Mark Levin skewers Hamas and its Useful Idiots | WATCH
Mark Levin's Fiery Defense of Israel: A Call to Confront Media Bias and Global Hypocrisy

In a blistering segment on Fox News, conservative commentator Mark Levin delivered an impassioned plea for America to "take a step back" and confront the rising tide of hate and disinformation surrounding the Israel-Hamas war. Speaking with raw emotion, Levin evoked the horrors of October 7, 2023, when Hamas terrorists slaughtered over 1,200 Israelis in a brutal assault, framing it not as a consequence of lacking a Palestinian state, but as the grim reality of one already given, Gaza under Hamas rule.
"You are true blue Americans, red-blooded Americans," Levin addressed his audience, his voice cracking with urgency. "You do not like what you're seeing and hearing." He painted a vivid, harrowing picture of that fateful day: young people at a music festival decapitated, gang-raped, mutilated, and burned alive; innocent families in kibbutzim, farmers, essentially, torn apart. "Why won't you show your citizens what happened on October 7?" he demanded of world leaders in France, Germany, Britain, and beyond, who now push for a Palestinian state. "Hamas executes, tortures, starves, and brutalizes the Palestinians in Gaza. Why don't you show it?"
Levin's monologue, delivered with the fervor of a man witnessing history repeat its darkest chapters, accused Western media of complicity. "Why are you knowingly and intentionally covering up for Hamas?" he thundered, pointing to the group's use of hospitals, mosques, schools, and homes as military hideouts, launchpads for attacks, storage for arms, and command centers. He highlighted how Hamas hijacks aid trucks at gunpoint, hoards supplies for its fighters, sells the rest at exorbitant prices, and enriches its billionaire leaders while Gaza's civilians suffer. "The enormous tonnage of food, water, and medical supplies, nearly 100 ton, Israel and others have shipped into Gaza has more than enough to feed the 2 million people there," he said. "Why don't you ask: where has it gone?"
Drawing poignant historical parallels, Levin contrasted Israel's restraint with Allied actions in World War II. "Dresden was bombed off the face of the map... perhaps a quarter of a million people were killed in two nights," he recalled, noting the incineration of civilian centers to end the war. "We bombed Tokyo repeatedly, Berlin repeatedly... We didn't give a [bleep] if they're eating or drinking." Yet Israel, he argued, has done more to avoid civilian casualties than any nation in modern history, citing urban warfare expert Jon Spencer. "No country in the world has fed the citizens of an enemy that is still in active war," Levin emphasized. "None."
The human cost weighed heavily in his words. Nearly 1,000 Israeli soldiers, young men and women, plumbers, electricians, doctors, nurses, have fallen since October 7, a staggering loss for a nation of 9 million. "That would be like tens of thousands of our soldiers dying," he said, his voice laced with grief. Hamas, meanwhile, continues firing missiles, murdering hostages, and refusing to release the remaining 20 alive, who "no doubt are starving... [and] have been raped."
Levin's lament extended to global hypocrisy: Egypt's sealed border with Gaza, unpressured despite starving Palestinians; the slaughter of Christians and Muslims across Africa and the Middle East by Islamists; Syria's 600,000 dead under Assad; Yemen's famine claiming 227,000 lives. "Muslims are slaughtering Muslims... Why don't you report about that?" he asked, decrying a "poison spreading" of antisemitism in media, academia, and politics. He slammed outlets like The New York Times for echoing Hamas casualty figures, proven inflated by experts and covering up atrocities, much as it downplayed the Holocaust.
In a heartbreaking crescendo, Levin warned of a "battle between the Marxist Islamists and the West," where appeasement emboldens terrorists. "The more people you murder and rape and torture, the more likely the failing nations will be accommodating you," he said, evoking the fragility of civilization. Praising Donald Trump and "righteous gentiles" for standing firm, he decried "Jew-hating podcasters" and demagogues in both parties who fuel division.
Levin's words hang like a shroud over a world still reeling from October 7, a day that shattered illusions of peace and revived ancient hatreds. As hostages languish and families grieve empty chairs, his call resonates: Will we confront the truth, or let history's shadows lengthen once more? In this moment of division, his plea reminds us that silence in the face of evil is the greatest tragedy of all.