Tag: fears

  • Planned Parenthood appears to scrub Instagram as fears of DOGE cuts loom

    Planned Parenthood appears to scrub Instagram as fears of DOGE cuts loom

    Planned Parenthood caught the internet’s attention on Thursday after all of its Instagram posts were deleted within hours of Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary RFK Jr.’s swearing in. 

    The organization, in an apparent nod to this move, posted a pair of eyes on a black background on its Instagram story with no explanation.

    On Friday, Planned Parenthood posted another story, an animated gif with the words “I bet you thought you’d seen the last of me,” and later there were just three posts on its Instagram page, all about condom use.

    As speculation swirled about the mysterious disappearance of the posts, many pro-life advocates started to call for the defunding of Planned Parenthood. This also comes just days after a conservative watchdog nonprofit founded by former President Mike Pence, urged the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) to cut federal spending on Planned Parenthood.

    DOGE MUST ‘DEFUND’ PLANNED PARENTHOOD, MIKE PENCE’S WATCHDOG GROUP URGES MUSK

    Photo illustration shows a woman with a phone and a Planned Parenthood (FreshSplash/AP Photo/Jeff Roberson, File)

    “For the sake of the American people and generations yet unborn, the time has come for the United States to finally defund the largest abortion provider in America,” Tim Chapman, president of Advancing American Freedom, wrote in a letter to Elon Musk.

    Planned Parenthood health centers received nearly $22 billion in HHS grants and $53 billion from public health programs from 2019 to 2021, according to a report by the Government Accountability Office.

    Protesters holding signs that say "Our bodies, our freedom" and "Our bodies, our choice, our rights" with the U.S. Capitol in background

    Pro-life and pro-choice demonstrators gathered outside of the U.S. Capitol and Supreme Court amid arguments over mifepristone. (Jemal Countess/Getty Images for Women’s March)

    RFK JR TELLS LAWMAKERS THAT ‘EVERY ABORTION IS A TRAGEDY’ AT CONFIRMATION HEARING

    During his confirmation hearing, Kennedy said that he believes “every abortion is a tragedy,” and expressed support for President Donald Trump’s assertion that states should handle the issue.

    “I agree with President Trump that every abortion is a tragedy,” Kennedy said. “I agree with him that we cannot be a moral nation if we have 1.2 million abortions a year. I agree with him that the states should control abortion. President Trump has told me that he wants to end late-term abortions, and he wants to protect conscience exemptions.”  

    Kennedy, who has expressed support for abortion in the past, vowed to implement Trump’s policies.

    With Kennedy at the helm of HHS and Elon Musk at DOGE, pro-choice advocates fear that Planned Parenthood will be on the chopping block.

    Pins with pro-choice phrases shown outside of a Planned Parenthood mobile clinic

    Pins are pictured outside a Planned Parenthood mobile clinic near the United Center, the host venue of the Democratic National Convention (DNC) in Chicago, Illinois, on Aug. 19, 2024. (REUTERS/Vincent Alban)

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    On Feb. 3, Planned Parenthood Federation of America put out a statement warning that “defunding” the organization could put patients at risk of losing access to “sexual and reproductive care.”

    Planned Parenthood Federation of America said that in 2022 the organization treated 2.05 million patients. The services mentioned in the organization’s included more than 4.6 million STI tests, nearly 213,000 breast exams and more. However, no data on the number of abortions performed in that time was listed.

    Planned Parenthood did not respond to a Fox News request for comment.

  • Egg farmers facing the ‘worst bird flu outbreak’ in ‘history,’ industry leader fears

    Egg farmers facing the ‘worst bird flu outbreak’ in ‘history,’ industry leader fears

    American farmers and those in the agricultural business continue to reel over the spread of H5N1 bird flu, which apparently shows no sign of slowing to “disaster” status.

    “The real crisis is that we’re going through the worst bird flu outbreak that we’ve had in the last 10 years since 2015, potentially the worst bird flu outbreak that we’ve ever had in the history of this country,” Eggs Unlimited Vice President Brian Moscogiuri said on “Fox & Friends” Thursday.

