Trusting the Day’s News
The press are not partisans; they must be truth-tellers.
Thane Rosenbaum is a novelist, essayist, law professor and Distinguished University Professor at Touro University, where he directs the Forum on Life, Culture & Society. He has written numerous works of fiction and nonfiction and hundreds of essays in major national and global publications. He is the legal analyst for CBS News Radio and appears on cable TV news programs. His most recent book is entitled “Saving Free Speech . . . from Itself.”
I’m missing the voter suppression. That’s because there isn’t any.
Today, we are guided by an entirely different impulse, the woke warfare of tribal feuds, shouting slogans in anti-American solidarity.
Our nation is terminally divided, and unlike the Civil War, this time it is not but one single issue that separate us.
The ICC has refused to investigate the Chinese persecution of Muslim Uighurs, the ISIS bloodlust of beheadings, and the genocide in Syria.
Welcome to a world where you can’t trust a single thing you hear.
It would be a colossal mistake for Democrats to continue to dismiss the lingering concerns of Trump voters.
Trump was always a tweeting, ticking time bomb.
As the year wound down, global Jewry was reminded that Jewish life is still very cheap.
The Trump administration discarded old orthodoxies that had been proven to be time-tested failures.