Israel 2026 – What Do We Want to Be When We Grow Up?
The question “Who do we want to be when we grow up?” is still open.
And maybe that’s the real story: We’re already grown up… we just haven’t decided who we are yet.
The question “Who do we want to be when we grow up?” is still open.
And maybe that’s the real story: We’re already grown up… we just haven’t decided who we are yet.
So is European culture terminally ill? Probably not.
But it certainly sometimes looks like a person who comes to the doctor with a long list of symptoms: identity confusion, political fatigue, and a little too much ideology on an empty stomach.
Europe’s problem is not Sharia, the problem is that it is no longer sure what it wants to be – and when that happens, someone else fills the vacuum.
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”:
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
Love for Israel is not a Hollywood story. It is not divided into a smooth plot with a sweet ending. It is a different kind of love – one born of commitment, not romance. It involves queues at the health insurance company, curses on the road, rent that reeks of fraud – and yet, it is a deeper, more burning love, the kind that leads people to fly here precisely when the sky is thundering.