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June 15, 2015

Blatter could still perform a U-turn and stand again

Sepp Blatter could still perform a U-turn on his promise to stand down as FIFA president, a former adviser said on Monday, while FIFA did not directly deny the possibility.

Klaus Stoehlker, who advised Blatter during the recent election campaign, told Sky News that Blatter could remain head of world soccer's governing body if a “convincing candidate” to replace him did not emerge.

FIFA said in a statement that Stoehlker, who was in a meeting when contacted by Reuters and unable to comment, was no longer working with Blatter.

“Klaus Stoehlker's mandate from the FIFA President ended on 31 May 2015. The FIFA President would like to point to his remarks from 2 June,” it said, referring to Blatter's announcement that he would call a new election in which he would not be a candidate.

English Football Association chairman Greg Dyke does not think Blatter will have a change of heart.

“I think it (a U-turn) is extremely unlikely. I think it would be very controversial,” Dyke told Reuters.

“There would be a rebellion amongst a lot of people (if he did).”

However, Blatter has changed his mind in the past. In 2011, he said his fourth mandate would be his last but he stood again this year.

Blatter was re-elected for a fifth term as FIFA president on May 29 when his opponent Prince Ali Bin Al Hussein withdrew after Blatter had won the first round of voting by 133 to 73.

Four days later, as corruption allegations continued to batter FIFA, Blatter said he would stand down and call a new election, due to be held between December and February.

The FBI is investigating bribery and corruption at FIFA, including scrutiny of how soccer's governing body awarded World Cup hosting rights to Russia and Qatar.

U.S. Assistant Attorney General Leslie Caldwell noted on Monday that the investigation into FIFA is not shouldered solely by the United States and is instead shared by international law enforcement partners.

The U.S. Justice Department “has worked closely with the lead FIFA prosecutors to obtain evidence from numerous countries across the globe,” Caldwell said at the Association of Certified Fraud Examiners conference in Baltimore.

“Far from acting as the world's corruption police, the United States is part of a formidable and growing coalition of international enforcement partners who together combat corruption around the world.” The confusion surrounding FIFA's leadership took a new twist on Sunday when the Schweiz am Sonntag newspaper reported that Blatter, 79, may seek to stay on as president.

The report said Blatter had received messages of support from African and Asian football associations, who voted for him at the election and want him to reconsider his decision.

Blatter was honoured by the support and had not ruled out remaining in office, the newspaper said, citing an anonymous source close to him.

Africa's soccer confederation (CAF) said on Monday that it had not heard of any of its members asking Blatter to stay on.

“At CAF level we are not aware of any African countries who have written to ask Blatter to stay on,” Kalusha Bwalya, a CAF executive committee member and president of the Football Association of Zambia, told Reuters.

“We feel it is better to get on with our own work in the meantime and see what everyone has to say in the next months. Everybody is waiting for clarity.”

“At the moment there are a lot of rumours floating about and everyone is rushing to turn the smallest piece of information into a story.”

UEFA insiders told Reuters that European soccer's governing body was left perplexed by the reports that Blatter would stand again and that the plot would be too outrageous even for a Hollywood script.

Officially, European soccer's governing body did not want to comment but the German football association (DFB) called on Blatter, who is staying on until the election, to leave quickly.

“We only know the media reports which strengthen our clear position,” spokesman Ralf Koettker told reporters. “Blatter's announced resignation must be formally completed as soon as possible.”

Germany coach Joachim Loew said: “As far as I can speak as a coach, FIFA must have a new structure and there has to be a certain new start because all of this has damaged football, and that was dangerous. I think resigning from a resignation should normally not happen.”

However, Domenico Scala, the official overseeing the process of choosing a new president, said on Sunday that Blatter's departure was an “indispensable” part of planned reforms to soccer's governing body.

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Study: Nazi propaganda had lifelong effect on many Germans

Germans who grew up during the 1930s are far more likely than their younger countrymen to have negative attitudes about Jews, according to a new study of anti-Semitism in Germany.

The study, released Monday by American and Swiss researchers, found that anti-Semitic views were particularly strong among Germans raised in regions of the country that were known for anti-Semitism even before Hitler came to power, The Associated Press reported.

According to the researchers, who analyzed surveys conducted in 1996 and 2006, the findings indicated that Nazi propaganda was highly effective, especially when it confirmed existing beliefs.

