In a recent column, the eminent scholar John McWhorter celebrates a linguistic revolution in the offing. But at what cost, and to whom?
S. Ansky’s radical yeshiva boys used to seem unreal. But observing today’s political scene has taught me to understand them.
To ease social animosities and heal political wounds, leaders and citizens in America and Israel must rededicate themselves to the principles of liberal democracy.
Which of the recent samples of anti-Semitism—on the street, on campus, in Congress, or in the clergy—is the greatest threat to America and the Jews?
Bend the Arc.
The Joe Lieberman example.
Accompanied by massive social pathologies that it can neither contain nor reverse, the emerging secular order is itself unsustainable.
American culture is now dominated by people convinced that biblical religion must be expunged from the public square in the name of freedom, authenticity, and the Self.
American society faces a deep crisis of meaning to which the city, and the idea, of Jerusalem has an answer. It is needed by Jews, and as much or more by Christians.
In the era of polyamory and “escaping gender norms,” marriage becomes one script among many.
Every progressive event is now an anti-Israel event.
Linda Sarsour and her fellow feminists.
George Soros, the “Dyke March,” and the progressive inversion of the meaning of anti-Semitism.
Betraying its mission.