Tuesday, May 19, 2026

From Ian:

Ruthie Blum: Bill Maher deserves praise, not gratitude, for telling the truth about Israel
For a full eight minutes, he let the hypocrites have it, highlighting the fact that “no one blinks” when an editor from the progressive magazine The American Prospect calls Israel a “brainwashed psychopathic death cult that might need to be nuked to save the human race.”

He then pointed out that Jew-bashing is the one thing that the left and right have in common these days, mentioning Tucker Carlson, on the one hand, and The New York Times, on the other. Though he failed to bring up the Gray Lady’s latest blood libel—penned by Pulitzer Prize-winner Nicholas Kristof, who printed the lunatic lie that Israel trains dogs to sodomize Palestinian prisoners—he did stress that ignoramuses on both sides of the spectrum see Israel as “the only country in the world doing anything bad.”

Yes, he said, taking a dig at the condition of education in the United States, “I see why the meathead manosphere and the Code Pink people are on the same page, because they both went to high school in America and they don’t know anything.”

Unfortunately, according to Maher, “Jew-hatred isn’t just acceptable now; it’s cool. Celebrities love it and make it trendy.”

Ditto concerning cowardly politicians, whom he chastised for “indulging, rather than correcting, their brainwashed-by-TikTok constituents who now have an unfavorable view of Israel,” and for “not telling their woke idiots that Israel isn’t a colonizer or an apartheid state or committing genocide.” Oh, and for not admonishing the younger generation, “If you brats had to spend a week anywhere in the Middle East other than Israel, you would understand what liberalism is not.”

The above are snippets of his lengthy rant, the rest of which was equally unflinching. Given the political, sociological and cultural climate he was describing so accurately, it’s not surprising that the clip exploded—shared widely on social media by pro-Israel influencers and broadcast on Israeli TV channels.

As worthy of praise as Maher might be for his wise and witty words, however, something is disturbing about the elation they elicited. It’s one thing to give credit to those brave enough to tell the truth about Israel and antisemitism. It’s quite another to be grateful for it.

Indeed, Jews shouldn’t need to treat intellectual honesty as heroism. Nor does it behoove us to grab any morsel of sympathy with the hunger of a hostage.

It’s the height of irony that we can fight fearlessly against enemies on the battlefield, yet recoil in the face of defamation and delegitimization—and bow at the feet of defenders like Maher.
László Nemes Says an “Orgy of Antisemitism” Is “Overtaking the West”
Legendary Hungarian filmmaker László Nemes has spoken plainly about “an orgy of antisemitism overtaking the West.”

In a new interview with The Guardian published on Monday, the acclaimed director discusses bringing his latest World War II venture — a biopic on the French resistance hero Jean Moulin — to the Cannes Film Festival, but much of the piece centers on what Nemes describes as a “puritan, moralising, self-righteousness” looming over Hollywood.

Nemes, who won an Oscar in 2016 for Son of Saul, begins by considering reaction to the award-winning film, as well as 2025’s Orphan. The former follows a day-and-a-half in the life of an Auschwitz concentration camp prisoner, while the latter is about a young Jewish boy’s search for his missing father, as he instead unveils the truth of his mother’s survival of the Holocaust.

Nemes tells the U.K. publication about Son of Saul‘s award success: “I don’t even think it would make the [Oscar] shortlist today. Because of the politicisation of cinema, because anything that’s Jewish is now considered… Nobody would touch it with a 10ft pole.”

Orphan, which he says was “ignored” at last year’s Venice Film Festival, failed to nab an Academy Award nod for best international feature, and has so far not landed a U.S. distribution deal: “You should be able to talk about these things without being ostracized,” he continues, saying he feels “a little bit” ostracized by the industry: “Even some response [to Orphan] from the media smells of an ideological standpoint.”

On widespread boycotts of Israeli film institutions — a pledge last year objecting to the war in Gaza featured names such as Olivia Colman, Ayo Edebiri, Mark Ruffalo, Yorgos Lanthimos, Emma Stone and 1,300 others — Nemes tells The Guardian that he believes it to be “anti-humanist regression.”

