— JNS Julio Levit Koldorf argues that Iran’s uprising—especially women defying the compulsory veil at immense personal risk—has exposed not only the brutality of the regime but the West’s selective silence, particularly from the UN, major human-rights NGOs, and activist feminism; he claims this is not a momentary failure but the predictable outcome of an ideological drift in which “universal” human rights have become conditional, a pattern he says was laid bare after Oct. 7,
— The Jerusalem Post Dr. Julio Levit Koldorf argues that antisemitism in the West has shifted from a condemned taboo to something increasingly normalized, even excused as “political expression,” especially after October 7. He claims institutions are now enabling this climate—courts, politicians, media, and even security authorities—by relativizing violence, restricting Jewish life “for safety,” and treating Jewish protection as too controversial to defend. Dr. Levit Koldorf c
— 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