
Mainstream outlets want you to believe Republicans are breaking rank over Israel. Axios, Politico, The Economist, and Time are singing the same chorus: “MAGA is turning against Jerusalem.” But according to a JNS report, that story is nothing more than liberal fiction dressed up as analysis.
The article dismantles the myth. It explains that while headlines trumpet a supposed “Republican schism,” the reality is that support for Israel remains strong across the GOP spectrum—including Donald Trump. The so-called “divide” is just another media-crafted illusion that rooted in a few loud mouths looking more for attention than truth—outliers who will have hell to pay, but simply don’t matter.
JNS notes: “The notion that a Republican schism exists on Israel is a mainstream media myth, perpetuated by outlets eager to portray Trump and his supporters as breaking away from Jerusalem.”
The same outlets spinning this lie about Republicans are also whitewashing Hamas’ manipulation of Gaza aid. JNS reports that Hamas hoards food, sells it at inflated prices, and engineers photo ops of suffering children to generate headlines blaming Israel. The crisis isn’t proof of Israeli cruelty—it’s evidence of Hamas using hunger as a weapon.
In biblical terms, this is nothing new. Isaiah wrote, “Woe to those who call evil good and good evil, who put darkness for light and light for darkness” (Isaiah 5:20). The liberal press has baptized Hamas’ deception, all while accusing Republicans of betrayal that doesn’t exist.
The Bible calls out exactly this kind of narrative corruption. “Justice is turned back, and righteousness stands far away; for truth has stumbled in the public squares, and uprightness cannot enter” (Isaiah 59:14). That was true in the ancient world and it’s still true today.
The media’s myth-making is dangerous—it warps reality and emboldens enemies of God’s people. Don’t buy into their deception. Anchor your worldview in the Word, not in headlines. Share the truth, defend Israel, and pray that America wakes up before the lies become policy.