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After COVID, racial unrest, a bitter election and then a shocking Capitol riot, Americans look to their new administration for hope, not recriminations and efforts to suppress speech.
The assault on the Capitol will give the Democrats, who now control the U.S. government, justification to implement the revolutionary dogma of the thugs that torched America’s cities last year.
Ten years later, the neo-conservative dream of spreading democracy is dead. But both Israel and America are largely content with their undemocratic Arab allies.
As he understood it, he had the same official title as Vladimir Putin in Russia and Recep Tayyip Erdoğan in Turkey—men he openly admired—and he craved their reserves of political power as well.
The conspiracy theories and symbols of intolerance that abounded at the Capitol riot should prompt questions about how to deal with protests of all kinds that can get out of hand.
Those trying to defend principles of law and constitutional order against the left have been grievously undermined.
The assault on the Capitol was shocking and disgraceful. It’s also a reminder that everyone’s rights, including minority groups, depends on the preservation of order and respect for democracy.
The myth that the Palestinians were denied the vaccine demonstrates the persistence of anti-Semitism and ignorance about who governs Arabs in the West Bank and Gaza.
In the warped world of Palestinian terrorists, having a friend die of an illness in an Israeli jail is sufficient cause to slaughter an innocent woman jogging through the forest near her home.
The Georgia Senate runoff hinges on the tribal culture war about the president, rather than on whether an effort to legitimize an intersectional radical like Raphael Warnock could succeed.
Numerous factors have come together to help the Arab world transition out of the era of jihadism and into a mode of progress.
A look back at the longstanding religious, military and diplomatic history of the U.S.–Israel relationship.