Dealing with shock
Having Donald Trump as president of the United States may be the most shocking political news story of my adult life.
Having Donald Trump as president of the United States may be the most shocking political news story of my adult life.
Americans who opposed Donald Trump have awoken in a stupor, shocked that his victory was no mere nightmare. For those who cannot envision living under a Trump regime, “I’m moving to Canada” or elsewhere no longer feels like election-year blather.
To speculate that Donald Trump’s victory in Tuesday’s presidential election signals the end of the two-state solution would not be unfounded.
The ultimate nonprofit working on diversity, dignity and respect in Hollywood, GLAAD recently released its annual “Where We Are on TV” report.
I was born and raised in Chicago — the Cubs were the sports team of my youth. Last week, I spent less than 24 hours in Cleveland for Game 7 of the World Series. It was an out-of-body experience.
For over a year, I’ve been writing about the anti-Semitism the Donald Trump campaign inflamed and inspired.
On the evening of January 20, 2009 — as Barack Obama was still dancing at his Inaugural Ball —- the House Republican leadership met in secret at The Caucus Room, an upscale D.C restaurant.
I was furious to read about Rabbi Sholom Levitansky, who will be treated at Beit T’Shuvah rather than doing jail time for pedophile sexual abuse (“Rabbi Charged With Sex Abuse to Get 1 Year of Counseling, No Prison,” Nov. 4).
Google researchers recently conducted an exhaustive study in which they attempted to identify the characteristic most common in the highest functioning teams.
“No matter what happens, at least there will be a Jewish son-in-law in the White House,” veteran comedy writer Rhea Kohan quipped when I saw her last week at the Los Angeles fundraiser for Friends of the Israel Defense Forces.