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June 4, 2010

Dems target Malek’s fundraising role

Democrats pressed Republicans to distance themselves from a major donor involved in Richard Nixon’s campaign against Jewish government employees.

Fred Malek’s role in demoting Jews in the Bureau of Labor Statistics while working as personnel director in the Nixon administration was first revealed in 1988, when it led to his resignation as deputy chairman of the Republican National Committee. He subsequently reached out to Jewish groups to make amends.

Additional memos recently released by the Nixon Library and published by the National Archives reveal additional information about Nixon’s mission to demote 13 Jewish staffers, whom he was convinced were tweaking employment statistics to make him look bad.

The newly released memos show that the campaign lasted from February to December 1971—with Malek’s involvement spanning the period—and clearly targeted Jews, euphemistically called “ethnics.”

Malek has remained involved in Republican politics, and chairs the “American Action Network,” a group that Democrats says is aimed at targeting Democrats in this November’s midterm elections.

Malek’s spokesman, Mark Corallo, told the Washington Post that Malek “has made mistakes in his life for which he has apologized, atoned and learned from.”

Democrats seemed determined not to let the matter go.

“With Malek leading an effort this year to target House Democrats, Republican Leaders must quickly decide whether to distance themselves from Malek and his troubling past or sit by and stay silent,” said a statement Thursday from the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee.

Rep. Steve Israel (D-N.Y.) chided Republicans who said staked their claim to the Jewish vote because of the party’s support for Israel.

“How can you accept money from someone who put Jews on Nixon’s enemy list?” he told JTA.

Malek, in the course of making amends, has befriended Abraham Foxman, the national director of the Anti-Defamation League, and Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), who continue to defend him as having paid for his role in the Nixon purge.

Matthew Brooks, the director of the Republican Jewish Coalition, said Democrats were rehashing old news.

“The incident that everybody is upset about—and rightly—is a mistake he admits, and he has apologized,” Brooks told JTA. “The guy’s paid an unbelievable personal price for it. This is a sad character assassination.”

Dems target Malek’s fundraising role Read More »

The Name’s Ava. Ava Teeyach.

Shalom friends~

One week in Jerusalem!

My stay thus far has been characterized by one very important question: If eating too many carrots will turn a person orange, will eating too much watermelon (avateeyach) turn me pink and green? Discuss.

Beseder, my first week was maleh meod (very full!) to say the least. I started out living in Rechavia, a very lovely, Anglo area that’s only a 10 minute walk from everything in Jlem-the shuk, the old city, Ben Yehuda, Nachlaot (the artists area), hakol. I loved it and it was a great way to wrap my mind around the layout of the city.

Just two days ago, I moved into my apartment for the month which is in Emek Refaim/Katemon – also very Anglo, beautiful, a tad chi-chi and right in the German Colony. Of course, I get lost a lot more often living here. My street is tucked away down a windy road in a residential neighborhood next to a school and tennis courts (!) which means I have a sound track of little, Israeli kids laughing forever playing in my ears. Ayze mazal! Ha lev sheli sharah! (What luck? My heart sings.) The streets are so beautiful – they curve around, made of well-worn Jerusalem stone, full of brightly, blooming bouganvillas climbing over every wall, blue doors and windows – gorgeous. Thank goodness for all of the mindfulness work I’d taken up before I left LA; it’s allowed me truly be HERE enJOY this beauty!

Now to business – the Ulpan. I lucked into THE best one in the country. True. My ivrit has improved exponentially in just one week! I’m in class Sunday thru Thursday (yeah, I started class just 2 days after arriving!) from 8:00am-1pm. The teachers essentially drill all day long so that your speaking becomes automatic; they don’t want you thinking, translating or conjugating, they want you to respond. And quick. Quicker. Quicker! It’s super intense! Furthermore, I got put into the smart-kids class, and they started a month ago. We move fst…I mean, fast. So, I’ve been playing catch up. But guess what? Now I’m caught up! I studied a lot this week after class and simply refuse to speak English on the streets. Of course everyone here speaks English, but I don’t care. I just tell them, “Lama atem choshvim sh’ani mehArzot HaBrit? Ani lo mevinah anglit.” (Why do you all think I’m from the States? I don’t understand English.) It works a lot of the time and other times it doesn’t, but I do my best. I’ve just resigned myself to knowing that I’m not going to sound like the smartest person or be perfect for a while, but you know what? At the end of every conversation, without exception, the Israelis say, “kol haKavod” (all the respect) and that they’re impressed by the effort.

