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![]() Latest Article from Clifford MayMuslim Brotherhood backers Qatar indoctrinating your childrenJune 10, 2026 • The Washington Times For centuries, Qatar was a sparsely populated sheikhdom under the loose influence of successive Islamic empires, caliphates, and regional Arab rulers. In 1916, it transitioned into a British protectorate. At that time, its main industry was pearl diving – which sounds romantic but was, in fact, an arduous trade. Divers suffered from ruptured eardrums and chronic lung ailments. During the off-season many families lived in poverty. Conditions in Qatar deteriorated sharply when the Great Depression reduced global demand for luxuries, and cultured pearls from Japan devastated the market for natural pearls.
![]() 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 Tevi Troyreview of Nothing Random: Bennett Cerf and the Publishing House He BuiltJune 2026 • Commentary Unknown to most people alive today, Bennett Cerf was at one point one of the most famous people in America. Cerf, who co-founded the publishing firm Random House, was a columnist, best-selling author, and regular participant on CBS's What's My Line? He was also, despite his WASPy name, a Jew. Many of the major publishing houses were founded by Jews. Besides Random House, there were also Simon & Schuster, Knopf, and Viking, among others. Cerf named his company Random House in part to avoid a Jewish-sounding name but also because he planned to publish Modern Library classics and other books "at random."
![]() Latest Article from Michael FreundWill Israel stand alone for Somaliland?May 29, 2026 • Jerusalem Post When Israel made the historic decision late last year to recognize Somaliland, it did something few nations are willing to do: it acted on principle and strategic interest rather than diplomatic convention. After more than three decades in which Somaliland has maintained its own institutions, elections, security forces, and governing structures – including multiple competitive presidential elections with peaceful transfers of power – Israel became the first country to acknowledge Somaliland's claim to sovereign statehood. That decision mattered. But recognition alone is not enough. Now comes the harder part: turning a symbolic breakthrough into diplomatic momentum.
![]() 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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