“It’s not just that Nazi schooling worked, that if you subject people to a totalitarian regime during their formative years it will influence the way their mind works,” Hans-Joachim Voth of the University of Zurich, one of the study’s authors, told AP. “The striking thing is that it doesn’t go away afterward.”

Voth added that the propaganda was particularly effective when “the overall environment where children grew up was already a bit anti-Semitic. It tells you that indoctrination can work, it can last to a surprising extent, but the way it works has to be compatible to something people already believe.”

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Cyprus says Hezbollah plot against Israelis or Jews likely foiled

A Hezbollah bomb plot against Israel or Jews “most probably” was foiled last month, the foreign minister of Cyprus said.

Cypriot police arrested a 26-year-old Lebanon native with a Canadian passport on May 27 after authorities discovered nearly two tons of ammonium nitrate — a fertilizer that in large quantities can be mixed with other substances to make a powerful explosive — in the basement of a house belonging to the man. The suspect remains in custody.

Foreign Minister Ioannis Kasoulides on Monday confirmed the arrest and the discovery of the explosives, Reuters reported. Asked whether a Hezbollah bomb plot had indeed been foiled, Kasoulides said, “Most probably.”

The fertilizer was to be used by Hezbollah to create explosives to be used against Israelis or Jews on Cyprus, Cyprus authorities told Israel, according to Reuters.

An unnamed senior Israeli official told Reuters that the chemical was to be saved for future attacks.

“It does not look like there was an immediate terrorist action planned in connection with this haul,” the official told Reuters.

The suspect arrived in Cyprus in the third week of May and was staying at the two-story house in a residential suburb of the coastal town of Larnaca.

In 1988, an attack on the Israeli Embassy in Cyprus left three people dead.

In 2013, a Swedish citizen of Lebanese descent was jailed in Cyprus on charges of plotting an attack on Israeli tourists. He said he had been asked by Hezbollah to track the movements of Israeli tourists on the island, but denied he was planning any attack.

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The Global Family Reunion shows how far online genealogy has come

What is more unexpected: that Jewish author A.J. Jacobs, known for his ambitious lifestyle experiments, has some Asian and Scandinavian roots? Or that rapper Ludacris is 1/16th Jewish?

These are the types of questions that were raised by the Global Family Reunion on June 6, a Comic Con-esque celebration of the advancement of genealogy technology. People from countries as far away as New Zealand and Brazil, along with a diverse cast of celebrity speakers and musicians, gathered on the grounds of the New York Hall of Science in Queens, New York to emphasize one basic but uplifting idea: that we’re all more related than we thought.

Before June 6, Jacobs, an Esquire editor-at-large and the author of seven books (on projects ranging from following the Bible as closely as possible to engaging in extreme exercise regimens), spent over a year compiling the world’s largest family tree with the help of companies such as MyHeritage, FamilySearch, WikiTree and Findmypast. The goal was to create a global family tree that connects as many people as possible through blood or marriage – even if they are 30 or 40 steps away from one another on the ancestral branches.

The results were fascinating. Overall, the project found connections between some 77 million people. Jacobs, of Ashkenazi Jewish heritage, discovered that he had connections to celebrities such as Daniel Radcliffe, Olivia Wilde and even President George H.W. Bush.

Still, even though large websites such as MyHeritage (which is based in Or Yehuda, Israel) and Ancestry.com have made the task much easier, the art of constructing a large family tree isn’t always an exact science (and Jewish genealogy in particular was considered especially difficult in past decades because of the destruction and scattered immigration effects of the Holocaust, as well as the many years of Eastern Europe being under the Iron Curtain). These companies have licensing agreements with archives, libraries and other institutions that own official records, which paid subscribers can use to research their ancestors – such as old birth certificates, military records and travel information. The big names like MyHeritage say they boast technology that self-corrects mistakes, such as a misspelled name or an incorrect birthday, which could send a family tree down a slippery slope of misinformation.

The reunion itself was an interesting mix of people from these companies, as well as celebrities backing the ethos of the event. Familysearch, one of the world’s biggest genealogy websites, is owned by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints – and was thus represented by dozens of young Mormon volunteers. The site Geni (which is owned by MyHeritage) – perhaps in order to promote the idea that we’re all somehow related to famous people – was represented by an Elvis impersonator wandering the grounds. Some of the celebrity speakers included Dr. Mehmet Oz, “Supersize Me” director Morgan Spurlock, “Glee” star Jenna Ushkowitz (who is Korean but was adopted by a Russian Jewish father and an Irish and English mother) and Henry Louis Gates, Jr., the Harvard history professor who hosts the PBS series “Finding Your Roots,” which traces the family history of famous Americans. Sister Sledge performed “We Are Family” live on the main stage.

