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March 30, 2018

Lisa Niver at SharkSchool

Marvelous March News 2018 with We Said Go Travel

Marvelous March News 2018 with We Said Go Travel: Happy Spring, Happy Easter and Happy Passover to me!

Lisa at Google for International Women's Day How have you been celebrating Women’s History Month? I went to Google International Women’s Day for Women Techmakers and it was amazing! I also went to an event with Bixel Exchange about Diversity and Inclusion and Designing Equality – Advocacy, Advancement and Action for Women in the Workplace.

I was invited to a workshop at AT&T to learn about taking 360 and Virtual Reality Videos. I cannot wait to try it out on my next trip.

In Las Vegas this month, I stayed at The Cosmopolitan Hotel. I cannot wait to share photos, video and all of the “just the right amount of wrong that happened!

Did you want to know more about my adventures in Utah:  A Festival of Food at Firewood and Best Meals in Park City.

New Articles:

American Airlines Tweet about Lisa Niver's article

 

Lisa in the News and Media:

Find all my article links on my LisaNiver website.

 

WHERE CAN YOU FIND MY TRAVEL VIDEOS?

Here are links to my video channels on YouTubeAmazon Fire Tv, and Roku Player. My views on Roku alone are now over one million! My total video views across all platforms is now over 1,736,974,919 (1.7M)! ! Thank you for your support! What should I do to celebrate when I get to 2 MILLION views?

Recent videos:

Lisa Niver Scuba Diving with Bull Sharks

 

Video #755: Sky Diving for my birthday with GoJump Oceanside!

Video #762: How Do You Create Freedom On The Mountain?

 

Video #766: Make Your Candy Dreams Come True

Video #767: Scuba Diving with Scuba Diving with Bull Sharks

My fortune cookies said “Do What Makes You Happy!”  and All things are difficult before they are easy.”

Thank you for your support. Lisa

Discover more on my social media accounts:  InstagramFacebookTwitterPinterestYouTube, and at LisaNiver.com. My social media following is now over 100,000 and I am verified on both Twitter and Facebook.

 

TRAVEL PHOTO AWARD:

We are now publishing the entries from our Travel Photo award! After all the entries are published, we will announce the winners. This will take several months. Thank you to everyone who participated and to our judges, Gary Arndt from Everything Everywhere and Jeana from Surf and Sunshine. We hope you will submit a photo in our next award.

Want to make your own video? Use code WESAIDGO10 for 10% on your project. Lisa loves working with EpicMakers and they were a sponsor for our first Travel Photo Award.

TRAVEL WRITING AWARD: 

Thank you to everyone who has participated in our 13 We Said Go Travel Competitions! Find the winners for all of them here. We hope you will participate in our 2018 Awards.

Deer Valley

Marvelous March News 2018 with We Said Go Travel Read More »

Stephen Reinhardt, Outspoken Judge and Jew, Dies at 87

Judge Stephen Reinhardt, dubbed the “liberal lion” of American jurisprudence and as outspoken on Jewish as on legal issues, died March 29. He was 87.

He died of a heart attack during a visit to a Los Angeles dermatologist, according to a spokesman for the 9th U.S. Circuit of Appeals, on which Reinhardt served from his appointment by President Jimmy Carter in 1980 until his death.

“Reinhardt was deeply principled, fiercely passionate about the law and fearless in his decisions. He will be remembered as one of the giants of the federal bench,” Chief Judge Sidney K. Thomas of the 9th U.S. Circuit — whose jurisdiction includes the Western United States, Alaska and Hawaii — told the Los Angeles Times.

His rulings were frequently overturned by a more conservative U.S. Supreme Court, to which Reinhardt responded that he was not about to help the Supreme Court take away the rights of citizens.

Among his more controversial decisions was that the words “under God” in the Pledge of Allegiance were unconstitutional, as were bans on same-sex marriage and physician-assisted suicide.

Reinhardt was born in March 27, 1931, in New York as Stephen Shapiro, but changed his name when his mother divorced his father and married Gottfried Reinhardt, screenwriter, director and producer (“The Red Badge of Courage,” “Town Without Pity”), who introduced the boy to the Hollywood community.

Stephen Reinhardt’s even more famous grandfather was Max Reinhardt, who revolutionized the German stage and then created Hollywood Bowl spectacles after fleeing Hitler’s Germany.

“Reinhardt was deeply principled, fiercely passionate about the law and fearless in his decisions.” — Sidney K. Thomas

This trauma also deeply affected Stephen Reinhardt and he spoke passionately about Jewish issues, unusual for a judge and a man of his standing.

His first wife, Maureen Kindel, told Citizen Magazine in an interview that her husband “thinks about his Jewish heritage a lot, very much so. He also thinks about the discrimination against Jews that he suffered when he was younger. I’m sure that has formulated his views about being protective of people’s rights.”

