Ten Convenient Beliefs For Author Yossi Klein Halevi

Stephen Turner (b. 1951) describes theories that fail as descriptions yet succeed as practices. They hold a group together, lower friction inside it, keep a coalition aligned, and let people act without checking their premises against the world. I call these convenient beliefs. They earn their place by cutting social cost, not by mapping reality.

Here is a set of ten that serve Yossi Klein Halevi (b. 1953), the American-born Israeli author and journalist, senior fellow at the Shalom Hartman Institute in Jerusalem, co-host with Donniel Hartman of the podcast For Heaven’s Sake, and co-director of the Institute’s Muslim Leadership Initiative. They align his arc from youthful extremism to liberal Zionism, his bridge-building books, his interfaith and Israeli-Palestinian dialogue work, and his role as the empathetic explainer of Zionism into a worldview that keeps his public vocation running.

His path from teenage follower of Meir Kahane and early flirtation with the settlements to mature, dialogue-minded liberal Zionist grants him moral and intellectual standing no opponent can match. The biography becomes the credential. Memoirs of a Jewish Extremist supplies the before, the dialogue work the after.

Patient one-on-one narrative, the method of Letters to My Palestinian Neighbor, offered free in Arabic, breaks the deadlock better than any rival approach and stands on higher moral ground. This lifts his books from advocacy to peacemaking.

The Shalom Hartman Institute gives him the position he needs: enough traditional Jewish depth to reach religious readers, enough openness to challenge both Israeli and Palestinian orthodoxies. His co-direction of the Muslim Leadership Initiative and the podcast extend the reach. The platform sustains the influence.

Both peoples carry real history and real wounds, and to deny either, whether settler maximalism or Palestinian rejectionism, prolongs the tragedy. The both-sides posture makes him the wise, compassionate center.

His spiritual travels through Christianity and Islam in At the Entrance to the Garden of Eden, and his listening projects with Palestinians, express religious humanism and Zionism at full strength rather than softness. The frame turns a charge of weakness into proof of deeper fidelity to Jewish values.

Attack from the hard right for sapping resolve, attack from the hard left for normalizing Zionism, and both confirm that he holds the honest middle. Backlash becomes validation.

His American-Israeli upbringing, his IDF reserve service during the First Intifada, and his Holocaust-survivor father give him lived standing when he explains Israel to the world. Insider credibility meets outsider perspective.

Long narrative nonfiction, the award-winning Like Dreamers above all, reshapes public understanding more than activism or polemic, and so his writing becomes public service. The prolific output becomes a calling.

The future of Zionism and Israeli society lies in a radical middle of empathetic realism, Jewish indigenous rights alongside painful compromise, the path he has charted. This keeps him relevant through the long deadlock.

History will absolve him because he modeled the honest, humanizing talk that might still prevent catastrophe and keep the moral core of the Jewish state intact. The belief insulates him against frustration and marginalization and recasts political failure as part of a redemptive arc.

These beliefs lock together. They coordinate his books, his institutional roles, his podcast, and his interfaith work. They justify bridge-building across the deepest divides in Israel and the Jewish world. They keep him in solidarity with fellow pluralists at Hartman. And they turn dissonance, the charges of naivete or selective empathy or insufficient hawkishness, into a sense of enlightened duty. In Turner’s reading, their goodness rests on how well they let the man and his coalition function and persist, not on how closely they track rejectionism, the settlement map, or the full spread of Israeli and Palestinian opinion. Different books lean different ways, memoir here, interfaith there, the Palestinian letters elsewhere, but the cluster holds the larger project together: empathetic Zionist renewal.

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Ten Convenient Beliefs For Philosopher Micah Goodman

Stephen Turner (b. 1951) treats some beliefs as coordination devices rather than accurate maps of the world. A belief can hold a group together, lower internal friction, keep a coalition intact, and spare its members costly self-examination, all without being true. I call these convenient beliefs. Their worth lies in what they let a man do, not in how well they track reality.

Micah Goodman (b. 1974) writes on classical Jewish thought, diagnoses Israel’s fractures, and casts himself as a healer of the country’s divides. He is a research fellow at the Shalom Hartman Institute‘s Kogod Research Center, a founder of Mabua, and co-host of the podcast Mifleget Hamachshavot. He lives in a West Bank settlement and counsels centrist politicians. His proposal to shrink the conflict became policy under Naftali Bennett. Here are ten beliefs that let him hold scholarship, settlement, and centrist politics together as one calling.

