German Circumcision Ban Bags First Victim

After a Cologne court ruled that circumcision was illegal, there were those who argued that the decision would not impact Jewish life in Germany. We were cautioned not to jump to conclusions since it was just one court, whose jurisdiction was limited. The reaction of Germany’s political leadership, particularly Chancellor Angela Merkel, was exemplary as the parliament voted to take up a bill legalizing the ritual in the fall. But, as today’s news reveals, the optimists did not count on the willingness of many Germans to support the court.

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German Circumcision Ban Bags First Victim

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Russia Is Not Your Friend

It seems like a lifetime ago that President Barack Obama admonished Mitt Romney for indulging in hopeless nostalgia by observing, accurately, that American and Russian geopolitical objectives exist in opposition. Four years later, following Russia’s invasion and annexation of territory in Europe and its brazen gambits in the Syria, the Democrats’ cynical shaming of Romney for daring to state the obvious looks rather naïve. Democrats are today singing an entirely different tune regarding Moscow, particularly following Russia’s apparent involvement in the infiltration of the computer networks of a variety of Democratic committees. The partisan impulse among Republicans to indulge in schadenfreude amid the Democratic Party’s woes is powerful, but it is also toxic. If proven, Russia’s effort to put a thumb on the scales of the American political process represents an egregious violation of American sovereignty and the integrity of U.S. elections.

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Lessons of Lebanon, 10 Years On

This Sunday marks the ten-year anniversary of the end of the 34-day Israel-Hezbollah War in Lebanon. The war began when Hezbollah crossed into Israeli territory from southern Lebanon, killed three soldiers, injured two others, and kidnapped two more. While Lebanon professed its innocence, it had made a conscience choice to allow Hezbollah to assert its primacy along its southern border following Israeli’s UN-certified withdrawal in May 2000. Israel’s war aims were to eradicate Hezbollah missile stockpiles and Hezbollah positions in southern Lebanon. While the Israeli military succeeded in knocking out many Hezbollah stockpiles, the Iranian-backed Shi’ite militia managed to launch hundreds of missiles and rockets, striking as far south as Haifa and killing several dozen Israelis.

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Why Google Shouldn’t Say Palestine

It surely ranks as one of the most absurd and yet insightful Internet petition disputes. Supporters of the Palestinians have been raging at Google recently because they felt the Internet giant had slighted their cause. An urban myth of recent vintage claimed that Google had removed the legend “Palestine” from its maps. But the problem was that, although a glitch had taken the labels off what some call the territory of “Palestine,” the words that were temporarily erased were “West Bank” and “Gaza”–not the name of a nation that formally exists only at the United Nations and in the Olympics but not in the real world.

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What Obscures Clinton’s Scandals?

The release earlier this week of 296 pages of Hillary Clinton’s emails concerning the family foundation that she runs with her husband and daughter should have been the top story of the week. As our Noah Rothman noted on Wednesday, the emails contained clear evidence of conflicts of interest. Just as troubling was the subsequent report from CNN based on interviews with a law enforcement official that said the Department of Justice had turned a request from “several FBI field offices” in which they asked to, “open a case regarding the relationship between the State Department and the Clinton Foundation.” Considering that this largely validates the controversial assertions made in the Clinton Cash book by Peter Schweizer published last year, this is political dynamite that ought to place the Democratic presidential nominee’s campaign in jeopardy.

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End the Backdrop Follies

It was a profound embarrassment for the Hillary Clinton campaign. At a rally on Monday in Florida, she found herself in front of the usual backdrop of ardent supporters—including Seddique Mir Mateen, the father of Orlando mass murderer Omar Mateen, who slaughtered 49 persons and wounded 53 others at the Pulse nightclub in Orlando on June 12. On Wednesday night, as Trump denounced Clinton for having Mateen in a place of honor at her rally, seated behind Trump in his human backdrop  was somebody else with a past: Mark Foley, a Florida Republican who was forced to resign in disgrace from Congress in 2006 after being caught sending sexually explicit messages to underage male interns.

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