Overall, the event was a star-studded representation of how far the online genealogy movement has come. But behind the day’s celebrity glamor, Jacobs is genuine about making people look at one another differently. Cass Sunstein, a prominent Harvard Law School professor – and Jacobs’ first cousin once removed –  perhaps best summarized the sentiments behind the project after his talk.

“We tend to think of members of our family as people we protect and sacrifice for and care for, and that tends to be limited to a very small group,” Sunstein told JTA. “But if you think of the extent to which your connections are much broader and more surprising than you know, then maybe those feelings of generosity and kindness can broaden.”

Well said, professor.

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Heirloom Tomato Sauce

Why is this tomato sauce different from all other tomato sauces?

Good question, I’m glad you asked. As anyone knows who has taken my pasta level 1 class, I start all of my pasta sauces off with garlic, red pepper flakes and olive oil.

However, in this sauce, I don’t want even the slightest kick from the red pepper flakes. Don’t get me wrong, they would be delicious in here. Yet this sauce was created for a dish far more delicate than pasta. It was made to be eaten on top of an eggplant and burrata roll-up. The burrata is delicate in flavor and I didn’t want anything to overpower it. Hence, the trick to this sauce is to highlight only the sweetness of the tomatoes and keep it as simple as possible.

Does that mean I can’t eat it with pasta?

No! It would be amazing with pasta. Top with parmigiano reggiano and some toasted pine nuts if you like.

What else can I eat it with?

As far as I’m concerned you can put it in a mug and drink it! It would be wonderful to use to make an eggplant parmigiana or a lasagna. As a sauce to top fish and chicken, I actually think it is too delicate and you would want a little more of a kick. Be inventive and try things out. You tell me what you like it with.

You say to cook it on low for several hours? Do I have to do this? What if I am rushed?

Then turn up the flame!! But with a low flame you are ensuring the delicacy of the tomato sauce. Sometimes we all have to speed things up and that is ok.

Ingredients:

  • extra virgin olive oil, to generously coat pan, about ⅓ cup
  • mixed colors of heirloom tomatoes – about 1 ½ pounds – chopped, removing the center brown spot that was attached to the vine
  • a handful of basil leaves – no need to cut them!
  • two cloves of garlic
  • salt, kosher, a good teaspoon

 

Directions:

  1. Put pan over medium heat while you prepare your ingredients.
  2. Add olive oil and garlic.
  3. Let garlic infuse its flavor into the olive oil for a few minutes. Watch the bubbles. Don’t let garlic burn.
  4. Add tomatoes and stir.
  5. Add basil and stir.
  6. Let saute for a couple minutes.
  7. Add salt, stir and, lower heat to medium low and let tomatoes cook for about 2 hours.
  8. When soft enough, smush tomatoes down with a fork or with the back of wooden spoon.
  9. Taste sauce. If you want it to be a little thicker cook longer.

 

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L.A.’s reigning queen of cannabis is a pot ‘doctor’ to the stars

Stepping into the lobby of the West Hollywood medical marijuana dispensary where Dina Browner serves up buds to movie stars, it’s hard to miss the name Snoop Lion splashed across a hydroponic grow box painted red, green and gold.

The Rastafarian rapper formerly known as Snoop Dogg didn’t have anyone to operate the custom-made indoor marijuana greenhouse that came as a gift from its manufacturer, so he asked his “doctor” to keep it filled with cannabis flowers.

The public face of Alternative Herbal Health Services, Browner — who believes she was the inspiration for the hit Showtime series “Weeds,” about a suburban housewife turned pot dealer — became an unofficial weed doctor a decade ago, when she had a physician write Snoop his first recommendation for medical cannabis. After seeing the hip-hop artist on the news for marijuana-related legal trouble, Browner, 40, decided to do her old friend a favor.

“I called him and said, ‘I’m going to bring a doctor over, and it’s going to change your life,’” she recalled. “He’s like, ‘What, you crazy? A doctor for weed?’ He kept saying ‘Dr. Dina, Dr. Dina,’ and from then on it was my nickname.”

