Column
The spurt of comments and articles comparing the president and his administration to the Nazis illustrates toxic partisanship and the failure of Holocaust education.
Universities, which are funded by students, parents and taxpayers, should ask whether purse strings more important than the people they are supposed to be educating, as well as keeping safe.
The prime minister remains unfazed, fighting to defeat Hamas in Gaza while using every available means to rescue the 59 Israeli hostages, living and dead.
It’s instructive to review how some groups asking American Jews for financial support describe themselves.
Though the Israeli prime minister’s statement lacked dramatic breaking news, it was a message that everyone at home and abroad needed to hear.
The administration’s demands to elite universities go beyond the narrow question of antisemitism. If DEI and woke ideology are spared, then Jew-hatred will continue to thrive.
The Pennsylvania governor might have been vice president and may yet try for the presidency. That said, the Harrisburg arson still illustrates the way Jews are reviled by the left.
Authorities in Bangladesh announced that they were reintroducing what is essentially a disclaimer on the passports issued to its citizens.
Negotiations led by a compromised envoy for an administration that remains divided over stopping Tehran’s nuclear ambitions aren’t likely to succeed.
It’s not just the man suspected of setting fire to the Pennsylvania governor’s Harrisburg home who has lost his mind.
If Nicholas Kristof genuinely cared about the fate of Christians in the Middle East, then why hasn’t he reported from Saudi Arabia, where practicing the religion is illegal?