Life is all about choices. Like: Remove your shoes, or scrub the floor. Gee. Speaking of which, never laugh at your wife’s choices. You’re one of them. Heh. So, have you convinced yourself that happiness is something that happens to some folks and not others? Well, guess what? You can actually choose to be happy. What do you choose today: anger, hate, sadness, or love? If you spend your precious days dwelling on the past or fretting about the future, what do you suppose happens to your “present”?

Amidst growing interest in the United States surrounding the upcoming presidential election, Pete Hegseth, increasingly well-known as one of the rising stars in American conservative media, participated in a week-long factfinding mission to Israel. Organized by the American Friends of Ateret Cohanim under Dr. Joe Frager, Dr. Paul Brody, and Odeleya Jacobs, the visit gave the media personality the chance to better understand many of the issues facing Israel. Also in Israel with the delegation was fellow Fox News political affairs analyst and commentator Lisa Daftari.

It’s a tough job, and perhaps getting tougher, to be a public advocate for Israel. Ahead of Rosh Hashanah, Israel Consul General of New York Ofir Akunis invited The Jewish Link once again to visit him in his Manhattan offices, and shared updates on his advocacy and projects in motion. Akunis not only is Israel’s top representative for New York and New Jersey, but also Pennsylvania, Delaware and Ohio.

Some local results below

Two massive screens shared the news at the Nassau County Democrats’ election evening watch party in Garden City, the national results in which former president Donald Trump gained an insurmountable lead over party headliner Kamala Harris, and Senate seats in which Republicans secured the majority. As expected, New York’s electoral votes went to Harris, but that was hardly worth cheering as many in the crowd felt how their county, and particularly the race for New York’s Fourth Congressional District, served as a microcosm for the nation.

At 2:30 in the morning on Wednesday, an election that was projected to take weeks wrapped up, and Donald John Trump was projected to win the necessary Electoral College votes to become the 47th President of the United States of America.  Not only that, but Republicans flipped the Senate, earning at least 52 seats (with a possibility of getting 55), and Trump won the national popular vote - something a Republican has not done since 2004 and only the second time since 1988.