How the Iran Deal Has Exacerbated the Crisis in Syria
We haven't intervened because we want to placate Iran.
September 10, 2015
Laudable instincts for compassion must be combined with caution.
Seeing photographs and reading reports of the plight of Middle Eastern refugees trying to enter Europe, the historian Deborah Lipstadt is reminded of Jews fleeing the Nazis in the 1930s—and the refusal of many countries to welcome them. Yet, she writes, laudable instincts for compassion must be combined with caution. She raises some important questions:
We haven't intervened because we want to placate Iran.
Are “lone wolf” terror attacks really isolated incidents?
The ancient city's name is the source of the word Armageddon.
On the relationship between philosophy and Judaism.
Laudable instincts for compassion must be combined with caution.
Seeing photographs and reading reports of the plight of Middle Eastern refugees trying to enter Europe, the historian Deborah Lipstadt is reminded of Jews fleeing the Nazis in the 1930s—and the refusal of many countries to welcome them. Yet, she writes, laudable instincts for compassion must be combined with caution. She raises some important questions:
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