Fearing Abandonment by the U.S., the Saudis Look to Russia and China
Diplomatic arson.
September 15, 2021
If we’re going to shame people, we should also find a way to forgive them.
When “cancelation,” in the sense of public shaming and exile from polite society, first entered Americans’ vocabulary, it was a phenomenon limited to celebrities. Since then, even ordinary people have lost their jobs or suffered other real-word consequences for the slightest infractions. And although the cancelers have become adept at doling out punishment, there is yet to be an equivalent process of rehabilitation or absolution. David Wolpe, contemplating the case of a friend who has been “canceled”—with good reason, in Wolpe’s evaluation—looks to what Yom Kippur, a holiday of forgiveness, can teach our unforgiving culture.
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The significance of Monday’s summit.
Frozen Jews.
If we’re going to shame people, we should also find a way to forgive them.
When the warrior and poet chose not to kill his sworn enemy.