    “We’ve lost 120 million birds since the beginning of 2022. In the last few months alone, since the middle of October, we’ve lost 45 million egg-laying hens,” he added. “We’ve lost a significant amount of production, more than 13%. So we’re just dealing with supply shortages. And it’s just a disaster right now because this virus is in three of the top egg-laying states in the country. It doesn’t seem like it’s stopping anytime soon.”

    According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), bird flu detections have been made in dairy cattle, wild birds, poultry flocks and other mammals, while 68 human cases have been confirmed as well as one death.

    EGG PRICES AREN’T COMING DOWN ANYTIME SOON, EXPERTS SAY

    Companies recently started imposing limits on egg sales as the shortage caused by outbreaks persists, causing a frenzy among shoppers. Droves of viral videos have surfaced in recent weeks, showing shoppers stockpiling eggs. One video posted on TikTok claimed that an entire section of eggs at a Costco was gone in less than 10 minutes.

    A grocery store worker rearranges items in the depleted egg section on January 23, 2025 in Miami, Florida. (Getty Images)

    Other grocery and restaurant chains like Trader Joe’s, Korger, Whole Foods and Waffle House have been limiting customer purchases or adding egg surcharges as the nationwide supply dwindles.

    “We’re just trying to figure out, and the farmers are trying to figure out, how the virus is getting in… there’s several different catalysts, including wild migratory birds that have been flying over the country in the fall, in the spring each year… And we’re also wondering, is it in the ground? Is it in the air on these farms? Some of these farms that have been able to clean out and are working on repopulating have actually been hit again,” Moscogiuri said.

    “The farms really need help in identifying where the virus is coming in from, and then,” he expanded, “solutions to stopping the virus so that they can repopulate, resupply and ultimately help to bring the egg prices back down.”

    Since January, average egg prices have risen 15% and are up 53% year-over-year, data from the U.S. Department of Agriculture and Bureau of Labor Statistics shows.

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    Eggs Unlimited is one of the largest international suppliers of eggs, servicing major retailers, distributors and food service companies while also serving as a sort of egg “broker,” according to Moscogiuri. 

    Business is understandably “difficult” right now, he said. 

    “There’s less eggs available. Right now, we’re really focused on making sure that our customers are getting the orders and their supply, and making sure that they have eggs on their shelves. For consumers, [we’re] trying to limit their impact with the pricing and the supply chain shortages that we’re currently seeing right now.”

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    FOX Business’ Daniella Genovese contributed to this report.

  • UN chief sounds the alarm amid fears over possible DOGE-inspired cuts after Trump’s order

    UN chief sounds the alarm amid fears over possible DOGE-inspired cuts after Trump’s order

    UN Secretary-General António Guterres seems to be bracing his staff ahead of possible changes in U.S. foreign policy under President Donald Trump. In a letter distributed to UN staff, Guterres warned of the “difficult challenge” facing the international body.

    “I assure you that we are working closely with colleagues throughout the United Nations system to understand and mitigate the extent of its impact on our operations,” Guterres wrote in the letter.

    “Now, more than ever, the work of the United Nations is crucial. As we face this difficult challenge, your dedication and support will help us to overcome and move forward. Together, we will ensure that our Organization continues to serve people in need around the world with unwavering commitment.”

    In response to a Fox News request for comment, Guterres’ spokesperson Stéphane Dujarric said, “From day one, US support for the United Nations has saved countless lives and advanced global security.  The Secretary-General looks forward to continuing his productive relationship with President Trump and the US Government to strengthen that relationship in today’s turbulent world.”

    WHITE HOUSE DETAILS USAID PROGRAMS UNDER ELON MUSK’S MICROSCOPE

    United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres speaks during a Security Council meeting during the 79th United Nations General Assembly at U.N. headquarters in New York, Sept. 27, 2024.   (Reuters/Eduardo Munoz)

    “As President Trump has indicated, the UN plays a crucial role in taking on big challenges so that individual countries don’t have to do it on their own at far greater expense. With the letter, the Secretary-General was keeping staff informed,” Dujarric added.’

    Former Principal Deputy Special Presidential Envoy for Hostage Affairs Hugh Dugan told Fox News Digital that “UN entities from the top down are feeling very anxious,” citing someone extremely senior in the UN. Dugan believes that DOGE and his own organization DOGE-UN are causes of concern for Guterres due to “heightened accountability” from Washington. 

