
Texas Disaster: Bad Luck or Climate Change? Maybe Both
When something happens once every hundred years, it’s hard to plan for it, especially if that planning is very costly.
When something happens once every hundred years, it’s hard to plan for it, especially if that planning is very costly.
When there’s too much technology between us and reality, reality itself speeds up and gets distorted.
It is precisely because it has become so difficult that we must go out of our way to donate our attention.
The horrible images coming out of Texas this week, with millions of people losing electricity amidst freezing temperatures, is an excruciating example of the power of electricity in dictating our lives.
It’s a well-known and powerful idea to express gratitude for life’s blessings.
In a cancel culture run amok, one of the biggest fears in America today is the fear of saying the wrong thing.
By giving us true rest and a place for quiet contemplation, the sanctity of Shabbat can help us find that inner voice.
A son of Holocaust survivors has helped provide the vaccine that will save countless lives.
I didn’t know much about “Valley of Tears,” a new show from Israel that came highly recommended. I like surprises, so I dove right in.
Today (Jan. 27) is International Holocaust Remembrance Day, and tonight we welcome the holiday of Tu Bishvat, also known as the Jewish “birthday” of the trees.