In 1990, in an address to the City Club of Los Angeles — which was labeled “provocative” by the media — Reinhardt maintained that Jews were drastically underrepresented on the U.S. Supreme Court, adding that if some were added “the result would be a better, kinder and gentler nation.”

Reinhardt is survived by his wife, Ramona Ripston, longtime former head of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of Southern California; three adult children, Mark Reinhardt, a political science professor; Justin Reinhardt, a musician; and Dana Reinhardt, a novelist; and seven grandchildren.

The family asks that donations in Reinhardt’s memory be made to the ACLU.

Stephen Reinhardt, Outspoken Judge and Jew, Dies at 87 Read More »

Time for a Reality Check

American Jews Need To Stop Crying Anti-Semitism — And Start Standing Up For Liberal Values

By David A. Lehrer                                                                                        March 30, 2018

These can be trying times for American Jews. The ADL recently released data showing a 57 percent increase in anti-Semitic incidents since 2016 — and not just from white supremacists, either. Louis Farrakhan, head of Nation of Islam, continues to spew anti-Semitic remarks every chance he gets.

This has led many Jewish organizations to condemn anti-Semitism, contrary to what Jonathan Weisman wrote in a recent op-ed in The New York Times, entitled “Anti-Semitism Is Rising. Why Aren’t American Jews Speaking Up?” Weisman argues that Jewish leaders here in the U.S. “have been remarkably quiet, focused instead, as they have been for decades, on Israel, not the brewing storm in our own country.”

Weisman is wrong about American Jewish institutions and their leaders. They have consistently called out anti-Semitism on the left and the right. But he is right that Israel has been asking us to use our leverage to fight their battles.

Several major Jewish organizations, and the Israeli government itself, would have us believe that part of the upsurge in anti-Semitism in this country comes from the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement. They have asked that significant energy be expended by American Jews in countering BDS, a suggestion that many groups are following with passion. At the recent AIPAC policy conference, counteracting BDS was one of just three major policy points the attendees would press on their representatives in Congress.

Yet serious academic studies have found over and over that Israel’s booming, diverse economy is not vulnerable to a consumer boycott. A significant number of Israeli exports are in high demand, a trend that seems likely to continue, and most consumers would be unable to replace them or unwilling to stop consuming them altogether. BDS is clearly an issue, but it is not one of the top tier issues confronting the Jewish community — either here or abroad.

The study found that overall support for the Jewish state in the US is at the highest level ever recorded, at 64 percent (the same as it was in 1991 and 2013). In stark contrast to these numbers, Gallup found that support for the Palestinian cause was at just 19 percent.

The bulk of the increase in support comes from Republicans, with a rise in support for Israel from 59 percent in 2001 to 87 percent in 2018). But support also rose among Democrats (from 51 percent to 59 percent).

Amazingly, no one seems very interested in these positive results. It’s odd. When a competing study came out of the Pew Research Center a few months ago showing declines in support for Israel among Democrats, there were scores of op eds written about the crisis.

Perhaps organizations are wary of data that counter the narrative propounded by far too many domestic Jewish organizations and the government of Israel itself of a hostile world arrayed against the Jewish state, or of nefarious forces undermining support for Israel in hidden corners of the internet and on campuses.

Those threats do exist. But when it comes to Israel, they are apparently having limited success, as even 65 percent of 18-34 year olds support Israel.

Attitudes towards Jews in the U.S. are favorable as well. Pew studies over years of polling have documented not only Americans’ support for Israel but Americans’ profound admiration of Jews in general.

Despite neo-Nazis marching in Charlottesville, Virginia, chanting “Jews with not replace us” and Louis Farrakhan spewing hate in Chicago, Jews are the most admired religious group in America.

Major Jewish organizations need to digest the Gallup data and recognize that the greatest threat to Jews both at home and in Israel comes from within us, from our failure to embrace and sustain liberal values and ethical behavior that has long been the hallmark of Jewish life. With support among Americans at an all time high for Jews and for Israel, American Jews need to feel liberated to speak up for “liberal norms” and principles both domestically and in Israel, in the knowledge that there is a bedrock of support for Israel and American Jews in the body politic.

When the principles of rejecting bigotry, debunking conspiracy notions and protecting a free press are in jeopardy we need to speak out.

Under threat of anti-Semitism and anti-Israel sentiment, we understandably felt that we needed to be circumspect and circle the wagons. But with support for Jews and Israel higher than ever, it’s time for a reckoning. It’s time for the organized Jewish community to stop acting like a threatened minority and start acting like the successful, admired group that we actually are in America.