Classical Jewish philosophy, Maimonides (1138-1204) above all, supplies the tools to break today’s Israeli dead-ends. Applying it to current crises counts as authentic public philosophy rather than anachronism. This belief turns his early books on Maimonides and on the Kuzari, along with his later applied work in Catch-67, The Wondering Jew, and The Eighth Day, into one seamless project instead of a pivot.

The Israeli Left and Right both hold true core fears, the Left over Israel’s democratic and demographic future, the Right over security. So the post-1967 situation is a real trap with no clean exit, only wise management from the pragmatic center. This lifts his bestseller above fence-sitting and lets him scold both extremes while standing over them.

The radical center he speaks for is the moral and intellectual mainstream, not tepid compromise. The extremes own the headlines, but he speaks for a silent majority that wants nuance. His books, lectures, and podcast become the true voice of Israeli common sense.

Living in a settlement while he preaches dialogue across every divide reads as lived authenticity and courage rather than contradiction. This folds his home into his bridge-building persona and asks nothing of him, no move and no retreat.

Hartman’s pluralist platform and his own beit midrash give him the perfect perch, enough traditional standing to reach religious Jews and enough academic freedom to needle Orthodox and secular orthodoxies alike. This keeps his reach wide and shields him from the charge of partisanship.

Attack from the Left for normalizing the occupation and from the Right for sapping resolve tells him he has read the trap correctly and struck the needed balance. The backlash becomes evidence that his method works.

His podcast, his lectures, and his access to centrist leaders extend the philosophical mission rather than distract from it. Media reach and political proximity become a scholar’s duty, translating old wisdom into tools for cooling Israel’s civil war.

Fragmented attention and culture-war heat are spiritual and philosophical problems, best met by the slow, text-based learning he champions. This makes his recent book The Attention Revolution the logical next step rather than a detour, and it keeps his output fresh without leaving his themes.

The honors, a place on the 50 most influential Jews in 2017 and the 100 most influential Israelis in 2019, confirm that his approach reshapes Israeli discourse from the center rather than the margins. Outside recognition becomes inside justification for staying the course.

History will be kind to the radical-center project, because it kept Israel from tearing itself apart. Even if the crises persist, his work plants seeds of long-term renewal. This recasts present deadlock as one stage in a redemptive arc and insulates him from the frustration of the moment.

These beliefs lock together. They coordinate his output, his roles, his media presence, and his choice of home. They hold him in solidarity with the pluralists at Hartman. They convert the dissonance of the work, the charges of naivety, of selective nuance, of settlement hypocrisy, into a sense of enlightened duty. On Turner’s account, their goodness lies in how well they let Goodman and his coalition keep going, not in how well they map the conflict, the depth of the polarization, or the real spread of Israeli opinion. The emphasis shifts across his books and his podcast, from classical exegesis to contemporary diagnosis, but the cluster as a whole sustains the project.

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Ten Convenient Beliefs For Scholar Marc B. Shapiro

Stephen Turner treats some beliefs as coordination devices. They hold a group together, lower internal friction, and license continued action without costly self-examination or outside check. Their worth lies in what they do for the coalition, not in how well they map reality. I call these convenient beliefs, the ones a man selects because they cut his social costs and steady his way of life.

Here is a set of ten that serve Marc B. Shapiro (b. 1966), rabbi, scholar of Jewish history, philosophy, theology, and rabbinic literature, holder of the Harry and Jeanette Weinberg Chair in Judaic Studies at the University of Scranton, author of The Limits of Orthodox Theology and Changing the Immutable. They align his academic-historical method, his Modern Orthodox identity, his critique of rabbinic censorship and theological rigidity, his publishing, his public lectures, and his Jewish historical tours into one worldview that keeps his role as insider-reformer sustainable.

Academic historical-critical scholarship is the only honest and rigorous way to study Jewish texts and history, and traditional Orthodox approaches often rely on unconscious censorship or deliberate rewriting that distorts the record. This frames his own books as needed correctives rather than optional readings.

