Carol Gould is the Philadelphia-born author of Don’t Tread on Me: Anti-Americanism Abroad, Spitfire Girls, and A Room at Camp Pickett, a play about her mother’s experiences as a WAC in World War II; she has just completed films about black GIs and GI babies. Carol has been a panelist on BBC's Any Questions?, hosted by Jonathan Dimbleby, and is a commentator on Sky News, Press TV, the BBC World Service, and Five Live.
In their epic clash over the president's Israel policy, Dershowitz is right to give Obama the benefit of the doubt.
Hopefully the public discourse in the United States will not become as ugly as it has in Europe.
Yet another shining example of clueless government health care bureaucrats in action.
A UK court declares that a Jewish school's faith-based admissions criteria violate anti-racism laws.
A UK charity holds an anti-Israel event and bans a Jewish activist from attending.
The magazine urges readers to stop worrying and learn to love the multicultural utopia.
The magazine's fawning interview with the president is a disgrace, even by mainstream media standards.
Once again, the mainstream press gets distracted from a truly important story at the worst possible time.
Other entertainers accomplished far more and overcame larger racial barriers — long before Jackson hit the stage.
No, not Pelosi. But if Britain can get rid of its disgraced speaker, America can do the same.