Print Issue: Looking Back on 2023 | Dec 22, 2023
As you’ll read in our Editor’s Note, 2023 has been a year like no other. To do it justice, we thought we would display every cover we ran this year as an instant retrospective.
As you’ll read in our Editor’s Note, 2023 has been a year like no other. To do it justice, we thought we would display every cover we ran this year as an instant retrospective.
Have you noticed how the worst mass horrors in the world are led by men?
The only miracles we should settle for are the sober, humble ones; the miracles where we must slowly and deliberately light one lonely candle at a time.
A long term plan to address the roots of campus hate and antisemitism will benefit not just the Jews, but America.
It is this quintessential Jewish idea—refusing to settle for easy victimhood—that most threatens the anti-America, victim-worshipping DEI movement that is poisoning American culture.
This Jewish trait drives Jew haters nuts because it’s not land-related, it has nothing to do with race or skin color, and it goes directly against the leftist narrative of Jews as the ultimate white oppressors.
In the past few weeks, a crack has opened in American academia, exposing a poison that undermines the very ideals of higher education: political ideology.
This blatant discrimination is the inevitable result of progressive, anti-West DEI bureaucracies that have permeated academia and are anything but diverse and inclusive.
“The short explanation is that both events on campus and the painfully inadequate testimony reinforced the idea that I cannot make the sort of difference I had hoped,” Wolpe wrote.
In the midst of a trip to Israel full of painful sights and stories from October 7, a New York rabbi still finds some room for dreaming.