From Google to Microsoft to Nvidia, America’s tech giants are facing a coordinated internal revolt—not over labor rights or product safety, but over their willingness to do business with Israel. Employees are interrupting keynotes, storming offices, and accusing their companies of “facilitating genocide.” Activist shareholders are pushing resolutions to investigate “Israeli war crimes,” while groups like “No Tech for Apartheid” escalate their campaign to cut ties with the Jewish state.
Let’s be clear: this isn’t grassroots activism—it’s a corporate hostage crisis orchestrated by a fringe minority emboldened by media allies and anti-Israel NGOs. These companies still invest billions in Israel, not because they’re political, but because Israeli innovation is indispensable. But as we’ve seen before, pressure works. Just ask the universities. Unless tech leadership finds the courage to push back against this hysteria, we could see a slow, quiet unraveling of one of the strongest U.S.-Israel partnerships in the modern era. That would be a victory for Hamas and its sympathizers—and a tragedy for freedom-loving people everywhere.