Column
A year after Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s death and with states pushing abortion restrictions, some claim that religion is driving judicial and political decisions. But seeking to ban such beliefs presents a greater danger.
The Oslo paradigm has survived despite the fact that it has been a catastrophe for Israel on every level for 28 years because Israel’s permanent ruling class supports it.
Twenty years ago, a U.N. conference against racism was hijacked by a revival of the “Zionism is racism” canard. You can draw a straight line from there to the way critical race theory legitimizes anti-Semitism today.
As with any kind of hate speech, context is key. Tell that to the French judiciary.
The United Nations itself is allowing evil to triumph with the complicity of the West.
A poem about Jewish martyrs read on Yom Kippur is a reminder of the persistence of Jew-hatred, as well as the necessity to find the courage to identify and resist anti-Semites.
After the United States was victimized, no one suggested following any of the advice American officials routinely give to Israel on how to respond to the terrorist threat it faces every day.
The media’s distortion of language in relation to Israel and the Palestinians is especially disconcerting—and par for the course—on the 20th anniversary of 9/11.
A Jewish GOP Senate candidate was roasted for comparing vaccine mandates to the Gestapo. Democrats who have used such analogies about Republicans are not in a position to talk.
The opening shot in the war to break America’s belief in its right to lead, its right to defeat its enemies and its right to be strong was fired in Durban, not New York.
The ADL’s apology for its former director’s opposition to a Ground Zero mosque is one more way the anniversary is being used to change the narrative about the attack.
For the West, there are no “forever wars.” Its wars are either won or lost; there are victors and vanquished. For Islamic extremists, war is indeed forever; defeat is only temporary.