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October 21, 2012

October 21, 2012

In-depth

An Assassination in Beirut

Lee Smith of the Weekly Standards looks at the implications of the killing of Lebanese security chief Wissam al-Hassan, thought to be the work of Syria and its allies.

Hassan was killed not just because of what he had done in the past, but because of what he was likely to do in the future—roll up Syria and Hezbollah terrorism operations, protect Lebanese politicians as well as the Lebanese state, and prevent it from falling into a war like the one that engulfed it from 1975-1990 and killed more than 150,000.

 

A Middle East Cheat Sheet For Monday's Foreign Policy Debate

Ahead of the final presidential debate, Robert Satloff of the Washington Institute presents 12 questions on the Mideast he hopes the moderator will ask.

U.S. defense officials have stated that the most Israel could do militarily is to delay Iran's march toward a nuclear weapon and, in the process, Israeli action could trigger a catastrophic regional conflict. Do you agree? And in you view, which is more damaging to U.S. interests — Iran's acquisition of a nuclear weapon or the repercussions of a possible Israeli preventive action to prevent Iran from getting a nuclear weapon?

 

An Intriguing New Mideast Peace Proposal

Writing for US News, Mort Zuckerman explores a plan promoted by Ehud Barak to withdraw from the West Bank while preserving most of the settlements.

Barak's proposal has the virtue of focusing Israel's concentration on the major settlement blocs while discountenancing further settlements elsewhere, particularly if they are embedded in an overall Palestinian population. The goal is a secular Zionism as a means to democratic statehood.

 

Daily Digest

 

 

Keep updated with Shmuel Rosner's Florida Diary: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4 and Part 5

Follow Shmuel Rosner on Twitter and Facebook as he travels across Florida, meeting candidates and campaigners

Check out Rosner's new book, The Jewish Vote: Obama vs. Romney / A Jewish Voter's Guide

October 21, 2012 Read More »

The meaning of ‘firm stand’ on Iran

The dramatic – if suspiciously well-timed – news of looming direct U.S.-Iran talks (a New York Times story) and the upcoming presidential debate on foreign policy give us ample reason to look at two recent polls on policy toward Iran. The new poll from the Pew Research Center is especially interesting, as it presents one with a question that is not an easy one to answer: What constitutes a “firm stand” on Iran?

Our J Meter tracking of American’s opinion on Iran – if you’re not familiar with our Iran Trend tracker, here’s your chance – uses two indices to measure public opinion. One tracks those polls in which the public is presented with a two-option question: attack or not attack. The other one tracks those polls in which a three-option question is presented: attack, use diplomacy, refrain from attack. As we’ve consistently shown, the different between these two types of polls is significant. Americans, generally speaking, would like to see a tough stance on Iran. When presented with a diplomatic option, however, it leads them to assume (rightly or wrongly, that’s an issue for a different article) that such an option exists – hence, they flock to pick the option that is on the one hand tough, but on the other isn’t violent.

A new poll from the Chicago Council on Global Affairs – also published last week – clearly demonstrates this phenomenon. “Americans view Iran and its nuclear ambitions as one of the most critical threats to the United States, but partisanship colors how Americans think Washington should handle Iran”, write the authors of this poll. The “partisanship” is over the option of attack (in this poll, somewhat strangely, the question refers to an attack authorized by the UN). While vast majorities of Republicans, Democrats and Independents support “tighter economic sanctions on Iran” (86%, 80%, 75% respectively), only Republicans “reach majority support for United Nations authorization of a military strike against Iranian nuclear energy facilities” (with 58%, compared to 41% of Democratic and Independent voters).

The Pew survey is a little more complicated to figure out, since it doesn’t use the familiar formula of presenting actual options, but rather asks a question that is more general: In the dispute over Iran’s nuclear program is it more important to take a firm stand or to avoid military conflict? Previous Pew surveys we have used in our Iran tracker asked a more specific question: In your opinion, which is more important – preventing Iran from developing nuclear weapons, even if it means taking military action OR avoiding a military conflict with Iran, even if it means they may develop nuclear weapons? This time, we have a “firm stand” – no specification. Do people understand this to possibly mean an attack, or do they support a “firm stand” that is a continuation of current policies, namely a tightening of the sanctions?