He adds: “Because it’s not identified as this, I think it’s very effective at spreading. And one of its very potent vectors has been antisemitism… The Jew has always been [cast as] the sort of internal enemy, and I think now [the idea of] the Jew as the internal enemy of the West has reached the dimensions of European antisemitism before the takeover by the National Socialist [Nazi] party.” When asked by journalist Jonathan Freedland if he thinks antisemitism is now at its worst since Nazi Germany, Nemes responds: “I think it’s getting there.”

He describes it as an “obsession with Jews” and says, referring to Orphan‘s struggle to find a distributor, “People [would] ask me about Gaza, instead of, you know, asking about the movie. [They ask] if I signed this or that petition.”
New York Times Blames Jews For Antisemitism—In Obituary of ADL Chief Abe Foxman
The New York Times used its obituary of the longtime national director of the Anti-Defamation League, Abraham Foxman, to promote the false narrative that Israel’s own actions in Gaza have worsened antisemitism.

The Times claims that "bigoted attitudes worldwide only mushroomed as a result of Israel’s response to a Hamas attack on Oct. 7, 2023, that killed more than 1,200 Israeli civilians and soldiers."

It went on, "The Palestinian death toll of more than 60,000 and videos broadcast worldwide of the destruction of Gaza’s buildings and of starving children set off a shift in American public opinion, with more Americans siding with the Palestinians. There was also an upsurge in antisemitic incidents."

Blaming Jewish behavior, rather than antisemites, for antisemitic incidents and attitudes is textbook antisemitism. The International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance definition of antisemitism includes among its possible examples of antisemitism, "Accusing Jews as a people of being responsible … even for acts committed by non-Jews." The Times passage meets at least two elements of former Soviet refusenik and former Israeli deputy prime minister Natan Sharansky’s "three Ds" definition of antisemitism—demonization and double standards, if not delegitimization.

In addition, it’s not even accurate that the Israeli self-defense actions, which involved killing Hamas terrorists and imposing pressure that ultimately led to the release of hundreds of live and dead hostages being held by Hamas, created the antisemitism or even any public opinion shift against Israel. The "shift in American public opinion," overstated though it has been, to the extent that it exists at all, has been driven not by Israeli actions but global trends of secularization, a rise in militant Islam, and by an intense international social media and propaganda campaign by outlets and platforms of foreign governments, individuals, and organizations—Qatar, Turkey, China, Iran. The timing predated Israel’s post-October 7 actions in Gaza, as evidenced by a former editor of The New Republic, Peter Beinart, publicly abandoning Zionism in July of 2020, by the Harvard Crimson in 2022 editorially endorsing a boycott of Israel, by the Harvard student organizations that came out with their letter on October 7, 2023, stating, "We, the undersigned student organizations, hold the Israeli regime entirely responsible for all unfolding violence" and "the apartheid regime is the only one to blame."
From Ian:

Meir Y. Soloveichik: The Unknown Messenger
‘The growing good of the world is partly dependent on unhistoric acts; and that things are not so ill with you and me as they might have been, is half owing to the number who lived faithfully a hidden life, and rest in unvisited tombs.” These words conclude George Eliot’s novel Middlemarch and are considered by many to comprise one of the finest conclusions to any work of literature. Eliot’s point is that while many dream of being linked to important achievements (as do the characters in Middlemarch), it is often the good deed done out of duty that truly lends moral significance to one’s life.

With this in mind, we may examine one story of an unhistoric act of kindness. Indeed, one might say that this act is so unhistoric, we do not know to this day the name of the person who performed it. Yet that act is also, in a sense, profoundly linked to a newsworthy event of the last month.

In the 1940s, George Deek, a member of a large Christian Arab family, worked at an electricity company in Jaffa, where his family had lived for generations. He was friendly with his Jewish co-workers and even learned how to speak Yiddish from them. Then, in 1948, as the Jewish state came into being, he was informed by Arab leaders that his family should flee. He was told that if they remained, they would be massacred by the Jews, and that only several days would be needed to crush the nascent state. George and many of his siblings fled to Lebanon, and from there throughout the world. Today, there are descendants of George’s siblings who are still considered refugees by the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) and who, like other Palestinians, are denied the rights of citizenship in Arab countries in which they have been living for generations.

