by Matthew Friedman | May 25, 2022 | Commentary
At this point, I really don’t have much to say or add about the mass shooting in Uvalde, and all I can do is look at everyone’s posts in social media and nod, or sit there considering whether I like, hug react, cry react, or anger react. I’ll read passionate articles...
by Matthew Friedman | May 15, 2022 | Commentary, Politics
What’s in a label? That question has been on my mind since Audie Wood’s most recent column first landed in my email in-box. “We have to call it what it is,” Wood wrote. We have to recognize that the reactionary right-wing movement that is driving the Republican Party...
by Matthew Friedman | Apr 24, 2022 | Commentary, Jewish Life, Politics
The shabby old man was a “loathsome reptile, engendered in the slime and darkness through which he moved.” And he drew the boy, “a young friend of mine” he said, deeper into his clutches. He ensured that the innocent child “was seldom left alone; but was placed in...
by Matthew Friedman | Mar 8, 2022 | Commentary
Did Russian boys grow up during the Cold War dreaming of someday being Blofeld? I can imagine a pubescent Vladimir Vladimirovich Putin emerging from the darkness of a 1965 screening of Thunderball at the Leningrad Odeon Theater, rubbing his hands together gleefully,...
by Matthew Friedman | Feb 27, 2022 | Commentary
Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky is sending negotiators to meet with a Russian delegation at a site on the banks of the Pripyat River, near the Belarusian border. “I do not really believe in the outcome of this meeting,” Zelensky said, “but let them try so...
by Matthew Friedman | Feb 7, 2022 | Commentary, Politics
They came in their thousands – by the tens of thousands, if you believe them – belching diesel fumes and blasting air horns. The Freedom Convoy of big tractor-trailer rigs, semis, and private pickup trucks and vans converged on the Canadian capital of Ottawa from...