In Lebanon, Did the U.S. Blink First, or Iran?
Two readings of the same scenario.
June 4, 2026
The pope, the Satmar rebbe, and a rabbi.
Last week, Aaron Teitelbaum, the leader of one of the two branches of Satmar—currently the most numerous hasidic group—delivered a blanket condemnation of artificial intelligence, declaring that those using it are “descending directly into hell.” Not long before that, the pope issued his own, more measured but also negative, evaluation of AI. Efrem Goldberg, responding to the latter, considers what Judaism has to say about the subject, drawing on rabbinic responses to other major technological innovations:
Two readings of the same scenario.
Beijing’s spy satellites gave the Houthis guidance too.
A mixed bag in the primaries.
Lost and found at random.
The pope, the Satmar rebbe, and a rabbi.
Last week, Aaron Teitelbaum, the leader of one of the two branches of Satmar—currently the most numerous hasidic group—delivered a blanket condemnation of artificial intelligence, declaring that those using it are “descending directly into hell.” Not long before that, the pope issued his own, more measured but also negative, evaluation of AI. Efrem Goldberg, responding to the latter, considers what Judaism has to say about the subject, drawing on rabbinic responses to other major technological innovations:
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