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Jennifer Garner Stirs Controversy After Sharing Video With ‘Palestine’ Supporter at Soccer Game
Jennifer Garner, left, at a recent Angel City FC match at BMO Stadium in Los Angeles. Photo: Screenshot
Actress and entrepreneur Jennifer Garner has left some fans disappointed after she shared a video of her performing with a pro-Palestinian activist at a recent soccer game in Los Angeles.
Garner is co-founder of the Angel City Football Club, a National Women’s Soccer League professional team based in Los Angeles. At a recent Angel City home game in BMO Stadium, Garner attended to show support for her team. The “Family Switch” star shared a video on Instagram from the game showing her beating a drum as fans in the stadium chanted “Angel City.”
The drum Garner played in the video was draped in what appeared to be a pink-colored keffiyeh. The actress was also beating the instrument with a woman who had a shawl around her neck that featured the colors of the Palestinian flag and the word “Palestine.” Their performance on the drums was displayed on the Jumbotron inside BMO Stadium.
“So, I’m a drummer now,” Garner wrote in the video’s caption, before thanking Canadian Indian YouTuber Lilly Singh “for being a badass” and the “always incredible” La Fortaleza, the name given to the Angel City FC supporters’ section in the venue. The Once Upon a Farm co-founder made no reference to the keffiyeh lookalike or pro-Palestinian sentiments expressed in the video, but she did label the original audio for the clip as “celebrities4palestine.”
However, Instagram users quickly took to the comments section on Garner’s post to share their thoughts on the matter. Some told Garner her interaction with the “Palestine” supporter was “deeply disappointing” and sad, and accused her of being complacent with the rest of the world in “diminishing what happened on October 7” during the deadly Hamas terrorist attacks in Israel.
“You were a role model of mine growing up. But that era has ended,” wrote one upset Instagram user. Another told Garner: “I’m sad to see your support a terrorist group — look what happened in LA yesterday. They brought destruction and violence to a peaceful neighborhood. Look what happened October 7. They don’t promote peace, they promote hate.”
Anti-Israel activists also took to the comments section, applauding Garner and sharing the emoji of the Palestinian flag with the message “Free Palestine.” One Instagram user wrote, “From the river to the sea Palestine will be free from Zionists Israhell.”
In January, Garner’s daughter Violet Affleck — her eldest child with ex-husband Ben Affleck — was photographed walking in Beverly Hills with her mother while wearing a black crewneck with a watermelon printed on it. Watermelons have become an expression of solidarity with Palestinians amid the ongoing Israel-Hamas war. The clothing company behind the shirt, Wear The Peace, said on its website that all proceeds from the sale of the crewneck will be donated to the nonprofit Pious Projects, which provides humanitarian help to locals in the Gaza Strip.
The post Jennifer Garner Stirs Controversy After Sharing Video With ‘Palestine’ Supporter at Soccer Game first appeared on Algemeiner.com.
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The Anti-Israel Mob Never Mentions Women’s Rights in Israel — Compared to the Middle East

Paris 2024 Olympics – Judo – Women -78 kg Victory Ceremony – Champ-de-Mars Arena, Paris, France – August 01, 2024. Silver medallist Inbar Lanir of Israel celebrates. Photo: REUTERS/Arlette Bashizi
In parts of the Middle East, women still live in deeply patriarchal, often brutal systems. Changes exist more on paper than in practice. Power remains in the hands of men, religious systems, and political elites — and this repressive treatment often goes unchallenged.
This happens in places like Gaza under Hamas, in Afghanistan under the Taliban, in Iran under the ayatollahs, and even in Saudi Arabia, where “reforms” like women driving made headlines in 2018.
Let’s be clear: not every Muslim-majority country treats women this way. In places like Jordan, Egypt, and Turkey, many women work, study, and participate in public life. But even there, legal protections and personal freedoms often lag behind. And in the four examples mentioned — Gaza, Iran, Afghanistan, and Saudi Arabia — women face severe, institutionalized oppression. These are not fringe cases; they reflect the governing ideologies of millions.
Now contrast that with Israel.
In Israel, the only liberal democracy in the region, both Jewish and Arab women live with rights and freedoms unheard of in most of the Middle East.
In Israel, women:
- Vote and run for office
- Serve as Supreme Court judges, ministers, professors, doctors, and CEOs
- Join the military, even in combat roles
- Protest publicly without fear of being shot or jailed
- Choose how to dress, where to work, whom to marry, and what to believe
- File police reports and expect legal protection
Women in Israel are not just present, they lead. They command battalions, fly fighter jets, debate in the Knesset, run start-ups, and shape policy. Gender equality is not perfect — no country is — but legally, all women are fully protected.
And this is the part that’s almost never said: Arab women in Israel also enjoy more rights than in any Arab country. They study in top universities, vote freely, become doctors, lawyers, and leaders. Yes, some face traditional cultural pressures in their communities, but under Israeli law, they are citizens with equal rights, and legal recourse when those rights are violated.
Can the same be said for women in Gaza, ruled by Hamas? For women under the Taliban in Afghanistan? Or for the brave Iranian women imprisoned for removing their headscarves?
If you are a self-respecting feminist in the West, this should be a moral line: Israel is the only place in the Middle East where women are truly free. In Tel Aviv, if a woman is raped, she can go to the police. She’ll be heard, investigated, supported.
In Tehran, she might be blamed. In Riyadh, she could be imprisoned. In Kabul, she might be killed. In Gaza, she might be forced to marry her rapist.
So ask yourself: if you support women’s rights, why are you aligning with regimes or movements that strip women of their humanity?
Something is deeply broken when women in free societies chant slogans for groups that would silence, veil, and imprison them. When feminists march with Palestinian flags, are they aware that under Hamas, there is no LGBTQ+ freedom, no feminist activism, no legal protections for women?
You don’t have to support every policy of the Israeli government to recognize this truth: Israel is the only country in the Middle East where a woman can live as a full, free citizen.
Western feminists need to wake up. When you champion groups like Hamas or regimes like Iran “for the cause,” you are betraying the very values you claim to fight for.
Until that realization comes, I ask just one thing: If you truly care about women, why on earth are you standing against Israel?
Sabine Sterk is the CEO of Time To Stand Up For Israel.
The post The Anti-Israel Mob Never Mentions Women’s Rights in Israel — Compared to the Middle East first appeared on Algemeiner.com.