Israel’s Invasion of Lebanon May Doom Kamala Harris’s White House Chances
Michigan’s Lebanese community is being asked to overcome its grief. That’s a tall order.
Perspectives on the news from Intercept columnists, reporters, and freelance contributors.
Michigan’s Lebanese community is being asked to overcome its grief. That’s a tall order.
Statements by John Kelly, Trump’s former chief of staff, have made it nearly impossible for the media to avoid Hitler comparisons.
Like other schools moving the goalposts, Swarthmore College recently changed its policies to ban “loud chanting.”
Too many Americans seem to be ignoring the risks that another Trump presidency would pose to the U.S. This is a warning to them.
Israel and the United States are already speaking about a Lebanon post-Hezbollah. They’re getting way ahead of themselves.
Without massive, unconditional U.S. military subsidies, Israel would have had to practice diplomacy with their neighbors years ago.
But Palestinians in densely populated Gaza are all Hamas’s “human shields” — letting Israel deflect the blame for civilian deaths.
Vladimir Putin and Benjamin Netanyahu both want Donald Trump to win so they can prolong and intensify their brutal wars.
Calling south Beirut a militant “stronghold” makes it sound like a giant military base, rather than a dense and vibrant urban area.
The source of the quote corrected Jake Tapper and Dana Bash, but they kept accusing the Palestinian House representative of antisemitism anyway.
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