Modern Orthodoxy can absorb critical scholarship and keep its halakhic commitment, which places him as the bridge between the academy and committed Jewish life. This sustains his double identity as ordained rabbi and university chair and shields him from the charge of standing outside Orthodoxy.

Maimonides‘ (1138-1204) Thirteen Principles never held the unquestioned status Orthodoxy claims for them, and showing this in The Limits of Orthodox Theology frees the tradition from needless rigidity. This raises his signature interventions to acts of intellectual liberation rather than attacks.

Orthodox history-rewriting and internal censorship, catalogued in Changing the Immutable, are real, and the community must face them to stay honest. This turns his most contested book into a public service.

His Harvard PhD under Isadore Twersky (1930-1997), his ordination, and his Weinberg Chair give him rare standing: enough traditional authority to be heard inside Orthodoxy and enough academic freedom to say what outsiders cannot. This explains why he can publish such critiques.

Pushback from traditionalist voices, such as the complaints about sourcing in Changing the Immutable, shows the same defensive rewriting and dogmatic enforcement his scholarship exposes. This converts scholarly criticism into confirmation.

Figures such as R. Jehiel Jacob Weinberg (1884-1966) and Saul Lieberman (1898-1983) model the navigation between tradition and modernity that he practices, so his studies of them serve as living mirrors rather than mere history. This justifies his focus on these liminal Orthodox intellectuals.

His Torah in Motion lectures, his Seforim Blog posts, and his guided tours extend the same scholarly mission, carrying evidence-based Jewish studies to committed audiences. This folds outreach into the single enterprise.

The future of Jewish studies and a viable Modern Orthodoxy rests on open engagement with primary sources rather than sanitized or hagiographic narrative. This sustains his publishing and reads any mixed reception as a sign the field still needs his voice.

History and the wider Jewish community will vindicate his approach because it keeps Orthodoxy from intellectual insularity, even if current traditionalist circles resist. This gives him psychological cover against controversy and recasts professional friction as proof of the work’s value.

The ten reinforce one another. They coordinate his output, his institutional standing, and his public persona. They justify sustained critique of Orthodox historical and theological self-presentation. They hold solidarity with academic-traditionalist reformers. They turn the dissonance of being accused of undermining Orthodoxy, or of selective sourcing, into a sense of enlightened duty. In Turner’s terms their goodness lies in how well they let Shapiro and his intellectual coalition function and persist, not in how closely they track verifiable consensus in the Orthodox world, peer review, or the full range of traditionalist scholarship. The emphasis shifts across his books and lectures, from theological reappraisal to historical censorship, yet the cluster holds the project of disciplined internal reform together.

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Ten Convenient Beliefs For Sociologist Stephen P. Turner

A convenient belief earns its place by what it does, not by whether it is true. It lowers social cost. It holds a coalition together. It lets a man keep working without auditing his own foundations. Stephen Park Turner (b. 1951) gave the idea its best name. He calls them good bad theories: false accounts that coordinate action, useless as description and useful as a signal that keeps people in step. Turner teaches philosophy at the University of South Florida, where he has held a chair since 1975. He has spent a career taking apart practices, tacit knowledge, and collective intentionality, and reducing each to transmission between individuals. Here are ten beliefs that keep his own project running.

Good bad theories give philosophy of the social sciences its sharpest tool. The concept explains away normativity, practices, and collective intentionality and leaves nothing over. So his framework becomes the one theory his rivals cannot climb out of.

Mainstream sociology and philosophy stay trapped in reified notions of practices, tacit knowledge, and irreducible norms. His transmission-based, individualist account takes those notions apart. So his books read as the correction the field needs rather than one view among many.

Pushback from normativists, hermeneuticists, and defenders of collective social facts confirms the theory. Their resistance shows the social use of the bad theories he studies. Criticism becomes evidence.

His long perch at the University of South Florida, paired with visiting posts and editorial reach at Social Studies of Science, gives him the outsider-insider seat. He keeps enough distance to attack the field and enough standing to publish in it. This explains his output and his pull.

His close readings of Max Weber (1864-1920), Karl Mannheim (1893-1947), and Richard Rorty (1931-2007) stand as the most rigorous on offer. So he holds the critical tradition in social theory by right of succession. The claim props up his authority over the canon.

