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November 16, 2016

Election 2016: The Donald Trump car wreck

The results of last week’s election hit with the force of a crash. 

The car was our democracy and now there is wreckage everywhere.

Our system seems utterly broken, but not as broken as we are — and I mean all of us: those who voted for a hatemongering, anti-intellectual bully and those of us who didn’t. 

Donald Trump was a choice born of pain, pessimism and despair — what Leon Wieseltier calls a “politics of panic” — driven by the impulse of self-interest and survival.

Or he wasn’t our choice at all. He was the monster beneath the bed that leaped from cartoonish nightmare to visceral reality, cast in orange flesh and a nimbus of blond hair to haunt our country. 

How in the world did we go from our first Black president to the resident “emperor” of white supremacists? 

For millions of Americans, last week felt like a funeral for democracy. It was the death of so many democratic values we cherish and the sense of loss was profound. Something sinister and dark was occurring in a country built on the light of freedom, liberty and opportunity. In one evening, centuries of hard-won progress in the form of civil rights, reproductive rights, immigrant rights and freedom of expression was being plunged back into the Dark Ages.  Hadn’t we been on the cusp of history being made? Again? 

Instead, we now face a reversal of the values and policies it took our country blood, tears and centuries to realize. The fortress of our more perfect union could collapse in the shadow of a reality TV star/real estate tycoon who has anointed himself an autocrat. 

Now, the White House is white again and the patron saint of the alt-right and neo-Nazi movement, Steve Bannon, is our next president’s chief strategist and senior adviser. The wrench in the system the white working-class voter ardently sought is worse than he could have imagined: In an interview with The Daily Beast, Bannon described himself as an admirer of Vladimir Lenin, the 20th-century Russian communist revolutionary, because Lenin “wanted to destroy the state, and that’s my goal too,” Bannon said. “I want to bring everything crashing down and destroy all of today’s establishment.”

Thank God, there is a precedent for this pending plague in the Bible, which we can learn from. In the Exodus story, a similar phenomenon as what has befallen our country plays out with dramatic effect:

While Moses spends 40 days on Mount Sinai communing with God and receiving the binding legal document that will ensure the future of Hebraic civil society, the Israelites become impatient and rebel. Not a day before he returns, they lose faith in their leader and the God who redeemed them from slavery. They replace divinity with a demigod and worship a do-it-yourself golden calf with fervor. When Moses returns and discovers this transgression, chaos ensues: He smashes the tablets into the golden idol and orders the death of 3,000 idolaters. 

How quickly divine enlightenment devolved into massive corruption.

Our rabbis teach that revelation is almost always followed by regression. In the Garden of Eden, God presents a perfect world, but Adam and Eve regress into children and break the one rule they’ve been given. Once they eat of the forbidden tree and become enlightened, they become embarrassed and hide. The path from revelation to regression is short, but it is woven into the fabric of our humanity.  

In the Age of Trump, this is not meant to be a comfort but a call. Donald Trump has told us exactly what he plans to do — shame and isolate immigrants; blame minorities for the country’s economic woes; and reverse policies such as universal health care coverage and a woman’s right to choose. He has casually encouraged countries such as Japan and South Korea to develop nuclear weapons, and when it was pointed out that this is downright apocalyptic, he tried to deny this and reverse course. But as the poet Maya Angelou cautioned, “When someone shows you who they are, believe them — the first time.”

The people who believed Trump was exactly who he said he was during his campaign — when he insulted a Gold Star family, called for a ban on Muslim immigration, tarred Mexicans as rapists and admitted to sexually assaulting women — turned completely spineless in the face of his new power. Most spineless of all, House Speaker Paul Ryan, who teasingly held out his endorsement and refused to campaign for Trump, is now photographed sitting next to him. Even President Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton have called for openness — asking those who vehemently oppose Trump to give him a chance.

But I already know what Trumpism is — it is a threat to reverse social and moral progress and an endorsement of contempt for whole groups of people. There’s no chance I’ll give that a chance. Instead, I’m taking to heart the call Leon Wieseltier made to “stay angry.” 

“If the presidency of Donald Trump inspires anything,” Wieseltier wrote in The Washington Post, “it should be a fierce spirit of opposition.”

So I’m not going to conciliate. As the media begin to treat this as the new normal, I won’t. As the incredulous become credulous, I will retain my outrage and indignation. Now, more than ever, we must fight to defend and preserve the values that make this country not great, but glorious.


Danielle Berrin is a senior writer and columnist at the Jewish Journal.

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One Hope Wine

Just in time for the holidays, order now from One Hope Wine and not only will you receive some delicious, high-end wines from this upscale winemaker, but you will help support the many charities and organizations they do as well!  My daughter just told me about One Hope Wine, what a great idea.  For more information, visit onehopewine.com.  They also have a 20% off coupon using THANKS16 if you order before 11/24.

