On March 31, 2021, New York State passed a law legalizing recreational use of cannabis for adults. Three-and-a-half years have since passed, so perhaps we should look at the effects of legalization on New Yorkers.

Sometimes, when I find myself doomscrolling through clips online, I come across a video of comedian and renowned atheist Ricky Gervais making his argument for science and against religion. He states, “If we take something like any fiction, any holy book, and any other fiction and destroyed it, in a thousand years’ time, that wouldn’t come back just as it was. Whereas if we took every science book and every fact and destroyed them all, in a thousand years they’d all be back, because all the same tests would be the same result.”

We are now finally past the election, so...hurray! or boo! depending on who won and whom you wanted to win. It’s time now to go back to our regularly scheduled lives. Today, I have the unfortunate duty to inform you of the death of one of New York’s most beloved fixtures: Vision Zero. Let me clarify that. Vision Zero, the program, is not dead. However, the façade that New York City is interested in reducing preventable fatal car crashes in the guise of Vision Zero is dead.

If I had to pinpoint the moment in my life that set me on the political path that I am on now, it was the day I was looking for something to read when I was in 11th grade and found my mother’s copy of Bernard Goldberg’s Bias. For those who have not read it, Goldberg was a reporter at CBS News, and this was his whistleblower memoir telling the world how news agencies, specifically CBS News, would curate what they put on the air to fit a particular political narrative, and if the story did not fit the narrative, it did not make it to air.

In a normal year, the Nine Days period is filled with reflection over the current state of interpersonal relationships. The primary reason for the destruction of the Beis HaMikdash was sin’as chinam, or baseless hatred. This year, however, global Jewish population is more united than I’ve seen in my lifetime. Obviously, this has everything to do with the events of October 7 and the subsequent wars Israel is fighting, and the increase in anti-Semitic rhetoric on college campuses and on streets all around the world. While we may be worried about what is to come, our unity as a nation is strong.