In this episode, Acton’s director of marketing and communications, Eric Kohn, talks with Jonathan Greenberg, the Jack Miller Family Foundation’s director of freedom initiatives and the former Midwest director for the American Israel Public Affairs Committee about the long history of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and the significance of the October 7 massacre, especially what it will mean for Israel and the region going forward. While the Gaza-Israeli dispute has been going on since at least 2006, the broader Israeli-Palestinian battle dates back decades, the contours of which are often poorly misunderstood as some subset of geopolitics or primarily about human rights or the specifics of a two-state solution. To fully grasp what’s going on, you have to understand that the conflict didn’t start in 1973 or even 1948. In fact, in some ways, it goes back millennia.
Why do some people hate the jews? | Acton Line
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America without God
Why do some people hate the Jews?
Representative Peter Meijer on public service
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Alexander Salter on the American tradition of ordered liberty and sound money
Nate Hochman on the intellectual energy of young conservatives
Helen Raleigh on how China’s aggression has backfired
Donald Devine on the enduring tension
Darrell Bock and Jonathan Armstrong on virtual reality church
Dylan Pahman on free speech and cancel culture
Trent Horn on Can a Catholic be a socialist?
John Mackey on conscious leadership
Stephanie Slade on the future of fusionism
Scott Lincicome on the myth of deindustrialization
Matthew Continetti on Rush Limbaugh's legacy
David Hebert on profits during a pandemic
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