Back in May, when Pew published the results of the more specific question – “use military force” or “accept a nuclear armed Iran” – 63% (of Americans) supported an attack, while only 28% said they’d rather accept a nuclear armed Iran. The “firm stand” question, asked in the current poll, and in a poll conducted back in January, elicits a different and somewhat puzzling response: In January, 50% supported the “firm stand” and now it is 56%. In January, 41% said “avoid military conflict” and now it is 35%. So why do I say it is puzzling? Because, counterintuitively, Americans tend to be more combative when they are specifically asked about “taking military action”, and less so when the more vague “firm stand” option is on offer. 

So what do we learn from that – what does a “firm stand” mean? Considering the fact that more Americans were telling Pew that they support “taking military action” than the numbers saying they support “firm stand”, I’d assume that respondents understand that firm stand might mean war. And note that a vast majority of Mitt Romney voters – 78% – support a “firm stand”, while a plurality of Obama voters – 48% – would like to “avoid military conflict”. Also somewhat puzzling: While Democrats are always far less supportive of the attack option, Pew found back in May that, “among those who oppose Iran acquiring nuclear weapons, Republicans (79%) are more supportive of turning to military force if necessary than are Democrats (61%) or independents (58%)”. So in May, 61% of Democrats supported an attack, and in October only 43% of Obama supporters would take a firm stand?

Two things should be noted here: 1. In May, it was Democrats and now we’re talking about Obama supporters – not exactly the same group. 2. The divide in May refers to “those who oppose Iran acquiring nuclear weapons” – namely to 94% of Americans and not 100% of them. I don’t think though that these two things explain such significant difference between the two polls. I think it probably has to do with the current politicization of all matters, foreign policy included. If half a year ago, most voters could still think about Iran without simultaneously thinking about the state of the presidential race, now they can’t. Many of them, especially Democratic voters, think about Iran with the subconscious assumption that a firm stand means Romney. And that is why more Democrats oppose a firm stand today than those opposing an actual attack half a year ago.

 

Keep updated with Shmuel Rosner's Florida Diary: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4 and Part 5

Follow Shmuel Rosner on Twitter and Facebook as he travels across Florida, meeting candidates and campaigners

Check out Rosner's new book, The Jewish Vote: Obama vs. Romney / A Jewish Voter's Guide

The meaning of ‘firm stand’ on Iran Read More »

The Challenge of Day School Affordability: Keeping our Eyes on the Prize!

In religious Jewish communities, the affordability of day schools is one of the most discussed social challenges. Supporting vibrant, successful, viable Jewish day schools is no less than supporting the Jewish future – our children are our future, and the values we demonstrate and pass on will determine what they will do with the torch when they are its bearers.

Rising school costs along with a continuing recession have combined to create a crisis in the survival of Jewish day schools. While estimates vary, it is clear that tuition costs have outstripped the ability of many families to pay. One report in 2010 estimated that most Jewish day schools “>Milken Community High School in Los Angeles, where the annual tuition is $32,155. In addition, there is an annual security fee of $700, and new students pay a one-time fee of $1,500. This does not count the expected parental contribution toward several fundraising efforts each year, or the flat fee for textbooks. To be sure the school offers a high-quality Jewish education, but how many families can afford to send their children there?


At the other end of the day school spectrum are the elementary and “>the average annual gross income of Baltimore families is far less than $50,000. Thus, an Orthodox family that sends three children to day school will spend $25,950 each year in tuition. After taxes and synagogue expenses, Orthodox Baltimore households are using all available funds for day school. The continuing Great Recession has exacerbated this crisis, and scholarship money is not often available. Many families are now at, or past, the point where they can afford to send their children to day school. As“>parents working several jobs and thus not being available to spend time with their children; students discouraged from becoming community-serving professionals like teachers and social workers because these careers do not pay enough to support a Jewish family; and families that will fall from the position of contributing to society to being forced to ask for charity.  


