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UPDATE: Mr. Goldbergs YouTube Account No Longer Exists and His Videos have been erased (Jan. 6, 2022)

Murdered for speaking out: Last words of David Goldberg warning of mass murder of Americans

Exposing the "gatekeepers" who constitute most of the alternative media....like InfoWars but also most of the seemingly "highly credible" news channels on YouTube...part of Israel's "tag, track and ID" program

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Full list of Israeli high-tech layoffs in 2022

The financial crisis is taking its toll on Israeli high-tech, with numerous companies parting ways with significant portions of their workforce

CTech

11:32, 21.07.22

TAGS:

Tech Crisis 2022

Crisis

Layoffs

הייטק משרד ריק שבוע עבודה מקוצר

Empty high-tech office.

(Photo: Getty)

21.7

Vimeo slashes workforce by 6%, including in Israel R&D center

The video hosting, sharing, and services platform will be parting ways with around 70 employees in total, including about 10 of its 120 employees in Israel

20.7

Zencity cuts 20% of workforce

The Israeli startup, which provides community insights and an analytics platform for state and local governments, will be parting ways with around 30 employees

Kornit Digital laying off dozens of employees after share price crashes

The Israel-based maker of industrial inkjet printers for the garment industry has seen its stock fall by over 80% since the start of the year

18.7

Unicorn Lusha lets go of 10% of employees

The Israeli company will be parting ways with 30 employees eight months after raising $205 million at a $1.5 billion valuation

13.7

Retail technology unicorn Fabric laying off over 120 employees

Fabric reached a $1 billion valuation just this past October when it raised $200 million, but will now be parting ways with a third of its staff

7.7

Insurtech unicorn Next Insurance nixes 17% of workforce

The company is laying off 150 employees, mostly in the U.S., explaining that “we must shift focus towards profitability”

6.7

Anodot lays off more than a quarter of its workforce

The business monitoring company is parting ways with 35 of its 129 employees

SQream slashes over 15% of workforce

The data analytics startup is laying off 30 of its 170 employees in order to help it reach a balanced bottom line

5.7

Bizzabo axes almost 30% of employees

The event planning platform will lay off 120 of its 400 employees as it prepares for an extended downturn in business

מימין בועז כץ ערן בן שושן ו אלון אלרואי מייסדי חברת ביזאבו bizzabo

Bizzabo founders. Photo: Courtesy

Verbit to layoff 10% of its workforce, eight months after $250 million funding round

Most of the total of around 80 layoffs will be of employees in the U.S., with 30 employees from Israel leaving the company

eToro laying off 100 employees, officially announces termination of SPAC

The trading platform is currently in advanced negotiations for a private funding round for between $800 million and $1 billion, at a $5 billion valuation

4.7

Unicorn cutbacks: Lightricks to lay off 80 employees - 12% of workforce

Lightricks is the latest in a growing list of unicorns to lay off employees despite having hundreds of millions of dollars in their account, joining the likes of Cybereason, Trax, and Snyk

3.7

Snyk laying off 30 employees less than a year after raising $530 million

The cybersecurity unicorn announced that it would be making organizational changes despite reaching a valuation of $8.5 billion last year and raising a total of $830 million in 2021

מייסדי Snyk סניק אסף חפץ דני גרנדר ו גיא פודחרני

Snyk founders.

(Photo: Snyk )

Ailing crypto lender Celsius to lay off a quarter of its employees

The American-Israeli company is parting ways with around 150 employees as it continues to look for a way out of a crisis that saw it pause all withdrawals from its platform three weeks ago

29.6

Parallel Wireless set to lay off a quarter of its employees in Israel

Around 60 of 250 employees are set to leave the American company, which was founded in 2012 and set up its R&D center in Israel six years later

28.6

Bright Machines lays off 30 employees in Israel

The American company develops software-defined autonomous manufacturing lines for industry and has an R&D and operations center in Kibbutz Yakum in Israel’s Sharon region

27.6

Alibaba closes R&D center in Israel, lays off entire staff

Around 50 employees were notified on Sunday that they will be laid off after the Chinese e-commerce giant decided to shut down local development

סטרים אלמנטס StreamElements

StreamElements team.

