

AP Writes About Problems in Gaza, Doesn’t Even Mention Hamas
Associated Press writes a biased article about Israel and Gaza, and doesn’t even mention the word “Hamas.”
Associated Press writes a biased article about Israel and Gaza, and doesn’t even mention the word “Hamas.”
Reuters Jerusalem bureau chief and outgoing Foreign Press Association chairperson Luke Baker openly expresses disdain for Israel on Twitter, breaching Reuters’ own Code of Conduct.
Time magazine’s inflammatory and inaccurate headline attributes Avigdor Lieberman as having called for “killing Palestinians.”
The Sunday Times misleadingly states that the State of Israel is planning the death penalty for Palestinian “militants.”
The Christian Science Monitor misrepresents the nature of Gaza and Israel, even omitting the fact that Gaza shares a border with Egypt.
New Zealand’s Broadcasting Standards Authority rules that Jerusalem’s Old City is not located in Israel.
Why did peace talks fail in 2014? According to the Financial Times, it was all Israel’s fault.
AFP’s one-sided story covers a UNICEF report that portrays Israel and its security forces as Palestinian child killers.
The Daily Beast uses an image of a traditional Jewish skullcap to inappropriately draw a linkage between Judaism and a private drug rehab clinic in Israel.
The International Business Times claims that Israel ends a ceasefire by responding to a Palestinian mortar attack from Gaza.
A Palestinian car ramming attack injures IDF soldiers. A Euronews headline erroneously states that it was the Palestinian car that was rammed.
If you work for newspapers, web sites, or TV or radio stations affiliated with terror groups, you’re practicing propaganda, not journalism.
Whether or not she crossed the line of anti-Semitism herself, Rachel Smalley’s sleight-of-hand attempt to cloak her misleading accusations in the mantle of “legitimate criticism” is disingenuous.
Despite reports that a explosion on a Jerusalem bus was a terrorist bomb, CNN’s headline refers to a “bus fire.”
The New York Times’s Diaa Hadid implies that there is something nefarious about Israeli security measures designed to limit their impact on the wider Palestinian population.
Examining the concept of “homeland” within the American context, James Traub in the New York Times claims that Jews gained a homeland in 1948 while Palestinians lost theirs.
While reporting on a decline in the number of Palestinian terror attacks, the Financial Times’s headline refers to “Israel attacks.”
Foreign Policy magazine misleadingly refers to the Hamas terrorist organization as a “Palestinian resistance group” on a photo caption.
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