    “And I think that they’re going to have to scramble to show that they’ve been trustworthy with those resources and have been careful in accounting for their ultimate disposition, because I expect that we’re going to find that’s not been the case,” Dugan said.

    United Nations headquarters

    The United Nations Headquarters is photographed in New York City. (iStock)

    This letter was sent just over two weeks after President Trump issued his Executive Order on Reevaluating and Realigning United States Foreign Aid.

    “It is the policy of the United States that no further United States foreign assistance shall be disbursed in a manner that is not fully aligned with the foreign policy of the President of the United States,” Trump’s order reads.

    While the order calls for a 90-day pause in foreign programs, it includes a clause giving Secretary of State Marco Rubio the authority to “waive the pause in Section 3(a) for specific programs.”

    Trump administration officials claim to have uncovered several areas of government waste when it comes to foreign funding. This includes a $1.5 million US Agency for International Development (USAID) project aimed at advancing DEI in Serbian workplaces and a $2 million program promoting “LGBT activism” in Guatemala.

    In her first briefing, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said that DOGE and OMB found “that there was about to be $50 million taxpayer dollars that went out the door to fund condoms in Gaza.”

    “That is a preposterous waste of taxpayer money. So that’s what this pause is focused on, being good stewards of tax dollars,” Leavitt told reporters at the briefing.

    At first glance, the funding for condoms in Gaza could seem like it would be aimed at public health. However, Hamas has used condoms in the past to fly incendiary devices and IEDs into Israel, as the Jerusalem Post reported in 2020.

    President Donald Trump, UNRWA flag and Israel's Knesset

    Trump hit out at government spending during his 2024 presidential campaign.  (Getty Images)

    TRUMP CUTS US OFF FROM UN HUMAN RIGHTS COUNCIL, BANS UNRWA FUNDING

    During his 2024 campaign, Trump took aim at government spending, ultimately introducing DOGE to tackle waste.

    Following Trump’s order, Secretary Rubio paused all US foreign assistance programs funded by or through the State Department and USAID pending review.

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    “Reviewing and realigning foreign assistance on behalf of hardworking taxpayers is not just the right thing to do, it is a moral imperative,” the State Department statement read. “The Secretary is proud to protect America’s investment with a deliberate and judicious review of how we spend foreign assistance dollars overseas.”

    In the same statement, the State Department emphasized Secretary Rubio’s focus on ensuring the programs his department funds are working for Americans and are “consistent with US foreign policy under the America First agenda.”

  • Trump’s tariff critics are trading on overblown and unfounded fears

    Trump’s tariff critics are trading on overblown and unfounded fears

    The market analysts and so-called economists panicking over President Donald Trump’s tariffs must be at least somewhat relieved that he’s agreed to pause the ones he wants to impose on Mexico.

    But they shouldn’t have been worried in the first place, because their fears are misplaced. Trump understands the harsh reality of the situation: other nations have exploited the U.S. for decades, and it’s long past time America fought back. In fact, Trump’s actions will benefit Americans greatly.

    In the first place, the idea that tariffs are always and everywhere passed on to consumers is a fallacy, by both economic theory and the record of history. Factors such as changes in exchange rates mean that foreign producers typically end up paying some (or most) of a tariff.

    HOW TRUMP’S TARIFFS CLOSED THE LOOPHOLE USED BY CHINESE RETAILERS

    We forget that during America’s Golden Age, the government essentially funded itself entirely with tariffs; the income tax didn’t even exist. Instead of tariffs wreaking untold economic calamity, they coincided with our fastest sustained levels of growth—a time that built America’s middle class.

    But today, both our friends and foes alike abuse America in international trade and undermine her potential to thrive. For example, Mexico has been working with China to circumvent tariffs and non-tariff barriers (NTBs) on China and abuse provisions of the trade deal between Mexico and Canada. That makes it impossible for American companies and American workers to compete.

    Slapping a tariff on both Mexico and China penalizes this kind of underhanded dealing and puts American exporters back on a more level playing field. When asked about tariffs on the European Union, Trump said he’ll use the same playbook, and rightfully so.