Cognitive sociology, the study of expertise, and science studies work because they cut grand theory down to individual processes. Older paradigms have aged out. This belief licenses his move from sociology to philosophy and his turn toward The Future of Sociology.

Charges that his work is reductionist, behaviorist, or deaf to lived experience are convenient bad theories of their own. People invested in normative and collective vocabularies deploy them. The charge reframes every methodological complaint as the phenomenon he describes.

Mad Hazard and the shape of his career show that steady, clear-eyed critique buys a distinguished and coherent scholarly life. The story becomes the payoff of the method.

The academy prefers ecumenical, paradigm-friendly scholarship to hard naturalism, and that preference reveals the forces he has spent a career exposing. This keeps him in the role of reformer and explains why his interventions stay needed.

History and the future of social theory will judge the naturalist, anti-normativist project kindly, because it keeps the social sciences from sliding back into mystification, even if the field is slow to see it. This gives long-term insulation and turns thin uptake into more evidence for the theory’s reach.

The ten hold together as a self-reinforcing system. They coordinate his output, his alliances with fellow naturalists and science-studies scholars, and his public character. They license the long campaign against dominant paradigms. They keep solidarity among the practice-skeptics. They convert the cost of the work, isolation from the normativist mainstream and a mixed reception for anti-normativism, into a sense of duty. Turner might say their goodness lies in how well they let a man and his coalition keep going, not in how closely they track consensus in the philosophy of social science, citation counts, or the rest of contemporary theory. His books press anti-normativism in one place and the history of sociology in another. The cluster sustains the larger project of demystification.

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Ten Convenient Beliefs For Author Anne Applebaum

Stephen Turner (b. 1951) studies the beliefs that hold a group together. He calls some of them good bad theories. They do not have to map reality. They have to coordinate people, lower friction, and keep a coalition moving without costly self-examination or outside verification. I call these convenient beliefs. A man selects them because they cut his social costs and steady his way of life.

Anne Applebaum (b. 1964) won the Pulitzer Prize, writes for The Atlantic, holds a senior fellowship at the SNF Agora Institute at Johns Hopkins, and chronicles authoritarianism. She married Radosław Sikorski (b. 1963), now Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister of Poland. The ten beliefs below align her scholarship, her transatlantic networks, her warnings about autocracy, and her own political home into one worldview, and that worldview keeps her work as democracy’s diagnostician sustainable.

Liberal democracy and the post-1989 transatlantic order, NATO and EU expansion, stand as a historical success and the only legitimate model, and any challenge to it slides toward totalitarianism. This casts her work, from Gulag through Iron Curtain to Twilight of Democracy and Autocracy, Inc., as prophecy rather than one reading among several.

Her training in Soviet and Eastern European totalitarianism gives her insight into today’s authoritarian networks around Vladimir Putin (b. 1952), Xi Jinping (b. 1953), and Donald Trump (b. 1946) that others lack. It raises her books and columns above partisan commentary into early warning.

Populists and illiberals who court autocrats such as Viktor Orbán (b. 1963) and Trump do not voice real grievances. They wreck institutions to take power. The move turns policy disagreement into moral clarity and frames her critique as a defense of civilization.

The threat to the West runs through a coordinated network of Russia, China, and Iran and their Western enablers, who use disinformation, migration fear, and civilizational rhetoric against liberal values. This frames her recent essays as exposure of a strategy and keeps the alarm warranted.

Elite institutions, The Atlantic, Johns Hopkins, the National Endowment for Democracy, the Council on Foreign Relations, hold the last ground of truth and expertise against populist feeling and foreign propaganda. It steadies her perch inside those institutions and recasts criticism of her as an attack on the mind.

Charges that she is a neocon, a warmonger, or an out-of-touch elite, whether from Glenn Greenwald (b. 1967) or Russian state media, amount to smear or useful idiocy, and they prove the urgency of her warnings. The attack becomes proof. The shield blocks any second look at tone or selection.

Her Polish citizenship, her restored manor house, and her marriage to a frontline Polish politician give her firsthand standing without costing her a historian’s detachment. It joins insider access to scholarly distance, so her voice on Poland, Ukraine, and Europe reads as both lived and analytic.

History will record this era as democracy’s twilight, and her early diagnosis will stand vindicated as her Gulag and Red Famine work did. Short-term political loss becomes proof of foresight.