I find myself attempting to translate whatever I’m thinking into Hebrew all day long. And I love it. It’s so irrational this need to speak Hebrew, but what can I do? I don’t get tired of studying or practicing and it’s SUCH a high when I get it right and they understand, or I get thru an entire conversation, or they don’t ask to speak English, or something I just learned works, or I suddenly understand something that was previously gibberish. So cool.

Now to socializing. I’m living with Rina, a real bestie who has been taking amazing care of me. She’s introduced me to lots of people and we’re living together which means I get to enjoy her amazing Moroccan cooking and yummy salads! I reconnected with Joel from LA and now that I’m getting more settled, I plan to reach out to all the folks referred to me by my LA friends.

I met up with Odelia Shabi, aka: Madame Pompidoo, in Tel Aviv on Wednesday after class. Odi and I met two years ago when I was a madricha (counselor) on a Birthright trip and she was our Israeli tour guide. We became fast friends and have kept in touch since. Together, we hit Shenkin street for sunglasses and shoe shopping. This girl cracks me up! She’s a party and we were a walking giggle factory.  I got to drink one of the amazing, fresh fruit juices that I dream about in the States while I was there. That day it was banana and (of course) watermelon juice at Yotvata on the beach. Mechia! Of course, Odi told me, “Your food in the States is plastic. Your fruit is big and beautiful, but it is all wax. Now you are tasting real vegetables.” And she’s so right. If veggies in the US tasted the way they do here, we’d eat them for breakfast too! A croissant or muffin has NOTHING on the oranges and cucumbers here!

Now, Tel Aviv vs. Jlem: When I first got to Tel Aviv, I thought, “I’m an idiot. I should SO be here.” It’s so NYC-ish and alive and bustling. Plus, the ocean does something to me that’s magical, but when I returned, I actually really appreciated Jlem. I love how clean Jerusalem is, and I can’t understate how amazing my ulpan is – to feel growth each and every day is something else. And fortunately for me, Odi and I have an agreement where I can bother her as much I like over the summer and stay with her in her silly, beachy apartment with the dramatic neighbors.

Other than that, the Flotilla mess has been interesting – you know the world is upside down when the global consensus is, “Hey Israel, why don’t you just lie down and let the world terrorize you?” Because any other country would allow terrorists to smuggle weapons onto their border? Of course, both sides of the argument are represented here. But the support has been beautiful to see-people are sailing simply to fly the flag.

Overall, it feels extremely natural and easy to be here. There are adjustments, as to be expected, but I love the kippot everywhere, I love the Hebrew everywhere, I love the shuk and the falafel and the Judaica everywhere, the soldiers everywhere (so handsome) and the best – catching a glimpse of the religious Zionist – the soldier who wraps tefillin at the back of a bookstore, or the dude who sells you your phone card, chilling by a fan with the TV on, browsing the pages of the Tanach.

Shabbat Shalom from Yerushalayim Shel Zahav (Jerusalem of gold), l’koolam (to everyone)!

The Name’s Ava. Ava Teeyach. Read More »

A L.A. demonstration in support of the Gaza-bound flotilla set to occur today from 4-7 p.m. outside

An email just sent to the Jewish Journal office announces a demonstration set to occur outside the Israeli consulate on Friday, June 4 from 4-7 p.m. in support of the Free Gaza Movement. The email also says that the founders of the movement, Greta Berlin and Mary Thompson Hughes, are originally from Los Angeles and though they weren’t on the flotilla boats, they monitored the progress of the flotilla as it set sail for Gaza up until its confrontation with Israeli forces.

From the email:

“As Israeli warships approached the Gaza Freedom Flotilla 70 miles off Gaza in international waters, two Los Angeles women who had helped organize the mission worked through the night with a flotilla support team in Cyprus.

           

“Greta Berlin, 69 and Mary Thompson Hughes, 76, two of the five co-founders of the Free Gaza Movement, remained glued to their chairs monitoring the Israeli assault and fielding calls from international media.”

According to this New York Times article (http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/02/world/middleeast/02activists.html?emc=eta1), the Free Gaza Movement contributed funds to the Gaza-bound flotilla and partnered with IHH, the organization whose name keeps coming up in every article about who was on the boats setting sail for Gaza.

The New York Times also article said that IHH is a charity organization that helped out with relief efforts in Haiti. If you google “İnsani Yardım Vakfı,” the Turkish name of IHH, the official website for the organization comes up and after applying the google translating mechanism, you can easily navigate around the site. Type in “haiti” into the search field and articles come up about IHH surgeons being dispatched to Haiti and treating 150 Haitian earthquake victims each day. Or, if you don’t feel like doing that, you can read this text copied and pasted from the site:

“The IHH Humanitarian Relief Foundation has sent a second group of aid workers to Haiti… The physicians are treating 150 people daily… Mehmet Rıdvan Üstünel, a physician in the IHH group… said he was treating 100 patients on average in a day and the number was rising every day.”