    MEXICO AGREES TO DEPLOY 10,000 TROOPS TO US BORDER IN EXCHANGE FOR TARIFF PAUSE

    Many European nations use schemes like value added taxes (VATs) to impose implicit tariffs on American exports. Furthermore, countries like Germany and Japan still have tariffs that were put in place after World War II to protect industries being rebuilt following the conflict. The status quo has completely changed, and there’s no reason for these nations to continue penalizing American farmers and factoryworkers.

    We finally have a president who recognizes these realities and who is implementing a carrot-and-stick approach to reshuffle the international paradigm in America’s favor. Trump is simultaneously making it more expensive to produce abroad and hire foreigners, while making it less expensive to produce domestically and hire Americans.

    Deregulation, lower marginal tax rates, and abundant energy will all contribute to lower costs of production in the U.S. while tariffs will increase costs on overseas production. How does this play out?

    CHINA THREATENS TO RETALIATE AGAINST TRUMP TARIFFS

    Consider Canada, whose leaders are ranting about Trump standing up for Americans. If Canada agrees to eliminate its own tariffs and NTBs, then American exporters, like dairy farmers, will be more competitive and will sell more product in Canada. That means doing more business and employing more Americans.

    If Canada remains obstinate and insists on a trade war, then Canadian products will be less competitive, opening the door for American producers, like foresters, to expand production and sell more domestically while employing more Americans. Trump is positioning the American worker to come out on top either way.

    As economist Art Laffer has noted, there are no winners in trade wars, but the losers can face drastically different losses. Nearly all Canadian exports go to the U.S. but only a small fraction of American exports go to Canada. If international trade between the two slows dramatically, it’ll lead to a steep recession in Canada but will be more like a speed bump for the U.S.

    TRUMP IMPOSES TARIFFS ON IMPORTS FROM CANADA, MEXICO AND CHINA: ‘NATIONAL EMERGENCY’

    In short, Trump holds all the cards. And he knows it.

    But it’s not just a matter of getting other nations to fully open their markets to American exporters; it’s about the trade deficit, which can’t go on forever. Economic textbooks sometimes explain away the deficit by pointing out that individuals often have steep trade deficits with retail stores, like Walmart or Amazon, and that doesn’t cause the individual to go bankrupt.

    While that’s true, this singular trade deficit is only possible in the long run because the individual has a massive trade surplus somewhere else, like their place of employment.

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    America’s long-standing deficit has been funded by the Federal Reserve, which has effectively been printing money and sending it around the world to finance our elephantine trade deficits for decades. This process has devalued the dollar over the years, so that Americans’ money doesn’t go as far as it used to—a phenomenon we call inflation.

    But the inflationary impact of our trade deficits has been blunted by the dollar’s status as the world’s reserve currency. If we suddenly lose that, however, America may face hyperinflation. That’s why Trump has threatened tariffs on countries that seek to dethrone King Dollar from its place in the world monetary order—a quick end to the dollar’s reserve currency status would be disastrous.

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    Lastly, Trump understands the misnomer of “free trade.” If we really want free trade, then why only advocate for it in international markets? Why not domestic transactions too? In other words, if taxes on international trade are so bad, then why do we allow taxes on domestic trade—like the income tax, which is a tax on labor?

    Free trade should apply first and foremost to domestic trade because we should be focused on benefiting our own citizens before we worry about those overseas. We don’t hate foreigners—we just love Americans more.

    E.J. Antoni, a public finance economist, is the Richard F. Aster fellow at the Heritage Foundation and a senior fellow at Unleash Prosperity.

  • The DeepSeek AI chatbot burst on to the scene: are fears about it overblown?

    The DeepSeek AI chatbot burst on to the scene: are fears about it overblown?

    China-based artificial intelligence (AI) startup DeepSeek’s release of new AI models that rival those made by leading U.S. tech firms roiled markets on Monday and prompted concerns about U.S. firms losing their edge in the AI race to Chinese rivals.

    DeepSeek released its R1 AI model last week which it said is 20 to 50 times cheaper to use than ChatGPT-maker OpenAI’s o1 model, depending on the task, according to a post on the company’s official WeChat account.

    DeepSeek’s AI assistant, powered by its new DeepSeek-V3 model, vaulted past ChatGPT to the top of Apple’s App Store. The company said that the model was trained with less than $6 million worth of computing power from what it said were 2,000 Nvidia H800 chips to achieve a level of performance on par with the most advanced models from OpenAI and Meta. The startup also rolled out its updated image generation model called Janus-Pro on Monday.

