By Yakir Benzion, United With Israel
A well-known Australian anti-Semite and supporter of brutal Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad launched a vicious online campaign to harass a woman who was jailed and tortured by the Iranian regime, the
Daily Mail reported on the weekend.
Former professor Tim Anderson has been going after Dr. Kylie Moore-Gilbert, a British-Australian academic who was illegally imprisoned in Iran for over two years, where she was accused of “spying” for Israel because her husband at the time was Israeli.
Anderson was fired by Sydney University in 2019 for using an Israeli flag with a Nazi swastika on it during a lecture. In 1979, Anderson was convicted for a murder plot and sentenced to 16 years in jail, but was pardoned after serving seven years.
Apr 4, 2021
Israel is considered a global leader in the cybersecurity business, and approximately 25 percent of all global investments in cybersecurity go to Israel.
By TPS
Israeli cyber companies broke an all-time record and concluded the first quarter of 2021 during which start-ups in the industry raised a total of $1.5 billion in 17 different transactions.
The volume of investments made in Israeli cyber companies is second place in the world in the distribution of investments, after the US.
This landmark is the continuation of a trend after peaking in 2020, during which investments reached $2.9 billion in all four quarters and accounted for 31% of all cyber investments in the world.
The Norwegian government-owned broadcasting company NRK featured an antisemitic blood libel in a quiz about Easter and Passover published on its website on Thursday.
The eighth question in the quiz, entitled “a very special bread,” shows a picture of young boy holding pieces of matzah.
Readers are asked “What was special about the bread Jesus and the disciples ate during the Passover meal?” and can choose from three answers.
The third options says “there was blood in it,” a reference to the blood libel that accused Jews of using the blood of Christian children to make matzah.
Twitter users said NRK including the blood libel in its quiz is “absolutely disgusting.”
Apr 1, 2021
Scientists have discovered that the immune system can find bacteria residing within cancer cells and use them to provoke an immune reaction against a tumor.
By Abigail Klein Leichman, Israel21c
The immune system can find bacteria residing within cancer cells and harness them to provoke an immune reaction against the tumor, according to a study published in
Nature.
An international research team, led by researchers from the Weizmann Institute of Science in Israel, says this discovery may explain why the gut microbiome is known to affect the success of immunotherapy treatments for cancer.
Immunotherapy has dramatically improved recovery rates from certain cancers, particularly malignant melanoma, but still work in only about 40 percent of the cases.
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