Apollo 11, which flew fifty years ago, remains today the most marvelous scientific achievement of the United States. Will we ever repeat it?
An oft-cited online source misdefines Zionism, likely deliberately so. Herewith a correction of the record, with some real history.
On this the fortieth anniversary of the resettlement of Beit Hadassah in Hebron, it is instructive to review its actual, undistorted history.
Jimmy Thach, Butch O'Hare, and Paul Tibbets also made the hero's journey during WWII. O'Hare in fact won the Medal of Honor.
Rashida Tlaib talks about dignity and suggests Muslims have more of it than Israelis. A few counterexamples to both parts of that sentence prove it false.
A hero's journey is supposed to change the hero. 77 years ago, 80 men began a hero's journey from which some never came back.
Yet again Arabs cried Nakba as Israel celebrated its independence. After more than 70 years, anyone else would move on. But the Arabs want it all.
In 1984 by George Orwell, one actually sees clocks strike 13. Orwell chose that to illustrate divorcing humans from their past. And...it's happening today.
History is who you are and where you come from. Those who would enslave us, must rewrite our history to suite them and their narrative.
America seems to be following a family business maxim: the third generation, lacking appreciation for the founding principles, ruins the business.