Jeremy Stern is deputy editor of Tablet Magazine.
The question, and the answers, are more uncomfortable than you think
Sometimes it feels better to live among your own kind, even if they’re Jewish
Don’t let them force you to choose between being an American and being a Jew
How to feel, and what to do, one month after the massacres
A startling string of policy failures shows the hollowness of the U.S. foreign policy establishment and its servile wunderkind, Jake Sullivan
Answering your questions on Hamas, Iran, the occupation, and more
It wasn’t a reward for the agency’s failures in Kyiv and Kabul
A portrait of life in the heart of America’s military empire, where the work of perpetuating the ‘liberal world order’ can be seen up close
Sanctions have failed to break Putin, and the West is running out of missiles and bullets
American bumbling has paradoxically promoted the long-standing U.S. policy goals of greater German and Japanese military engagement. But we should be careful what we wish for.
The worst nightmares of Europe’s sleeping giant are coming true all at once
How government, tech, finance, and law enforcement converged into an all-knowing criminalization complex—and how to resist it
Blinded by their own Cold War propaganda, Americans can’t see Berlin’s Ukraine policy for what it is
Ukraine shows that the ‘return of great power rivalry’ isn’t happening under the Biden administration
A seat at the European table won’t be too much to ask for the man who saves Europe from nuclear war
But it will take more than a war to undo decades of emotional and economic investment in the Russian state
As LA’s once-thriving Russian Jewish neighborhood is transformed into an ethnic Disneyland, its residents continue to see things differently
Rabbi Ed Feinstein sees the continuity of a new kind of Jewish life in the San Fernando Valley