In 2014, a young Israeli diplomat, speaking in Norway, where he was posted, delivered a speech in accented but eloquent English about how Palestinians were persecuted—in Arab countries. Whereas the descendants of refugees in any Western country would long ago have acquired citizenship, “in the Arab world, the Palestinian refugees—including their children, their grandchildren, and their great-grandchildren—are still not settled.” They are “aggressively discriminated against, and in most cases denied citizenship and basic human rights…. The collaborators in this crime are no other than the international community and the United Nations.” In contrast to the way other refugees were treated, he argued, Palestinians were clearly being forced to suffer in these Arab countries in order to weaponize their situation against Israel:
Rather than doing its job and help the refugees build a life, the international community is feeding the narrative of the victimhood. While there is one U.N. agency in charge of all refugees in the world—the UNHCR, another agency was established to deal only with the Palestinian ones—UNRWA. This is no coincidence—while the goal of the UNHCR is to help refugees establish a new home, establish a future and end their status as refugees, the goal of UNRWA is opposite: to preserve their status as refugees, and prevent them from being able to start new lives.… In fact, Israel was one of the few countries that automatically gave full citizenship and equality for all Palestinians in it after ’48. And we see the results: despite all the challenges, the Arab citizens of Israel built a future. Israeli Arabs are the most educated Arabs in the world, with the best living standards and opportunities in the region.

This speech is posted to YouTube under the title “The best speech an Israeli diplomat ever held” and has hundreds of thousands of views. The name of the ambassador who delivered it is…George Deek, grandson of the aforementioned George Deek, who has made a career as an Israeli diplomat and recently served as Israel’s ambassador to Azerbaijan, the first Arab Christian to hold such a position.
The Perversion of Martyrdom
Modern Islamist movements have learned to operate inside this framework. They present themselves as the powerless while pursuing a theology entirely about power: the establishment of the ummah, the recovery of historic Islamic sovereignty. They engage in martial martyrdom while being coded by the Western host as passive victims. The host’s immune system extends its protection to a force that does not believe in weakness as a permanent condition, only as a temporary embarrassment on the road to victory.

This is why so many on the Western left find themselves sympathizing with Hamas, Hezbollah, and the Iranian regime. By any progressive criterion—women’s rights, pluralism, freedom of conscience—these movements are reactionary to the marrow. But they are the victims of Western power. And in the secularized Christian martyrology that now dominates elite culture, that is sufficient.

Yehuda Halevi would have named this instantly. In the Kuzari, he distinguishes between suffering that purifies and suffering that merely accumulates bitterness—resentment without refinement. A truth claim that depends entirely on who is suffering, with no reference to what is being suffered for, is not a theology. It is resentment in vestments.

The early Christian martyrs died rather than worship the Roman emperor. They died for the proposition that there is an authority above Caesar. That proposition is the theological root of every liberal freedom the West currently enjoys. Now the secular heirs of this tradition are carrying placards for movements that execute people for apostasy—movements that would reinstate the very condition against which the martyrs died. The formal structure of the martyrology survives. The content has been discarded. When you remove the content from a martyrology, you do not get neutrality. You get a form available for any content. And the content that has filled it is not liberation. It is the oldest thing in the world: the strong man who claims to speak for the weak.

Pikuach nefesh—the near-absolute sanctity of human life—means that the Talmud suspends virtually every commandment to save a life. The martyrdom principle is the exception, not the rule. The Jew is not supposed to want to die. He is supposed to want to live: ve-chai bahem—and you shall live by them, not die by them.

When death becomes necessary, the martyr does not kill others, does not romanticize his death, and does not expect to win. Maimonides is explicit: One who could have found a legal workaround and chose martyrdom instead is not praiseworthy but irresponsible.

Perpetua walked into the arena in 203 C.E. She did not take anyone with her. The structure of her death—the vertical death, the death that preserved something rather than destroyed something, the death between herself and God—is still legible.

The Islamic martyr dies to conquer.

The Western campus radical taking the form of Christian submissiveness without the content performs his suffering to accumulate moral capital.

The Jewish martyr dies to preserve the integrity of a law he believes is worth more than his life, while refusing, structurally and legally, to impose that cost on anyone else.
Alan Baker: ‘Settler violence’: A buzzword used to single out Israel
Violence by hooligan groups, religious factions, political mobs, or any other group is illegal, cannot be excused, and must be condemned and punished under the law. That is a basic norm of any civilized society. It applies whether the perpetrators are politically motivated youth, religious extremists, sports hooligans, or demonstrators.

