Column
Political leaders should be neither blindly supported nor opposed. But it’s their deeds that matter, not their words.
A letter from rabbis worrying about self-censorship in discourse on race, gender and politics mandated by the intolerant left charts a path back from the abyss of polarization.
Talk about preparations for a strike on Iran is aimed at restraining American appeasement, though the tactic may not stop back channel nuclear talks that could render Israeli protests moot.
The Israeli finance minister might want to take the advice that he gave to tourism-industry workers and “find another job.”
The Ilhan Omar-sponsored bill sounds like a gesture against prejudice. Still, the effort may do more to legitimize a form of anti-Semitism than to counter hate against Muslims.
It is beginning to dawn on the Israelis that when it comes to Iran’s nuclear program, the Jewish state stands alone.
New York’s Tenement Museum partially shifted its focus from the lives of European immigrants to one appeasing woke political fashion, illustrating how obsessing about race trashes history.
Staff members need to be trained in how to identify both anti-Semitism and the anti-Zionism that targets Israel’s right to exist in order to exclude these perspectives from their programming.
Israel-haters are saying that the sophisticated new barrier proves that the Gaza Strip is an “open-air prison.” They ignore that it was made necessary because of Hamas terror and intransigence.
Claims of moral equivalency are bogus. Bigotry is based on falsehoods, not fact.
Rep. Jamaal Bowman of New York was praised for visiting Israel. But his alliances with anti-Zionists and disturbing stands illustrate the dubious nature of the search for friends of the Jewish state on the far-left.
The outcry about the first lady going ahead with plans that others were told to postpone was as natural as anchorwoman Dana Weiss’s response was ridiculous.