Another website, http://axisoflogic.com/artman/publish/Article_60176.shtml—one that appears to have no affiliation with IHH – confirms IHH’s humanitarian aid in Haiti. According to the site:

“An Islamic organization, IHH was formed in 1994 in response to the war in Bosnia. It provides shelter, clothing, food and various other necessities to individuals in conflict or natural disaster zones. IHH is presently involved in humanitarian aid projects in over 120 countries, including Ethiopia, Haiti, Bosnia-Herzegovina and Palestine.”

The same site also says that in 2008, Ehud Barak “outlawed IHH…for allegedly supporting Union of the Good, an umbrella organization which provides money and other aid to groups purportedly affiliated to Hamas.”

What does it mean that Barak outlawed IHH? And for that matter, what is Union of the Good?

This website, http://www.terrorism-info.org.il/malam_multimedia/html/final/eng/sib/2_05/funds.htm, though slightly hard to follow and listing an old February 2005 date on the top of the page, has some info on Union of the Good. More to come in future posts.

A L.A. demonstration in support of the Gaza-bound flotilla set to occur today from 4-7 p.m. outside Read More »

A response to Dennis Prager

Thanks to Dennis Prager for selecting my recent article to illustrate what’s wrong with the Left. It’s great being used as a straw Jew, so Mr. Prager can knock me down.

I was asked by the editor of the Jewish Telegraphic Agency to write a short rebuttal to a column by Binyamin Korn, a leader of a new (and tiny) group called “Jews for Palin.”  Mine was a concise 600-word opinion piece, much shorter than a policy memo or even a sermon. Despite this, Mr. Prager was quick to use my piece to stereotype progressives and paint them all with the same brush, hardly the reflection of an open or nuanced mind.

Mr. Prager claims, for example, that leftists make statements “ “that only fellow leftists believe, and they believe these assertions largely because of antipathy to conservatives, not because there is validating evidence.”  To illustrate his point, he says that I provide “no validating evidence” for my criticisms of the Bush Administration about what I called its “monstrous deficit spending,” “breakdown of diplomacy,” and “disdain for science and civil liberties.”  This was a short essay in response to an attack on President Obama, not an article in an academic journal about President Bush, but if Mr. Prager would like me to supply him with documentation for my statements, I’d be happy to oblige. 

But there are some things – like the fact that the sun sets in the west – that shouldn’t require footnotes because they are so well known. 

Fact:  President Bush inherited a surplus budget from President Clinton and proceeded to wreck it with two unfunded wars and massive tax cuts for the super wealthy.  President Obama has had to spend so much in order to try and fix this mess, an economic disaster of epic proportions. 

Fact:  The Bush Doctrine alienated most of the world, save for a few European countries who joined in the terrible decision to invade Iraq, and even they mostly gave up in the end.  Withdrawing from major international treaties, ignoring global climate change at a time when the whole world was prepared to work together to save our planet, and most painfully, wasting the good will the world had for us after 9/11 to work together to combat the true sources of terrorism, namely Osama Bin Laden – these are clear evidence of Bush’s failure as a diplomat. 

President Obama cannot correct the entire mess he inherited after Bush’s eight years of serious disdain for international law and American civil liberties.  Did Mr. Prager agree with sanctioning torture, warrantless wiretapping, rolling back environmental regulations, bringing Wall Street and the world economy to the brink of collapse and other highlights of the eight years of “rightist” thinking and policy? 

Prager assumes that progressives only talk to and listen to each other, filtering out ideas they don’t agree with.  He asserts, for example, that because I’m on the left, I don’t listen to his show.  In fact, I do listen to his show and other right-wing talk shows, but, more importantly, I read lots of conservative and middle-of-the-road publications so I can be fully aware of the public debate on important issues. Ironically, Mr. Prager’s show, like his writings, is hardly fair and balanced. He is part of the conservative echo chamber that dismisses ideas that don’t conform to the Right’s views.  Just because Prager isn’t a shouter like Rush Limbaugh and Glenn Beck doesn’t mean that his show is any more ecumenical.  The great rabbis like Hillel and Shammai often disagreed, but were still able to eat together and find joy when their children married each other.  I find little of this mutual respect and tolerance for opposing views on Mr. Prager’s show or those of other right-wing broadcasters.

