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Marching for Tyrants: Inside America’s Far-Left Protest Machine — and Why Jews Are in Its Crosshairs
UConnDivest, a Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP) spinoff, demonstrating at University of Connecticut. Photo: UConnDivest/Instagram
There is something profoundly wrong in American protest culture — and the rot is no longer subtle. It is visible in the streets, on college campuses, and now in the grotesque spectacle of American far-left activists marching in support of Nicolás Maduro.
These are not confused individuals acting independently. They are members and followers of a tightly networked protest ecosystem — self-described socialists, communists, anti-capitalists, and “decolonization” activists who have made opposition to the United States, Israel, Zionists, Republicans, Conservatives, Christians, and liberal democracy their unifying ideology.
They organize under different banners but move together — from “No Kings” protests, to pro-Hamas and anti-Israel demonstrations, to chanting for Maduro in American cities. Groups such as the Party for Socialism and Liberation (PSL), the ANSWER Coalition, Code Pink, radical factions of the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA), Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP), Queers for Palestine, and Within Our Lifetime do not merely overlap in membership. They coordinate. They cross-promote. They share organizers, marshals, slogans, chants, visual branding, and digital toolkits.
Their leaders appear interchangeably at rallies for Venezuela, Gaza, and against American institutions. This is not speculation. It is documented, reported, and repeatedly observed by journalists, NGOs, and government agencies monitoring extremist and protest networks.
They claim they are marching “for Venezuelans,” while chanting the name of a man who stole an election, runs a narco-terrorist regime, and is despised by his own people. Maduro is not Venezuela’s legitimate president. He is a dictator who lost, cheated, and ruled through fear. The Organization of American States, Human Rights Watch, the United Nations, and the US Treasury Department have all documented the regime’s political imprisonment, torture, censorship, extrajudicial killings, and corruption. These are not opinions — they are facts.
And while these American activists scream that US action against Maduro is “imperialist” or “illegitimate,” Venezuelans themselves are dancing in the streets — in Caracas, Miami, Madrid, and cities across the global diaspora — celebrating the collapse of a regime that destroyed their country. They are not confused about who their oppressor is. Only the activists are.
The operation was not only morally justified; it was strategically necessary. It protected the security and stability of the Western Hemisphere, safeguarded the interests of Venezuela’s citizens, and ensured the integrity of the Americas in the face of malign influence.
Venezuela, once among the world’s wealthiest nations, flourished under US energy partnerships. Its oil revenues fueled infrastructure, education, and public services, and the people prospered. Then communists seized power, destroyed democratic institutions, and funneled resources to themselves and their allies — Iran, Russia, China, and Hezbollah — while ordinary Venezuelans suffered.
And yet, far-left activists, whose hatred for Trump is so profound that it blinds them to reality, cannot admit that a single thing about this operation is right, just, or effective. Instead, they cling to ideology, pretending principle and morality exist while denying the facts in front of them. This ideological blindness is central to their problem: loyalty to a narrative is more important than recognition of truth, justice, or liberation.
What unites these movements is not concern for human rights, but a shared ideological framework: anti-Americanism, anti-capitalism, and the belief that any regime or movement opposing the West must be defended — no matter how brutal or corrupt it is.
The connective tissue is clear: the same activists who marched under “No Kings” banners, claiming to oppose authoritarianism, now march for a dictator. The same organizers. The same slogans. The same signs. The same fonts. The same chants. The same scripts circulating in group chats. The same funding streams.
The demonstrators themselves are often less ideological than the organizations manipulating them. Many are alienated, disconnected from family, faith, or purpose, and drawn to movements that offer identity, certainty, and belonging in exchange for obedience. They adopt causes that have nothing to do with them, in countries they have never visited, involving conflicts they do not understand. They memorize slogans. They repeat scripts. They borrow values they never practiced, perform them publicly, and betray them the moment those values collide with their ideological tribe.
This is not activism. It is mobilized nihilism.
For Jews, the warning signs are unmistakable. These movements consistently converge on antisemitic outcomes. They target Jewish institutions under the guise of “anti-Zionism.” They rationalize violence against Jews as political necessity. They erase Jewish history while framing Jewish self-determination as illegitimate. The same activists who chant for Venezuela’s “liberation” have no problem marching alongside slogans that celebrate October 7 or deny Jewish suffering.
History is a guide. Movements that claim to fight injustice but excuse tyrants and terror groups often end with the same outcome: Jews cast as symbols of power to dismantle, rather than people to protect. When protest culture rewards allegiance over truth and spectacle over principle, Jewish safety is always in jeopardy.
When American activists chant for the downfall of democracies while pretending to be righteous, they are not resisting oppression. They are rehearsing it.
And Jews, once again, are being told to pay attention.
Yuval David is an Emmy Award–winning journalist, filmmaker, and actor. An internationally recognized advocate for Jewish and LGBT rights, he is a strategic advisor to diplomatic missions and NGOs, and a contributor to global news outlets in broadcast and print news. He focuses on combating antisemitism, extremism, and promoting democratic values and human dignity. Learn more at YuvalDavid.com, instagram.com/Yuval_David_, x.com/yuvaldavid, youtube.com/yuvaldavid, and across social media.