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10 reasons Trump’s victory is not the apocalypse

To explain the victory of Donald J. Trump as 45th president of the United States, people keep quoting from Philip Roth’s “The Plot Against America,” the story of a fascist takeover of our country. But I keep thinking of a line from another Roth book, “The Humbling,” whose title perfectly describes my feelings these days.

“At a certain stage of misery, you’ll try anything to explain what’s going on with you,” says the narrator, “even if you know it doesn’t explain a thing and it’s one failed explanation after another.”

It’s time to stop explaining, stop wallowing in misery and focus on silver linings. Because, well, choose life, right? So, here goes:

1. Most Americans rejected Trump 

Trump won the election, but Hillary Clinton won the popular vote by about a million votes. An ABC exit poll found that 61 percent of voters viewed Trump unfavorably. Americans who didn’t vote for Trump and dislike him are in the majority in America. #WereNotAlone

2. The backtracking has begun

Based on his post-election statements, it’s becoming clear that Trump won’t build his 30 foot concrete wall, Mexico won’t pay for it, he won’t deport 12 million undocumented immigrants, he won’t “rip up” the Iran deal and he won’t keep out Muslims. Either these promises were lies to begin with or the consequences of actually doing stupid things has begun to dawn on him.

3. Breitbart.com will be exposed to light

I am not one of those people calling Stephen Bannon an anti-Semite. I don’t know him, and it’s not a term I throw around loosely. But breitbart.com is a cesspool of anti-Semitic, misogynistic and racist commentary. At some point soon, the new special assistant to the president will be forced to choose between draining that swamp or losing his job. Otherwise he and his boss will end up tracking every vile comment and headline across the clean Oval Office carpet.

4. Cory Booker doesn’t have to wait 16 years

Not just U.S. Senator Booker (D-N.J.), but an entire generation of progressive young leaders now can consider running in 2020. If Hillary had won, the new generation of Democrats would likely have to cool their heels for the next 16 years.

5. Neither does Nikki Haley

Don’t be fooled by the Trump victory — the GOP is still divided. A thoughtful and brave challenger like Haley, the Republican governor of South Carolina, can take on Trump in 2020. There are a lot of decent, unhappy Republicans who should view the Trump victory as a call to return their party to its thoughtful, conservative roots while reaching out to a changing America.

“Trump won the presidency in a manner that undermines the GOP’s electoral future,” noted former George W. Bush speechwriter Michael Gerson in The Washington Post. “Trump’s white-turnout strategy is not the wave of the future; it is the last gasp of an old and disturbing electoral approach.”

6. Trump’s victory will strengthen our alliances

Less than a week after the election, the American Jewish Committee and the Islamic Society of North America met and created the Muslim-Jewish Advisory Council. This new high-level organization will advocate together on issues of common concern like, say, an immigration ban based on religion. It includes Farooq Kathwari, CEO of Ethan Allen, Sinai Temple Rabbi David Wolpe and former U.S. Sen. Joseph Lieberman. 

Locally, rabbis joined imams and priests at a solidarity rally outside the Islamic Center of Southern California last week, and this Thursday young Jewish and Muslim leaders of NewGround: A Muslim-Jewish Partnership for Change will meet for support and strategy. Trump has done what Middle East negotiators could only dream of: He brought Muslims and Jews together.

7. Trump is healthy

Trump acts in a coarse, cruel and hateful manner, but he is a pragmatist. Until recently, he was even a Democrat. You can’t say the same for vice president-elect Mike Pence. I wish Trump four years of excellent health.

8. America has survived worse

There have been more hotly contested elections and presidents from both parties who have said and done awful things, like Franklin Roosevelt locking up Americans in internment camps. Watch Trump like a hawk. Be ready to fight. Don’t panic, until it’s time.

9. Trump could do some good things

If Trump can get a Republican Congress to go along with rebuilding our infrastructure, great. If he can get Vladimir Putin to agree to a settlement in Syria, great. If he can tweak NAFTA to improve labor conditions in Mexico — something President Barack Obama tried to do — great. If he can bring jobs to the people who voted for him based on that promise, great.

10. Make our communities great again

With Trump in Washington, we will be forced to become the change we want to see. Our young people will learn what it is to mobilize and fight for change. Our local leaders will have to step up to defend our laws and values. We will have to focus on making stronger, better communities, helping and protecting one another, living the values in our lives that we find missing in our president. 

One way we have already begun to do that is with our pocketbook. Donations are flooding in to the American Civil Liberties Union, the Southern Poverty Law Center, Planned Parenthood, the ADL and the Sierra Club.  These organizations are more valuable than ever.

The other way is to organize now and be ready to resist when necessary.   