Instead, Mr. Prager tends to see the world in very black and white terms, a common myopia of the far right.  I recognize that the world of politics and culture is diverse and that nobody has a monopoly on the truth. When it comes to world affairs,  there is more than one narrative, not just that of the Republican Party or even of the United States in general. Others have good ideas and legitimate grievances. 

I consider myself a disciple of Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel and Dr. Martin Luther King, two men who called us to live lives of love, compassion, grace and peace, but who also engaged in the real world of politics and policy, emulating the prophets who spoke truth to power.  Like these two great thinkers and men of action, I believe in diplomacy over warfare.  Does Prager think that Dr. King and Rabbi Heschel’s views were “make believe,” a phrase he applies to the entire progressive worldview? 

War should always be a last resort, and I admit that I am somewhat ambivalent about even that choice.  Addressing the root causes of social injustice such as poverty, hunger, and fear, is usually a more effective weapon for combating evil than a gun or a missile. 

The Torah calls on us to challenge greed, bigotry, oppression, and the abuse of power.  More times than any other command in the Torah, we are told to care for the stranger and orphan, the widow and the downtrodden. That is the philosophy I try to live by. It isn’t left or right. It is just the right thing to do. Mr. Prager and I apparently read the same Torah, but we understand its teachings differently.

Finally, let me correct one of Mr. Prager’s factual errors that reflecthis sloppy thinking. Referring to me, Prager wrote that,  “for the rabbi of almost any Reform temple to write a leftist column or to give a leftist sermon is as courageous as an Orthodox rabbi sermonizing on keeping kosher.  But in the make-believe world of the left, giving a leftist sermon to a largely left-wing congregation is courageous.” 

It would have been easy for Mr. Prager to find out – simply by Googling my name or that of my synagogue – that the Pasadena Jewish Temple and Center ( www.pjtc.net) is affiliated with the Conservative movement and that I was ordained at the Conservative movement’s Jewish Theological Seminary.  I serve a very diverse and mixed congregation of almost 500 families, where there is much debate and discussion about all kinds of issues, religious and secular.  I’d even welcome Mr. Prager to visit our synagogue, as he lives in the neighboring town, and see for himself – a bit of empirical research that he didn’t bother to do when attacking me and my congregation.


Dennis Prager Responds:

As Rabbi Grater did not actually respond to my column, I can only request that readers read or reread what I wrote.

I will simply add a few points.

In my column I noted that Rabbi Grater makes assertions without providing evidence. In his response to my piece, he did this again. For example, he writes: “I believe in diplomacy over warfare.” Without examples, the statement is meaningless. When? Where? Not a word. With Hitler in 1939? With Iran today? With Islamic terrorism? (Or does the rabbi not use that term just as the Obama administration no longer uses it?)

Rabbi Grater writes, “Mr. Prager was quick to use my piece to stereotype progressives and paint them all with the same brush.” I think we have a case of projection here. Rabbi Grater writes that seeing “the world in very black-and-white terms [is] a common myopia of the far right.” Isn’t that a stereotype (for which, again, no example is offered)?

I will end this brief response by noting what I consider the saddest and most objectionable thing Rabbi Grater wrote: “War should always be a last resort, and I admit that I am somewhat ambivalent about even that choice.”

Every moral person believes war should be a last resort and longs for a world in which “nations shall not learn war anymore.” But for a rabbi to write that he is ambivalent about war even as a last resort is a bad sign for Judaism. Judaism has never countenanced pacifism. As every yeshiva student learns, “Whoever comes to kill you, arise earlier and kill him” (Talmud). Judaism hates evil — “Those who love God must hate evil” (Psalms), and the greatest evils are usually ended by war, almost never by diplomacy. The Nazi death camps were liberated by soldiers who kill, not by peace activists, let alone pacifists.

Diplomacy to stop evil? Please. This is another example of the make-believe world of the left I described. Diplomacy did nothing for 2 million Cambodians, the Congolese (6 million killed in the last 10 years while the world’s diplomats were busy condemning Israel), the Tutsis in Rwanda, the North Koreans, the 75 million Chinese under Mao, the 30 to 40 million under Stalin, or the tens of millions slaughtered by the Nazis (in large measure because of European “ambivalence” about war).

Finally, identifying a Conservative synagogue as Reform is not “sloppy thinking,” it is mistake. It is sloppy thinking to call a factual mistake “sloppy thinking.” I regret the error. For the record, I have been an active member of a Reform synagogue for 20 years. And I am happy to accept Rabbi Grater’s invitation to visit his Conservative synagogue. I promise to sit quietly in the back.