Disinformation, media capture, and illiberal cultural shift pose existential danger and call for constant vigilance and public advocacy from figures like her. This casts her anti-disinformation work, her op-eds, and her lectures as civic duty rather than career.

To speak from elite platforms about the pull of authoritarianism is a moral and historical duty, and the awards and influence that follow count as earned service to freedom. It turns the Pulitzer, the fellowships, and the bestseller lists, the perks of the establishment she sometimes scolds, into virtuous necessities.

The beliefs lock together. They coordinate her output, her alliances, and her persona. They warrant steady opposition to particular leaders and movements. They hold the pro-democracy set together. They convert dissonance, the charge of alarmism, of selective outrage, of insider bias, into a sense of duty. Turner might say their goodness lies in how well they let her and her coalition keep going, not in how closely they track the record of post-1989 policy, the cost of her alliances, or the real content of populist grievance. The emphasis shifts between the books and the columns. The cluster holds.

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Ten Convenient Beliefs For Religion Scholar Aaron W. Hughes

Stephen P. Turner (b. 1951) describes beliefs that work as coordination devices. They need not map reality. They hold a group together, lower friction inside it, license continued action, and spare the man who holds them costly self-examination or outside checking. I call these convenient beliefs. Their goodness lies in what they do for the believer and his coalition, not in how well they track the evidence.

Aaron W. Hughes (b. 1968) works the edge of religious studies as critic and reformer. He trained in Jewish philosophy and comparative religion, holds the chair in Judaic studies at Rochester, co-edits the field’s main method journal, and has spent two decades charging that the academic study of Islam went soft. He writes from outside the Islam guild and treats that distance as his credential. Here are ten beliefs that align his methods, his public quarrels, his output, and his standing into one workable self.

The academic study of Islam runs on apologetics, crypto-theology, and ecumenical caretaking that exists to make Islam look palatable to Western readers rather than to analyze it. This frames his own books, Situating Islam, Theorizing Islam, and Islam and the Tyranny of Authenticity, as repair work rather than one view among many.

Real scholarship demands deconstruction and reconstruction through critical theory in the line of Russell McCutcheon (b. 1961), Bruce Lincoln (b. 1948), and Jonathan Z. Smith (1938-2017). Anything softer is quasi-theology wearing the mask of objectivity. This raises his method manifestos to the standard and lowers his rivals to the naive.

John Esposito (b. 1940), Carl Ernst (b. 1950), and Omid Safi stand for the field’s liberal Protestant style of apology, which bends sources and skips the inconvenient evidence. Named targets turn a broad complaint into a clear line of battle that organizes his interventions and his public replies.

When critics call his tone polemical or his arguments simple, that reaction shows the field defending its self-deceptions, not a flaw in his work. The belief reads pushback as a sign of his effect rather than a reason to doubt.

His training in Jewish studies and comparative religion gives him the distance to read Islam without the insider loyalty, the tyranny of authenticity, that traps Muslim scholars and their friends. This seats the outsider as the field’s best diagnostician.

The gatekeepers, the AAR Study of Islam section and the large university presses, run a closed shop that rewards ecumenism and punishes hard criticism. This explains his place at the edge and why his books often land with smaller, specialized houses.

Bad scholarship stays bad whatever the author’s identity, and naming errors is honesty, not Islamophobia. This stance, raised in his reply to Safi, turns a charge of bias into a mark of courage.

The field’s future lies in new methods, fresh critical vocabularies like Religion in 50 Words, and de-apologetic primers like Muslim Identities, so his output sits on the right side of the coming consensus. This keeps the editorial projects moving even when a given book meets mixed reviews.

Controversy reads as yield. Each fight shows the field forced at last to face its own assumptions. The belief turns journal exchanges and Reddit threads into evidence that the field now answers him.

The academy will look on his approach with favor in the end because he kept the study of religion from collapsing into interfaith dialogue or political advocacy. This insulates him against isolation and recasts any career friction as the price of necessary work.

These beliefs lock together. They coordinate his scholarship, his persona, and his alliances with fellow critical theorists. They license the sustained fire at high-profile colleagues. They hold the method-reform camp together. They turn the sting of being called a tone-policer or a one-note critic into a sense of duty. Turner’s point holds. The strength of such beliefs lies in how well they let a man and his camp keep going, not in how closely they match a poll of the field or the full range of Islamic-studies work. The emphasis shifts across his books, method purity in one, a named takedown in the next, but the cluster does its job.

