The Great Rupture in American Jewish Life
What happens when liberalism and Zionism can no longer be reconciled?
By Peter Beinart
What happens when liberalism and Zionism can no longer be reconciled?
By Peter Beinart
The Palestinian cause has revived a partnership forged in the civil rights era — and also created new tensions.
By Daniel Bergner
More people have participated in protests than at any previous time, Vincent Bevins writes, yet little seems to improve.
By David Wallace-Wells
The furor over a pro-Palestinian rally in Times Square exposed political divisions that were instantly heightened when Hamas attacked Israel.
By Nicholas Fandos and Jonah E. Bromwich
Prominent movements like Occupy Wall Street and Black Lives Matter have had an impact. But none achieved their ambitions.
By David Leonhardt
The Substack pundit Fredrik deBoer and the political scientist Yascha Mounk feel that liberal ideologues and “woke” pretenders have marred American life.
By Sam Tanenhaus
Protests in New York City have long helped shape social change in the United States, sometimes at a cost. A court settlement may change the dynamics of such events.
By Corey Kilgannon and Maria Cramer
In “Revolutionary Spring,” the Cambridge historian Christopher Clark argues for the lasting impact of the uprisings that engulfed Europe in 1848.
By Alexander Zevin
A picture taken of Ms. Rainey, who called herself an “old lady in combat boots,” after she was doused with pepper spray at a protest went viral.
By Ed Shanahan
Pensé que una multitud de manifestantes conduciría a un cambio en la política. ¿Qué fue lo que sucedió?
By Zeynep Tufekci
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