“If the first day [of President Trump] we see something that is hostile to our people, hostile to our city, bad for our economy, bad for our security, we will speak up, speak out, act up and act out,” Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti said.

Yes, and I will join him.


ROB ESHMAN is publisher and editor-in-chief of TRIBE Media Corp./Jewish Journal. Email him at robe@jewishjournal.com. You can follow him on Instagram and Twitter ” target=”_blank”>@RobEshman.

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A Moment in Time: We Each Carry Two Notes….

Dear all,

It is told of the 18th century Hassidic Rabbi, Simcha Bunem, that he used to carry two notes, one in each pocket. 

One note said: “I am but dust and ashes.”

The other said: “The world was made for me.”

I recently thought of this after opening two letters I had received the same day.  One made me realize I have many hills to climb.  The other made me very proud of my accomplishments.

Every day, we each receive notes.  Some in writing.  Some inscribed by God or nature.  Some on the faces of people we know or meet.  Are we receptive to each note?  Do we take in those that ground us as well as those which uplift us?

We are all works in progress!  But a moment in time to accept that life is a fine balance helps us remember to keep moving forward in our journey.

With love and shalom,

Rabbi Zach Shapiro

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The Protest Theology exchange, part 3: How early rabbis humanized God

” target=”_blank”>Pious Irreverence: Confronting God in Rabbinic Judaism. Parts 1 and 2 can be found ” target=”_blank”>here.

***

Dear Professor Weiss, 

I’d like to dedicate the last round of this exchange to the potentially enlightening aspects of the idea of God being morally imperfect, a view which you attribute to many late-rabbinic thinkers. In the introduction to your book you write the following words:

Unlike  the  image  of  God  presented throughout most of the Bible, this late rabbinic God is not the ultimate moral sovereign. Rather than imitating God’s own actions, the rules of ethical conduct now emerge through dialogues between God and various biblical heroes.  In  addition,  while  these  texts  imply  a  profound  lesson  about  divine morality and the possibility of change, they also point, in accordance with the thinking of the late religious humanist David Hartman, to human dignity and empowerment.

I’d like to ask you to elaborate a bit on this point, and perhaps to share with our readers a couple of examples of illuminating critical depictions of God’s morality. How do these undogmatic queries about God’s goodness highlight “human dignity and empowerment?”

I’d like to thank you again for the interesting book and for doing this exchange.

Shmuel

***

Dear Shmuel,

First, thank you for giving me this platform to present some of my thoughts on rabbinic thought. And, now, to answer your question:

Pious Irreverence posits that some sages in the late rabbinic period took the early rabbinic theology that humanized God to its extreme: they did not automatically assume a morally perfect deity. While fundamentally good, God, like His human creations, does not always make the correct ethical choice. Hence, the act of protest was not deemed a futile expression but one that, in the imagined biblical period at least, could propel God to recognize His ethical shortcomings. Indeed, the widespread motif of divine moral concessions, particularly in the midrashim of Tanḥuma-Yelammedenu, suggests that scholars ought to consider modifying and nuancing their assumption that the sages always imagined God to be morally perfect. For example, in the first half of the twentieth century, Arthur Marmorstein argued that the tannaim (early rabbis) adamantly defended the existence of an ethically infallible God to counter the Marcionite heresy that viewed the Hebrew Bible's God as ruthless and unjust. Here, Marmorstein does not consider the possibility that this rigid Jewish attitude may have waned over time. Similarly, David Weiss Halivni asserts that the rabbis never consciously set their own sense of morality above a straightforward reading of a “difficult” biblical law since that would have implied that God’s morality was in error—and the “Perfect Law Giver” could never err.

However, as some late rabbinic passages show God acquiescing to many moral critiques, they present a radically different conception of God from the rabbinic texts adduced by Marmorstein and Halivni. Constructing a “human” God who is not morally perfect, these images sharply contrast with the unchanging and morally infallible God championed by much of ancient Greek philosophy, early Christian thought, and medieval Jewish philosophy. In some aggadot, although God is concerned with and committed to justice and morality, He also recognizes His limitations and fallibility. Most radically, in some of these aggadot, God is willing to reform His methods of governing the world after receiving human input. Consider the following two examples:

Rejection of Intergenerational Punishment

The earliest biblical discussion of the theology intergenerational punishment is found in the Decalogue (Exodus 20:5-6) where God announces that God would “punish the sins of the parents upon the children, upon the third and upon the fourth generations.” This doctrine was used as a motivating and even threatening device to exhort Israel into complying with the prohibition of idolatry. The awful consequences of sin: not only will sinners suffer for their transgressions, but their progeny will be punished as well.

Ancient Jewish interpreters of the Bible struggled with the obvious moral problem: how could the divine Torah in Exodus 20 endorse a theology that punishes an innocent person for the sins of another? How does this punitive doctrine fit with God's attributes of mercy and kindness?