Read Dennis Prager’s column on A response to Dennis Prager Read More »

Why Glenn Beck Hurts Israel

On Thursday, Fox News’ Glenn Beck devoted a segment of his television program to attacking me for condemning the Israeli raid on the Gaza-bound relief flotilla.

I have no problem with that. But I can’t help but feel a little sad that the Israeli government’s most vocal supporters are now on the extreme right. (My discomfort on that score was only heightened today when Beck endorsed a book by a notoriously anti-Semitic author.)

It’s no surprise that liberals are not too enamored with Israel these days—not with the Netanyahu government firmly choosing occupation and blockade over negotiations with the Palestinians.

Does that mean that the extreme right is more pro-Israel than progressives?

Actually, it means the opposite.

Progressives oppose Israeli policies that would almost inevitably lead to Israel’s dissolution. There is hardly a mainstream political figure in Israel, dead or living, (including current Defense Minister Ehud Barak and former Prime Ministers Yitzhak Rabin, Shimon Peres, Ariel Sharon and Ehud Olmert) who hasn’t evinced the belief that Israel cannot survive if it maintains the occupation of the lands taken in 1967. Netanyahu’s choice of confrontation over negotiating the end of the occupation appears suicidal.

But that is the policy supported by right-wingers like Beck. They don’t admire Israel because of its intrinsic qualities but because they view it as fighting the good fight against the people they most despise: Arabs and Muslims. They will happily fight to the last Israeli in a struggle they view as part of the “War on Terror.”  If Israel is sacrificed in the name of that goal, so what? There are more important things to the right than the survival of one little Jewish country—like fighting Islam.

No doubt, the Israeli right welcomes this kind of support because beggars can’t be choosers. Nor do they much care that, when Israel finally chooses the path of peace with the Palestinians, which it will, these rightwing “supporters” will disappear.

Israel is their proxy in the war against Islam. Once Israel stops fighting, you can count on Beck to denounce it for selling out to the socialists. (And that is appropriate.  Pretty much every major institution in Israel—including the state itself, the agricultural and industrial sectors, and the military—was built by socialists.)

There is so much wrong with Beck’s response to me that I can’t respond to them all here although PoliticalCorrection.org (a project of Media Matters Action Network) does.

But there are a few points I do want to make.

The first is that Beck insists that the Israeli blockade of Gaza is legal under international law. It isn’t (see Political Correction).

But the larger point is that it doesn’t matter whether the collective punishment of civilians is legal. Slavery was legal. So was segregation. In fact, the entire civil rights struggle was about overturning Jim Crow laws, which were passed between 1865 and 1965 to keep African-Americans subjugated.

I am not surprised that the right does not know this because it was, at best, notoriously indifferent to the civil rights struggle. Democrats, liberals and “so-called” Rockefeller Republicans (the kind of Republicans who no longer exist) are responsible for every civil rights law that has been enacted since the 1960’s.

In fact, as most people know, the solid Democratic south became the solid Republican south in response to the Civil Rights Act of 1964.  Even today, Republicans in places like Kentucky and Nevada have a hard time saying that they would support the Civil Rights Act of 1964 in its entirety. (Why would they? The founder of the modern conservative movement, Barry Goldwater, proudly voted against the law and that enabled him, as the 1964 GOP nominee for President, to switch the south to Republican for going on 50 years.)

But the Middle East conflict is bigger than politics and certainly a patriot like Glenn Beck knows that.

That is what General David Petraeus was saying when he warned us that continuation of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict puts American interests, including American men and women in uniform, in jeopardy.

It is all well and good for Glenn Beck to wave his Israeli flag and cheer on an unnecessary and deadly attack on civilians on the high seas.  But what about US interests?

Is there anyone who can possibly make the case that America benefits from being the only country in the entire world that endorsed the Israeli attack on the flotilla?  Does it make sense that the center-left American government backed it while the center-right British government condemned it? (It does make a certain sense, but only in the context of the financing of political campaigns.)

Does Glenn Beck really believe that American and Israeli interests are identical?

Because, if he does, I have some sad news for him.  His proclaimed hero, George Washington, would disagree. In fact, Washington would call those views un-American (as he called any suggestion that the US has identical interests with any foreign country).

This is from Washington’s Farewell Address of 1796, a speech so significant that it is read aloud in Congress each year on the anniversary of Washington’s birthday (italics mine).

A passionate attachment of one nation for another produces a variety of evils. Sympathy for the favorite nation, facilitating the illusion of an imaginary common interest in cases where no real common interest exists, and infusing into one the enmities of the other, betrays the former into a participation in the quarrels and wars of the latter without adequate inducement or justification….And it gives to ambitious, corrupted, or deluded citizens (who devote themselves to the favorite nation), facility to betray or sacrifice the interests of their own country, without odium, sometimes even with popularity; gilding, with the appearances of a virtuous sense of obligation, a commendable deference for public opinion, or a laudable zeal for public good, the base or foolish compliances of ambition, corruption, or infatuation.

