape the company.

This investigation does not claim that the Israeli state is deliberately infiltrating Silicon Valley. However, what it does unquestionably suggest is that the outlook and general biases of these entities are strongly pro-Israel. What does it say about Silicon Valley’s culture that individuals with well-documented ties to a controversial foreign spy agency are considered ideal hires?

It is unthinkable that former intelligence agents of Hezbollah, Iran’s Ministry of Intelligence, or Russia’s FSB or GRU would be hired en masse, and trusted with our most sensitive data. Yet, when it comes to Israel (or U.S. surveillance agencies), the answer is different. Many of these employees are not even “former” agents, and are directly recruited from Unit 8200 while still in active service, despite Israeli law explicitly prohibiting the group’s members from identifying themselves or divulging their alliances.

Thus, in this light, it appears that those like Apples4Ceasefire struggling to end the company’s double standards are fighting an uphill battle.

Feature photo | Illustration by MintPress News

Alan MacLeod is Senior Staff Writer for MintPress News. He completed his PhD in 2017 and has since authored two acclaimed books: Bad News From Venezuela: Twenty Years of Fake News and Misreporting and Propaganda in the Information Age: Still Manufacturing Consent, as well as a number of academic articles. He has also contributed to FAIR.orgThe GuardianSalonThe GrayzoneJacobin Magazine, and Common Dreams. Follow Alan on Twitter for more of his work and commentary: @AlanRMacLeod.

Continue ReadingRotten Apple: Dozens of Former Israeli Spies Hired by Silicon Valley Giant

Oil and Gaslighting: How Trump and Corporations Manufacture Self-Serving ‘Pseudo-Realities’

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Original article by Adam M. Lowenstein republished from DeSmog

U.S. President Donald Trump and corporate image-crafter the World Economic Forum have perfected the tactic of creating “pseudo-realities” to help avoid accountability for damaging actions. Credit: World Economic Forum/Valeriano Di Domenico .

This week, the EU agreed to 15% tariffs with the United States, half of President Donald Trump’s threatened rate, before the August 1 deadline. With Mexico and Brazil trade deals on the horizon, Trump appears to have the world’s pocketbooks, supply chains, and eyeballs precisely where he wants them: in a state of uncertainty, and focused on him.

These days, few observers are surprised by Trump’s ever-evolving tariff threats. But back in April, when stock markets ricocheted after “Liberation Day,” chief executives and financial analysts were startled that Trump had followed through.

“We didn’t believe him,” a Wall Street executive told the Financial Times. “We assumed that someone in the administration that had an economic background would tell him that global tariffs were a bad idea.” Trump seemed surprised by the executives’ surprise: “I said this would exactly be the way it is,” he noted, correctly.

But perhaps CEOs can be forgiven for assuming that the self-proclaimed “Tariff Man” was bluffing. Perhaps it’s understandable that some of the world’s most powerful and highly compensated executives, including fossil fuel leaders, filed Trump’s campaign pledges — “tariffs are the greatest thing ever invented,” he declared last fall — in the category of “things politicians say.”

After all, making high-profile promises on which they have no intention of following through — promises that are based largely on what they want people to think is true, or simply what is convenient to say in the moment — is how corporations operate every day.

Indeed, with the help of well-paid public relations firms, prestigious consultants, and elite conveners like the World Economic Forum, executives and their organizations construct what might be considered “pseudo-realities”: alternative portrayals of the world that serve a company’s interests but have little bearing on how the company actually makes money. 

In the digital age, in fact, operating in the space between word and deed, between image and action, between theater and reality, has become the modus operandi of the corporate world, especially fossil fuel companies.

The Big Oil Autocratic Playbook

Big Oil has honed this playbook to near perfection. For decades,  the industry has enlisted PR agencies to construct elaborate narratives so polished and pervasive that they’ve managed to stave off meaningful climate action while painting the oil and gas giants as working toward — in what might be a first in the history of modern capitalism — its own obsolescence.