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Some Tankers Cross Strait of Hormuz Before Shots Fired, Ship-Tracking Data Shows
A satellite image shows the ship movement at the Strait of Hormuz on April 17, 2026, in Space. EUROPEAN UNION/COPERNICUS SENTINEL-2/Handout via REUTERS
More than a dozen tankers, including three sanctioned vessels, passed through the Strait of Hormuz after a 50-day blockade was lifted on Friday, shipping data showed, before Iran reimposed restrictions on Saturday and fired at some vessels.
Reopening the strait is key for Gulf producers to resume full oil and gas supplies to the world, and end what the International Energy Agency has called the worst-ever supply disruption.
US President Donald Trump said on Friday Iran had agreed to open the strait, while Iranian officials said they wanted the US to fully lift its blockade of Iranian tankers.
Western shipping companies cautiously welcomed the announcements but said more clarity was needed, including on the presence of sea mines, before their vessels could transit.
IRAN RESUMES RESTRICTIONS
The ships that passed through the strait on Friday and Saturday via Iranian waters south of Larak island were mainly older, non-Western-owned vessels and included four sanctioned ships, according to ship-tracking data.
Iran arranged passage for a limited number of oil tankers and commercial ships following prior agreements in negotiations, a spokesperson for Iran’s Revolutionary Guards said.
Other ships have been seen approaching the strait and turning back as Iran said it would maintain strict controls as long as the US continues its blockade of Iranian ports.
The UK Navy reported on Saturday that Iranian gunboats fired at some ships attempting to cross the strait.
Some merchant vessels received radio messages from Iran’s navy saying the strait was shut again and that no ships were allowed to pass, shipping sources said on Saturday.
Ship-tracking data showed five vessels loaded with liquefied natural gas from Ras Laffan in Qatar approaching the strait on Saturday morning.
No LNG cargoes have transited the waterway since the US-Israeli war with Iran began on February 28.
Hundreds of ships have been stuck in the Gulf since the conflict started and Tehran closed the strait, forcing Gulf oil and gas producers to sharply cut production.
Top producers such as Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Iraq and Kuwait say they need steady tanker flows and unrestricted passage through the strait to resume normal export operations.
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Trump Greenlights Russian Oil to Ease Strain on Global Markets After War with Iran
US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent in Washington, DC, US, March 27, 2026. Photo: REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
i24 News – The Trump administration has authorized a 30-day emergency waiver allowing the maritime purchase of Russian oil, reversing a hardline stance in an effort to stabilize skyrocketing global energy prices.
The Treasury Department announced Friday that the license for crude and petroleum products will remain in effect until May 16, 2026, responding to intense pressure from international partners struggling with the fallout of the war with Iran.
This policy pivot comes as a surprise after Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent suggested earlier this week that no further exemptions would be granted:
“As negotiations with Iran accelerate, the administration seeks to ensure oil availability for those who need it most. We must prevent a total price collapse for consumers while the geopolitical situation remains volatile.”
Ensuring global oil availability is paramount for the US as over 80 energy facilities in the Middle East have been damaged by recent war with Iran. With the November midterm elections approaching, record-high fuel prices at the pump remain a primary vulnerability for the Republican party. By allowing Russian oil back into the maritime flow, the administration hopes to neutralize “pain at the pump” before voters head to the polls.
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UK: Islamist Group Claims to Attack Israeli Embassy with ‘Drones Carrying Radioactive, Carcinogenic Materials’
A UK man has been arrested for allegedly threatening a group of Jews while wielding an ax on Rosh Hashanah. Photo: Tony Webster / Wikimedia Commons.
i24 News – British police officers in protective clothing were seen investigating a “security incident” near the Israeli embassy in London on Friday, after a jihadist group put out a video showing it launching two drones allegedly carrying radioactive and carcinogenic materials toward the embassy.
“There is an increased police presence in Kensington Gardens and officers are assessing a number of discarded items. As a precaution, some of the officers who have been deployed are wearing protective clothing. We recognize this may concern local residents and the wider public,” police said in a statement.
“Counter Terrorism Policing London are aware of a video shared online overnight in which a group claims to have targeted the nearby embassy of Israel with drones carrying dangerous substances,” the statement further read. “While we can confirm that the embassy has not been attacked, we are carrying out urgent inquiries to determine the authenticity of the video and to identify any potential link between it and the items discarded in Kensington Gardens.”
The incident comes amid a steep hike in antisemitic attacks in Britain targeting Jewish and Israeli individuals and institutions.
The group that released the video was identified as Harakat Ashab al-Yamin al-Islamia, a shadowy entity with suspected ties to Iran. It has already claimed seven attacks against Jewish institutions, including an arson attack in London where four ambulances owned by the Hatzolah charity were torched.