So, Glenn, next time you want to make the case that every good American should support every Israeli policy, don’t take it up with me.  Take it up with our first president.

Why Glenn Beck Hurts Israel Read More »

Tavis Smiley and Willful Ignorance

Tavis Smiley is the host of a weeknight PBS show who recently made the astounding claim that “every single day in this country” Christians commit violent acts of terrorism.  If you financially support PBS, consider yourself a Christian, or are offended by this bizarre argument, you might want to let PBS know what you think of Mr. Smiley and his claim.

Prompting these rambling claims of daily Christian terror was the appearance of Ayaan Hirsi Ali on Smiley’s show.  Hirsi Ali is the internationally renowned social critic and author of “Infidel” and she visited the PBS show to promote her new book “Nomad.”

This woman’s amazing and courageous life story is full of events that would make for a gripping Hollywood film and includes being the victim of genital mutilation while a young girl, fleeing her Muslim homeland of Somalia, escaping from an arranged marriage, and making her way to the Netherlands where she was later elected to that European nation’s parliament.  While in the Netherlands Hirsi Ali underwent an intellectual awakening which resulted in her rejection of Islam.

Hirsi Ali’s name was in the international headlines after her colleague, Theo van Gogh, had his throat slit by a Muslim assassin in broad daylight in the middle of a busy boulevard in Amsterdam.  The Muslim immigrant who killed van Gogh had also vowed to kill Hirsi Ali because, “Submission,” the film she and van Gogh made, angered Muslims because it depicted the conditions of women living under Islam.

Following the brutal killing of van Gogh, Hirsi Ali made her way to the United States where she now lives – but under the constant vigilance of security guards.  Her life continues to be threatened by Islamic extremists.

In 2008 Community Advocates honored Hirsi Ali with the “Ziegler Courage of Conviction Award.” 

This was the woman who walked onto Tavis Smiley’s nationally syndicated PBS show.  Most likely she thought there would be at least a thoughtful discussion of her new book – which calls on key institutions in the West, universities, feminist groups and Christian churches to wage a war of ideas with radical Islam.

However, Smiley wasn’t in the mood to hear Hirsi Ali’s critical views of extremist Islam.  He seemed intent on asserting the shop-worn and politically-correct notion that Islam is always and everywhere “a religion of peace.”

Apparently irritated with Hirsi Ali’s contention that radical Islam poses a danger far more serious than other world religions, the left-leaning Smiley said:

“I guess I’m trying to understand where the evidence is that suggests that all of us who happen to be Christians or enlightened in some way need to take on Muslims here in the West.”

Looking incredulous, Hirsi Ali patiently forged ahead:

“Okay, I think first and foremost what we have to acknowledge is we’re not going to get a monster with horns, blue in the face, looking like a dragon called jihad coming in and terrorizing us.  The people engaged in terrorist activities look like you and me.  They look like everybody else here.  Major Nidal Hasan, the military guy who in November shot 13 of his colleagues and injured 32 … the young man, Faisal Shahzad, in Times Square who tried to blow innocent people he didn’t know up, these guys are acting on conviction.  Somehow, the idea got into their minds that to kill other people is a great thing to do and that they would be rewarded in the hereafter.”

Now appearing even more agitated, Smiley says to Hirsi Ali:

“But Christians do that every single day in this country.”

Hirsi Ali responds with:

“Do they blow people up?”

Not content with making a completely baseless argument, Smiley stuck his foot even deeper in his mouth:

Yes, Oh, Christians, every day, people walk into post offices, they walk into schools, that’s what Columbine is – I could do this all day long …

There are so many more examples, Ayaan, of Christians who do that than you could ever give me examples of Muslims who have done that inside this country, where you live and work.”

Realizing finally that she’s got a clueless television show host on her hands, Ali simply replies:

“Well, I think you and I disagree …”

The sweeping ignorance, or political blindness, of Smiley’s claims that “… Christians (commit acts of terror) every single day in this country” is nothing short of jaw-dropping.

Unlike Islam, present day interpretation of Judeo-Christian scripture does not guarantee Paradise to those who kill in the name of their faith.  However, the Koran does offer the fruits of Paradise to those who kill for Allah.  Suicide bombers have been lured to their deaths with the promise, and the offer, that they will be free from the fires of hell if they kill an infidel and, in the process, die.