Take Saudi Arabia’s state-backed oil giant Aramco, which is one of the most profitable companies in the world. As DeSmog’s TJ Jordan has pointed out, the company’s relentless advertising constructs a narrative of responsibility and green innovation. Aramco frames its advanced fuels and F1 motorsport sponsorship as a credible pathway to decarbonization — part of a broader Saudi push for a clean energy transition.

That argument omits a key piece of reality: not just that the kingdom is a major fossil fuel producer, but that it has stated its commitment to this extractive business model for years to come. (McCannPublicis, and Hill+Knowlton, which is now part of Burson, are among the PR firms that have worked for Aramco.)

Or consider DeSmog’s deeply researched investigation into how Edelman, one of the world’s largest PR firms, polished the image of the United Arab Emirates, creating an alternate reality that convinced the public and heads of state that it was a leader on climate action, obscuring its oil-producing legacy.

The PR campaign helped propel oil baron Sultan Ahmed Al Jaber to the top levels of climate diplomacy as host of COP28, the UN’s annual climate gathering, even as the UAE was pumping more and more oil — a case study in manifesting an effective pseudo-reality.

Sultan Ahmed Al Jaber addresses a news conference in Dubai, December 4, 2023. Credit: Just Stop Oil YouTube Channel.

Meanwhile, this July, barely a year after Edelman won an “eight-figure” contract with Shell, one of the world’s leading oil and gas producers, the agency signed an agreement to manage PR for the upcoming COP30 climate conference in Brazil.

The goal of campaigns like these does not appear to be to convince everyone, everywhere, forever. Instead, like an authoritarian propagandist (or an aspiring one), these efforts seek to flood society’s information channels with alternate visions of how the world might be.

As long-serving autocrats have discovered, the resultant mixture of true belief, skepticism, and confusion creates doubt that the truth — in this case, about the severity of climate change, and the complicity of those responsible for it — can ever really be known. Such doubt helps prevent the emergence of public consensus and stalls momentum for accountability and change.

A Performative Ally

In pursuit of these efforts, fossil fuel companies have found an ally in an organization that is ostensibly committed to tackling the climate crisis and transitioning the world to clean energy.

Indeed, few organizations demonstrate the performative nature of corporate image-crafting as transparently as the World Economic Forum (WEF), the nonprofit that hosts the annual gathering of corporate and political elites of the same name in Davos, Switzerland, each January.

“The big issues in the world, like climate change, cannot be solved by governments alone,” said WEF’s founder and former CEO Klaus Schwab in 2019. “We need new technologies, so business has a role to play. Civil society has a big role to play. We are all stakeholders in our global future. And the World Economic Forum acts as a kind of catalyst for this process.”

(Earlier this year, Schwab resigned from the WEF following allegations that included misappropriating funds and creating a toxic work environment rife with racial discrimination and sexual harassment.)

WEF CEO Klaus Schwab speaks at the group’s 2018 annual meeting. Credit: World Economic Forum/Remy Steinegger

The WEF is decidedly inaccessible to the public: Membership can cost companies more than $650,000 a year, with individual attendees paying upwards of $30,000 for top-tier access to the four-day Davos conference. But it is nevertheless a performance for the public. WEF elites want to be seen and think of themselves as “using their powers for good,” as one of my former bosses in the corporate world used to say.

To that end, the organization publishes a steady stream of content, including reports, white papers, articles, podcasts, YouTube videos, and social media posts. Most of this corporate “thought leadership” shares two distinct but related goals: to position the organization that publishes it as an expert in a problem being discussed (such as climate change), and to portray the company — and “business” more generally — as critical to addressing that problem.

The WEF did not respond to an emailed request for comment.

For instance, in a January 2023 paper published with the consulting firm (and WEF “strategic partner”) PwC, the WEF outlined a “business case” for corporations to pursue climate adaptation strategies. One recommendation: “Capitalize on opportunities” created by the climate crisis. “These adaptation efforts will generate demand for products and services and open new markets,” the report noted.

The language in these publications is typically grandiose. “The future of our planet depends on it,” its foreword concluded, referring to the corporations taking action — of which authoring a report is presumably one part.

