Get in Babkans, those of you on micro.blog, and other fedizens, we're doing Monday.

I'm currently drinking my second cup of coffee, breakfast has been consumed, and John and I are rereading the Camel Club series by David Baldacci. The Want To Read pile continues to grow, and otherwise I'll be getting as much work done as I can today. Pretty boring other than that.

#today

Foreign Ministries by Andrew Lovseth

In late December, the murder by Hamas of a Canadian-Israeli citizen, 70-year-old Judith Weinstein Haggai of Kibbutz Nir Oz, was confirmed. As has been their habit, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Minister of Foreign Affairs Mélanie Joly, and Canada’s ambassador to Israel, Lisa Stadelbauer, were all silent. I was not. My rebuke of the Canadian ambassador […]

The BBC by Andrew Lovseth

A few months before I graduated from Oxford, I was interviewed for the British Broadcasting Corporation’s prestigious two-year journalist trainee course. This was the best way at the time to secure a job at Britain’s most respected news broadcaster. A committee of five interviewed me. The chair asked whether there was anything I would have […]

Root-Causism by Andrew Lovseth

Immediately after news of Hamas’s October 7 massacres broke — before it was known just what had happened, before the shock of the cruelty had been absorbed (which will, perhaps, never happen) — instant, and astonishingly confident, analyses of the event’s “root cause” emerged. On October 7 itself, the Democratic Socialists of America, once the home of Michael Harrington’s […]

Islamism by Andrew Lovseth

Why, more than two decades after 9/11, when Osama bin Laden attacked America in order to inspire and lead “the global jihad project” — the term is from the left-leaning Brookings Institution — do we see massive demonstrations on the streets of Europe and the United States in favor of the antisemitic, genocidal Islamist butchers of Hamas, who are […]