However the attempt to establish a moral equivalency between the acts of Islamic jihadists and Christian fundamentalists is hardly new.  Rosie O’Donnell, a former host on ABC’s “The View,” once argued that “Radical Christianity is just as dangerous as radical Islam.”  Now, a supposedly more thoughtful Tavis Smiley has wondered into the same intellectual weeds.

Smiley’s smear of Christians was so appalling that Michael Getler, the PBS Ombudsman, issued a Tavis Smiley and Willful Ignorance Read More »

Heavy Coffee Drinkers May not be Getting any Boost from their Caffeine Fix

Everyone knows that caffeine is useful on occasion if we need to stay alert, especially when we’re sleepy.  Is there any college graduate who hasn’t had a caffeine-fueled all-night study session before an exam?  I certainly remember several nights in which I drank coffee to the point of inability to blink, much less sleep.

But for those who drink a lot of coffee daily, how much of a boost in alertness are they getting?  A study in this issue of Neuropsychopharmacology offers an interesting insight.

Over 300 subjects were randomized to receive either caffeine tablets or placebo tablets.  They all had to abstain from caffeine for 16 hours before the experiment.  The caffeine group then received a 100 mg caffeine tablet and 90 minutes later a 150 mg caffeine tablet.  (These doses are roughly the amount in a cup of coffee.  See the Mayo Clinic link below for an interesting review of the amounts of caffeine in different beverages.)  The placebo group received a placebo tablet and 90 minutes later a second placebo tablet.  The subjects were asked about headache and alertness before and after each dose.

The responses varied depending on the subjects’ usual caffeine use.  Those who normally were moderate to heavy users of caffeine reported an increase in headache and a decrease in alertness after placebo but not after caffeine.  So after caffeine they were feeling normal and without it they were having withdrawal symptoms – headache and sleepiness.  Surprisingly, even those who normally use little or no caffeine didn’t report any more alertness after caffeine than after placebo.  But at least they weren’t having withdrawal symptoms with placebo.

So it sounds like heavy coffee drinkers aren’t getting a boost from their coffee.  They’re just avoiding withdrawal.  They should probably slowly decrease their use of caffeine to more reasonable ammounts.

And those of us who drink little coffee are probably experiencing a boost from psychological conditioning as much as from caffeine.  We expect the hot fluid that we know so well to make us more alert, so it does.  If someone slipped us decaf without our knowledge it would likely work almost as well.

To celebrate this new-found wisdom, I’m going to go home and drink Diet Coke until I have palpitations.

Learn more:

BBC News article: ” target=”_blank”>Caffeine content for coffee, tea, soda and more

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Heavy Coffee Drinkers May not be Getting any Boost from their Caffeine Fix Read More »

Comedy Central’s Jon Stewart criticizes Glenn Beck over flotilla crisis video fib

On the “The Daily Show” last night, Jon Stewart suggested Glenn Beck, well, lied when saying FOX News is the only media outlet showing videos of last weekend’s violent clash between Israeli soldiers and pro-Palestinian activists onboard the Gaza-bound flotilla.

Yes, “only Glenn Beck and Fox have the balls to be fair to Israel on American television,” said Stewart, very, very sarcastically. “Let’s admire Mr. Beck’s courage.”

One wonders what Beck was thinking making such an easily disprovable statement. Check out the video from “The Daily Show” below.

The Daily Show With Jon Stewart Mon – Thurs 11p / 10c
Glenn Beck Airs Israeli Raid Footage
www.thedailyshow.com
Daily Show Full Episodes Political Humor Tea Party

Comedy Central’s Jon Stewart criticizes Glenn Beck over flotilla crisis video fib Read More »

Rabbi Adam Kligfeld: Time to Unite

I have been following the news out of Israel with a mixture of despair, frustration and confusion. I wanted to share some thoughts.

Let me cite the words Professor Alan Dershowitz used to open the opinion-piece he published on Wednesday: “Although the wisdom of Israel’s actions in stopping the Gaza flotilla is open to question, the legality of its actions was not.” Dershowitz goes on to show how Israel’s response to the threat to its Gaza blockade, set up not to deny Palestinians in Gaza basic food and medical needs, but rather to prevent the flow of weaponry to terrorist hands, had undeniable legal force and legitimacy. Others have pointed out what many media outlets will choose to ignore, which is that the nefariousness of the flotilla organizers is made clear by the fact they rejected Israel’s and Egypt’s offer to off-load the goods on their soil, to be first checked for weapons before being sent to Gaza.  As one of the activists declaimed, “This can only end up good for us: we become martyrs or we break the blockade.”  Their goal was to goad Israel into a lose-lose situation, breaking Israel’s lawful blockade or drawing Israel into a public relations nightmare. 

