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![]() Latest Article from Michael FreundThe Jew who married into Tahitian royaltyJune 24, 2026 • JNS In the middle of the 19th century, one of the most influential men on the southern Pacific island of Tahiti was a Jewish merchant named Alexander Salmon (originally "Solomon"). He was not a rabbi, communal leader or scholar. Nor did he come from one of the great centers of Jewish life in Europe or the Middle East. Born in 1820 in Hastings, England, Salmon would travel across the globe and settle in Tahiti. Eventually, this English Jewish merchant married into Tahitian royalty, became a trusted adviser and secretary to the ruling dynasty and left an imprint on the island that is still remembered today.
![]() Latest Article from Clifford MayLetter to Melania: Beyond the oil and nukes, you can fight for Iranian womenJune 23, 2026 • The Washington Times Dear Mrs. Trump – Or may I call you Melania? If that's too familiar, no problem, I understand. But you can certainly call me Cliff! I'm a long-time admirer. I've heard you speak out for human rights, saying for example: "There is no room for compromise when it comes to this essential right that all women possess from birth: individual freedom." You've also pressed Russia to return the Ukrainian children its soldiers have abducted. "Reunifying children with their loved ones," you've said, "remains one of the most important global issues today."
![]() Latest Article from Tevi TroyTom Clancy's GhostJune 17, 2026 • The Wall Street Journal Fans of Tom Clancy's bestselling thriller novels will unfortunately find little of Jack Ryan's moral clarity in the latest film inspired by the series. "Jack Ryan: Ghost War," one of the Top Five movies on Amazon Prime, follows CIA agent Jack Ryan as he tries to stop an MI6/CIA team created to fight Islamist terrorists. A pro-America version would make the team fighting the terrorists the heroes, but that isn't the case in "Ghost War." Instead, the villain appears to be the head of the post-9/11 antiterror task force, while the protagonists (led by Ryan) are people who want to shut the task force down.
![]() Latest Article from Soeren KernPope Leo Urges Spain to Embrace Muslim ImmigrationJune 11, 2026 • Ideological Defense Institute Pope Leo XIV began an official visit to Spain (June 6–12) by urging Spaniards to embrace multicultural coexistence with Islam and stop "fanning the flames of polarization" over mass migration from the Muslim world. He said that Christians and Muslims can live together as friends and proceeded to present medieval Spain—which was occupied by Islamic invaders for nearly 800 years—as an interfaith utopia that led to advancements in astronomy, medicine, and science. The Pope declared:
![]() Latest Article from Judith Millerreview of While Israel Slept: How Hamas Surprised the Most Powerful Military in the Middle EastJune 5, 2026 • City Journal The Hamas invasion of Israel on October 7, 2023, was an assault about 15 times as large, on a per capita basis, than the 9/11 attacks. When it was over, more Jews had been murdered than on any single day since the Holocaust.
![]() Latest Article from Asaf RomirowskyIt's Not Oil & Water: The Real Reason the U.S. Is In IranMay 18, 2026 • RealClearMarkets President Trump's trip to China brings the economic implications of America's war against Iran into sharper focus. The fact that the Taiwan Strait generated more news than the Strait of Hormuz during the recent news cycle, is a telling indicator. Critics keep framing this as crass resource politics: oil, opening the Strait of Hormuz waterway, and keeping gas prices down for American consumers. Granted, we all want the price at the pump to come down, and previous administrations have cried wolf about weapons of mass destruction in the Mideast before, but the naysayers are wrong on the facts about this oil and water paradigm as I call it.
![]() Latest Article from Jonathan SchanzerThe Final Lebanon War?May 7, 2026 • The Dispatch Secretary of State Marco Rubio said Tuesday that peace between Israel and Lebanon is "imminently achievable"—if Beirut can finally confront Hezbollah. But even as Washington presses the two governments toward unprecedented security understandings, Israel and Hezbollah continue to trade fire in southern Lebanon. The ceasefire declared by President Donald Trump on April 16, and then extended on April 23, now hangs in the balance. For the governments of Israel and Lebanon, the uptick in violence comes at a delicate time. The ambassadors from both nations have met twice now in Washington in a bid to reach new security understandings—but Hezbollah remains powerful enough to stymie these efforts.
![]() Latest Article from Thomas HibbsDebate is essential for learning
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