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Christopher Caldwell


Christopher Caldwell, a contributing editor at the Claremont Review, is the author of Reflections on the Revolution in Europe: Immigration, Islam, and the West  (2009).

Latest Content

  1. Editor's Pick ·

    Hungarian Jewry, Anti-Semitism, and the Paradox of Viktor Orban

    Anti-Semitic advertisements don’t pose the same threat as anti-Semitic immigrants.

  2. Editor's Pick ·

    Why Post-Catholic France Mourned for Notre Dame

    For nonbelievers, objects and traditions bound up with religious belief are a substitute for belief itself.

  3. Response ·

    The Migratory History of the Jews Has Little to Teach about Today’s Immigration Woes

    By Christopher Caldwell

    Jews have a long and varied history of exile and migration: ancient Egypt and Babylon, medieval and modern Europe, Ellis Island, aliyah . In his recent essay for Mosaic , Nicholas M. Gallagher see...

    The Migratory History of the Jews Has Little to Teach about Today’s Immigration Woes
  4. Editor's Pick ·

    Why Israel Must Not Capitulate to the Gaza Protests

    The legitimacy of Israel’s borders.

  5. Response ·

    Why There Is No Secular Substitute for Alcoholics Anonymous

    By Christopher Caldwell

    Jeffrey Bloom, in “God, Religion, and America’s Addiction Crisis,” defends a religious approach to treating drug and other addicts, in particular the approach used in “twelve-step” programs patterne...

    Why There Is No Secular Substitute for Alcoholics Anonymous
  6. Editor's Pick ·

    Turkey’s Sham Intervention in Syria

    It wants to crush the Kurds, not Islamic State.

  7. Editor's Pick ·

    With Open Doors and Closed Eyes, Europe Welcomes Refugees

    What has Angela Merkel unleashed?

  8. Editor's Pick ·

    Unfree French

    Committed to developing and supporting the intellectual, religious, and political leaders of the Jewish people and the Jewish state.

  9. Editor's Pick ·

    Of Jews, Communists, and Jewish Communists

    Committed to developing and supporting the intellectual, religious, and political leaders of the Jewish people and the Jewish state.