Column
What this Jewish holiday is not, or at least shouldn’t be, is an opportunity to bemoan the lack of freedom experienced—or imagined—by all human beings everywhere.
The billionaire’s bid to restore free speech on the Internet unnerves those who want to silence online anti-Semitism. Giving Big Tech that kind of power can threaten democracy even more than extremists.
Instead of directing its denunciations where they belong, the Biden administration is buying and selling the anti-Semitic deception that Israel is spurring Muslim rage by attempting to change the status quo on the Temple Mount.
It is sobering to note that it always takes a crisis or a conflict for Western nations to recognize that their systems of government are worth defending.
The Torah is the compass of life. It provides our navigational fix, so we know where to go and how to get there.
Despite efforts to turn Passover into a non-Jewish metaphor, it’s the holiday that reminds us that a sense of peoplehood and a country to call home are essential to our liberation.
Biden is considering backing the use of the International Criminal Court to investigate Russian crimes. But it’s a mistake to empower a body prejudiced against America and Israel.
Contrary to the aspersions cast by external or internal ill-wishers, Israelis are far from trigger-happy.
A magazine conference not only failed to address examples of the media spreading lies, it gave a platform to those who spread it, including former President Barack Obama.
“Ramadan is not a month of laziness but rather ... a month of jihad, conquest and victory,” said the P.A.'s Supreme Shari’a judge on the first day of Ramadan.
One correspondent went as far as to tail soldiers on a door-to-door search for the terrorist, with a camera rolling on their faces and weapons.
The Lapid-Gantz-Bennett government can’t see that because it does not understand U.S. politics or the complex way in which foreign policy is crafted in America.