The business models of, say, a consulting firm like McKinsey & Co. that is determined, in the words of its boss, to continue “[doing] business with greenhouse-gas emitters,” or of a global nonprofit like the WEF, which brought in more than $500 million in revenue last year, much of it from extractive corporations and oil-reliant governments, do not include concrete actions that would make fossil fuel production less lucrative. (McKinsey, ChevronAramcoBP, and Rio Tinto are among WEF’s other “strategic partners.”)

‘Organized Lying’

A revealing example of how companies use thought leadership to spin pseudo-realities into existence comes from a PR firm with close ties to Schwab and the WEF.

The late 2010s and early 2020s marked a short-lived era in which executives decided that their workers, customers, and other “stakeholders” — such as politicians and regulators — wanted to hear that businesses were solving global challenges like climate change, inequality, and racism. This self-serving notion was called “stakeholder capitalism,” which also became the title of a 2021 book by Klaus Schwab.

Edelman, one of the largest PR firms in the world, helped drive this corporate reimagining. “CEOs expected to lead on change” was among the findings of the agency’s 2019 “trust barometer,” a survey it releases in Davos every January.

The following year, company CEO Richard Edelman highlighted the “stunning” finding that employees “expect their employer’s CEO to speak up on one or more issues.” In 2021, Richard Edelman proclaimed that “the events of this past year reinforced business’ responsibility to lead on societal issues.” Citing the trust survey, the CEO wrote in a 2023 blog post titled “Companies Must Not Stay Silent,” that, “Business leaders must not only speak out on incidents of injustice and the pressing issues of the day, but they must take action.”

PR firm CEO Richard Edelman writes an annual trust survey that a researcher said “consistently paints the picture that best served the interests” of Edeman and its clients. Credit: Wikimedia Commons

In a 2024 paper, Lee Edwards, a professor of strategic communications and public engagement at the London School of Economics, looked closely at the surveys Edelman published between 2018 and 2022. She studied not only their findings and conclusions, but the entire package — the headlines, the imagery, the tone, the formatting, the branding.

Edwards found that Edelman consistently painted the picture that best served the interests of the firm and its clients: that public trust in governments, nonprofit organizations, and the media was collapsing — meaning, in turn, that businesses had an obligation to step into the breach.

In a nod to Hannah Arendt, the late philosopher and scholar of totalitarianism, Edwards described the trust barometer as an example of “organized lying,” which “reconstitutes … reality on the basis of whatever the organization deems necessary to achieve their goals.” Corporate thought leadership “might be based on deception,” Edwards argued, “but the appearance of truth is what matters most for its value in the production of trust.”

In short, you do not need to convey what is true. You only need convince people to believe that something is true, a tactic that Trump and his Maga movement specialize in.

Corporate Trust Narratives as Alternative Realities

Edwards concluded that “the production of trust narratives by the public relations industry is not a commentary on a pre-existing reality, but a construction of an alternative reality, that in many ways obscures — intentionally or otherwise — many inconvenient but factual truths about the role of business in society.”

Because these alternative realities are driven by what is most useful for companies to portray as the truth at a given moment in time, their conclusions can shift quickly. The rhetorical emergence of stakeholder capitalism was promptly followed by a right-wing backlash that saw furious pundits and political parties in the United States and elsewhere, especially the MAGA movement and its emulators around the world, gain momentum — and sometimes win elections — in part by decrying what they called “woke capitalism.”

Professor Lee Edwards describes Edelman’s trust barometer as an example of “organized lying.” Credit: LSE Department of Media and Communications

In turn, as the cheery narrative that companies would use market forces to fight injustice and solve climate change began to incur reputational and political risks from the right, companies did not hesitate to pivot to a different message — one that, in many ways, appeared incompatible with what they had been touting widely only months before.

“My advice to all of you for your companies is stay out of politics,” Richard Edelman told the WEF in January 2024, less than a year after advising that “this is not the time for CEOs and the companies they lead to remain silent or stand down.”

One organization that appeared to follow Edelman’s change of heart was the WEF itself. In 2024, Semafor reported that Richard Edelman was among the executives counseling the WEF to shift its politics rightward to avoid alienating conservative politicians and governments reliant on oil and gas extraction.

