
Charlie Kirk, Christian Nationalism and the Jews
The American experiment — and, by extension, American Jews — needs Christians to be better Christians.
The American experiment — and, by extension, American Jews — needs Christians to be better Christians.
Fourth in a series
Hamas is not just guilty of the crimes it accuses Israel of; it is defined by them.
How will a combined student body of millions of undergraduate students marinated in an antisemitic miasma on social media receive its Jewish peers this fall? If the past is any indication, we should buckle up.
Policy Failures and Generational Poverty
Even in the face of these murders, the same narrative persists, the one that excuses or explains away Jewish blood when it’s spilled.
Last week Linehan flew back to the U.K. to appear in court on charges related to a scrap between him and a young “transwoman” among his alleged crimes being “misgendering,” referring to his antagonist with male pronouns.
Twenty-four years later, the lessons of that day remain urgent.
What kind of human being is capable of walking up to another person — an innocent, defenseless, unarmed civilian — and, at close range, shooting him or her?
At its core, this narrative is nothing new. It’s the recycling of one of the oldest antisemitic tropes: that Jews secretly pull the strings of governments.