Sadly, they were victorious on the second account. Therefore, my first message to the congregation is that we are, once again, at a moment where Israel has been, and likely will continue to be, vilified and demonized.  Her severest critics are at her throat, intentionally and wantonly conflating what was likely a strategic error with a moral failing, using this tragic encounter to prove that Israel is a pariah state, and should be treated as such. While I agree that love comes along with the right, and perhaps responsibility, to levy warranted critique alongside deserved praise; while I understand that a significant expression of one’s Zionism can be decrying actions and approaches Israel has taken when other routes would have been more fruitful and more representative of the values of the Jewish State; while I do not accept that support for Israel’s every move must always be unflinching and undiscriminating, I also believe that one’s first responsibility to one’s own is to rally in crisis, defending against slander, lies and defamation, putting aside, at least for the moment, left-wing vs. right-wing politics so that we can stand together as a Jewish community. I do believe that what is under attack when Israel’s motives and actions are so bitterly denounced is not just Israel’s right to have acted as it did in this situation, but rather Israel’s right to be, to exist, to thrive, to be maintained as a sovereign Jewish nation with defensible borders. I encourage the entire congregation to find some way this week to show love for Israel, to defend her existence and her right to self-defense even if you harbor serious questions about how Israel chose to respond to the flotillas.

The second point I want to share is still being formed in my heart and mind: the central idea is that I ache, perhaps with more nostalgia than is warranted, for the Israel, and the Israeli leadership of an earlier generation, that seemed to have the combination of savvy and sekhel required to have handled this situation with simply better strategy.  I cannot even venture a guess as to what that strategy would have been.  Let the flotilla through, denying them their headlines and martyrdom, but opening a route for future arms-smuggling?  Find a way to take out the engine of the 6th boat, on which the deadly interaction took place, as they seemingly were able to do for the other 5?  In some ways, the situation seemed lose-lose the moment the boats left Turkey.  And yet even as we pray for Israel to pull itself out of this mire, a mire whose darkness and murkiness stems chiefly from the knee-jerk reactions of those for whom Israel is always singularly to blame, can we not pray also for loftier leadership, a leadership that would anticipate such a crisis before it devolves into a nightmare?  Can we not ask, external obstacles notwithstanding, what it would take inside Israel to have produced from even this seemingly unnavigable diplomatic catastrophe a response less cringe-worthy and more Entebbe-like?

As angry as I am that haters of Israel and, yes, haters of Jewish sovereignty have successfully libeled us again, I am equally angry that Israel has seemingly lost its power, resolve, creativity, determination…something…to define its own narrative.  We, and the world, end up talking about the topics that our enemies want to be raised. A flotilla sails towards Israel, knowing it has succeeded in its campaign before the event itself unfolds. Almost immediately, Israel reacts, the world is up in arms, and the narrative of every synagogue, Jewish organization and Zionist expression is hijacked, sent into damage-control mode, sent scurrying to defend, or explain, or justify, or subtly critique, or pray, or rally or perhaps be struck dumb. We are no longer talking about Ayalim and the determined effort to resettle the Negev; we are talking about sea-commandos. We are no longer talking about Start-Up Nation and Israel’s entrepreneurial spirit and creativity as a magnet for venture capital; we are talking about what is and what is not proportionate force a soldier can use when beaten by a pipe.  We are not, for this day or week, talking about Israel’s leaving Gaza so that Palestinians could self-govern, self-sustain and create a thriving civilization there, given a head-start by the infrastructure Israel left behind; no, this day and this week we speak about humanitarian crises—if there is one in Gaza or not—and we wonder aloud why the flotilla’s organizers rejected Israel’s offer to permit the boats of aid to go through in exchange for a request that some of the aid be sent to Gilad Schalit, the Israeli soldier held in captivity in Gaza for nearly 4 years.

As the week draws to a close, I am emotionally exhausted, my Israel batteries fully spent and my Israel kishkes fully twisted. I pray for the simple justice I associate with Israel given a fair chance to defend herself.  And I pray for visionary leadership within Israel to help vault her back to a situation where Israel, not her enemies, controls her narrative, her story.  I pray for visionary leadership, certainly wiser and more courageous than I, who can see past flotillas, PR mudslides, world anger, despair and pessimism, and begin to build a future in which Israel and her neighbors can live in security, and dignity, and within safe borders, with legitimate hopes that tomorrow will be better than today, next week brighter than this week, next year closer to peace than we are right now.

Rabbi Adam Kligfeld: Time to Unite Read More »