“The Gulf monarchies, whose oil money flows down the [Davos] Promenade and helps underwrite the forum, have also grown weary of criticism of fossil fuels and signaled to the forum that, ‘we can do this elsewhere,’” Semafor wrote. A few months later, in April 2024, WEF hosted a “special meeting” in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, where a panel about “an equitable energy transition” featured the Saudi energy minister, the CEO of Occidental Petroleum, and the CEO of ExxonMobil.

In an emailed statement, an Edelman spokesperson said: “The guardrails on speaking out have changed because public expectations of business have evolved. The broad permission once granted to business leaders to speak freely has become more selective, requiring careful consideration of when and where to engage. Our recent data shows that there are specific instances where people expect business leaders to engage on a societal issue such as when the issue harms their employees, customers, or communities.”

Boorstin’s ‘Pseudo-events’

In her 2024 book Invisible Rulers: The People Who Turn Lies Into Reality, Georgetown University professor Renée DiResta discusses what the late historian Daniel J. Boorstin called “pseudo-events”: events manufactured specifically for the purpose of generating media coverage. Like a news conference that announces the formation of a task force that will produce a non-binding report, pseudo-events have no significance in and of themselves; they exist to create the illusion of significance.

Once a pseudo-event has been hallucinated into existence — such as an announcement in a news release or, these days, a mention in an Instagram influencer’s story — its significance cascades outward as more news outlets and social media influencers and online scrollers report on it and cite it and share it. This “narrative laundering,” as DiResta calls it, helps transform a pseudo-event into reality — or, at least, pseudo-reality.

“Once a pseudo-event has been hallucinated into existence —
such as an announcement in a news release or, these days,
a mention in an Instagram influencer’s story — its significance
cascades outward as more news outlets and social media
influencers and online scrollers report on it and cite it and share it.”

The WEF and its corporate members are master crafters of pseudo-events. Indeed, the gatherings of the WEF high in the Swiss Alps, or at June’s “Summer Davos” in Tianjin, China, are themselves pseudo-events. 

They attract legions of wealthy and powerful people, alongside their PR teams and journalists. From behind closed doors emerge plenty of headlines and pledges, endless content and commitments — but no new laws, no binding emissions reductions, no new taxes to help pay for the climate adaptation that “the future of our planet depends on.” And, crucially, their high-profile pronouncements and publications can say whatever they deem most helpful for them to say in that moment.

Out of nothing emerges a pseudo-reality that portrays corporations as they wish to be seen. And in this alternate reality, the real world — in which companies operate as they always have, capitalizing on the sociopathic imperatives of capitalism — is mostly irrelevant.

Trump, Tariffs, and Pseudo-Realities

Of course, what validated, to some extent, the disbelief of the executives and Wall Street analysts on “Liberation Day” is the fact that Trump is a serial fabricator. Over the past decade, no one has been more successful than this president of the United States in spinning up and cashing in on pseudo-realities largely untethered from what he is actually doing.

Shamelessly promising whatever is convenient in the moment, with no intention of following through; profiting off the manipulation of supporters while condescending to them; acquiring power by constructing an alternative narrative of how the world is; performing that pseudo-reality into existence by repeating it over and over again: This is the Trump playbook. But it is also the corporate playbook.

Many say that President Trume aquired power by constructing an alternative narrative of how the world really is. Credit: Public Domain

Despite their initial shock, companies quickly found that there was value in the tariff narrative. Reports are already documenting executives explaining how the expectation of tariff-driven price increases provided an ideal cover for increasing prices — even on products not impacted by tariffs.

In April, asked on CNBC whether corporations were “raising their prices…just because they can,” one oil executive responded, “Exactly. Yes. … It gives them room to move prices up,” as The Lever’s Luke Goldstein noted.

Whether price-gouging under the cover of tariffs, or offering tired-but-effective national security justifications for doubling down on fossil fuels, predicting something and then using your prediction to justify what you already wanted and/or planned to do is a key two-step in what LSE’s Edwards called “organized lying.”

Only in an alternative reality could the PR and influence industry, whose business model includes laundering the reputations of autocrats and creating astroturf front groups to generate the illusion of broad public support, be seen as an authority on public trust. Yet it seems not to matter whether the pseudo-realities they manufacture are genuinely believable — only that they are just believable enough to serve a purpose.

