March 26, 2012

When Jews for Jesus Paid Santorum Six Grand

Kenneth Vogel, Politico

In 2010, Rick Santorum was paid to speak to a controversial religious group unpopular with some Jewish leaders because it seeks to convince Jews to accept Jesus.

The Messianic Jewish Alliance of America paid Santorum $6,000 to speak at its 2010 annual conference, according to a filing released Wednesday showing a total of nearly $95,000 in speaking fees that Santorum previously failed to disclose.

Read Full Article ››

TAGGED: Jews, Rick Santorum

RECOMMENDED ARTICLES

May 11, 2012
Let's Not Throw Up on JFK
David Neff, Christianity Today
Christianity Today was founded in 1956 to offset the influence of The Christian Century. In those days, we rarely agreed on anything. But in the run-up to the 1960 election, the two magazines warned Americans against electing a... more ››
May 14, 2012
The Moral Costs of Jewish Day School
Rabbi Aryeh Klapper, JID
There is a lot of hand-wringing these days about whether the rising costs of Jewish day schools are sustainable.  The discussion has been about money: How can we get more?  How can we spend less?  These questions miss the... more ››
May 16, 2012
Is Facebook Good for the Jews?
Uriel Heilman, Jewish Journal
If the Talmud were written today, would it look like Facebook?First, the rabbis of the Mishnaic period post a Jewish legal rule. Then, Talmudic sages weigh in with their comments, all pithy and lacking punctuation. Almost... more ››
May 17, 2012
The End of the Jewish Left
Adam Kirsch, Tablet Magazine
“Why so many alte kockers? Where is the rising generation?” The grumbler sitting behind me at the conference on “Jews and the Left,” sponsored by YIVO last week at the Center for Jewish History in New... more ››
May 11, 2012
Jews Tweeting on the Sabbath! Shame!
Daniel Vahab, Huffington Post
On a Friday evening, I tweeted three times and posted three Facebook updates at three separate times -- and I wasn't even online.Tools like Hoot Suite and Tweet Deck allow social media users to schedule posts in the future for... more ››