Between Cyrus and Khomeini: Iran, the Jews, and Israel
Sometimes, the most dangerous thing in the Middle East is not a missile but a miss.
Sometimes, the most dangerous thing in the Middle East is not a missile but a miss.
Israel is not the problem – it is the proof.
Proof that Jews have not surrendered – that they have no longer accepted the status of dhimmi, that they dare to be sovereign, armed, and victorious.
A post with a dash of humor and a dash of sadness about the astonishing gap between two words that are not really similar, but for some reason are labeled as “the same thing”:
And this time, a satirical column, sharp but not inflammatory, that seeks to address one of the popular slogans of the humanist-relativist era.
With or without baklava — it’s time to stop underestimating the new Sultan of the Middle East.
Because while Iran is still building the bomb, Turkey is already filming the series that will make you fall in love with whoever holds it.
The Netherlands – the land of freedom, cannabis, rights and cheese – seems like the last place where Sharia would find a sympathetic audience. But as we learned from neighboring Belgium: The world of 2025, what seemed impossible becomes reality before you’ve even finished your latte in Amsterdam.
If you fell asleep in 1995 and woke up in October 2025, you would be flipping through the news and asking yourself: “What the hell happened to Belgium?!”
A country that for most of the world symbolized chocolate, a beautiful Brussels square, and beer with a perfect foam — has become a battleground between a tired Western culture and an ideology that believes the 7th century is the high-tech of values
Radical Islam is not a “local problem” or a “passing wave of terror” – it is part of a deep cultural-religious conflict between opposing worldviews. The question is not whether there will be a Third World War, but whether the West will recognize that it is already in it.
October 2025. As the level of anti-Semitism in Europe rises, Britain is experiencing identity attacks, and we are trying to decide whether to invite someone who is considered an “enemy of the public” there or a “friend of the Jews.”
The Europe of late 2025 is a history lesson for us all: an entire continent that sold itself out in the name of empty values. The question is – will we learn from this lesson in time, or will we find ourselves in a decade writing about “Israel 2035 – Outlines for the Image of the Post-Jewish Middle East”?