And that purpose is often as simple as preventing the coherence of an alternative narrative, like the fact that corporate profiteering, which rose during the COVID crisis, is exacerbating tariff consequences for consumers. Or that the fossil fuel industry is (still) exploiting public anxieties to preserve its lucrative business model as long as possible, as Amy Westervelt discussed recently for Drilled.

Were narratives like these to cohere, they might generate broad public enthusiasm for new taxes or regulations or consumer protections or unions or even popular movements. As long as a pseudo-reality prevents the truth from cohering, it serves its purpose.

In Invisible Rulers, DiResta notes a consequence of living in a world of pseudo-realities, one in which it becomes difficult for ordinary people to be certain about what is true and what is not (which is also a defining characteristic of authoritarian propaganda states).

“People are simply overwhelmed,” DiResta writes. “The world feels unimaginably complex, and millions believe that they are being manipulated — they’re just not sure by whom and to what end.”

Those millions are often correct.

Donald Trump urges you to be a Climate Science denier like him. He says that he makes millions and millions for destroying the planet, Burn, Baby, Burn and Flood, Baby, Flood.
Donald Trump urges you to be a Climate Science denier like him. He says that he makes millions and millions for destroying the planet, Burn, Baby, Burn and Flood, Baby, Flood.
Neo-Fascist Climate Science Denier Donald Trump says Burn, Baby, Burn.
Neo-Fascist Climate Science Denier Donald Trump says Burn, Baby, Burn.
Continue ReadingOil and Gaslighting: How Trump and Corporations Manufacture Self-Serving ‘Pseudo-Realities’

Amnesty urges police restraint ahead of London protest about Palestine Action ban

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Pro-Palestinian activists stage a solidarity protest outside Royal Courts of Justice as co-founder of Palestine Action Huda Ammori takes Home Secretary to High Court over proscription of the group as terror organization in London, United Kingdom on July 4, 2025. Ammori is seeking to block the proscription coming into effect. [İlyas Tayfun Salcı – Anadolu Agency]

Amnesty International UK has urged the Metropolitan Police against mass arresting peaceful demonstrators expressing support for the recently banned group, Palestine Action, ahead of a major protest planned in London on Saturday, Anadolu reports.

The protest organized by the activist group, Defend Our Juries, is expected to draw hundreds.

Since the group’s ban on July 5 under the Terrorism Act, more than 200 people across the UK have been arrested for displaying slogans such as “I Oppose Genocide. I Support Palestine Action.”

Police have indicated they may arrest hundreds more this weekend, and prison authorities have been asked to prepare for a potential influx of detainees, after the justice ministry initiated a “capacity gold demand,” according to reports.

Amnesty UK Chief Executive Sacha Deshmukh urged officers to exercise restraint and uphold international human rights law, in a letter to Metropolitan Police Commissioner Mark Rowley.

“Peaceful protesters must be free to express themselves this weekend without fear of reprisals, said Deshmukh. Arresting people on terrorism offences for peacefully holding a placard flies in the face of international human rights law.”

“At a time when people are quite rightly outraged by the genocide they see being perpetrated in Gaza, it is more crucial than ever that there is space to peacefully express that outrage,” he also said.

The letter argues that criminalizing protest slogans supportive of Palestine Action breaches the UK’s international obligations to protect freedom of expression and assembly.

It adds that under international law, protest speech can only be criminalized if it incites violence, serious property damage, hatred or discrimination — criteria which, Amnesty notes, are not met by holding a placard.

The letter also references the High Court’s recent decision to grant a full hearing to a judicial review challenge against the proscription.

Read: Britain’s war on Palestine has come home

The Court ruled that the case raised “serious issues to be tried,” meaning the legal foundation for arrests under sections 12 and 13 of the Terrorism Act is now in doubt.

The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights also publicly criticized the UK’s decision to ban Palestine Action.

And the UN Special Rapporteur on Counter-Terrorism and Human Rights has been granted permission to intervene in the judicial review.