    The advancements made by DeepSeek with what it reported as being fewer, lower capability chips and a lower cost than spending on AI training by U.S. rivals prompted a market sell-off and a debate over whether the Chinese firm has upended American firms’ edge in the AI race.

    AI STARTUP DEEPSEEK FACING HACK, BLOCKS QUESTIONS ABOUT CCP

    DeepSeek’s AI chatbot blocked questions critical of the Chinese Communist Party, a FOX Business review found. (Photo Illustration by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Marc Andreessen, co-founder and general partner of venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz, wrote in a post on X that “Deepseek R1 is AI’s Sputnik moment,” in reference to the Soviet Union’s early lead over the U.S. in the Cold War era Space Race.

    Anthropic co-founder Jack Clark wrote in his “Import AI” newsletter, “R1 is significant because it broadly matches OpenAI’s o1 model on a range of reasoning tasks and challenges the notion that Western AI companies hold a significant lead over Chinese ones.”

    While some tech sector figures and investors in the AI space see DeepSeek’s advancements as signaling the arrival of a new phase of AI competition, others are less convinced that it poses a broad challenge to the U.S. tech industry.

    WHAT IS CHINESE AI APP DEEPSEEK?

    Image of DeepSeek

    Chinese AI startup DeepSeek roiled markets with the release of its new AI models. (Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Dan Ives, managing director and global head of technology research at Wedbush Securities, wrote Monday in a note to investors that while DeepSeek’s LLM has clearly impressed the tech sector, it shouldn’t be viewed as a rival to more capable companies like Nvidia at this stage.

    “No U.S. Global 2000 is going to use a Chinese start-up DeepSeek to launch their AI infrastructure and use cases,” Ives wrote. “At the end of the day there is only one chip company in the world launching autonomous, robotics, and broader AI use cases and that is Nvidia. Launching a competitive LLM model for consumer use cases is one thing… launching broader AI infrastructure is a whole other ballgame and nothing with DeepSeek makes us believe anything different.”

    Ives sees the tech sector selloff spurred by DeepSeek’s emergence as an opportunity to invest in tech companies that are active in the AI space.

    “These are just the opportunities to own the Nvidia, Microsoft, Alphabet, Palantir, Salesforce, Amazon and broader tech ecosystem that is under heavy pressure today,” he wrote amid Monday’s selloff. “DeepSeek impressed the tech community with this LLM model… but this is not launching 100x the capacity/algorithms that is needed to even consider this a competitive threat in our view.”

    CHINESE APP DEEPSEEK HAMMERS US STOCKS WITH CHEAPER OPEN-SOURCE AI MODEL

    DeepSeek AI

    DeepSeek’s AI assistant topped OpenAI’s ChatGPT in the Apple App Store. (Christoph Dernbach/picture alliance via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Mark Malek, CIO at Siebert, observed in a note that while OpenAI’s ChatGPT and other models have “vast capabilities in natural language processing, while DeepSeek is created to be task-specific.” 

    Malek asked in his note: “Who or what was challenged by DeepSeek’s outing this weekend? Was it the hyperscalers, data security companies, network equipment makers, chipmakers, IC design software providers, AI users, etc?” 

    “No, on notice should be LLM (large language model) AI models like OpenAI, Google DeepMind, Anthropic (Claude), and maybe Meta’s LLaMA,” he explained. “Now let’s remember that these are software companies with vast resources that can easily modify their algorithms to reflect the current state of research.”

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    “Did DeepSeek seek and find a more efficient processing model for AI? Maybe, but you can count on the incumbents to adopt any new techniques found, no matter who finds them. It is the basis for a competitive and rich market,” Malek wrote.

  • Task Force created in Africa to counter terror fears from Iran and jihadi groups

    Task Force created in Africa to counter terror fears from Iran and jihadi groups

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    JOHANNESBURG – To counter the perceived threat of terror from Iran and jihadi groups, South Africa’s chief rabbi is setting up a specialist task force. 

    Chief Rabbi Dr. Warren Goldstein was spurred into creating the group after a bomb attack at a Jewish center in Cape Town last month. An improvised explosive device was thrown at the Samson Community Center but failed to detonate. The center is home to several South African Jewish organizations. 

