Hollywood Celebrities Wear Red Pin At Oscars That Supports Lynching Of Israelis
Various celebrities in attendance at the Oscars on Sunday donned a diverting red pin as an accessory to their outfits.
Mark Ruffalo, Billie Eilish, Ramy Youssef, and Mahershala Ali were among the notable attendees to wear the pin, showing an outstretched red hand with a black heart in its middle.
Reports say the celebrities wore the pin in support of a ceasefire in the Israel-Hamas war. That's true – sort of. But only sort of.
The symbol on the pin is most commonly associated with the 2000 Ramallah lynching of Israelis, during which a Palestinian mob slayed two reservists for the Israel Defense Forces, Vadim Norzhich and Yosef Avrahami.
The red hand denotes support for the most barbaric Palestinian terror attack prior to October 7, the day Hamas organized a coordinated offensive on southern Israel by massacring 260 civilians at a music festival.
Thus, the state of Israel denounced the celebrities for wearing the pin in an X post on Monday:
"Most celebrities wearing red pins don’t know that the image of red hands is associated with one horrific event imprinted on the minds of Israelis and Palestinians.
"The 2000 Ramallah lynching of Israelis. This symbolism isn’t a coincidence."
Warren Kinsella of the Toronto Sun described the pin as a form of "hate propaganda" on behalf of Hamas.
Per Kinsella:
"Was that what Billie Eilish and others were celebrating? Did they — like the little kid with the anti-Semitic sign in far-away Picton, Ont. — know what they were saying? Maybe, maybe not. But the corrosive effect remains the same.
"It is propaganda, yes. But it is inarguably worse than that: It is holding something up to signal that someone else — in this case, Jews — are inferior. Are bad. Are worthy of detestation.
"The holding up of awful signs, the wearing of awful pins, is happening a lot, these days. And that is important. Because, through repetition, hate is made routine."
Several other influencers echoed Kinsella's sentiment:
That raises the question: did the likes of Ruffalo and Eilish, two far-left extremists, understand the meaning behind the pins they donned?
We can't say for certain. Actors tend to be dense, after all. But sympathy for the terrorist group Hamas is not all that rare of a commodity.
Ivy League institutions, MSNBC, corporate journalists, the Squad in Washington, and Hollywood each showed support for Hamas since October, under the defense that Palestinians are victims of Jewish superiority.
Hamas presented us with the worst of humanity — the slaughtering of the innocent, the abduction of women, and the beheading of civilians. Yet cultural elites responded by supporting them.
What's more, rather disheartening it is to see U.S-based celebrities use the Oscars stage to share a political message on behalf of the Palestinians.
Here in the U.S.,we are under an invasion of illegals, leading to the recent death of Laken Riley.
Unfortunately, Hollywood celebrities wouldn't dare use the award show state to express disapproval of illegal immigration, the gravest national security threat of our lifetime.