(Photo: Kobi Bachar)

26.6

StreamElements to lay off 20% of employees less than a year after raising $100 million led by SoftBank

The company, which provides engagement and monetization tools for live and VOD content creators, joins Cybereason and Trax on the list of Israeli SoftBank-backed startups making cuts

22.6

Airspan laying off 35 employees in Israel

The U.S. company announced just four months ago that it plans on recruiting dozens of additional employees in the country

20.6

Retail analytics unicorn Trax to lay off over 100 employees

“We still have a lot of money in our account from last year’s funding round, but we are required to reach profitability faster than we had planned,” said Trax co-founder and Executive Chairman Joel Bar-El

משמאל יוני לוקנסברג אריאל קליקשטיין מייסדי אלמנטור ELEMENTOR

Elementor founders.

(Photo: Amit Shaal)

15.6

Elementor laying off dozens of employees

The total number of staff members that will be leaving the company is estimated to be around 50-60, most of them from the marketing department

1.6

Cybereason laying off 100 employees in Israel, U.S. and Europe

Earlier this year, Cybereason, which is backed by SoftBank's Vision Fund 2 and former U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin's investment firm, confidentially filed for a U.S. initial public offering that could value it at more than $5 billion

31.5

Playtika to lay off 250 employees in North America and Europe

The gaming giant is looking to consolidate some of its activities and therefore decided to close its R&D centers in London and Montreal, and to transfer the activity of its Los Angeles studio to Israel and Poland

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This video highlight how crazy jews think.

Iran Says Arrested Israel-linked Agents Were Kurdish Rebels

Iran’s intelligence ministry said Wednesday that agents linked to Israel’s Mossad who were arrested last week were also members of an outlawed Kurdish rebel group who planned to target a “sensitive defence centre.”

The ministry had announced on Saturday that it arrested “members of a terrorist organisation who work for the Zionist spy agency Mossad and were sent to (Iran) to carry out (a) terrorist operation.”

It did not say how many suspects were arrested, nor did it identify the targets of the purported plots against “sensitive sites”, but alleged that they entered from neighbouring Iraq’s autonomous Kurdistan region.

On Wednesday, the intelligence ministry said in a new statement that “the elements of the operating team are members of the Komalah terrorist and mercenary group.”

Komalah is a Marxist group which seeks autonomy for Kurdish-populated regions of northern Iran and has been outlawed since the Islamic revolution of 1979.

The group has periodically clashed with security forces in northwest Iran, which has a sizeable Kurdish population.

Iranian intelligence forces in April said they arrested a number of Komalah members in the northwestern province of Kurdistan who were seeking to “cause security problems.”

The ministry on Wednesday published pictures of equipment and weapons allegedly confiscated from those detained.

They showed square-shaped pieces of furniture with ‘bombs’ hidden inside, pistols with silencers and bullets, SD cards hidden in the cap of perfume bottles, oxygen tanks, in addition to laptops, mobile phones and cash.

The arrested individuals were aiming to “blow up a sensitive defence industry centre in the country,” the statement published on Wednesday said, without identifying the target.

Iran and Israel have been engaged in a years-long shadow war, with the Islamic republic accusing its arch-foe of carrying out sabotage attacks against its nuclear sites and assassinations of key figures, including scientists.

Tensions have ratcheted up following a string of high-profile incidents that Tehran has blamed on Israel.

The Islamic republic has blamed Israel for the killing of Revolutionary Guards Colonel Sayyad Khodai at his Tehran home on May 22.

Two other Guard members have also died — one in a reported accident and the other while on a mission — earlier this year.

In April, Iran said it arrested three people linked to Mossad and a month earlier claimed it had foiled an attack on a nuclear plant also planned by suspects linked to Israel.

