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|    Message 157,224 of 157,374    |
|    useapen to All    |
|    Mahmoud Khalil keeps defending Hamas and    |
|    10 Aug 25 08:12:53    |
      XPost: alt.politics.immigration, alt.news-media, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh       XPost: sac.politics, talk.politics.guns       From: yourdime@outlook.com              Some people are better off keeping their mouths shut.              Such is the case with Mahmoud Khalil, who — when still a student arrested       by ICE agents for his involvement in Columbia pro-Palestine protests —       could be propped up as a martyr by the movement.              Khalil was released from jail in June, and each time he’s encountered a       microphone or a camera ever since, he’s made himself as unsympathetic as       possible.              First, it was refusing to condemn Hamas on CNN. Now, he’s gone as far as       to seemingly justify October 7th in a New York Times interview.              “To me, [October 7] was a desperate attempt to tell the world that       Palestinians are here, that Palestinians are part of the equation,” Khalil       said in a Tuesday podcast conversation with Times reporter Ezra Klein.              Klein asked Khalil whether he saw Oct. 7’s design in the minds of Hamas as       a provocation of war or “something that needed to happen to break the       equilibrium” in the conflict between Israel and Palestine.              “It’s more the latter — just to break the cycle, to break that       Palestinians are not being heard,” Khalil, 30, answered.              He also said that he found it “frightening that we had to reach this       moment in the Palestinian struggle.” Had to? One can imagine it might also       have been frightening for the 1,200 people murdered by Hamas that day.              During the interview, Khalil also dismissed complaints about antisemitism       on campus as primarily the result of “manufactured hysteria.”              He offered a non-specific catch-all disclaimer that “targeting civilians       is wrong,” but his comments made clear that Khalil feels a great deal of       sympathy and understanding towards Hamas.              Klein asked him clarifying questions and teased out his positions, but the       host, who isn’t known to go lightly on his guests, offered only limp       pushback. In fact, it was a remarkably fluffy interview, much of which       centered around Khalil and his personal story and even his grandmother.              This isn’t Khalil’s first time carrying water for Hamas in the mainstream       media.              Last month on CNN, Khalil refused to condemn the internationally       recognized terrorist organization when asked by anchor Pamela Brown, “Do       you specifically condemn Hamas, a designated terrorist organization in the       United States, not just for their actions on October 7?”              Again, he pulled out his vague condemnation of killing “all civilians,       full stop” — but not of Hamas.              When pushed once more about “Hamas specifically,” he doubled down in his       vagueness: “No, I am very clear with condemning all civilians. I’m very       straight in my position in that part. “But it’s disingenuous to ask about       condemning Hamas while Palestinians are the ones being starved now by       Israel.”              He went on to call the question “selective outrage of condemnation” and to       claim it is “disingenuous and absurd to ask such questions.”              Khalil, who was born in Syria to Palestinian parents, was arrested by ICE       officers in March at his Columbia residence and targeted for deportation       on the charge of Secretary of State Marco Rubio that campus protests posed       a threat to US foreign policy interests.              In June, a federal judge ordered Khalil be released on bail while his       immigration case is pending.              There was widespread outrage about his situation — even from Jewish       organizations — during his 100-plus days behind bars. But now that he’s       out and on his media tour, he finally has the chance to show his true       colors. Turns out they’re not very pretty.              “We cannot ask Palestinians to be perfect victims after 75 years of       dispossession,” Khalil argued to Klein.              That statement would be fair enough… if not made in the context of a       conversation about October 7th. A downtrodden people shouldn’t be expected       to act “perfectly,” but not murdering innocent civilians at a music       festival is a pretty low bar.              Students for Justice in Palestine made Khalil the face of their movement.       Where are the statements distancing themselves from this sort of rhetoric?       Or from Ilhan Omar, who so passionately embraced him as a hero?              The silence is deafening. So too are Khalil’s loud, proud, and consistent       efforts to justify Hamas’s most horrific actions.              https://nypost.com/2025/08/08/us-news/mahmoud-khalil-just-cant-stop-       defending-hamas-and-excusing-oct-7th/              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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