Reforms to Israel’s Judiciary Must Be Carefully Calibrated
Change is necessary and inevitable. But it must not amplify division or open the nation up to unintended consequences.
February 6, 2023
A new book examines a murky plot.
In November 1943, as the tide was turning in the Allies’ favor in World War II, United States president Franklin Delano Roosevelt, British prime minister Winston Churchill and Soviet premier Joseph Stalin met in Tehran to discuss their plans for the war. When they returned home, at least one of them announced that the meeting been shadowed by a Nazi assassination plot. “I suppose it would make a pretty good haul if they could get all of us going through the street,” FDR said to the press when he got back to the United States.
Change is necessary and inevitable. But it must not amplify division or open the nation up to unintended consequences.
Discussing Free as a Jew.
Reaching millions of people in 50 languages.
The problems with You People.
A new book examines a murky plot.
In November 1943, as the tide was turning in the Allies’ favor in World War II, United States president Franklin Delano Roosevelt, British prime minister Winston Churchill and Soviet premier Joseph Stalin met in Tehran to discuss their plans for the war. When they returned home, at least one of them announced that the meeting been shadowed by a Nazi assassination plot. “I suppose it would make a pretty good haul if they could get all of us going through the street,” FDR said to the press when he got back to the United States.
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