The Digital Hegemon Accords ©️

In a region saturated with chaos, ideology, and centuries of failed diplomacy, clarity sometimes requires sharp lines. Israel’s continued assertion of authority over Gaza—whether through blockade, military operations, or territorial ambition—is not an act of expansionism, but of existential necessity. The Jewish state, born out of the ashes of genocide and centuries of exile, exists in a geopolitical neighborhood that has, since its inception, vowed its annihilation. Gaza, governed by Hamas—a group whose charter once called for the destruction of Israel—is not simply a neighbor in dispute. It is an enemy fortress, armed and funded by foreign actors, embedded in civilian infrastructure, and committed not to coexistence, but obliteration.

Total submission is not about conquest. It is about survival.

For decades, Israel has offered negotiation. It withdrew from Gaza in 2005. It watched as greenhouses and infrastructure were looted and destroyed. It endured rockets raining down on civilian cities. It faced intifadas, kidnappings, and suicide bombings not in occupied territories, but in Tel Aviv and Jerusalem—inside the 1967 borders. It built the Iron Dome not to dominate, but to defend. And still, the assaults came.

A state cannot function with a powder keg on its border. A nation cannot allow a hostile regime to dig tunnels into its soil, or fire missiles from schools and hospitals, or indoctrinate children with martyrdom as a virtue. For any other country, such a situation would result in war without end. And yet, Israel is asked to restrain itself endlessly, while its enemies demand erasure.

There is also the matter of historical justice. The land of Israel is not a colonial outpost; it is the ancient homeland of the Jewish people, from Hebron to Gaza, from Jerusalem to the Galilee. The Jewish presence predates Islam. It predates every modern border drawn by imperial hands. While the Nakba is a tragedy to Palestinians, it was born in part from an unwillingness to accept a Jewish homeland at all. The wars of 1948 and 1967 were not launched by Israel—they were survival responses to existential threats. Every inch gained in war was taken in defense. Every inch lost was paid in blood.

To submit Gaza is to silence the rockets. To neutralize the war drums. It is not ethnic cleansing—it is military necessity. Civilians should be protected. Aid should flow. But the regime must fall. Hamas cannot exist beside Israel. The ideology must break before peace can begin.

This may be an uncomfortable truth for the international community, but comfort is not the currency of peace. Peace comes after fire, after clarity, after will. Israel’s will to live is stronger than the world’s will to scold. In time, Gaza under Israeli control may know stability, growth, even prosperity. But it will never know these things under Hamas.

And so, submission is not subjugation—it is salvation. For Israel, for its children, and ultimately, for Gaza too.

If I Were a Rich Man ©️

There is a beauty that does not announce itself with a flourish, but rather seeps into the consciousness like a slow, warm drip of honey—golden, inevitable, and impossible to forget. It is the beauty of Jewish women, a beauty woven with history, brushed with the lingering incense of old-world melancholy, laced with the defiant glint of survival.

Ah, Jewish women. Their allure is not the thin, brittle kind that withers beneath the weight of time, nor the fleeting prettiness of store-bought charm. No, theirs is an ancestral beauty, a beauty steeped in old libraries and candlelit kitchens, in whispered prayers and sharp laughter, in eyes that have read tragedy and lips that can still sing. It is the softness of Sabbath light falling over a cheekbone sculpted by centuries, the knowing arch of a brow that has seen both exile and homecoming. It is the warmth of a hand that has braided challah and caressed a child’s forehead, the delicate fierceness of a woman who can argue law at dinner and soothe a fever at dawn.

They wear their beauty like a talisman, stitched with the voices of grandmothers who once crossed deserts and seas. It is in the cascade of curls that refuse to be tamed, in the curve of a shoulder that carries both burden and grace. They do not need to be told they are beautiful—they know. It is in the way they move, the way they love, the way they stand, not just for themselves but for generations before them.

And if you have ever been loved by a Jewish woman, truly loved, then you know: it is not a love of half-measures. It is a love that is given with both hands, pressed to your heart like a prayer. It is fierce, relentless, boundless. It is a love that will argue with you and fight for you, that will remember how you take your coffee and remind you to call your mother. It is a love that builds homes, that writes histories, that leaves a mark.

There are many kinds of beauty in this world. But the beauty of a Jewish woman—ah, that is something else entirely. That is a beauty that does not fade, does not bend, does not break. It lingers, like the taste of pomegranate on the tongue, rich, bittersweet, and everlasting.