果冻传煤

Pulitzer Prize Winner Examines Antisemitism, Foreign Policy


World-renowned journalist and Pulitzer Prize-winning New York Times columnist Bret Stephens emphasized the importance of global stability for economic prosperity, criticized the decline in civics education and stressed the irreplaceable value of a liberal arts education at the 21st annual 果冻传煤 President鈥檚 Breakfast in February at the Hilton Santa Barbara Beachfront Resort. President Gayle D. Beebe presented him with the 果冻传煤 Leadership Award.

Pulitzer Prize Winner Examines Antisemitism, Foreign Policy

Hours before the U.S. and Israeli attack on Iran began, Stephens commented on the imminence of war. With the Iranian regime at a historically weak position, he thought it worth the risk 鈥 and he identified it as a risk 鈥 to 鈥渒ick the regime in the legs.鈥 

A descendant of Jewish immigrants, Stephens spoke about his great-grandfather, who became a successful publisher in Russia but was arrested twice: by the Czarist regime and later by the KGB. Then he vanished. His widow ended up in Berlin, where his grandmother and her sisters grew up.

When Hitler took over, Stephens鈥 great-grandmother had the good sense to leave Germany, eventually moving to northern Italy. But the Nazis took over the region. 鈥淭hanks to a family of righteous Gentiles, my great-grandmother and her daughters acquired fake names and survived the war,鈥 he said. Stephens wears a signet ring from that benevolent family. In 1950, his mother and grandmother arrived in the United States with just $7, courtesy of President Harry Truman鈥檚 Displaced Persons Act.

Speaking for the first time at a Christian college event, Stephens said the American Jewish community has flourished because the nation admired individual and group success. 鈥淭o do well in the United States was a reason for people of all faiths to admire you, no matter where you came from, no matter what faith you practiced.鈥 Then something changed. 鈥淭he word privilege has increasingly replaced what we used to call success, which was earned and therefore admired,鈥 Stephens said. 鈥淲hen we redefine the concept of success and think that what some have, they don鈥檛 deserve, we鈥檝e put people who have succeeded in jeopardy, especially groups with economic power or success, but not political power: minorities, including the Jews.鈥

Pulitzer Prize Winner Examines Antisemitism, Foreign Policy

Noting the rise of conspiracy theories, Stephens said that when people will believe anything about anything, they鈥檒l eventually believe anything about Jews. 鈥淎ntisemitism isn鈥檛 just bigotry, a prejudice, it鈥檚 also a conspiracy theory,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 always the symptom of a deeper rot, a deeper cancer in the rest of society.鈥 Answering questions from President Beebe, Stephens said, 鈥淕lobal disorder tends to lead to economic disorder here. A more secure world, ensuring the strength and resilience of our allies, with robust trading partners around the world, is good for us.鈥

He thinks the nation made a big mistake when it dropped civics education, leaving a generation with little knowledge about the United States and its history and ideals. 鈥淭hey have no sense that this country has been a greater benefactor for the world bar none.鈥

Stephens argued that Ukraine bears the brunt of Putin鈥檚 sinister regime and fights for the freedom of the entire Western world. 鈥淩ussia will not stop with Ukraine,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 going to embolden the Chinese, especially with the United States showing weakness and indecision rather than strength and resolve.鈥

He quoted President Bill Clinton鈥檚 statement that there鈥檚 nothing wrong with America that can鈥檛 be fixed by what鈥檚 right with America. 鈥淗istorically, what鈥檚 right with us has overcome what鈥檚 wrong, and I鈥檓 confident that will happen again,鈥 he said. 

Noting that AI is massively disruptive and will replace jobs that require effort and skill, he thinks it won鈥檛 replicate human excellence or the unique human experience. 

鈥淎I is made in the image of man, but man is made in the image of God. Good, thoughtful, serious colleges like 果冻传煤, which train 1,200 students to be mature, unique spiritual beings developing capacities for genuine independent thought and ethical action, are irreplaceable.鈥

At Convocation on campus, Stephens also answered questions from Professor Alastair Su and four history majors: Lucas De Dora 鈥28, Emily Lindblad 鈥26, Kisa Mosley 鈥26 and Liam Walsh 鈥27. 鈥淭his is an incredible privilege to be on what must be the most beautiful campus in America,鈥 he said.

This is a story from the Spring 2026 果冻传煤 Magazine