Time for a Reality Check Read More »

Lawsuit Alleges SFSU Has Anti-Semitic Practices

In June 2017, a group of San Francisco State University (SFSU) students and members of the local Jewish community filed a lawsuit against the university, alleging the school has a long-standing policy of anti-Semitism and overt discrimination against Jewish students.

The lawsuit was filed on behalf of the plaintiffs by attorneys from The Lawfare Project and the global law firm Winston & Strawn LLP. The suit was filed after university administrators were alleged to have ordered campus police do nothing as pro-Palestinian protesters disrupted an April 2016 speech given by Jerusalem Mayor Nir Barkat on campus, and threatened members of the audience. The lawsuit also listed various instances of anti-Semitism over the years at SFSU that the university never took action on.

In November 2017, U.S. District Judge William Orrick said he would dismiss the suit, ruling it was too vague and didn’t center on present-day issues at the university. However, on March 9, he gave The Lawfare Project the opportunity to amend and refile the suit.

On March 29, The Lawfare Project refiled its suit to include additional plaintiffs and new claims, including that the university didn’t discipline a Palestinian student who threatened Israel Defense Forces (IDF) soldiers, and in doing so violated Title VI of the 1964 Civil Rights Act.

“As a former member of the IDF, I was horrified and terrified when I found out that one of my classmates had expressed a desire to kill Israeli soldiers.” — Shachar Ben-David

Shachar Ben-David, a former IDF soldier who graduated from SFSU in 2014, was informed by a classmate in 2013 that Mohammad Hammad, president of the General Union of Palestinian Students (GUPS), had written some posts on Tumblr “describing [Hammad’s] desire to set children on fire, radicalize his classmates, join Palestinian terrorist organizations and behead Israeli soldiers.”

Among Hammad’s posts on Tumblr was a picture of a blade, and Hammad allegedly wrote: “It cuts through everything like butter and just holding it makes me want to stab an Israeli soldier.”

Ben-David told her professor and university administrators that she felt threatened with Hammad in the same classroom. The university allegedly responded by removing Ben-David, not Hammad from the classroom and offering her psychological counseling.

“As a former member of the IDF, I was horrified and terrified when I found out that one of my classmates had expressed a desire to kill Israeli soldiers,” Ben-David said in a statement released by The Lawfare Project. “The University did nothing to protect me, and in fact left me even more vulnerable by declaring that Hammad was suspended or expelled when, in actuality, he was still a student at SFSU. I’m taking action now to ensure that other Jewish and Israeli students at SFSU never have to experience that kind of fear and humiliation again.”

In 2014, Ben-David told local Bay Area television station KTVU that she had to take her finals in a separate room “because it turned out [Hammad] was in a class [in which] I was very vocal about being Israeli and an Israel supporter.”

The March 29 complaint alleges that Hammad left SFSU in January 2014 for unstated reasons but eventually was allowed to return and earn his degree. The FBI reportedly investigated Hammad for the posts in question but concluded “he did not pose any criminal or national security threat.”

A new claim in the lawsuit alleges that the SFSU is suppressing a report — thereby violating the California Public Records Act — detailing why the university didn’t allow SFSU Hillel to participate in the February 2017 “Know Your Rights” fair that informs students about potential threats to their rights and physical safety given the new, hostile political climate.

“Having had the opportunity to amend the complaint to include two new student plaintiffs, and additional new claims alleging violations of the California Public Records Act and Title VI national origin discrimination, we are very confident that this crucial case will proceed to the [discovery] phase of the litigation,” Lawfare Project Director of Legal Affairs Amanda Berman said in a statement to the Journal.

A spokesperson for SFSU said in an email to the Journal, “In light of the pending litigation and the confidentiality of student records, we are unable to provide the information responsive to your question at this time.”

Lawsuit Alleges SFSU Has Anti-Semitic Practices Read More »

Rosner’s Torah-Talk: Passover with Rabbi David Kay

Rabbi David Kay was ordained at the Jewish Theological Seminary of America (JTSA) in 2002, where he also received a Master of Arts degree in education. Rabbi Kay serves Congregation Ohev Shalom in Maitland, FL. Founded in 1918, Ohev Shalom is central Florida’s original and oldest continuing Jewish congregation. He also serves on the Jewish Community Relations Council of the Jewish Federation of Greater Orlando. He is a member of the Mayor Buddy Dyer’s Council of Clergy and the Executive Committee of the Interfaith Council of Central Florida, for which he coordinates Orlando’s annual interfaith celebration of the legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King.

Our discussion focuses on the Torah reading for Passover.

 

Previous Torah Talks for Passover included:

Rabbi Joel Levy

Rabbi Eliyahu Fink

Rabbi Debra Orenstein

 

 

 

 

 

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