Goon Brutalizes Defenseless Nun in Daylight Assault in Jerusalem

A thug viciously beat a nun near King David’s Tomb in Jerusalem, shoving the helpless sister to the ground and furiously kicking her, disturbing video shows.

The brutal assault of the French Biblical and Archaeological School member was captured on surveillance camera Tuesday, when the unidentified man ran up behind the nun, while she was calmly walking down a side street near the tomb on Mount Zion, the video shows, according to NBC News.

The attacker shoved her so hard that the woman hit the pavement, smacking her head on an empty concrete tree ring, the outlet reported.

He then began pummeling the nun with kicks to the chest — until bystanders intervened.

Israeli police arrested the brute and can be heard on the video telling the suspect in Hebrew, “Put your hand down. Show me your hands.” (Read more from “Goon Brutalizes Defenseless Nun in Daylight Assault in Jerusalem” HERE)

Photo credit: IsraelPolice/X

Iran Tortures Dad to Death for Using Internet, Executes Karate Champ in Regime’s Latest Bloody Crackdowns

The barbaric Iranian regime reportedly tortured a dad to death for the high crime of using the internet and abused and executed a 21-year-old karate champ for merely attending a protest.

Father of two Hesam Alaeddin, 40, was beaten to death after being arrested for using Starlink to access the internet — which has been banned in the country since the US-Iran war started Feb. 28.

News of Alaeddin’s death was reported by Reza Pahlavi — the exiled son of the last shah of Iran — and spread across shocked posts on social media.

“The brutal and criminal regime of the Islamic Republic killed Hesam Alaeddin under torture after he was reportedly arrested for using Starlink,” Pahlavi wrote on X on Friday. “For 62 days, this regime has shut down the internet and continues to massacre Iranian people. The world cannot stay silent.”

Alaeddin was detained sometime in the past two weeks after being accused of connecting to the internet with Starlink, IranWire reported.

Iranian regime police searched his home, and when they found the Starlink device, they beat him in the family’s residence until he died, according to IranWire. (Read more from “Iran Tortures Dad to Death for Using Internet, Executes Karate Champ in Regime’s Latest Bloody Crackdowns” HERE)

Photo credit: Flickr

Ex-JPMorgan Staffer Accused of ‘Fabricated’ Sex-Assault Claims Once Apparently Asked Legal Chatbot for Advice: ‘I was raped’

The male ex-JPMorgan staffer accused of making fabricated sex-harassment claims against a female executive apparently asked a legal-expert chatbot for advice nearly a year ago, The Post has learned.

Chirayu Rana — whose recent now-redacted lawsuit against Lorna Hajdini accused the executive bank director of forcing him to be her “sex slave” — was the self-identified user behind a public back-and-forth on the online legal-advice platform AskALawyerOnCall.com 10 months ago, or around July, according to the website.

“I was raped, secually assulted [sic], harassed, and forced to do drugs by my former boss at Morgan Stanley,’’ began the 35-year-old Rana’s supposed exchange with a bot from the site.

“I was then retaliated against for seeking to move groups internally at the firm,” he allegedly wrote.

“HR conducted an ‘investigation’ but they ultimately made me signed [sic] a Separation Agreement.”

The customer later referred to his alleged harasser as a “he’’ as part of two exchanges apparently posted by the site as an example of what it can do for customers. (Read more from “Ex-JPMorgan Staffer Accused of ‘Fabricated’ Sex-Assault Claims Once Apparently Asked Legal Chatbot for Advice: ‘I was raped’” HERE)

Photo credit: Flickr

Disgraced Eric Swalwell Still Messaging Former Staffers on Snapchat Despite Political Fallout

Eric Swalwell, the disgraced former Congressman, is still using Snapchat as a channel for private communications despite it being the app that led to the end of his political career.

The revelation came Friday in a report from the New York Times detailing Swalwell’s use of social media.

“Mr. Swalwell is still using Snapchat. As recently as this week,” the Times wrote. “Mr. Swalwell communicated directly with a former intern on the app and asked her why she had taken a screenshot of their chat history.”

The Times said the details were provided to them through images, though they said the new messages were not sexual in nature.

At least six women have publicly or anonymously accused Swalwell of misconduct spanning sexual assault allegations, inappropriate workplace conduct, and unsolicited explicit communications, including claims involving Snapchat exchanges that allegedly included sexual messages and explicit images. (Read more from “Disgraced Eric Swalwell Still Messaging Former Staffers on Snapchat Despite Political Fallout” HERE)

Photo credit: Gage Skidmore via Flickr

Strait of Hormuz Crisis Sparks Fears of Global Famine

The crisis in the Strait of Hormuz caused immediate shocks to the world oil market, but analysts are also afraid that rising food prices and fertilizer shortages could increase the risk of famine in struggling nations.

Vespucci Maritime CEO Lars Jensen told Fox News Digital on Thursday that the “worst-case” scenario would resemble “the eight-year closure of the Suez Canal from 1967 to 1975.”

“Best case, there is an agreement between the U.S. and Iran within the next few weeks, and the Strait reopens — and it has to be a deal where there is trust that Iran is sufficiently satisfied with the deal such that they do not suddenly close the strait again,” Jensen said.

“Even in that case, it will still take months for the supply chains to revert back to normality,” he added.

The Suez Canal was shut down by Egypt at the beginning of the 1967 Arab-Israeli War. The Egyptians blocked one of the world’s most important shipping lanes by laying minefields and sinking ships to create physical barriers. The canal remained closed until 1975. It was actually the second time the canal was closed by Egypt, after a much shorter shutdown in 1956-1957. (Read more from “Strait of Hormuz Crisis Sparks Fears of Global Famine” HERE)

Photo credit: Flickr

Trump ‘Not Satisfied’ with Latest Iranian Proposal: ‘May Never Be a Deal’

President Donald Trump said Friday that he is “not satisfied” with Iran’s latest proposal to end the conflict, warning there “may never be a deal” as he described Tehran’s leadership as “very disjointed” and confirmed he was briefed on potential military options if an agreement is not reached.

Speaking to reporters as he departed the White House, Trump made clear that the revised Iranian offer — delivered through Pakistani mediators — falls short despite ongoing diplomatic engagement.

“They want to make a deal, but I’m not satisfied with it,” Trump said, adding that Iran is seeking terms he “can’t agree to” even as negotiations continue. He argued Tehran’s push reflects its weakened position, saying the regime “wants to make a deal because they have no military left, essentially.”

Trump pointed to internal divisions within Iran’s leadership as a central obstacle, describing a fractured system struggling to coalesce after the sustained U.S.-Israeli campaign that decimated much of the regime’s senior command structure.

“There’s tremendous discord — they’re having a tremendous problem getting along with each other,” Trump said. “The leadership is very disjointed. It’s got two, three, maybe four groups … they all want to make a deal, but they’re all messed up.”

(Read more from “Trump ‘Not Satisfied’ with Latest Iranian Proposal: ‘May Never Be a Deal’” HERE)