King of kings¹ Bible - Revelation 3:9 Behold, I will make them of the synagogue of Satan, which say they are Jews, and are NOT, but do LIE (Idumeans/Edomeans); behold, I will make them to come and worship before thy feet, and to know that I have loved thee.

http://jahtruth.net/kofkad.htm

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Japan’s government resigns in its entirety

A special Cabinet meeting began at 11:30 local time. It is expected that soon it will become known about the new composition of the Japanese government under the leadership of Prime Minister Fumio Kishida, Pledge Times reported.

The desire to renew the composition of the Japanese government was announced last fall. Then Kishida declared that the country’s leadership needed to “meet face to face with public opinion.” At the same time, the head of Japan’s main opposition force, the Constitutional Democratic Party, Yukio Edano, stressed that “a change in the entire government is needed since the LPD will not change.”

Kishida was confirmed on October 4, 2021, by a majority vote as the Prime Minister of Japan. Now in the lower house of the Japanese Parliament, out of 465 seats, 305 belong to the deputies of the ruling coalition as part of the LDP and its partner, the Komeito party.

Japan’s government resigns in its entirety - Mehr News Agency

Originally, the government reshuffle was supposed to be carried out in early September, but now due to the mention to accelerate the promotion of his economic concept of “new capitalism”, the need to take action due to rising food and fuel prices, and in order to prepare in advance for the session of parliament, the prime minister decide to speed up the reshuffle process in the government

Approval ratings slide

Earlier, Bernama reported Japan’s prime minister reshuffled his cabinet Wednesday after a slump in approval ratings, replacing the brother of assassinated ex-leader Shinzo Abe as defence minister.

Fumio Kishida led his ruling party to victory in an upper house election last month, days after Abe was shot dead by a man resentful of the Unification Church.

Since then, as the public scrutinises the church’s ties with Japanese politicians and Kishida’s handling of the economy, approval ratings for the government have tumbled.

They fell 13 percentage points in three weeks to 46 percent, according to a poll published Monday by public broadcaster NHK, while another survey by the Yomiuri Shimbun daily showed a drop of eight points from July to 57 percent.

Political veteran Yasukazu Hamada was named defence minister — a key role given Kishida’s pledge to ramp up the defence budget to counter growing threats from China and North Korea.

Hamada, who previously served as defence minister from 2008-9, replaced Abe’s brother Nobuo Kishi, whose ailing health has prompted concern.

Kishi also recently vowed to “thoroughly review” his links to the Unification Church, after acknowledging that church members had served as campaign volunteers

Since Abe’s death a month ago, Japanese media has revealed that many ruling lawmakers — especially those in Abe’s faction — received similar assistance from Unification Church members, something the group says followers only do as private citizens.

The organisation founded in Korea in 1954, whose followers are colloquially known as “Moonies”, has confirmed that the mother of the man suspected of killing Abe was a member.

She reportedly declared bankruptcy after making donations of around 100 million yen ($1 million at the time) to the church. The public is also split over Kishida’s decision to hold a state funeral for Abe, Japan’s longest serving prime minister whose nationalistic stance was divisive.

https://www.businesstoday.com.my/2022/08/10/japans-government-resigns-in-its-entirety/

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Japan's Government Resigns in its Entirety

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This video highlight how crazy jews think.

Lost Ten Tribes in France says RASHI!

T.H.E.Y. heed no bounds...

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@GodTaughtMeHow ,

Thank-you.

Nice one.

ExMossad chief says Israel conducted operations in heartland of Iran

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This video highlight how crazy jews think.

Cities of the Millennial Kingdom - People of the Covenant Stone of Scone Israel

Israeleak No 4 - Israel Found Serious Safety Porblems With The Covid Jab

netanyahu

Some Israelis Are More Scared of Netanyahu Than Iran

https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/energy/some-israelis-are-more-scared-of-netanyahu-than-iran/2022/09/06/e6a54aee-2da0-11ed-bcc6-0874b26ae296_story.html

In 1992, a young member of Knesset, Benjamin Netanyahu, startled the Israeli public with a warning that Iran — a dictatorship pledged to the destruction of the Jewish state — was “three to five years” from attaining a nuclear weapon. He left to the public imagination what disaster would follow. It was an opportunity for him to present himself as a savior, the man who saw the future and wasn’t afraid to face it.