Fortunately, there may be a more promising future for Jewish day schools. Most proposed solutions fall out into one of the following ten options:


1. Increase philanthropic support to Jewish schools (or offer low-cost loans);
2. Increase state funding of secular subjects within day schools (or move toward the British model of state-funding);
3. Cut down school expenses without cutting quality (raise student-teacher ratio, move to smaller facilities, follow an administrative cost-sharing model, encourage regional benchmark standards, use green technology to cut energy costs, etc.);
4. Increase revenue (rent school space, hold community programs, charge for adult education, e“>the Jewish Day School Affordability Knowledge Center, a joint project between the Partnership for Excellence in Jewish Education and the Orthodox Union.

The day school system is potentially the most powerful way of educating, empowering, and activating our Jewish youth base to grow as global Jewish leaders, and is therefore crucial to the future of the Jewish community. We must reprioritize our wealth to ensure that we leverage our personal and communal funds to address the most pressing moral issues of our time. If we do not repair our financially broken day school system, we risk becoming overwhelmed by its burden and becoming less relevant in the cosmic unfolding of human history. Now is the time to change the paradigm.

 

Rabbi Shmuly Yanklowitz is the Founder and President of “>Ethics & Social Justice: A Guide for the 21st Century.” Newsweek named Rav Shmuly The Challenge of Day School Affordability: Keeping our Eyes on the Prize! Read More »

Working Moms Who Are Really in A Bind

With all the chuckling over the image of “women in binders” from last week’s presidential debate, it is easy to overlook the issue of workplace flexibility that Gov. Romney inserted into the national conversation.

When he talked about providing flexibility for a woman on his staff while Governor in Massachusetts he focused, as do many in the working world, on moms of younger children:

“I recognized that if you're going to have women in the workforce that sometimes you need to be more flexible,” Romney said. “My chief of staff, for instance, had two kids that were still in school. She said, 'I can't be here until 7 or 8 o'clock at night. I need to be able to get home at 5 o'clock so I can be there for making dinner for my kids and being with them when they get home from school.' So we said, 'Fine. Let's have a flexible schedule so you can have hours that work for you.'”

The thing is, for us moms of kids/teens/ adults with chronic illnesses and developmental disabilities, we need flexibility and understanding in the workplace for a whole lot more than just coming home to make dinner (that’s why God invented Trader Joes by the way).  We may need time off during the workday for meetings with special education administrators at the public school, to attend speech therapy sessions or even to provide medical assistance. But don’t worry, we will make sure that the work gets done, even if we answer emails in the middle of the night and take our conference calls in doctors' waiting rooms.

Take the example of a courageous Mom in Washington D. C. Latesha Taylor a 36-year-old single mother has been caring for her daughter’s type 1 diabetes for eight years, and when the school district’s nurse isn’t there, it is Latesha who has to drop everything at work and run over to the public school to help out with blood glucose monitoring, insulin shots, and any emergency glucagon to keep her daughter Loretta healthy and able to learn during school. Because of all these absences, Latesha’s had trouble keeping a job. Thanks to legal advocates and the American Diabetes Association, the school district has agreed to train more staff in the schools to help Loretta manage her diabetes, but I am still concerned that the flexibility Latesha will need for all the medical-related appointments may not be forthcoming from a future employer.

Another issue is that kids like our son, Danny, don’t magically become able to take care of themselves just because they have reached some chronological age. With his combination of physical and intellectual disabilities, he will need someone around 24/7 for the rest of his life. And no matter how organized I’ve tried to be, there are invariably unanticipated situations. The sitter gets a flat tire, Danny gets a stomach bug or the high school decides to throw in a “minimum day” without telling us. In all those cases, Mom gets the first call.

I’ve been pretty fortunate. Since Danny’s diagnosis at 13 months, my direct supervisors in various Jewish and general non-profit agencies have been very supportive but that doesn’t mean that the whole organization gets it. Unless the organization has a clear written policy about how they will handle workplace flexibility for on-going family issues for all employees, previous “understandings” can disappear overnight.

So maybe we do need some binders after all…

Working Moms Who Are Really in A Bind Read More »