Yet when violence is linked to Israel, there is a troubling tendency to generalize isolated incidents and recast them as proof of an official, state-sanctioned policy. In that context, the phrase “settler violence” has gained currency. It is often used not simply to describe criminal acts by individuals but to suggest that Israel as a state encourages or condones violence against Palestinians. That is a misleading claim.

There is no Israeli policy that authorizes or promotes violence against Arabs. Such conduct is illegal in Israel, just as it is elsewhere, and law-enforcement authorities are expected to act against it. If enforcement is weak or inconsistent, that may justify criticism of the authorities. But lax enforcement is not the same thing as an official policy of sanctioning violence. To use the term “settler violence” as though it describes an Israeli government practice is therefore inaccurate and unfair.

Discussing violence in Israel
A wider problem is the readiness to attach loaded buzzwords to Israel in ways that amplify hostility and misrepresent facts. Terms such as “genocide,” “apartheid,” “colonialism,” “illegal occupation,” “mass starvation,” and “indiscriminate violence” are often repeated as if they were settled descriptions, even when the legal and factual basis is contested. Such language can be effective rhetorically, but it also distorts public understanding by imposing inflammatory labels on complex realities.

This pattern is especially visible when comparing how violence is discussed in relation to Israel versus other societies. Around the world, football hooliganism causes assault, property damage, riots, injuries, and deaths. It has occurred in countries across Europe, South America, North America, Africa, and elsewhere.

Major political demonstrations and marches in Western capitals also sometimes turn violent, with attacks on police, damage to public property, and assaults on symbols or institutions. Yet these incidents are not typically used to brand entire countries as officially sponsoring “sports violence” or “demonstration violence.”

That contrast matters. The problem is not that violence elsewhere is ignored; it is condemned, as it should be. The problem is the double standard applied to Israel, where sporadic criminal acts by fringe groups are presented as though they reflect a national doctrine. That framing is not only misleading; it also suggests a selective moral outrage that is directed at Israel in a way not applied to others.

Monday, May 18, 2026


In October 2008, NPR’s Tell Me More invited David Duke on air to discuss the approaching Obama election. The host introduced him carefully — former grand wizard of the Ku Klux Klan, former Louisiana state representative, president of something called the European American Unity and Rights Organization — and warned listeners that what followed might be offensive. Then she asked him how he felt about being called a white supremacist.

Duke rejected the label immediately.

First, I should say that I am not a white supremacist. I don’t think any race should be supreme or rule over another. I do believe in equal rights for all. I just think today that European-Americans face a racial discrimination called affirmative action and the European-Americans have the same right to defend their heritage and their perceived interest as black people do in NAACP, which is not the National Association for the Advancement of People. It’s the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, that Mexicans do in La Raza, which means The Race, and the advancement - and of course, there are hundreds of organizations that defend and support the perceived interest of the Jewish community, in fact, the foreign nation of Israel.

I would say, I was a white civil-rights activist.

I think that I’ve got the same right to preserve my heritage and my rights that black people have, that Jewish people have and all the groups that work for Jewish interest, that Mexicans have. And I think unless we stand up and do that, we’re going to lose our rights and we are losing our rights in this country.

He was careful about terminology throughout. He did not say “white people,” he said “European-Americans” — a construction that mirrors “African-Americans,” “Mexican-Americans,” or “Asian-Americans.” Every other hyphenated group had organizations, advocacy, institutions. Why not his? He said he was not asking for supremacy. He was asking for parity, for the same rights every other group already had. He had no objection to black schools oriented toward black students, black neighborhoods, black institutions. He simply wanted the same freedom for white communities — to associate, to organize, to define what their community looked like without being called racist for it. People naturally chose to associate with their own kind, he observed. Look at any cafeteria. This was not pathology. It was human nature.

In this way, Duke pre-empted the usual objections to his beliefs. If you call him a racist: he has already rejected that label on principled grounds and invited you to explain what principle distinguishes him from the NAACP. If you say his organization is hateful: he responds that he supports the same freedom of association for every group. Invoke his KKK history: he will note that what he advocates now is equal rights.

Now you are on a debate stage opposite David Duke. He has just said all of this. The camera is on you. Can you refute him? How?