Defend Our Juries, which focuses on civil disobedience and protest trials, has led peaceful demonstrations in Westminster since the Palestine Action ban took effect. The protest on Saturday is expected to include up to 500 demonstrators who are expected to hold placards in open defiance of the ban.

Amnesty International has urged police to focus on facilitating peaceful protest rather than suppressing it.

“I call again on the Met police to think carefully before making rash decisions this weekend – their job is to facilitate peaceful protest, not shut it down,” said Deshmukh.

In June, the government announced a ban under the Terrorism Act 2000 after activists from Palestine Action spray-painted planes at a Royal Air Force base, an act being investigated under counter-terrorism laws.

The ban was later passed in the House of Commons and the House of Lords in July.

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Keir "I support Zionism without Qualification" Starmer supporting genocide.
Keir “I support Zionism without Qualification” Starmer supporting genocide.
UK Labour Party Shadow Foreign Secretary repeatedly heckled at a speech to the Fabian Society over his and the Labour Party's support for and complicity in Israel's genocide of Gaza.
UK Labour Party Shadow Foreign Secretary repeatedly heckled at a speech to the Fabian Society over his and the Labour Party’s support for and complicity in Israel’s genocide of Gaza.
Vote Labour for Genocide.
Vote Labour for Genocide.
Continue ReadingAmnesty urges police restraint ahead of London protest about Palestine Action ban

‘Stupid, Criminal, and Horrifying’: Netanyahu Plan to Take Control of Entire Gaza Strip Condemned

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Original article by Julia Conley republished from Common Dreams under Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0).

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu speaks during an event at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel in Jerusalem on July 27, 2025. (Photo: Gil Cohen-Magen/AFP via Getty Images)

“They’re talking about occupying areas that are packed with so many people,” said one Palestinian civilian. “If they do that, there will be incalculable killing.”

Ahead of a meeting with his security ministers, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu confirmed once again Thursday that his government plans to take control of the entire Gaza Strip—”a direct assault on international law,” as one group said this week, and one that his own military leaders have opposed.

In an interview with Fox News, Netanyahu was asked whether his government aims to take over all of Gaza, 75% of which it now claims to control, as officials have stated this week.

“We intend to,” the prime minister said, saying his country would take control of the enclave “in order to assure our security, remove Hamas there, enable the population to be free of Gaza, and to pass it to civilian governance that is not Hamas and not anyone advocating the destruction of Israel.”

Netanyahu convened a security meeting after the interview, seeking approval for his plan to expand Israel’s offensive in Gaza to areas in the central part of the territory where hostages are believed to be held, which the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) have largely avoided since it began bombarding Gaza in October 2023.

The assault has forcibly displaced nearly the entire population of 2.1 million Palestinians, killed more than 61,000, and injured more than 150,000 as Israel’s near-total blockade has pushed the enclave toward famine and starved to death nearly 200 people, including at least 96 children.

The prime minister did not delve into specifics about the plan, but claimed Israel does not “want to govern” Gaza.

“We don’t want to be there as a governing body,” he said. “We want to hand it over to Arab forces.”

IDF Chief of Staff Eyal Zamir has expressed opposition to the proposal, and three military officials told The New York Times Thursday that the military would prefer a new cease-fire deal rather than intensifying fighting.

Cease-fire talks between Hamas and Israel have recently hit a deadlock.

Setting up a system of occupation in Gaza like the one Israel controls in the West Bank would take “up to five years of sustained combat,” officials told the Times.

Muhammad Shehada, a visiting fellow at the European Council on Foreign Relations, explained how Netanyahu and his Cabinet, including Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, likely plan to carry out “the final phase of the genocide” in Gaza, having recently set aside funds “for winning the war” in the enclave.

“Israel will move to annihilate the three remaining areas that haven’t been wiped out fully yet: Gaza City, Deir Al-Balah, and the central refugee camps (i.e. Nuseirat),” said Shehada. “Those three areas have been heavily bombed, invaded by the IDF, shelled nonstop but they have not been depopulated and fully razed to the ground like Rafah, Khan Younis, Jabaliya, Beit Hanoun, etc.”

Palestinian-American analyst Yousef Munayyer denounced Netanyahu’s stated plan as “stupid, criminal, and horrifying.”