To solve the dilemma, one Midrash from the Tanhuma-Yelammedenu (see Numbers Rabbah 19:33) presents an impassioned face-to-face confrontation between Moses and God.  After prefacing his remarks with the submissive phrase “Master of the World,” Moses boldly asks, “Shall they [the righteous people] take [punishment] from the sins of the parents?” After providing a few biblical cases where righteous children are born to wicked men, Moses rhetorically asks, “Is it appropriate that righteous people shall receive lashes for the sins of their parents?” After hearing Moses’s critique, God concedes and the theology is subsequently nullified. God declares, “You have taught Me something [למדתני] and By your life, I will nullify My decree [אני מבטל דברי] and establish your word.”

Peace before Genocidal War

A second example: The laws of Israelite warfare are found in Deuteronomy 20, which begins: “When you approach a town to attack it, you shall offer it terms of peace (v. 10).” In this passage, God commands Israel to first seek peace before engaging in warfare. On a straightforward reading, God’s decree is completely unprovoked and uncontroversial.

One Tanhuma-Yelammedenu text, however, provides the “true” backstory that generated the law. It posits that the legal dictum requiring that peace should be sought before engaging in a genocidal war against Israel’s enemies only came about as a response to a moral critique brought by Moses. Specifically, when God commanded Moses to wage a genocidal war against Sihon’s nation (Deut. 2:24), Moses defied that order, declaring “I do not know who has sinned and who has not sinned [איני יודע מי חטא ומי לא חטא]. Instead, I will come to them in peace.” Unlike the case of trans-generational punishment, Moses confronts God not only through words but through an act of defiance.  Moses justifies this daring act by acknowledging the religious standing and legitimacy of his own moral sensibilities. The midrash presents the confrontation as a clash between Moses’s ethics and God's ethics. Rejecting God's command, Moses seeks peace with Sihon's kingdom, claiming that not all of them are evil. He wishes to avoid a war that would inevitably cause the death of the innocent (among Israel’s enemies!) along with the guilty. In a striking response, God concedes to Moses’s ethical sensibilities, and ratifies this less militant approach into law (Deut. 20:10), declaring: “By your life, just as you have said, so will I do [חייך כשם שאמרת כך אני אעשה].”    

This late Midrash has Moses specifically challenge one problematic element of religious war: the rule of ḥerem (annihilation). Moses’s moral concern is not in fighting any war, but in fighting an unnecessary war of genocide that requires the killing of every man, woman and child. Driven by his moral conscience, Moses rejects this form of battle. Indeed, God's subsequent concession serves to validate Moses’s qualified critique of genocidal war. According to this rabbinic text, God – only with the help of Moses – amends the older ḥerem theology of Deuteronomy 20:17 with a new rule (cited in Deut. 20:10) requiring that the Israelites first seek a peaceful solution. In short, before Moses’s “transgression,” God preferred war to peace; but now – after Moses’s defiant critique – God prefers peace to war in conflicts between Israel and her enemies.

These Midrashic teachings — and there are many more like them — depict dramatic confrontations between Moses and God that appear nowhere in Scripture. In them, the ethical intuition of the human voice, as epitomized by Moses, emerges triumphant (when given the consent of God). These texts are theologically striking, for in them God is taught the moral principle of individual responsibility; in these texts, God needs human assistance to reach the pinnacle of moral behavior.

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Who is a Dive Expert for Departures? Lisa Niver

Thank you to Valentina Valentini for including me in your article for Departures, “>Who is a Dive Expert for Departures?” target=”_blank”>”Sipadan, Malaysia

” target=”_blank”>Lisa Niver, a PADI Divemaster/Master Diver with over 300 dives. Try using Scott Dunn luxury travel bookers for a one-of-a-kind diving vacation. Best time to go: July through August; from $1,440 per person for a 5-day stay.”

” target=”_blank”>Blue Corner, Palau:

“Blue Corner is one of the best dives in Palau, according to just about everyone. Part of the Micronesia region in the western Pacific Ocean, this excursion is not for the faint of heart; it is an advanced dive often with currents that change in seconds. Expert diver ” target=”_blank”>Sipadan as one of the top guides in the area (from $150 per dive); or, hire Grant W. Graves and have a fully customized experience among the whitetip sharks and king triggerfish. Best time to go: December through April.” When I first started diving, I was scared as I had a near drowning as a child. I persevered and learned to dive and for many  years that was the focus of all my travels. I have returned again to diving recently and been so happy under water.

Where do you feel free? What do you feel grateful for? Share your story in my We Said Go Travel Writing Award, the theme is “>We Said Go Travel!

One of Lisa's recent dives in Cozumel, Mexico: