Unassigned

NPR’s Outrageous Choice: Sympathy for Attacker’s Lebanese Town, Silence for Michigan Synagogue Victims

When NPR reported on the Michigan Synagogue attack by a crazed Hezbollah supporter last month, they didn't manage to get one quote from a member of the synagogue. They did manage to get quotes from people in Lebanon, though.

Advertisement

NPR didn’t manage to quote a single member of the Michigan synagogue that was attacked last month by a crazed Hezbollah-supporting terrorist last month — but did manage to track down his pals 6,000 miles away in Lebanon, a new report reveals.

Now even NPR’s public editor is criticizing the lefty broadcaster for the stunning oversight.

Instead of focusing on the victims in the heinous attack, a March 14 “All Things Considered” segment sent an NPR reporter to the Lebanon hometown of Ayman Ghazali, 41, who just days earlier had rammed his truck into a Jewish preschool at Temple Israel in West Bloomfield Township.

NPR doesn't see the members of the synagogue as real people with value. That's why they didn't bother to talk to them.

Advertisement

It's not surprising in the least. That's the worst part.

It's infuriating.

Some judge actually thinks Americans should have to pay for NPR to openly hate Jewish people. No thanks.

Advertisement

Every day, they give brand new reasons to hate them, actually. 

Oh, they did their darndest to get public sympathy on the side of the terrorist. Many Leftists bought it.

Every single time.