Your disgust at him is not an argument. Duke was arguing dispassionately. How can you respond?

The sad fact is that most people are not equipped to answer Duke’s argument on their own. This should alarm us.


The Duke example is worth examining carefully.

Notice that almost every individual claim he made is defensible on its face. The NAACP does advocate specifically for black Americans. La Raza does mean The Race. Affirmative action does produce outcomes in which some qualified white candidates are passed over on the basis of race. People do tend, voluntarily, to socialize with others like themselves. These statements y are, in the main, true.

And yet the conclusion those facts are being assembled to support — that a former Klan leader running an organization called the European American Unity and Rights Organization is simply doing what the NAACP does — is not just wrong. It is a conclusion that, if accepted, would require us to abandon almost everything we understand about what racism is and how it operates.

How does that happen? How does an argument built substantially on true claims arrive at a conclusion that is repugnant to almost everyone who hears it? Something is happening between the facts and the conclusion. Something is doing work that the facts alone are not doing. The argument is a structure — a framework — and the structure itself is where the problem lives. But identifying that a problem exists is not the same as being able to locate it, name it, and answer it.

Most people who heard Duke that day could not do that. They felt the wrongness clearly. They could not articulate it. And feeling something is wrong, without being able to say why, is not an argument. It is a reaction. Duke knew the difference, and he was counting on it.


Now consider who is listening to arguments like this one today.

The people who heard Duke on NPR in 2008 mostly had an advantage: they had lived through or grown up in the shadow of the civil rights movement. They remembered, or had parents who remembered, what the language of “heritage” and “community rights” and “freedom of association” had been used to defend within living memory. They had emotional and historical context that functioned as a partial defense, even when it could not be articulated as an argument.

That advantage is expiring. The audience that matters most now — people in their teens and twenties who formed their understanding of the world through social media — did not grow up with that context. For many of them, the civil rights movement is as distant as the First World War. They do not have the emotional baggage. They encounter the argument cold, on its stated terms.

And the argument has gotten more sophisticated. Duke is not the threat. The threat is the twenty-five-year-old with a large following on a short-video platform who has never heard of David Duke, who does not think of herself as racist, who genuinely believes she is talking about fairness and equal treatment and the right of every community to advocate for itself. You can point out that Duke has a history of racist statements as a partial rebuttal, but you don’ thave that ammunition against the TikToker today. She uses the same framework Duke used, without the biography that triggers the alarm. She is articulate. She sounds reasonable. She invokes principles her audience already believes in. She is reaching millions of people who have no idea they are hearing an argument with a history.

What do we expect them to say in response? If we — adults who know the history, who feel the wrongness viscerally — cannot articulate what is wrong with the argument, why would they be able to? What exactly are we expecting them to do with the disgust they are supposed to feel but were never taught to explain?

The honest answer is that we are expecting them to absorb the correct conclusion from the culture around them, to feel what we feel, and to suppress the argument unexamined because the person making it has been socially discredited. That has been the substitute for thinking. It worked, imperfectly, as long as the gatekeepers of social credibility were functioning. The gatekeepers are no longer functioning. The argument circulates without the biography attached, in formats and on platforms designed to reward engagement over scrutiny, to a generation that has every reason to be skeptical of the authorities telling them what to feel.

This is the situation. The argument is out in the world. The tools to answer it — really answer it, in terms that hold up — are not widely distributed. The gap between those two facts is not a political problem. It is a thinking problem, and it exists on every subject, right wing or left wing, not just this one.


This series is about the gap.

It does not argue that any particular political position is correct. It does not tell you what to conclude about affirmative action, or immigration, or any of the other subjects Duke raised. What it does is give you the equipment to examine arguments yourself — to see what a framework is doing, to ask what work is being performed between the facts and the conclusion, to identify what a claim requires to be true before you decide whether it is true.

These are not instincts: they are skills. They can be taught. But before you can develop them, it helps to understand exactly what you are up against..


