— JNS In the article Dr. Julio Levit Koldorf argues that contemporary moral outrage has become performative and selective, driven more by ideological fashion than by genuine concern for human suffering. It contrasts the global indifference toward severe humanitarian catastrophes in places like Africa with the intense, often disproportionate focus on Israel, which the author contends is framed through symbolic narratives unsupported by empirical evidence. This imbalance, he su
— JNS In the article, Dr. Julio Levit Koldorf argues that the Israeli–Palestinian conflict is driven less by territory than by a symbolic choice: the Palestinian movement’s decision to cast Jews as the ideal enemy, a role the world readily accepts because Jews function as a “safe repository” for blame. This dynamic fuels global selective outrage—intense moral mobilization when Jews are involved, indifference when far greater atrocities occur elsewhere. The author concludes th
Indegazette (Belgium) On Sunday, November 23, 2025, Dr. Julio Levit Koldorf, spoke at the demonstration in front of the International Criminal Court in The Hague about the place of jihadism and Islamism in the broader history of civilizations. He compared societies and cultures to individual life cycles, in which phases of growth, maturity, and decline follow one another. In this context, Dr. Julio Levit Koldorf described Islamic civilization as one still in a kind of early a