The Rot On His Own Side

Like the president, Senate Majority Leader and New York’s senior Senator Chuck Schumer sees a problem. And like the president, Schumer thinks he can thread the needle and worm his way out of the problem. It isn’t working for Biden, and it won’t work for Schumer. Both fail to grasp the nature of the problem.

Senate Majority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) warned this week in a landmark speech that anti-Israel militancy has fomented antisemitism on the American left since Hamas’s Oct. 7 terrorist attacks against the Jewish state. His remarks highlighted the resilience of the Democratic Party’s non-antisemitic majority. But they also showed why a party steeped in identity politics has a limited capacity to contain antisemitism’s spread.

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Dragging The Line: Can Appeals Save Trump?

There was some small degree of controversy about whether a sitting president could be prosecuted, as the Department of Justice Office of Legal Counsel issued a memorandum that a president could not during the term of office. This wasn’t law, but DoJ opinion, which ordinarily binds the federal government’s exercise of authority. And frankly, who would have ever thought we would need such an opinion, given that we’re talking about the president of the United States here, someone who should be a paragon of integrity, if nothing else. Would there ever be another Richard Milhous Nixon?

This was, upon reflection, the correct decision. So long as a person was president, the person could not be dragged into local courthouses by prosecutors who oppose the person to make it impossible to do the job of president. There is room for debate, but this was the only practical outcome. Continue reading

Seaton: The Night A Punk Froze Hell

Hell froze over Saturday, November 25, 2023 around 11 pm.

It happened at the Rosemont Horizon in Rosemont, Illinois. At the close of WWE’s annual “Survivor Series” Pay Per View, the babyface team of Randy Orton, Cody Rhodes, Jey Uso, Sami Zayn and Seth Rollins were all celebrating after their victory in WarGames, a brutal two-ring steel cage match designed by Cody’s father, “The American Dream” Dusty Rhodes.

The copyright notice ran on Peacock’s feed, and most folks like myself got ready to see if we could catch some highlights from college football. Continue reading

Short Take: Teaneck Board of Education’s VP’s Reply

It began with a letter from the Superintendent of the Teaneck school district, André D. Spencer, to the parents and students, characterizing Hamas’ October 7th attack not as terrorism, or even as something bad perpetrated by Hamas, but as “the latest incidents in the cycle of violence in the Middle East.” At the next Board of Education meeting, Jewish parents stood to address this failing. Board Vice President Victoria Fisher was having none of it.

The Board, however, repeatedly cut off commenters who described Hamas’s actions to
underscore why they thought Superintendent Spencer should have issued a stronger statement condemning the attack: Continue reading

Can Israel Buy Palestinians’ Love?

For all the calls to do the untenable, fight Hamas without disproportionately (whatever that means) harming Gazans in the process, no one has yet come up with an actual way to accomplish this. It sounds great in platitudes, but can’t be done on, or below, the street. Is there any other way Israel can eradicate terrorists dedicated to its destruction and thrilled to rape, kidnap and murder its people, to salvage its reputation among the unduly passionate and those who rely on their votes?

a professor of political science at the University of Haifa, offers a way out.

Israel insists that it is doing all it can to protect civilians, given the complex urban environment it is fighting in, the embedding of Hamas in the civilian population and persistent missile strikes. Continue reading

They Wants, I Do Not

It’s bad enough that McWhorter has a point when it comes to the way language develops going forward.

It’s a principle in linguistics that things that settle in for good tend to start with young people, and the new “they” is used most by people under 35. (It has a mixed reception among people between 35 and 55 and is often outright dismissed by people past 55, according to a 2019 survey.)

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Tuesday Talk*: After The Ceasefire

As the four-day Israel-Hamas ceasefire enters its fifth day, the question remains: What happens when the hostage release comes to an end?

The tenuous truce between Israel and Hamas appeared to hold for a fifth day on Tuesday, an act of continued cooperation that could allow for additional aid to flow into Gaza and the release of more hostages, prisoners and detainees than initially expected.

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A Citizen, Until Dr. Sobhani Wasn’t

If anyone other than the government had sat on its dirty hands for 61 years, they would be laughed out of court. But when it’s the government, there’s no court and medical doctor Siavash Sobhani isn’t doing any laughing. Having been born here, and living here his entire life, and becoming a doctor, a taxpayer and a member of the community, he was informed by the United States that he was no longer a citizen. Dr. (was he still allowed to practice as a doctor?) Siavash Sobhani was stateless.

As he tells it, when he sent in an application for a new passport in February, he had no reason to expect he’d face any difficulties. He had renewed his passport several times previously without problems. This time, it was set to expire in June, and he wanted to make sure he had a valid one in hand before his family took a trip in July. Continue reading

Drama In Queens

They weren’t college students in Portland or elite liberal arts students in Massachusetts. They were students at Hillcrest High School in Jamaica, Queens. And they wanted to be part of the action, to feel just as entitled to attack.

“I doubt half of them know how to spell Palestine,” a senior said.

“They just wanted to make drama about it,” a sophomore said of the teacher’s pro-Israel stance.

“Just, like, chaos. They thought of it as fun.”

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Paying Attention To Attention

A few years back, my old pal Bennett announced on the twitters that it was going to be the year of attention. This struck a chord with me, as I consider my time and attention to be precious. I may give it to you, but I don’t owe it to you and you can’t demand it of me. It’s mine to use as I choose.

The ability to focus, to pay attention to one, and only one, thing so that you can get below the surface and do the hard labor of thinking deeply, was never a human strength. But the claim of the moment is that attention spans are at 47 seconds and students’ ability to pay attention is worse, in a different way, than it’s ever been. Continue reading