Beyond Inhuman
An AI-assisted look at Laura Loomer and the other miscreants who have denied US visas to critically wounded Palestinian children seeking medical treatment.
“Woe to those who call evil good and good evil.” — Isaiah 5:20
The Atrocity We Just Witnessed
A group of Palestinian children, maimed by Israeli bombs and siege, were granted rare visas to travel to the United States for urgent medical care. They arrived in wheelchairs, missing limbs, their faces scarred with trauma but still carrying the spark of youth. To any human heart, their plight would evoke compassion.
But in America 2025, compassion has been outlawed.
Laura Loomer, a far-right activist and self-styled “proud Zionist,” splashed videos of these children across social media, not to celebrate their survival but to cast them as infiltrators. She derided them as “Islamic invaders,” claimed their joy was “jihadi chants,” and warned that our hospitals were being “compromised.” Her grotesque inversion turned innocence into menace.
Within twenty-four hours, the United States government caved. The State Department announced it was halting all visitor visas for people from Gaza, including the very medical-humanitarian cases that had brought these children here. Secretary Marco Rubio justified the decision as a “review,” citing vague “congressional concerns.” In reality, it was the triumph of a smear campaign.
The Machinery Behind the Smear
Loomer was not alone. Congressman Randy Fine of Florida, himself a Jewish Zionist hardliner, immediately amplified the hysteria. He described these injured children as a “national security risk” and praised Loomer for forcing action. Texas Congressman Chip Roy, an evangelical Christian Zionist, added his imprimatur by declaring he was “deeply concerned” about flights from Gaza.
So within a day, the trifecta of Zionist influence—Jewish and Christian, activist and legislator—moved the levers of power. No debate in Congress, no democratic process. Just a pressure campaign, a social media storm, and a bureaucracy obediently turning compassion into cruelty.
This is how Zionism works in America: not merely through formal lobbying but through informal capture—an ideological reflex so strong that the charge of “terror” overrides the evidence of children’s suffering.
The Cost to America
The human cost is obvious: children denied care, families sentenced to despair. But the American cost is deeper.
Moral inversion. Compassion is recast as danger, and cruelty is dignified as “security.” A society that accepts this inversion has already lost its bearings.
Geopolitical rot. The world sees America not as a land of refuge but as the executioner’s accomplice. International law is shredded, humanitarian norms mocked. Every canceled visa is another nail in the coffin of U.S. credibility.
Civic corruption. Ordinary Americans become complicit. Our taxes fund the bombs that maim these children; now our policies deny them healing. We are dragged into moral bankruptcy by association.
Zionism as Existential Threat
Zionism is often portrayed as a foreign policy issue, a question of Israel’s security or America’s strategic interests. But this episode reveals something more profound: Zionism threatens the very soul of America.
Why? Because it demands not just support for Israel but the systematic dehumanization of Palestinians—to the point where even their broken children must be recast as infiltrators. And once you accept that inversion abroad, you import its logic at home.
Zionism hollowed out Israel, turning a dream of refuge into an apparatus of domination. Now, by capturing American policy, it threatens to hollow out America itself—transforming a republic built on liberty and sanctuary into a fortress of cruelty.
Unlike other lobbies, Zionism does not merely shape policy outcomes; it corrupts the moral grammar of politics itself. It makes us call evil good, and good evil.
Beyond Inhuman
The title of this essay is not hyperbole. What we are witnessing is not just a lapse of judgment or a partisan excess. It is beyond inhuman—a deliberate, systemic inversion of morality.
When the most defenseless among us—children with missing limbs—are cast as existential threats, we have crossed a line from which return will not be easy. America cannot claim to be a beacon of liberty while it lets Zionist hysteria dictate whether a child lives or dies.
A Call to Conscience
We must name this clearly: Zionism is the greatest danger to America—not because it is foreign, but because it has colonized our conscience. It has taught us to fear compassion, to weaponize victimhood, to invert morality for political ends.
If America is to survive as anything more than an empire of cruelty, it must reclaim its moral sovereignty. That means refusing to let Zionist pressure dictate policy. It means restoring compassion as a principle, not a liability. It means remembering Isaiah’s warning: Woe to those who call evil good and good evil.
The choice is before us. Either we stand against this inhumanity now, or we accept our descent into barbarism.
And history is watching.
America’s test is not on the battlefield or the balance sheet. It is here, in whether we see a wounded child as a patient—or as an enemy. Choose wrong, and we will have gone beyond inhuman, into the abyss.