Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS
Dan Rosen. Credit: Courtesy.

Daniel Rosen

Daniel Rosen is chairman and co-founder of IMPACT, a 501(c)(3) dedicated to organizing individuals into communities to combat Jew-hatred on social media and beyond.

Pausing the strikes gives leaders of the Iranian regime time to observe their own ruins. It forces them to realize what they’ve lost and what they stand to lose if the next round begins.
It exposes how “anti-Zionism” frequently operates not as principled dissent, but as a socially acceptable vehicle for antisemitism.
Strip away the slogans and the hashtags, and a single idea remains: the belief that Western civilization itself is the root of all evil.
Brandishing a notorious antisemitic book, she accused Jewish people broadly of controlling the slave trade.
The Jewish story is not one of continuous power, but of improbable victory and survival.
In this seemingly powerless moment, one reality stands out: Israel remains the Jewish people’s best (and perhaps only) long-term guarantee of security, continuity and dignity.
The Arab world had the ability to end this horror of a war, but chose to delay action for its own reasons.
The word “Jewish” now encompasses very different commitments, worldviews and loyalties.
Cairo must be at the heart of a sustainable solution; failing to act now will led to it being sidelined to the point of irrelevance.
Still, groups with shared values can form a kind of collective strength, a kindling that can ignite a broader movement.
It’s time that former Israeli leaders realize that their words are not exclusively for domestic consumption.
Recent antisemitic attacks are not a show of power. They exhibit frustration and weakness.