Column
An Internet announcement is troubling, but the idea of Jews cowering in response and the mainstreaming of antisemitism by the corporate media is the real problem.
It’s tempting to think that if revisions to his work continue, very little of the original will be left, which is why some observers are arguing that the project of sanitizing his novels is a waste of time.
Moshe Dayan’s decision to prohibit Jewish prayer on the Temple Mount, writes Rabbi Meir Y. Soloveichik, “was a terrible mistake, the worst in Israel’s history.”
The administration crosses two ominous red lines.
Helen Mirren is a wonderful actress, but her claim that she understands Golda’s “world” or the contemporary debate about Israel’s Supreme Court is pure bunk.
When the definitive history of the fall of the Islamic Republic is eventually written, Tehran’s decision to involve itself in Russia’s invasion of Ukraine will likely occupy a prominent place in the narrative.
The accelerated plans to put the DEI catechism at the center of government mandates undermine the goal of equality and give a boost to woke antisemitism.
Despite the renewed rapprochement between Jerusalem and Ankara, Israel must remain cautious.
The idea that it’s possible at this juncture to conduct rational talks with hysteria-mongering judicial-reform rejectionists is tenuous, at best.
Poll results demonstrate an understanding that Jew-hatred is grown. But thanks to misperceptions, mistakes and failed leadership, efforts to counter this trend are failing.
Either the U.S. State Department doesn’t know about the social-media antics of its nominees, or it doesn’t care.
The administration backs the Israeli left’s campaign to thwart the will of Israeli voters.