Palestinians have expressed fears this week that the latest Israeli proposal would kill far more civilians in Gaza as the IDF moves into areas where hundreds of thousands of people have been forced to move.

“They’re talking about occupying areas that are packed with so many people,” Mukhlis al-Masri, a 34-year-old Palestinian who fled to Khan Younis from his home in northern Gaza, told the Times. “If they do that, there will be incalculable killing. The situation will be more dangerous than anyone can imagine.”

Mairav Zonszein, a senior analyst on Israel at the International Crisis Group, said Netanyahu’s comments on Thursday included “a slip, but a revealing one”: that Israel wants to “enable the population to be free of Gaza” following the IDF’s decimation of the enclave.

“Netanyahu’s threat to ‘take control’ of all of Gaza is like his threat in 2020 to annex the West Bank,” said Zonszein. “Israel already controls and destroyed most of Gaza, and already de facto annexed the West Bank. So while Palestinians will suffer more, Israeli strategy hasn’t changed one bit.”

Original article by Julia Conley republished from Common Dreams under Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0).

Keir Starmer objects to criticism of the IDF. He asks how could anyone object to them starving people to death, forced marches like the Nazis did, bombing Gaza's hospitals and universities,mass-murdering journalists, healthworkers and starving people queuing for food, killing and raping prisoners and murdering children. He calls for people to stop obstructing his genocide for Israel.
Keir Starmer objects to criticism of the IDF. He asks how could anyone object to them starving people to death, forced marches like the Nazis did, bombing Gaza’s hospitals and universities,mass-murdering journalists, healthworkers and starving people queuing for food, killing and raping prisoners and murdering children. He calls for people to stop obstructing his genocide for Israel.
Continue Reading‘Stupid, Criminal, and Horrifying’: Netanyahu Plan to Take Control of Entire Gaza Strip Condemned

Gaza death toll from Israeli war exceeds 61,200, including 197 from starvation

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Relatives and loved ones of Palestinians, who lost their lives in an Israeli attack on the ez-Zeytun neighborhood, mourn the deceased as the bodies are being taken to El Ehli Baptist Hospital for funeral in eastern Gaza City, Gaza on August 6, 2025. [Khames Alrefi – Anadolu Agency]

At least 61,258 Palestinians have been killed in Israel’s genocidal war on the Gaza Strip since October 2023, including 197 who have died from hunger, the Health Ministry said on Thursday, Anadolu reports.

A ministry statement said 100 bodies were brought to hospitals in the last 24 hours, while 603 people were injured, taking the number of injuries to 152,045 in the Israeli onslaught since October 2023.

The ministry also said that four more people died from starvation and malnutrition over the past day, pushing the death toll since October 2023 to 197, including 96 children.

A medical source told Anadolu that 16-month-old Mohammed Zakaria Asfour lost his life at the Nasser Medical Complex in Khan Younis as a result of starvation-related complications amid a severe shortage of food and medicine due to the Israeli siege.

READ: UN says over 100 doctors barred from Gaza since March amid worsening crisis

Activists shared videos on social media showing Mohammed’s extremely frail body and protruding bones.

The ministry also said that 51 Palestinians were killed and 230 injured while trying to get humanitarian aid in the past day, bringing the total number of people killed while seeking aid to 1,706 with over 12,030 others wounded since May 27, when the controversial Gaza Humanitarian Foundation began operations.

Israel has imposed a blockade on Gaza for 18 years and, since March 2 has shut down all crossings, blocking the entry of humanitarian aid and worsening conditions for the territory’s 2.4 million population.

According to Gaza’s government media office, Israel allowed in just 92 aid trucks on Wednesday – far short of the 600 trucks needed daily to meet the needs of the residents.

The Israeli army resumed its attacks on the Gaza Strip on March 18, breaking a ceasefire and prisoner exchange agreement that took hold in January. Efforts for another truce led by the US, Egypt and Qatar have so far not yielded any results.

READ: UN says over 100 doctors barred from Gaza since March amid worsening crisis

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Continue ReadingGaza death toll from Israeli war exceeds 61,200, including 197 from starvation