Let’s start with something trivial. There is no meaningful difference between most branded toothpastes and their generic equivalents. The active ingredients are identical. The fluoride concentration is regulated. The whitening agents are the same compounds at the same concentrations. And yet the branded version costs twice as much and outsells the generic by a wide margin, because a century of advertising has attached feelings — of confidence, attractiveness, professional success — to the brand name, and those feelings arrive before any reasoning about ingredients begins. Nobody sits down and consciously thinks, “I will pay extra for this toothpaste because a beautiful person smiled while holding it in the ad.” The persuasion happens below that threshold. Most reach for the familiar brand, and always have.

This is the least consequential example of a problem that runs through nearly everything you consume.

Edward Bernays — Freud’s American nephew, who built the modern public relations industry and was comfortable calling what he did propaganda — understood in the 1920s that the most effective persuasion never announces itself as persuasion. It does not make arguments you can evaluate. It shapes the environment in which you form preferences, so that by the time you make a choice, the choice feels like yours. He famously helped a cigarette company expand its market by hiring women to smoke publicly in a suffragette parade, framing cigarettes as “torches of freedom.” He did not argue that women should smoke. He attached smoking to a value his audience already held, and let the association do the work.

The industry he founded has had a hundred years to refine these techniques, and it has had access to tools he could not have imagined.

The news you read is shaped by what keeps the publication financially viable, which is advertising revenue, which depends on audience size, which rewards stories that generate strong emotion — outrage, fear, tribal solidarity — over stories that generate careful thought. It is an incentive structure, and it operates whether or not any individual journalist is aware of it. A story that makes you angry keeps you reading. A story that makes you uncertain sends you elsewhere. Uncertainty does not monetize.

The universities that produce the experts quoted in those stories are increasingly funded by foreign governments, corporations, and ideologically committed donors, each of whom has views about which research conclusions are welcome and which are not. The funding does not usually purchase specific results. It purchases environments in which certain questions get asked and certain questions do not, in which certain scholars thrive and certain scholars find their grants dry up. The bias is structural and largely invisible to the people inside it.

The movies and television shows you watch as entertainment are, in part, extended commercials. Product placement is now a significant revenue stream for major studios — Apple, Ford, luxury brands — and the integration is designed to be imperceptible. The hero drives a specific truck. The laptop on the coffee table faces the camera at a consistent angle. You are not watching an ad. You are watching a story in which certain products appear so naturally that your brain files them under “things that belong in a good life” rather than “things someone paid to put in front of me.”

Social media is the most sophisticated version of all of this. The platforms are not neutral conduits for information. They are attention extraction businesses, and their product is your time. Every design choice — the infinite scroll, the autoplay video, the notification, the algorithmic feed — is engineered to keep you engaged as long as possible, because engagement is what they sell to advertisers. They have behavioral data on hundreds of millions of people and machine learning systems that have identified, with extraordinary precision, what content keeps each user’s thumb moving. You have almost certainly experienced the result: you watched one video, and then another appeared that was slightly more extreme, slightly more enraging, slightly more impossible to look away from, and an hour later you were somewhere you did not intend to be, having consumed content no one would have described as your choice.

The algorithm did not ask what you wanted to think about. It asked what would keep you watching. These are not the same question, and the algorithm is very good at answering the one it actually asked.

Step back from the individual examples and the scale of the situation becomes clear. Nearly all the information that reaches you arrives with an attached agenda — to sell you something, to hold your attention, to confirm what your tribe believes, to make you feel something specific. The agenda is usually invisible. It operates through the framing, the selection, the emphasis, the emotional register of what is shown to you, not through explicit argument you can evaluate and reject.

You did not choose most of what you know. You absorbed it from an environment that was itself shaped by interests that had nothing to do with your ability to understand the world accurately.

The information environment has always been imperfect, always been shaped by power and money and ideology. Newspapers, pamphlets and books from the 18th century also pushed political agendas. What has changed is the scale and the precision.

The tools that shape what you think are more sophisticated than they have ever been. The tools available to resist them have not kept pace.

That asymmetry is why David Duke’s approach works — and why it is the least of our problems.

Duke understood something that the most effective persuaders always understand: the most durable influence does not fight against your values. It borrows them. He did not ask his audience to abandon their commitment to equal rights. He assumed it, invoked it, and redirected it. He knew that his listeners had been raised to believe that every community deserves to celebrate its culture, that civil rights language belongs to the dispossessed, that consistency is a virtue. So he built an argument from those bricks, in that language, toward a conclusion those values would normally forbid. The argument was designed to make your own principles work against your judgment.