Today, 30 years later, Netanyahu is still recycling updated versions of his warning. It will almost certainly be the theme of his campaign in the upcoming Israeli election, where he hopes to return to power as head of the right-wing Likud party. This week he accused Prime Minister Yair Lapid and Defense Minister Benny Gantz, his main opponents, of “falling asleep on their watch, and allowing Iran to reach an agreement that endangers our future.”

The agreement in question is the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, the deal Iran struck in 2015 with world powers to restrict Tehran’s nuclear program. Former President Donald Trump withdrew the US from the pact, but the Biden administration is seeking to revive the deal, opening a path for Iran to become a threshold nuclear state within a few years.

Yet stoking Israeli fears of a direct Iranian attack no longer looks like a dependable path for Netanyahu and his allies on the right.

Once, Israel dreamt of wiping out the Iranian nuclear program with military strikes, just as the country had destroyed nuclear sites in Iraq in 1981 and in Syria in 2007. In 2010, Bibi, as Netanyahu is widely known in Israel, and his hawkish defense minister Ehud Barak began seriously planning such a strike against Iran. Their plan was shelved after the army’s senior command informed them success couldn’t be fully assured.

Today, any such plan would be absurd. Iran’s nuclear program is scattered throughout the country and buried underground. Unlike the Iraqis and the Syrians, Iran has the scientific and technological ability to rebuild. And the entire world, including the US, would condemn such a move as destabilizing. Iran has oil, and these days oil talks.

There is a segment of the Israeli public that still believes Netanyahu has a magic ability to wipe out the Iranian nuclear project. Bibi knows it isn’t true, but he encourages the delusion.

He is all too willing to whip up voters with apocalyptic “never again” scenarios. It isn’t too hard for Israelis, who have experienced conventional missile attacks by Iranian proxies in Gaza and Lebanon, to imagine what Iran’s leaders might do with a nuke. This fear is ingrained in some people and Netanyahu knows how to activate it.

But not everyone is susceptible to Bibi’s rhetoric. His decades of warnings of Iranian menace have desensitized some people to his message. Netanyahu’s opponents won’t hesitate to assert that Bibi’s unbending us-against-the-world hardline is out of touch with reality.

This opposition case was on display in a recent televised roundtable discussion on post-JCPOA Iran. Two of the participants were former military chiefs of staff who had served under Netanyahu. Two were ex-ministers of defense in Bibi governments. One, Gantz, had held both jobs. None was a Bibi supporter, a point they readily acknowledged (Gantz is the head of a centrist plank in the November election).

The five participants were in accord: None liked the JCOPA (“it’s full of holes,” said Gantz) but all agreed that it was destined to be a regional fact of life that Israel would have to deal with. They shared a high degree of confidence that the military could cope with whatever threats nuclear Iran presented.

To bolster the point, Gantz invoked President Joe Biden’s pledge, made in July during his visit to Israel, that he would use force against Iran “in the last resort.” This amounted to a departure from Israel’s historic defense doctrine that it will fight its own battles without outside intervention. Surprisingly, none of the generals disagreed.

There was also a surprising consensus that Iran shouldn’t be at the top of Israel’s defense priorities. A bigger concern, according to the panel, was the polarized state of the nation. One by one, without mentioning any names, the participants pointed to the lack of solidarity and the decline they perceive in social resilience and patriotism under Netanyahu’s long and divisive reign.

Former Prime Minister Barak summed it up: “All living chiefs of staff, almost all living heads of the Mossad and all living Shin Bet chiefs would agree, all the people who are, or were, at the head of the security apparatus, understand today that there is a more serious threat to the future of the State of Israel than from Iran, Hezbollah or Hamas.” That threat, Barak clearly intimated, with nods from his fellow panelists, would be the return of Bibi Netanyahu and his polarizing, man-of-destiny brand of leadership, to the prime minister’s office.

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Is Israel preparing to attack Iran

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