
In late 2020 and early 2021, I pointed out that the Democrat Intifada targeting Jews in America was being put together. I showed with evidence Joe Biden wasn't President, then predicted October 7-warning Israel.
Nicholas Goldstein
712 posts

@CivilRightsNick
political writer, history in civil rights community in DC, youngest son of civil rights legend Barry Goldstein, nonpartisan, follower of Baudrillard and Artaud

In late 2020 and early 2021, I pointed out that the Democrat Intifada targeting Jews in America was being put together. I showed with evidence Joe Biden wasn't President, then predicted October 7-warning Israel.









Justice Alito fires back at Justice Jackson, calling her solo dissent "baseless and insulting" and "utterly irresponsible" after she accused the majority of abandoning principle for power.


The daughter of a man killed in the Bondi Beach massacre has revealed the barrage of hate-filled messages she's received in the wake of the terror attack. Sheina Gutnick's father died trying to stop the alleged gunmen; today she fronted the first day of the royal commission on antisemitism, saying she's been told by strangers, she too should have died that day.


“I love Jews as long as they reject Israel” does not seem like a winning message.


Connecticut Attorney General William Tong on his attempt to override federal law by banning ICE from wearing masks: "We are sovereign in this state. We are the sovereign state of Connecticut... We are joined together by our consent in a federation known as the United States."





Pretty much every chart over the last few years says women radicalized while men stayed normal, but we've seen almost no media coverage about this. Should be a huge story with ongoing coverage. Curious

@memeticsisyphus I wrote a short story inspired by Demons for my creative writing class in college. It was a sort of rape hoax (appeared to fake being drugged) where the ending suggested the left fascism on college campuses was harmful to the mental health of young women.

Demons Fyodor Dostoevsky (1872) Few men understood the coming storm of revolution better than Dostoevsky. He knew what it would mean when these fools gained power, he knew what they would do, how they would act. We watch the transformation of highly respectable, educated people possessed by an idea that purges them of their decency, their honor, their virtue until they’re no longer recognizable. The book would be a tragic comedy if it did not come true 50 years later. Rating: 5/5






M Gessen of The New York Times has won the 2026 Pulitzer Prize for opinion writing.