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Ten Convenient Beliefs For Leaders In America’s Deep State

Stephen P. Turner (b. 1951) writes about good bad theories. A theory can be false and still serve a group, so long as it helps the members act together. The belief lowers friction inside the coalition, holds the ranks against outsiders, and lets the work go on without costly self-examination. I call these convenient beliefs. A group selects them for their social payoff, not for their truth, and a man can hold one for years without testing it.

Here is a set that serves leaders inside what people call the Deep State: career intelligence officers, senior bureaucrats, parts of the military and its contractors, and the technocrats who move among them. The cluster aligns secrecy, institutional independence, policy continuity, and elite self-regard into one worldview, and that worldview makes permanent unelected influence feel like duty.

The American public is too fragmented and too poorly informed to handle the raw facts of national security, so experts must steer outcomes out of public view. Opacity becomes a public service instead of a grab for power.

Elected officials are amateurs who pass through every few years. Only the permanent bureaucracy and the intelligence community carry the continuity the country needs. This licenses the slow-walking of any presidential order that threatens the standing arrangement.

Surveillance, information shaping, and the timed leak protect democracy from its own worst impulses. Guardianship turns a gray act into a moral one.

The real threats, foreign rivals and domestic extremists and disruptive outsiders, dwarf any harm the institutions might do on their own. Scrutiny turns outward, toward the threats and away from the institutions that name them.

Oversight, FOIA requests, and whistleblowers serve partisan witch hunts that put the country at risk. Accountability becomes politics, and resistance to it becomes patriotism.

We hold the full classified picture. Journalists, voters, and most elected officials lack the context to judge us. Compartmentation becomes a shield against criticism.

Alliances, NGOs, international law, and the rules-based order extend American power under the respectable cover of multilateralism. Empire proceeds by a gentler name.

The policies we shape, Fed moves and sanctions and oversight of the tech sector, serve a long-run stability that politicians and markets would otherwise wreck. Institutional self-interest dresses up as stewardship.

The conspiracy-theorist label discredits anyone who notices the coordination among elites. The taboo holds without any need for factual rebuttal.

History will judge us kindly because we stopped catastrophes the public never saw and never had to survive. Failures stay invisible, and moral compromise turns heroic.

These beliefs hold each other up. They coordinate agencies that otherwise compete, they justify the budgets, they keep solidarity against outsiders, and they turn legal and moral discomfort into a sense of enlightened service. Their value, as Turner might put it, lies in how well they let the group persist, not in how well they track the law, democratic theory, or the record. The CIA, the FBI, and the career diplomats each lean on different items. The cluster holds the coalition together.

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Ten Convenient Beliefs For West Bank Settlers

Stephen Turner (b. 1951) studies the beliefs groups hold not because they map the world but because they let the group function. I call these convenient beliefs. A convenient belief lowers internal friction, holds a coalition together, and justifies action without forcing costly self-examination. Its worth to the group lies in what it does, not in whether it checks out against history, law, or demography. The belief might be true. Turner’s point is that truth is not what selects it.

Religious Zionist communities in Judea and Samaria run on a cluster of such beliefs. Each one folds theology, security, history, and daily life into a single coherent picture that makes settlement sustainable. Here are ten.

God gave the whole Land of Israel to the Jewish people in an eternal covenant. This turns settlement from a policy into obedience. A man does not negotiate over a divine grant. Residence becomes duty.

Settling the land fulfills a commandment and hastens redemption. In the teaching of Abraham Isaac Kook (1865-1935) and his son Zvi Yehuda Kook (1891-1982), every new home and yeshiva draws the world closer to its end. Hardship and risk gain cosmic weight.

Jews are the indigenous people returning after two thousand years of exile, and Palestinian national identity is a recent construction without deep roots. This reverses the colonial story. The settler restores. He does not displace.

Settlements give Israel strategic depth and a buffer against attack. Building on the hilltops becomes self defense rather than expansion. Withdrawal invites rockets, so staying is prudence.

There is no peace partner. Every Israeli concession meets rejection and more violence. Failed talks reflect the other side’s bad faith, not any settler obligation to compromise.

