Tucker Carlson met in Jordan with Anglican Archbishop of Jerusalem, Hosam Naoum, to discuss how Christians are doing in the Holy Land. As in previous episodes of his show, Tucker Carlson and his guest served up a hefty dose of inaccuracies and misrepresentations about Christians and Israel.
Being Christian After the Desolation of Gaza features numerous misrepresentations, false accusations, inappropriate comparisons, villainized depictions, misconstruals, deflections, inaccurate claims, and promotion of extremist organizations as well as individuals with an anti-Israel bias.
These organizations have expressed sympathy for and justified Palestinian violence against the Jewish State, collaborated with organizations that have employed antisemitic tropes and platformed terrorists, supported the BDS movement targeting Israel while delegitimizing the Jewish State, and promoted falsehoods and misrepresentations about the State of Israel.
Archbishop Hanna's "open message" to US Vice President JD Vance maligns the State of Israel, echoes anti-Jewish tropes that misrepresent American and Israeli leaders, and hypocritically promotes peace while the archbishop elsewhere praises terrorists, opposes peace with Israel, and seeks to destroy the world’s only Jewish State.
Tucker Carlson continues to provide a platform for people who demonize and delegitimize Israel as he nods in agreement before his millions of followers. This time, Carlson platformed Mother Agapia Stephanopoulos, an Orthodox nun, on his show.
Notwithstanding Green’s stated aim to convey facts to his viewers, a number of Green’s claims more closely resemble a genre of writing at which he excels: fiction.
The Story of the World: Volumes 1 and 4 By Susan Wise Bauer
Well-Trained Mind Press, 2006 and 2021 Volumes 1 and 4 of Susan Wise Bauer's The Story of the World include erroneous claims about Jewish inhabitation, the drawing of inappropriate analogies that obscure historical data, and omissions of crucial information surrounding Israel’s establishment.