『Episode 80 - They Love Death Like The Jews Love Life』のカバーアート

Episode 80 - They Love Death Like The Jews Love Life

Episode 80 - They Love Death Like The Jews Love Life

無料で聴く

ポッドキャストの詳細を見る

概要

Send us Fan Mail

An ambulance is one of the clearest symbols of human decency: you rush toward danger to keep a stranger alive. So what does it say about a movement, a culture, or an ideology when the target is the ambulance itself? We start with Hatzalah and the broader reality that Jewish communities often build parallel systems of emergency medical services, security patrols, and mutual aid that raise the quality of life for everyone nearby, especially when government resources are stretched.

From there, we speak plainly about antisemitism, propaganda, and the moral confusion that spreads when people refuse to look at what groups openly say they want. We unpack the meaning behind the claim “we love death like the Jews love life,” and why that worldview shows up in horrifying stories, including accounts of life saving medical care being repaid with plans for violence. These examples are hard to hear, but they force an honest question: if we won’t name what we’re facing, how can we protect the innocent or build real peace?

We close with Torah grounded ethics on self-defence and the responsibilities that come with power. Judges, police, teachers, and anyone with authority don’t just make decisions, they shape destinies, and the impact cuts both ways. If you’re searching for moral clarity, practical lessons about leadership, and a values-based lens on the Israel Gaza conflict and community safety, this conversation is for you.

Subscribe for more, share this with someone who needs it, and leave a review so more listeners can find the show. What part of the conversation challenged you most?

Support the show

#thetrustfactorpodcast #jewishpodcasts

https://podcasts.apple.com/.../the-trust.../id1803418137

https://open.spotify.com/show/2xheh4uQ0xCYGGNVimSSWw

https://chat.whatsapp.com/ICNYcOL39CtGG2YtaWui38...

まだレビューはありません