We love ourselves too often and need reach out much more often. It is a social responsibility and it effects the environment also.
Its flashbacks: After a landslide election victory in 2024, President Donald J. Trump is returning to the White House to build upon his previous successes and use his mandate to reject the extremist policies of the radical left while providing tangible quality of life improvements for the American people. This includes putting a stop to endless wars, defending our nation’s borders, and unleashing the potential of the American economy, affording ALL Americans the opportunity to pursue THEIR version of the American dream. In his first administration, President Trump passed record-setting tax cuts and regulation cuts, achieved energy independence, replaced NAFTA with the United-States-Mexico-Canada Agreement, invested $2 trillion to completely rebuild the Military, launched the Space Force, obliterated the ISIS Caliphate, achieved a major breakthrough for peace in the Middle East, passed the most significant Veterans Affairs reforms in half a century, confirmed over 250 federal judges, including 3 Supreme Court Justices, signed bipartisan Criminal Justice Reform, lowered drug prices, protected Medicare and Social Security, and secured our nation’s borders in his first four years in office. This was only the beginning. Donald J. Trump defines the American success story. Throughout his life he has continually set the standards of business and entrepreneurial excellence, especially in real estate, sports, and entertainment. President Trump built on his success in private life when he entered into politics and public service. He remarkably won the Presidency in his first ever run for any political office. He won a second time despite several assassination attempts and the unprecedented weaponization of law fare against him. Time after time President Trump has defied the odds because he fundamentally believes in the exceptionalism of the American spirit and wants to see our great country succeed. A graduate of the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School of Finance, President Trump followed in his father’s footsteps into the world of real estate development, making his mark in New York City. There, the Trump name soon became synonymous with the most prestigious of addresses in Manhattan and, subsequently, throughout the world. President Trump is also an accomplished author. He has written more than fourteen bestsellers. His first book, The Art of the Deal, is considered a business classic. President Trump has five children, Barron, Don Jr., Ivanka, Eric, and Tiffany, as well as 11 grandchildren.
Antisemitism and engagement Looking at the state of antisemitism today, Daroff sees “early indications” of a gradual cooling of the explosion in anti-Jewish hostility over the last two years. While it is too early to guess how things will progress over the coming months, there are signs of progress, especially on the fierce ideological battlefields of college campuses. “Things like anti-Israel encampments and Jewish students being harassed are not happening anymore,” Daroff said. “Campuses are much calmer now than they were previously.” That marks a sharp contrast with the spring of 2024, when weeks-long encampments, building occupations and class disruptions were common at major universities. Tents and signs fill Harvard Yard by the John Harvard statue in the pro-Palestinian, anti-Israel encampment at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on May 5, 2024. (Joseph Prezioso / AFP) Much of that, he said, is because the Trump administration took strong steps to enforce Title VI protections against discrimination, including threatening to withdraw federal funding, to force university administrators to clamp down on hate activities on campus. Advertisement “Those interventions raised the stakes for institutions and literally changed the atmosphere for Jewish students and faculty overnight,” he said. Meanwhile, the phenomenon of surging Jewish engagement among non-affiliated Jews since October 7 shows no signs of abating, Daroff said. Organizations continue to report rising synagogue and JCC attendance, increased involvement in Jewish and pro-Israel advocacy, and public displays of Jewish identity such as wearing yarmulkes and Magen David necklaces. Former hostages Keith and Aviva Siegel light Hanukkah candles with William Daroff and participants at the Israel Foreign Ministry’s J50 Conference in December 2025 (Shlomi Amsalem/GPO) “We haven’t seen indications that the surge is reversing,” Daroff said. “As a community, we have been circling our wagons because we have seen that, at the end of the day, the people we can count on the most are our Jewish friends and neighbors. I think that’s been an important part of the surge, and we need to find ways to ensure that Jewish engagement continues.” “My hope at this point,” Daroff said, “is that with the conflict here receding, the Jewish community can press reset and focus on what is important.”
Sabrina Soffer @sabrinasoff · 7h The disturbing reality at @CarnegieMellon : university leadership enabling antisemitism under Qatari influence. CMU contracts require compliance with Qatari “cultural, religious, and social customs”— which includes prohibitions on the public practice of Judaism. University Show more Protect Our Campus @Protect_Campus · Feb 3 🔦 @Columbia University is no longer dealing with allegations or speculation. Its own data shows systemic failure, selective enforcement, and resistance to oversight. When an institution documents the problem and still refuses to act, accountability moves from the margins straight to the administration. 0:49 / 0:58 Protect Our Campus @Protect_Campus · 32m 🔦 @RutgersU tenured professor Todd Wolfson has used his academic authority and public platforms to promote radical political ideology, including repeated Nazi and Holocaust comparisons and the normalization of extremist rhetoric. These statements are not confined to private opinion. They are public, ongoing, and come from a professor whose role is to teach history, media, and political power with accuracy and responsibility. Holocaust inversion and Nazi analogies are not neutral political critique. When used by a professor, they distort historical reality, trivialize genocide, and shape how students understand democracy, governance, and moral accountability. Faculty are free to criticize policy, but academic freedom does not excuse abusing historical atrocities or legitimizing radical ideology through scholarly language. Universities hold professors to a higher standard because their words carry institutional weight. Rutgers should not ignore conduct that undermines historical truth and responsible education.
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