International law, UN resolutions, and foreign criticism apply a double standard and often rest on antisemitism. This lets the settler set outside pressure aside as bias rather than law.

The community, the subsidies, the open space, and the traditional home make the West Bank a sound place to raise Jewish children. Quality of life keeps pragmatic settlers alongside the ideological ones.

The land belongs to the Jewish people, and Arab residence confers no sovereign claim over it. Eternal title outranks present demography.

Living here carries on the pioneering spirit of early Zionism and blocks the permanent partition of the homeland. Withdrawal betrays the founders. Settlement becomes the only consistent Zionism.

Providence protects the settlers, and opposition from abroad or at home is a test of faith. Violence, isolation, and hardship become proof of the cause rather than reasons to rethink it.

These beliefs reinforce each other. They coordinate action, justify the flow of state resources, hold solidarity against critics, and turn moral doubt into moral clarity. A religious settler leans on the first two. A secular one leans on the fourth and the seventh. The cluster carries them both.

Turner might add a caution the critics of settlement tend to skip. Every coalition runs on convenient beliefs, and the people who oppose the settlements hold their own: that the 1967 lines are natural, that a Palestinian state brings peace, that international law speaks with one clear voice. Naming the settlers’ convenient beliefs does not refute them. It shows what the beliefs do. Whether any of them is also true is a separate question, and it stays open.

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Ten Convenient Beliefs For Seventh-day Adventist Leaders

Stephen Turner‘s convenient beliefs run at full speed inside the General Conference headquarters in Silver Spring, Maryland, the world division offices, the annual council chambers, and the late-night strategy calls with union and conference presidents. The U.S.-Israeli campaign is in its second month. Ali Khamenei (1939-2026) is dead. Iran’s nuclear sites lie in rubble. Tehran fires missiles across the region and the war does not end. These beliefs let the President, the vice presidents, the division leaders, and the senior administrators hold global unity, keep the tithe and mission-offering pipeline flowing, reassure 22 million members, and place the Adventist Church as the faithful remnant preparing for the final crisis. They do this without conceding that the war has tested member loyalty, strained finances in some regions, or raised hard questions about why the time of trouble feels so long.

Here are the ten most useful ones moving through General Conference leadership today.

The war and the global upheaval fulfill prophecy, the time of trouble and the nations in distress foretold in Daniel and Revelation. Every missile launch and oil-price spike becomes another validation of the church’s historicist reading.

This crisis is the greatest evangelistic opening in a generation, and frightened people turn to the three angels’ messages and the Sabbath truth as never before. Every worried inquiry and every spike in Bible-study requests becomes fresh soul-winning material.

Our hold on the distinctive doctrines, the Sabbath, the health message, the state of the dead, makes the remnant the only safe harbor in the storm. Leaders wave off any call for relevance or softening as compromise with Babylon.

The weakening of Iran and the wider Middle East chaos shows the papacy and its allies losing control, with the final events unfolding as predicted. Iranian setbacks confirm that the king of the north scenario runs on schedule.

Global membership and tithe faithfulness hold, and the external crisis has unified the world church and reminded every Adventist that we are one family under the three angels. Quiet grumbling about finances, lockdowns, or delayed mission trips counts as marginal noise.

Western governments depend on Adventist hospitals, disaster relief, and community services, which guarantees they never push too hard on Sabbath accommodations or religious liberty. The belief explains why quiet coordination with authorities continues through the occasional public friction.

The humanitarian catastrophe in Iran and the refugee waves underscore why the Adventist Development and Relief Agency and the health ministry stand as indispensable witnesses in the last days. Each new crisis becomes one more case for mission funding and medical-missionary emphasis.

Our model of centralized prophetic guidance and worldwide unity has outlasted the fragmented post-modern churches now collapsing. Every battlefield headline and every social breakdown becomes proof of the church’s divine foresight.

Strategic patience joined to unrelenting proclamation of present truth will carry the day again, because the remnant always survives and triumphs when the nations rage. The belief guards the long eschatological vision against any internal voice that wants a softer, more mainstream approach.