Since 2003, when Browner became the first woman to open a medical marijuana dispensary in Southern California, she has cultivated an A-list clientele that includes actors, hip-hop moguls and politicians (including a few Republicans who publicly oppose pot legalization, she says). More than a decade later, as more states move to legalize both medical and recreational marijuana use, Browner is emerging as a spokeswoman of sorts for the cannabis plant, touting its medicinal value on “Good Day LA,” gracing the cover of Dope Magazine and lighting up “the world’s most expensivest joint” with rapper 2 Chainz in a GQ video that went viral.

Inspiration for her career as a medical marijuana consultant came from an unlikely source: United Synagogue Youth, the Conservative movement’s youth group. At her first USY convention, Browner spent the day organizing Braille books at a charity for the blind. Afterward, she said, she was struck by how good helping others made her feel.

“I was learning about tzedakah and giving back,” she said. “That’s what started me in the industry I’m in now.”

Claire Kaufmann, a Portland, Oregon-based cannabis consultant and co-founder of the Jewish pot legalization group Le’Or, described Browner as a pioneer.

“She’s blazed a new path for the industry overall, particularly for women,” Kaufmann said, “and has done it all with a clear passion for activism and a connection to her Jewish identity.”

Browner, a telegenic brunette with a camera-ready smile, grew up in a conservative Jewish family in the San Fernando Valley. Her first brush with pot came in the early 1990s, when she smoked a blunt with Snoop Dogg in a friend’s backyard.

Her friend’s stepfather happened to be the lawyer defending Snoop in his murder trial (he was acquitted in 1996), and as Browner tells it, her teenage friends warned the rapper to be careful, lest straight-laced Dina rat him out for smoking weed. Snoop called Browner over to his circle, pointed to the blunt and said, according to Browner, “You better hit this.” That way, if he went down, so would she.

When the pair reunited a decade later, Browner — who has consulted to dozens of dispensaries in California, Colorado and Oregon — was still in the closet about her profession (she’d told her boyfriend’s parents she was a “business consultant”). But a couple years ago, her cover was blown when Snoop outed her as his weed doctor in a GQ magazine story.

Browner actually believed the former Death Row Records artist had done as much eight years earlier, when she thought she recognized herself on a giant billboard for “Weeds.” The woman on the billboard turned out to be the actress Mary-Louise Parker, the protagonist of what was then a new series premiering on Showtime.

Browner remains convinced that the hit comedy was more than partly based on her life. Like Nancy Botwin, Parker’s fictional character, Browner lived in an upscale suburban community in Southern California. But unlike Botwin, who worked the black market, Browner has always sought to keep her weed-related activities within the law.

A former fashion sales representative (her father’s family was in the clothing business), Browner stumbled into the cannabis industry by accident. In 2003, a friend who had been diagnosed with stage 3 cancer called and said he wanted to kill himself — that’s how sick the chemotherapy was making him. Browner brought her friend a joint to ease his suffering, and his appetite and spirits improved almost immediately, she said.

“His stomach started to growl, and he said, ‘I can’t believe this. It’s the first time I’ve wanted to eat something since starting chemo,’” she recalled. “The next day he called and said he needed more.”

But in the early 2000s, a recommendation for medical marijuana was still hard to come by, even though California had legalized its use in 1996. After some research, Browner eventually found a doctor in the Bay Area who was willing to recommend the cannabis plant.

While her sick friend threw up in the car, she drove him north to San Francisco, where they waited three hours to see that doctor. Then Browner and the pot doctor struck a deal: He would fly to Los Angeles one day a week to see patients if she would run the office.

But the problem wasn’t solved. Short of turning to the black market, patients still had nowhere to purchase their medicine.

“At that point, I realized we had a need for dispensaries,” Browner said. “So I talked to a couple friends who decided to open a dispensary in West Hollywood. Flash forward a decade later, we’re still here and we’re still doing it.”

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Who Are We? The Three Lessons of the Grasshopper

The Three Lessons of the Grasshopper

Parashat Shelach-L’cha Shabbat sermon at by Shabbat shalom.

Some of you might remember the old 1970s television show, Kung Fu which aired from 1972-1975 on ABC. I remember it from re-runs.

The main character of the series, Kwai Chang Caine, is played by David Carradine. Kwai Chang is the orphaned son of an American man and a Chinese woman As a boy, he comes to study martial arts and wisdom at a Shaolin Temple. His master is blind.

“You cannot see,” the boy says when he meets the master for the first time.

“You think I cannot see,” says the master.