Podcast: John Podhoretz on Midge Decter’s Life in Ideas
May 24, 2022 | By: John Podhoretz

Press play below to listen to the podcast, download it in the iTunes Store, or stream it via Stitcher. On May 9, the cultural commentator Midge Decter passed away. Author of essays and books, editor of magazines, and mentor to generations of writers, Decter was subtle, clear, and courageous in her thinking. Though a […]
Read MorePodcast: Motti Inbari on the Yemenite Children Affair
May 17, 2022 | By: Motti Inbari

Press play below to listen to the podcast, download it in the iTunes Store, or stream it via Stitcher. In the late 1940s and early 1950s, thousands of Middle Eastern Jews left their countries of origin and moved to Israel. Among them were the Jews of Yemen. There is a myth, believed by some […]
Read MorePodcast: Christine Emba on Rethinking Sex
May 10, 2022 | By: Christine Emba

Press play below to listen to the podcast, download it in the iTunes Store, or stream it via Stitcher. For most young men and women today, sexual ethics have been collapsed into one idea: consent. Consent, whereby two responsible, conscientious, free people agree to enter into a sexual relationship, has become a shorthand way […]
Read MorePodcast: Shany Mor on How to Understand the Recent Terror Attacks in Israel
April 29, 2022 | By: Shany Mor

Press play below to listen to the podcast, download it in the iTunes Store, or stream it via Stitcher. Since the end of the second intifada nearly twenty years ago, during which Israel endured attacks constantly, terrorism there has been comparatively rare. There have been knifings, and many rockets fired from Gaza and from […]
Read MorePodcast: Abraham Socher on His Life in Jewish Letters and the Liberal Arts
April 21, 2022 | By: Abraham Socher

Press play below to listen to the podcast, download it in the iTunes Store, or stream it via Stitcher. Since its first issue twelve years ago, the Jewish Review of Books, a beautifully-designed quarterly that was founded and supported by Tikvah, has produced 49 issues of high-level Jewish discourse. Much of that success can […]
Read MorePodcast: Ilana Horwitz on Educational Performance and Religion
April 13, 2022 | By: Ilana Horwitz

Press play below to listen to the podcast, download it in the iTunes Store, or stream it via Stitcher. Why do some American children do better in school than others? Social scientists tend to look to family structure, race, class, and gender in an effort to find factors that correlate to better or worse […]
Read MorePodcast: David Friedman on What He Learned as U.S. Ambassador to Israel
April 1, 2022 | By: David Friedman

Press play below to listen to the podcast, download it in the iTunes Store, or stream it via Stitcher. When Donald Trump improbably became president in 2016, few knew what his foreign policy agenda would look like. Having spent little time on such issues during his campaign and having no previous electoral experience, Trump’s […]
Read MorePodcast: Andy Smarick on What the Government Can and Can’t Do to Help American Families
March 28, 2022 | By: Andy Smarick

Press play below to listen to the podcast, download it in the iTunes Store, or stream it via Stitcher. In recent years, family policy—what the government can do to strengthen the formation of American families—has come to occupy the minds of many political and cultural figures. That’s a good thing, since the family is […]
Read MorePodcast: Aaron MacLean on Deterrence and American Power
March 18, 2022 | By: Aaron MacLean

Press play below to listen to the podcast, download it in the iTunes Store, or stream it via Stitcher. The United States of America is the most powerful nation in the world. But it is facing tests of its credibility in multiple theaters of conflict. What do America’s adversaries believe about the capacity and […]
Read MorePodcast: Ronna Burger on Reading Esther as a Philosopher
March 11, 2022 | By: Ronna Burger

Press play below to listen to the podcast, download it in the iTunes Store, or stream it via Stitcher. When Jews celebrate the upcoming holiday of Purim, they’ll also study the Book of Esther, named for the young queen whose Jewish identity was unknown to her husband—Persia’s king—and his court. The Book of Esther […]
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