Read More
The Biden administration must make this a condition to any negotiations in November.
But if the Mavi Marmara incident is the best-known, it is far from the only attack that IHH members have engaged in
"Dishonor" cannot be allowed to legitimize violence
The United Nations estimates that, globally, 5,000 women are the victims of honor killings every year. It is a figure most experts dispute as being far too low.
Calling a terrorist crazy is nuts. What's more, calling a terrorist "insane" or "confused" does more than free him of responsibility
If you supported the Women's March, you were duped. And if you are Jewish and supported the March, they duped you twice.
But what does "terrorism" really mean, actually? And how well do most people understand it? Not very, it seems.
the new celebration of the hijab seems to be about celebrating all those things that we in the West generally condemn: pushing a new "must" trend for women in fashion and behavior; showing preference for one religious group over another; and above all, increasing the very real risks to those Muslim women who choose not to wear a head-covering by making models and icons of those who do.
The oldest hatred in the word is rejuvenated-and gaining strength in Europe
While much media focus has been on anti-Muslim violence and so-called "Islamophobia" in recent years, less attention is given to attacks against Jews which have been particularly high and significantly more violent – and the situation is only getting worse.
Even some of Israel's most stalwart opponents are starting to change course, with some discouraging the BDS, movement, others even engaging in joint military exercises with the Jewish state
{Originally posted to the IPT website} They are known as "the 102 minutes that changed America." Fifteen years later, it is increasingly clear that the 102 minutes of the Sept. 11 attacks also reshaped and changed the world. Indeed perhaps even more than Americans, Europeans now feel the strongest aftershocks, having been shaken by more […]
Americans, however, have been reluctant to accept the notion that honor violence occurs on US soil, just as – until recently – they insisted that the radicalization of Muslims in Europe was not a problem that could confront Americans. But with events such as Nidal Malik Hassan's 2009 attack at Fort Hood we've learned otherwise: radical Islam is alive and well in these United States and with it, religious and culturally-based violence against women.