    The “Counter-Terror Task Force” will make recommendations to protect places of worship, schools and community centers.

    “South Africa’s Jewish community, like other Jewish communities globally, faces heightened risk of terror attacks,” Goldstein told Fox News Digital. “The Iranian regime is the world’s chief exponent of state-sponsored terror, and have made it their strategy to target Jewish communities worldwide. With this in mind, the findings of the task force will be applied not just in South Africa, but globally.” 

    GLOBAL RISE IN ANTISEMITISM LEAVES JEWISH COMMUNITY ISOLATED, RABBI SAYS WORLD AT ‘A TIPPING POINT’

    A man brandishes a replica toy gun during a pro-Palestinian demonstration organized by the South African opposition party Economic Freedom Fighters in front of the Israeli Embassy in Pretoria, South Africa, on Oct. 23, 2023. (Marco Longari/AFP via Getty Images)

    He added, “In addition, Africa has over the past decade become a hub for global jihadi terror, with the threat indices dramatically increasing as groups such as al-Shabab, Boko Haram and ISIS operate throughout the continent.” 

    The task force comprises global authorities on terror: Admiral Mike Hewitt, former deputy director for Global Operations for the Joint Chiefs of Staff at the U.S. Defense Department, Dean Haydon, former senior national coordinator for counter-terrorism in the United Kingdom, Major General David Tsur, former commander of the counter-terrorism unit in the Israeli Police, and Andre Pienaar, co-founder of South Africa’s Directorate of Special Operations, also known as the Scorpions. 

    Iranian revolutionary guard members marching

    FILE- Members of the Iranian revolutionary guard march during a parade. The IRGC is designated as a foreign terrorist organization by the State Department. A large part of its work is to covertly operate outside of Iran. (Reuters.) (Reuters)

    The chief rabbi added, They will be marshalling additional resources and personnel as and when needed.” 

    Goldstein said the force’s immediate objective “is to secure the South African Jewish community against attacks. The broader objective is to better ensure the safety of all South Africans, and citizens of countries around the world.” 

    He continued, “Across Africa, especially, it is Christians far more than Jews who suffer the consequences of Jihadist terror. Each year, Jihadists murder thousands of Christians for their faith.” 

    Rabbi Goldstein of South Africa

    South Africa Chief Rabbi Dr. Warren Goldstein. (The Office of The Chief Rabbi)

    Goldstein told Fox News Digital that the South African government’s stance at the International Court of Justice, where it has accused Israel of genocide over the war in Gaza, has “stigmatized Jews not only within the country but globally.” 

    INCOMING TRUMP ADMIN, CONGRESS SHOWDOWN LOOMS WITH SOUTH AFRICA OVER SUPPORT FOR RUSSIA, US FOES

    However, Goldstein added that the views of the government here are not necessarily the views of the people. “Against that it must be understood that the South African public generally holds moderate and pragmatic views on Israel, and levels of domestic antisemitism remain very low by Western standards.”

    “There were 128 recorded antisemitic incidents in 2024 in South Africa,” Professor Karen Milner, national chair of the Jewish Board of Deputies in South Africa, told Fox News Digital. “This makes it the second-highest number of incidents since record keeping began in 1998. The highest number of incidents was recorded in 2023 (182). However, 63% of these occurred immediately following the events of October 7 (the Hamas attack in Israel).

    Israel supporters in South Africa

    Members of the Active African Christians United Movement pose as one of them blows through a shofar, a ritual musical instrument used to usher in the Jewish New Year, as others gather in support of Israel outside the Embassy of Israel in Pretoria, South Africa, on Nov. 17, 2023. (Photo by EMMANUEL CROSET/AFP via Getty Images)

    “The early months of 2024 were impacted greatly by the wave of antisemitism that immediately followed the October 7 attacks in Israel,” Milner continued. “It is worth noting that the majority of the antisemitic incidents recorded in 2024 were verbal assaults, targeted hate mail, or antagonism, with very few incidents graduating into physical assault.”

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    Milner concluded, adding, “with that said, antisemitism remains much lower than other comparable countries, and South Africa remains a safe space in which Jews can identify as Jewish and practice their religion in relative security.”

    Fox News Digital reached out to the South African Justice and Police Departments but did not receive a response.