The Seventh-day Adventist Church, under the General Conference, remains the indispensable remnant called by God for this hour, and history will record that we stood firm, proclaimed the truth, and prepared a people while the world spiraled into chaos. This is the meta-belief. It lets the leadership sleep, in Silver Spring or on a red-eye to a world division, knowing that every emergency video appeal, every new baptism, and every tithe report counts as responsible stewardship in the final hours of earth’s history.

These are not conspiracy theories. They are survival tools for a global church whose authority, money, and self-image depend on never conceding that the war has complicated mission work, that some members drift, or that the old soon-coming timeline might need careful re-framing. The missiles keep the world on edge and the war refuses to end on schedule, and still these beliefs keep the divisions loyal, the Sabbath-school lessons prophetic, and the brand safe from the too-rigid charge on the progressive side and the not-urgent-enough complaint from the harder apocalyptic wing. Question too many of them out loud and you risk the label, the administrator or pastor who has fallen out of step with the remnant message.

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Ten Convenient Beliefs For Iran’s Next Supreme Leader

Stephen Turner describes the convenient belief, a claim a man holds for what it does for him rather than for its truth. Convenient beliefs run hot in Tehran right now. They circulate in the new Supreme Leader’s fortified residence, the IRGC high command, the Guardian Council chambers, and the secure calls with surviving hardliners. Ali Khamenei (1939-2026) died in the joint U.S.-Israeli strikes that opened the war on February 28. The Assembly of Experts named his son Mojtaba Khamenei (b. 1969) Supreme Leader on March 8. A month into the war, with nuclear sites cratered and oil terminals smoking, these beliefs let Mojtaba, the clerical establishment, and the IRGC hold discipline, keep the rank and file moving, justify more resistance, and present the son as the divinely guided heir who will carry the Islamic Republic to victory. They do this without anyone conceding that the regime has lost its head, that the economy is gutted, or that the street is exhausted.

Here are the ten in heaviest circulation in his inner circle.

“My rise proves the divine wisdom of velayat-e faqih. My father’s martyrdom purified the system and made it stronger.” The claim turns a decapitation into a coronation. It recasts every surviving protest and every IRGC fracture as a test that confirms the mandate rather than a threat to it.

“Zionist and American aggression has sped the final victory of the revolution. Every crater proves the enemy panics while we stand firm.” Survival after the loss of the Supreme Leader reads as proof of God’s favor, so the more damage the enemy does, the stronger the claim of divine protection.

“Our asymmetric arsenal and our proxies beat their billion-dollar jets. The war shows the West has no will for a long fight.” One cheap drone counts for ten precision bombs, which holds morale up while the Air Force sits on the ground.

“The resistance economy is not collapsing. The strikes and sanctions purify it, and it comes back stronger once the West has to deal on our terms.” Black-market oil, currency controls, and IRGC business empires become self-reliance instead of desperation.

“Any protest or desertion is foreign work, CIA and Mossad and MEK, with no real support among the faithful.” The claim lets him crush dissent without conceding that the street is tired of the war.

“The Axis of Resistance lands decisive blows. Hezbollah, the Houthis, and the Iraqi militias bleed the enemy on many fronts and buy us time.” The count leaves out the losses the proxies take. Every Houthi launch becomes strategic depth.

“Nuclear breakout was never the goal. The program was always a peaceful deterrent, and the enemy has now proven we need it more than ever.” The story gives cover to restart enrichment deeper underground while the regime holds the moral high ground.

“The West and Israel lack the patience for a long war. They tire, fracture, and come begging for talks once they see our steadfastness.” A willingness to absorb casualties becomes the regime’s best weapon against short attention spans.

“Sanctions and strikes only tighten my grip on the economy, the IRGC, and society. Every new restriction routes more loyalty and money through the faithful.” The siege becomes the excuse to expand control while the old guard is removed or sidelined.

“Final victory is certain through resistance, faith, and patience. This is one more chapter in the 47-year war that ends with the Republic triumphant and the Zionist entity erased.” This is the meta-belief that sits above the others. It lets the Supreme Leader sleep in his bunker, sure that each new week of destruction is the price of destiny.

These are not conspiracy theories. They are survival tools for a man, and for the clerical and military coalition around him, whose power and safety now fuse to the regime’s survival. The Republic loses generals, infrastructure, and oil revenue, and the beliefs keep the machine loyal, the propaganda crisp, and the purges justified. Question too many of them out loud and you become the next martyr eulogized on state television.

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