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There are reasons for pessimism about the future of Jewish life in the United States. But American exceptionalism is real, and can and must be preserved.
Britain may be an outlier for now, but America’s not far behind.
The portrayal of Jews as unwelcome interlopers in the creation and appreciation of art (because their mean, narrow-minded, self-centered spirit is antithetical to artistic greatness) is alive and well.
The president wants an end to the war in Gaza so he can make more deals in the region. As much as Jerusalem must defer to him, there must be limits to that gratitude.
A Jew is a Jew is a Jew. Never write off anyone!
He is pulling the strings in the Mideast and still dreams of cutting a deal with Tehran. He tried before. He’ll fail again.
The liberal media and others spin attempts to call out the Democratic mayoral nominee’s hatred for Israel as hatred for Muslims.
The operation against Iran’s nuclear infrastructure wasn’t reckless. Quite the opposite: It was necessary.
The claim that the Israeli prime minister crafted the U.S. president’s Truth Social post is as laughable as it is a lie.
In the words of a piece of antisemitic graffiti daubed on a synagogue in Melbourne, Australia: “Iran Is Da Bomb.”
In the eyes of the U.S. president, the Israeli prime minister is a wartime leader who now carries the potential to usher in peace.
The radical candidate’s primary victory means more about what lies ahead for the party than it does about prospects for the survival of American Jews.