The devil can cite Scripture for his purpose. Countering that requires something more than knowing the Scripture. It requires understanding how frameworks are built, what they assume, what work they are doing beneath the surface of what they say out loud.

That is what thinking is. Thinking is the active examination of what an argument is actually doing: where it came from, what it requires, what it leaves out, why it is reaching you in this form at this moment. It is the difference between being moved and understanding why you are being moved.

It is hard work. It gets easier with practice. And there is no version of self-governance — personal or political — that does not require it.

This series will give you tools to recognize the persuasion methods and understand how falsehood can be smuggled into things that sound true. Each tool addresses a specific way that arguments fail, or a specific way that our own thinking fails when we encounter them. Together they constitute a method for doing something to what you read rather than having it done to you. It is easy to let a rally or a song or an article or a novel wash over you and influence your thinking. It is easy to go along with the crowd. It is difficult to recognize how you are being manipulated in real time.

The tools are only useful if you apply them without exemptions — to your own side’s arguments as rigorously as to the opposition’s. That is harder than it sounds, because we all have biases.

Thinking is hard. But it is very rewarding.

Let’s start.



Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

Reclaiming the Covenant on America's 250th (May 2026)

"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024)

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   

 

 

  • Monday, May 18, 2026
  • Elder of Ziyon

Many newspapers in May 1876 published an article with the headline "The Vitality of the Jews"

It went through a number of statistics: 

The Jews are the healthiest and longest lived people on the face of the earth. Their immunity from diseases of all forms is remarkable. Even the great epidemics pass them by with the infliction of much lighter scourge than falls upon other races. It is declared that the cholera never chose one of them for its victims, and, in fact, the deaths from this malady have been so few as almost to bear out the assertion. Suicide is seldom practiced among them. It has been computed, from statistics returned in certain provinces of Austria and Germany, that in a population of 1,000,000 the proportion of suicides between the Jews and the mixed white races was as one to four.
From data carefully studied Hoffman found that between the years 1823 and 1840 the number of stillborn among the Jews in Germany was as one in thirty-nine, and among other races as one in forty. Mayer ascertained that in Fürth the proportion of Jewish children who die between the ages of 1 and 5 years is 10 per cent., and of Christian children of same age it is 14 per cent. M. Neuville, calculating from the statistics of Frankfort, shows even a greater disparity existing among the children of the Jews. He also finds from his data that the average duration of the life of a Jew is 36 years and 9 months, while of the Christian it is 36 years and 11 months. “In the total of all ages half of the Jews born reach the age of 58 years and 1 month, while half of the Christians born attain the age of 36 years only.” One fourth of the Jewish population live beyond 71 years, but the same proportion of the Christian population live no beyond 59 years and 10 months. The official returns of Prussia give the Jews a mortality of 1.61 per cent. and the whole kingdom 2.62 per cent. While the Jews double their numbers in forty-one and one half years others require a period of fifty-one years.
In 1849 there was in Prussia one death for every 3140 Jews and one death for every thirty-two of the remaining population.
A Dr. Richardson writing in Diseases of Modern Life  "ascribes the high vitality of the Jews to their sober way of living."
"The Jew drinks less than his ‘even Christian;’ he takes, as a rule, better food; he marries earlier; he rears the children he has brought into the world with greater personal solicitude; he tends the needy more thoughtfully; he takes better care of his poor; and he takes good care of himself. He does not boast to-morrow, but he provides for it, and he holds tenaciously to all he gets. To our Saxon eyes and Celtic eyes he carries these virtues too far; but thereby he wins, becomes powerful, and, scorning boisterous mirth and passion, is comparatively happy.”




Buy EoZ's books  on Amazon!

Reclaiming the Covenant on America's 250th (May 2026)

"He's an Anti-Zionist Too!" cartoon book (December 2024)

PROTOCOLS: Exposing Modern Antisemitism (February 2022)

   

 

 

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Elder of Ziyon - حـكـيـم صـهـيـون



This blog may be a labor of love for me, but it takes a lot of effort, time and money. For 20 years and 40,000 articles I have been providing accurate, original news that would have remained unnoticed. I've written hundreds of scoops and sometimes my reporting ends up making a real difference. I appreciate any donations you can give to keep this blog going.

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